HomeMy WebLinkAbout1996-0428AUGUSTINE_SPAANS96
ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
1111 SETTLEMENT ,
REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, SUITE 2100, TORONTO ON M5G 1Z8 TELEPHONEtrELEPHONE (418) 328-1386
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, BUREAU 2100, TORONTO (ON) M5G 1Z8 FACSIMILEITELECOPIE (418) 328-13PfS
GSB # 428/96
OPSEU # 96B602, 96B604
IN THE MATTER OP AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Augustine/Spaans) Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources) Employer
BEFORE F Briggs Vice-Chairperson
FOR THE G. Leeb
GRIEVOR Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
FOR THE S Patterson
EMPLOYER Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Management Board Secretariat
HEARING June 21, 1996
Subsequent to the partles SIgmng a Memorandum of Settlement on March 29, 1996, the
employees m the bargammg urnt returned to work after a five and one half week strike
Many of the newly negotiated amendments contamed m the Memorandum of Settlement
pro\11de for the lay-off, dIsplacement and redeployment nghts of employees In accordance
wIth Its clearly stated mtentIons, the Employer sent out notIces of lay-off to numerous
employees
There are two gnevances wInch allege that the Employer failed to proVide seven days for
employees to notIfy the Employer of therr willmgness to bump mto a pOSItIon outsIde of the
geograpIncal boundary of forty kilometres AccordIng to Joseph Augustme and Michael
Spaans, the Employer only allowed them until the end of the followmg busmess day to make
therr electIon. By way of remedy they ask for SIX addItional days to respond, for a total of
tbrrteen days. At the heanng, the Umon altered the gnevance and the remedy sought. The
Umon asked the Board to find that the collectIve agreement had been breached and to make
a declaratIon to that affect. Further, the Umon asked the Board to order that because of the
procedural breach, the process must begm agam.
The partIes agreed to the followmg facts
1 The gnevors are employed WIth Mimstry of Natural Resources m the Kapuskasmg
offices - and both receIved a notIce of surplus,
2 On May 16, 1996 the gnevors receIved a letter - AppendIx A & B advIsmg of surplus
and as well that there are no vacanCIes m the Mimstry to whIch they can be asSIgned,
3 The May 16,1996 notIce also adVIses the gnevors oftherr optIons as IdentIfied m the
CollectIve Agreement under ArtIcle 24 4 1 e-f and 24,5,
4 The May 16, 1996 notIce dIrects the gnevors to conSider therr options and respond on
the enclosed form to therr manager by 4 p.m. May 17, 1996,
5 ArtIcle 24 4 lee) does not Identify a tIlDe penod for whIch employees are to follow for
notificatIon to the employer of therr desrre to seek POSItiOns outsIde 40kms,
6 The partIes agreed as IdentIfied m a May 16, 1996 memo from Don Chtro, Drrector,
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Collectlve Agreement Admuustration - Management Board Secretanat (Appendix D)
that employees would be gIven 3 workIng days to mdicate therr WIsh to seek a posItIOn
outside 40km as per 24 4 1 (e)
On May 16, 1996, all MInlstry of Natural Resources staff received the followmg e-mall
memo from Ron Vrancart, Deputy MInlster wluch states
Today MNR managers wormed 902 classified employees whose positiOns are affected by our
1996/97 expendIture reductiOns.
About 10 percent of these employees have been assigned to another MNR position, effective
mnnedIately The rest were told therr positions are declared surplus.
These reductIons are part ofMNR's new busmess drrectiOns, wluch focus our actlVIties on core
bus mess and pnontles, and contribute to the government's efforts to restructure and moderrnze
the Ontano government.
Today s staffmg actiOns are conSistent WIth the OPSEU collective agreements, government
staffing directlves, the PublIc SeIVlce Act and other labour relatiOns reqwrements. Each surplus
employee was provided With a personal fmancial statement and a package outlIrung nghts and
entitlements.
About 200 OPSEU surplus staff are eligible to dIsplace a Jumor employee Wltlun 40 kilometres
oftherr worksite, and have a week to decide whether to do so. Other surplus OPSEU staff have
until 4 .00 pm Fnday May 17 to worm therr manager whether they WIsh to explore dtsplacement
opportunIties beyond 40 kilometres of therr worksite or, if eligible, to another rmrustry Wlthm
40 kilometres.
AMAPCEO pOSitiOns affected by MNR's 1996/97 expendtture reductions were not part of
today's exerCise. The rmruStry is workIng to determme an unplementatiOft date for these
staffmg actions.
Staffwho Will be asked to relocate as part ofMNR"s mfrastructure reductiOns (office/facilIty
closures) will be mformed m the near future on a site-by-site basiS.
Today has been a difficult day for everyone at MNR. We need to be aware of our own feelmgs
and needs, as well as sensitive to those of our colleagues, as we move through tlus tranSition
penod.
The letters sent to the gnevors explamed that there was no employee WIthm 40 kilometres
for them to displace ill accordance the collecnve agreement. TheIr remammg optlOns were
set out and It stated, ill part:
Please consider your OptiOns carefully and return the enclosed form to your manager no later
than 4 pm on May 17, 1996 to mdIcate your deCiSion and/or proVide the addItiOnal mformatiOn
requested, Failure to receive the form Witlun the allotted tune frame wIll be deems as your
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havmg given up your nght to dIsplace and optmg for redeployment under SectIOn 24 5
On May 16, 1996, there was dIscussIOn between the partIes and an agreement was reached
regardmg the matter of tune allowed for employees to consIder theIr InltIal optIons
AccordIngly, Mr Cwo wrote the followmg to Mr GaVIn Leeb, representatIve of the Umon.
RE ARTICLE 24 4 I(E) OF THE COLLECTIVE AGREEMENT
ThIs WIll confIrm our recent telephone conversatIOn wherem I advised you that the partIes
mutually agreed that for purposes of applymg Article 24 4 lee), employees are to be given 3
workmg days to mdIcate that they wIsh to be placed beyond the 40km radIus of thelf
headquarters.
I wIll forward tlns memo to our Corporate Redeployment office and the rmmstnes' human
resources departments.
NotwIthstandIng that agreement, on May 17, 1996, Mr Chrro sent a memorandum to
Gabnella Zillmer, DIrector of Human Resources for MNR. That memo stated.
RE NOTICE REQUIREMENTS - ARTICLE 244 I(E) OPSEU COLLECTIVE
AGREEMENT
Trus will confIrm our dISCUSSIOn of tlns mornmg wherein I adVIsed you that It would be
acceptable for your nnmstry to meet ItS oblIgatIons under the above article m applymg (3) days
for employees to make thelf electIon.
In your IIll111stry's case, tlus would mean that employees who have received the recent notIce would have
until the end of Saturday to notIfy your Il11111stry of thelf electIon.
In conversatIons WIth OPSEU, It would appear that tlus would be acceptable given the large
numbers mvolved m your rmmstry and the extraordInary attempts you are makIng m bemg
available to employees throughout the weekend. I would suggest that we may have to use some
dIscretIon m the applIcatIon of the (3) days for unIque clfcumstances.
May 16, 1996 was the Fnday precedIng the three day hohday weekend. The gnevors were
asked to adVIse of theIr decIsIon by Saturday of the long weekend. It was an agreed fact that
notwIthstandIng the above memorandum, the MinIstry accepted responses up to the end of
busmess on Tuesday May 20, 1996 However, that extenSIon of tune was not commumcated
to employees
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UNION SUBMISSIONS
It was the Umon's SUblll1SSIOn that there was a clear breach of the collecove agreement and
the subsequent agreement of the partIes regardmg the length of tune for employees to
respond to an offer of a further search for dIsplacement elsewhere m the Provmce The
vIOlatIOn of the agreement IS procedural and therefore reqUITes a substanove remedy To
proVIde only declatory relIef m these CIrcumstances renders the breach meamngless
Mr Leeb, for the Umon asserted that once the agreement was made WIth the Umon regardmg
employees' havmg three workmg days to respond to the Employer, the Employer had an
obhgaoon to commumcate that mfonnaoon to the employees who had been preViously told
that a response was reqwred Wlthm a day There was no suggestIon from the Employer that
any attempt was ever made to send out that mfonnaoon to employees. That faIlure, m the
face of an agreement on process, must bnng about a remedy for the gnevors
The U mon urged that the remedy necessary to make the gnevors whole IS to order the
Employer to go through the process agam. The Employer's failure to comply WIth the agreed
upon process put the gnevors m a dIfficult posIoon. No one can know what would have
happened, that IS, how the gnevors would have responded, If they had been gIven adequate
tune to contemplate the offer bemg made to them. The process has to begm agam m order
for the gnevors to be afforded the amount of tune for deCISIOn makmg that the partIes agreed
upon.
The Umon remmded the Board that the offer of a Job IS done on a "snap shot" baSIS
Accordmgly, the gnevors may well have been offered dIfferent posIoons If they had been
given three days to respond as the partles had agreed upon. Perhaps other employees would
have reSIgned If they had more opportunIty for thought. Indeed, It was suggested that there
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IS eveI)' reason to beheve that the consequences would have been dIfferent for the gnevors
had they been gIven the benefit of the full length of tIme to consIder the matter Mr Leeb
conceded that the gnevors could have been placed m a more dIsadvantageous posIt1on.
However, a dIsadvantage caused by an Employer breach of the agreement IS substantially
dIfferent than a dIsadvantage cause by serendIpIty
Ms Story-Paul, co-counsel for the Dmon, likened the matter at hand to gnevances where
employees have been dIscharged WIthout Dmon representat1on. As m those void ab initio
cases, the Employer had Violated a procedure establIshed to protect the nghts of employees
The Dmon rehed on Re Government of Province of British Columbia (Personnel Services
Division) and British Columbia Government Employees' Union (Canham) (1991), 21
L.A.C (4th) 325 (BIrd), Re Canada Post Corp. And Canadian Union of Postal Workers
(Gibson) (1992), 29 L.A.C (4th) 7 (Burkett), and Re Centennial College and Ontario
Public Service Employees Union (August 3, 1983), unreported (Weatherill) In each of
those deCISIOns, It was determmed that the procedure was Violated and that m an effort to
make the gnevor whole, the act10n taken must be rescmded. In the present mstance, the
not1ces must be re-Issued and the process started anew
EMPLOYER SUBMISSIONS
Mr Patterson, for the Employer, subrmtted that there had been neIther a breach of the
agreement between the Mr Chrro and Mr Leeb nor of the collectIve agreement. However,
m the event that the Board determme that the gnevances should be upheld, the employer IS
of the View the gnevors would be suffiCIently served If the Board's remedy was lumted to
a dec1arat1on.
The Employer suggested that It would be of aSSIstance to put thIs matter mto context. Nme
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hundred employees receIved a notIce of lay-off on May 16, 1996 Of those, many employees
mcludmg the gnevors, also got notIce that there was no pOSItIOn aVallable for them wIthm
forty k1lometres Mr Leeb and Mr Chrro came to therr agreement after the lay-off letters
were sent to employees on May 16, 1996 The partIes are gomg through the new lay-off
proVIsIons m the collectIve agreement for the frrst tune The Mffilstry of Natural Resources
IS a lughly decentrahzed employer and, given all of the foregomg, It IS not surpnsmg that the
procedure rmght not be followed exactly as set out. Indeed, llTespectIve of any attempt
whIch may have been made to ensure that employees knew of the extensIOn m tune, It IS
possIble that some employees rmght have been rmssed. In these cIrcumstances, the
Employer's actIons were not unreasonable. TIns IS not a gratwtous VIOlatIon of the collectIve
agreement. Further, the Employer's response was appropnate, that IS, to allow responses
beyond the tune set out m ItS letter That actIon satIsfies the Employer's obhgatIons as set
out m the agreement. Therefore, m the event that the Board IS not of the VIew that the
Employer's actIons were sufficIent to meet ItS obhgatIons under the collectIve agreement,
gIven that there IS no egregious breach of a long standmg nature, the appropnate remedy
would be to make a declaratIon.
Mr Patterson noted that the cases proVIded by the Umon regarded breaches of a substantIve
nght set out m a collectIve agreement, not a procedural nght. SubstantIve nghts, such as the
nght to umon representatIon at the tune of dIscIplme, cuts to the very heart of the
employer/employee relatIonsh1p
The Employer urged that the board must look to the appropnate balance between the labour
relatIons pnontIes of the partIes. SpecIfically, the Board must consIder what the gnevors
have actually lost m the CIrcumstances of tlns case and whether It must be redressed. The
Umon's requested remedy will cause dIsruptIon and wIll, albeIt madvertently, proVIde
potentIally better nghts to some employees over others given the "snap shot" approach to
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displacement nghts
In the fmal alternatIve, the Employer asserted that m the event I fmd that there IS a breach
wlnch must be remedted by some faslnon beyond a declaratIon, I should proVIde the gnevors
WIth an opportunIty to change therr mmd on the offer that was made to them m May 1996
Such a remedy would make clear that the Employer did not comply with the process It
would allow the gnevors to be made whole, as requested by the Umon, but It would neither
cause dtsrupt:J.on nor treat the gnevors preferentIally by allowmg the process to begm agam.
In reply, Mr Leeb subrrutted that the facts of the mstant case do not allow the Employer to
aVOId remedial actIon. The Employer cannot VIolate the collect:J.ve agreement, even If that
breach was madvertent, and face no penalty
DECISION
IrrespectIve of whether the three workIng days that the partIes agreed upon are mcluslVe or
exclusive of Saturday and Sunday, the Employer VIolated the agreement by obhgmg the
gnevors to respond by the end of busmess on Saturday May 17, 1996 WinJe I apprecIate
that the Employer accepted responses untIl the end of bus mess on Tuesday May 20, 1996,
the failure of the Employer to not:J.fy the gnevors of tlns extenSIOn, was a breach of the
agreement.
The matter of remedy IS the real Issue for tlns Board to determme m tlns matter The
gnevances are mdlVldual and therefore, generally speakmg, the remedy should redress the
gnevor's mdtVldual clfcwnstances Wlthm the Board's junsdlCtIOn. The Employer urged that
a declarat:J.on would suffice m tlns matter I thmk not.
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It was saId m Re Ontario Public Service Employees Union and Carol Berry et al and The
Crown in Right on Ontario (Ministry of Community and Social Services) DIVIsIonal
Court, (March 13, 1986), unreported (Reul, J), at page 13 that "It IS a commonplace of the
law that the eXIstence of a nght lIDphes the eXIstence of a remedy" It was later stated, m
consldenng the Gnevance Settlement Board's fallure to allow a gnevance or remedy havmg
made a fmdmg of a VIolaoon of the collecove agreement, at page 15, "ItS JunsdlctlOn IS
unrestncted. Its mandate IS remedial. In makmg the declslOn It made the Board refused to
decide the matter, It SlIDply fmessed It."
In my VIew, m tlus matter, It would be sufficient, m accordance WIth Re Berry (supra), for
this Board to uphold the gnevances and slIDply make a declaratIon that the Employer
breached the agreement. However, m the absence of a compellmg reason to refram from
awardmg mdIVIdual redress such as an extended passage of tune, a declaraoon Without
specific remedy "fmesses" thIs Board's mandate In the mstant matter, there was no such
compelhng reason offered to refuse mdIVIdual redress There was no threat of either
adrmmstraove chaos or orgarnzaoonal repercusslOns that Inlght even arguably outweigh the
nghts of the gnevors
The Umon conceded, given the "snap shot" affect of Artlcle 24, the gnevors Inlght be
disadvantaged by begmmng the process agam. Presumably, the avallable posloons that
Inlght have been offered to the gnevors m May of 1996, are no longer avallable However,
due to crrcumstances It Inlght be that a posloon IS presently available that would be of
mterest to the gnevors.
Accordmgly, I fmd that the Employer VIolated the agreement by failmg to proVIde three
workmg days for the gnevors to respond to therr surplus notIce The gnevors are to be given
the optlOn of either askmg for the procedure to be re-run or, acceptIng the offer that was
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made to them m May of 1996 To be clear, they cannot elect to have to process re-run and
then elect to accept the posItIon that they were offered m May of 1996 The gnevors shall
be gIVen three workmg days to make thelT electIOn m tlus regard.
I wIll remam seIzed m the event that there are dIfficultIes unplementmg tlus deCISIOn.
Dated m Toronto, tlus 17th of July, 1996
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FelIcIty D Bnggs
Vice Charr