HomeMy WebLinkAbout2016-1730.Fusco.17-06-16 Decision
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2016-1730
UNION#2016-0411-0020
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Fusco) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Brian P. Sheehan Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Dan Sidsworth
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Ann Fowler
Treasury Board Secretariat
Centre for Employee Relations
Employee Relations Advisor
HEARING June 6, 2017
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Decision
[1] The Employer and the Union at the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre agreed to
participate in the Expedited Mediation/Arbitration process in accordance with the
negotiated Protocol. It is not necessary to reproduce the entire Protocol. Suffice to say,
that the parties have agreed to a True Mediation/Arbitration process wherein each party
provides the Vice-Chair with their submissions setting out the facts and the authorities
they respectively will rely upon. This decision is issued in accordance with the Protocol
and with Article 22.16 of the collective agreement; and it is without prejudice or
precedent.
[2] The facts in this matter are not in dispute.
[3] The grievor is employed in the position of a Psychologist 1 at the Ottawa-
Carleton Detention Centre.
[4] The grievor’s start date with the Employer was November 12, 2013.
[5] The written offer of employment to the grievor was dated September 16, 2013,
and provided as follows, regarding the rate of pay for the grievor:
Your position is full-time at 36.25 hours per week and is classified at
09380- Psychologist 1 level. The current salary range for this
classification level is $1,474.27 to $1,892.04 per week. Your starting
salary will be $1,474.27 per week. You have an annual salary review
date of November 1, 2014 to allow for salary progression through the
pay range. Eligibility for salary progression is based on performance in
the position and is subject to salary administration provisions in the
collective agreement.
[6] The grievor accepted the offer of employment and was paid the starting salary of
$1,474.27 per week.
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[7] The grievor claims that she made inquiries at the time of her hiring as to whether
her starting salary could reflect the fact that she had four years of experience as a
Forensic Psychologist with the British Columbia Provincial Health Services Authority.
According to the grievor, she was advised that this was not possible, as all employees
commencing employment in the Psychologist 1 position started at the lowest step (the
“start rate”) on the salary grid.
[8] In July 2016, the grievor learned that an employee newly hired into the
Psychologist 1 position, who had a prior work history similar to hers, did, in fact, receive
credit for that work history in terms of her starting salary. Specifically, that employee’s
starting salary was several steps higher than the start rate on the salary grid pertaining
to the Psychologist 1 position.
[9] The Employer does not deny that the grievor was advised at the time she was
hired that all employees commencing employment in the Psychologist 1 position started
at the start rate. It was, in fact, the position of the Employer, at that time, that all new
employees to the Psychologist 1 position were to be paid the start rate. The Employer
subsequently, however, had some difficulty in recruiting suitable candidates for the
Psychologist 1 position so they adjusted their policy; adopting the view that in certain
instances, credit would be granted for prior work experience, in terms of the starting
salary of a newly-hired Psychologist 1.
[10] It is understandable that the grievor may have found it frustrating that the
Psychologist 1 hired in 2016 had her starting salary adjusted upward, in recognition of
her prior work history. That is— it is recognized that it could be viewed, at one level, as
“unfair” that the grievor’s request to receive credit for her prior work experience was not
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granted on the basis that it was the Employer’s policy, at the time, that all individuals
hired into the Psychologist 1 position commenced at the start rate; yet thereafter, the
Employer did not apply that policy with respect to another new hire. That being said, an
arbitrator only has jurisdiction to grant remedial relief upon a finding that the collective
agreement has been violated. The facts in this matter, in my view, unequivocally do not
establish such a violation of the collective agreement.
[11] The grievor was advised of her starting salary at the time she accepted the offer
of employment from the Employer. That salary was in accord with the provisions of the
collective agreement. Subsequently, due to a recruitment concern, the Employer
changed its policy and allowed for, on a discretionary basis, the adjustment of the
starting salary of individuals hired into the Psychologist 1 position, in light of the
candidate’s prior work history. That change in policy was not contrary to the provisions
of the collective agreement; and, the fact that another individual was (some two and a
half years after the grievor was hired), in fact, given credit for her particular work history
and received, on a relative basis, a starting salary above that of the grievor is not a
sufficient basis to find that the Employer violated the collective agreement.
[12] Absent a finding that the collective agreement has been violated, the grievance
must be dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 16th day of June 2017.
Brian P. Sheehan, Vice-Chair