HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-0884.Balachandran.03-04-08 Decision
Crown Employees Commission de ~~
Grievance Settlement reglement des griefs
Board des employes de la
Couronne
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GSB# 0884/01 0885/01 0886/01 0887/01
UNION# 01B289 01B290 01B291 01B292
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontano PublIc ServIce Employees Umon
(Balachandran) Grievor
- and -
The Crown In RIght of Ontano
(Mimstry of Consumer and BusIness ServIces) Employer
BEFORE Bram HerlIch Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION George RIchards
Gnevance Officer
Ontano PublIc ServIce Employees Umon
FOR THE EMPLOYER MeredIth Brown
Counsel
Management Board Secretanat
HEARING March 12,2003
2
DECISION
Background
Four gnevances have been referred to me for determmatIOn.
The gnevor commenced her employment wIth the Mimstry on January 24 2000 She was
appomted to the publIc servIce under the terms of an employment contract whIch was effectIve from
January 24 2000 and was to expIre on March 31 2000 Through a senes of renewals, however her
status as an unclassIfied employee contmued untIl August 24 2001 when her most recent contract
expIred. By letter dated Apnl 26 2001 the employer had advIsed the gnevor that her contract (then
set to expIre on Apnl 30 2001) was bemg renewed untIl August 24 2001 In that same letter she was
also explIcItly advIsed at that her contract would not be renewed beyond August 24 2001
As had been mdIcated, the gnevor's contract expIred on August 24 2001 and her employment
was consequently termmated. On the day pnor to the contract's scheduled expIry four gnevances
were filed on behalf of the gnevor Each of these seeks, m varymg ways, to dIrectly or at least
effectIvely reverse that termmatIOn.
In the first gnevance (whIch I wIll refer to as the termmatIOn gnevance) the gnevor's
termmatIOn IS dIrectly challenged. The Umon also suggested that the employer had not acted m good
faith m effectmg that termmatIOn.
In the second gnevance (whIch I wIll refer to as the postmg gnevance) It IS alleged that the
gnevor was demed her nghts to compete for classIfied posItIOns under the terms of ArtIcle 6 of the
collectIve agreement.
The thIrd gnevance (whIch I wIll refer to as the converSIOn gnevance) refers to ArtIcle 31 15
of the collectIve agreement m support of the claim that, pnor to the termmatIOn of her contract, the
gnevor's status ought to have been converted to that of a classIfied employee under the terms of the
collectIve agreement.
3
In the fourth and final gnevance (whIch I wIll refer to as the dISCnmInatIOn gnevance) It IS
alleged (as amplIfied by the umon representatIves at the heanng) that the employer's treatment of the
gnevor and ItS deCIsIOn to termInate her employment were taInted by dISCnmInatory motIves
prohIbIted under the terms of ArtIcle 3 of the collectIve agreement.
The employer IndIcated that It wIshed to advance prelImInary obJectIOns seekIng to dIsmIss
each of these gnevances as InarbItrable In essence, the employer claimed that the four gnevances
were but four separate attempts to challenge the propnety of the gnevor's termInatIOn. As an
unclassIfied employee, however the employer asserts that the gnevor's termInatIOn sImply flows from
the conclusIOn of her contract and (relYIng on legal authonty whIch wIll be canvassed below) thIS
Board sImply lacks the JunsdIctIOn to InqUIre Into the matter
DespIte that general opemng posItIOn, It also became clear that the employer was equally of the
VIew that, even If thIS Board has the JunsdIctIOn to InqUIre Into some or all aspects of some or all of
the gnevances, the facts whIch the umon asserts, even If accepted as true and provable, do not make
out any case for concludIng that there has been any vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement.
In that context the heanng proceeded as follows Both partIes were provIded wIth a full
opportumty to descnbe the nature of the eVIdence they Intended to call and rely upon. We heard legal
submIssIOns from the partIes both wIth respect to the employer's prelImInary obJectIOns and the claim
that the umon' s gnevances, even acceptIng the facts asserted as true and provable, faIled to establIsh
any vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement. Thus, to the extent the employer's prelImInary obJectIOns
have not fully dIsposed of these matters (and, as wIll be clear shortly they have not) I have accepted
the umon's allegatIOns as true and provable for the purposes of determInIng whether the gnevances
dIsclose any vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement.
The Preliminary Objection(s)
SubJect to certaIn claims about the gnevor's employment pnor to January 2000 (whIch wIll be
dealt wIth In the specIfic context of the conversIOn gnevance later In thIS decIsIOn), It was common
4
ground that the gnevor's employment as an unclassIfied employee ran from January 24 2000 to
August 24 2001
The employer relIes on sectIOn 9 of the Public Service Act. It provIdes
9 Termination of Employment - A person who IS appoInted to a posItIOn In the
publIc servIce for a specIfied penod ceases to be a publIc servant at the eXpIratIOn of
that penod,
We were also referred to the decIsIOns of thIS Board In Merson 16/93 299/93 and 1162/93
(Gray) Gallagher 152/94 (Gray) and Gagnon 1067/96 (Roberts) as support for the proposItIOn that
the non-renewal of an unclassIfied employee cannot be the subJ ect of the gnevance and, more
partIcularly even where the non-renewal IS said to have been effected In bad faith, that thIS Board IS
wIthout JunsdIctIOn to reVIew that decIsIOn.
I have carefully revIewed the authontIes relIed upon by the employer as well as a number of
other decIsIOns of thIS Board (whIch are cIted and dIscussed In the authontIes presented by the
employer) Those addItIOnal decIsIOns Include Milks 1000/92 (Low) Pitirri 1685/92 et al (Kaplan)
and Ghiandoni 518/94 519/94 (Mikus)
A reVIew of those authontIes certaInly confirms the soundness of the general proposItIOn that
the non-renewal of the contract of an unclassIfied employee IS beyond reVIew by thIS Board. That
general proposItIOn IS not, however wIthout exceptIOns And there may be some lack of utter clanty
regardIng the eXIstence and scope of those exceptIOns
A very bnef reVIew of the cases wIll serve to elaborate Each of these cases Involved the non-
renewal of the contract of an unclassIfied employee I consIder them In chronologIcal order
It IS undoubtedly the earlIest of these cases, Milks whIch provIdes the strongest support for the
employer's posItIOn. In that case the gnevance challengIng the non-renewal of an unclassIfied
employee was dIsmIssed pursuant to a prelImInary obJectIOn much lIke the one currently before me
The Board clearly artIculated the VIew that where an unclassIfied employee's fixed term contract
expIres, the employment relatIOnshIp IS severed by operatIOn of sectIOn 9 of the Public Service Act
The Board went on, however to reJect the proposItIOn that the presence of bad faith (as was alleged In
5
that case) would gIve thIS Board JunsdIctIOn to renew the contract or to Impose a new one upon the
partIes
In the Pitirri case, however a sImIlar prelImInary obJectIOn was dIsmIssed where the gnevance
alleged Improper dISCnmInatIOn In vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement. That Impugned conduct was
alleged to have transpIred pnor to the expIry of the unclassIfied contract and was dIrectly related to the
gnevor's ultImate claim of unJust dIsmIssal
SImIlarly In the Merson case the prelImInary obJectIOn was dIsmIssed where the facts relIed
upon arose pnor to the expIry of the contract and where It was alleged that the non-renewal was
motIvated by grounds specIfically prohIbIted under the collectIve agreement.
The Board's decIsIOn In Ghiandoni contaIns perhaps the clearest authonty supportIng thIS
Board's abIlIty to reVIew a non-renewal agaInst the standard of bad faith. The Board, reVIeWIng an
earlIer decIsIOn (Jafri 933/91 (DIssanayake)) offered the folloWIng at page 14
DealIng first wIth the Issue of the JunsdIctIOn of the Board, It IS clear that the
Jafri decIsIOn stands for the proposItIOn that If an employer's decIsIOn not to renew the
contract of an unclassIfied employee was made for reasons whIch resulted In the
undermInIng or abndgment of any nghts of an employee under the collectIve
agreement, the employer's actIOns are revIewable by a Board of ArbItratIOn. If the
employer acted In such a manner the Jafri Board equated It to "bad faith" That panel
stated that If the employer was retalIatIng agaInst the gnevor for seekIng assIstance
from the Umon by not reneWIng hIS contract, the exerCIse of the employer's authonty
would have the effect of undermInIng the gnevor's nghts to gneve If the Umon can
prove that the employer's decIsIOn In the Instant case was made In bad faith, It would
be a dIrect lInk to the undermInIng of the gnevor's collectIve agreement nghts On
these grounds, thIS board has the JunsdIctIOn to reVIew the reasons for the Employer's
decIsIOn not to renew the gnevor's contract.
In ultImately upholdIng the ments of gnevance the Board In that case concluded that the
gnevor's contract was not renewed, In part, because of the exerCIse of hIS nghts under the collectIve
agreement.
The Gallagher decIsIOn IS perhaps less useful for our purposes In that case the Board
determIned that the Impugned conduct - alleged to be contrary to the dISCnmInatIOn provIsIOns of the
collectIve agreement - occurred after the expIry of the unclassIfied contract. The gnevance was
6
therefore dIsmIssed on the basIs that the employer's treatment of an employee (presumably even If It IS
otherwIse prohIbIted by the collectIve agreement) whIch occurs after the expIry of the contract (and
hence the employment relatIOnshIp) IS sImply not governed by the collectIve agreement.
I note that the specIfic questIOn of whether an alleged collectIve agreement vIOlatIOn occurs
pnor or subsequent to the expIry of the employment contract IS one whIch may Itself be the subJect of
controversy Does the complaInt tYPIcally anse only after the contract has expIred and not been
renewed? Or IS there logIcally a pOInt at whIch, pnor to ItS expIry an actIve decIsIOn IS made not to
renew? Fortunately thIS IS one Issue we need not address In thIS case The decIsIOn to not renew the
gnevor's contract was clearly taken and commumcated to the gnevor well before ItS expIry and at a
tIme when the gnevor enJoyed the protectIOn of the collectIve agreement.
The most recent of the cases consIdered IS Gagnon The Board In thIS case appears to have
deftly combIned an apparent antIpathy towards the general proposItIOn that all claims of bad faith non-
renewal of fixed term contracts wIll be revIewed by thIS Board wIth the dIsmIssal of the employer's
prelImInary obJ ectIOn In that case The Board descnbed ItS approach as follows
I have decIded to take JunsdIctIOn of the ments of thIS gnevance but not
because I am persuaded that claims of "bad faith" non-renewals of the contracts of
members of the unclassIfied servIce are revIewable upon theIr ments In the present
case, Mr McFadden alleged that management was In bad faith when It delayed untIl It
was too late for the gnevor to Improve notIce that the number of tImes she declIned
avaIlable work had become a matter of senous concern. The Gnevance Settlement
Board certaInly has JunsdIctIOn to entertaIn the ments of a claim of bad faith exerCIse
of management nghts
Later In the decIsIon, the Board specIfically reJected the assertIon that ItS JunsdIctIon extends
to the pOInt of reVIeWIng all claims of bad faith non-renewal of fixed term contracts but also offered
the folloWIng
When, however the umon claims that a decIsIOn not to renew was part-and-
parcel of a bad faith abndgment of a collectIve agreement nght possessed by a member
of the unclassIfied servIce whIle employed, the Board, of course, wIll take JunsdIctIOn.
HavIng revIewed thIS Junsprudence and the provIsIOns of the Public Service Act and havIng
consIdered the submIssIOns of the partIes, I come to the folloWIng conclusIOns
7
As a general proposItIOn, the non-renewal of the fixed term contract of an unclassIfied
employee IS not the proper subJect of a gnevance And whIle It may be equally sound law that there IS
no automatIc reVIew of such a decIsIOn agaInst a standard of bad faith, there IS ample authonty to
support the VIew that where the non-renewal of a contract IS "part and parcel" of a bad faith
abndgment of a collectIve agreement nght possessed by a gnevor or where the decIsIOn not to renew
the contract was made for reasons whIch resulted In the undermInIng or abndgment of any other
collectIve agreement nght, the Board wIll InqUIre Into the complaInt. Further I note and adopt the
specIfic acknowledgment In Gagnon that the GSB has the JunsdIctIOn to entertaIn the ments of a
claim of bad faith exerCIse of management's nghts Put perhaps somewhat more sImply where the
non-renewal of a contract engages an alleged vIOlatIOn of some other provIsIOn of the collectIve
agreement (whIch may Include an alleged bad faith exerCIse of management's nghts dIStInct from the
non-renewal Itself), thIS Board wIll InqUIre Into all of the CIrcumstances to determIne whether there
has been any vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement.
In applYIng those conclusIOns to the Instant case I am persuaded that the employer's
prelImInary obJectIOn(s) must be dIsmIssed.
FIrst of all, whIle there may be practIcal ment and substance to the employer's claim that each
of the four gnevances before me duplIcates the essentIal umon effort aimed at preservIng or
reInstatIng the gnevor's employment relatIOnshIp each of the gnevances IS dIfferently framed and
raises Issues whIch warrant separate treatment. In partIcular the claims asserted In the converSIOn and
postIng gnevances (whatever theIr ments) raise specIfic provIsIOns of the collectIve agreement apart
from the Issue of non-renewal Those Issues cannot be dIsmIssed by the broad sweep of the
prelImInary obJectIOn urged by the employer
The termInatIOn and dISCnmInatIOn gnevances are perhaps more readIly subJect to the
employer's motIOn. However each of these gnevances, as filed and presented by the umon, fit the
mould of cases whIch wIll engage thIS Board's reVIew ThIS IS clearly the case where It IS alleged (in
the dISCnmInatIOn gnevance) that the decIsIOn to not renew the gnevor's contract was part and parcel
of the employer's alleged contraventIOn of ArtIcle 3 I confess that I am less confident In arnVIng at a
sImIlar conclusIOn In respect of the termInatIOn gnevance, largely because the specIfic nature of the
alleged vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement (presumably In the nature of bad faith - perhaps even an
8
alleged bad faith exerCIse of management' s nghts) remaIns less than clear to me (thIS wIll be explored
a lIttle more fully below)
In the cIrcumstances, the employer's prelImInary obJectIOn In relatIOn to each of the gnevances
IS hereby dIsmIssed.
I turn now to consIder the ments of each of the gnevances and, In partIcular to determIne
whether these gnevances, assumIng and acceptIng the facts alleged by the umon, can be seen to
dIsclose any vIOlatIOn of the collectIve agreement.
The Termination Grievance
I have already IndIcated my confirmatIOn of the general pnncIple that the non-renewal of the
contract of an unclassIfied employee IS not the proper subJect of a gnevance Thus, to the extent that
thIS gnevance has survIved the employer's prelImInary obJectIOn, that IS because It alleges bad faith
was part and parcel of the employer's decIsIOn to not renew the gnevor's contract. However I find It
extremely sIgmficant that the umon dId not explIcItly allege a vIOlatIOn of any specIfic provIsIOn of the
collectIve agreement In support of ItS posItIOn. In that regard (and as perhaps suggested earlIer In thIS
decIsIOn), I may have been overly generous to the umon In declImng to allow the employer's
prelImInary obJectIOn In relatIOn to thIS gnevance
In consIdenng the nature of the umon's claim under thIS gnevance, there IS, however sImply
no doubt In my mInd that the gnevance must be dIsmIssed.
The umon acknowledges It has no specIfic eVIdence establIshIng bad faith, but asks me to Infer
bad faith from the facts It asserts And, essentIally the umon' s case In that regard amounts to no more
than the folloWIng. EVIdence (whIch mIght have to be gleaned to some extent from employer records
the umon would seek to have produced) wIll demonstrate that the work the gnevor performed or work
sImIlar to It contInued to be performed after her departure to an extent that would establIsh an ongOIng
need for the work. In that context, I am asked to conclude that the decIsIOn to not renew the gnevor's
contract was made In bad faith.
9
I need not provIde a full catalogue of the shortcomIngs of the umon' s posItIOn. It IS sufficIent
to note that, even assumIng the umon could establIsh an ongOIng need to perform the gnevor's work (a
proposItIOn not embraced by the employer) It IS not clear to me that such a conclusIOn, In turn, leads
to a findIng of employer bad faith. The Junsprudence surroundIng the non-renewal of unclassIfied
contracts IS rooted In the proposItIOn that there IS no nght or entItlement to renewal It straInS lOgIC to
accept on the one hand, that contracts need not be renewed and to assert, on the other that when they
are not, bad faith ought therefore to be Inferred. Moreover there IS a multIplIcIty of avenues avaIlable
to the employer both wIth respect to the manner In whIch It orgamzes ItS work and the tImIng of ItS
deCISIOns In the absence of specIfic eVIdence suggestIng bad faith, I do not see how the assertIOn that
work sImIlar to the gnevor's was performed after the expIry of her contract can, In and of Itself,
support any conclusIOn of bad faith.
The termInatIOn gnevance must therefore be dIsmIssed.
The Job Posting Grievance
The J ob postIng gnevance refers to a number of postIngs and "non-postIngs" To the extent any
actual Job competItIOns are referred to they occurred well after the termInatIOn of the gnevor's
employment and entItlement to claim the benefit of the collectIve agreement. The umon pOInts,
however to a number of Instances where It asserts that J ob competItIOns ought to have but dId not
occur Had the competItIOns taken place dunng the gnevor's tenure, she would have been entItled to
compete And whIle that entItlement IS, of course no guarantee of success, the gnevance claims,
among other thIngs, that the gnevor ought to be awarded a full-tIme classIfied posItIOn as a remedy for
the alleged vIOlatIOn.
EssentIally the umon pOInts to the departure of three classIfied employees (due to permanent
reassIgnment or retIrement) to claim that up to 3 vacanCIes ought to have been posted dunng the
course of the year 2000
There IS no questIOn that when posItIOns are posted, bargaInIng umt employees (includIng
unclassIfied employees) have the nght to partIcIpate In the competItIOn. But whIle ArtIcle 6 of the
collectIve agreement clearly sets out what IS to happen (by way of postIng and competItIOn) once a
10
vacancy occurs or a new classIfied posItIOn IS created, I was not pOInted to anythIng In the collectIve
agreement whIch determInes precIsely when there IS such a vacancy As already noted, the employer
has a broad range of optIOns avaIlable to It - both wIth respect to tImIng and the manner In whIch It
opts to get ItS work done There are no provIsIOns In the collectIve agreement - at least none were
pOInted to - whIch eIther freeze employee complement or specIfically regulate ratIOs of employee
categones or oblIge the employer to "declare a vacancy" In specIfied cIrcumstances (compare the
converSIOn provIsIOns of the agreement, dIscussed below) No authontIes were advanced to support
any such proposItIOn. In the absence of any such specIfic collectIve agreement provIsIOns or any
senous argument that the relevant movements of classIfied employees automatIcally and ImmedIately
gIve nse to an oblIgatIOn to declare and therefore post a vacancy I am not persuaded that there IS any
basIs for the postIng gnevance to succeed.
The postIng gnevance must therefore be dIsmIssed.
The Conversion Grievance
In the converSIOn gnevance, the umon relIes on the provIsIOns of ArtIcle 31 15 It IS
unnecessary for me to set out or consIder that provIsIOn In great detaIl It IS sufficIent for our present
purposes to note that, In certaIn prescnbed cIrcumstances, the artIcle contemplates the creatIOn of a
posItIOn WIthIn the ClassIfied ServIce and the converSIOn of the status of the Incumbent In the posItIOn
from unclassIfied to classIfied. However among the vanous condItIOns reqUIred for such a converSIOn
IS the one found In the opemng words of the artIcle
Where the same work has been performed by an employee In the UnclassIfied ServIce
for a penod of at least two (2) consecutIve years
In sImple terms, an unclassIfied employee must perform the same work for at least 2 years In
order to be elIgIble to benefit from any converSIOn. It IS clear from the facts outlIned above that the
gnevor's tenure wIthIn the UnclassIfied ServIce dId not meet thIS mImmum servIce reqUIrement and
that she therefore has no basIs upon whIch to claim any entItlement under the artIcle
11
NeIther am I persuaded that the gnevor's pnor employment yt,ith a different employer IS of any
relevance even where that employment resulted In the gnevor performIng the same work (a fact
whIch, I note IS dIsputed) for the reqUIsIte penod.
The collectIve agreement refers to an employee who has been in the unclassified service for at
least two years Further and despIte the valIant argument advanced by the umon representatIve that I
consIder more tradItIOnal common law approaches to IdentIfYIng the employment relatIOnshIp I
cannot Ignore the provIsIOns of sectIOns 8 1 (2) and 8 1 (10) of the Public Service Act
(2) Status as a public servant - An IndIVIdual IS not consIdered to be a publIc servant
unless he or she has been expressly appoInted as such by the LIeutenant Governor In
CouncIl, the CommIssIOn, a mImster or a desIgnee of a mImster
(10) No implied appointment - In the absence of an express appoIntment of an
IndIVIdual as a cIvIl servant, publIc servant or Crown employee the IndIVIdual's
appoIntment shall not be Inferred solely from the CIrcumstances of hIS or her
employment.
In short, there IS sImply no basIs to conclude that the gnevor had the reqUIsIte servIce as an
unclassIfied employee to qualIfy for converSIOn under the collectIve agreement. There IS no basIs to
conclude that the duratIOn of her unclassIfied servIce IS anythIng dIfferent from or addItIOnal to the
penod from January 2000 to August 2001
The converSIOn gnevance must therefore be dIsmIssed.
The Discrimination Grievance
The dISCnmInatIOn gnevance makes reference to ArtIcle 3 of the collectIve agreement. ArtIcle
3 1 provIdes
3 1 There shall be no dISCnmInatIOn practIced by reason of the race, ancestry place of
ongIn, colour ethmc ongIn, cItIzenshIp creed, sex, sexual onentatIOn, age, mantal
status, famIly status, or handIcap as defined In sectIOn 10 (1) of the Ontano Human
Rights Code (OHRC)
12
The umon (as It dId In relatIOn to the allegatIOns of bad faith) conceded that It had no specIfic
eVIdence of dISCnmInatIOn upon whIch It relIed. Rather It suggested that dISCnmInatIOn was to be
Inferred from the facts of the case
In that regard, the umon pOInted to the fact that the gnevor was demed an IntervIew In a J ob
competItIOn whIch took place In March 2002 and to the demal of the gnevor's request to partIcIpate In
certaIn career development opportumtIes/assIgnments dunng her tenure as an unclassIfied employee
Of course, the competItIOn pOInted to took place some 7 months after the termInatIOn of her
employment at a tIme when the gnevor had long ceased to be covered by the terms of the collectIve
agreement. And as far as the career development opportumtIes were concerned, there IS sImply
nothIng In the facts asserted by the umon whIch IS InCOnsIstent WIth the conclusIOn that such a demal
was a functIOn of the gnevor's status (as an unclassIfied employee hIred, accordIng to the employer to
perform a partIcular set of tasks) not an example of Improper dISCnmInatIOn.
But even more dammng to the umon' s posItIOn IS the fact that It was unable to clearly IdentIfy
any prohIbIted ground of dISCnmInatIOn said to be at play The umon suggested somewhat tentatIvely
that perhaps It was the gnevor's status as a member of a vIsIble mInonty whIch was operatIve But the
umon conceded almost ImmedIately that the gnevor was less than umque among her fellow employees
In that regard and no specIfic comparator was posIted to found any basIs for a claim of Improper
dISCnmInatIOn. Indeed, the employer advIsed (and the umon dId not dIspute) that another employee
was hIred Into an unclassIfied posItIOn sImIlar to the gnevor's at the same tIme as the gnevor and that
both of theIr contracts were subsequently termInated at the same tIme There was nothIng In the
umon's presentatIOn whIch suggested that the gnevor was treated any dIfferently from the other
employee wIth respect to eIther her hmng or tenure
In short, I am sImply not persuaded that there IS anythIng In the facts asserted by the umon
whIch can support any findIng of Improper dISCnmInatIOn.
The dISCnmInatIOn gnevance must therefore be dIsmIssed.
13
Summary
In summary and for the reasons set out above, both the employer's prelImInary obJectIOns and
the umon' s gnevances are all hereby dIsmIssed.
Dated at Toronto thIS 8th day of Apnl 2003
~ ~L~~~~l: _.
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Bram HerlIch
Vice-Chair