HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2005-2314.Kevin Ransome.06-12-05 Decision
Public Service
Grievance Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas Sl. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
BETWEEN
BEFORE
FOR THE GRIEVOR
FOR THE EMPLOYER
HEARING
Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. : (416) 326-1388
Telec. : (416) 326-1396
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
Kevin Ransome
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care)
Kathleen G. O'Neil
Kevin Ransome
George Parris
Counsel
Ministry of Government Services
October 30, 2006.
Nj
~
Ontario
P-2005-2314, P-2005-2786
Grievor
Employer
Vice-Chair
2
Decision
This decision deals with the employer's preliminary objection, in which the employer argues that
the grievance should be dismissed at the outset, without a hearing on the merits. The grievor
claims that he and other similarly situated managers in the ambulance call centres run by the
province are being paid in a manner which breaches their terms and conditions of employment
and is discriminatory. His position is that the employer breached its obligation to maintain fair
and equitable working conditions as outlined in employer policy and other documents referred to
at the hearing, which will be dealt with below.
The grievor's well-documented presentation dealt with the history of pay level comparisons
between managers and the bargaining unit, and among managers going back to 1999. He referred
to an external review of the Hamilton ambulance call centre in 2001 which reported a general
level of job and wage dissatisfaction among both communications staff and managers, associated
with the fact that Ministry-operated emergency dispatch centres were paying considerably lower
wages for relatively higher workloads than comparable dispatch centres. More competitive wage
rates were among the key recommendations of that review. Significant increases to the wages of
the bargaining unit classifications followed in 2002,2004 and 2005, totalling 30%. As for the
managerial ranks, the classification of OM14 was reclassified upwards to OM16 with a 3%
increase effective August 2004.
Mr. Ransome's wage rate has been less than that of the top rate of the classification reporting to
him since 2001, according to a chart he prepared. When people are promoted out of the
bargaining unit, they are entitled to receive a minimum 3% promotional increase, which
exacerbates the situation, creating the additional effect of some managers with less experience
earning considerably more than managers with more experience. The frustration felt by the
grievor and others in similar situations is obvious.
As argued at the hearing, the grievor's main concern is the fact that managers promoted later
than he was are being paid more than he is. This is the result of the fact that the employer's Pay
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on Assignment policy provides for a minimum 3% increase on promotion. The managers who
are making more than the grievor, despite less service as a manager, were promoted out of the
bargaining unit after they had received the significant wage increases noted above which the
grievor did not receive as he was no longer in the bargaining unit. As a matter of arithmetic, and
the fact that the promotional increase is a percentage, when it was applied to a higher base, it
produced a higher entrance salary than the grievor' s salary after several years as a manager. He
is firmly of the view that this represents an inequitable and unfair condition of employment that
should be remedied by the Board.
The employer argues, in essence, that the grievor has not put forward a sufficient basis of facts
that if proven, would entitle him to the remedy he seeks. Most specifically, in the employer's
view, the grievor has not identified a promised level of salary that has not been provided.
Counsel argues that the extracts from policy referred to do not entitle him to what he is seeking,
namely, that no manager hired after him should make more than he does.
For the purpose of this motion, I accept all the facts asserted by Mr. Ransome, the grievor, as
true and provable. The grievor relies on a number of employer policies and directives as the
location of the terms and conditions of employment he is asking the Board to enforce, as he
believes they have been breached by allowing the pay situation outlined above to exist. Firstly,
the grievor referred to the governments published "OPS Mission and Organizational Values"
among which is the following statement on fairness:
We deal with others in an open, impartial and non-discriminatory manner. We ensure that
the processes we use and the decisions we make are fair and seen to be fair.
The Pay on Assignment Operating Policy provides as its purpose:
To ensure that employees are paid equitably in keeping with pay principles, policies and
collective agreements for permanent and temporary assignments, and to ensure that
discretionary pay decisions are defensible.
Under the heading "Principles", the following appears:
Employees should be paid equitably in their assigned salary ranges, taking into account
such factors as skills and job-related experience, relationships to peers and career
progresSIOn.
Under the heading "Mandatory Requirements" the following wording can be found:
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Employees must receive all salaries and entitlements they are eligible for that apply to the
class of their position.
A document entitled Human Resources Management Directive provides the following:
The Ontario Public Service (OPS) strives to be an organization that demonstrates
dedication and excellence in serving the people of Ontario and their elected
representatives. It is a workplace where employees will feel valued and can build
challenging and rewarding careers.
Flexible human resources (HR) management policies and practices are required to enable
the OPS to respond quickly and effectively to new challenges in a rapidly changing
environment.
Under the heading "Principles", the same document provides that:
HR management strategies, policies and practices will:. . . . Embody the values of honest,
integrity, fairness and diversity.
The grievor does not feel valued in the existing salary situation and does not feel that the HR
policies which affect him are sufficiently flexible to adequately deal with the changes in the
salary environment, nor does he consider the management strategies involved to have embodied
the value of fairness. Further, the consistency, fairness and equity espoused in the Classification
and Position Administration Guideline have not been adhered to in the grievor's view. In
particular he finds it inconsistent to have later hired managers paid more than earlier hired
managers. He argues that the various salary levels should have been reviewed to make sure that
the "adverse effect discrimination" against managers in his position did not occur. He notes that
the Salary Rates/Ranges Directive provides under the heading "Principles" that pay
administration will be consistent with approved compensation practices and recognize the
managers' responsibility to manage, and that Pay administration will contribute to the attraction
and retention of competent employees.
In his concluding remarks, the grievor submitted that although his claim may look like it
concerns classification as in the Garratt case, [Garratt. et al. and the Crown in Riszht of Ontario
(Ministrv of Health and Long Term Care) P-2003-1670 (O'Neil), decision on the preliminary
objection dated May 17,2005 and on the merits dated December 7,2005], it is really just
challenging the different treatment depending on when managers were hired. Further, he argues
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that it is in the Board's jurisdiction to remedy this working condition, because it is discriminatory
to have newly promoted people making more than those promoted later.
The grievor relied on the following cases of to support his argument that the Board had
jurisdiction to remedy his grievance. Kanga v. The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of
Health) No. P/0003/85, June 20, 1986; Gleason and The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of
Community Safety, P/0040/92, February 20, 1998.
Employer counsel replied that even if one does not dispute that the wage comparisons
complained of are unfortunate, they do not constitute a breach of any term or condition of
employment. The employer's position is that compliance with the two separate methods of pay
determination for bargaining unit and managerial staff has created the situation complained of,
but there is no sufficient basis for the Board to remedy that.
Counsel referred to the Board's decision in Hill et. al. and The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety), P-2004-3699, August 25,2006, which dealt with the complaint
that other managers were paid at a higher rate for overtime than required, and than the grievors
had been paid. In that case, the Board dismissed the grievance as there was no evidence that the
grievors had not been paid in accordance with their own terms and conditions of employment as
to pay. Further, counsel referred to a case involving a group of managers with the Ministry of
Finance, where the grievance was dismissed, even where the Board found that the employer had
made a bad business decision, but it was not considered either bad faith or a breach of a term or
condition of the grievors' employment. See: Ascott, Arblaster, Benedict, Brooks, Chol, Duncan,
Duhig, Hogarth, Kawall, Koss, Longden, Mah, Montle and Young v. Her Maiesty the Queen in
Right of the Province of Ontario (Ministry of Finance) (November 25,2002), No. 133/200 1
(S.C.J.), the report of the unsuccessful judicial review application of the Board's decision in
Group Managers, Ministry of Finance and The Crown in Right of Ontario, (Ministry of Finance)
(October 2,2000), No. P/0020/99 (P.S.G.B.). As in other cases before the Board, the employer
sees the grievor as asking that the Board rewrite the pay on assignment or other pay policies,
since there is no dispute that the grievor received the applicable promotional increase at the time
he was promoted.
Additional Board decisions not cited above, relied on to support the employer's request for the
dismissal of the grievance, included: Koons, Stewart, Wootton, Smalley and Sivier v. The Crown
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in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Correctional Services) (February 9, 1988), No.P/OO 13/87)
(P.S.G.B.); Harris et al. v. The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services) ,December 22,2005, Nos. P-2003-1479, P-2004-0837, P-2004- 1528, P-
2004- 1720, P-2004- 1721, P-2004- 1994, P-2004-23 80, P-2004-3699 (P.S.G.B.); and Smalley
v. Ministry of Correctional Services (September 8, 1986), No. P/0013/85 (P.S.G.B.). See also
Drakos. and the Crown in Riszht of Ontario (Ministrv of Communitv Safetv and Corrections) ,
August 25,2006, P-2004-1721 (O'Neil); and Woodward and the Crown in Riszht of Ontario
(Ministrv of Communi tv and Social Services), April 4, 2006, P-2005-1853 (O'Neil) for cases
with similar themes.
***
Having carefully reviewed the material and arguments before me, it is my finding that the
employer's motion should be granted, as it is clear that the grievance cannot succeed. This is
because the material submitted does not establish that it is a term or condition of his employment
that the grievor is entitled to be paid not less than others promoted after him or that he should be
paid more or differently than he is being paid, or that his pay treatment is discriminatory,
arbitrary or in bad faith.
The issue is primarily a question of contract law. The Board must answer the question: Is it a
term or condition of the grievor's contract with the employer that he should be paid the
additional money he claims? It is clear that there is no specific provision which the grievor has
identified that would entitle him to the significant wage increases he claims. His grievance is
rooted instead in the general statements in the employer policy and guidelines about fairness and
equity, which for the purposes of this motion will be assumed to form part of the grievor's
contract of employment. However, they are general statements of intention, with no promise to
the grievor that sufficiently addresses his claim. What is fair is a question about which people
frequently differ, often with well-thought out reasons for their view. It is important to look at the
provisions of those policies to see if they provide the answer to the question: what is a fair wage
for this grievor? Having done so, the Board finds that there is no answer to be found in the
documents submitted anywhere near specific enough to grant the grievor what he claims. The
grievor's answer to that question is to the effect that a fair wage would be one that afforded him
essentially the same increases as the bargaining unit received, at a time when he was not a
member of the bargaining unit, and/or a wage that guarantees that he is not paid less than
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managers promoted later than he was. Although he is certainly entitled to that view, his contract
of employment, on the material before me, does not contain a promise to that effect.
As noted, as argued at the hearing, the grievor's complaint concerned the comparison of his
wages with others in his own classification. However, the written submission to the Board dated
November 7,2005 was framed in large part as a complaint about the relationship of the grievors'
wages with those of the bargaining unit positions who report to him, and the fact that the rate of
increase in the managerial ranks had not kept up with those of the bargaining unit. In that
document, the grievor asked for wage increases to the OM14 and OM16 classifications
retroactive to 2002. The claim as written is not one the Board is in a position to grant either, as
the Board has no power to award wage increases, only to enforce established terms and
conditions, including those dealing with pay. If the grievor had shown that the employer had
agreed to pay a wage increase that he did not receive, then the Board could enforce the agreed
wage increase. The material before me does not establish such an agreed or promised wage
increase, nor one that he is entitled to on more general principles of fairness.
Especially in the managerial setting, where contracts of employment are not collective, but
individual, it is not enough to say that it is fair or would be more fair if a grievor was paid more,
or not less, than some other employee. In order to succeed, a grievance must show that the
difference is improper, either because it offends a specific term or condition of employment, or
some more general principle oflaw. In that respect, the grievor argued that the difference is
discriminatory. However, there is nothing to suggest that the differential in payment was for an
improper reason, such as discrimination on the basis of race, gender, religion or some other
identified illegal ground, or that the decision to pay the grievor in the manner that it has, was
somehow arbitrary, or in bad faith. The facts before me indicate that the grievor was paid in
accordance with the Pay On Assignment policy when he was promoted into management and
there is nothing to suggest he has not been paid according to the other pay provisions applicable
to his classification since. What he argues is that there should be a term or condition of his
employment that would ensure he was paid better than those promoted or hired later. This is a
complaint about the absence of a term or condition of employment of the kind he would like,
rather than a request to remedy a breach of an identifiable existing term or condition of his
employment. The facts before me simply do not form a sufficient basis for such an argument to
succeed. What the grievor is claiming would be tantamount to creating a term or condition of
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employment, rather than awarding a remedy for the breach of an existing term or condition of
employment.
***
To summarize, although I agree with the grievor that the Board has jurisdiction over his
complaint, it is clear that it is not a complaint that can succeed. In the result the employer's
motion is successful, and the grievance is dismissed, because, even assuming all the facts the
grievor asserts as true, there is an insufficient basis in law, to award the remedy requested. In
other words, a prima facie case for the grievance to succeed has not been established.
As with many cases that come before the Board, several of which are cited above, the grievor's
dissatisfaction with the situation is very understandable. However, the employer is entitled to set
the terms of employment for managers in light of its estimation of what is required to retain
sufficient competent staff, and the Board is not entitled to "remedy" a situation unless it finds a
breach of an established term or condition or employment, or a sufficient basis to conclude that
the employer conduct is arbitrary, in bad faith, or discriminatory in the sense of based on some
illegal ground. For the reasons set out above, this is not such a case.
In the result, the grievance is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto this 5th day of December, 2006