HomeMy WebLinkAbout2005-2265.Miller.07-10-12 Decision
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas Sl. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
reglement des griefs
des employes de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. : (416) 326-1388
Telec. : (416) 326-1396
Nj
~
Ontario
GSB# 2005-2265, 2005-2266, 2006-3020
UNION# 2005-0430-0012,2005-0430-0013,2006-0430-0007
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
BETWEEN
BEFORE
FOR THE UNION
FOR THE EMPLOYER
HEARING
CONFERENCE CALL
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Miller)
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation)
Richard L. Jackson
Kristin Eliot
Eliot Smith
Barristers and Solicitors
Jennifer Richards
Counsel
Ministry of Government Services
April 26 & 27, 2007
September 11, 2007.
Union
Employer
Vice-Chair
2
Decision
These are grievances of Mr. Steve Miller, of the Ministry of Transportation and, since they arise
out of the same basic situation, they are dealt with all together. They were heard in an expedited
arbitration process in which Mr. Miller made some submissions.
Grievance No. 1- Dated July 25, 2005, GSB File No. 2005-2265
The Ministry of Transportation has improperly excluded me from job competitions and
impeded my career with the Ministry by not allowing me secondments into other areas of
work.
Grievance No.2 - Dated August 11,2005, GSB File No. 2005-2266
I grieve that the Ministry of Transportation, by its actions, has created undue hardship
upon myself and family and also created unsafe and stressful working conditions.
Mr. Miller asks, by way of remedy, that he be placed into the next seconded assignment
available and to be made whole (re Grievance No.1) and that the Ministry create (for him) a
safer working environment that will cause him less stress (re Grievance No.2). There is also a
third grievance, GSB No. 2996-3020, originating in the same set of facts.
The situation lying behind these grievances is the following. Mr. Miller has worked for the
Ministry of Transportation for fifteen years, for many years as an OAG 6 clerk in the City of
Kingston. For some years prior to 2000, the grievor had been living in an apartment in
Brockville, approximately 50 miles away, and commuting to his job in Kingston. His rationale
for living in Brockville was that it was his home town and, with the provincial government
looking to downsize or even privatize some of its operations, he believed he would be more
likely to find alternative work there than in Kingston.
In 2000, his concerns were borne out when the Ministry announced to its staff that it intended to
explore transferring of services to an alternate service provider. Mr. Miller immediately started
looking for jobs closer to his home in Brockville. At that point, the grievor and his wife also
bought a house in Brockville, his rationale being that (1) with privatization, he would lose his
Ministry of Transportation j ob in Kingston and would end up working in Brockville and (2) the
resulting severance package would enable him to bring down the level of mortgage.
3
His problem arises from the fact that the privatization of the Ministry never did take place, the
employees being officially notified in February of 2003 that the plan was being dropped. While
good news to the vast majority of Ministry employees living in Kingston, it was bad news for
Mr. Miller because he was not - and still has not been - able to find a position in Brockville,
either in the Ontario Public Service or elsewhere; therefore, he has had to continue commuting
between Kingston and Brockville every day. He has found this financially difficult, because of
the cost of commuting (approximately $100 per week) and the fact that there was no severance
payment that could reduce the mortgage payment. He has also found it tiring and stressful.
Through the period to 2005, the grievor had one temporary assignment, applied for several other
positions, and upgraded his skills in an effort to enhance his chances injob competitions - all
with a view to finding an OPS job in Brockville. Unfortunately, this was to no avail: he is still in
his position in Kingston and commuting between there and Brockville every day.
This is the context, then, for Mr. Miller's grievances. He is distressed and frustrated that he
failed even to be selected for an interview in several competitions where he thought he was
qualified and feels that the Ministry - or, rather, more broadly, the OPS - should have provided
him with more developmental opportunities on secondment so as to increase his qualifications,
thus enhancing his chances in job competitions. That is his first grievance, for which he now
seeks the next seconded assignment available as a remedy. The second and third grievances
claim various steps the grievor feels the Ministry should have taken or should now take so as to
relieve his stressful situation and compensate him for his losses.
Award
It is not difficult to sympathize with Mr. Miller's frustration, given the 2000 announcement that
the Ministry was going to explore privatization and the 2003 announcement that it was not going
forward; it is also easy to appreciate his sense that he has done a lot of things in order to obtain a
position in Brockville, none of which have worked out, and to sympathize with the stress
resulting from a daily commute of 50 miles each way. Unfortunately, however much one may
sympathize on a personal level with Mr. Miller, there is nothing that can be done in this situation
with respect to any of these grievances by way of this arbitration award, given the evidence in
this case. An arbitrator's power to act is limited to situations where there is a violation of the
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collective agreement, and there is simply no violation here. Appointment and assignment of
employees to positions is a management right and, short of evidence that that right was exercised
in bad faith or discriminatorily - of which there was none in this case - it must be concluded that
there was no violation of the collective agreement. Similarly, Mr. Miller's other claims simply
find no support in the words of the collective agreement.
There being no violation of the collective agreement, therefore, the grievances must fail.
Dated at Toronto this lih day of October, 2007.