HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017-0654.Solomon.18-12-04 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# 2017-0654
UNION# 2017-0546-0020
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Solomon) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(The Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE Reva Devins Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Andrew Mindszenthy
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
Regina Wong
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING November 30, 2018
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Decision
[1] The Grievor was employed as a Program Support Clerk with the Ministry of
Community and Social Services on a fixed term contract that ended on March 10,
2017. She applied to the Program Support Clerk Talent Pool Competition during
her contract and was invited to participate in the first stage of the selection process.
She completed a pre-screening written test on April 20, 2017 that had an Employer
set threshold of 75%; the Grievor’s score was 68% and she was therefore not
invited for an interview in the next phase of the selection process.
[2] On May 26th, 2017, the Grievor filed the following grievance:
Statement of Grievance
I grieve that competition JOB ID 104526 was improper and conducted in
violation of the collective agreement, specifically including but not limited
to Article 6.3, in that:
a) The Employer failed to give primary consideration to
qualifications and ability to perform the required duties; and
b) The Employer placed undue reliance on a test score, eliminating
me from the competition solely based on the test score, and
without appropriate consideration of comprehensive information
relevant to my qualifications and ability to perform the job,
including but not limited to, actual employment experience in a
Program Support Clerk position and past employment
experience relevant to the position; and
c) I have 6 months seniority with no discipline or negative
performance review
Settlement Desired
To be made whole. That I be compensated for the wages that I have lost
and be given a position as a Program Support Clerk. I am also requesting
that my continuous service date and company seniority date be put back
to March 20th, 2017 when my employment ended with the Ministry of
Community and Social Services and any other compensation deemed to
be fair by an arbitrator of the Grievance Settlement Board.
[3] The Union subsequently provided particulars that include allegations of harassment
during the term of the Grievor’s contract and allegations that the conduct of the
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Grievor’s manager during the written test had a negative impact on the Grievor’s
score. The Employer indicated that it intends to raise a number of preliminary
objections, however, this decision is limited to the first objection, that the particulars
are an improper expansion of the grievance insofar as they relate to allegations of
harassment or bad faith. The parties also agreed that the matter proceed under
Article 22.16 and that any decisions are without prejudice or precedent.
[4] The Employer submitted that all of the particulars that relate to Article 2, Article 3,
the Occupational Health and Safety Act (“OHSA”), harassment and the conduct of
the Grievor’s former manager are not inherent in the grievance, even on a liberal
reading, and are therefore an improper expansion of the grievance. Article 6.3 of
the collective agreement is the only article referred to in the grievance and no
allegations of harassment or bad faith are mentioned. Nor were these allegations
raised at Stage 2 or at any other time during the formal resolution process. In the
Employer’s submissions, there was nothing stated during the grievance process
that would have made it aware that the Grievor was pursuing allegations of
harassment. The Employer therefore requests that all of the particulars that relate
to the allegations of harassment or bad faith be struck out.
[5] The Union opposed the motion and submitted that the allegations of harassment
were inherent in the grievance itself. The Grievor had independently raised
allegations of workplace harassment with the Employer when she left in March. Her
concerns were investigated by the Employer and the Grievor believed that this was
a confidential process. She also did not want to appear to be escalating her
concerns by raising them again in her job competition grievance. In these
circumstances, the Union maintains that the Employer should have realised that
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the harassment allegations were part of or inherent in the competition grievance.
Moreover, it submitted that there would be no prejudice to the Employer in
proceeding with these allegations as they have already been investigated.
Analysis
[6] I have considered the parties submissions and have determined that the particulars
of harassment and bad faith are beyond the scope of the grievance. Therefore,
permitting the Union to proceed with these allegations would be an improper
expansion of the grievance.
[7] The parties agreed on the appropriate legal test for the motion, which is well
settled: OPSEU (Botash) v. Ministry of the Attorney General (2018), GSB No.
2014-1088 (Abramsky); OPSEU (Rafol) v. Ministry of Children and Youth Services
(2009), GSB No. 2009-1115 (Dissanayake); OPSEU (Brown-Bryce) v. Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services (2016), GSB No. 2014-1158
(Dissanayake).
[8] The principles set out by the Ontario Court of Appeal in Re Blouin Drywall
Contractors Ltd. and Carpenters Local 2486, (1975), 57 DLR (3d) 199 still provides
the starting point for analysis:
No doubt it is the practice that grievances be submitted in writing and that
the dispute be clearly stated, but these cases should not be won or lost on
the technicality of form, rather on the merits and as provided in the
contract and so the dispute may be finally and fairly resolved with
simplicity and dispatch.
…
Certainly, the board is bound by the grievance before it but the grievance
should be liberally construed so that the real complaint is dealt with and
the appropriate remedy provided to give effect the agreement provisions.
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[9] Arbitrator Dissanayake discussed these principles and further fleshed them out in
Greater Sudbury Hydro Plus Inc., (2003) 121 L.A.C. (4th) 193 (Dissanayake) at
paragraphs 12-14, as follows
I find two countervailing principles in the foregoing statement by the Court
of Appeal. The first is that, where on a liberal reading of the grievance an
issue, although not articulated well, is inherent within it, an arbitrator ought
to take jurisdiction over that issue, despite any flaws in form or articulation.
However, there is also a countervailing principle to the effect that an
arbitrator ought not, in the guise of “liberal reading”, permit a party to raise
at arbitration an issue which was not in any manner, even inherently,
joined in the grievance filed. To do that would defeat the very purpose of
the grievance and arbitration procedure.
[10] In this case, the grievance is completely silent on the allegations at issue. It does
not include any reference to the relevant articles of the collective agreement, to
OHSA or any of the facts that are now asserted in the particulars. Nothing on the
face of the grievance alludes to discrimination, harassment, or any impediment to
the Grievor’s ability to complete the written test. In my view, even on a fair and
liberal reading of the grievance, the essence of the dispute was restricted to Article
6.3 and the Employer’s reliance on the Grievor’s test score, to the exclusion of
other considerations regarding her qualifications and ability to perform the job.
[11] I appreciate that the Grievor also brought her concerns regarding harassment to
the attention of the employer, however, she did not do so in relation to this
grievance. Nor did she pursue that claim after her allegations were investigated or
raise them during the formal dispute resolution process. The Union submitted that,
having complained about harassment in a different context, that element of the
Grievor’s concerns was nonetheless part of or inherent in her job competition
grievance. I am not persuaded by this submission. The grievance process requires
transparency so that both parties are aware of the true nature of the dispute
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between them. It cannot be a guessing game and the nature of the dispute must be
clearly articulated. Although a grievor will not, and should not, be held to a standard
of perfection, she must voice her concern as best she can. There is nothing in the
grievance before me that signals to the Employer that the grievance encompasses
issues of workplace harassment or bad faith and the Employer simply could not
have known that these issues were being pursued as part of this grievance.
[12] For all these reasons, I would grant the Employer’s preliminary motion and strike
out the Union’s assertions of bad faith and workplace harassment related to Article
2, 3 and OHSA and the following particulars:
1. Paragraphs 4-27, except for the first portion of the sentence in
paragraph 5, which will end at the first comma after “… to answer
phones”.
2. Second and third sentences in paragraph 29.
3. Second – fifth sentences in paragraph 30.
4. Paragraph 32.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 4th day of December, 2018.
“Reva Devins”
Reva Devins, Arbitrator