HomeMy WebLinkAbout2016-2406.Vescio.19-12-03 Decision
Crown Employees Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
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GSB# 2016-2406
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Association of Management, Administrative and
Professional Crown Employees of Ontario
(Vescio) Association
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Finance) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Arbitrator
FOR THE ASSOCIATION Nadine Blum
Goldblatt Partners LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Paul Meier
Treasury Board Secretariat
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
FOR THE THIRD PARTY
Susan Parsons, on her own behalf
Landlord and Tenant Board,
Ministry of the Attorney General
HEARING November 19, 2019
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Decision
[1] The complainant, Mr. Nick Vescio was employed as a mediator in the Mediation
Services Unit of the Dispute Resolutions Branch Automobile Insurance Division
of the Financial Services Commission of Ontario (“FISCO”). FISCO Mediator
was a multi-incumbent position classified at level 6 of the Legal Services
Functional Group. The employer declared the FISCO Mediator position surplus,
and affected employees received surplus notice and notice of layoff dated April 5
and April 14, 2016 respectively, with a layoff date of October 14, 2016.
[2] In November and December 2016 six FISCO Mediators filed disputes under
article 27 of the collective agreement claiming that the employer violated the
collective agreement by deciding that they were not entitled to bump into a
position of Dispute Resolution Officer (“DRO”) at the Landlord and Tenant Board,
Ministry of the Attorney General. Some also claimed a right to bump into other
positions and/or a right to a Targeted Direct Assignment.
[3] The six complainants who filed disputes under article 27, and their continuous
service dates in order of seniority are as follows:
(a) Chris Jackson (2002-01-02)
(b) Rebecca Hines (2002-05-27)
(c) Salvator Maietta (2005-01-04)
(d) Anna Teskey (2008-01-02)
(e) Claude Mbuyi (2008-09-09)
(f) Nick Vescio (2010-02-01)
[4] Subsequently the disputes filed by employees listed from (a) to (e) above were
settled. The dispute filed by Mr. Vescio, the least senior of the six complainants,
was not settled. When his dispute was scheduled for arbitration, the parties
provided third party notice to Ms. Susan Parsons, who had a continuous service
date of July 14, 2014, as the least senior DRO at the Landlord and Tenant Board
whose legal rights and employment status may be affected by the disposition of
Mr. Vescio’s dispute.
[5] This decision relates to a motion by Ms. Parsons claiming that she should not be
the least senior DRO at risk, should the Board decide that Mr. Vescio is entitled
to bump into a DRO position. Ms. Parsons’ reasoning is to the effect that at the
present time she is not the least senior DRO because another employee
(hereinafter Ms. F) had subsequently joined the Landlord and Tenant Board as a
DRO, and Ms. F has a continuous service date of February 3, 2015, compared to
her continuous service date of July 14, 2014. She contends that, should Mr.
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Vescio’s dispute be upheld, it is Ms. F who should be displaced, not her. She
argued that it would be unfair to displace her rather than the least senior DRO at
the present time. She submits that the “current” seniority list should be used to
determine the least senior DRO, not an old seniority list. Ms. Parsons pointed
out that the collective agreement does not specify which seniority list has to be
used. She urged the Board to order that the current list should govern, because
it is fairer.
[6] Ms. Parsons also made alternative arguments. First, that had the employer
complied with the collective agreement, Ms. F would have been rolled over to
full-time status in August 2016. If that happened she would have been the least
senior DRO even on the seniority list the parties had used. Second, Ms. Parsons
argued that Mr. Vescio became entitled to displace her only because the more
senior FISCO mediators settled their disputes. He was not so entitled on
September 11, 2019, when the instant hearing commenced. Had any of the
other complaints not settled, Mr. Vescio would not have been entitled to bump
her.
[7] Counsel for AMAPCEO submitted that the Board has already established the
principle that when determining bumping rights of surplussed employees,
seniority must be decided on the basis of the circumstances frozen as of the time
that the alleged violation crystallised. Reliance was placed on Re OPSEU
(Union) and Ministry of Government Services, 2011-0110 (Herlich). She
submitted that besides that arbitral principle, the AMAPCEO collective agreement
in fact gives explicit direction to the parties on the relevant time to assess
seniority. Reliance was placed on article 27.9.1.
[8] Employer counsel submitted that the employer had made the same argument
Ms. Parsons makes here, that Mr. Vescio cannot rely on his advancement in the
seniority rank as a result of the settlement of the more senior complainants’
disputes. The Board had rejected that argument made by the employer in an
earlier decision in this proceeding. Re AMAPCEO (Mbuyi) and Ministry of
Finance, 2016-2694 (Dissanayake). He stated that while the employer
understands Ms. Parsons’ “unfairness” argument, the principle established by
arbitrator Herlich is legally correct. He pointed out that in Re Mbuyi (supra), in
rejecting the employer’s position, the Board at para. 20 wrote:
That submission has appeal from a fairness point of view.
However, while I have sympathy for that assertion, the legal reality
is that this Board has no equitable jurisdiction. Its authority is to
interpret and apply the terms agreed upon by the parties. It cannot
disregard, amend or add to the agreed upon terms, even if it is of
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the view that enforcement of those agreed upon terms result in
unfairness to one or the other of the parties.
[9] I will not deal with the submissions as to whether or not Ms. F should have been
rolled over into full-time status earlier. Ms. F has not filed a dispute in that
regard. Nor have the employer and AMAPCEO joined issue on that matter. It is
not possible, and even if it is, it would be completely inappropriate to decide that
issue in this proceeding which is about a dispute filed by Mr. Vescio.
[10] As I did in Re Mbuyi, I understand and sympathise with Ms. Parsons’ sentiment
that the result would be unfair to her. However, what I wrote in Re Mbuyi is true
in this case as well. This Board has no general power to do what it believes to
be fair. Its authority is to interpret and apply the collective agreement and the
law, except in very limited circumstances not relevant here.
[11] In Re OPSEU (Union) and Ministry of Government Services (supra) the Board
was called upon to apply the job security and surplussing provisions of the
OPSEU collective agreement. The decision does not refer to any specific term of
the collective agreement relating to the appropriate seniority list to use.
Nevertheless, at para. 18 arbitrator Herlich wrote.
[18] The provisions of Article 20.4 are elaborate and fine in their
details. I have not set them out here because, for our current
purposes, it is sufficient to note (and the parties were in agreement
on the point), that the displacement provisions provide a surplus
employee with a single opportunity to exercise “bumping rights”.
This has been referred to, in other contexts, as a provision which
provides “the best bump of the day”. The right only arises at a
single moment in time and if an appropriate “bump” cannot be
found as of that point in time, the right is spent, it does not continue.
[12] In that case, it was the employee seeking to bump who attempted to rely on
subsequent events to assert a right to bump. The Board rejected that argument.
Here, it is the incumbent in the position targeted for a bump relying on
subsequent events. In the OPSEU case both the union and the employer had
agreed on the proper principle; and the Board endorsed their agreement and
rejected the concept of a changing seniority list. Even in the absence of an
explicit provision in the collective agreement, in my opinion that principle makes
very good sense because it is not practical to have a “moving” seniority list; one
that may change as events occur in the workplace, such as new employees
entering or exiting the bargaining unit.
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[13] In any event, in the instant collective agreement, there is a provision that is
consistent with the arbitral principle in the OPSEU case. Article 27 sets out the
steps that chronologically follow when employees receive notice of surplus. The
material part of article 27.9.1 reads:
27.9.1 If an employee has not been directly assigned in accordance
with Article 27.8 by the end of the fifth (5th) month from the
receipt of the notice of surplus, the Employer shall identify
the bumping option, if any, for employees who are declared
surplus and employees who are bumped by employees with
greater seniority and have bumping rights. In identifying the
bumping option, the Employer shall, in accordance with the
ordering rules in Article 27.9.3, look for the permanent
AMAPCEO unit position occupied by the least senior
employee for which the surplus employee is qualified, based
on the following criteria:
[14] Thus the collective agreement between the employer and AMAPCEO addresses
the question, when the employer is to identify the bumping option. It must be
done when “… an employee has not been directly assigned in accordance with
article 27.8 by the end of the fifth (5th) month from the receipt of the notice of
surplus”.
[15] In these circumstances, to order that the employer must use the current seniority
list, would be to disregard or amend the terms of the collective agreement. As I
observed in Re Mbuyi (supra) in rejecting the employer’s argument, this Board
has no authority to disregard or amend a term of the collective agreement
because in its opinion the result of applying the provision in the collective
agreement in a particular case is not fair. Therefore, to apply the current
seniority list, as Ms. Parsons urges me to do would be to ignore article 27.9.1.
Although that may seem to produce a fairer result, it is not something the Board
is authorized to do. Therefore, I have no alternative but to dismiss the motion
advanced by Ms. Parsons.
[16] I remain seized. The hearing will continue as scheduled.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 3rd day of December 2019.
“Nimal Dissanayake”
Nimal Dissanayake, Arbitrator