HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2019-0446.Tighe.20-06-02 Decision
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PSGB# 2019-0446
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Tighe Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Reva Devins Vice Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Edward Tighe and Katherine MacCarone
FOR THE EMPLOYER
FOR THE
INTERVENORS
Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
Andrew Camman for K. Dermott, L. Beach
M. Martin and P. Dolezal
Hugh MacDonald for G. MacDougall
E. Berezowski, B. Barber, M. Edgar, G.
Kitzul and D. Wood, A. Mezzera, L.
Blaney and S. Jensen
HEARING October 18, 2019
SUBMISSIONS November 1 and 26, 2019; January 6
and 10, 2020; February 7 and 18, 2020
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Decision
[1] The Complainant, Mr. Tighe, has challenged the Employer’s refusal to grant his
request to exit the Ontario Public Service (“OPS”) with enhanced severance
benefits via the Voluntary Exit Program (“VEP”).
[2] The Employer raised a preliminary motion, asking that the complaint be dismissed
on the grounds that the Public Service Grievance Board (the “Board” or “PSGB”)
does not have jurisdiction to hear the complaint. The Employer argued that there
was no alleged violation of a term or condition of employment and that the Board
lacked the authority to grant the requested remedy.
[3] There are a number of other employees who have submitted similar complaints
regarding the administration of the VEP. While these cases have not been formally
consolidated, to ensure fairness, the Board asked counsel for the Employer to
provide written submissions and a compendium of the relevant authorities. This
package of material was forwarded to the other complainants who might be
affected by the jurisdictional dispute and they were given the opportunity to
respond.
[4] The Board also asked Employer counsel to address the fairness doctrine
articulated in Bhasin v Hrynew, 2014 SCC 71.
Background Facts
[5] On December 12, 2018 a memo from the Secretary of the Cabinet was circulated
to staff advising of a time limited opportunity to exit the OPS through the VEP. A
Fact Sheet was provided that set out who was eligible to apply, what options would
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be available to employees who exit under the VEP and the consequences of
reappointment to the OPS.
As context for the initiative, the information sheet indicated that the Employer
decided to make the VEP available to Managers and Senior Management to
ensure that services were delivered in the most efficient and effective manner.
[6] The Employer described the approval process as follows:
Approval
The Employer retains the sole discretion to approve any VEP requests. The
Employer’s approval shall be based on the following consideration:
i. At the time that an employee VEP request is being considered, the
Employer has plans to reduce the positions across the organization
ii. The Employer has determined in its discretion that the employee’s
exit from employment supports the transformation of the Ontario
Public Service.
A VEP application can be withdrawn by the employee at any time prior to receiving
written notice of the Employer’s approval to exit.
The employee’s last day of work shall be discussed between the employee and the
Employer, however it must be within the 2019 calendar year. Where no agreement
is made between the Employer and the employee, the Employer shall have the
discretion to determine an exit date.
[7] The only reference to how or whether decisions would be communicated to
applicants was in an additional section with questions and answers:
Q6. How will I know if my VEP application has been approved?
A. If your application is approved, you will receive written notification from a
senior official in your Ministry.
[8] The Complainant submitted his request for VEP and was advised that it was not
approved due to operational needs. No further details were provided regarding the
criteria for approval or the reason for the denial. Mr. Tighe was aware that other
employees, occupying similar positions, were approved and he asked the employer
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for information about the VEP, including the process for selecting employees who
would receive enhanced benefits; the Employer did not respond. Mr. Tighe alleges
that he was not treated fairly or equally and complains that the process was not
transparent. The remedy that he requested was “To be made whole in the process
by being treated fairly and equitably by my Employer by granting me the same
treatment they have provided to my colleagues in approving the VEP.”
[9] The other individuals who have complained about their inability to exit under the
VEP described substantially similar circumstances. They received minimal
reasons for the denial of their requests and expressed concerns about lack of
transparency, an inability to know why their request was denied or what criteria
was used to assess them against others who were approved.
Employer’s Preliminary Motion
[10] At the commencement of the hearing, the Employer raised a preliminary objection
challenging the Board’s jurisdiction to hear the complaint on the merits. It took the
position that the VEP does not form a term or condition of employment until the
employee’s application is approved by the Employer. The Employer submitted
that, when interpreting the Public Service Act of Ontario (“PSOA” or the “Act”), the
legislation that governs the Board’s jurisdiction to hear complaints, the PSGB has
consistently held that it will only enforce or interpret an existing term and condition
of employment and cannot create new ones. While terms and conditions can
include provisions in applicable legislation, such as the Human Rights Code, the
allegations must relate to an existing term or condition of employment.
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[11] The Employer argued that it did not make any commitments to existing employees
when it communicated the existence of the VEP. Rather, it merely advised of an
opportunity that might lead to revision of an employee’s existing contract. Counsel
suggested that in accordance with the law governing contracts, the communication
of the VEP was properly characterised as an invitation to treat: interested
employees were invited to apply with an offer to leave under the conditions set out
in the announcement, but the right to receive those benefits did not crystallise or
form a term of the contract until approved by the Employer.
[12] Counsel maintained that employees initiated the VEP process by submitting a
voluntary application to exit the OPS, but they remained free to withdraw their offer
at any point before it was approved. Conversely, approval of the application
remained in the sole discretion of the Employer. Ultimately, in the Employer’s view,
there was no binding contract or term of employment until it accepted the
employee’s offer. Counsel referred to the legal requirements related to invitations
to treat that are set out in The Law of Contracts, Fifth Edition, Waddams and
applied in UHN (Western and General Hospitals) and ONA, 2016 CanLII 6259
(ONLA) (Albertyn).
[13] The Employer acknowledged that once approved, the provisions of the VEP would
become a term of employment and the Board would have jurisdiction to hear
complaints about the Employer’s execution of those provisions. However, there
was no “working condition or term of employment” over which the Board had
jurisdiction prior to approval of a request for VEP.
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[14] Counsel relied on a number of cases from the PSGB that have considered the
limits of its jurisdiction, including findings that it does not have jurisdiction to hear a
complaint generally alleging that the process or the decision was unfair or have the
remedial authority to grant the relief requested by the Complainant: Scott et al v
Ministry of Transportation, P-0001/96, July 7, 1998 (Lynk); L. Scarr v Ministry of
Health, P-0131/96, May 7, 1997 (Leighton); Hasted/Berezowsky v Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services, P-2014-2665, January 18 2016
(Nairn); Mills v Ministry of Transportation, P/0015/97, March 13, 1998 (Walter);
MacDonald et al v Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, P-
2012-4718, November 7, 2014 (O’Neil); Ransome v Ministry of Health and Long-
Term Care, P-, October 30, 2006 (O’Neil); Garratt et al. v Ministry of Community
Safety and Correctional Services, P-2003-1670, May 17, 2005 (O’Neil). Counsel
also referred to the following case from the GSB: Sutherland v Ministry of Labour,
GSB# 2006-0519 (Dissanayake).
[15] Lastly, counsel for the Employer commented on the application of the duty of good
faith set out in Bhasin v Hrynew, supra. Counsel noted that the case arose in the
context of a commercial contract and introduced two incremental steps to make the
law more coherent and just. First, the SCC established that good faith contractual
performance is a general organising principal of the common law. Second, that
there is a common law duty to act honestly in the performance of contractual
obligations. In the Employer’s submission, there are no alleged facts in the present
case in which the doctrines set out in Bhasin could be invoked: the Complainant
has not made any allegations or identified facts that would support a finding of bad
faith or dishonesty.
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[16] Counsel recognised that the complainants assert a lack of transparency that leaves
them unable to determine whether there was bad faith in the determination of their
application. However, counsel argued that the Board rejected a similar argument
in Garratt et al, supra. The Employer submitted that in the ultimate analysis, the
complainants have not identified a term or condition of their employment that
entitles them to a particular process, a specific form of communication or
transparency in the approval process. Nor have they identified any term or
condition that was applied incorrectly or that guarantees approval of the VEP. In
the absence of an existing term or condition of employment that has been allegedly
breached, the PSGB is without jurisdiction to consider the merits of this case.
Complainants’ Response
[17] Ms. MacCarone, Mr. Tighe’s representative, submitted that the VEP was a policy
created by the Employer that it was obliged to apply through a fair and transparent
process. It was her position that Mr. Tighe cannot know if the Employer engaged
in a discriminatory or bad faith review of his request for VEP because the Employer
has refused to disclose any details: they have not identified the criteria to
distinguish among applicants or offered full disclosure of the reasons for their
decision.
[18] Ms. MacCarone urged the Board to take a broad and liberal interpretation of
working conditions and terms of employment, as established in Kanga, supra. She
also relied on other PSGB and GSB cases for the principle that the Board will
consider whether the employer has breached their duty of fairness and or unfairly
applied its policies: Gleason v Ministry of Transportation, P/0040/92 February 20,
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1998 (Leighton); Harris et al. v Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional
Services, P-2003-1479, December 22, 2005 (O’Neil); Cardoza v Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services, P-2009-1510 December 16, 2011
(O’Neil); Kanga v. Ministry of Health, P/0003/85, June 20, 1986 (Simmons);
OPSEU (Koeslag) v Treasury Board Secretariat, GSB # 2013-1446, January 12,
2016 (Devins).
[19] Ms. MacCarone further addressed the Employer’s submission on the application of
Bhasin. In her submission, the general duty of honesty imposes an obligation on
the parties not to lie or knowingly mislead one another about matters directly
related to the performance of the contract. Ms. MacCarone asserts that the
Employer fell short of its responsibilities when it failed to respond to Mr. Tighe’s
request for information about the VEP.
[20] Ms. MacCarone also reiterated her earlier position that the VEP formed a part of
the employment contract between the Employer and the Complainant. Ms.
MacCarone argued Mr. Tighe was a longstanding employee and each new
endeavor should not be considered piecemeal, but as part of the whole. In her
submission, the contract falls under the relational theory of contract, which
although not fully described by her, I understand means that the focus should be
on the relationship between the parties rather than discrete transactions.
Therefore, due to the relational nature of the contract, Ms. MacCarone submitted
that the contract was formed at the outset and should be analysed to take into
account the ongoing nature of the employment relationship.
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[21] The submissions of the other complainants were very similar. The Berezowski
group complained that the approval process was neither fair nor transparent. They
were not provided any insight into the vague reasoning behind the denial of their
applications and they were not provided with any information regarding the criteria
or process for VEP approval. In their submission, the Employer failed to meet its
mandate to be fair, equitable and transparent. Ms. McDougall also claimed that the
decision-making process was not fair or transparent; she further claimed that the
Employer engaged in discrimination on the basis of age and disability when it
denied her request for VEP.
[22] Ms. Mezzera, Blaney and Jensen took the position that by accepting applications
for VEP, and approving some managers but not others, the terms and conditions
ending their employment with the OPS were directly affected. They argued that the
approval process was random, unfair, arbitrary, discriminatory and in bad faith, and
that they were subjected to differential treatment.
[23] Counsel on behalf of Ms. Dermott, Beach, Martin and Dolezel posited that the
Employer in this case is not an ordinary employer, but, as the Crown, has a special
duty to act with honesty and integrity and not to treat its employees in a
discriminatory or arbitrary manner, in bad faith or with caprice. In this case, the
Employer was not justified in granting the benefit of early retirement to some
employees but not others without a “bona fide business purpose”. By failing to
disclose the reasons for their denial, the Employer did not treat its employees fairly
and was capricious when it failed to provide a business justification for its decision.
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[24] Counsel further argued that it was the Employer’s failure to administer the pre-
existing contract that gives the Board jurisdiction. In his submission, characterising
the VEP as an invitation to treat is fundamentally at odds with the intentions of the
Public Service Act, which inherently requires the employer to administer the work
relationship in a manner that is in good faith and not discriminatory, arbitrary or
capricious. Therefore, it was submitted that it is always a term or condition of
employment in the Public Service that employees are treated fairly.
Employer Reply
[25] Counsel submitted that the arguments of the complainants focused on being
treated fairly and that they effectively suggest that the absence of evidence of good
faith shifts the assumption to bad faith, thereby giving the Board jurisdiction. In the
Employer’s submission, this argument turns the PSGB jurisprudence on its head.
Counsel argued that currently, the Board only takes jurisdiction to implement and
enforce the current terms and conditions of an excluded employee’s employment.
It does not review the decision-making process for good faith when the Employer
seeks to implement new terms and conditions. To find otherwise would be to
considerably expand the Board’s jurisdiction.
[26] The Employer also suggested that any review for good faith would be a moot
exercise because the Board lacks the jurisdiction to award the remedy requested.
The Board would be limited to ordering disclosure of the process by which the
decision was made to approve or deny, but the Board could not itself eliminate a
position and award the VEP entitlements to a complainant.
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Decision
[27] The PGSB has clearly defined jurisdictional limits and can only hear the full merits
of a complaint in the specific circumstances spelled out by the legislature. In this
case, section 4. (1) of Regulation 378/07 under the Public Service of Ontario Act
permits a public servant “who is aggrieved about a working condition or about a
term of his or her employment” to file a complaint with the Board. There are other
circumstances where employees can also file complaints, such as when they have
been dismissed or disciplined, however, they do not apply here. In order to
proceed, I must first be satisfied that the complaints allege a breach of a working
condition or term of employment; if not, the Board has no authority to issue a
decision or grant a remedy.
[28] The complainants argued that by announcing the VEP, the Employer has either
incorporated those terms and conditions into their current contract or established a
policy or directive that was implemented in an arbitrary and unfair manner. Mr.
Tighe, and some of the other complainants, stressed that this was an ongoing
employment contract and therefore the introduction of the VEP automatically
became embedded in their contract. On behalf of Mr. Tighe, the Board was
encouraged to focus on the relationship as a whole and not on discrete
transactions or elements of the employment relationship.
[29] The Employer maintains that there was no formal offer and acceptance of the VEP
and, therefore, no legally binding contract. The Employer compared the current
situation to a tender process, where one party actively seeks to solicit interest from
the other party before entering into a contract. As such, it argued that three basic
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elements must be completed: an invitation to treat or invitation to interested parties
to enter into discussions about a proposed contract; an offer by one party to enter a
contract on the terms set out in the invitation; and acceptance by the other party.
Only upon completion of all three elements have the parties entered into a legally
enforceable contract.
[30] Applying this contractual principle to the VEP, the Employer maintains that its
announcement was an ‘invitation to treat’ that merely explained the options
available to interested employees and invited them to indicate their interest in an
early departure from the OPS. New terms and conditions did not become a part of
their existing contract until an employee actually applied for the VEP and the
employer accepted their application. The initial communication was therefore pre-
contractual, soliciting interest based on a representation of included benefits.
However, prior to acceptance, there was no legally binding contract, as is evident
by the ability of employees to withdraw their offer at any point up to the point it was
accepted by the employer.
[31] The concept of ‘invitation to treat’ and the impact of pre-contractual representations
has been considered in the employment context, including in a collective
bargaining setting by Arbitrator Albertyn, in UHN v ONA, supra. The issue before
Arbitrator Albertyn was whether nurses who indicated that they were available for
weekend work were eligible for premium pay. He concluded that when employees
made themselves available to work overtime, if it was offered, they were making a
statement of intention akin to a pre-contractual representation. He compared that
representation to a pre-offer, without any legal consequence. The true ‘offer’ came
when the employer responded to the availability list and contacted the employee to
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come in to work overtime. The employee was free to decline, but once they
accepted the offer, they were obliged to attend work.
[32] While I do not think that the tender or ‘invitation to treat’ analogy is perfect, I agree
with the Employer that communicating the possibility of an early exit from the OPS
under the VEP did not introduce a legally enforceable term or condition of
employment into the complainants’ existing contracts. Similar to the reasoning of
Arbitrator Albertyn, I consider the announcement of the VEP to be a precontractual
representation. It is akin to exploratory discussions or negotiations without any
assurances by the Employer that it would agree to modify the contract of any
specific or individual employee. I appreciate that this is an ongoing employment
relationship and agree that I should therefore look at the contract as a whole.
Nonetheless, I am not persuaded that the nature of the relationship automatically
converts all opportunities into a revision of an employee’s existing terms and
conditions of employment. I must still determine whether the pre-contractual
representation, when the Employer communicated who was eligible to apply for the
VEP, amounted to a legally binding commitment.
[33] Applying the required contract analysis to the facts in this case, I find that there is
no formal offer and acceptance, which are essential to the formation of a valid
contract, until a VEP request is approved. When it initially issued its memo to
eligible employees, the Employer communicated the possibility that it might, in
limited, but largely undefined circumstances, accept an offer by employees to
voluntarily exit the OPS in return for an enhanced severance package. Nothing
crystallised as a binding term of the employment contract, however, until the offer
was accepted by the Employer. Indeed, there was no unequivocal offer by the
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employee before then; employees remained free to withdraw their application at
any point before it was accepted. This further reinforces my conclusion that a new,
legally enforceable term of the contract is only created when the Employer accepts
an employee’s offer.
[34] While the Board has previously determined that the phrase ‘working condition or
term of employment’ should be accorded a broad and liberal interpretation: Kanga,
supra. The PSGB has distinguished between existing and new terms and
conditions of employment and relied on that distinction as a central consideration in
analysing whether it has jurisdiction to hear a complaint. As reviewed in further
detail in the cases excerpts that follow, it has consistently held that:
a. It can only intervene where there is an alleged breach or violation of an
existing term or condition of employment; and
b. It does not have jurisdiction where there is only a general allegation of
unfairness or where the claim seeks the imposition of a new term or
condition.
[35] In Ransome, supra, the complainant took issue with his wage rate, which was less
than those promoted after him. The Board concluded that, while unfortunate, this
disparity did not constitute a breach of any term or condition of the complainant’s
employment. Vice Chair O’Neil concluded as follows, at p. 7:
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
of law. … 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
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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 employment, rather
than awarding a remedy for the breach of an existing term or condition of
employment.
[36] Similarly, in Garratt, supra, a group of nurses complained of salary and benefit
disparities between their classification and that of the Registered Nurses that
reported to them. The Board found that although the phrase ‘working condition or
term of employment’ was to be given a broad and liberal interpretation in
accordance with the decision in Kanga, supra, it does not give the Board the
authority to set the terms and conditions of manager’s employment or offer its
opinion of whether the contract is ‘fair’.
[37] Finally, in MacDonald et al., supra, the Board dealt with complaints regarding the
rate of pay for Operational Managers in a correctional facility. The complainants
requested that they be placed at a top level of the pay grid and granted a 14%
additional increase to their base rate of pay. The employer raised a preliminary
objection, arguing that there was no breach of a term or condition of employment.
The Board reviewed previous decisions of the Board and determined that there
was no evidence of any “policy, legislation, practice or other term or condition of
employment that was in force at the time of the complaints which provides for the
complainants to be paid in the manner they seek.” The Board concluded, at p.5,
that:
As noted in earlier decisions of this Board, in order for the Board to be able to
award a remedy to a complainant, there must first be an existing term or
condition of employment related to the facts complained of, something that is part
of the complainant’s contract of employment. This is something more than the
belief that something is unfair, no matter how deeply held. Secondly, there must
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be a breach of that term or condition of employment, and thirdly, there must be a
link between that breach and a remedy that the Board is empowered to give.
[38] If the VEP was not an existing term of their contract, the complainants suggested
that the Employer established a policy or directive that became a working condition
when it announced the VEP. I do not agree. Although the Board has taken
jurisdiction over complaints that allege that the employer has not properly applied
its own policies and directives, it has only done so where there was evidence that a
clearly articulated policy, committed to by the Employer, has been breached.
[39] In Scott, supra, at p. 24, Vice Chair Lynk determined that “an employment policy
introduced by the employer became a ‘working condition or term of employment’
when it was intended as an employment commitment and is generally applied as
such.” He went on to conclude that the policy at issue in that case was introduced
as a commitment not to do certain things, that the employer had applied the policy
since it was introduced and had not formally withdrawn or altered it. The Vice
Chair further noted that counsel for the Ministry did not challenge the grievor’s
characterisation of the policy as a working condition or term of employment and, in
those circumstances, he accepted it as such.
[40] Having considered the submissions of the parties and the only document from
which a policy could be derived, I am not persuaded that the Employer intended to
introduce a policy or directive that bound them to a specific process by which the
VEP would be decided and communicated. It certainly did not articulate the kind of
process that the complainants are seeking. When it announced the VEP, the
Employer made virtually no commitment, beyond reviewing applications to consider
whether an employee’s departure would support the transformation of the OPS. It
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reserved for itself the sole discretion to approve all applications, setting out a very
broad and largely undefined basis upon which it would make that decision. Nor did
it commit to communicating with applicants, beyond advising them if their
application was successful.
[41] Even if I were to generally accept that the VEP was a policy over which the Board
had jurisdiction, this is ultimately a complaint about what was not included. The
complainants have not identified any specific breaches of the policy or said that the
Employer failed to honour commitments that it made to them. The focus of the
complainants’ concern is that the Employer failed to do more than it promised: it did
not lay out defined criteria for the exercise of its discretion or provide transparency
in the decision-making process by providing reasons.
[42] Nor is there any other established policy or practice, statute or regulation that
codifies the elements of the VEP that the complainants allege have been
improperly applied. The Employer conceded that the Board would have jurisdiction
to review implementation of the VEP once an application was approved and has
jurisdiction to review alleged breaches of the Human Rights Code. However, there
is no existing term or condition of employment that entitles the complainants to an
approval process that includes disclosure of the criteria or reasons for the
Employer’s decision.
[43] Counsel for one group of intervenors raised the argument that it was always a term
or condition of employment in the Public Service that employees will be treated
fairly, in good faith and without discrimination or caprice; no cases were cited to
support this assertion. Having reviewed all of the cases that were submitted to me,
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I cannot find any suggestion that there is a general duty of fairness owed to
employees in all circumstances. In my view, that would be inconsistent with the
clear limitations set out in PSOA and the jurisprudence of this Board.
[44] The Board has held that a duty of fairness arises in very specific circumstances.
For example, in Cardoza, supra, the Board followed earlier cases that determined
that the employer had a duty to treat a complainant fairly where they were accused
of a serious breach of the Human Rights Code. However, it did not go so far as to
find that there was a general duty to treat employees “fairly”, in the broad sense, or
that it had a duty to respond to all inquiries in a timely manner.
[45] Nor, in my view, does Harris et al, supra, stand for the proposition that ‘fairness’
required the employer to respond to Mr. Tighe’s inquiries. The Board in Harris
found that the employer had directly communicated with the grievor to advise him
that his rate of pay would be adjusted. In that circumstance, the Vice Chair
determined that the new rate of pay had arguably become a term and condition of
employment and that the Board therefore had jurisdiction to hear the complaint.
The Board did not find that there was a stand-alone entitlement to a response from
the employer.
[46] Mr. Tighe pointed out that he was not in a position to know whether the Employer’s
decision was fair or arbitrary because he had not been provided with adequate
disclosure of the reason for his denial. The issue of lack of transparency and
inability to determine whether the employer acted in bad faith was previously
addressed by the Board in Garratt, supra. While understandably frustrating for the
Complainant, I agree with the following statement, at p. 11, made by, then, Vice
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Chair O’Neil that this does not, in itself, confer jurisdiction on the Board if it does
not relate to an existing term or condition of employment:
… the nub of the problem is the perceived lack of transparency and disclosure as to the
mechanism and rationale for the establishment of managerial compensation. In the
absence of knowledge of what is transpiring about pay and compensation issues, the
grievors are left wondering if there has been bad faith or not. These concerns appear
inseparable from the portion of the grievance which asks for the development of a
mechanism which provides for a fair and equitable means to assess and communicate
managerial wages and benefits. Although the Board can readily understand the grievors’
desire to have a more transparent process, this latter element appears to be limited to
dissatisfaction with the current method of setting and communicating wages, leading to a
request that the Board establish a new process for setting and communicating wages.
This portion of the grievance is beyond the jurisdiction of the Board as is it is seeking the
establishment of new terms and conditions of employment, rather than the enforcement
of existing ones. If the allegation were that there already was a term or condition of
employment providing a process for setting and communicating wages that had not been
applied to the grievors, or had been applied in bad faith, that would be another matter.
[47] This is not to say that the complainants’ concerns are intemperate. I fully
understand their concerns. They were advised that their employer was offering an
enhanced severance plan but they were never told what criteria would be used to
determine who would be approved. Nor have they been provided a detailed
explanation that would allow them to understand what factors were considered
when the Employer decided to deny their request. Nonetheless, the terms of the
legislation that governs the Board’s jurisdiction only permits us to review
complaints regarding certain matters. The Board has long interpreted these
provisions as extending to a review of existing terms or conditions of employment.
In keeping with a long line of cases issued by the Board, I have determined that
this does not include jurisdiction over prospective terms or conditions.
[48] My conclusion is also consistent with the Board’s limited remedial authority. The
PSGB cannot create a new term or condition of employment, including those that
alter compensation or eliminate positions. Ultimately, that is what is being sought
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in this case. I agree with the submission of the Employer that even if the Board
assumed jurisdiction over the fairness of the process, it does not have the ability to
approve a VEP request. That would involve setting new terms of compensation
and require the elimination of the departing employee’s position. Many of the
complainants have retired and are no longer the incumbents in the positions that
would be eliminated. For those that have remained in the OPS, the Board would
still be amending the terms of their existing contract.
[49] I have also considered whether the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in
Bhasin and Hrynew, supra, in any way alters the Board’s previously decided cases
that it only has jurisdiction to hear cases alleging a violation of an existing term or
condition of employment, but cannot hear cases relying solely on a general claim of
unfair treatment.
[50] The primary question that the Court addressed in Bhasin was whether “Canadian
common law imposes a duty on parties to perform their contractual obligations
honestly?” It answered that question in the affirmative and recognized that good
faith contractual performance is a general organizing principle of the common law
of contracts. The Court further confirmed that there was a general expectation that
parties “perform their contractual duties honestly and reasonably and not
capriciously or arbitrarily.” The Court cautioned, however, that there were limits to
this duty:
“there was a general duty of honesty in contractual performance. This means simply
that parties must not lie or knowingly mislead each other about matters directly linked
to the performance of the contract. This does not impose a duty of loyalty or of
disclosure or require a party to forego advantages flowing from the contract; it is
simply a requirement not to lie or mislead the other party about one’s contractual
performance.” (para 73)
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[51] In arriving at its conclusion, the Court in Bhasin affirmed its previous findings in
Honda Canada Inc. v. Keays, 2008 SCC 39, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 362 where it had
already determined that there was a duty of good faith in the employment context.
The Court noted, however, that the duty imposed on the employer in Keays, was
“not to engage in conduct that is ‘unfair or is in bad faith by being, for example,
untruthful, misleading, or unduly insensitive’ when dismissing an employee …
Good faith in this context did not extend to the employer’s reasons for terminating
the contract of employment because this would undermine the right of an employer
to determine the composition of its workforce”.
[52] I have decided that the Bhasin decision does not expand the Board’s jurisdiction,
primarily for three reasons. First, the limitation on the Board’s jurisdiction to
circumstances where there is a complaint about a ‘working condition or term of
employment’ is a statutory condition precedent embedded in our enabling statute.
The PSGB can only hear cases that are assigned to it under PSOA, which, for the
purposes of this case, is what restricts the Board to cases that engage a working
condition or term of employment. Although the Board is required to interpret the
scope of our authority, we do not have any inherent jurisdiction or capacity to
enlarge it. Nothing in Bhasin suggests that there is a free-standing condition or
term of employment that would permit review of the Employer’s decision in this
case.
[53] Second, I am satisfied that the principle enunciated in Bhasin, at least at this stage
of the evolution of the law of contract, is restricted to the manner in which terms of
an existing contract are fulfilled; it has not yet been extended to “contracting” per se
to include all aspects of the relationship between contracting parties, such as
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negotiations for new or amended terms of the contract. The Court was clear that,
although the reasonable expectations of the parties were to be considered, the
general principles were to be applied after the contract was formed, with respect to
the performance of the established contract. It did not extend to negotiations or
consideration of prospective terms.
[54] Third, the focus of the Court in Bhasin was on honest performance of the contract
and ensuring that parties to a contract did not lie or mislead one another. None of
the complainants in this case suggest that the Employer lied or mislead them. Nor
do they suggest that the Employer withheld information that they relied upon when
they decided to request VEP or leave the OPS. They are merely seeking
information related to the decision-making process so that they can understand
why the Employer denied their requests. Although perfectly understandable, there
is nothing in the existing terms of their contract, the VEP announcement or the
principles set out in Bhasin that entitles them to that information. Nothing in the
caselaw or the commitments made by the Employer requires that it reply to the
request for information. The employer cannot lie or mislead if they do provide an
answer to an employee’s request for information, but they are under no obligation
to respond.
[55] For all of these reasons, I have found that the Board does not have jurisdiction to
hear complaints about the Employer’s denial of VEP, except on the narrow basis
that the denial was in contravention of the Ontario Human Rights Code or some
other legislation. The Employer’s preliminary motion is allowed and Mr. Tighe’s
complaint is dismissed.
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[56] With respect to the other outstanding complaints, Ms. McDougall and Ms. Dermott,
Beach, Martin and Dolezel have all alleged discrimination, on various prohibited
grounds under the Ontario Human rights Code, and those aspects of their
complaints will proceed in the normal course. They can also address the Board at
that time on any other aspect of their complaint, in light of this decision.
[57] The Berezowski and Mezzera groups did not allege Code based discrimination and
are directed to contact the Board to advise whether they intend to proceed with
their complaints in light of this decision.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 2nd day of June, 2020.
“Reva Devins”
________________________
Reva Devins, Arbitrator