HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2017-3151.Tremblay et al.20-07-09 Decision
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Grievance Board
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Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
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PSGB# P-2017-3151; P-2017-3253; P-2017-3254; P-2017-3346; P-2017-3348;
P-2017-3349; P-2017-3350; P-2017-3732; P-2017-3733; P-2017-3734; P-2017-3735;
P-2017-3794; P-2017-3795
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Tremblay et al Complainant
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry) Employer
BEFORE Andrew Tremayne Vice Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Eric Tremblay
FOR THE EMPLOYER
SUBMISSIONS
Thomas Ayers
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
Written submissions completed on June
12, 2020
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with a preliminary objection raised by the employer concerning
complaints filed by 13 senior managers in the Aviation Services Section of the Ministry
of Natural Resources and Forestry. The employer takes the position that the Board has
no jurisdiction to deal with the complaints because they are essentially about the
complainants’ job classification, and the Board lacks jurisdiction over complaints of this
nature. The complainants disagree, saying that the issue is the removal of their salary
allowances and that their complaints should be heard on the merits.
[2] This is the second preliminary objection raised by the employer concerning the Board’s
jurisdiction to hear and determine these complaints. The first objection was about the
timeliness of the complaints, and the Board dismissed that objection in a decision dated
February 4, 2020: Tremblay et al. v. Ontario (Ministry of Natural Resources and
Forestry), 2020 CanLII 20407 (ON PSGB). Following the release of that decision, the
parties agreed that the Board would rule on the employer’s second preliminary
objection based on written submissions, and these were exchanged following an
agreed schedule.
[3] In addition, the parties agreed that at the same time they exchanged written
submissions on the employer’s second preliminary objection, they would also exchange
written submissions on the employer’s alternative argument on the merits of the
complaints. That argument, briefly, is that the complainants have not identified a term
or condition of their employment that has been breached by the employer and that the
removal of the salary allowances (as it has been described by the complainants) does
not amount to a breach of their terms and conditions of employment.
[4] The employer acknowledges that it bears the onus to demonstrate that the complaints
should be dismissed without a hearing on the merits. For reasons which are set out
below, the employer’s second preliminary objection to the Board’s jurisdiction to hear
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and determine these complaints is dismissed. The complainants bear the onus of
demonstrating that there was a breach of the terms and conditions of their employment,
and the Board’s decision on the merits of the complaints will be dealt with in a separate
decision.
Background to the Complaints
[5] A summary of the principal facts helps provide the context for this decision. In 2014,
the complainants started to receive a special salary allowance, which the employer
introduced because Aviation Services was experiencing a retention and recruitment
problem. They were paid the salary allowance over and above the normal salary that
applied to their classification. The details are set out in Management Board of
Cabinet Directive 33-51 under the PSOA 2006, titled Directive for the Creation of
Salary Allowances and Related Payments (dated January 27, 2014).
[6] According to documents from the employer, a salary allowance is an approved
pensionable amount paid in addition to an employee’s basic salary rate and under
certain conditions. It is paid bi-weekly and is subject to all deductions, including
pension contributions. It is included in calculating benefits but not included in
transactions arising from a change in status (e.g. promotion) and not included in pay
for performance calculations.
[7] In late 2018, the employer implemented the Management Job Evaluation Project
(MJEP). The main objective of MJEP is to standardize job descriptions for managers
who are in similar roles across the Ontario Public Service. MJEP was implemented
along with a new compensation plan for managers, which reduced the total number of
classification levels and salary ranges. The overall effect was a complete
reconstruction of the compensation system for managers, including the complainants.
The details are set out in Management Board of Cabinet Directive 33-66 under the
PSOA 2006, titled Directive for the Creation of Classes of Position, Salary Ranges,
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Remuneration and Transition for Middle Managers (dated November 15, 2016, and
reissued on September 12, 2017, and March 20, 2018).
[8] In practical terms, MJEP was used to determine the classification level of all
managerial positions in the new system. Managers were then assigned to a new
“class of position,” each of which has a salary range. A manager’s “pre-MJEP” salary
was used to determine their placement on the new salary ranges, and rules for pay
administration were devised and set out in the Directive to assist with the placement.
For example, if a manager’s “pre-MJEP” salary was below the minimum of the salary
range in effect for the manager’s new class of position, the manager would be placed
at the minimum of the new class of position; if the “pre-MJEP” salary were greater
than the maximum of the salary range for the manager’s new class of position, the
manager’s salary would not increase until the maximum caught up to the manager’s
salary.
[9] The Directive also says that if a manager received a salary allowance, it was to be
included in the “pre-MJEP” salary, effectively rolling it into a manager’s base salary,
and that going forward, the manager would no longer be eligible for a salary
allowance. This provision is of particular relevance to the complainants, because they
had been entitled to receive a salary allowance since 2014. Moreover, the salary
allowance was always paid in addition to their regular salary and was shown as a
separate “line item” in the complainants’ biweekly pay stub.
[10] The complainants frame their complaint as the “removal” of their salary allowance.
They argue that by including the amount of salary allowance in the calculation of the
“pre-MJEP” salary, the employer’s new compensation system has worked to their
financial disadvantage. Instead, the employer ought to have transitioned them to the
new system without consideration of the salary allowance, then placed them in the
appropriate salary range based solely on their base salary. The salary allowance
should be added to their total compensation at the end, argue the complainants, as it
was before MJEP was implemented.
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Statutory Framework
[11] It is useful to briefly review the Board’s statutory framework to place the employer’s
preliminary objection in context.
[12] The Board only has the powers granted by the Public Service of Ontario Act and the
regulations made under that legislation, notably Regulation 378/07, which states as
follows:
4. (1) Subject to subsection (2), a public servant who is aggrieved
about a working condition or about a term of his or her employment
may file a complaint about the working condition or the term of
employment with the Public Service Grievance Board,
. . . .
(2) The following matters cannot be the subject of a complaint
about a working condition or about a term of employment:
1. The term or duration of the public servant’s appointment to
employment by the Crown.
2. The assignment of the public servant to a particular class of
position.
3. A dismissal without cause under subsection 38(1) of the Act or
a matter relating to such a dismissal.
4. The evaluation of a public servant’s performance or the method
of evaluating his or her performance.
5. The compensation provided to or denied to a public servant as
a result of the evaluation of his or her performance.
[emphasis added]
[13] In the Board’s jurisprudence, “class of position” has been interpreted as a reference to
the class, or classification, to which an employee has been assigned and which
determines, among other things, their pay range. That is, subsection 4(2)2 has been
understood to remove from the Board’s jurisdiction complaints about being assigned
to a specific classification. In other words, if a complainant is seeking a declaration
from the Board that they have been assigned to the wrong classification, then the
matter would be outside the Board’s jurisdiction.
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[14] For example, the Board dismissed a complaint where it was alleged that the employer
had violated its Pay on Assignment Policy when it did not give the complainant a
promotional increase. In Ilika v Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional
Services), 2014 CanLII 76834 (ON PSGB), the complainant had been awarded a new
job with additional responsibilities, although he remained in the same job class. He
alleged that certain other employees were paid at a higher rate, creating an imbalance
and an environment of resentment. Among other things, the complainant asked the
Board to award him a 5% retroactive raise and to move him in the salary grid to an
amount equal to his colleagues who did the same work.
[15] The employer, in that case, argued that the complaint should be dismissed without a
hearing on the merits because the complaint did not make out a viable or prima facie
case for the remedies claimed and because the Board had no authority to grant them.
The Board observed as follows:
[19] In order to have a potentially successful grievance, there must be a
term or condition of the complainant's employment, a breach by the employer,
and a remedy connected to the breach that is within the Board's statutory
power to give. It is my finding that the complainant's arguments and materials
do not provide a sufficient basis for the complaint to succeed, even accepting
the facts he asserts to be true, such as that he has increased responsibilities,
or that others are paid more to do the same or very similar work. What is
lacking is any facts that make out a possible breach, as well as that the Board
does not have the jurisdiction to decide that the complainant ought to be paid
more, unless there is a contractual term requiring that he be paid more.
It was undisputed that the complainant’s classification had not changed, and that the
definition of “promotion” in the Pay on Assignment Policy required the employee to be
assigned to a position in a class with a higher salary range maximum. In other words,
the relevant Policy had been correctly appplied, so there was no viable legal argument
that it had been breached. Further, to the extent that the complainant felt that he
should be paid on par with employees in other classifications, the complaint was
essentially about the job class to which the complainant had been assigned. Thus,
even accepting the facts asserted in the complaint to be true and provable, the case
could not succeed. The Board dismissed the complaint because it did not make out a
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viable or prima facie case for the remedies claimed, which in any case were outside
the Board’s jurisdiction to award.
[16] The Board has reached a similar conclusion where it has found that the substance of
a complaint is “pay for performance,” which is another matter that cannot be the
subject of a complaint before the Board as set out in subsection 4(2)5 of Regulation
378/07. In Smith et al. v. Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional
Services), 2014 CanLII 48098 (ON PSGB), the complainants alleged unfair, unequal,
and inequitable treatment by the employer as a result of a pay freeze. The source of
the alleged unfairness was that some employees, who were already at the maximum
of the pay grid at the end of the previous fiscal year, had received lump-sum
payments while the complainants had not. The remedy sought by complaints was
more pay. The Board, finding that the essence of the complaint was the denial of pay
for performance as a result of the pay freeze, dismissed the complaint as beyone its
jurisdiction. See also Berenbaum v. Ontario (Ministry of Labour), 2011 CanLII 23299
(ON PSGB), where the Board found that the portions of the complaint that related to
the complainant’s pay for performance were not within its jurisdiction, even if the
complainant could show that the employer had erred in the amounts that it had paid to
him.
[17] The Board will always look carefully at the substance of a complaint, however, and
while a complaint may be dismissed without a hearing on the merits, the basis for that
outcome is not always rooted in the Board’s jurisdiction. For example, where a
complaint was for stand-by pay, which was not a term or condition of employment that
applied to the complainants but which did apply to other classifications, the Board
rejected the employer’s argument that the complaint concerned the classification of
the complainants. In that recent decision (Johnston et al. v. Ontario (Community
Safety and Correctional Services), 2019 CanLII 65197 (ON PSGB)), the Board said
the following:
[36] In this case, the complainants are not suggesting they should be
assigned to a different classification. They are disputing one aspect of their
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remuneration, relating to on-call or stand-by duties. Employer counsel
accurately observes that the remedy claimed, insofar as it relates to a claim for
stand-by pay pursuant to the compensation directive, is a claim for a provision
pertaining to a different classification. This fact has consequences which will
be discussed below, but does not turn this complaint into a complaint about the
"assignment to a particular class of position". Assignment to a different class of
position would entail a change to all the terms and conditions of employment of
the alternate classification, rather than just one.
While the Board in Johnston went on to dismiss the complaint because it did not make
out a viable or prima facie case for the remedies claimed, the Board nevertheless
found that the complaint fell within its jurisdiction and dealt with it on its merits.
[18] Finally, not all complaints that touch on other aspects of classification are outside the
Board’s jurisdiction. For example, subsection 4(2)2 has not been read to exclude
from the Board’s jurisdiction complaints about being assigned work that is alleged to
be outside of one’s own classification during an on-call rotation. See, for example,
Hasted/Berezowsky v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2015
CanLII 7473 (ON PSGB); Courchesne-Godin et al v. Ontario (Children and Youth
Services), 2017 CanLII 89957 (ON PSGB), Doyle v Ontario (Municipal Affairs and
Housing), 2018 CanLII 109219 (ON PSGB), and Boucher v. Ontario (Community
Safety and Correctional Services), 2018 CanLII 119631 (ON PSGB).
Submissions and Analysis
[19] The employer argues that the complaints are disguised classification grievances. As
such, the complaints are outside the Board’s jurisdiction, and they should be
dismissed without a hearing on the merits. By objecting to how their compensation is
now provided and administered, the complainants are attempting to create an
opportunity for an increase to their total compensation package. In essence, submits
the employer, the complainants are attempting to move themselves to a higher
classification (with a correspondingly higher salary range) and create an increase in
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their potential total compensation package without directly asking the Board to review
and change their classification.
[20] Further, the employer points to the extensive submissions made by the complainants
in two areas: the reduction in their compensation as a result of the removal of the
salary allowance, and the unique attributes of the positions that they hold as
managers in Aviation Services. These submissions also show that the complaints
are, in essence, about the complainants’ classification, argues the employer.
[21] On the first point, the complainants allege that they have been denied merit increases,
pay for performance, salary progression, and have lost pensionable earnings. Some
of them have also been red-circled, and will not be eligible for further salary increases
until the salary range catches up to their red-circled salary. The Board should
conclude from these passages that the complaints are entirely related to
compensation. The complainants are attempting to achieve the result of creating an
increase to their potential total compensation package without asking directly to be
reclassified, the employer submits, but by asking the Board to change the structure of
their compensation package they will achieve the same result, which the Board is not
empowered to do.
[22] As to the uniqueness of the complainants’ positions, the employer highlights the
sections of the complaints that describe how no other manager in the same
classification as the complainants could qualify for their positions, due to the extensive
requirements imposed by Transport Canada. At the same time, submits the
employer, the complainants say that they would be qualified to apply for any other
vacancy that occurred in the managerial ranks. The only conclusion that can be
drawn from these and similar statements in the complaint, the employer argues, is
that the complainants believe that they have been improperly classified. Changing the
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complainants’ classification or their salary range is a remedy that the Board does not
have the jurisdiction to award, submits the employer.
[23] The employer argues that the facts in this case are analogous to the facts that were
before the Board in Ilika, where the complainant alleged that he had been improperly
denied a pay increase after he was promoted. In that decision, the Board found that
the essence of the complainant’s argument was that he should be paid more because
his new position came with increased responsibilities. Similarly, the core of the
Aviation Managers’ complaints is that the removal of the salary allowance has
reduced their future earnings and placed many of them in a position where they are
red-circled.
[24] The complainants submit that they have never alleged that they are improperly
classified. They recognize that they cannot be in a higher classification than their
superiors, who are already at the maximum for their organization. This is not a new
scenario, however, and it was one of the reasons for the salary allowance: it allowed
the hierarchy to be preserved while addressing the broader staffing issues, namely
the retention and recruitment problem in Aviation Services, which is not in dispute.
The salary allowances were “outside” the classification, which meant that the unique
attributes of the managers’ positions could be recognized and compensated, although
they were still classified in a way that respected reporting relationships and the
hierarchy.
[25] Further, the complainants point out that there is a separate process under MJEP to
address concerns about classification. Classification appeals under MJEP are a
stand-alone issue over which the Board has no influence. The purpose of the
complaints has only ever been to address the removal of the salary allowance. Still, it
is not possible to understand the complainants’ position without referring to MJEP and
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the classification process. These references were provided for context and not to
portray the complaints as classification grievances, submit the complainants.
[26] The information about the uniqueness of the managers’ positions was provided to
show that the positions are required by Transport Canada and that special
considerations apply to them, the complainants submit. It is simply a fact that other
managers in the OPS could not be appointed by Transport Canada to one of the key
positions. The complaints before the Board are not about placement in classifications
and they are not about assigned duties. The only thing at issue is that the salary
allowance was part of the complainants’ terms and conditions of employment and now
it is not, argue the complainants.
[27] The issue to be decided is whether the complaints are essentially about the
complainants’ job classification, which is something that subsection 4(2)2 has
removed from the Board’s jurisdiction. Although several years have passed since the
complaints were filed with the Board, it is helpful to return to them briefly before
turning to the parties’ submissions on the employer’s preliminary objection.
[28] Other than the identity of the complainants, the substance of all 13 complaints is very
similar, and after they were filed, the Board ordered that the complaints would be
heard together. In these proceedings, Mr. Tremblay, who has been the Chief Rotary
Wing Pilot in Aviation Services since April 2014, has “taken the lead” in presenting
submissions on behalf of all of the complainants. As a result, and although most of
the key elements of all 13 complaints are very similar if not identical, I will focus on
and use excerpts from Mr. Tremblay’s complaint, the substance of which is attached
as “Appendix A” to his Form 1.
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[29] As noted by the employer, Mr. Tremblay’s complaint sets out the unique attributes of
his position, which is Chief Rotary Wing Pilot. It also describes in detail the direct
effect of the removal of the salary allowance on Mr. Tremblay’s income. Having
carefully reviewed all of the complaints as well as the parties’ submissions on the
employer’s preliminary objection, I find that it is more accurate to characterize these
parts of the complaints as information that provides history, context, and/or colour.
For example, it would have been extremely difficult for Mr. Tremblay to explain to the
Board why the removal of the salary allowance is of concern to him without describing
how it came to be implemented in the first place, and a significant part of that story is
directly connected to the uniqueness of the positions held by the complainants. It is
also fair to say that Mr. Tremblay is entitled to describe for the Board the financial
hardship that he alleges has ensued. In my view, none of this information has the
effect of transforming the complaints into classifications grievances.
[30] The substance or “nub” of the complaint is set out elsewhere and described very
differently, however:
7. The premise of my complaint is simply that all of the calculations
regarding my compensation structure as it relates to placement in the new pay
grid should have been calculated in isolation from my salary allowance. My
position as Chief Pilot Remains unchanged as it was described in all the
supporting Salary Allowance documents provided to me on my appointment to
this position.
. . .
10. It has been suggested to me that the Venue for this complaint is to rely
on the MJEP appeal process that may or may not be available to me sometime
after May. Although I agree that this may be the process for appealing my
placement on the new Grid I contend that the Salary Allowance is not
associated with my MJEP placement as it is to be paid "in addition" to my
Salary whatever it may be.
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In these paragraphs, it is clear the complainants are not asking the Board to decide
whether their current classifications are correct or to assign them to a different
classification. Rather, the focus is clearly on the significance of the salary allowance
in the complainants overall terms and conditions of employment and its removal.
[31] MJEP is also mentioned extensively in the complaints. It is not disputed that the main
objective of MJEP is to standardize job descriptions for managers who are in similar
roles across the Ontario Public Service and that the overall effect was a complete
reconstruction of the compensation system for managers, including the complainants.
MJEP is a job evaluation system, and the substance of the complaints is not that the
complainants’ jobs were incorrectly assessed or not measured properly. Nor are the
complainants seeking to have all of the terms and conditions of employment of
another classification apply to them. Rather, the only matter at issue is whether the
salary allowance forms part of the complainants’ terms and conditions of employment,
and if so, whether the employer has breached those terms and conditions by
removing it. The salary allowances were removed as a result of the MJEP process,
and describing this undisputed fact in the complaints, even at length, does not
transform them into classification grievances.
[32] Having carefully considered the parties submissions, I find that the facts, in this case,
are very similar to those in Johnston et al., where the Board found that disputing one
aspect of one’s remuneration did not turn a complaint into a complaint about “the
assignment to a particular class of position.” Here, the complainants are disputing the
removal of the salary allowance. They are not asking the Board to decide whether
their current classifications are correct or to assign them to a different classification.
Disposition
[33] To summarize, having carefully considered the evidence and the submissions of the
parties, the complaints are not classifications grievances which would be beyond the
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Board’s jurisdiction. The employer’s second preliminary objection is dismissed, and
the matter will be addressed by the Board on the merits.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 9th day of July, 2020.
“Andrew Tremayne”
_______________________
Andrew Tremayne, Vice-Chair