HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2019-1829.Bowmaster et al.20-12-21 Decision
Public Service
Grievance Board
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
PSGB# P-2019-1829, P-2019-1891, P-2019-1892, P-2019-1932, P-2019-1953, P-2019-2026,
P-2019-2088, P-2019-2089, P-2019-2090, P-2019-2156
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Bowmaster, Lessel, Lessel, Dalton, Narburgh,
Dwyer, Cartwright, Tomlinson, Reay, Kloosterman Complainant
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General)
(Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE Marilyn A. Nairn Vice Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANTS
Self Represented
Andrea Wobick (Counsel)
(Representative for Complainant Dwyer)
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Ursel Phillips Fellows Hopkinson LLP
Peter Dailleboust (Senior Counsel)
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
SUBMISSIONS Written representations received on August
26, September 30, and October 22, 2020
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Decision
[1] In an interim decision dated April 16, 2020, the Board noted as follows:
Each of these complaints challenges the Employer’s treatment of the complainant
in respect of their performance rating and the associated compensation. Although
the factual bases in each case differ somewhat, the complaints essentially all
assert that, having conducted a performance evaluation of the complainant, the
Employer then improperly changed that performance rating to the detriment of
each complainant. The alleged reasons for the Employer’s actions vary but include
allegations that the Employer acted in a manner that was arbitrary, discriminatory,
and/or in bad faith. Some of the complaints specifically make allegations of
discrimination under the Human Rights Code.
In each case, and relying on sub-paragraphs 4 and 5 of section 4(2) of Ontario
Regulation 378/07, the Employer takes the preliminary position that the Board has
no jurisdiction to entertain the complaint and seeks to have each complaint
dismissed without an inquiry into its merits.
[2] That decision consolidated the hearing of these ten complaints at least for the
purposes of determining the preliminary objection as to the scope of the Board’s
jurisdiction. It provided a timetable for the receipt of the complainants’ and the Employer’s
will-say statements and supporting documentary material in respect of the preliminary
issue. A subsequent decision dated July 31, 2020 established a timetable for the receipt
of the parties’ submissions. This process was utilized in response to the inability to
conduct in-person hearings due to Covid-19 restrictions and therefore it took some
months to receive the parties’ full materials and submissions.
[3] This decision deals with the preliminary issue as to the scope of the Board’s
jurisdiction to entertain these complaints.
[4] In dealing with the preliminary issue, the focus is on the nature of the complaints,
and I assume that the facts asserted by the complainants are true and provable. There
may be little dispute as to what actually occurred in each case, although the
characterization of those facts is in dispute. Many of the submissions received by the
Board are virtually identical. The complainants are all managers who work in various
managerial capacities within the Ministry of the Solicitor General and in one case, with
the Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services.
[5] Factually, the complaints (with the exception of one) assert that the complainant
received a performance review from their immediate manager, rating their performance
as either “Effective-Meets All Expectations” or “Outstanding”. That performance review
process is set out in the Employer’s Employee Performance Policy (“EPP”). A rating at
these levels attracts a merit pay increase pursuant to the Merit Pay Policy for Individual
Contributors (“MPP”).
[6] In each of those cases, it is asserted that the performance rating determined by
the immediate manager was subsequently changed and downgraded by someone at a
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higher management level without input from either the immediate manager or the
employee. In one complaint (Bowmaster), it is not clear whether a review was conducted,
but the complaint asserts that the ultimate performance rating was lower than expected,
again resulting in no award of merit pay. All of the complaints assert that a lower rating
of “Effective-Meets Most Expectations” was inappropriately assigned. That rating results
in no award of merit pay.
[7] The complaints also all assert that the Employer failed to comply with its own EPP
by, inter alia, failing to advise the complainant of any performance concerns; failing to
conduct regular performance meetings as contemplated by the policy; and/or by failing to
provide feedback, mentoring, supervision, and/or support in respect of any performance
issues; and by failing to adhere to the immediate manager’s assessment as the person
directed by the policy to perform that assessment. Some of the complaints speak to the
application of a ‘bell curve’ being applied after the immediate manager’s assessment, a
review alleged to have been dependent solely on the scope and detail of the immediate
manager’s written comments. The complaints assert that the process was conducted in
a manner that was arbitrary, discriminatory and in bad faith. As one complainant
asserted:
The “new” rating methods introduced for this performance cycle were intended to
reward excellence and be individually based, but the use of a bell curve has
essentially changed this system to a lottery.
[8] A number of the complaints also assert that the Employer violated its Code of
Conduct and Professionalism Policy (“COCAP”) when the complainant was advised that
“no one would receive a ‘Meets All’ rating” and that this information was conveyed prior
to any meeting assessing performance. The implication being asserted is that the
Employer acted in an arbitrary fashion, making blanket determinations as to performance
prior to any individual assessment of actual performance. These complaints assert that
the Employer acted in violation of the principles established in COCAP, creating an
unhealthy work environment.
[9] It is asserted that the lower rating affects not only monetary compensation
including pension, but also opportunities for advancement and development
opportunities.
[10] Seven of the complaints also allege a violation of the Ontario Human Rights Code
(the “Code”). The prohibited grounds relied on vary and are individual to each
complainant.
[11] The complaints variously seek a number of remedies, including a determination
that the Employer’s practice of limiting the number of employees who may receive a
particular rating is biased, unfair, and in contravention of legislation and policy; oversight
of future performance assessments; compensation for human rights violations, an
apology, costs, damages for loss of reputation, damages for loss of dignity, and in two
cases, a request for a Voluntary Exit program.
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[12] The complainants all seek to have their rating restored (or redone in one case) so
as to be at the higher rating of “Effective-Meets All Expectations” or, in one case, to
“Outstanding”.
[13] Most of the complaints make a specific request for the retroactive payment of the
merit pay associated with the higher performance rating. In the case of one complaint,
the complainant seeks a “make whole” remedy including an amount of damages “resulting
from the Employer’s arbitrary, discriminatory and/or bad faith actions”.
* * *
[14] This Board is established pursuant to the terms of the Public Service of Ontario
Act, 2006 (the “PSOA”) and the scope of its authority to consider and resolve complaints
is set out in Ontario Regulation 378/07 (the “Regulation”) made pursuant to the PSOA.
That Regulation sets out the type of complaints that the Board has jurisdiction to entertain,
providing a limited forum in which excluded employees may bring complaints about the
alleged breach of, inter alia, terms and conditions of employment.
[15] Section 4 of the Regulation provides:
Complaint about a working condition or a term of employment
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:
…
4. The evaluation of a public servant’s performance or the method
of evaluating his or her performance.
5. The compensation provided or denied to a public servant as a
result of the evaluation of his or her performance. O. Reg. 378/07,
s. 4 (2).
[16] It is the position of the Employer that paragraphs 4 and 5 of sub-section 4(2)
prevent the Board from taking jurisdiction over these complaints - that the Regulation is
clear and specifically precludes an employee from making any complaint concerning the
performance review process and/or its result. Regardless of the most generous reading
one might give to the complaints, argued the Employer, they all relate to the evaluation
of the complainants’ performance and are expressly precluded from review by the Board.
[17] The complainants do not take issue with the assessment and rating provided by
their immediate manager. They argue that, in seeking to have that rating restored, the
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complaint falls outside the parameters of the exception in sub-section 4(2) of the
Regulation. Counsel on behalf of Ms. Dwyer argued (and the argument applies to all of
the complaints) that no issue is being taken with the evaluation conducted by the direct
supervisor, nor the rating assigned by the direct supervisor. Rather, argued counsel for
Ms. Dwyer, it is the arbitrary, discriminatory and/or bad faith decision taken by the
Employer to unilaterally change the rating, months after the evaluation and previous rating
had been completed and assigned. Similarly, argued counsel, any compensation flows
not from any result of the evaluation of performance but as a remedial response to the
arbitrary, discriminatory and/or bad faith decision taken by the Employer to deny
compensation despite the evaluation and rating assigned by the direct supervisor.
According to the EPP, it is argued, the direct manager is responsible for evaluating
performance. Any prohibition in the Regulation cannot act to shield the Employer from
its failure to comply with its own policy, argued the complainants.
[18] I have reviewed the following decisions of the Board, referred to me by the parties:
Younger v Ontario (Environment), 2007 CanLII 30471; Tyrell v Ontario (MCSCS), 2004
CanLII 55241; Berenbaum v. Ontario (Labour), 2011 CanLII 23299; Sumner et al v
Ontario (Health and Long Term Care), 2007 CanLII 36065; Hill v. Ontario (MCSCS), 2006
CanLII 30740; Garratt v. Ontario (Health and Long Term Care), 2005 CanLII 53194; Tighe
v. Ontario (Solicitor General), 2020 CanLII 45594; Drakos v Ontario (MCSCS), 2013
CanLII 88258; Chyczij v. Ontario (Labour), 2006 CanLII 26472; Aspiotis v. Ontario
(MCSCS), 2019 CanLII 21767; and Charlton v. Ontario (MCSCS), 2007 CanLII 24192.
[19] The Employer’s will-say statement on the preliminary issue states that some
employees may have been advised of a rating before final corporate approval of the rating
was given. If the case, it would not be difficult to predict the sense of unfairness that
would manifest in employees who received performance reviews from their immediate
managers only to have that rating later downgraded by someone who had no direct
knowledge of their performance and without any consultation with the supervising
manager or the employee, with the attendant impact on compensation.
[20] However, notwithstanding the able arguments made in an attempt to avoid the
clear and comprehensive language of sub-section 4(2) of the Regulation, one cannot
escape the conclusion that these complaints fall within the parameters set out in
paragraphs 4 and 5 of sub-section 4(2) of the Regulation.
[21] In 2004 in Tyrell, supra, the complainant sought reconsideration of the dismissal
of his complaint. As here, the complaint alleged that the employer had failed to follow its
own policy for implementing pay for performance and challenged the cap placed on the
number of managers able to achieve an “exceeds all” rating as being arbitrary and
discriminatory. In its original decision dated February 4, 2004 (cited in the reconsideration
decision at page 2 and following) the Board stated:
The Public Service Grievance Board, as a statutory tribunal, can only deal with
those complaints falling within its legislative mandate…set out in [the Regulation]…
…
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Your complaint…relates to either the method of performance evaluation, or the
performance evaluation itself, or the compensation provided or denied as a result
of a performance evaluation. For this reason it does not constitute a grievance over
which this tribunal has jurisdiction and, accordingly, it must be dismissed.
[22] At page 5 of the reconsideration decision, the Board re-iterated:
Regardless of the most generous reading one could give to the complaints, they
all related to the evaluation of the complainants’ performance.
[23] In Younger, supra, the complainant entered into Minutes of Settlement that
contemplated his retirement. The complainant had expected that by retirement, his
performance would, in the normal course, be evaluated and rated for his final year of
employment, with an attendant merit pay increase. That did not happen. That issue was
not discussed during the negotiation of the settlement and the complainant argued that
the settlement and the release contained therein did not shield the employer from future
breaches while he remained employed.
[24] While the Board found that the Minutes of Settlement precluded it from entertaining
the complaint, it also addressed the issue of whether the exclusion in the Regulation
precluded the Board from entertaining the complaint. Again, the assertion was that the
Employer had failed to comply with its own policy. At page 7 the Board stated:
…the issue is that the employer failed to follow its own guidelines so that what
occurred in the employee’s absence was not a true evaluation…
…
There is no doubt that certain aspects of the employer’s pay for performance
program are properly considered terms or conditions of a manager’s employment.
However, by virtue of subsection 31(4) [the predecessor to sub-section 4(2) of
Regulation 378/07], complaints regarding it are excluded from the grievances over
which this Board has jurisdiction, as they are complaints regarding the method…of
evaluation of the employee’s performance, the evaluation itself…and the
compensation provided or denied as a result… the core of the grievor’s complaint
is about how he was evaluated (not in the way it had been done before and as he
had expected, after a face-to-face meeting), the content of the evaluation itself
(negative, and not giving sufficient recognition to the high quality of his
achievement) and the compensation provided or denied as a result of that
evaluation (a zero percentage merit award). This is exactly the kind of claim
excluded by subsection 31(4) and thus the Board has no authority to deal with it.
[25] Also in Berenbaum, supra, the complainant alleged that his pay for performance
award should not have been pro-rated. In finding that it had no jurisdiction to entertain the
complaint, the Board stated at para 26:
The grievor stresses that he is not complaining about the substance of the
evaluation of his performance…He is complaining about its implementation, as he
is convinced that there was a mistake in what he was paid, not how he was
evaluated…However, some mistakes, if mistake it was, have been removed from
the Board’s purview to fix. Even if the Board were to be persuaded, on a hearing
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of the merits of the grievance, that the employer had erred, the grievor has not
demonstrated how it could be within the Board’s jurisdiction to award the grievor a
larger pay-for-performance award, given the wording of the Regulation, which
effectively removes elements related to pay-for-performance from the grievance
over which the Board has jurisdiction.
(emphasis added)
[26] Ms. Dwyer relies on the decisions in Drakos and Chyczij, both supra, to argue that
the Board has jurisdiction to deal with allegations that an employer’s treatment of an
employee is arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad faith. Further, relying on the decision in
Aspiotis, supra, she argues that the Board has elected to hear a complaint where it raised
the possibility that the Employer’s actions were arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad faith.
She further argued that any lack of remedial authority did not deter the Board from
proceeding to a hearing on the merits in Aspiotis.
[27] The Board’s decision in Garratt, supra, confirms that there may be circumstances
where the Board will inquire into an allegation of arbitrary, discriminatory or bad faith
conduct on the part of the Employer. Fundamentally, the allegation must relate to an
existing term or condition of employment which the Board has jurisdiction to enforce. In
Garrett, the complainants sought a transparent process for setting and communicating
wages. No such process then existed and the Board dismissed the complaint on the
basis that the complainant was seeking to establish a new process - to create a new term
of employment, a matter beyond the Board’s jurisdiction. The Board’s role is the
enforcement of existing terms and conditions of employment. The Board did go on to say
that an allegation that an existing term or condition of employment had been applied in
bad faith was a matter that could be brought to the Board. However, that decision did not
deal with a term or condition of employment that was otherwise expressly excluded from
the Board’s purview.
[28] So, for example, in Chyczij, supra, the Board allowed a complaint to proceed to a
hearing on its merits where the allegation was that a term of the complainant’s
employment included the proper consideration of his request for tuition assistance. The
Board found that it had both the jurisdiction to determine whether, as a matter of fact,
there was such a term or condition of employment, and, if so, whether that term had been
breached. In discussing the Board’s jurisdiction to review discretionary management
decision-making it referred to the decision in Garratt, supra.
[29] And see paragraph 43 of the Board’s decision in Drakos, supra, that confirms that
the Board’s caselaw recognizes that it has jurisdiction to deal with allegations that
treatment by the Employer was arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad faith. However, none of
the cases cited in support of that proposition deal with cases where pay for performance
was the issue.
[30] Even the preliminary decision in Aspiotis is appropriately distinguished. The issue
in that case arose when the complainant was reassigned from his Staff Inspector position
to the position of Deputy Superintendent. The complainant alleged that the reassignment
was improper and was a decision made in a manner that was arbitrary, discriminatory
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and in bad faith. The complainant further alleged that his Staff Inspector position had been
made redundant which allowed him certain surplus rights that had been denied.
Alternatively, the Employer’s actions were alleged to have been disciplinary.
[31] The Employer raised a number of preliminary objections, including sub-section
4(2) of the Regulation. The complainant in that case apparently argued that the Board
would have jurisdiction to hear the complaint notwithstanding the language contained in
the Regulation. In allowing the complaint to proceed on its merits, the decision quotes
Drakos, supra, and concludes:
[117] In reviewing the materials provided by the parties the most significant
issues before the Board is [sic] whether the Complainant has adequately supported
the allegations that the Employer has engaged in arbitrary, discriminatory or bad
faith behaviour in the reassignment of the Complainant to the Deputy
Superintendent position.
…
[122] As a result the Board directs the parties to attend at the Board where a
hearing will be held to determine whether the Employer’s conduct in evaluating the
Complainant’s work performance and subsequent reassignment to the position of
Deputy Superintendent was made in an arbitrary or discriminatory manner or
resulting from bad faith.
[123] Secondly, the Board will hear evidence to conclude whether the Employer
has either disciplined the Complainant or has engaged in such behaviour that the
Board could conclude that the Complainant has been constructively dismissed.
[32] The decision does not address the impact of sub-section 4(2) on the Board’s
jurisdiction. There is no reference to any of the caselaw dealing with the regulatory
exclusion. It is not apparent from the facts whether paragraph 2 of sub-section 4(2) was
applicable, although there is a clear assertion that the move constituted discipline, an
allegation over which the Board would have jurisdiction. It is the case, as paragraph 117
of the decision confirms, that the complaint was not about pay for performance but was
about a change in the complainant’s position from Staff Inspector to Deputy
Superintendent. The complainant wanted his old job back. To the extent that work
performance was raised, it was raised by the Employer as an anticipated defence to the
complaint. The complaint was subsequently settled between the parties.
[33] I am not persuaded that it is appropriate to read the decision in Aspiotis as going
so far as to find that the Board has jurisdiction to consider complaints related to pay for
performance for allegations of arbitrary, discriminatory or bad faith treatment on the
Employer’s part. The Board’s historical and consistent caselaw stands opposed to that
conclusion as do the clear words of the Regulation which bind the Board in the scope of
its authority.
[34] Pay for performance is a term and condition of employment for excluded
employees, including these complainants (and see Kaine v. Ontario (CYS), 2014 CanLII
48097 at paragraph 36). These complaints all assert that the manner in which their
performance was evaluated, first done by their direct manager and then changed without
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notice or consultation was in breach of the EPP and that the Employer cannot shield itself
from its own misconduct. However, what is being fundamentally complained about are
those matters excluded from the Board’s purview by paragraphs 4 and 5 of sub-section
4(2) of the Regulation. Each complaint seeks to be remedied by the complainant being
awarded a higher performance rating as each challenges the evaluation ultimately made
by the Employer. In asserting that the Employer acted in a manner that was arbitrary,
discriminatory and/or in bad faith the complainants are challenging “the method of
evaluating...performance”. They also seek “the compensation.. denied…as a result of
the evaluation”.
[35] Having regard to the specific exclusion in the Regulation, I find that the Employer
is effectively protected from a complaint at the Board asserting that it acted in a manner
that was arbitrary, discriminatory, or in bad faith in respect of matters concerning pay for
performance. This in no way speaks to the quality of the Employer’s treatment of the
complainants or to the actual work performance of any complainant. It is a decision based
on the fact that this Board has no inherent authority and the clear language of the
Regulation specifically excludes these allegations from the Board’s jurisdiction to consider
and/or remedy.
*
[36] As noted above, seven of the complaints allege that the Employer violated the
Ontario Human Rights Code in changing their performance ratings. Distinct from the
scope of the Board’s jurisdiction under the Regulation to assess the discretionary
decision-making of the Employer, the Employer acknowledges that it must conduct itself
in accordance with the legislative and quasi-constitutional terms of the Code and that the
Board does have the jurisdiction to entertain and determine that narrower statutory
allegation. However, it has also reserved its right to bring a further preliminary motion to
the effect that the complaints do not make out a prima facie case of discrimination
pursuant to prohibited grounds in the Code.
[37] Allegations of a breach of the Code are individual to each complainant. Therefore,
to the extent that the Employer’s further preliminary objection is to be considered, it must
be done on a case by case basis in respect of those complaints making the allegation.
*
[38] Having regard to all of the above, I hereby make the following findings:
1. The following complaints do not make any allegation of a breach of the Code by
the Employer. They are therefore determined based on the review set out above
as to the scope of the Board’s jurisdiction, as limited by paragraphs 4 and 5 of sub-
section 4(2) of the Regulation. In each case, the Board has no jurisdiction to
entertain the complaint as it is a complaint fundamentally about pay for
performance, a matter excluded from the Board’s purview.
Therefore, the following complaints are hereby dismissed:
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Board File #P-2019-1932 - Dalton v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-1953 - Narburgh v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-2089 - Tomlinson v. MCCSS
2. The remaining complaints all allege a violation of the Code or allege that the
Employer acted in violation of a prohibited ground referenced in the Code. Further
to the application of paragraphs 4 and 5 of sub-section 4(2) of the Regulation,
these remaining complaints are hereby dismissed in all respects but for the
remaining allegation that the Employer acted in violation of the Code. Those
complaints are:
Board File #P-2019-1829 - Bowmaster v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-1891 - Lessel, K. v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-1892 - Lessel, P. v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-2026 - Dwyer v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-2088 - Cartwright v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-2090 - Reay v. SOLGEN
Board File #P-2019-2156 - Koosterman v. SOLGEN
[39] As noted, the Employer has reserved its right to object to these remaining
complaints proceeding, on the further ground that they do not make out a prima facie
case of discrimination pursuant to the prohibited grounds in the Code. The Employer is
therefore directed to advise the Board as to whether it intends to pursue that objection.
Should the Employer advise that it intends to pursue the objection, counsel for the
Employer is hereby directed to also advise as to an appropriate time table for the receipt
of the Employer’s written submissions on this preliminary objection and in respect of each
of these complaints, following which, each of these complainants will have the opportunity
to respond.
[40] The Board will henceforth deal with each remaining complaint individually.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 21st day of December, 2020.
“Marilyn A. Nairn”
________________________
Marilyn A. Nairn, Vice-Chair