HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2020-2108.Joncas.21-03-25 Decision
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PSGB# P-2020-2108
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Joncas Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General)
Employer
BEFORE Allen Ponak Vice Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Dean Joncas
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Jordanna Lewis
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
SUBMISSIONS Written submissions received on February
15; March 1 and March 8, 2021
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Decision
ISSUE AND BACKGROUND
[1] Mr. Dean Joncas is a sergeant at the Ottawa Carleton Detention Centre
(“OCDC”), part of the Ministry of Solicitor General. On November 28, 2020, Mr. Joncas
filed a complaint with the Public Service Grievance Board (“PSGB”), “grieving the
working conditions through systemic discrimination” (File # P-2020-2108). In particular,
the complaint alleged: 1) lack of payment of meal allowances for sergeants working an
extended shift; and 2) lack of payment of shift premiums while working overtime. The
complaint alleged that employees below the rank of sergeant who work in OCDC
receive such payments and the denial of these payments to the sergeant group was
unfair and discriminatory. The complaint also claimed that sergeants had received meal
allowances during extended hours in the past. As a remedy, Mr. Joncas requested
compensation for all lost compensation dating back to January 2013 for shift premiums
and April 2019 for meal allowances.
[2] The Employer disputed these claims, taking the position that Mr. Joncas had
been paid in accordance with Ministry pay policies in effect for sergeants. It denied the
allegations of systemic discrimination and suggested, as a preliminary objection, that no
prima facie case had been made out that the Employer’s actions violated any anti-
discrimination law or any Employer compensation policy. The Employer raised a further
preliminary objection asserting that the complaint had been filed outside the mandatory
time limits specified in the governing PSGB regulations.
[3] Following my appointment as adjudicator for this matter, a case management
conference call was held on January 15, 2021 with Mr. Joncas and Ms. Jordanna Lewis,
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counsel for the Employer. It was agreed that the parties could address the Employer’s
preliminary objections through written submissions. These submissions were received
on February 15, 2021, March 1, 2021, and March 8, 2021 and the foregoing decision is
based on those submissions.
SUBMISSION OF THE EMPLOYER
[4] The Employer submitted that, as a sergeant, Mr. Joncas is part of the
Management Compensation Plan (“MCP”) and is excluded from the bargaining unit to
which many of the employees whom he supervises belong. In other words, he is not
governed by the collective agreement between the Ontario Public Service Employees
Union (“OPSEU”) and the Government of Ontario. The compensation provisions that
apply to Mr. Joncas are determined by the Employer through the MCP. Under the
MCP, the Employer argued, Mr. Joncas “is not entitled to the meal allowances he has
claimed nor is he entitled to shift premium allowances while working overtime”
(Employer brief, paragraph 11).
[5] With respect to shift premiums, the Employer drew attention to section 26(2) of
the MCP which states:
An employee who is entitled to be paid overtime when he or she works in the
circumstances described in subsection (5) is not entitled to be paid a shift
premium for the same period of work.
Section 26(5) indicates when shift premiums apply but section 26(2) “makes it crystal
clear that since the Complainant is entitled to be paid overtime, he is not entitled to be
paid a shift premium as well” (Employer brief, paragraph 22). The Employer argued that
the Public Service Grievance Board (the “Board”) has no jurisdiction to “disturb those
terms on mere allegations of unfairness” (Employer brief, paragraph 25). The Employer
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cited the following case in support of its position that employees in Mr. Joncas’
classification were not entitled to shift premiums under MCP (or its predecessor)
notwithstanding that bargaining unit employees who they supervised received such
premiums: Mark Drakos et al. v. Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional
Services 2007 CanLii 30470.
[6] With respect to meal allowances during extended shifts, the Employer took the
position that there is no provision in the MCP that entitles Mr. Joncas to a meal
allowance on a shift extension. Thus, “he is simply alleging that he is no longer
receiving a meal allowance that other employees in his workplace continue to receive.
…… the Employer may exercise its discretion … and the Board does not have
jurisdiction to disturb those decisions” (Employer brief, paragraph 53). Even accepting
as true Mr. Joncas’ claim that he had received a meal allowance on extended shifts in
the past, “the discretionary payment simply came to an end for his sergeant group”
(Employer brief, paragraph 57). The Employer cited several cases including: OPSEU
(Dubroff) v. Ministry of Environment 2008 CanLii 19779 (ON GSB) Dissanayake.
[7] According to the Employer, Mr. Joncas had failed to establish a prima facie case
both with respect to his meal allowance and shift premium claimed violations, even after
assuming that he had not been paid either shift premiums or meal allowances. The
Employer asserted that under Rule 11 of the Public Service Grievance Board the
complaint could be dismissed as a preliminary matter. Rule 11 reads:
Where the Board considers that a complaint does not make out a case for the
orders or remedies requested, even if all the facts stated in the complaint are
assumed to be true, the Board may dismiss the complaint without a hearing or
consultation. In its decision the Board will set out reasons.
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The Employer cited the following cases in support of its argument that the complaint
could be dismissed on the ground that Mr. Joncas had failed to make a prima facie case
to support the complaint: James Allen et al. v. Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services P-2007-2921 (O’Neil); and, Hugh MacDonald et al. v. Ministry of
Community Safety and Correctional Services P-2013-0273 (O’Neil).
[8] The Employer turned to the allegation that it had discriminated against Mr.
Joncas. According to the Employer, the complaint does not establish a prima facie case
for discrimination. In particular, it was submitted that discrimination must be based on
an enumerated ground in human rights law, such as age or disability or race. The
complaint did not reveal any such ground – “the complainant’s classification as sergeant
in the Ontario Public Service is not an enumerated ground under the Human Rights
Code” (Employer brief, paragraph 74). Further, the Employer argued that “honest and
genuine belief in discrimination is not prima facie evidence of discrimination” (Employer
brief, paragraph 85). In the Employer’s submission, the “fact that various employees in
the OPS are paid differently does not mean the Complainant was discriminated against”
(Employer brief, paragraph 87). The Employer cited the following case in support of its
position that Mr. Joncas’ complaint had failed to disclose a basis for discrimination:
Mitchell v Kerry’s Place Autism Services, 2012 HRTO (Mitchell).
[9] Finally, the Employer asserted that Mr. Joncas’ complaint was untimely and
could be dismissed on that basis. It noted that the complaint was about the lack of shift
premium pay dating back to 2019 and meal allowances dating to 2013. Thus, it could
be inferred that Mr. Joncas was aware of the alleged breaches by 2019 and 2013,
respectively. Yet, his complaint was not filed until November 2020. The Employer
pointed out that the governing statutory regulations contain strict and mandatory time
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limits and that Mr. Joncas “was required to notify the Deputy Minister within 14 days of
becoming aware of the working condition or term of employment that gave rise to the
complaint” (Employer brief, paragraph 95). The complaint was filed far in excess of 14
days after Mr. Joncas became aware that he was not receiving meal allowances or shift
premiums and therefore, the Employer argued, must be dismissed as untimely. The
Employer submitted that the Board had no jurisdiction to relieve against a time limit
violation, citing Hasted/Berezowsky v The Crown in Right of Ontario (MCSCS) PSGB
2014-2665.
SUBMISSION OF MR. JONCAS
[10] Mr. Joncas responded to the Employer’s preliminary application that his
complaint be dismissed. He disagreed that the complaint failed to disclose systemic
discrimination, citing definitions provided in the Human Rights Code (“Code”) as follows:
“also called institutionalized discrimination, refers to a method of discrimination which
occurs regularly in the workplace as an inherent part of the company through
interactions and processes creating a disadvantage for people with a common set of
characteristics” (Joncas brief, paragraph 1). He argued that the Employer’s practices
and policies were “systematically discriminatory to the sergeant group… intentionally
treating them differently, as the Ministry does between the correctional officer and
sergeant group” (Joncas brief, paragraph 5). He pointed that sergeants work closely
with correctional officers, the main difference lying in the supervisory role of sergeants
and the fact that sergeants are not covered by the OPSEU collective agreement. He
submitted that because correctional officers received shift premiums during overtime
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and meal allowances on extended shifts, sergeants were victims of systemic
discrimination.
[11] Mr. Joncas took issue with the Employer’s claim that the compensation policy for
sergeants restricted the Board’s jurisdiction to intervene. He suggested that the Board
has the authority and duty to overturn bad policies arguing that “women having the right
to vote was a result of a law and policy changed because it was wrong” (Joncas brief,
paragraph 8). He pointed to Indian Residential Schools as another wrong policy that
was changed, reiterating that sergeants were clearly being discriminated against
compared to correctional officers and that the Board should right an obvious wrong.
[12] Mr. Joncas disagreed that the regulations precluded the granting of meal
allowances, citing the case of another sergeant who had been granted meal allowances
by the deputy director of his facility in Ottawa (Joncas brief, paragraph 9). In Mr.
Joncas’ view, this created a past practice that should be applicable to his case.
[13] Mr. Joncas did not agree that his complaint was untimely. He suggested that he
had raised the issue with Superintendent Michael Wood who had requested he wait
until the matter could be investigated. When the superintendent informed him that his
compensation requests would not be granted, he had filed the current complaint. Any
delay, Mr. Joncas argued, lay with management, not him (Joncas brief, paragraph 9).
[14] Accordingly, Mr. Joncas requested that the merits of the complaint be heard.
EMPLOYER REPLY
[15] The Employer replied that “the entirety of the Complainant’s discrimination case
rests on a distinction between sergeants and correctional officers – a distinction that
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cannot ground a human rights claim in any way” (Employer reply, paragraph 11). The
Employer reiterated that Mr. Joncas had failed to identify the term of employment that
had been violated. On the contrary, he had conceded that that applicable policies did
not support his case but instead asked the Board to correct what he believed to be an
obvious wrong. The Employer submitted that “the Board has consistently rejected this
type of argument as insufficient to establish prima facie entitlement to discretionary
compensation, particularly when made by sergeants in correctional institutions”
(Employer reply, paragraph 23).
[16] With respect to the timeliness of the complaint, the Employer agreed that
Superintendent Wood did not issue a decision about Mr. Joncas’ claim until October 1,
2020. However, the time clock for filing a claim did not stop while Mr. Joncas awaited
word from his superintendent. The Employer submitted that Mr. Joncas “made a choice
… to wait until Superintendent Wood got back to him” (Employer reply, paragraph 36)
and that this reason for failing to meet the time limits “however sympathetic or
compelling, do not assist the Complainant when the Board lacks the jurisdiction to
relieve against them” (Employer reply, paragraph 37).
[17] Accordingly, the Employer asked that the complaint be dismissed.
DECISION
[18] It is the Board’s decision to uphold the Employer’s preliminary application that the
complaint be dismissed. It is our determination that the complaint is untimely, that Mr.
Joncas has failed to establish grounds for a discrimination claim, and that, even if the
Board accepted that all facts as submitted by Mr. Joncas are true, the complaint cannot
succeed.
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A. Timeliness
[19] It is the Board’s conclusion that the complaint is untimely. The complaint was
filed on November 28, 2020. On its face, it refers to meal allowances for the fiscal year
of “April 2019 to present” and “shift premiums lost since January 2013”. Under
Regulation 378/07 of the Public Service of Ontario Act, notice of a complaint about a
working condition or term of employment must be given “within 14 days after the
complainant becomes aware of the working condition or term of employment giving rise
to the complaint”. The Board draws the inference that Mr. Joncas was aware that he
was not receiving meal allowances for extended shifts or shift premiums during overtime
for a period well in excess of the 14 days. It is unnecessary to pin down the precise
date at which Mr. Joncas became aware that he was not receiving these payments. It is
sufficient to note that in the complaint itself, as well as his written submission, Mr.
Joncas stated that he raised the matter with Superintendent Wood and that he held off
filing his complaint “since the beginning of the year” (i.e. the beginning of 2020), while
he awaited the superintendent’s response. I find that Mr. Joncas was aware of the
terms of employment that lie at the heart of his complaint by early 2020. By November
2020, his complaint was long out of time.
[20] It is well established in the Board’s jurisprudence that the time clock for filing a
complaint does not stop while a response is being sought. The 14 day clock begins
ticking the moment an employee becomes aware of the issue underlying the complaint
(see, Hasted/Berezowsky). Unlike under some legislative regimes and collective
agreements, the Board has no discretion to relieve against time limit violations in cases,
such as this one, where the delay in filing was for sound labour relations reasons – i.e.
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to give his superiors a chance to look into the matter. The Board has no choice but to
find that the complaint is untimely and must be dismissed.
B. Discrimination
[21] Even if the complaint was timely, the Board would still dismiss it. The essence of
Mr. Joncas’ discrimination complaint is that correctional officers receive shift premiums
during overtime and meal allowances during extended shifts and sergeants do not
receive these payments. While Mr. Joncas no doubt considers this unfair, it is not
discriminatory from a legal perspective. Our anti-discrimination protections in Canada
are embedded in our human rights legislation – in Ontario this means the Ontario
Human Rights Code. At the risk of oversimplifying, the Code does not provide unlimited
protection against any kind of alleged discrimination but instead provides protection
against discrimination based on specific characteristics. These characteristics are
expressly listed or enumerated in the legislation. Included in this list of protected
characteristics are age, race, family status, and disability among others. There are 17
protected grounds that are expressly listed in the legislation.
[22] The Code does not prevent an employer from treating different classifications of
employees differently as long as the differential treatment does not run afoul of one of
the protected grounds (for example, treating a mostly female group of employees
differently from a mostly male group doing the same job). There is no protection in the
Code for “employee classification”. An employer is able to determine the compensation
and working conditions of its employees and is legally entitled to decide one group can
receive certain benefits that another group is denied. That is not discrimination as
defined in the applicable legislation.
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[23] In the current case, Mr. Joncas alleges that correctional officers are entitled to
shift premiums when they work overtime and receive meal allowances during extended
shifts. As a sergeant he does not receive these payments. His assertion about
correctional officers may well be true (there have been no submissions on the
compensation provisions for correctional officers), but even if that is the case, the fact
that Mr. Joncas does not receive the same payments does not violate that Ontario
Human Rights Code. It is perfectly legal for the Employer to choose to compensate
different classifications of employees differently. I note that correctional officers are
covered by the collective agreement between the Ministry and OPSEU and that
sergeants, as managerial employees, are governed by the Management Compensation
Plan. The fact that the compensation provisions of the collective agreement and the
MCP are different is hardly surprising. This differential treatment cannot constitute
discrimination under Ontario law.
[24] Accordingly, the Board concludes that Mr. Joncas has failed to make a prima
facie case of discrimination. His complaint of systemic discrimination, therefore, must
be denied.
C. Rule # 11
[25] There is a third preliminary ground under which this complaint is dismissed. Rule
# 11 under the PSGB’s “Rules and Practice” has been set out earlier in this award. It
enables an adjudicator to dismiss a case on a preliminary application if, even assuming
the complainant’s facts are all true, the complaint still cannot succeed. In this case, that
means accepting that: 1) Mr. Joncas has not been paid shift premiums while working
overtime; 2) Mr. Joncas has not been paid meal allowances during extended shifts; 3)
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Mr. Joncas received meal allowances in the past during extended shifts; 4) at least one
sergeant has recently received a meal allowance during an extended shift at OCDC;
and 5) correctional officers routinely receive shift premiums and meal allowances in the
same circumstances. The Board is satisfied that assuming all these facts are true, Mr.
Joncas’ complaint cannot succeed.
[26] With respect to shift premiums, section 26(2), cited earlier in the award, is
determinative – an employee being paid overtime cannot also be paid a shift premium
for the same work. This provision is unambiguous and cannot be overcome based on
the facts at hand.
[27] With respect to meal allowances, discretion to grant or not grant meal allowances
in individual situations is delegated to senior management under sections 4.1 and 4.2 of
the “Travel, Meal, and Hospitality Directive” of the Management Board of Cabinet. Mr.
Joncas’ complaint is not that this discretion was exercised unfairly or arbitrarily towards
him in a particular situation. Rather the basis of his claim is that sergeants received
them in the past, he knows of one sergeant at OCDC who recently was granted a meal
allowance, and correctional officers receive them.
[28] The Board has already addressed the differential treatment of sergeants and
correctional officers which is based, among other reasons, on the fact that correctional
officers are governed by a collective agreement and sergeants are not. The sergeant-
correctional officer difference cannot be a basis for challenging the discretion of senior
management to provide meal allowances to sergeants. Second, the fact that sergeants
may have received meal allowances in the past or that a sergeant at OCDC recently
was granted a meal allowance merely reinforces the discretionary rights of senior
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management in this regard. It provides no factual basis of inappropriate exercise of that
discretion. The complaint and submissions of Mr. Joncas do not provide even the hint
of such evidence. Therefore, neither the past practice nor the granting of a meal
allowance to another sergeant, without a great more evidence, can form the basis for a
successful challenge to lack of meal allowances for Mr. Joncas.
[29] Accordingly, Board accepts the Employer’s submission that the complaint should
be dismissed under Rule # 11.
AWARD
[30] It is the Board’s conclusion that the complaint should be dismissed on a
preliminary application for the following reasons:
1. The complaint is untimely.
2. Mr. Joncas has failed to make a prima facie case for discrimination.
3. Even accepting all facts as alleged by Mr. Joncas to be true, the complaint
cannot succeed. It is therefore dismissed under PSGB Rule # 11.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 25th day of March, 2021.
“Allen Ponak”
________________________
Allen Ponak, Vice-Chair