HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017-3776.Jacobs et al.21-04-13 Decision
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GSB#2017-3776; 2017-3777; 2017-3778; 2017-3779; 2017-3780; 2017-3781
UNION#2017-0579-0011; 2017-0579-0012; 2017-0579-0013; 2017-0579-0014;
2017-0579-0015; 2017-0579-0016
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Jacobs et al) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Dale Hewat Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Brett Hughes
Dewart Gleason LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Braden MacLean
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING March 9, 2021
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Decision
[1] On November 6, 2020 I issued a decision in this case, Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (Jacobs et al.) v The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of the
Solicitor General), 2020 CanLII 97349 (the “merits Decision’), in which I found that for
the period between May 14, 2016 and November 21, 2017, the Employer violated
Article 6 of the Collective Agreement by failing to post and fill vacancies for
Operations Officer positions, classified at the Fire Service Advisor 1(“FSA1”)
classification, in the Provincial Emergency Operations Centre (“PEOC”). The case
was bifurcated with respect to remedy. On January 14, 2021, the Parties attempted
to mediate a remedial settlement, but were not able to reach an agreement.
Subsequently, on February 18, 2021, I held a conference call with Counsel in which it
was determined that before the Parties could move forward in trying to negotiate a
settlement again, they wanted direction from me on which section of the Collective
Agreement should be relied upon to determine the appropriate remedy in this case.
The Union submits that the layoff provisions in Article 20 apply while the Employer
submits that the pay administration provisions of Article 7.3 apply. Depending on the
outcome of this Decision, the Parties agreed that they would engage in further
settlement discussions, failing which, they would appear before me in a subsequent
remedy hearing that is currently scheduled for April 28, 2021.
[2] For the purpose of this Decision, the relevant general sections of the Collective
Agreement are:
ARTICLE 7 – PAY ADMINISTRATION
7.3 Where a position is reassessed and is reclassified to a class with a lower
maximum salary, any employee who occupies the position at the time of the
reclassification shall continue to be entitled to salary progression based on merit to
the maximum salary of the higher classification, including any revision of the
maximum salary of the higher classification that takes effect during the salary cycle
in which the reclassification takes place.
ARTICLE 20 – EMPLOYMENT STABILITY
20.1.1 Where a lay-off may occur for any reason, the identification of a surplus
employee in an administrative district or unit, institution or other such work area and
the subsequent redeployment, displacement, lay-off or recall shall be in accordance
with seniority subject to the conditions set out in this article.
[3] In the merits Decision, I ordered that "the timeframe for considering all issues
pertaining to […] posting and filling of vacancies […] shall go back until May 14,
2016" but that any remedy would be limited to a period starting 30 days prior to the
grievances being filed, i.e., starting on November 14, 2017 for Stephen Knapp and
Dan Stanhope and on November 16, 2017 for Jermaine Jacobs. 7. In other words,
the liability finding could date back to May 14, 2016 but a remedial order could only
date back to November 14 or 16, 2017.
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[4] The Grievors were all employed as Operation Officers at the FSA1 classification in
PEOC pursuant to a series of fixed-term contracts for a varying number of years. As
summarized in the merits Decision at paragraph 7, during their fixed-term contract
tenures, PEOC was structured as follows with the Grievors primarily working at the
Duty Desk:
[7] PEOC is the Ontario government’s hub for collecting, analyzing, and
distributing information about potential and declared emergencies to coordinate the
Provincial response. During the Grievors’ employment as Fixed-Term employees,
PEOC Operations Officers were assigned to one of two sections: the “duty desk”
section which focuses on day-to-day information monitoring and distribution; and the
“projects” section, which focuses on a variety of longer-term and one-off projects, such
as planning for and monitoring Ontario’s Pan and Para-Pan American Games (the
“Pan-Am Games”) in the summer 2015. The Grievors primarily worked as Operation
Officers at the duty desk, which is staffed 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, 365 days
per year (“24/7/365”). In terms of staffing hours, the duty desk requires at least 8,760
work hours annually, or at least 4.6 full time equivalent positions (FTEs).
[5] Based on my conclusion that the Employer violated Article 6 of the Collective
Agreement, the Union is seeking a remedial order that would put the Grievors in
positions that they would have been in had the Employer posted and filled the regular
service FSA1 vacancies by November 2017. The Union maintains that when filling
vacancies, Article 6.3 requires the Employer to “give primary consideration to
qualification and ability to perform the required duties”, with seniority as the
tiebreaker. The Union states that if the Employer had posted the regular service
FSA1 vacancies by November 2017, Article 6.3 would have required it to award the 3
FSA1 Operations Officer positions to the Grievors.
[6] What actually happened in this case was that in November 2017, the Grievors were
employed as Operations Officers FSA1 pursuant to fixed-term contracts. Earlier in
2017, the Auditor General of Ontario conducted an audit of emergency management
in Ontario. As part of the audit process, the Employer submitted the Duty Desk job
specifications to the Job Evaluation Branch in September 2017 for classification
review. On October 12, 2017, the Job Evaluation Branch provided a report to the
Employer concluding that based on the job specifications, that the Duty Desk job
functions aligned with the Office Administration 10 (“OAD10”) classification and that
the position would be classified at the OAD10 rate as an Emergency Management
Duty Officer position. As a result of the audit, in December 2017, an Emergency
Action Plan was approved by Cabinet in which the Office of the Fire Marshall and
Emergency Management (“OFMEM”) received funding to hire additional staff. In
early January 2018, the Grievors received notice that their fixed-term contracts would
not be renewed in June 2018 and they were encouraged to apply for new Emergency
Management Duty Officer (OAD 10) positions that were announced on January 12,
2018 and then posted on January 16, 2018. The Grievors applied for and were
awarded 3 of 8 regular full-time service positions as Emergency Management Duty
Officers that commenced on June 4, 2018 following the expiration of their fixed-term
contracts. The remaining 2 PEOC full-time Operations Officers continued in their
positions as FSA1 Operations Officers but their work continued at a higher level of
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duties related to leading and coordinating projects and program business plan
objectives, as necessary (Paragraph 11 merits Decision).
Union’s Submissions
[7] The Union claims that the Grievors would have held regular service FSA1 positions
by the end of 2017 based upon its reading of my remarks at paragraph 44 of the
merits Decision where I stated that “Had those full-time positions been posted, it is
likely, given the Grievors’ skill, qualifications and seniority, that they would have
been awarded these positions”. The Union argues that the primary remedial issue
is therefore the effect of the Employer’s transfer of duties from the Grievors’ FSA1
positions to new OAD10 positions in June 2018. In that regard, the Union states
that the Employer could not have removed the Grievors from their regular service
FSA1 positions in June 2018, without laying them off, which would have entitled
them to the protections in Article 20 of the Collective Agreement (Employment
Stability). The Union is seeking a declaration that the transfer of all of the duties
from the Grievors’ regular service FSA1 positions to OAD10 positions would have
constituted a layoff and is also seeking an order directing the Parties to negotiate
the specific remedy that flows from such declaration.
[8] The Union argues that transferring all of the Grievors’ duties from FSA1 to OAD10
position was de facto abolition of their positions or a material change that deprived
them of fundamental incidents of their employment, namely classification and
wages resulting in a layoff that would have triggered contractual remedies under
Article 20. Unlike the Grievors, the Union notes that the other 2 FSA1 Operations
Officers remained in their positions which were not reclassified and that FSA1
vacant positions remain listed on the Employer’s organizational charts.
[9] From the Union’s perspective, on June 4, 2018, when the Employer transferred all
duties associated with the PEOC Duty Desk from the Grievors’ FSA1 positions to
the new OAD10 positions, the Grievors would have found themselves without any
duties to perform. In essence, the Union maintains that the complete transfer of
duties to another position constitutes a layoff within the meaning of Article 20.
[10] The Union submits that if a collective agreement does not include "a specific
provision reflecting a different meaning, a layoff is a period of time off work due to a
lack of work": LIUNA, Local 183 v York Condominium Corp. No. 281, 2012
CarswellOnt 8170 at ¶55 (Ont Arb) (Steinberg). The Union notes that the present
agreement does not include a provision reflecting a different meaning and while
article 20.17.2 provides that "lay-off means the same as release per Section 39 of
the Public Service of Ontario Act, 2006", that legislation only sets out permissible
reasons for a layoff, not a definition which are shortage of work, shortage of funds,
elimination of position, or material change in the ministry. In addition, the Union
submits that this interpretation was mirrored in an earlier iteration of article 20.1.1,
which began: 24.1 Where a lay-off may occur by reason of shortage of work or
funds or the abolition of a position or other material change […] [emphasis added].
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The Union submits that the general arbitral definition of layoff applies under this
Collective Agreement. It argues that not only was there a material change in the
Ministry, but also, that the complete transfer of duties from the FSA1 positions to
OAD10 positions would have resulted in the Grievors being off work as there would
have been no work for them to perform in their FSA1 positions as of June 4, 2018.
[11] In addition, the Union maintains that employees are laid off from employment if
there is a lack of work that includes the fundamental "incidents" of their home
positions. The Union notes that classifications and the associated rates of pay are
fundamental incidents of the unionized employment relationship and provide the
basis around which much of the collective agreement, if not also the performance of
bargaining unit work, is organized. As a result, "the removal of an employee from
her existing classification for reasons of a lack of work triggers the application of the
layoff provisions of the collective agreement" (Queensway-Carleton Hospital and
AAHPO (Hodgins), Re, 1999 CarswellOnt 6678 at ¶31 (Ont Arb) (Goodfellow).
[12] Reference is also made to the decision in Western Grocers v RWDSU, Local 469,
1989 Carswell Man 565 at ¶64 (MB Arb) (Freedman):
When reducing the workforce in the warehouse the Company may assign remaining
work to remaining workers, so long as it does so in conformity with the management
rights clause (and not in contravention of the restrictions in the management rights
clause), with respect to shifts and locations as the Company in its judgment thinks
appropriate (and subject to the Agreement). However, assigning remaining workers to
lower classifications effectively constitutes a layoff, giving those persons the right to
bump. So long as persons are not in fact or constructively laid off in a manner which
adversely affects their classification or pay, we do not see the Company's rights
constrained in respect of shift or location in terms of assigning workers (subject to the
other express provisions of the Agreement, for example, art. 6(c)). The incidents of the
job that, in this context, are relevant, are classification, pay, shift and location. Acts of
the Company affecting the first two are almost certainly going to run a foul of the
Agreement, as those two incidents are negotiated expressly, and objectively set forth
in the Agreement. […] [Emphasis added.]
[13] The Union also argues that parties have negotiated express language in Article 20
consistent with the principle that an employee’s removal from their home
classification constitutes a layoff by referring to the following provisions:
(a) Article 20.3 (Targeted Direct Assignment) provides that an employee may be
assigned to a position "in the same classification, or in the same class series within a
range of two classifications below the employee's current home position".
(b) Article 20.4 (Displacement) provides that an employee has the right to displace
another employee "with the least seniority in the same classification and the same
ministry as the employee's surplus position".
(c) Article 20.6 (Recall) provides that an employee is entitled to be recalled to a
position that becomes vacant "in the same classification and ministry as his or her
former position".
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[14] Finally, the Union submits that this approach is consistent with the Board's previous
interpretation and application of this Collective Agreement. For example, in OPSEU
(Union Grievance) v Ontario (Ministry of Health), 1982 – 665/81 (Ont GSB)
(Kennedy), the Employer transferred the grievors' duties from Toronto-based
positions to Kingston-based positions. The Employer argued that no layoff occurred
because it "offered" or "guaranteed" those positions to the grievors and therefore
only transferred their employment. The Board held that the grievors were not
required to relocate. Instead, based on the Union's argument that the positions had
been abolished or a material change had occurred, the Board held […] that those
employees who are scheduled to relocate in Kingston and who are unable or
unwilling to relocate and who do not find positions elsewhere in the interim […] must
be considered as having been released within the provisions of [the predecessor
provision to section 39 of the of the Public Service of Ontario Act,2006]. The
situation is correctly characterized as a layoff within the provisions of Article 24 and
those employees are entitled to the contractual remedies that flow from that status.
No challenge is made to the Employer's right to make the fundamental changes in
the organization that are proposed but the Employer cannot escape the contractual
consequences of those changes simply by categorizing them as job transfers. They
constitute in substance the abolition of certain positions under the Collective
Agreement and the creation of other positions. [Emphasis added.]
[15] Applying the Collective Agreement language and the arbitral interpretation referred to
above, the Union maintains that the layoff provisions would be meaningless if the
Employer could simply unilaterally transfer employees out of their home
classifications and into lower-paid classifications. Rather, the Union argues that they
confirm that the parties intended for Article 20 to be triggered upon an employee's
loss of work in their home classification.
[16] The Union recognizes that the Employer has the right to “manage the business and
direct the workforce” pursuant to the Management Rights provision in Article 2
including the assignment of duties to different positions and classifications, in
accordance with the Collective Agreement. The Union also notes that the Employer
has the right to “evaluate and classify positions” and that Article 7 (Pay
Administration) contemplates that the Employer may “reassess” and “reclassify”
positions. However, the Union distinguishes between transferring duties from one
position to another versus reclassifying a position and argues that the Employer in
this case chose to transfer duties from the FSA1 to OAD 10 positions rather than
reclassify the position.
[17] Article 7.2.1 come into play “where the duties of an employee are changed as a
result of reorganization or reassignment of duties and the position is reclassified to a
class with a lower maximum salary”. The Union submits that the Grievors’ duties did
not change, therefore this Article would not apply in this case. Reading Article 7.3, it
applies “where a position is reassessed and is reclassified to a class with a lower
maximum salary”. The Union argues that since the Employer created a new and
distinct OAD10 position and chose not to reclassify the regular service FSA1
positions, that Article 7.3 does not apply. Lastly, the Union states that Article 7.4
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which deals with “abolition of a position” cannot apply as the Grievors’ FSA1
positions were not abolished.
[18] Whereas the Employer argues that what the Grievors are seeking is essentially that
they be classified at the FSA1 position, the Union submits that it is not asking for
such an order. Section 51 of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act
(“CECBA”) prohibits an order of the Board from requiring the creating of a “new
classification or the alteration of an existing classification” or that a change “be made
in the classification of an employee”. From the Union’s perspective the merits
Decision determined that five vacant FSA1 positions already existed in PEOC
between May 14, 2016 and November 21, 2017 and that the Employer was required
to post and fill the vacancies. The Union submits that a declaration that the FSA1
vacancies would have been filled by the Grievors by November 2017 would not
require the creation or alteration of a classification as the FSA1 classification and
positions existed at the relevant time. Similarly, the Union argues that a declaration
that the Grievors would have been laid off from their regular service FSA1 positions
would not require the creation or alteration of any classifications.
Employer Submissions
[19] The Employer maintains that what is underlying these grievances is the Union trying
to dictate what classification rate the Grievors should hold. From the Employer’s
perspective, it suggests that the Grievors are seeking jobs at a classification that they
feel they deserve, namely that they should be rated as FSA1 Operations Officers
instead of the OAD10 Emergency Management Duty Officer positions that they
currently hold. Pointing to Section 51 of CECBA, the Employer argues that what they
are requesting is a change in classification for which I have no jurisdiction to remedy.
In support of its argument, the Employer referred to the decision of the GSB in
OPSEU (Metcalfe et al.) v. Ontario (MGS), 2012 CanLII 6212 (ON GSB) (Stephens),
which affirms that the GSB has no jurisdiction to deal with classification grievances.
[20] While agreeing that the natural remedy for a breach of the vacancy provisions in
Article 6 of the Collective Agreement is that the Employer be required to post and fill
positions, the Employer submits that it satisfied remedying the breach because as a
result of restructuring, it created, posted, and filled 8 new OAD10 Duty Officer
positions in January 2018, 3 of which were filled by the Grievors in June 2018 when
their fixed-term contracts ended. In this regard, the Employer states that by the
Grievors accepting the new Duty Officer positions, they joined the regular full-time
service staffing the Duty Desk, which also had the effect of ending the cycle of fixed-
term contracts. Turning to timelines, the Employer suggest that the appropriate
period for assessing remedy should be from the 30-day period prior to the December
2017 filing of these grievances. In the Fall of 2017, the Employer sent the job
specifications to the job evaluation branch who determined that the Duty Officer
position would be an OAD10 classification. Thus, the Employer argues that the within
the 30 days pre-grievance, it had already decided that it would be staffing the Duty
Desk with positions at an OAD10 level and that January 2018 announcement and
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posting of these new vacant positions simply confirmed what had already was in the
works in terms of the reorganization and staffing. Similarly, the Employer states, in
retrospect, had it been ordered to post and fill vacancies 30 days pre-grievance, it
would have posted the Duty Officer OAD10 position, not the FSA1 Operations Officer
role.
[21] Alternatively, assuming that the Grievors would have filled the vacant FSA1
Operations Officer positions in November 2017, the Employer argues that the
appropriate framework for assessing next steps with the reorganization of PEOC
would have been the application of Article 7.3 of the Collective Agreement and not
the layoff provisions outlined in Article 20. In this regard, the Employer emphasizes
that Article 20 comes into play when staff are considered surplus due to shortage of
work. As noted in the merits Decision, it was evident that the Duty Desk work
continued and even increased over time. In contrast to the Union’s submission that a
change in classification triggers a lay-off, the Employer argues that there is nothing in
the language of Article 20 that would require the Employer to surplus its staff when
changing a classification. Instead, the Employer states that when a demotion occurs
due to a change in classification, employees receive salary protection under the
provisions outlined in Article 7.3.
[22] In support of its position, the Employer referred to the decision in OPSEU
(MacIntosh) v. Ontario (MCS), GSB # 200/78 (Kennedy). In that case a grievance
was brought by an employee who was demoted from a probation officer III to a
probation officer II classification as a result of a reorganization and reassessment of
his duties. Early in the grievor’s career he was promoted to a probation officer III
level, not by way of a posting and job competition, but because a new classification
was created for a number of specialized parole officers. After a number of years, an
audit was done by the Ministry and it was concluded that the duties that the grievor
performed were in line with a probation officer II classification. The grievor was told
that his work as a probation officer III had been reassessed and that he would be
reclassified down to the probation officer II level. The evidence in that case
established, however, that there still remained a position of probation officer III which
was known in the workplace as a Senior Probation Officer. Evidence also
established that, while the probation officer III position was being phased out over
time, other employees continued to work as Senior Probation Officers classified at
the probation officer III rate, performing at administrative and supervisory capacity
working on specific case assignments of a complex of multi-disciplinary nature.
Whether or not the grievor in that case was able to perform the Senior Probation
Officer duties was not a factor. The Arbitrator dismissed the grievance finding that
the provisions with respect to salary protection noted in the Pay Administration
provision, Article 5.4 of the Collective Agreement in effect at that time, applied. The
Arbitrator found that while there had been no change in the grievor’s duties, the
change reflected the assessment of the proper classification assessment of the job,
(page 12). Moreover, the Arbitrator did not accept the Union’s argument in that case,
that the change to the grievor’s classification triggered the layoff job security
protections.
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[23] The Employer also argues that the layoff provisions in Article 20 do not apply in the
instant case because there was not a shortage of work. The Employer referred to
the GSB decision OPSEU (Union) v. Ontario (SolGen), 2000 CanLII 20509 (ON
GSB) (Leighton). as example of a scenario under which surplus notices might be
given pursuant to Article 20. In that case, the Union filed a grievance alleging that
the Employer violated the redeployment provisions of the Collective Agreement,
including Appendix 13, in its surplussing and assignment of staff after closing 3 jails.
The Union’s position was that the operation or work of the 3 jails was moved to other
locations therefore triggering Appendix 13 which provided employees with the right to
move with the operation or reject the move and take the rights and provisions under
Article 20. The Employer argued that Appendix 13 was not triggered because it only
applies when a “functioning or cohesive unit” is moved to another location (page 2).
At page 6 of the Decision, the Arbitrator concluded that if there is no more work then
Article 20 and all its rights are triggered and where an employer decides to move
where the work will be done beyond 40 kms then the rights under Appendix 13 must
apply.
Decision
[24] Having reviewed the submissions of the Parties, I have determined that the
appropriate framework for assessing remedy, with regard to the specific facts in this
case, is the salary protection provision in Article 7.3 (Pay Administration). I do not
agree with the Employer that this case is about the Union’s dissatisfaction with the
classification of the Emergency Management Duty Officer position or that the Union
is asking me to alter or change the classification, and therefore, Section 51 of
CECBA has no application in this case. Instead, what the Union is seeking is a
remedy to address my finding that the Employer violated Article 6 of the Collective
Agreement by failing to post and fill vacant Operations Officer FSA1 positions at
PEOC. From my understanding, the Union’s position is that the Grievors should
have been placed in the vacant Operation Officer FSA1 positions by November 2017
and that had they been in those regular service full-time positions, changing their
positions to Duty Officer OAD 10 positions in June 2018, would have resulted in a
lay-off triggering their entitlements under Article 20. While I did not make a
conclusive finding in the merits Decision that the Grievors should have been placed
in the vacant Operations Officer FSA1 positions between May 14, 2016 and
November 21, 2017, I did remark that based on the evidence, given the Grievors
skills and qualifications and seniority, it is “likely” that they would have filled the
vacancies.
[25] Assuming, therefore, that the Grievors would have filled the vacant Operation Officer
FSA1 positions at PEOC by November 2017, the question of how to address remedy
is affected by what occurred in 2018 with the creation of the new OAD10
classification for the Emergency Management Duty Officer position that assumed
and continued the Duty Desk duties at PEOC. Part of the difficulty in providing
direction in this case is that assumptions need to be drawn based on hypothetical
circumstances. However, a remedy needs be determined in this case, whether it be
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negotiated by the Parties, or ordered by the GSB, and the Parties need direction on
the basis for a remedy. While I did note that it was likely that the Grievors’ would
have filled the FSA1 vacancies before November 2017, there was no conclusive
finding on that issue. Furthermore, it is difficult to look back and determine that the
Employer, if told to post vacancies in the fall of 2017, would have made an earlier
announcement of its decision to hire 8 new Emergency Management Duty Officer
positions to staff the Duty Desk. In addition, while the 2019 PEOC organizational
chart shows some vacant Operation Officer positions, it also shows filled Emergency
Management Duty Officer positions, which on its own is not indicative of a finding
that the Operation Officer positions marked vacant should be filled.
[26] There are a number of reasons why I do not find that a layoff would have occurred in
this case. Although Article 20 refers to a “layoff for any reason”, most of the caselaw
and interpretation support a lay-off occurring as a result of a shortage of work, denial
of work, or involuntary removal from the work force, which is not the case here. The
undisputed evidence in this case, was that the work of the Duty Desk, continued and
even increased over time resulting in the Employer increasing its hiring by creating
and posting 8 Emergency Management Duty Officer positions. The decision in
Western Grocers and Queensway-Carleton Hospital, supra, cited by the Union, both
deal with changes in classification resulting from a lack of work. Western Grocers
dealt with a group grievance filed in connection with a layoff and the consequential
reassignment and transfer of workers and allocation of work. The issue in that case
involved a determination of what limits were on the Employer when reducing the
workforce in the warehouse in assigning the remaining work to the remaining
workers in terms of a different shift, location, and classification. The Arbitrator found
that in the context of a reduction of the workforce in the warehouse, the Employer
would be in violation of the collective agreement if it assigned remaining workers to
lower classifications or pay adversely affecting the incidents of the job. In the
Queensway- Carleton Hospital, following a reorganization that involved contracting
out of some lab technician testing work, a senior technologist in the Hospital’s
microbiology lab was advised that her position was being reclassified to that of a
junior technologist. The Arbitrator found that the reclassification was in reality, a lay-
off, noting that the contracting out of the lab technician testing work was a substantial
contributing factor to the elimination of the grievor’s position and her consequent
“reclassification” (at paragraph 63). In essence, the Arbitrator concluded that
management rights are curtailed when where there is a unilateral reduction to an
employee’s classification brought about by lack of work in the employee’s existing
classification. In this case the Duty Desk work was not eliminated by the
reorganization of PEOC. There also was not a complete transfer of duties of the
FSA1 Operations Officer positions to the OAD10 Emergency Management Duty
Officer positions, as the evidence showed that the 2 employees remained in the
Operation Officer FSA1 positions but were assigned work that differed from the Duty
Desk duties as that work involved a higher level of project-based and administrative
duties.
[27] These Grievors’ circumstances also differ from other situations that arose in cases
referred to by the Union where layoffs occurred but were not related to shortage of
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work. For example, in OPSEU (Union Grievance) v Ontario (Ministry of Health),
1982 – 665/81 (Ont GSB) (Kennedy), a lay-off was found when the employer closed
its Toronto OHIP office and opened a new OHIP office in Kingston and tried to argue
that those employees who did not elect to move to Kingston effectively abandoned
their positions. In that case, the arbitrator found that the work in Kingston, primarily
due to the geographic location, involved new positions and concluded that the
closure of the Toronto office resulted in the abolition of positions being available for
those employees who wished to remain in their positions in Toronto. In contrast, in
the instant case, there was not a closure of a unit or a requirement that employees
make a material change to their work or work location. Reference was also made by
the Union to the decision Timmins and District Hospital and OPSEU, Local 643, 2015
Carswell 4457 (Ont Arb) (Stout), in which a group grievance was filed after the
employer notified staff that it would only employ employees in a pharmacy technician
classification who were registered with the Ontario College of Pharmacists. The
Union in that case, successfully argued that management’s decision to only employ
registered pharmacy technicians resulted in a layoff for those who technicians who
did not become registered. Making reference to the Supreme Court of Canada’s
decision in Canada Safeway Ltd. Local 454 (1998), 160, D.L.R. (4th) (S.C.C.), the
arbitrator noted that layoff in labour law refers to a denial of work to an employee, or
a reduction in hours or the involuntary removal from the workforce. Applying the
general layoff principles, the arbitrator concluded that the consequences of only have
registered pharmacy technicians work in the pharmacy affected employees who were
not registered with the College, thereby preventing them from performing work
resulting in a layoff. Comparing the Grievors’ circumstances in this case, there was
no change to the duties or the requirements of duties that would have resulted in a
denial of work.
[28] In terms of the layoff provisions in the Collective Agreement, Article 20, while
preserving and protecting rights of employees to their home classifications whether
through assignment, displacement or recall, the triggering language in Article 20.1.1
is clear that there must be an identification of a surplus employee and that surplus
notices will be issued to those employees identified as surplus (Article 20.1.2.1).
Article 20.13 provides protection, to an employee who is released from employment
due to technological change. Throughout many sub-sections of Article 20, reference
is also made to “where an employee’s position is declared surplus”. In essence,
while there is no specific definition of what constitutes a layoff in Article 20, when the
provision is read as a whole, it reasonable to conclude that a layoff is triggered by
work no longer being available to an employee either because the work has been
declared surplus or where work becomes redundant due to technological change.
There is no definition in the Collective Agreement for what constitutes “surplus”,
however, reference is made to the concept of reduction of work in Article 20.1.2.1
Surplus Notice Alert which states that “ The Surplus Notice Alert will describe the
work unit, the job functions to be reduced and the number of positions to be
reduced”. Applying the concept of reduction to the instant case, it cannot be
concluded on the facts, that job functions were reduced or that the work associated
with those job functions was reduced. Instead, the employer decided on how to
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reorganize its staffing and duties to better deal with the continued increasing work at
PEOC.
[29] I find that Article 7.3 and its salary protection provisions apply in this case. The
purpose of Article 7, in general, is to provide salary protection to employees whose
jobs are affected by being placed in lower classifications when management
reorganizes and assesses how it needs to staff positions. The exercise of sending
the job duties to the job classification branch involved an assessment of the duties
that the Grievors were performing in their work at the Duty Desk and resulted in the
reclassification of that work into the Emergency Management Duty Officer OAD10
position. A similar finding applying the former Pay Administration article (5.4) which
mirrors Article 7.3, was made in OPSEU (MacIntosh) v. Ontario (MCS), GSB #
200/78 (Kennedy). In that decision, the arbitrator found that the salary protection
provision applied in circumstances when, after an employer audit, that the duties of a
probation officer III were reclassified to a probation officer II. Although the probation
officer III position continued to exist and be staffed, the arbitrator agreed that it was
within management’s rights to reorganize and staff accordingly. Similar to the case
at hand, the employee who was reclassified down to the lower rated classification
continued to perform the same duties. The arbitrator concluded that that layoff
provisions did not apply, but that the affected employee was entitled to salary
protection as per the collective agreement. I find that the facts of that case similar to
what occurred here in terms of review of duties and reassessment of the work and
duties performed by the Grievors at the Duty Desk. Although, the Employer
continued to employ 2 other employees in the FSA1 role as Operations Officers, like
the need to continue higher level work performed by the senior parole officer in the
MacIntosh case, supra, in PEOC there continued to be a need to fill roles related to
more complex and administrative matters staffed by FSA1 Operations Officers.
[30] Based on my direction that Article 7.3 is applicable to the determination of remedy in
this case, I am remitting the issue of remedy back to the Parties. April 28, 2021 is
scheduled for a hearing on remedy should the Parties not reach a remedial
settlement.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 13th day of April, 2021.
“Dale Hewat”
________________________
Dale Hewat, Arbitrator