HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2007-2921.Allen et al.09-07-15 Decision
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P-2007-2921
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Grievor
James Allen et al
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services)
Employer
BEFOREKathleen O?Neil Vice-Chair
FOR THE GRIEVORSJames Allen and Dennis Burt
Grievors
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Cathy Phan
Ministry of Government Services
Counsel
WRITTEN
SUBMISSIONSMarch 3, 2009.
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Decision
[1]This decision deals with the employer?s motion asking for the dismissal of a grievance
submitted by a group of thirteen Operational Managers, claiming that the employer has
failed to provide adequate training to complete their performance management plans.
[2]The employer?s motion, made in writing, asks that the matter be dismissed for want of
jurisdiction, in that the grievance does not point to any statute, regulation, past practice,
policy or directive which would support a claim that there is any term or condition of
employment entitling the grievors to the training requested.Further, the employer asserts
that the subject matter of the grievances relates to the evaluation of the grievors? job
performance or the method of evaluating that performance, and is thus beyond the
Board?s jurisdiction, as set out in section 4(2) of Regulation 378/07 under The Public
Service of Ontario Act. The employer submits that the grievors are essentially claiming
that if the employer had provided training on how to complete their performance
management plans, the grievors may have prepared Performance Management Plans
which would have resulted in their receiving higher compensation by way of pay for
performance.
[3]The Board requested submissions from the grievors in reply to the written motion,
advising them that the Board would decide whether further hearing or submissions were
necessary after receiving them. Having carefully reviewed the material filed by both
parties, the Board is of the view that the matter can and should be dealt with on the
material now before it.
[4]The employer?s motion makes reference to Section 4 of Regulation 378/07 under the
Pubic Service of Ontario Act, 2006, which provides 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,
(a) if the public servant is eligible under sections 5 and 7 to file such a complaint;
(b) if the public servant gives notice in accordance with section 8 of his or her
proposal to file the complaint; and
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(c) if the public servant complies with the filing requirements set out in section 10.
(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 or denied to a public servant as a result of the
evaluation of his or her performance.
Section 9 of the Board?s Rules provides as follows:
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 its reasons.
The grievor?s claims
[5]For the purposes of this motion, the facts asserted by the grievors are assumed to be true
and provable, but no findings of fact are made. In their grievance, the Operational
Managers indicate that the employer set time lines for completing the updating of their
own Performance Management Plans, and advised them that failure to meet those time
lines could have an adverse effect on their performance rating. The grievors state that
these comments have increased their stress and frustration, and that the employer has
been made aware of their concerns. They state that they perceive the comments
concerning the time lines as threats.
[6]The grievance states that the grievance is not a complaint about the method of evaluation
their performance or the compensation provided or denied as a result of the evaluation of
their performance. As remedy, they ask for the following:
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1. Proper training be given to all Operational Managers when policies are changed
and/or new policies are implemented that directly or indirectly impact on the
Operational Managers in performance of their duties and responsibilities.
2. The employer immediately cease and desist form making comments that operational
managers perceive to be threats of reprisal.
3. Time be allotted for Operational Managers to complete assigned tasks and
documentation.
4. No reprisals by employer in regards to submission of this complaint.
5. Operational Managers be reimbursed for any costs that may be incurred in regards
to this grievance.
[7]The grievors state in their written submissions in response to the motion to dismiss that
the employer has made it a term and condition of employment to complete their
Performance Management Plans within the time lines set by the employer, failing which
there would be adverse affects on the managers. Further, they state that the employer has
also indicated that performance management is an essential element of every employee?s
responsibilities, which leads them to believe that completion of the Performance
Management Plan would be a condition of employment also.
[8]The grievors also make reference to provisions of the Performance Management
Operating Policy, to the effect that Performance Plans are linked to the ministry?s
business objectives, that senior management provides support for the successful
implementation of performance management, which is reflected in the appropriate
training and skills development for the manager.
[9]The grievors also submit that the Deputy Minister has the right to determine training and
refer to The Crown Employee?s Collective Bargaining Act, s. 18(1) and to Sections 17
and 18 of Regulation 977 under The Public Service of Ontario Act, Part III entitled Staff
Development Programs. The grievors mention various training provided by the employer
in the past on subjects such as use of force, inmate escort and human rights, asserting that
past practice has been that when any new computerized program or policy is
implemented, the employer provide classroom training to staff who are impacted.
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The grievors stress that they do not consider the grievance to be about performance
evaluation, but to be about training.
* * *
[10]I have considered all the material before me, on the assumption that the facts asserted by
the grievors are true and provable. For the following reasons, it is my finding that the
matter should be dismissed without further hearing, partly on the basis of jurisdiction,
and partly because the material filed does not make out a case for the remedies requested.
[11]Starting with jurisdiction, the regulation set out above makes it abundantly clear that the
Board has no jurisdiction over complaints that relate to the evaluation of a public
servant's performance or the method of evaluating his or her performance. The grievors
assert that this complaint is not about evaluation, but about training. I accept that training
is central to the remedy requested, but there are aspects of the grievance that are very
clearly related to the method of evaluating the Operational Manager?s performance.
Specifically, the portions of the complaint which assert that by setting a time line for
Operational Managers to complete their own Performance Management Plans, and
indicating that failure to meet that time line could negatively impact their performance
appraisals, senior management is ?threatening? them, directly relate to the method of
evaluating their performance. The only content to the alleged threat is that it will impact
performance appraisal. Therefore, for this reason alone, this portion of the grievance
should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. As well, it appears that the Performance
Management Plans themselves are part of the overall method of evaluating their
performance, so that anything related to them would be beyond the Board?s jurisdiction
as well.
[12]Further, the Board?s Rule 9 makes it clear that if a complaint does not make out a case for
the orders or remedies requested, the matter may be dismissed. In legal terms, this is
referred to as lack of a prima facie (a Latin term meaning at first view) case. From a
jurisdictional point of view, the Board is within its mandate to determine if a complaint
makes out a case for the remedies claimed. However, in order to make out a case for the
remedies requested, a complaint has to set out enough facts to establish that some term or
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condition of employment has been breached, and that some remedy is owed to make up
for that breach. Establishing a viable case can be thought of as a chain with at least three
links: first, grievors must establish an existing term or condition of employment; second,
they must establish that the employer has breached that term or condition of the
employment contract, and third, they must establish that there is a connection between
the breach and the remedy requested, or at the very least, some remedy within the
Board?s jurisdiction. The Board is not in a position to ?fix? all complaints that come
before it. Specifically, it is not given the authority to set terms and conditions of
employment, or change or add to them because an employee or a group of employees
does not like them, unless the terms set by senior management are unlawful, or in breach
of some other contractual term of employment. Here, the grievors have not succeeded in
establishing any term or condition of employment that has been breached. In the result,
the Board is not able to grant any remedies, let alone the ones requested, as detailed
further below. Therefore, there is no basis on which it would be appropriate to allow the
matter to proceed further.
[13]In their written submissions, in answer to the employer?s submission that their complaint
disclosed no relevant term or condition of employment, the grievors made a number of
statements as to where one might find terms and conditions of employment. To start,
they referred to The Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act. Although this
legislation has great relevance to any unionized employees whom the Operational
Managers may supervise, it has nothing to say about their own terms and conditions of
employment. More pertinent was a reference to Sections (17) and (18) of Regulation
977, under The Public Service of Ontario Act. Originally established under the now
repealedPublic Service Act , that regulation was revoked on December 20, 2007, but was
in effect when the grievance was filed. It reads as follows:
PART III
STAFF DEVELOPMENT
17. The deputy minister of a ministry,
(a) shall plan and provide for the employees of the ministry staff development
programs for the continued efficient and effective operation of the ministry; and
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(b) shall provide to the Commission reports on the staff development programs of the
ministry or on such aspects of the programs as the Commission may specify at such
times as the Commission may require the reports. R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 977, s. 17.
18. (1) Where a deputy minister assigns a public servant to participate in a staff
development program,
(a) that is conducted by a ministry or by the Commission; and
(b) that, in the opinion of the deputy minister, will provide the public servant with
skills or knowledge of value to the public service,
the assignment shall be in accordance with subsections (3) and (4). R.R.O. 1990, Reg.
977, s. 18 (1).
(2) Where a deputy minister assigns a civil servant to participate in a staff
development program,
(a) that is not conducted by a ministry or by the Commission; and
(b) that, in the opinion of the deputy minister, will provide the civil servant with skills
or knowledge essential to the performance of his or her duties, the assignment shall be
in accordance with subsections (3) and (4). R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 977, s. 18 (2).
(3) The deputy minister shall authorize payment by the ministry of an amount equal to
the tuition fees and all or part of any expenses that may be specified by the deputy
minister in connection with the participation of the civil servant or public servant in
the program. R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 977, s. 18 (3).
(4) The deputy minister shall make the assignment subject to, and shall ensure that the
civil servant or public servant is aware that the assignment is subject to, the following
conditions:
1. The civil servant or public servant shall submit regular personal attendance reports.
2. The civil servant or public servant shall not accept a bursary or scholarship in
respect of the program.
3. The civil servant or public servant shall not enter into any other employment that
will interfere with his or her participation in the program or that will result in a
contravention of subsection 15 (1).
4. No overtime will be credited or paid for in respect of participation in or the
completion of work related to participation in the program. R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 977,
s. 18 (4).
Although this regulation undoubtedly qualifies as a term or condition of the grievors?
employment, there is nothing in the facts before me that suggest it was breached. The
grievors refer to various kinds of training provided in the past, which tends to support a
finding that the employer has been providing training and staff development, rather than
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that they have failed to do so. Most specifically, there is nothing in the material before
me on which I could find that the employer is obliged to provide the specific training the
grievors would like on how to deal with their own Performance Management Plans, or
the more general remedial request for a guarantee of training on every new policy that
affects their work.
[14]As to the request for time to complete tasks and documentation, it is totally unsupported
in the material; there is no suggestion that there is some obligation to provide more time
than has been provided, or even any indication of what time was provided for what tasks.
In the circumstances, this is a request that the Board order the employer how to allot time
for tasks to the Operational Managers, which goes well beyond the proper role of the
Board. As to the remedy request that the employer not make comments that the
Operational Managers perceive as threat of reprisals, there is also an insufficient basis in
the material to support such a remedy. Firstly, as noted above, in context the reference to
a threat is related to a time line for completion of documentation which the employer
intends to count in consideration of performance evaluation, and is thus outside the
Board?s jurisdiction, as relating to the method of evaluation of performance. It is also
difficult to credit the idea that setting a time line with consequences in terms of
performance appraisal could be considered a threat in the legal sense of the word in
general, or a threat of reprisal in particular.Reprisal is a word used in the law to refer to
negative consequences for exercising a right, not ordinary employment consequences for
failing to fulfill a lawful employment requirement. There is nothing in the material
before me sufficient to find that setting a time line, and taking any failure to meet it into
account in assessing performance, is unlawful.
[15]As to the request that the Board grant the remedy that the employer should not engage in
reprisals against the grievors because of this complaint, it is not rooted in a sufficient
factual basis to warrant a finding that there was a breach of a term or condition of
employment, without which the Board is unable to grant remedies of any kind.
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[16]The remaining request is for costs, which are generally not granted by the Board, even for
successful grievances, and for which there is no basis in the material filed.
[17]In the result, for the reasons set out above, the grievance is hereby dismissed.
th
Dated at Toronto this 15 day of July 2009.
Kathleen G. O?Neil, Vice-Chair