HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-3311.Solomon et al.21-11-30 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
GSB# 2018-3311
UNION# 2019-0586-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Solomon Smith) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services) Employer
BEFORE
Bram Herlich
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Andrew Mindszenthy
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Maria-Kristina Ascenzi
Treasury Board Secretariat
Counsel
HEARING November 18, 2021
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DECISION
[1] This is a job competition grievance. The parties agreed to a form of mediation-
arbitration in an effort to streamline the hearing process and to minimize any
delay in the issuance of a determination. The process the parties agreed to
permitted me to hear from the parties’ representatives and from the parties
themselves, including the grievor and a number of management personnel.
Consistent with the spirit of the parties’ agreement, my decision will be
economical, without all of the intricate factual details and legal analysis that are
more typical of the decisions of this Board. This decision will, of course, be
binding on the parties insofar as it will resolve the grievance that gave rise to
these proceedings. Otherwise, however, it will be without precedential value and
of no other binding authority.
[2] In August 2018, the employer posted to fill vacancies in the position of Welfare
Field Worker 2 under the auspices of the Ministry of Community and Social
Services. The posting indicated that there were 5 permanent and 34 temporary
positions to be filled. Ultimately, however, 14 permanent and 41 temporary
positions were filled.
[3] Some one thousand applications were received. From those applicants, the
employer selected close to 150 to participate further in the process, including
Daliah Solomon (the grievor) and Sansia Frayn (the incumbent). Those selected
then participated in an interview and two written tests. Final percentages were
tabulated in respect of each applicant (the pre-interview test was scored out of
40; the interview out of 45; and the post-interview test out of 15 for a maximum
possible total of 100%). The same questions were posed at all of the interviews,
which were conducted by the same two management personnel. The employer
then set a minimum score of 70/100 for candidates to be further considered and
selected successful candidates from those who had achieved that minimum
score. Every candidate offered a position was also subject to a further
standardized reference check. (As it turned out, given that a number of
candidates offered positions declined, ultimately every candidate with the
minimum score of 70 was subject to the additional reference check.)
[4] The collective agreement identifies qualifications and ability to perform the
required duties as the primary consideration in selecting the successful
candidates. The employer used its test/interview scores to assess qualifications
and ability. However, where the collective agreement selection factors can be
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seen to be relatively equal as between competing candidates, the agreement
prescribes that seniority is to govern the selection.
[5] With the number of positions to be awarded and the number of candidates to be
considered in this competition, the assessment of relative equality was not
necessarily a simple matter. The employer proceeded to apply relative ability
assessments on what it described as a “rolling” basis. As will be clear, however,
the precise details of that process and the selection, one by one, of successful
applicants are not material to the issue in this case.
[6] The union and the grievor assert that the position awarded to the incumbent (who
was given notice of but did not attend these proceeding) ought to have been
awarded to the grievor instead. The grievor had slightly more than two years
seniority at the time of the competition; the incumbent had slightly less than two
years seniority. Thus, by virtue of her seniority, the grievor had a claim to be
awarded the position in lieu of the incumbent, but only if the two could be seen to
be relatively equal.
[7] The grievor’s total score was 66 (although it was once recorded, in error the
employer says, as 68). This 2-point disparity makes no difference to the ultimate
result. Having scored less than 70, the grievor’s application was not considered
any further by the employer and no follow up reference check was conducted. By
contrast, the incumbent scored 92. The latter was offered a position because she
was considered to be relatively equal to a junior candidate notwithstanding the
score of 100 attained by the latter (“relative equality is often said to arise when
there is no more than a ten percent disparity between the assessments of
competing candidates).
[8] There are a number of ways to view the disparity the grievor would need to
foreclose in order to be considered relatively equal. First, I note that the union
accepted that, in essence, the appropriate comparator is not the incumbent but
rather the junior applicant who scored 100 and against whom the incumbent was
considered to be relatively equal. Otherwise, if the grievor could succeed by
claiming her relative equality only to the incumbent, what is to prevent another
applicant, with a score even 10 points lower than the grievor from advancing a
similar claim against the successful grievor, and so on.
[9] But whether the grievor is to be assessed directly against the incumbent, where
she would need to attain at least 14-16 additional points, an increase of over
20% or (more properly, perhaps) against or closer to the high score of 100,
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where she would need an additional 32-34 points, an increase well beyond 30%,
it is far to say that the “gap” between the grievor and relative equality is more in
the nature of a chasm.
[10] Having considered the information provided by the parties’ representatives and
the parties themselves (including the grievor and certain management
representatives), I am not persuaded that the union and the grievor can come
anywhere close to scaling that chasm. Accordingly, the instant grievance must be
and hereby is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 30th day of November 2021.
“Bram Herlich”
______________________
Bram Herlich - Arbitrator