HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-0656.Burns et al.10-01-25 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
règlement des griefs
Settlement Board
des employés de la
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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GSB#2008-0656
UNION#2008-0542-0007
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Burns et al)
Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Randi H. Abramsky
FOR THE UNIONDanny Kastner
Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYERCathy Phan
Ministry of Government Services
Counsel
HEARINGJanuary 20, 2010.
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Decision
[1]The Employer has raised a preliminary objection, contending that the grievance
should be dismissed on the basis that it is a classification grievance over which the Board
does not have jurisdiction. The Union opposes the motion, asserting that the grievance
concerns retroactive pay, not the grievors? classification.
Facts
[2]On April 28, 2008, a group grievance was filed by six IRP Issuing Clerks with the
Ministry of Transportation. The grievance states, in relevant part, as follows:
We grieve that our rights have been violation[sic], specifically but not
exclusively of Articles 2 and 8 of the Collective Agreement by not being
paid properly for performing the duties of the General Issuing Clerk, a
higher classification?
The remedy sought was ?full redress.?
[3]For the purposes of this motion, the parties agreed to the following facts, as set
forth in the Union?s particulars:
1.The grievors are employed as International Registration Plan (IRP) Program
Support Clerks and General Issuing Clerks in the Ministry of Transportation
(MTO). Both are OAG9 positions.
2.In April 2008, at the time of filing the grievance, the grievors were employed as
IRP Issuing Clerks, an OAG8 position.
3.Until November 3, 2008, the grievors were wrongly classified at the OAG8 level.
The employer recognized the error and changed the grievors? classification to
OAG9 effective November 3, 2008.
4.Prior to the grievors? reclassification, the employer had converted all other OAG8
IRP Clerks, throughout the MTO, to OAG9s. The Ministry provided retroactive
payment of the difference between the classification salaries to all such employees,
except the grievors.
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As noted above, the Employer had reclassified all of the other OAG8 IRP clerks to
OAG9s at the time of the grievance, which led the group to file the grievance on
April 28, 2008. In November 2008, the Employer ?recognized the error and
changed the grievors? classification to OAG9 effective November 3, 2008.? The
other IRP Clerks, however, were provided retroactive payment of the difference
between the classifications, but the grievors were not. The remedy sought, as stated
in the Union?s particulars is ?the difference between the OAG8 and OAG9 pay for
the relevant period.?
Analysis
[4]The parties take divergent views on the nature of the grievance. In the
Employer?s view, although the grievance alleges a violation of Article 2 (management
rights) and Article 8 (temporary assignments), it is, in reality a disguised classification
grievance. The Employer asserts that the Board would have to determine that the
grievors were improperly classified at the OAG8 level and should have been classified at
the OAG9 level, in order to provide them with the retroactive pay remedy they seek. In
support of its position, the Employer cites to OPSEU (Boyer) and Ministry of the
Environment (2001), GSB No. 0742/00 (Abramsky); OPSEU (Aiken et al.) and Ministry
of Health (1993), GSB no. 678/87 (Gorsky); and OPSEU (Rosamond) and Ministry of
Citizenship, Culture and Recreation (1998), GSB No 2086/96 (Leighton).
[5]The Union views the grievance as a pay and management rights issue ? an
assertion that they were not paid properly and that the Employer arbitrarily denied them
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the OAG9 pay given to other employees. The grievance, it asserts, arose because all of
the other IRP Clerks had been reclassified by the Ministry, except the grievors. The
Employer subsequently recognized its mistake and reclassified them, but denied them the
same retroactive pay provided to the others. The Union submits that the grievance, which
asserts ?not being paid properly for performing the duties? [of the] higher classification?
includes the issue of retroactive pay. The Union further asserts that the Board need not
determine that the grievors were improperly classified because the Employer, itself, has
recognized that and reclassified the grievors.The issue that remains, the Union asserts, is
the Employer?s failure to pay the grievors retroactively as it did the other IRP Clerks. In
the Union?s view, that was an arbitrary and discriminatory exercise of management?s
rights, and the Board has jurisdiction. In support of its position, the Union cites to
OPSEU (Gaffar) and Ministry of Transportation (2001), GSB No. 0434/95 et al.
(Dissanayake).
[6]After carefully considering the grievance, facts and submissions of the parties, I
conclude that the Employer?s preliminary motion must be denied.
Section 52(1) of The Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act, reads as follows:
52(1) Classification Issues ? A provision in an agreement entered into that provides for
the determination by an arbitrator, board of arbitration or another tribunal of any of the
following matters is void:
1.A classification system of employees, including a new classification system or
amending an existing classification system.
2.The classification of an employee, including changing an employee?s classification.
Similarly, Article 22.12 of the parties? collective agreement provides that while a grievor
may grieve that ?his or her position is improperly classified?, if the grievance has not
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been resolved by the end of Stage 2, it ?may be referred to the Joint System
Subcommittee (JSSC) provided in Appendix 7 (Classification System Overall) of this
Agreement for final resolution.?
[7]The Board has held that it has no jurisdiction over grievances that require the
Board to determine whether a grievor is properly classified, even though the grievance is
not framed as a classification grievance. Re OPSEU (Aiken et al.), supra; Re OPSEU
(Rosamond), supra; Re OPSEU (Boyer), supra.
[8]In contrast, based on the stipulated facts in this case, the Board would not have to
determine whether the grievors? were improperly classified as IRP Clerks. All the other
IRP Clerks had been reclassified as OAG9s, except the grievors, which led to the instant
grievance. The Employer then realized its mistake and reclassified the grievors to OAG9
positions. Consequently, the decision about the grievor?s classification has already been
made by the Employer. The only inquiry is whether the Employer arbitrarily denied the
grievors? the retroactive pay that it provided to the other IRP Clerks. That is a matter
clearly within the Board?s jurisdiction.
[9]This case is similar to the decision of Vice-Chair Dissanayake in OPSEU
(Gaffar), supra. In that case, the grievor had applied for and won a competition which, at
the time, was a promotion. Subsequently, his former position had been reclassified based
on an order of the GSB (when it had jurisdiction to deal with classification grievances),
and given a significantly higher rate of pay. The result was that the new wage rate for his
former position was higher than the wages for his new position. What he believed to
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have been a promotion when he competed for and won the competition turned out, in
fact, to be a demotion. Eventually, his new position was also reclassified and became
higher paid than his former position, but the interim period from the date of his new
position until it was reclassified was still in issue.
[10]The Board determined that this was not a situation, as in Re OPSEU (Aiken),
supra, ?that can only be decided if the Board must first render a decision with respect to
the proper classification of a grievor at some point in time.? As the Vice-Chair
concluded at par. 11:
Clearly, the determination of Mr. Gaffar?s claim for retroactivity does not require
me to determine the proper classification for his position, because that has already
been decided and implemented. I would not be called upon to go through an
exercise of comparing the duties and responsibilities of different classifications,
as would typically be the case in classification cases. Accordingly, the
employer?s objection to the Board?s jurisdiction was dismissed.
[11]The same result applies here. The grievors, at this point, are not seeking
reclassification. They have already been reclassified. The grievors are claiming that they
are entitled to the same retroactivity as all the other IRP Clerks. The grievance concerns
that issue, and it is an issue over which the Board has jurisdiction.
th
Dated at Toronto this 25 day of January 2010.
Randi H. Abramsky, Vice-Chair