HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-1407.Allin et al.10-05-26 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
Tel. (416) 326-1388 Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396 Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2008-1407
UNION#2008-0340-0008
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Allin et al)
Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Revenue)
Employer
BEFORENimal Dissanayake Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONTim Hannigan
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYERBenjamin Parry
Ministry of Government Services
Counsel
HEARINGMarch 2, 2009, June 5, 2009, July 27 & 31,
2009, November 4 & 17, 2009, December 11,
2009, January 27, 2010, March 30, 2010.
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Decision
[1]The Board is seized with a group grievance dated April 16, 2008 filed on behalf of
six employees employed as Investigators in the Tobacco Tax Section, Special
Investigations Branch of the Ministry of Revenue. They grieve that ?the employer is in
violation of Article 2 and Article 8.1.1 of the Ontario Public Service (OPS) Collective
Agreement. The employer changed the nature of the position by reassigning the criteria for
investigations from $ 25,000 to $ 250000, thereby, in effect, changing the nature of our
position from an FO 5 (Investigators) to temporary assignments as AFA 20 (Senior
Investigators)?. The AFA 20 position was created in January 2004. The gist of the
grievance is that since that time the grievors had been temporarily assigned to perform
duties of the AFA 20 position but not remunerated at the AFA20 rate as required by article
8.1.1.
[2] The Special Investigations Branch consists of a number of sections including the
Tobacco Tax Section (?tobacco?) and the Retail Sales Tax Section (?RST?). Both these
sections employ Investigators classified as Financial Officer 5 (hereinafter ?FO5?) and
Senior Investigators classified as Financial Administrator AFA20 (Hereinafter ?AFA20?).
FO5s are in the OPSEU bargaining unit, and AFA 20s in the AMAPCEO bargaining unit.
[3] Article 8.1.1 provides:
Where an employee is assigned temporarily to perform the duties of a
position in a classification with a higher salary maximum for a period in
excess of five (5) consecutive working days, he shall be paid acting pay
from the day he commenced to perform the duties of the higher
classification in accordance with the next higher rate in the higher
classification, provided that where such a change results in an increase of
less than three percent (3%), he shall receive the next higher salary rate
again.
[4] The union submits that in January 2008, the grievors became aware for the first time that
since the creation of the AFA20 position in January 2004, the employer had made a significant
distinction between the work of the two groups based on the tax value of files assigned to them.
Files of a tax value of up to $ 25,000 were considered to be FO5 work, while files with a value in
excess of $ 25,000 were considered AFA20 work. The union claims that sometime late in 2007
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the employer changed the value limit from $25,000 to $250.000. It claims acting pay for the
grievors up to that date, on the basis that they had performed duties which the employer at the
time considered to be AFA20 work, i.e. files with a value exceeding $ 25,000.
[5] The union also asserted that some FO5s in RST were formally granted temporary
assignment as AFA 20 and paid in accordance with article 8.1.1. The grievors were assigned
AFA20 duties, but article 8.1.1 was not applied to them. The union alleges that the differential
treatment was motivated by management?s desire to appoint certain individuals in RST into
permanent AFA20 positions, and submits that this constitutes an exercise of the employer?s
management rights under article 2 in a manner that was arbitrary, discriminatory and in bad faith.
[6] This decision deals with a non-suit motion made by the employer at the conclusion of the
union?s case following testimony by four of the grievors, Collin Taggart, John Allin, Colm
Doyle and Steve Irons.
[7] The parties filed a number of decisions of the Board in which the principles that apply in
determining non-suit motions are reviewed. In Re Whan, 2003-3446 (Dissanayake), in
dismissing the motion, the Board noted that the parties were not in disagreement as to the
following principles:
1.The Board will not put the moving party to an election of whether or not to
call its own evidence as a matter of course. The appropriateness of putting
the moving party to such an election will be determined based upon the
considerations of expedition and fairness in the particular circumstances of
each case.
2.In a non-suit motion, the standard of proof expected from a responding party
is that of a prima facie case, which is significantly lower than the standard of
proof on a balance of probabilities.
3.In determining whether a prima facie case has been made out, the test is
whether some evidence exists to support the claim, which requires an answer
or explanation from the other side.
4.In applying the standard of a prima facie case, any conflicts in or doubts
about the facts must be determined in favour of the party responding to the
motion.
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5.In assessing the existence of a prima facie case, viva voce evidence as well
as all documentary evidence before the Board must be considered.
6.In examining the evidence before it, the Board will not assess the quality,
reliability or the credibility of the evidence.
7.Where a non-suit motion is granted a written decision with reasons will
follow. However, where a motion is denied, no reasons, oral or written, will
be issued.
[8] In several other decisions, the Board had considered the appropriate test to be whether
?some evidence? exists to support the claim, as set out in 3 above. See for example Re Dhanju,
2004-1101 (Dissanayake) and Re Beltrano et al, 2003-3597 (Petryshen). In Re Whan the parties
were in agreement on the applicable agreement principles set out therein. In all of the cases
where the ?some evidence? standard was set out, there is no analysis of the law. In Re Dhanju,
(supra) the only Court decision put before the Board was the Divisional Court decision in
Cahoon. Therefore, it does not deal with the apparent conflict between Cahoon and the Court of
Appeal decisions considered in Re Gareh and the decisions that followed it. In these cases, the
distinction between ?some evidence? and ?sufficient evidence? was not argued before the Board,
and the decisions do not include an analysis of that issue.
[9] I conclude that the correct law is that set out in Re Gareh, 1665/98 (Brown), which has
since been followed in decisions such as Re Sager et al 2000-0377 (Mikus) and Re Gauntlett
2006-0659 (Gray). In these cases the distinction was directly before the Board. In Re Gareh
(supra), the Board was faced with two Court of Appeal decisions which applied the standard of
?sufficient evidence?, and a Divisional Court decision which appeared to apply a lower standard
of ?some evidence?. Vice-Chair Brown at pp.4-7 wrote as follows:
The standard of ?sufficient? evidence was adopted by the Ontario Court of Appeal
inHall v. Pemberton (1974), 5 O.R. (2d) 438, page 439, where the Court quoted with
approval the following passage from Parfitt v. Lawless (1872), 41 L.J.P.&M. 68:
I conceive, therefore, that in discussing whether there is any case evidence to
go to the jury, what the Court has to consider is this, whether assuming the
evidence to be true, and adding to the direct proof all such inferences of fact as
in the exercise of reasonable intelligence the jury would be warranted in
drawing from it, there is sufficient to support the issue. (pages 72; emphasis
added)
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The only reasonable interpretation of ?sufficient to support the issue? is adequate
to allow a jury to rule in favour of the party resisting the non-suit. In other words, a
judge ruling on a non-suit motion in a jury trial, assuming witnesses to be credible
and making all reasonable inferences in favour of the party resisting the non-suit,
must determine whether the evidence is ?sufficient? in the sense that it could lead a
properly instructed jury to rule in favour of that party.
The standard of ?sufficient? evidence was again applied by the Court of Appeal in
Re Gallant and Roman Catholic Separate School Board of District of Sudbury (1985)
56 O.R. (2d) 160:
In dealing with such a motion, a judge must decide whether sufficient prima
facie evidence has been presented by the applicant. At this stage, the plaintiff
[opposing the motion] is entitled to have the facts interpreted in the manner
which is most favourable to him or her Hall v. Pemberton ? (page 167;
emphasis added)
In advocating a lower standard of ?some evidence?, counsel for the union relies
upon the decision of the Divisional Court in Ontario v. OPSEU (Cahoon), (1990), 37
O.A.C. 218 quashing a decision of the Grievance Settlement Board which had
allowed a motion for non-suit brought by the union in that case. The Court wrote:
The Board began by setting out its understanding of a non-suit. While it held
that a prima facie case had not been made out, its reasons make it clear that it
believed a prima facie case had to be established on the balance of
probabilities. This is, of course, incorrect. ? The standard of proof on a non-
suit is that of a prima facie case, not a case on the balance of probabilities. If a
prima facie case has been shown a non-suit must not be granted. It is
erroneous to determine a non-suit on the basis of the higher onus of the balance
of probabilities.A prima facie case is no more than a case for the defendant to
answer.
. . .
A motion for non-suit in modern practice is made by the defendant, contending
that the trier of fact should not proceed to evaluate the evidence in the normal
way, but should dismiss the action. The defendant must satisfy the trial judge
that the evidence is such that no jury acting judicially could find in favour of
the plaintiff. The decision of the judge in both jury and non-jury actions is a
question of law. Sopinka, The Trial of An Action, p. 124 (Butterworths).
The ?normal way? in a civil action would be on the balance of probabilities.
Where a judge is sitting with a jury, the issue is whether there is some evidence
to support the claim. If there is, the case goes to the jury. If there is none, it
does not. (emphasis added)
The Divisional Court?s comment that a motion for non-suit should be dismissed if
there is ?some evidence to support the claim? must be interpreted in the context of
the immediately preceding passage from Sopinka?s The Trial of an Action saying the
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issue to be determined by the judge is whether ?no jury acting judicially could find in
favour of the plaintiff?. Based upon the Divisional Court?s apparent approval of this
passage, I understand the Court?s reference to ?some evidence to support the claim?
to mean evidence which could lead a jury (or some other trier of fact) to rule in
favour of the party opposing the motion, if the trier of fact found that party?s
witnesses to be credible and made all reasonable inferences in its favour. This
standard is no different in substance than the test of ?sufficient? evidence utilized by
the Court of Appeal in the Hall and Gallant cases.
In the case at hand, I must decide the motion for non-suit as well as serve as the
trier of fact. At this stage, my task is to determine whether the evidence presented
could be sufficient to lead me to rule in favour of the union, if I assumed its
witnesses to be credible and drew in its favour all inferences reasonably supported by
direct evidence.
It is not logically possibly to make this determination without taking into account
the applicable standard of proof which is on the balance of probabilities. The
question to be decided is whether I could rule that the union has proven its case on
the balance of probabilities, if its witnesses are believed and it is granted the benefit
of all reasonable inferences. The decision-making process on a motion for non-suit
cannot ignore the standard of proof, but this process entails an application of that
standard which differs markedly from the way it would be applied after both parties
had closed their case. At that point, in determining whether the union had proven its
case on the balance of probabilities, I would scrutinize the credibility of witnesses,
and I would not draw inferences so as to resolve doubts in favour of the union,
because the benefit of doubt should not be granted to the party bearing the onus of
proof.
[10] I adopt the foregoing as the standard that applies. Thus the instant motion must be
upheld if the union has failed to adduce evidence sufficient to support its claim. In assessing
sufficiency, the Board must determine whether the union has proven its case on a balance of
probabilities, if its witnesses are believed and the benefit of any inferences to be drawn are ruled
in the union?s favour.
The Evidence
[11] Substantial evidence was led by the union to establish that the tax value limit for
assignment of tobacco tax files was changed from $ 25,000 to $250,000 only in late 2007 or
early 2008, and not in 2005. I will not review that evidence, but will assume for purposes of this
motion that the union?s position is correct.
[12] The position description for FO5 sets out the ?Purpose of Position? as follows:
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To conduct investigations involving non compliance and/or frauds relating to evasion of
tax and/or obtainment of grants or subsidies under all statutes administered by the Tax
Revenue Division and under the Criminal Code of Canada, as a Provincial Offences
Officer and/or a Peace Officer, in order to prosecute individual or corporate violators.
To lead and coordinate the intelligence process. To provide advice, recommendations and
identify problems and issues arising from the collection and analysis of intelligence,
analyse options and prepare reports.
To collect, process, analyse and disseminate intelligence information to determine
enforcement trends and develop enforcement projects and strategies.
In comparison, the position description for AFA20 sets out the ?Purpose of Position? as follows:
To plan and conduct investigations of the most complex or sensitive cases and
projects involving non compliance and/or frauds relating to evasion of tax and/or
obtainment of grants or subsidies under all statutes administered by Tax Revenue
Division and under the Criminal Code of Canada, as a Provincial Offences Officer
and/or a Peace Officer, in order to prosecute individual or corporate violators. To
provide leadership and guidance to investigative staff and teams. To identify and
assess staff training needs, participate in the development of training modules and
deliver technical and legislative training sessions.
[13] The respective position descriptions list a large number of duties and responsibilities.
The FO5 position description includes the following in relation to investigations:
Planning, leading, and conducting investigations, search and seizure actions,
obtaining evidence by ensuring proper collection, custody, control and
identification;
locating, interviewing or interrogating informants, third party witnesses, suspected
violators and/or their legal/financial representatives; obtaining and evaluating information
on alleged violators; liaise with external agencies on joint investigations; conducting
surveillance operations.
The AFA20 position description includes:
-Conduct investigations of the most complex or sensitive cases, execute and lead
staff in search and seizure actions, securing evidence by ensuring proper collection,
custody, control and identification; locate, interview informants, third party
witnesses, suspected violators and/or their legal/financial representatives; obtain and
evaluate information on alleged violators; liaise with external agencies on joint
investigations; conduct and lead surveillance operations.
-Conduct and lead the development, planning and implementation of projects as
assigned.
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The very first two paragraphs, listed under the AFA20 duties and responsibilities, (hereinafter be
referred to as the ?leadership? and ?training? duties respectively) are as follows:
-Provide mentoring, leadership and guidance to staff in the office and in the field.
Plan/direct/monitor and analyse work in progress, conduct reviews of completed
work, assess capabilities/performance of work assignments, provide constructive
feedback to staff and notify management if standards are not met. Supervise staff,
provide input to management in the preparation of performance evaluations and
recommend merits, approval of various leave requests and participate on interviews
as a technical expert.
-Identify and assess the implications and timing of short and long range training
plans/objectives and recommend to senior management the most appropriate strategy
to ensure the best delivery and ongoing maintenance of an effective enforcement
program. Develop, deliver and participate in training sessions, course, presentations,
workshops and seminars. Actively participate in the development and maintenance
of branch manuals.
[14] Grievor Mr. Collin Taggart has been employed as a FO5 in Tobacco since January 2005.
He testified in chief in great detail about the duties he performed, with reference to the duties
listed in the FO5 position specification. He agreed that the position specification accurately sets
out the work he did.
[15] Union counsel referred Mr. Taggart to the ?Purpose of Position? portion of the AFA20
position description, which provides that AFA 20s investigated ?the most complex or sensitive
cases?, and asked him whether he was aware what makes a case complex or sensitive. Mr.
Taggart replied that based on what the Senior Manager Mr. Jim Thompson, stated at a meeting
on March 8, 2008, and a file criteria from the employer disclosed at the stage two meeting, he
was aware today that the dollar value of the file, and qualitative factors can make it a complex or
sensitive file. As examples of qualitative factors, he referred to files where politicians are
involved; where multiple entities are involved; where no records are available; and where the
person or business being investigated is not registered. When asked whether as a FO5 he had
investigated complex or sensitive files, Mr. Taggart replied that he did a file linked to organized
crime, and several where first nations people were charged, which he considered to be complex
or sensitive.
[16] In chief, Mr. Taggart was asked whether AFA20s carried out the function ?To identify
and assess staff training needs, participate in development of training modules and deliver
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technical and legislative training sessions? as listed in the AFA20 position description. He
replied that he was not sure who designed the training, but that to his knowledge AFA20s did not
do that. However, Mr. Taggart testified that AFA20s ?periodically delivered some parts of the
training? to new employees, and that when he started some of his training was done by AFA20s.
[17] Mr. Taggart testified that FO5s are ?always there to help a colleague?, and if a colleague
?did not know that to do?, he would show him. He considered that to be ?training?. In his view
therefore, FO5s also performed training duties.
[18] Union counsel asked Mr. Taggart whether AFA20s performed the ?mentoring, leadership
and guidance to staff? function as set out in their position specification. Mr. Taggart replied,
?Yes. Its part of the training they do?. He testified, however, that as a FO5 he also did
mentoring, and elaborated that if a fellow FO5 had a question, he would answer and if a FO5 did
not know how to do inventory, he may show him if a AFA20 was not available.
[19] When asked whether AFA20s did the rest of the duties listed in the ?leadership duties?
paragraph, he stated, that he questioned whether AFA20s supervise staff, and that he was not
aware that they had input in the preparation of FO5 performance evaluations or that they
recommended merit increases. He added that the latter duty could not exist because ?in OPSEU
merit increases are automatic?.
[20] When asked whether AFA20s ?plan/direct/monitor and analyse work in progress and
conduct reviews of completed work?, Mr. Taggart replied, ?I think they do review. Some senior
managers also review FO5 work. I hand in my work directly to my senior manager?.
[21] Union counsel asked Mr. Taggart whether AFA20s did the duties listed under the
?training duties? paragraph. He replied, ?I?d say some of them do. I don?t think every AFA20 is
involved in all of those things?, and added ?I think now development of manuals is done by a
committee which includes a senior manager, a AFA20 and a FO5?. With regard to
investigations, Mr. Taggart agreed that AFA20s did complex or sensitive cases and led staff in
the activities listed, but added that AFA20s also did investigations which were not complex or
sensitive. He said that a AFA20 ?can be assigned a file with a $5,000 value and no
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complexity/sensitivity attached?. Mr. Taggart testified that if the reference to ?complex or
sensitive? is deleted, that paragraph in the AFA20 position specification would be applicable to a
FO5. The AFA20 position description sets out as a duty ?conduct and lead staff in examining
and analysing all evidence ?. Mr. Taggart stated that he was not sure, but added ?I guess they
can lead staff in that?. Mr. Taggart was asked to comment whether a number of other duties
listed in the AFA20 position description, equally applied to a FO5. Mr. Taggart testified that
some did. With regard to other duties, he testified that FO5s did them except that FO5s did not
?review? work of other staff, did not ?coordinate and lead? and did not ?mentor staff?.
[22] Mr. Taggart defined ?a project? as ?a file bigger than a regular investigation with
multiple targets and multiple locations?. He agreed that projects are assigned to AFA20s, but
added that Mr. Colm Doyle, a FO5, was given an acting assignment as AFA 20 for nine months
to do a project known as ?Project Bear?. When asked whether the paragraph on ?knowledge? in
the AFA20 position description applied to a FO5, Mr. Taggart said that it did, except that FO5s
were not involved in developing branch manuals, and he did not know what was meant by ?co-
ordinate and lead special projects?. With regard to the paragraph on ?judgement? in the AFA20
position description, Mr. Taggart stated that it equally applied to FO5s. He pointed to the
provision that ?complex matters can be discussed with the Branch Director? and commented that
AFA20s did not do that, that AFA20s as well as FO5s first talked to the senior manager before
discussing with the Branch Director. He also testified that AFA20s did not research and design
training programs as stated because that was done by another unit.
[23] The AFA20 position description provides as follows under ?Accountability?:
Programs
Job is guided by the provisions of the tax statutes, related regulations, Criminal
Code of Canada, precedents, policies, standards, program objectives as well as
within investigative and legal processes. Care must be taken in identifying the
need for and defining the extent and scheme of tax evasion and fraud (non-
compliance) for all cases including the most complex and sensitive cases and
projects. All work must be properly carried out and completed as required by the
judicial process. Evidence must be presented coherently and must be properly
assembled, translated and consolidated. The job requires the development of
investigative strategies with the flexibility to modify them for complications and
changes as they occur.
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Human Resources
Provides leadership, guidance and mentoring to investigators and investigative
teams. Position monitors and reviews work of investigators, identifies training
needs, develops training material and presents training sessions.
Financial and Material
Ensure the efficient and effective leadership and guidance to investigators to
provide the delivery of a quality enforcement program.
Impact of Errors
Insufficient research and analysis of evidence could negatively influence the
general deterrent factor of the enforcement program and could lead to increased
non-compliance and potential tax loss. Inadequate results could lead to the loss of
public confidence in the integrity of the voluntary tax system.
[24] Mr. Taggart testified that the accountability for ?programs? listed equally applied to
FO5s. Under ?Human Resources?, Mr. Taggart said that AFA20s did not monitor and review
work of investigators. The manager did that. As for identifying training needs, Mr. Taggart
testified that anyone, AFA 20 or FO5, can ?tell a manager if he sees a training need for himself
or for the unit?. Mr. Taggart stated that neither FO5s or AFA20s are accountable for developing
training material because ?there is a special person designated for that?. As for presenting
training sessions, Mr. Taggart testified that managers do ask AFA 20s for assistance in training
new hires, but added that not all AFA20s do that.
[25] Mr. Taggart was asked whether FO5s were accountable, as set out in the ACA20 position
description under Financial and Material?, to ?ensure the efficient and effective leadership and
guidance to investigators to provide the delivery of a quality enforcement program?. He replied
?yes?. When asked ?how?, he stated that ?When we work with new hires, we take them with us
on our investigations so they get experience.? Mr. Taggart was of the opinion that FO5s had the
same accountability as that listed in the AFA20 position description under ?Impact of Errors?.
[26] When union counsel asked Mr. Taggart to comment on the FO5 and AFA20 positions
based on a comparative review of the duties, he replied that both were investigator positions, and
that the only difference was that files above a certain tax dollar amount and files determined by
the Branch to be complex or sensitive were assigned to AFA20s. He testified that there was
absolutely no other difference in the work assigned to the two positions. Mr. Taggart testified
that prior to January 2008, the only distinction, as far as he was aware, was that projects were
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only assigned to AFA20s or acting AFA20S. Prior to January 2008 he had never heard of a
dollar limit for files that may be assigned to FO5s. While doing a training session for FO5s and
AFA20s in January 2008, Ms. Tracey Down, a member of the AMAPCEO bargaining unit
mentioned that two months earlier the limit for tobacco tax files assigned to FO5s had been
changed to $ 250,000.
[27] In cross-examination, Mr. Taggart agreed that the posting for the FO5 position he
successfully applied for, does not set out any dollar value limit. Questioned about the FO5
position specification, Mr. Taggart agreed that it sets out the purpose of the FO5 position, and
the duties and responsibilities accurately, but added that he had not personally performed each of
the listed duties and responsibilities. He was specifically asked, ?Are there any duties and
responsibilities you did, which are not identified here?? and he replied ?no?.
[28] Mr. Taggart confirmed that the ?knowledge? set out in the position description was also
accurate and that to perform his job he did not require any knowledge not listed. Mr. Taggart
identified six areas which are omitted under ?skills?, but agreed that those are listed under the
heading ?duties and responsibilities?. Having reviewed the FO5 position description Mr.
Taggart agreed with employer counsel that ?There is nothing you?ve done which is not listed
here?, that it does not refer to any value limit of files, and that he had seen other position
descriptions which set out dollar value limits.
[29] Mr. Taggart confirmed that the manager is always aware of the information contained in
all files assigned to him, and that as far as he knew, in practice the value limit of a file was not
given any weight in assigning files. Mr. Taggart testified, however, that ?later it became
apparent that the practice was inconsistent with ?branch policy?. That caused him to initiate the
grievance.
[30] Mr. Taggart agreed that a number of AFA20s were involved in the delivery of his
training, after he was hired as a FO5. He agreed that AFA20s are assigned as mentors for FO5s,
and that as a FO5, he had never been assigned as mentor for another FO5. However, he testified
that he did mentoring of FO5s ?in a certain way? in that colleagues sometimes come to him for
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advice, and sometimes he took new FO5s along on field work. Thus, he was of the view that he
had responsibility for the development of new FO5s.
[31] Mr. Taggart agreed that as a FO5, he had never been required to comment on the
development of another FO5, to review reports prepared by another FO5, or to provide input into
performance appraisals of other FO5s. He was not aware whether those responsibilities are
assigned to AFA20s, or whether AFA20s were involved in updating branch manuals or the
development of manuals on-line.
[32] Despite repeated cross-examination, Mr. Taggart insisted that prior to the training session
with Ms. Down in January 2008, he was not aware that any dollar value limit was used in
assigning files to FO5s and AFA20s. As far as he was aware, the only files restricted to AFA20s
were those involving projects. He conceded that management had the right to change the criteria
for assignment of files. Mr. Taggart stated that after January 2008, when the grievors were
informed of the change in the value limit to $250,000 they would not be entitled to assert that
they were performing AFA20 duties, and therefore, have not sought remedies beyond that date.
[33] Grievor, Mr. John Allin testified that when he was appointed as FO5 in January 2005, a
AFA20 was appointed as his mentor for a 2 year period. He testified that when he went on field
work, the mentor was expected to accompany him. For a period, all crown briefs he prepared
were reviewed by the mentor before being handed in. If he had a question on a file he would ask
the mentor, but may also go to a FO5 with particular expertise on a subject. Very often he went
to Mr. Doyle as a fellow FO5, because Mr. Doyle was very knowledgeable on tobacco issues.
However, he did not view Mr. Doyle as a mentor since he was not appointed as a mentor. Mr.
Allin testified that two newly hired FO5s frequently came to him with technical questions and he
tried to help them out.
[34] Mr. Allin testified that during a tobacco staff meeting around April 2005, Mr. Stangarone
made it ?crystal clear? that the only difference between AFA20 work and FO5 work was that
projects were done only by AFA20s. He stated that from November 2005, he had been aware
that a dollar value was used in assigning files to FO5s and AFA20s in RST. However, he
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became aware of a dollar value being used in assignment of tobacco tax files only when Mr.
Taggart told him of the information Ms. Down had conveyed in January 2008.
[35] Grievor Mr. Colm Doyle testified that at the time he accepted the AFA20 acting
assignment to do Project Bear, he became aware that projects go only to AFA20s. He was not
aware of a dollar value being used in assigning tobacco tax files until Mr. Taggart and Mr. Allin
told him about what Ms. Tracy Down mentioned at the January 2008 training session.
[36] When asked whether as a FO5 he had provided training to other FO5s, Mr. Doyle
answered ?yes?, and explained that he assisted new hires ?on a daily basis?. He testified that he
was simply continuing the practice in the office, of more experienced FO5s helping out newly
hired FO5s. However, he stated that all FO5s were equals and that a new hire did not have to
follow his advice.
[37] Mr. Steve Irons, another grievor, has been employed with the Ministry for 30 years, from
1990 as FO5 in the Tobacco Tax section. He testified that at the meeting on October 2, 2006,
Mr. Stangarone did not mention a $250,000 limit. He first became aware that any dollar value
was used in assigning tobacco files to FO5s and AFA20, only when Ms. Down mentioned it.
Until then he understood that the only difference in the files assigned to FO5s and AFA20s was
that projects were only assigned to the latter.
[38] In cross-examination, Mr. Irons agreed that he was a FO5 at the time the AFA20 position
was created in January 2004. He agreed that both before and after that time, as a FO5 he did any
file assigned, except projects, regardless of its dollar value. He also agreed that his FO5 job
description remained unchanged following the creation of the AFA20 position. That practice of
assigning files, except projects, to FO5 regardless of the dollar value existed while Mr.
Stangarone was his Senior Manager, and continued under Mr. Thompson after October 2005.
Submissions
[39] In support of his motion that the union had not made out a prima facie case that the
employer had contravened article 8.1.1., employer counsel took the following positions:
(1) The grievors, at all times, were performing duties within their own FO5 position.
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(2) If they did any duties outside their own position, those were not duties required of a higher
classification.
(3) If some duties were duties of a higher classification they did not actually perform those.
(4) If the grievors establish that they actually were performing duties of a higher classification,
the instant grievance is a disguised classification grievance and therefore inarbitrable.
(5) The grievance is nothing more than a ?me too? claim.
[40] The union?s position was that it has established a prima-facie violation of article 8.1.1,
whether the ?some evidence? standard or the ?sufficient evidence? standard is applied. In
substance, the union took the position that the evidence supports a prima facie finding that the
grievors performed the core duties of the AFA20 position, when they did tobacco tax files which
exceeded the $25,000 limit. Union counsel asserted that the evidence that the grievors did not
perform other AFA20 duties, such as training, and mentoring, in the same manner as AFA20s
did those, is irrelevant because those were not core duties of the AFA20 position. In addition,
counsel asserted that the evidence establishes that in granting temporary acting assignments to
FO5s in RST, while not treating the grievors similarly, the employer was motivated by a desire
to favour certain individuals, and that it constituted an arbitrary, discriminatory and bad faith
exercise of management rights. Finally, union counsel submitted that the grievors were not
seeking a reclassification of their positions to AFA20, but were only attempting to pursue their
right to acting pay under article 8.1.1.
DECISION
[41] At the outset I find that there is absolutely no evidence that the employer treated the
grievors in an arbitrary, discriminatory or bad faith manner in not granting them temporary
assignments as AFA20. The only evidence is that two FO5s in RST received such assignments,
and that with that experience they subsequently obtained permanent AFA20 positions. While
motivation to favour these individuals was asserted, there simply is no evidence to support that.
Therefore, that aspect of the grievance fails for lack of a prima facie case.
[42] Next I turn to the issue of whether there is sufficient evidence to establish that the
grievors were temporarily assigned to perform the duties of a higher classification within the
meaning of article 8.1.1. The employer cited a number of decisions including the following : Re
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Noon, 111/81 (McLaren), Re Collins, 807/85, Re Farrelly, 424/86 (Draper); Re Bullock, 699/87
(Fisher);Re Bonner, 19/89 (Verity); Re Nichols, 778/89 (Knopf); Re Gervais 392/89
910/93 (Gray) and Re Barnier, 1062/98 (Abramsky).
(Dissanayake);Re Decarie,
[43]Re Collins, (supra), is cited often as setting out the conditions to be met for entitlement to
acting pay. In interpreting the predecessor provision to the present article 8.1.1. which was
materially the same in all respects relevant for the present purposes, the Board at p. 4 wrote:
Therefore the onus is upon the union to prove that the grievor was assigned to do a
job temporarily; that the job was to perform duties of a position in a classification
with the higher salary maximum; and that the job performed was for a period in
excess of eight consecutive working days.If these three elements are proved the
grievor is entitled to acting pay subject to the limitation referred to in article 6.4
which covers periods during which an employee is on vacation.
The first element that the union had to prove was that the grievor was assigned to a
job which was not part of his own job.
The grievance was dismissed on the basis, inter alia, that the supervision duties the
grievor performed did not go beyond the duties within his own job.
[44] In Re Bullock (supra), the grievors claimed that they were entitled to acting pay at the
General Foreman rate for time they spent performing night patrol duties. Citing Re Collins, Vice
Chair Fisher at p.6 concluded:
This Board therefore finds, on the evidence before it, that the functions performed by
the grievors as Night Patrolmen is contained within their job specification and their
class standards and therefore they have failed to pass the first test of the Collins case.
Therefore, the grievance is denied.
[45] In contrast, in Re Bonner (supra), the Board concluded that the union met the first
condition of the article because ?the grievor was assigned to a teaching role that was not part of
his regular job?.
[46] In the present cast it is undisputed that neither the AFA20 or FO5 position description set
out any dollar limit for files. Moreover, the evidence from the grievors was clear that they had
not performed any duties not set out in the FO5 position description. The union?s position was
that regardless of the contents of the respective position descriptions, during the relevant period
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files with a tax value exceeding $25,000 fell outside the FO5 position and became part of the
AFA20 position, by virtue of a branch policy that only AFA20s will be assigned files exceeding
the $25,000 limit.
[47] There is sufficient evidence that the employer did consider the tax value of a file in
assigning tobacco tax files to AFA20s and FO5s. The evidence is that at the meeting on March
8, 2008, Mr. Thompson?s position was that he changed the limit from $25,000 to $250,000 back
in October 2006, not that he did not use a dollar value. However, assuming that the change in
the dollar amount was not changed until late 2007 or early 2008 as the union asserts, the
evidence does not indicate that file assignment between the two groups was solely based on a
dollar limit. To the contrary, the union?s evidence is that throughout the relevant period, files
with a value of less than $25,000 were routinely assigned to AFA20s. One grievor testified that
a file with a value as low as $5000 may be assigned to a AFA20. Similarly, the evidence is that
FO5s were routinely assigned files with a value exceeding $25,000. Under their position
description AFA20s were responsible for ?sensitive or complex? files. What the evidence
suggests is that the employer considered the $25,000 value to be one of the relevant factors in
determining whether a file fell within the ?sensitive or complex? category. The evidence does
not support a finding that the employer had a policy to the effect that any file which exceeds the
$25,000 limit was necessarily beyond the scope of the FO5 position. Similarly the fact that
AFA20s did files which had values of under $25,000 suggests that certain files may be
considered sensitive or complex for other reasons, despite their low value. In fact, the union?s
evidence was that factors such as the involvement of politicians, multiple statutes, multiple
locations or first nations could make a file sensitive and complex. The fact that the employer
considered the $25,000 threshold in assigning files does not mean that the employer had a policy
under which any and all files exceeding that value was beyond the scope of the FO5 position.
Therefore, the union has failed to establish on a prima facie basis that the work in question was
beyond the grievor?s own job. Since the first condition of article 8.1.1 is not met, the grievance
fails on that basis alone.
[48] However, if the Board?s conclusion in that regard is wrong, and files over $25,000 are
deemed to be outside the scope of the FO5 position, the grievance must still fail, because the
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union also fails to satisfy the second condition for the application of article 8.1.1, namely, that
the grievors performed ?the duties? of a higher classification.
[49] The Board has recognized that ?in a temporary assignment there will seldom be a perfect
fit?. (Re Bonner,supra). Therefore, the Board has not required that for entitlement to acting pay
under article 8.1.1, a grievor must have performed all of the duties of the higher classification
claimed. The test rather, is whether or not the grievor performed the core duties or significant
duties of the higher classification.
[50] The Board has also held, however, that under article 8.1.1 the performance of ?a core
duty? or ?some core duties? is not sufficient. Thus in Re Barnier (supra) at p. 28, Vice-Chair
Abramsky concluded:
The right to acting pay under Article 8.1.1 depends on whether the duties the grievors
were required to perform were not part of the AFO job but were instead NFA duties
and responsibilities. It also depends on whether the grievors were assigned to
perform all of the significant or core duties of the NFA position.(emphasis added)
[51] This requirement was further addressed in Re Decarie (supra). There the union claimed
that certain duties, referred to as PPSR duties, are classified as OA-6, a classification higher than
the grievor?s home position. It argued that acting pay is payable under the then article 6.1.1
?whenever an employee is assigned duties which are classified higher than the employee?s home
job?. At pp. 10-11, Vice-Chair Gray wrote:
Having regard to the language of Article 6.1.1, the union must show that the grievor
was ?assigned temporarily to perform the duties of a position in a classification with
a higher salary maximum for a period in excess of five (5) consecutive working
days? in order to succeed in this grievance. It is common ground that the grievor was
assigned to perform PPSR functions for periods in excess of five (5) consecutive
working days on a number of occasions between late 1989 and March 1993. There is
no challenge to the union?s assertion that these assignments were ?temporary?. The
issue here, then, is whether on those occasions the grievor was assigned ?to perform
the duties of a position in a classification with a higher salary maximum?.
It is clearly not enough to show that the duties assigned were not ones which the
grievor ordinarily performed. Nor is it enough to show that the duties assigned fell
outside the description in the Position Specification for her home position and must
therefore have been the duties of some other position. The union must show that that
other position was ?a position in a classification with a higher salary maximum,? and
that the grievor was assigned ?the duties? of that position. The parties used the
words ?the duties?, and not just the word ?duties?. The Board?s decisions have given
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effect to that distinction.Against the background of those decisions, the parties have
continued to use that language in successive collective agreements.
[52] Following a review of the decisions in Re Noon,Re Collins,Re Farrelly,Re Bullock,Re
Nichols,Re Gervais and Re Bonner, at pp. 21-22 Vice-Chair Gray wrote:
As we have noted, at one point in his argument the union?s representative spoke of
PPSR duties as being classified OA-6. It is positions that are classified, not their
individual component duties. The classification of a position takes into account all of
the duties and responsibilities of the position. Although PPSR duties were a major
component of the OA-6 classified position of ?Senior Clerk, P.P.S.R. and
Companies? they were not its only component. Companies registration duties were
also a significant part of that position.
The thrust of all of the decisions cited to us, including Bonner, is that an employee
cannot be said to have been assigned ?the duties? of a position (or classification)
unless he or she had been assigned all of its significant duties. We agree with that
approach. A job which includes some but not all of the significant duties of a
particular position may or may not fall within the same classification as that
particular position, but it will not be that position.
At p. 23, the Board concluded as follows:
Even on that view, however, and assuming in the union?s favour that the assignments
in question went outside the Position Specification for the grievor?s Services Clerk
position, the union must still show that the position to which the grievor was
temporarily assigned was a position in a classification with a higher salary maximum
than the OA-2 classification. The only asserted basis for the union?s claim to that
effect is that the assignments were to perform the duties of the OA-6 ?Senior Clerk,
P.P.S.R. and Companies? position described above. Since we have rejected that
argument, the grievance must be dismissed on its merits.
[53] It follows, therefore, that to be entitled to acting pay, the grievors must establish that they
were assigned to perform all of the core or significant duties of the AFA20 position. On the
basis of the union?s evidence, I find that the union has not made out a prima facie case that they
did that, even assuming that they did files, which were outside the scope of their own job and fell
within the AFA20 position.
[54] A review of the AFA20 position description makes it clear that handling sensitive or
complex files is a significant duty of that position. Even if the union?s position is accepted that a
tax value exceeding $25,000 by itself makes a file sensitive or complex, it would result in a
finding that the grievors were assigned one of the core or significant duties of the AFA20
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position. However, the handling of sensitive or complex files is not the only core duty of the
AFA20 position. The AFA20 position description is replete with leadership, training and
mentoring responsibilities, which is a major feature not present in the FO5 job description.
Based on the position description and the evidence about the mentoring, training and leadership
duties performed by AFA20s, the Board finds that those are core duties of the AFA20 position.
[55] The union submitted that the grievors also performed similar leadership, training and
mentoring functions during their claimed temporary assignments. However, the evidence does
not support such a finding. There is no evidence that the employer assigned the grievors any
leadership, training or mentoring duties. To the extent that the grievors assisted or mentored new
or less experienced colleagues, they did it on their own volition. As one grievor testified, they
were simply carrying on a practice within the office, of colleagues helping one another. As the
Board in Re Collins, (supra), at p. 9 wrote:
However, if a person takes on responsibilities on his own volition that is not
sufficient to say that by the assumption of the responsibilities that may fall within a
higher classification that he then is entitled to receive pay for that higher
classification.
[56] In any event, the evidence discloses that there was a substantial difference between the
responsibilities in this regard carried out by AFA20s and those undertaken by the grievors. The
evidence is clear that the grievors did not have the same level of responsibility and accountability
for the development and work performance of newly hired FO5s as AFA20s did. In fact, the
evidence does not suggest that they had any responsibility or obligation in that regard. The fact
that FO5s may assist or train or mentor other less experienced FO5s is very different from
AFA20s who had a responsibility and duty to carry out those functions as part of their job.
Therefore, to the extent they did any leadership duties, those cannot be said to be duties of the
higher classification.
[57] The union also pointed to the evidence to the effect that not all AFA20s had been
involved in the training of FO5s or appointed as mentors, and further that those duties were not
ongoing, but performed only if and when there were new hires. Reliance was placed on Mr.
Doyle?s testimony that although he was formally granted a temporary assignment as AFA20 for
a 6 month period, he did not perform any training, nor was he appointed as mentor to anyone.
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Union counsel submitted that a duty could not reasonably be said to be a core or significant duty
when it is performed only by some incumbents, and that too only on an as needed basis.
[58] The foregoing argument was considered and rejected by the Board in Re Barnier,(supra).
The Board concluded on the evidence that commercial valuations formed a core duty of the
higher classified NFA position, and further that the grievors had not performed that core duty.
Then at p. 31, the Board observed as follows on the union?s position that some incumbents in
NFA positions also did not perform commercial valuations:
The fact that some NFAs also did not do these things is not relevant legally, although
it clearly gave rise to the grievors? belief that they were
doing the same work as some NFAs for less pay. I have no doubt that this occurred.
But the assessment under Article 8.1.1 looks at whether an individual employee is
?assigned temporarily to perform the duties of a position in a classification with a
higher salary maximum ??. It is the ?duties of a position? that matters, not what an
individual in that position may or may not be doing. Clearly, some NFAs in the
London region, which outside of the City of London is largely rural, may not perform
many, or indeed, any commercial valuations. Likewise, some may not, in any given
period, attend court. But it is the duties of the NFA position that matters under
Article 8.1.1, and those duties include independent commercial/industrial valuations
and attending courts, duties which the grievors were not assigned to perform.
[59] In the present case there is evidence that all AFA20s had authority, and exercised that
authority in a leadership role while in the field. Quite apart from that, as in Re Barnier, here also
the fact that not all AFA20s performed the leadership duties or the fact that such duty was not
carried out on an ongoing basis is irrelevant. As the Board stated, ?It is the duties of a position
that matters, not what an individual in that position may or may not be doing?.
[60] In summary, I find that the union has failed to make out a prima facie case to support a
violation of article 8.1.1. The work they carried out was not outside the scope of their own
position. Even if it was, the grievors then would have performed only one core aspect of the
AFA20 position. In the circumstances, there is no evidence, on a prima facie basis, sufficient for
a finding that the grievors were ?assigned temporarily to perform the duties of a position in a
classification with a higher salary maximum ?? within the meaning of article 8.1.1.
[61] Since the Board has also rejected the union?s allegation that the employer had exercised
its management rights in an arbitrary, discriminatory or bad faith manner, the grievance must
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fail. In the circumstances, it is not necessary to address the employer?s argument that the instant
grievance is a disguised classification grievance, or that it is a ?me too? claim. The grievance is
hereby dismissed.
th
Dated at Toronto this 26 day of May 2010.
Nimal Dissanayake, Vice-Chair