HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-0110.Union.22-10-19 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance
Settlement Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. west
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
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# 2018-0110
UNION# 2018-0603-0002
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Union) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Alex Zamfir
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Andrew Lynes
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING July 20, October 7, November 18,19, 2020;
August 25, September 21, 27, November 17,
18, December 16, 2021; August 23 and 30
2022
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Decision
[1] This decision determines a policy grievance dated March 8, 2018, which reads:
The Union grieves that the Employer violated, and continues to violate,
Collective Agreement Articles 2 (“Management Rights”), 20
(“Employment Stability”), and 32 (“Seasonal Employees”) and any other
relevant articles and legislation, by failing to recall the BIO2 seasonal
position in December 2017 (and thereafter) and by redistributing the
work, within the same work unit, to four (4) BIO1s, at a lower pay rate
[2] The grievance in substance is an allegation by the union that the employer’s
decision to not recall a seasonal employee Mr. Benoit Hamel was in contravention
of its obligations under article 32.5.1.2 of the collective agreement, which provides:
Seasonal employees who have completed their probationary period shall
only be offered employment in the same position in the following season
on the basis of seniority.
[3] It is the union’s position that for the 2017-2018 season, instead of recalling, Mr.
Hamel to the seasonal position he worked in the previous season, the employer
distributed that work among three of four B101s it hired. It asserts that from
November 2017 to January 2018 BIO1s, Ms. Derissa Vincentini, Mr. Aaron Craig
and Mr. Jemmett Kirk performed work Mr. Hamel had performed for several
seasons including the previous 2016-17 season. Mr. Hamel was left with no
employment until he was ultimately recalled in January 2018.
[4] Mr. Hamel, as well as the BIO1s at all relevant times worked in the Forest Research
and Monitoring Section of the Ontario Research Institute in Sault Ste Marie,
Ontario (“The FRM Section”) in the Forest Soil and Water Program. Ms. Maureen
Kershaw, as coordinator of the program, was the manager of Mr. Hamel and the
BIO1s. She reported to Senior Manager, Mr. Dan Puddister. There is no dispute
that Mr. Hamel had completed his probationary period, that he had seniority over
the three BIO1s, and that he was ready and expected to be recalled in November
2017 as in previous years. The crux of the dispute is whether or not the work
performed by the BIO1s constitutes “the same position” Mr. Hamel had performed
in the previous season.
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[5] The evidence relating to the work performed by Ms. Vincentini was filed by way of
an agreed statement of fact. The other two BIO1s did not testify. The direct
evidence of the two of the employer witnesses, Mr. James McLaughlin (employed
in the bargaining unit position of Research Scientist) and Mr. Dan Puddister
(Senior Manager of the FRM Section) was put in by way of willsay declarations,
and they were cross-examined.
[6] The determination of this grievance requires a comparison of the duties and
responsibilities of Mr. Hamel’s position with work performed by the BIO1s in the
relevant period. It is agreed that in previous seasons Mr. Hamel was recalled in
late November/early December to his position of Far North Specialist. The union
asserts that the work performed by the BIO1s between November 2017 and Mr.
Hamel’s recall in January 2018, constituted the “same position” within the meaning
of article 32.5.1.1, and that Mr. Hamel had a right to be recalled in November 2017
as in previous years.
[7] Significant evidence was led as to whether Mr. Hamel was not recalled because of
a reduction in funding for his position, whether other sources of funding were
available, and whether management made sufficient effort to find alternative
funding. The collective agreement obligation is on the employer (the Crown). It is
not restricted to any branch of the Ministry or the Ministry. If article 32.5.1.1 entitled
Mr. Hamel to be recalled, it is no defence for the employer to argue that there was
no funding to comply with its collective agreement obligations. There was also
evidence about who made the decision to hire the BIO1s and not to recall Mr.
Hamel, and how that decision was made. The union suggested that a bargaining
unit employee, Mr. McLaughlin made the effective decisions, which were merely
rubber-stamped by management, or at least that management was influenced by
Mr. McLaughlin’s recommendations on staffing needs, which it alleged was tainted
by bad faith. Those are not material to the issue to be decided. Regardless of
how the decisions of seasonal staffing for 2017-18 were made, ultimately it is the
employer that has the legal obligation to comply with the collective agreement. If
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the work the BIO1s did does not meet the “same position” test, the employer had
no legal obligation to recall him. On the other hand, if the test was met the
employer would have been in breach. Therefore, it is immaterial what information
the employer relied on. Evidence was led about Mr. Hamel’s expertise and
experience as a scientist, as Far North Specialist; whether his work performance
was satisfactory or not; and about his familiarity with the site the BIO1s worked at
and the equipment and techniques they used. The employer did not assert that
Mr. Hamel was not capable of doing the work done by the BIO1s . The issue
anyway is not whether he was qualified and able to do that work. It is whether that
work could be said to be the “same position” he had performed, within the meaning
of the collective agreement. I have set out the evidence relating to the foregoing
issues only to the extent that provides a context relevant to the central issue of
whether the work was the same.
[8] The Board has interpreted and applied the predecessor collective agreement
provision of the present article 35.2.1.1. It provided:
3.21.1 Seasonal employees who have completed their probationary period
shall be offered employment in their former positions in the following
season on the basis of seniority.
[9] Neither counsel attached any significance to the change in the wording from “the
former position” to “the same position” in the current collective agreement. In fact,
this Board has held that there is no significance. See, OPSEU and MNRF, 2018-
0110 (Dissanayake), dated September 25, 2019.
The Case Law
[10] In Re Beauvalet, 2853/92 (Gray) the issue to be determined was, “whether, as to
each of those grievors, there was in 1993 a “former position” of that grievor to
which he or she ought to have been recalled that year pursuant to subsection
3.21.1”. At pp. 7-9, the Board reviewed the Board’s jurisprudence.
The meanings of “position” and “former position” in similarly worded
provisions of previous agreements had been considered in several GSB
decisions before the parties entered into the 1992-93 collective
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agreement: W. Furniss, 602/86 (Slone), Brousseau, 2285/87 (Devlin),
Munro and Boden, 677/188 (Fraser), Orville D. Smith, 2315/87
(Dissanayake), G. Genery, 1468/85 (Fraser), Kauffeldt, 771/89 (Wilson)
and Anderson, 471/86 (Roberts). Those decisions came to these
conclusions:
- The position in which an employee completes his or her
probationary period may not be a seasonal employee’s only “former
position.” Any position which the employee “formally occupied, by a
formal appointment under the Public Service ‘Act” is a “former
position” for purposes of subsection 320.2: G. Genery.
- A target position with essentially the same functions as -‘a-
seasonal employee’s previous position is‘ that employee’s “former
position” even if the functions of the target position are to be
performed ‘elsewhere than at- the location at which the employee
performed ‘them in the previous position: W. Furniss, Kczuffeldt.
- Job titles are not determinative, and minor variations in the job
duties between a ‘previous position and a target position will not
prevent the latter from being a “former position”, but it is insufficient
that the previous and target positions fall within the same
classification: Orville D. Smith.
- It is not enough for there to be an overlap of some functions of the
target and previous positions, there must be a substantial
correspondence in all of their core functions: Anderson, Brousseau,
and Munro and Boden.
Subsection 3.21.1 provides a considerably narrower right to job security
than is afforded to classified employees under Article 24 of the collective
agreement. The test-under subsection 3:2-1.1 is not whether the employee
claiming the right to recall to a position could easily learn to perform all the
functions of that position, nor even whether the employee. is’ presently
capable of performing all those functions without training. The test is
whether the target position is the employee’s former position, a test which
is satisfied only if the target position and a previous position of the
employee are substantially similar. If there is a material difference in the
job functions involved or skills required in the two positions being
compared, then the two positions are not substantially similar the purpose
of this test. If, for example, the functions of position A include all the
functions of position B plus another material function not required in
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position B, then positions A and B are not substantially similar, even
though the functions of position B are “included” in position A. This is so
when position B is the previous position and position A, is the target
position. It is also so when position A is the previous position and position
B, consisting of functions included in’ A, is the target position.
[11] The Facts
Mr. Hamel’s “Far North Specialist” job specification includes the following:
Purpose of Position :
To work with the program scientist and partners In all components
of environmental quality research by designing, developing, and
implementing peat ecology in the far north studies that contribute to
Improved forest management in Ontario. To provide specialized
scientific and technical support to all programs within the research
unit. To coordinate the research program to deliver on objectives
and goals in a timely manner. To communicate results and
achievements to a variety of project partners.
Duties / Responsibilities :
Specific project duties include:
• Planning, coordinating, and Integrating multiple research
projects addressing forest peat ecology in the far north issues by
preparing operational work plans including estimating financial,
human resources, equipment requirements and making logistical
arrangements; providing group leadership to field staff; monitoring
expenditures to ensure approved budget allocations are not
exceeded. Providing leadership and technical training to other
research staff and technical field staff to perform field data
collection activities. Providing leadership in the collection of quality
data by preparing Quality Assurance Project Plans (QAPPs) and
field sampling protocols and conducting field-based quality
assurance/quality control (QA/QC) audits of program personnel.
• Assisting in the organization and expansion of cooperative
research projects with clients, resource agencies and partners such
as working with Industry and public service representatives in the
coordination of logistics for soil and water research and development
projects.
• Planning, designing, organizing and implementing scientific field
studies (e.g. determining sampling design, field sampling
procedures, field data collection and selecting study sites and
sampling locations). Collecting new data through field studies,
developing new methodologies for soil and water data collection
(e.g. real- time sensors), and obtaining existing data In
electronic/digital format (e.g. Ontario Base Maps; Satellite
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imagery).
• Analyzing and interpreting study results; preparing data
summaries, writing reports and manuscripts for publication;
developing applications and supporting tools and products;
designing and managing integrated databases.
• Transferring research and development products and
information produced from scientific studies to internal /external
clients and partners by writing reports and technical notes,
preparing and conducting presentations and workshops and
leading field tours. Job requires training internal/external project
and or client staff on field techniques and use of tools or
applications (e.g. use of soil and water quality sampling
equipment, use and application of real-time sensors).
Performing other duties as assigned, such as
- serving on appropriate internal and external committees;
- maintaining and enhancing relevant knowledge and skills
through personal training and development;
- complying with the Occupational Health and Safety Act and
other related legislation, standards, and management
principles
• Managers have the right to assign additional duties.
[12] The positions occupied by the three BIO1s were classified as Biologist1 and titled
“Soil and Water Project Biologist”. It included the following:
Purpose of Position
To provide project assistance to conduct literature synthesis for the soil and
water program’s commitment to the State of the Forest Report Criteria 3 and
4. To conduct data analyses and syntheses for water qualify, fish habitat,
and nitrogen, sulphur, and water cycling with the solid and water
components as the key indicators. Top work with lead scientist to produce
a document defining a strategy for nitrogen, sulphur, and water cycling that
will be sued for reporting on the health of forests in the Area of the
Undertaking. To produce a working document highlighting these objectives
and results from the literature reviews and syntheses.
Duties/Responsibilities (the individual will perform the following tasks)
Specific project duties include:
• Conduct literature and database searches to document long-germ
trends in (i) nitrogen and sulphur deposition and nitrate export to surface
waters and (ii) water cycle indicators identified from an OFRI workshop
with a focus on the Area of the Undertaking for the 2006 State of Forest
Report.
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• Summarize compliance reports for water qualify and fish habitat
indicators.
• Work collaboratively with scientists at OFRI, CNFER, Watershed
Science Centre and Trent University to define specific indicators and/or
their proxies to use for the Nitrogen and Sulphur Cycling and Water
Cycle Elements to include in the 2011 State of Forest Report.
Provides Technical transfer by:
• Summarizing, synthesizing, and preparing reports for 2006 State of
Forest Report.
Managers have the right to assign additional duties.
[13] Information set out in job specifications are not determinative of the work actually
performed by the incumbents. In this case it is particularly so, since in both job
specifications management has reserved the right to assign “additional duties”.
Also, although set out in the job specifications, an incumbent may not have actually
performed the specified duties in the period under review in this case. Whether a
position which was the same or substantially similar to Mr. Hamel’s position,
depends on the evidence as to the duties actually performed by Mr. Hamel and the
BIO1 employees in the relevant periods. The parties filed the following agreed facts
on the work performed by each of the three BIO1s.
Work performed by Derissa Vincentini
1. Derissa Vincentini commenced employment with the Ministry of Natural
Resources and Forestry on September 18, 2017, as a Biologist 1 within the
Science and Research Branch, located in Sault Ste. Marie.
2.Derissa was assigned responsibilities to:
a. Assemble data sets from continuous measurement of water pressure
and barometric pressure in two long-term peatland research sites
located in the White River Forest Management Unit.
b. Develop methods to calculate water table levels in the two peatlands
using data in (a) above.
c. Calculate descriptive statistics and hypothesis testing of water table
level about weather and peatland conditions.
3. At the end of October / beginning of November Derissa Vincentini and
Madison McCaig were assigned to assist with a field project.
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a. The field assignment was from Monday, October 30, 2017 to
Wednesday, November 1,2017.
b. Derissa Vincentini and Madison Derissa Vincentini and Madison
McCaig were sent to White River to assist with measuring water table
depths, collecting water samples, carbon dioxide fluxes, and collect
samples from litter traps.
c. This field experience was organized as a learning and development
opportunity for Derissa Vincentini and Madison McCaig. Equivalent
work can be completed by a crew of 2 – 4 staff: Derissa Vincentini and
Madison McCaig were added staff.
d. During the period of the field assignment (October 30 to November 1,
2017) Derissa Vincentini and Madison McCaig observed/assisted field
staff with typical shared field activities, including carrying equipment,
measuring depth of piezometers and wells, recording data (e.g., water
depth, chemistry); retrieving levelloggers/buttons, collecting gas
samples, and/or forest floor/litter samples.
4. Commencing November 6, 2017, Derissa Vincentini was assigned to
perform data correction / compensation by collating data from text data
outputs from approximately 20 levelloggers at the White River, Ontario site.
a. The levelloggers obtained measurements for approximately six (6) month
periods measured at intervals of 15 minutes covering a period from 2003
to 2017.
b. The data obtained by levelloggers measures ground water levels, as
well as temperature, within a cylindrical tube known as a piezometer
installed in two peat lands at the White River, Ontario study site.
c. Derissa Vincentini was assigned to:
i. Collate data from text to excel format at the White River site;
ii. Compensate/correct the data to account for pressure sensor drift,
well height above ground/altitude, as well as the influence of
barometric pressure on water levels by using data obtained from a
companion sensor at the White River site.
UNION EVIDENCE
Evidence in-Chief of Mr. Mark Crofts
[14] Mr. Mark Crofts, a Senior Research Technician employed in the FRM Section, at
the relevant time was the Vice-President of the Local Union. He testified that he
was familiar with seasonal employees in the FRM section, particularly because of
as union Vice-President. He testified that seasonal employees had “recurring
employment status and seniority rights” under the collective agreement. If at all
possible, a seasonal employee is scheduled for 42 weeks each season. He said
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that it became in the norm in the last 10 years that they are initially given 22-week
contracts and given multiple extension contracts for short periods.
[15] Mr. Crofts testified that although Mr. Hamel was also a seasonal employee, his
season was different. Typically he was recalled in November or early December.
It was “almost guaranteed” that each year he would be recalled in November
because of the priority the employer placed on his work. He explained that most
of Mr. Hamel’s work was “in the Ontario Far North, the Hudson’s Bay Lowlands”.
Initially the work of the FRM Section in the Hudson’s Bay Lowlands was limited to
collecting peat core samples and having it analyzed in the laboratory. Then the
work turned to collecting samples from permanently frozen peat using different
tools and techniques, and installation of environment monitoring equipment on the
peat, and sending data to the laboratory. The work also included application of
hydrology to determine the water stream flow and volume of water, before
approving development, such as mines, rail, or access roads in the region.
[16] Mr. Crofts testified that on many occasions he worked alongside Mr. Hamel, but
became familiar with what Mr. Hamel did mostly through daily conversation as a
team member, and attending meetings. He had seen maps Mr. Hamel produced.
Mr. Hamel had responsibility to select and procure tools to do the peat sampling,
to book a Ministry helicopter, and to get safety documents prepared. He testified
that Mr. Hamel “had a role in staffing fixed-terms and students for the peat field
season, to get employees from other branches to help us, and for liaising with First
Nations”. He said that Mr. Hamel “took care of the first line of the budget which
was tens of thousands of dollars and got research permits for sites.”
[17] Mr. Crofts testified that Mr. Hamel was responsible for procuring different sensors
to monitor the environment. The data from the sensors are logged and sent via
satellite to the office in Sault Ste Marie. Since it was cheaper, Mr. Hamel bought
parts and assembled the environment monitoring station, rather than buying it. He
chose alternative places to install the stations. Mr. Crofts said that he had worked
with Mr. Hamel, installing all three types of stations. – Perma Frost Bore Hole, Peat
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monitoring and stream flow. He said that the data sent by satellite to the office are
stored in two different data bases to be organized and quality controlled. Mr.
Hamel built those data bases.
[18] Mr. Crofts testified that in the non-field season between approximately May and
November, Mr. Hamel had to study new challenges in the next season posed by
changes in the program objectives, and figure out how to budget it, how to
collaborate with others, and what tools and training etc. would be required. He
managed the quality of the data collected, checked for anomalies, and returned
defective sensors to the manufacturer to be fixed. Mr. Hamel organized paper tally
sheets, transferred data into an electronic data base and put photographs and
samples into an inventory. He prepared the samples, sub-divided them for
laboratory analysis, and ensured that the integrity of the samples is maintained.
He then had meetings with others in the section to plan for the next season with
new staff and new activity. Asked how much of Mr. Hamel’s work outside the field
season data analysis and quality control was, Mr. Crofts said that depending on
the data the section had, it could be 1/4 to 1/3 of his work. Referring to a Ministry
document “FRM Section Training Standard for cutting frozen peat in a walk-in
cooler using a horizontal band saw”, Mr. Crofts stated that he had a role in creating
it and in revising it several times, and that Mr. Hamel also had a similar role,
“perhaps to a lesser degree”.
[19] Union counsel asked Mr. Crofts whether he was aware of the three BIO1s “ever
doing work previously done by Mr. Hamel”. He said that he did not work alongside
any of them, but just through “conversation and chatter”, he knew Ms. Vincentini
was working on level logger data, that Mr. Kirk was doing some GIS work, and that
while passing by he once observed Mr. Craig sectioning some peat or perma frost
cores.
[20] Mr. Crofts testified that he was aware that there was some uncertainty whether Mr.
Hamel would be recalled for the 2017-18 season. He said, “It didn’t sound he will
be”. He was therefore surprised that there was work for four BIO1s in the same
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period. He was concerned because some of the work BIO1s were doing seemed
to him as work Mr. Hamel did. Asked what that work was, Mr. Crofts said that the
GIS, sectioning of peat, and level logger work Mr. Hamel had done, and added
that the equipment used up North seemed very analogous.
[21] Mr. Crofts testified that by early January 2018, Mr. Hamel’s had not been recalled.
On January 22, 2018, he wrote to Mr. Puddister requesting a meeting to discuss
Mr. Hamel’s situation, but was declined. In February 2018, Mr. Puddister was
away, and Ms. Kershaw was in charge of the FRM Section. The union sought a
meeting with her. Initially Ms. Kershaw resisted, stating that she could not discuss
an employee’s contract rights without that employee present. However, on
February 8, 2018, at 12:52 p.m., Ms. Kershaw emailed him agreeing to meet
“immediately after lunch for 15 minutes just after 1:00 p.m.” The union asked for
a later time, stating that eight minutes notice was not enough to have everyone
attend. No meeting took place.
Cross - Examination of Mr. Crofts
[22] Mr. Crofts agreed that Mr. McLaughlin was a bargaining unit employee employed
as the Water and Soil Research Scientist in the FRM section, and that Mr. Hamel
did his work at Far North under Mr. McLaughlin .
[23] Counsel asked Mr. Crofts what exactly he personally observed Mr. Hamel do using
GIS mapping tools. He replied, “I would’ve seen some maps he produced,
would’ve heard about what he does at staff meetings, and in conversation with
others”. He said that he did not see Mr. Hamel work with GIS. Counsel asked Mr.
Crofts whether he had personally observed Mr. Hamel do QAQC work. He replied,
“I saw the product he did. Occasionally we’d sit down and look at data. I may
have had questions to him about the data, not daily, but it did happen”. Mr. Crofts
agreed that he did not observe Mr. Hamel managing data or develop Peat Core or
Permafrost data bases, but said “I’ve sat with him on several occasions when he
was trouble shooting the data bases. He said that the trouble shooting Mr. Hamel
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did was “way over my head”, but Mr. Hamel knew how to go in and make
corrections needed to fix problems.
[24] Mr. Crofts was asked how he knew about the work each of the three BIOs
performed during the relevant period. He said that he did not personally observe
Ms. Vincentini working. However, in late 2017, Ms. Vincentini asked him some
questions about the history of the site from which some data was obtained. From
that he inferred that she was doing QAQC work on that data. He agreed that
various employees worked with that data set over the years, and that they also
asked him questions about the data they were working with. Mr. Crofts was asked
what he observed Mr. Kirk do with GIS. He testified that he did not observe
anything. His knowledge about Mr. Kirk’s work was derived from “chit-chats and
water- cooler type” conversations with him, about what he was working on. He
added that product developed by staff is showcased at staff meetings, and
sometimes set out in emails and displayed on walls. He got some insight into what
Mr. Kirk was doing from all of these. Mr. Crofts testified that in December 2017, he
saw “a long-time seasonal”, Mr. John Rolston and Mr. Craig sectioning some peat
core.
[25] Employer counsel put to Mr. Crofts that it was the work he testified about what the
three BIOs did, that led him to file the policy grievance. He replied, “primarily as a
union, we had information from Mr. Hamel, and at staff meetings about the
section’s future work plans. Overall it gave us the sense that there was a workload
at the time. The employee with the most seniority should’ve been offered that
work.” Counsel asked, “So your concern was that work Mr. Hamel could do was
available?” He replied, “We were being told there was no work and no money. But
there were four BIO1s working. That gave us a strong suggestion there was work
and money at the time. If not, people with lesser seniority would’ve been laid-off
or had their contracts ended”.
[26] Mr. Crofts testified that he could not recall any seasonal employee not being
recalled in the past. The idea of recurring contracts was somehow maintained, for
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example by transferring the employee to a new program. However, “Mr. Hamel
was told there was no money and no work, when four new employees were doing
the exact or highly similar work. That’s the crux of our grievance”. He said, “I know
of zero effort by management to see whether they could bundle this work now done
in the building for him”. Counsel asked whether the union expected the employer
to see what work is done in the building, and offer to Mr. Hamel work he was able
to handle. Mr. Crofts replied that seasonal employees have seniority rights in the
collective agreement. The union always understood that the employer has to offer
a seasonal employee at least 8 weeks or lay-off. Mr. Puddister and Ms. Kershaw
did not offer Mr. Hamel any work, while at the same time the same or substantially
similar work which he had performed was being done in the building by others.
[27] In re-direct, Mr. Crofts was asked how he knew what Mr. Hamel and the BIO’s did
in the relevant period. Mr. Crofts replied that he had very little knowledge of what
work others did through personal observation.
Evidence In- Chief of Mr. Benoit Hamel
[28] Mr. Hamel testified that typically his season was 42 weeks, starting in November
or December and ending in September the following year. He testified that as Far
North Specialist he did the planning and coordination of the Far North Research
Program. He was in charge of the logistics of the field work, he coordinated work
with other partners in the project, and was in charge of collecting data in the field,
processing that data, and storing it, so that it can be used by the scientists. He did
that work “subject to” Research Scientist Mr. James McLaughlin.
[29] Mr. Hamel testified that his job description filed in evidence was “largely accurate”.
At the start of his contract he met with Mr. McLaughlin and reviewed with him the
work left from the previous season that needs to be completed. He also discussed
the science objectives Mr. McLaughlin wanted to achieve in the upcoming season.
He was then responsible to determine how best to achieve those objectives. He
proposed plans and established an experimental design for collection of data in
the field, using different equipment, including using GIS, which collects data using
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remote sensors and satellites, to establish field locations. Mr. Hamel also planned
for procuring equipment required to ensure that all equipment is there before going
out to the field.
[30] Mr. Hamel testified that in addition to the planning and procurement work, he had
to organize and do some quality control work and process data, such as peat core
samples collected in the previous season, before submitting them to the laboratory
for analysing. He did that work himself and also supervised other staff do it. Mr.
Hamel said that he was also in charge of coordinating with the laboratory for
submitting samples in the upcoming year for clinical and physical analysis. He
estimated all the logistical and travel costs, and proposed the human resources
that would be needed for the various duties.
[31] Mr. Hamel testified that he had to ensure that health and safety training is in place,
to do some bench testing on any field techniques to be used in the field in the Far
North, review the staff budget, decide where to store the data, and ensure that the
IT infrastructure is in place to preserve the data. He also initiated the Standard
Operating Procedure for processing peat core and for the management of the
Standard Operating procedure for the Meteorological Weather Station.
[32] Mr. Hamel testified that he then established dates for the staff to meet weekly, bi-
weekly, or monthly during the season to review progress. He designated who was
in charge of health and safety in the field, and ensured all staff have everything
required to go out to the field. He organized the logistics for doing the field work;
found efficient ways to travel; estimated the number of hours a helicopter would be
required for; finalized the accommodation and bush meal needs; and established
the rules for team members. Then he went out to the field and started on the work.
Referring to a 38-page document titled “OFRILS Standard Operating Procedure”
filed in evidence, Mr. Hamel testified that he drafted it, and his proposal that it be
used as the procedure to process was implemented.
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[33] Mr. Hamel testified that it was hard for him to draw a line between the White River
and Far North sites, because White River was used as a bench test for the work
at Far North. The techniques he used at Far North were not used at White River.
However, “the physics” at both sites was similar. He stated that he had visited the
White River site 4 or 5 times, and was involved in installing the level loggers and
setting up sensors. A couple of times he also looked at some of the data collected
by the level logger. Once he noted some glitches in the data from sensors in the
well at the White River site. Using his survey equipment, he was able to help Mr.
McLaughlin identify the location of the sensors in the well.
[34] Mr. Hamel testified that while he assisted team members in the installation of level
loggers at White River, he was not involved in the study itself. In contrast, at Far
North he was in charge of the installation of all digital equipment. At White River
data was collected manually, while it was done electronically in Far North. In Far
North the QAQC work involved manually reviewing and formatting numerous files
and spread sheets. However, at both sites “the same kind approaches and
methods were used”. He said that while there were different variables, the process
at both sites was “more or less the same”.
Cross-Examination of Mr. Hamel
[35] Mr. Hamel testified that at Far North, because of his greater knowledge and
experience, he gave other staff direction, and also assisted with the actual
processing of peat cores. He agreed that processing of cores was work that was
shared by many employees. Employer counsel asked how much of his time in a
season was spent on collection and processing of peat core from Far North. Mr.
Hamel replied, “may be a month. May be less. It depends on how much core we
had received in the previous year”. Counsel put to him that it was not one of his
“major job duties”. Mr. Hamel replied, “I guess so. One month out of ten months
can be considered a small part of it”.
[36] Counsel put to Mr. Hamel that he used the GIS only for the purpose identifying
field sites in the Far North. He replied that he would say it went beyond that. He
-17-
said, “we had to select random sample locations. Using GIS for that purpose, I
produced a summary of land cover classifications such as open bog, swamp,
water”. He added that on his own initiative, he also used sensor imagery to show
Mr. McLaughlin the impact of fire disturbance on the carbon pool and cycle over
the area. Counsel put to Mr. Hamel that the GIS work he described were “not part
of your regular job duties”. He replied, “I don’t think so. But it was part of my duty
to bring data and information to the program. If field work like processing of peat
core was 1/10th of my time, GIS could be 1/5th. It was not the most important
investment of my time, but I think it was an important one.”
[37] Mr. Hamel described in detail the work he did in collaboration with the Ministry of
the Environment, the Ministry of Mines and Forests and the University of Toronto.
[38] Mr. Hamel testified that he did QAQC of data during the same time he did the
planning and procuring work for field work. Asked how much of his time was on
QAQC, he said that every year the employer’s priorities changed. The time
required to QAQC, building a data base, and writing a script, therefore, could vary
depending on what the data was. He added, “But I’d say 20 percent of my time”.
[39] Mr. Hamel agreed that apart from his involvement one time installing a level logger
at White River, he did very little work there. However, data from the White River
level logger was part of the QAQC he did off season. Therefore, overall level
loggers were not a significant part of his job. Counsel put that Mr. McLaughlin
would be testifying that several times Mr. Hamel told him that he was not
responsible for White River. Mr. Hamel agreed and said that he did that because
he was very busy, and wanted more time to do his Far North duties.
[40] In re-direct, Mr. Hamel stated that at White River he was not involved in the
procurement of level loggers. The level loggers at Far North were powered by the
station, and the atmospheric pressure was compensated automatically. However,
level loggers at both sites produced the same kind of data about the level of water.
-18-
EMPLOYER EVIDENCE
[41] Evidence of Mr. James McLaughlin
Mr. McLaughlin’s willsay declaration included the following at paragraphs 7 to 34:
7. A full time Biologist 2 (BIO2) has been assigned to the Forest Soil and
Water Research Program since the early 2000s. Staff in this position: (1)
oversees program expenditures, (2) coordinates field sampling, and (3)
assists in transfer planning and report, manuscript, and proposal writing.
Benoit Hamel was hired on a recurring Biologist 2 position as the Far North
Specialist, which was funded by the Far North Branch. This recurring
Biologist 2 position was filled to:
[1] procure, test, and install equipment to measure air, peat, permafrost, and
stream parameters in the Far North;
[2] assist and coordinate site selection and field sampling in the Far North;
[3] conduct quality assurance/quality control analyses (QAQC) for all
parameters collected in the Far North, and develop a database which may be
accessed by program staff; and
[4] write standard operating procedures for peat and permafrost sampling and
core processing for the Far North.
8. The Biologist 1 (BIO1) positions were filled as six (6)-month contracts that
were funded by MNRF’s climate change and land use carbon initiatives to
meet deliverables for Ontario forests, wetlands, and permafrost priorities for
hydrology, carbon, and pollutants. The four (4) Biologist 1 hires brought
scientific skills to the program that Benoit Hamel lacked, including statistical
analyses of large data sets, report writing, and remote sensing skills.
9. The fiscal year in question is 2017/18 which coincided with approximately
$250,000 in program cuts from previous years’ Far North Funding. Program
adaptation to the funding cut required a change in priorities to continue
informing Ontario policy regarding forests and wetlands. I designed the Far
North project to understand how climate change and land use activities
affects carbon storage in peatlands located in the Far North. The Land Use
Carbon Initiative (“LUCI”) projects were designed to (1) understand the
contribution of forested peatlands to Canada’s forest carbon reporting and (2)
to understand how managed wetlands may be used to meet Canada’s
commitments to the United Nations Framework for Climate Change. The
climate change project was designed to understand and predict how
permafrost thaw affects hydrology, carbon and pollution fluxes from land to
water.
-19-
10. Four (4) Biologist 1 positions were filled to meet Forest and Soil and
Water Program deliverables that were due in March of 2018 and spelled out
in the Land Use Carbon Inventory managed by the Fish and Wildlife Policy
Branch. These projects were independent of the work Mr. Benoit Hamel
performed during his seasonal contract that ended in September 2017.
Furthermore, the four (4) Biologist 1 positions were assigned different duties
than what Mr. Hamel performed during his 2017 contract period. A summary
of these duties is set out below.
Biologist 2 (“BIO2”): Benoit Hamel
11. Benoit Hamel was responsible for the following as Far North Specialist:
12. Field work: a. Manually measure flow rates in streams within the Ring of
Fire region.
b. Install datalogging system to measure stream flow at a research site within
Polar Bear Provincial Park.
13. Office work: c. Design a strategy to obtain manual streamflow
measurements to support rating curve calculations to convert water depth to
streamflow for 8 automated stream gauges.
d. Clean data obtained from satellite uploads for 20 remotely installed
datalogging systems measuring weather, soil, and stream conditions located
in the Ring of Fire, Attawapiskat River basin, Polar Bear Provincial Park, and
White River Forest Management Unit.
e. Prepare standard operating protocols for collecting, cleaning, and trouble-
shooting sensor or data errors in (b) above.
14. Laboratory work: f. Assist with peat sample preparation on backlogged
peat samples.
15. Mr. Hamel’s position was only ever funded with Far North Branch
funding. In terms of Mr. Hamel’s Far North-specific duties: g. Assigned as
field lead for Far North peatlands project
h. Did not have writing skills to write technical/scientific papers (ESL)
i. Acquired satellite data but did not do any analytical work with the data
16. As Far North Specialist, Benoit Hamel’s position did not fit with new
program priorities because, with the exception of the permafrost mapping
project (assigned to Jemmett Kirk) for which he lacked the remote sensing
analytical skills, the other projects were not focussed on the Far North.
-20-
17. Mr. Hamel occasionally assisted at White River site. Mr. Hamel did not
have responsibilities for this field program as I was the lead and I was
assisted by a different full time Biologist 2. The White River research site was
established in 2002 to understand how forest harvesting of near-stream
zones (riparian) affected stream water quality. This project was separate from
the Far North peatland work, as it was focused on Ontario’s managed forest
and involved sampling for greenhouse gases, groundwater and stream
chemistry, and litterfall and decomposition; work Benoit Hamel never
completed while employed in his recurring Biologist 2 position.
18. Benoit Hamel also made it crystal clear to me on many occasions that as
the Far North Specialist, he had no responsibilities for the White River
research site, which was the focus of the tasks assigned to two of the
Biologist 1 positions.
19. As noted above, Mr. Hamel had some responsibilities with respect to peat
sampling. However, peat sampling and laboratory processing in the Forest
Soil and Water Research Program have been ongoing since 2004, with
another employee, John Ralston, assigned to primarily oversee peat
processing. Many staff, volunteers (i.e., students, interns), and students hired
through the Student Opportunities Program assisted John Ralston during the
years with this work. This has included work at or in the vicinity of White
River, Poplar River First Nation, the Far North, Victor Mine, the Ring of Fire.
Similarly, many staff and students have worked with level-logger data as well,
and the data is often shared with universities.
Biologist 1 (“BIO1”) Positions
20. Three (3) of the four (4) following positions were short-term funded (e.g.,
6-months) under the Land Use Carbon Initiative from Strategic and
Indigenous Policy Branch for specific projects associated with Forest carbon
and White River field study. Jemmett Kirk was hired and funded by Climate
Change funds and used data from the German Space Agency to do complex
post processing of satellite imagery (not just acquisition per Benoit Hamel’s
job description).
Aaron Craig: Duties from April 2017-2018
21. Aaron Craig was responsible for the following in his Biologist 1 position in
the time period in question:
22. Field work: a. Assist with field measurements and sample collection of
groundwater and greenhouse gases at a long-term research site located in
the White River Forest Management Unit.
23. Office work: b. Assemble data sets from measurements of forest
physical, chemical, and biological characteristics using data obtained from
the Provincial and National Forest Inventory programs, governmental reports,
-21-
and peer-reviewed literature within the Area of the Undertaking. (The Area of
the Undertaking is a forest management region in central and northern
Ontario which includes White River but not the Far North.)
c. Conduct spatial analyses using data in (a) by applying advanced statistical
methods to describe important landscape controls that can be used to
separate upland and wetland forests at the forest management unit scale.
d. Develop a forest classification key to separate upland and wetland forests
using data in (b) above.
e. Calculate amounts and proportions of forested wetlands across forest
management units in the Area of the Undertaking using data from (a), (b),
and (c) above.
24. Laboratory work: f. None.
25. Mr. Craig’s primary role related to the above-mentioned LUCI project. His
primary responsibility was to conduct data analysis to “separate” upland from
forested wetlands and calculate the amounts of forested wetlands in the Area
of the Undertaking. By “separate”, I mean assist with developing a more
accurate reading of forested wetlands for the purpose of calculating carbon –
this allows for better carbon measures to assist with climate change research
and policy needs. Mr. Hamel’s work had nothing to do with this or with the
LUCI project generally.
Jemmett Kirk: Duties from April 2017-2018
26. Jemmett Kirk was responsible for the following in his Biologist 1 position
in the time period in question:
27. Field work: a. None
28. Office work: b. Assemble data sets of measurements from satellite
images and point data in the Far North for land cover, plant functional type,
soil, geomorphological, and permafrost conditions across in the
discontinuous and continuous permafrost zones in Ontario using advanced
satellite imagery, such as Radarsat-2, Deimos, SPOT, and TanDemX
satellites.
c. Conduct spatial analyses using data in (a) by applying advanced statistical
methods to describe permafrost conditions in the Albany Ecodistrict, which is
situated in the Far North using data in (a) above.
d. Calculate amounts and proportions in the discontinuous permafrost using
data from (a) and (b) above.
-22-
e. Write a draft report that is serving to form research partnerships and grant
submissions to understand current and future permafrost conditions in
Ontario.
29. Mr. Kirk’s work involved advanced statistical analysis that Mr. Hamel did
not do. This is called “smoothing” data, which refers to standardizing data
that is applied for linear interpolations in remote sensing studies. Mr. Kirk
'smoothed' the data by applying advanced statistical analyses, such a
maximum likelihood analysis. This method maximizes likelihood of the most
probable distribution in the data. The point in space that maximizes the
likelihood function is called the maximum likelihood estimate and is used in
the interpolations. Mr. Hamel accessed remotely sensed data that previously
underwent data' smoothing' by the Natural Resources Inventory Section and
did not perform data 'smoothing' as part of his assigned tasks.
Derissa Vincentini: Duties from April 2017-2018
30. Derissa Vincentini was responsible for the following in her Biologist 1
position in the time period in question:
31. Field work: a. Assisted with field measurements and sample collection of
groundwater and greenhouse gases at a long-term research site located in
the White River Forest Management Unit.
b. Mr. Hamel never performed the functions in (a) during any of his contracts
between 2009 and 2017.
32. Office work: c. Assemble data sets from continuous measurement of
water pressure and barometric pressure that were obtained using level-
loggers in two long-term (2003 – 2018) peatland research sites located in the
White River Forest Management Unit.
d. Develop methods to calculate water table levels in the two peatlands using
data in (a) above.
e. Calculate descriptive statistics and hypothesis testing of water table level
about weather and peatland conditions.
f. Mr. Hamel never performed the functions in (c), (d), and (e) during his
contract period of 2016–2017. Nor was Mr. Hamel ever assigned a key role
in the research at the White River peatlands. He was assigned four (4) tasks
to complete at White River during his contracts from 2009–2016:
i. coordinate lumber purchases and helicopter services to sling lumber
into the research peatlands in 2010.
ii. Procure and install a weather station in one peatland in 2011.
iii. Procure and install a weather station in a second peatland in 2016,
although this task was never completed.
iv. Assist in lumber slinging into two peatlands in 2016 as Forest Soil
and Water Program commitments to an NSERC Strategic Research
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Partnership Grant to the University of Western Ontario (2015–2018)
for which the Soil and Water Program was the key research partner.
Dr. Maara Packalen, fulltime Research Biologist assigned to the
program, led this task.
33. Laboratory work: None.
34. Derissa Vincentini’s had a background in forest research in Ontario which
was an asset to her work at the White River site.
Cross-Examination of Mr. McLaughlin
[42] Mr. McLaughlin agreed that he provided leadership in the section as lead
scientist, but was a bargaining unit employee. He said he was familiar with the
duties and responsibilities of the staff in the program, including Mr. Hamel and
the three BIO1s. He testified that the bulk of Ms. Vincentini’s duties related to
QAQC data to get a picture of the water table and flow. That included
assembling data sets from the White River level loggers, doing statistical analysis
of the data, and manually compensating for pressure measured by the device.
[43] Union counsel put to Mr. McLaughlin that Mr. Hamel testified that he did the
following work at White River, which is not mentioned in his description of Mr.
Hamel’s work in the willsay (1) He installed level loggers; (2) Did a survey of
location and elevation of level heads; (3) Retrieved data from level loggers; and
(4) proposed changing the length of cables for level loggers in wells. Mr.
McLaughlin agreed that one season Mr. Hamel was involved in installing the level
logger at White River. He said that the survey data Mr. Hamel produced was
never used because it was too scattered. He was not aware of him retrieving
data from level loggers or about his proposal relating to cable lengths. Asked
whether he was denying that Mr. Hamel did any of that work, Mr. McLaughlin
replied, “No, but it was a very minor part of things he was supposed to do”.
[44] Mr. McLaughlin agreed that QAQC of data on stream flow and meteorological
data transmitted electronically from Far North was part of Mr. Hamel’s
-24-
responsibility as Far North Specialist. Counsel put to him that Mr. Hamel and Ms.
Vincentini were doing QAQC of the same type of data. Mr. McLaughlin replied,
“Yes. But the difference is, he did the QAQC of data produced electronically.
Ms. Vincentini was working on the manual data from level loggers at White
River”. Counsel put that whether QAQC work was done manually or
automatically, the ultimate goal in both was to ensure that the data is within
permissible bounds. Mr. McLaughlin replied, “yes, but the difference is when
using electronic QAQC you are not going to catch all errors because the data is
scattered all over.” When counsel suggested that Mr. Hamel did both manual
and electronic QAQC work, Mr. McLaughlin responded, “If he did some manually,
he did a poor job. A couple of times he sent data to grad students who found
significant errors in the data sets”.
[45] Counsel put that in 2017-18, Mr. Kirk’s major task was to prepare a report
delineating the perma frost coverage in the Far North. Mr. McLaughlin agreed.
Counsel noted that in his willsay Mr. McLaughlin states that while Mr. Hamel
acquired satellite data, he did no analysis of that data; that he only did satellite
imagery to do site selection, and put to Mr. McLaughlin Mr. Hamel’s evidence about
other GIS work he did, which go beyond merely acquiring satellite imagery. Mr.
McLaughlin agreed that Mr. Hamel did those tasks. However, he testified in detail
that what Mr. Hamel did was basic analysis by satellite imagery using programs
and models already put in place by other agencies of government. He did that by
simply moving and clicking on the computer with cursor pointed to the particular
area. Mr. McLaughlin was cross-examined in detail about two data bases called
“Trackmon Peat” and “Hudcore”. He responded that he was not familiar with them,
but agreed that Mr. Hamel built the Trackmon Peat data which was primarily
geared for electronic data.
[46] Mr. McLaughlin agreed that the afternoon session of the FRM Section staff meeting
was limited to managers including Ms. Kershaw and Mr. Puddister and research
scientists, and that a document authored by him, setting out challenges for the
section and proposed solutions, was distributed to the attendees of the afternoon
-25-
session. Mr. McLaughlin said that he wrote it to Ms. Kershaw on his own initiative
to expand on his views about challenges and solutions for the program. He said
that the program was facing a reduction of $ 25,000 of funding received from the
Far North in the previous 3 years. He said that he identified contract staff as a
challenge, because most of the program’s money was being spent on contract staff
wages. The FRM Section had entered into MOUs with a number of Ontario
Universities, committing to complete certain work. Therefore, he was of the view,
and proposed as a solution, that graduate and post doctoral students be used to
do work currently done by employees on recurring contracts. Mr. McLaughlin
explained that when he identified “difficult staff” as a challenge, he was referring to
staff who were not productive, not to Mr. Hamel or any particular employees.
[47] Mr. McLaughlin agreed that the contract staff he” chose” to retain did not include
Mr. Hamel’s position, but included two or three short-term contract staff at the level
of BIO1and wrote: “I chose not to recall Benoit Hamel (BIO2) for the foreseeable
future, based on reduced emphasis on field work and his sub-par adaptability,
interpersonal skills and judgment, as he was a liability rather than added value to
the program”. Mr. McLaughlin testified about his concerns relating to Mr. Hamel’s
performance in the position of Far North Specialist BIO2.
[48] Mr. McLaughlin agreed that the employer decided not to recall Mr. Hamel in
November, and that his views about Mr. Hamel would have influenced that
decision. He testified that he had previously raised his concerns about Mr. Hamel
with Ms. Kershaw in the previous 2016-17 season, also talked to Mr. Hamel himself
a couple of times. He insisted that his expression of concern about contract
employees and difficult employees was a general one, and not targeting Mr.
Hamel. He also maintained that, despite the strong language he used, he had no
authority to make staffing decisions. His document was only a strong
recommendation.
[49] In re-direct, Mr. McLaughlin testified that QAQC of data was a major focus of the
program and very important when there are court challenges. He said that all staff
-26-
in the program, including BIO2 staff, have done QAQC over the years. He named
Mr. Crofts and Mr. John Wilson, as examples of higher ranked staff like Mr. Hamel,
who have done QAQC work similar to what Ms. Vincentini did.
[50] Mr. McLaughlin reiterated that the QAQC work Ms. Vincentini did as a BIO1 was
solely analysis of applied statistics of data from the two weather stations in White
River. Mr. Hamel’s primary focus was on the Far North QAQC data, and it was an
insignificant part of his job, involving data from weather stations at Far North and
White River. All he did was analysis of descriptive statistics. Also, the QAQC Mr.
Hamel did was automatic QAQC where any inaccurate information is automatically
eliminated. Ms. Vincentini in contrast did manual QAQC of large data sets.
[51] Mr. McLaughlin explained that the QAQC Mr. Hamel did was basic because all
data sets he used were put together by other agencies. All calculations were
already done. All Mr. Hamel needed to do was click on what you want, and all
statistics were in there. Asked to compare the remote sensing work Mr. Hamel did
with that done by Mr. Kirk, he described in detail what he called complex analysis
Mr. Kirk did including calculations and smoothing of the data. Mr. Kirk also worked
with spot satellite imagery. Mr. Hamel did not do any of that. He only did the basic
analysis.
[52] Comparing work done by Mr. Hamel with that of Mr. Craig, he said that Mr. Craig
used data bases from national and provincial inventories like vegetation chemistry
data. Those data bases were very different from the Trackmon Peat and Hudcore
data bases Mr. Hamel worked with.
Cross-Examination of Mr. Dan Puddister
[53] Mr. Puddister testified that on January 5, 2018, he became aware that Mr.
McLaughlin had proposed changing the direction of his program and staffing needs
in anticipation of funding cutbacks, and that “he did not want to recall Mr. Hamel”.
He said that at that time he had discussions about Mr. Hamel’s recall with Ms.
-27-
Kershaw. She informed him that she was trying to get soft funding to be able to
recall Mr. Hamel for 8 weeks. Counsel put to Mr. Puddister that in November 2017
there was no discussion about recalling him as usual in mid-November. He replied
that the management team would have discussed that because the union had
sought discussions on seasonal recalls. He was aware that there was discussion
that it would be difficult to recall Mr. Hamel without Far North funding, so he would
have likely discussed that with Ms. Kershaw. He testified that every year at the
August management meeting funding issues and forecasting of staffing are
discussed. At the meeting held after the August 2017 budget, the extension of
base funded group 3 seasonals was discussed. Due to funding concerns, it was
decided that seasonals would initially be recalled only for 22 weeks. Then attempts
would be made to find savings to extend them to the usual 42 weeks.
[54] Mr. Puddister agreed that three BIO1s were hired in November 2017, followed by
one more in December, to support Mr. Mclaughlin’s program. When counsel
pointed to Mr. McLaughlin’s memo of December 2017, Mr. Puddister responded,
that in that memo Mr. McLaughlin was making projections for the future based on
his own opinions based on information that was “not true”. Counsel put to Mr.
Puddister that the decision not to recall Mr. Hamel and to hire 4 BIO1s came to
him as a “done deal”. Mr. Puddister disagreed. He said that Ms. Kershaw makes
initial decisions about seasonal recalls and proposes her decisions to him. He
could either approve her decision or veto it. He said that he makes the ultimate
decision on seasonal recalls.
[55] He testified that Ms. Kershaw was able in January secure soft funding from the
Climate Change Branch, and Mr. Hamel was recalled for 8 weeks. He said that
was an exceptional decision made in order to meet the employer’s obligation under
the collective agreement to comply with Mr. Hamel’s recall rights. He testified that
management believed that it would meet its collective agreement obligation by
recalling Mr. Hamel for a minimum of 8 weeks. The plan was to have Mr. Hamel
do data management in the Far North in the 8 weeks starting in the latter half of
-28-
January 2018. Mr. Puddister agreed that before recalling Mr. Hamel, management
was aware that he had already started another job.
[56] In re-direct, Mr. Puddister was asked how management made decisions about Mr.
Hamel. He said that from 2016 he was aware that Far North funding may be
reduced. Ms. Kershaw on a few occasions raised her concern that on the one
hand there was no funding for Mr. Hamel’s position, but the employer had an
obligation to recall him. On advice from The Human Resources Branch, in January
2018, it was decided that Mr. Hamel will be recalled for 8 weeks.
Evidence in -Chief of Ms. Maureen Kershaw
[57] Ms. Kershaw held the position of Science Coordinator at the FRMS at the relevant
time. Research scientists from different programs, including Mr. McLaughlin,
reported to her. She reported to Mr. Puddister.
[58] Ms. Kershaw described the hiring of the BIO1 employees in November-December
2017. With regard to BIO1 Mr. Kirk, she testified that in April 2017 the Strategic
Planning Branch decided to launch a Land Use Carbon Inventory (LUCI) program
for major land users in Ontario. Once funding was obtained, a search was
undertaken to select someone for a BIO1 position to complete the LUCI work,
which had to be done within a short time. Mr. Kirk was selected because he had
experience working with nurseries and greenhouses. Ms. Kershaw testified that
the same process was followed in offering Ms. Vincentini an entry level position as
a BIO1. She was known in the FRM Section, having worked for another science
coordinator. Ms. Kershaw testified that the letter offering a BIO1 position to Mr.
Craig went out around the same time as the others. He was willing to accept, but
due to personal reasons could not start immediately. Since Mr. Craig had valuable
experience, his start date was delayed to December 1st. Ms. Kershaw testified that
the 3 BIO1 hired worked in the LUCI program, not the Far North. Each had a task
to work on a piece of the LUCI program, and each had a deliverable date.
-29-
[59] Referring to an email she wrote to Mr. Hamel on January 26, 2018, informing that
the priorities of the program had changed, and that Far North funding had been
reduced, she said she was not certain whether that was the first time she gave Mr.
Hamel indication that his recall was in doubt, but stated that she would be surprised
if Mr. McLaughlin had not indicated that to Mr. Hamel earlier.
[60] Ms. Kershaw testified that management from all over Ontario submit requests to
hire staff for approval by the Director. To obtain approval management has to
show that funding for the positions is in place. When she requested approval to
recall Mr. Hamel in 2017, she was unable to show funding. The Science Director
and the Business Unit in responding to hiring requests consider availability of
funding and the number of staff that can be “in the books”. The request to recall
Mr. Hamel was not approved.
Cross- Examination of Ms. Kershaw
[61] Union counsel suggested that Mr. Hamel’s job entailed procuring physical samples
from the field in the form of peat cores. Ms. Kershaw replied that like any other
team member he may have done it. However, she added that he had a higher
responsibility than that, to design the overall plan and the execution of the plan.
[62] Ms. Kershaw agreed that QAQC of data collected from Far North was one of Mr.
Hamel’s duties. She added, however, that while Mr. Hamel controlled the Far
North QAQC, he could assign another staff to do that, and did some QAQC work,
among many other duties. Ms. Kershaw agreed that Mr. Hamel’s field work in the
Far North was done primarily in the summer.
[63] Ms. Kershaw stated that she had some familiarity with the work of the three BIO1s,
but not details. They worked under close supervision. Bagging/sorting soil
samples was one of their main duties. She agreed that QAQC of water data was
a big part of Ms. Vincentini’s job, but added that she was working on data from
White River, not Far North. In contrast, Mr. Hamel’s was a more senior position.
-30-
He was responsible to plan and acquire all needed equipment before going for field
work in Far North. He had to write standard operating procedures for the field work
because of the high probability of being audited. He also had to decide how to
solve problems that arise.
[64] Counsel put to Ms. Kershaw that Mr. Hamel, with his experience, was capable of
doing the work Ms. Vincentini did. She agreed, but explained that White River and
Far North were two different studies. Ms. Vincentini was hired in early September
2017 to work on the White River study funded by LUCI. The tasks she did were
not related to the Far North study, for which Mr. Hamel was hired.
[65] Counsel pointed out that Mr. Hamel had assisted with installation of the White River
level logger, and suggested that his work was not exclusively at Far North. She
testified that White River was a larger project. Data from White River was used by
the LUCI, as well as by various other areas, to develop their policies and
procedures. She agreed that Mr. Hamel was assigned some duties on White
River, as all other members of his team were. However, the focus of his position
was the Far North project.
[66] Ms. Kershaw agreed that Mr. Hamel was capable of doing the QAQC work Ms.
Vincentini did. However, management had discussed and planned the Far North
work Mr. Hamel would be assigned when recalled. He had other priority work
waiting for him, had his recall been approved. That included “clean up”, that is to
document the methods used, so that external groups would be able to assess the
validity of data, and decide if they could use the same methods.
[67] Ms. Kershaw explained the process for hiring seasonal employees. She decided
the staffing required for the season. She requested approval from Mr. Puddister
to hire/recall the staff she determined was required. Once Mr. Pudddister gives
his approval, further approval had to be obtained from the Science Director and
the Business Unit. In order to get approval from them, she had to show why the
positions in question are a priority, that funding for the positions had been secured,
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and where that funding came from. She started conversations seeking approval
to recall Mr. Hamel in November/December 2017. Approval was, however, not
received because at the time she could not show there was funding. As soon as
approval was received in January, Mr. Hamel was offered a recall.
[68] Ms. Kershaw was asked whether she considered recommendations by Mr.
McLaughlin in deciding not to recall Mr. Hamel, and instead hire BIO1 staff. She
replied that she considered Mr. McLaughlin’s views. However, she did not have to
accept them. In fact, in Mr. Hamel’s case, despite Mr. McLaughlin’s reservations
about Mr. Hamel’s performance and strong view that he be not recalled at all, no
decision was made to not recall him. There was work for Mr. Hamel. She always
wanted to recall him, and did so as soon as funding was found, and approval given
to recall him. Presenting Mr. Mclaughlin’s memo of December 2017, counsel put
to her that that the language there is directory, and was not a recommendation.
Ms. Kershaw disagreed.
SUBMISSIONS
Union Submissions
[69] Counsel submitted that this grievance turns on the meaning of the phrase “same
position” in article 32.5.1.1, and its application to the facts in this case. He referred
to the following paragraphs of the Board’s decision dated September 25, 2019, in
deciding a preliminary “no prima facie case” motion between these same parties:
[23] However, I do not agree that because article 32.5.1.1 does not explicitly
stipulate a particular length of the recall, as long as the employee is recalled
for any period of time the employer is compliant with its obligation. That would
be an unduly narrow and unreasonable interpretation of the article which
would deny the seniority rights contemplated in the article. For example, the
employer could recall the senior employee for a few days, even though the
work of “the same position” is required for a longer period. This would defeat
the purpose of article 32.5.1.1. The parties would not have intended that.
[24] Therefore, the issue is the meaning of “same position”. The parties advised
that they were unable to find any decisions interpreting that term in article
32.5.1.1. However, they did present prior decisions of this Board considering
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the meaning of the term “former position” in the predecessor article in the
collective agreement (hereinafter “the predecessor provision”). It read:
3.20.1 Seasonal employees who have completed their probationary
period shall be offered employment in their former positions in
the following season on the basis of seniority.
The parties did not argue that the change of the language from “former” to
“same” to be of significance for the present purposes. I find that to be of no
significance. Therefore, that case law remains relevant and instructive.
[25] In interpreting the term “same position” the Board must recognize that article
32.5.1.1, at least in part, is intended to give priority and a measure of job
security to senior seasonal employees. In interpreting “former position” in
the predecessor provision, the Board in Re Anderson, 471/86 (Roberts)
wrote as follows at pp. 13-14 about the importance of seniority:
There seems to be little dispute that, in general, seniority rights constitute
“one of the most important and far-reaching benefits which the trade
union movement has been able to secure for its members by virtue of the
collective bargaining procedure” Tung-Sol of Canada Ltd. (1964), 15
L.A.C. 161, 162 (Reville). In recognition of this, the Grievance Settlement
Board has adopted the view laid down by judge Reville in the foregoing
case that “an employee’s seniority should only be affected by very clear
language in the collective agreement … and … arbitrators should
construe the collective agreement with the utmost strictness whenever it
is contended that an employee’s seniority has been forfeited, truncated
or abridged under the relevant sections of the collective agreement”.
Citing prior decisions, Vice-Chair Roberts observed that these principles have
been applied by the Board in cases under article 3.20.1, the predecessor to
article 32.5.1.1.
[26] With those principles in mind, I turn to the issue of whether the particulars of
the union are capable of establishing that the “same position” Mr. Hamel had
performed in the prior seasons existed at the relevant time. In Re Furniss
602/86 (Slone) the Board was required to determine whether the grievor had
completed the probationary period by working two full periods of seasonal
employment of at least eight consecutive weeks each in the “same position”
in the same ministry, which was a pre-requisite for recall rights under the
predecessor provision. In interpreting “same position”, the Board at p. 10-11
wrote:
We do not suggest that in every case, the “position” is equivalent to a
particular job title. A title is nothing more than a title, although it provides
some evidence that the substance of another job is similar to the
substance of another job bearing the same title. In many cases there will
be little doubt as to what is a position; in other cases, it will be a factual
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question as to whether or not the substance of a job and the nature of the
duties are sufficiently similar to be considered the same position.
[27] Re Kaufffeldt, 771/89 (Wilson) was also a case under the predecessor
provision. The Board referred to the above noted excerpt from Re Furniss
and a number of other decisions of the Board, and wrote at pp. 10-11:
I have carefully read the other two authorities referred to in Boden,
namely Saunders and Nielson. Saunders deals with Section 3.18 as it
relates to recall under 3.2.01. Nielsen deals with Section 3.20.2. All three
cases use a comparison of the functions of the positions in question to
see if they are the same or substantially similar. All agree with Furniss
that job title and of course position classification are not determinative.
[28] In Re Orville D. Smith 2315/87 (Dissanayake), another case under the
predecessor provision, at pp. 8-9 the Board wrote:
While we agree with the Furniss decision that the position need not be in
the same location, we would add that it is also not necessary that for
article 3.20.1. to apply the duties and responsibilities in the positions be
identical. There may be numerous business and practical reasons why
the duties and responsibilities in a position may change somewhat from
year to year. If the Board adopts a test requiring identical duties,
seasonal employees may be denied their seniority and recall rights
unreasonably simply because of some minor changes in duties in the
position. The reasoning of the Board in Furniss in rejecting the “same
location” requirement is equally applicable here.
At p. 10 the Board wrote:
In determining whether a position is the grievor’s former position some
latitude must be allowed for minor differences. In our view the
appropriate test is whether or not the substance of the duties and
responsibilities are sufficiently similar. This of course will be a question
of fact in each case.
[29] In its particulars, the union does not use the words “same” to describe the work
it asserts was performed by the employees with less seniority. However, at
para 5 it asserts that “The employer redistributed the work traditionally
performed by Benoit Hamel to the four BIO 1 positions”. That in my view, is
another way of stating that the work was the same. Taken together with the
submissions made, there is no doubt in my mind that the assertion was that
the same work Mr. Hamel had performed in the past seasons existed and was
performed by other employees who had less seniority.
[30] The arbitral authorities reviewed above makes it clear that “same position” (in
those cases “former position”) is not a reference to a job title or classification.
As stated in Re Orville B. Smith (supra) the appropriate test is whether or not
the substance of the duties and responsibilities are sufficiently similar.
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[31] The union’s particulars, that the work in question was the work Mr. Hamel had
traditionally performed, if assumed to be true, is capable of meeting the test
in Re Orville B. Smith. Therefore, the particulars would be capable of
establishing that element necessary to substantiate the alleged violation of
article 32.5.1.1 and satisfies the test in Re Couture (supra). It follows that the
employer’s motion fails, and I so find.
[70] The union relied on four “bundles of work” the BIO1s as satisfying the “substantially
similar” test. Those (1) The level logger QAQC work done by Ms. Vincentini, (2)
The perma frost core processing work done by Mr. Craig, (3) The data base
building which Mr. Craig did, and (4) The GIS work Mr. Kirk did. Counsel submitted
that that in all past cases, in applying the legal principles, the Board was faced with
facts where one other employee had done the work of the grievor’s position. The
instant case is novel in that the union was asserting that the grievor’s functions
were distributed among three other employees. He submitted that if the Board
agrees that work of the three BIO1 employees relied upon by the union, when
combined, was substantially similar to Mr. Hamel’s Far North Specialist position,
the union will satisfy the test.
[71] Union counsel reviewed in detail the document, willsay declarations, and viva voce
evidence elating to the duties performed by the BIO1 employees, and compared it
to the duties Mr. Hamel performed in his position. The material evidence in that
regard is set out in some detail in this decision.
[72] Counsel noted that the bundles of work in question were performed by the BIO1
employees in the same period, starting in November, the same period when Mr.
Hamel would normally have been recalled. This season Mr. Hamel was not
recalled, and the BIO1s did that work instead.
[73] Counsel submitted that it was “open to the employer” to recall Mr. Hamel in
November as usual, by combining the many tasks the BIO1s did, including QAQC
of level logger data, the peat core processing, the data base building work, and the
GIS work, which the BIO1s did. That work was similar to work Mr. Hamel had
done. He pointed out that Mr. Hamel was familiar with the work the BIO1s did at
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the White River site. He had gone out to that site several times to work and had in
fact installed level loggers there. Counsel submitted that the Board should
conclude that the work the BIO1s did, and work Mr. Hamel did were substantially
similar despite some differences.
[74] He said that the grievance is about seniority rights. Therefore, it must be
interpreted broadly to protect the seniority of Mr. Hamel, who was left with no
employment, while employees with significantly less seniority were doing work
similar to what he had done. Counsel submitted that such a broad is warranted by
the long-standing and often followed decision in Tung-Sol of Canada Ltd.. He
urged the Board not to follow the approach in Re Beauvalet, (supra), and prefer
the recognition of the importance of seniority in Re Tung-Sol. Counsel urged the
Board to uphold the policy grievance.
Employer Submissions
[75] Employer counsel submitted that the job specification for Mr. Hamel’s Far North
Specialist position which he agreed was largely accurate, clearly shows that Mr.
Hamel was the “field lead” for the Far North Research program. The evidence of
the employer, as well as Mr. Hamel’s own evidence, was consistent that his was a
leadership role.
[76] Counsel agreed that there was evidence there was some superficial overlap
between the work of the BIO1 employees, and Mr. Hamel’s duties as Far North
Specialist. He submitted that this is not sufficient to establish that the BIO1
employees did duties substantially similar to duties of Mr. Hamel’s position. There
was no evidence that the BIO1s did any of the core duties of Mr. Hamel’s position.
[77] Counsel submitted that the evidence was that QAQC data done by Ms. Vincentini,
and the GIS work done by Mr. Kirk was different qualitatively than the QAQC and
GIS work Mr. Hamel had done. Also the evidence was that much of that kind of
work done by Mr. Hamel was done also by numerous employees across the
program. He pointed out that both the BIO1 and BIO2 job specifications state that
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management has the right to assign “other duties”, which are incidental. Counsel
submitted that when the legal principles that govern the meaning of “same position”
as established in the case law are applied to the facts of this case, which are not
in dispute in any significant aspect, the grievance must fail.
[78] Reviewing the “purpose of position” set out in the Far North Specialist job
description(supra), counsel submitted that it is clear that is a specialized position
working at a high level on the Far North program. He contrasted the BIO1 job
description with Mr. Hamel’s. The purpose of the BIO1 position is to “provide
project assistance” for specific tasks for different research programs. Unlike the
Far North Specialist, none of the BIO1 employees had any leadership role. The
evidence is uncontradicted that their positions were “entry level”, while Mr. Hamel’s
was at a higher level.
[79] Counsel pointed to Mr. Craft’s evidence that the seniority of Mr. Hamel drove the
filing of this policy grievance. He testified that the employer made no effort to see
whether Mr. Hamel could handle the work going on in the building. Counsel argued
that the collective agreement does not give seasonal employees priority recall
rights to do any work they could handle. The entitlement is only where the same
or substantially same work is being done.
[80] Counsel highlighted that the evidence established the following as core duties
performed by Mr. Hamel.
- He coordinated the research program with the Research Scientist.
- He was very involved in planning the program.
- He coordinated with various partners.
- He was “in charge” of collecting data in the Far North.
- He met with the Research Scientist at the start of the season and with
him planned the program, its objectives.
- He discussed the budget, the experiment design, financial and human
resources.
- He was responsible for equipment acquiring, logistics
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- He ensured that health and safety training is in place.
- He was responsible to ensure that all equipment taken for work in the
Far North is in good condition because there were no facilities up north
to fix equipment.
- He also created the standard operating procedures for processing peat
cores, and for managing of ecological and environmental weather
stations.
[81] Counsel submitted that the union led no evidence that the BIO1 employees did any
of the foregoing duties at all. Mr. McLaughlin’s evidence about Mr. Hamel’s duties
was largely consistent with Mr. Hamel’s own evidence. Both testified that Mr.
Hamel’s main responsibility was for the Far North site. Mr. Hamel testified that he
had gone up to the White River site 4 to 5 times and did a few tasks. He said he
could not recall what specifically he did, except that once he assisted and was
involved in installing level loggers. He agreed that he was not responsible for that
installation work, but only assisted, and that he did very little else at White River.
[82] Counsel pointed out that Mr. Hamel agreed that he himself told Mr. McLaughlin
several times that he was not responsible for work at White River. Mr. Hamel
explained in cross examination that he said something along those lines to Mr.
McLaughlin because he was too busy with Far North work.
[83] Counsel submitted that it is clear that there is no evidence at all, and the union did
not even assert, that the BIO1 employees did any of the leadership roles Mr. Hamel
had with respect to the Far North Research Program. He was the “field load”.
None of the BIO1 employees had a leadership role. Also the union did not dispute
that an important part of Mr. Hamel’s job was planning the field activities, projects,
and research at Far North site and to prepare the study design. Counsel submitted
that the leadership role and planning responsibilities were core duties of Mr.
Hamel’s position, which were not done by the BIO1 employees. He argued that
the insignificant overlap of duties the union relies of is insufficient to meet the
“substantially similar” test. He urged the Board to dismiss the grievance.
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[84] In Reply Submissions, union counsel, reiterated that labels like LUCI attached to
projects are irrelevant. It is the work that matters. Mr. Hamel was familiar with the
type of work that went on in relation to various research projects. He said that in
any event it is clear that, even if numerous employees in the program did data
QAQC work, it was also part of Mr. Hamel’s job. Ms. Kershaw confirmed that in
her testimony. Although the data Mr. Hamel worked with was data from a different
source than White River, he was familiar with White River having worked there
several times. The data he did QAQC was of the same type as data from White
River.
[85] Counsel stated that employer counsel glossed over the “timing issue”. The
evidence is undisputed that Mr. Hamel did non-field duties in November and
December, prior to the winter. In November and December Mr. Hamel did his
office work in the same building in Sault Ste Marie, where the BIO1 employees
also worked in the same period.
[86] Counsel distinguished the decision in Re Beauvalet (supra). There the Board
dismissed the grievance because the two jobs being were markedly different. He
said that in contrast, Mr. Hamel worked with the same material, same techniques
and methods, and similar data, as the BIO1s did.
[87] Counsel submitted that none of the authorities relied on by the employer had the
undisputed fact here, that the BIO1 employees were doing QAQC work in
November-December 2017 in the office in Sault Ste Marie, in the same period. Mr.
Hamel would have worked in the same building performing non-field work,
including data QAQC.
[88] Finally, counsel again stressed the importance of the Tung-Sol principle, and
submitted that the Board ought to find substantial similarity of duties, and uphold
the grievance.
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DECISION
[89] The authorities have established the test to be, whether the duties and
responsibilities of the position of the grievor and those of the targeted positions,
were “substantially similar”. The onus to satisfy that test is on the union. It is also
well established that job titles or labels attached to projects, such as LUCI work,
Far North work or White River work are not significant. Also, while the location
where work is done is a factor that may be considered in comparing similarity of
positions, it is not a significant factor. While duties and responsibilities of the
positions to be compared need not be identical, they must be substantially similar.
I will not review the submissions on the applicable legal principles by either counsel
because there was no dispute in that regard. I will focus on their submissions on
the application of those principles to the evidence in this case.
[90] In urging the Board to uphold the grievance the union placed significant reliance
on the decision in Tung-Sol. As counsel pointed out arbitrators in general, and this
Board in particular, have consistently approved and applied the principle
established in that decision. I agree. However, it is important to examine what
principle was established in Tung-Sol. It does not establish a principle that
employers covered by a collective agreement are obligated to give priority on the
basis of seniority whenever it exercises its management rights. That obligation
arises only if, and only to the extent, the collective agreement imposes such an
obligation. Tung-Sol established a rule of interpretation to the effect that where a
collective agreement provides priority on the basis of seniority, that provision ought
to be interpreted strictly to give effect to the seniority rights agreed to between the
parties. It was open to the Board to read the word “same” literally and give it the
dictionary meaning “identical” (Webster’s New Dictionary 1994). However, it did
not do so. In the authorities reviewed above it has interpreted the article broadly
to enforce seniority rights in a number of ways. Most importantly, applying Tung-
Sol, it has held that positions would be the same, if the duties and responsibilities
are substantially similar. They need not be identical. Similarly it has held that job
titles classifications or labels attached to work, or locations where work is
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performed are not, by themselves, material, if the work is substantially similar.
Moreover, the Board has held that availability of funding is irrelevant. Whether or
not the employer acted on the basis of incorrect advice from Human Resources
Staff, whether or not it was influenced by inappropriate recommendations by a
bargaining unit employee, it would not be in breach of the collective agreement if
it had no collective agreement obligation to recall the employee anyway.
[91] The Board also finds that the fact that, unlike in the past authorities, here the senior
seasonal employee’s duties were not performed by another single employee but
was distributed among several employees; and the fact that that the senior
seasonal employee was capable of doing the work done by other less senior
employees, make no difference. The Board agrees that if the work itself was
substantially similar, the article applies whether it was performed by one or several
employees with less seniority. However, the ability of the employee with greater
seniority to perform work done by less senior employees is irrelevant if that work
does not meet the “substantially similar” test. The collective agreement does not
give priority recall rights to any work performed which he was capable of doing.
The work must be substantially similar. In short, given the undisputed fact that Mr.
Hamel had completed probation and had greater seniority, if the work performed
by the BIO1s was substantially similar to duties of Mr. Hamel in his Far North
Specialist position, he would have been entitled to recall priority under article
32.5.1.1.
[92] The union relied on four “bundles” of work performed by three BIO1s to argue that
the “substantially similar” test is satisfied. After careful consideration of the
evidence, I have concluded that even on the most liberal view of that evidence, it
does not meet the “substantially similar” test.
[93] In Re Munro/Boden 677/88 (Fraser) the Board was considering whether two
bargaining unit positions, the grievor’s Resource Technician Foreman Position and
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the General Resource Technician Position were substantially similar. At pages 22-
23 the Board wrote
TO sum up at this point, It is quite clear that the Resource Technician
Foreman's duties are included In the General, Resource Technician's duties,
but that does not make them substantially the same. There must be some
equivalence between the core or main duties of each position, to reach that
conclusion. To take an extreme example, the General Resource Technician
Is required to have a valid M.T.C. driver's licence, and one may assume that
driving Ministry vehicles is an included duty under “other duties as assigned”.
One would not conclude from that, however, that a job limited to driving
Ministry vehicles was substantially slmllar.to a job of General Resource
Technician. The included function alone is not determinative, and there must
be a broader similarity when all the core functions are compared.
The two position specifications show no such similarity., There are many
timber duties in the General Resource Technician job not included in the
Foreman's job. Mr. John McMurray, Forest Operations Manager, Tweed
district gave evidence on this. He noted that of the many timber duties found
in Duty #l in the GRT position specification, the Foreman would only do the
tending duty, which might, also include pest control. ..In the skills section of
that specification, the Foreman does not require demonstrated experience in
tree marking and timber cruising, nor a Timber Certification Course, all of
which the GRT must have. The Foreman only supervises projects for which
sufficient directions are given, which replace the more detailed skills and
knowledge required of the GRT. In sum, a General Resource Technician can
do everything a Resource Technician Foreman can do, but the reverse is not
true, because the GRT position has a number of more complex duties, and
requires greater skills and knowledge.
We have little difficulty in concluding on the basis of this evidence that the
principal duties and core content of the General Resource Technician
position are substantially more complex and involved that those of the
Resource Technician Foreman, and the two jobs are not substantially similar,
notwithstanding the inclusion of the functions of one job in the other, and
notwithstanding the acceptability of Ms. Munro's work as a foreman for the
purpose of satisfying the probationary period in Article 3.18. (Emphasis
added)
[94] In Re Anderson, 471/86 (Roberts) the Board quoted Re Tung-Sol (supra) with
approval, and noted that this Board has accepted the views expressed there about
the appropriate approach when interpreting seniority provisions. In dismissing the
grievance following a review of the evidence, at p. 22 the Board concluded:
“In light of the foregoing considerations, and in particular, the degree of
differentiation in core functions and essential skills, the Board must conclude
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that the positions of Assistant Forester and Timber Technician-scaler are not
“substantially similar …” (Emphasis added)
[95] On the evidence before me, which was largely not in dispute, the conclusion is
unavoidable that Mr. Hamel’s duties as Far North Specialist and the duties
performed by the three BIO1s in the relevant period were significantly different in
their core duties and responsibilities. Mr. Hamel’s duties and responsibilities set
out in the job description, which was consistent with the evidence led by the
employer, as well as Mr. Hamel’s own evidence, establishes that there was no
substantial similarity of the core duties quantitatively or qualitatively.
[96] The evidence is that Mr. Hamel had a leadership role. Providing leadership to
other members of the team in various aspects of their work was a core duty of his
job. Mr. Hamel was a very honest and candid witness. He himself used the term
“supervised” in describing his role during his testimony with respect to other
members of the field team. He had overall responsibilities in planning and
implementing the field work to achieve the scientific and research objectives set
for the program. Those were highlighted by employer counsel, and are set out at
para. 81 (supra). The union did not dispute that Mr. Hamel carried out these core
responsibilities, and Mr. Hamel in his testimony confirmed that he did those. Also,
witnesses from both parties, including Mr. Hamel, agreed that the Far North
Specialist was “in charge” of several aspect of the Far North program. His job
specification envisages that it is his duty “to provide specialized scientific and
technical support to all programs within the research unit”. In contrast, the BIO1
job specification does not envisage a leadership role. BIO1s had no overall
responsibilities over the program, as Mr. Hamel did.
[97] There is no doubt that there was some overlap in Mr. Hamel’s duties and
responsibilities and those of the BIO1 employees, such as collection, processing
and analysis of peat core data and doing quality control on data. Both Mr. Kirk and
Mr. Hamel used the satellite GIS as part of their jobs. However, the evidence is
that even with regard to those functions, there was a qualitative difference in what
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they did. Mr. Hamel, in addition to collecting and processing peat core data, wrote
the Standard Operating Procedure for doing that. His analysis and QAQC of data
was basic compared to what the BIO1s did. He used GIS for very limited purposes,
while use of GIS was a large part of Mr. Kirk’s job, and for different purposes.
[98] The most convincing evidence that causes the Board to conclude that there was
no substantial similarity, however, is the clear evidence that there was no
commonality between the core functions Mr. Hamel’s position and the positions of
the BIO1s. In Re Munro/Boden (supra) and Re Anderson also, the Board found
some overlap in the two positions being compared. However, the Board concluded
that the duties were not substantially similar for the same reason. In Re
Munro/Boden stated in finding no substantial similarity, “There must be some
equivalence between the core or main duties of each position to reach that
conclusion”. I find there is no equivalence between the core or main duties in this
case also. Union counsel urged me not to follow Re Munro/Boden and the
decisions cited therein on the grounds that it failed to apply the Tung-Sol principle.
For the reasons I have set out, there is no conflict between the Tung-Sol principle
and the Board decisions.
[99] The union’s concern that Mr. Hamel, despite his greater seniority, was left with no
employment, while employees with less seniority were employed doing work Mr.
Hamel was capable of doing, is understandable. It may also be true, as Mr. Crofts
testified, that if the employer had the employer made a serious effort, it may have
been able to combine the duties the BIO1s did and recall Mr. Hamel to perform
those. However, the issue for the Board to decide here is not what the employer
could or could not have done, or what was fair. The issue is what the collective
agreement requires the employer to do. The Board’s authority is only to enforce
the obligation agreed upon between the parties. It has no authority to impose on
the employer additional obligations because it deems that the employer could have
done it, or that it would be fairer.
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[100] For all of the foregoing reasons, the policy grievance is hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 19th day of October 2022.
“Nimal Dissanayake”
Nimal Dissanayake, Arbitrator