HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-2382.Andraychak.10-10-26 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
UqJOHPHQWGHVJULHIV
Settlement Board
GHVHPSOR\pVGHOD
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388 7pO
Fax (416) 326-1396 7pOpF
GSB#2008-2382
UNION#2008-0714-0001
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
èÏÔÎÏ
(Andraychak)
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
Employer
(Ministry of Children and Youth Services)
BEFORERandi H. Abramsky Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONJim Gilbert
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYERCaroline Cohen
Labour Practice Group
Ministry of Government Services
Counsel
HEARINGOctober 5, 2010.
.
WRITTENOctober 14, 2010, October 18, 2010,
SUBMISSIONS
October 19, 2010.
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DECISION
[1]The grievor, Janet Andraychak, contests the results of a competition for the position
of Probation Administrative Support in the Probation Services Branch of the Ministry of
Children and Youth Services. Although she has less seniority than the successful applicant, the
JULHYRUDVVHUWVWKDWVKH³ORVWDcompetition because it was conducteGLQDSSURSULDWHO\´$WWKLV
point, she does not seek appointment to the position but seeks lost wages from the date the
position was filed, May 18, 2008, until she obtained another satisfactory position in February
,WLVWKH(PSOR\HU¶VSRVLWLRQWKDW the grievance should be dismissed.
FACTS
[2]The parties presented this case through documents and argument only. No witnesses
were called by either party. The parties agreed that if there was a factual dispute which was
material and required evidence, they would provide evidence on it.
[3]On March 20, 2008, the Ministry posted for the position of Probation Administrative
Support in its Thunder Bay office, with a closing date of April 7, 2008. On March 28, 2008, Ms.
Andraychak applied for the position, sending in a cover letter and her resume for consideration.
On the same date, Ms. Maggie Aalto, the acting incumbent, also applied for the job, submitting
her letter and resume. At the time of their application, Ms. Andraychak had approximately one
year of seniority while Ms. Aalto had a seniority date of 1994.
The posting described the job as follows:
You will type correspondence, reports and documents, provide telephone and
reception duties in addition to maintaining client and office files. As the key
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operator for the youth offender information tracking system, you will enter and
check computerized data, liaise with other offices, courts, and relevant
stakeholders to exchange information and distribute mail and messages
appropriately.
Qualifications: proven administrative experience including knowledge of the
Youth Criminal Justice System and relevant legislation proven ability to use
computer software (word-processing, email and database) with excellent
keyboarding skills, good communication and interpersonal skills required to
respond to inquiries and provide effective customer service to clients using tact
and diplomacy while maintaining client confidentiality; proven ability to
organize, set priorities regarding own workload and work under minimal
supervision.
The Position Specification is more detailed, but the key duties are listed in the posting.
[4]There were six selection criteria used to evDOXDWHWKHDSSOLFDQWV±
SURYHQFOHULFDO
and administrative experience including knowledge of administrative functions, procedures and
policies (20%); (2) working knowledge of the criminal justice system and relevant legislation
(15%); (3) good communication skills in order to be able to effectively communicate with
clients, parents, lawyers, ministry officials, court staff, using tact and diplomacy while
maintaining client confidentiality (20%); (4) proven ability to organize and prioritize own work
and work under minimal supervision as the probation manager is frequently away from the office
(20%); (5) proven ability to use fully programmable word-processing equipment, applications
and operations i.e., Word, Email, Youth Offender Information Tracking System (15%); (6)
excellent typing/keyboarding skills (10%). The Union did not contest the selection criteria or the
weight afforded to each criterion.
[5]Both Ms. Andraychak and Ms. Aalto were interviewed for the position, along with
three other individuals. There were two interviewers, not three as indicated in the letter advising
Ms. Andraychak of her interview. One was Ms.$QGUD\FKDN¶VVXSHUYLVRU0V/LVD6LPPLF
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7KHRWKHUZDV0V$DOWR¶VVXSHUYLVRU0V.HOO\ Turek. Ms. Aalto had been acting in the
Probation Administrative Support position since September 2007.
[6]The competition consisted of an interview with eight questions, a data entry skills test
and a written prioritization test. The interview was worth 70%, the priority test 15% and the data
entry test 15%. In addition, references, including a referenFHIURPWKHDSSOLFDQWV¶FXUUHQW
supervisor, were checked before the competition was closed. No numerical weight was given for
the references. Personnel files aQGSHUIRUPDQFHDSSUDLVDOV±WRWKHH[WHQWWKDWWKH\H[LVWHG±ZHUH
not reviewed.
[7]My review of the questions establishes that were all job-related to the position, and
the Union does not challenge the questions asked. Instead, it challenges the scores received by
the grievor and the incumbent.It asserts that the grievor was repeatedly underscored while the
incumbent was overscored, especially by thHLQFXPEHQW¶VVXSHUYLVRU.HOO\7XUHN
[8]The following chart reveals the scores issued by Ms. Turek and Ms. Simmic for both
Ms. Andraychak and Ms. Aalto:
Kelly Turek Lisa Simmic
Grievor Ms. Aalto Grievor Ms. Aalto
Question19/106/1010/106/10
Question 28/109/1010/109/10
Question 3 17/2012/2016/2012/20
Question 4 10/1010/1010/1010/10
Question 5 7/1010/1010/106/10
Question68/109/106/106/10
Question 7 10/106/109/106/10
Question81/55/52/55/5
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[9]A review of the test scores by Ms. Simmic and Ms. Turek show substantial similarity,
overall, in their evaluation of the applicants¶DQVZHUVDQGQRPDUNHGIDYRULWLVPWRZDUG0V
$DOWR,Q0V7XUHN¶VFDVHVKHVFRUHG0V$QGUD\FKDNKLJKHULQWKUHHTXHVWLRQVIRUDQH[WUD
marks; scored them the same once; and scored Ms. Aalto higher in four questions for an extra 9
points. Similarly, Ms. Simmic marked the grievor higher in five questions for an extra 16 points,
marked them the same twice, and gave Ms. Aalto higher marks in one question, for an extra 3
marks. In addition, Ms. Simmic and Ms. Kelly marked Ms. Aalto identically in six questions.
They marked her differently on only three questions, for a total of seven marks difference in
total. They marked Ms. Andraychak the same one time, within 1 mark difference on four
questions, within 2 marks in two questions, and 3 marks difference on only one question. On
these scores, without further evidence, I cannot conclude that Ms. Turek or Ms. Simmic
improperly marked either Ms. Andraychak or Ms. Aalto.
[10]The Union referred to the number of checks next to the prescribed answers to
establish that the marking was improper. A review of the scores and the check marks shows
there was no 1:1 correlation between the checks and the scores given. For example, in question
0V6LPPLFKDGHYHU\SRLQWFKHFNHGIRU0V$DOWR¶V answer, plus a number of points listed in
WKH³FRPPHQWVHFWLRQ´\HWJDYHKHUDVFRUHRIDSSDUHQWO\EHFDXVHWKHUHZDV³WRROLWWOH
GHWDLO´,QTXHVWLRQ0V7Xrek had only one point checked on WKHJULHYRU¶VDQVZHU\HWJDYH
her a score of 9/10. On some questions, there is more than one check mark per item on a
prescribed answer. On some questions, there are less checks than the mark. Conversely, on
some questions, there are more checks than the mark. Based on the documents, which was the
RQO\HYLGHQFHVXEPLWWHGWKHUHVLPSO\LVQRFRUUHODWLRQEHWZHHQWKHLQWHUYLHZHU¶VFKHFN
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PDUNVDQGWKHDSSOLFDQWV¶VFRUHV7KHUHLVQRHYLGHQFHWRVXSSRUWWKH8QLRQ¶VFRQWHQWLRQWKDW
Ms. Andraychak should have received an additional 14 points from Ms. Turek and an additional
11 points from Ms. Simmic. It should be noted that the additional points suggested by the Union
would lead to Ms. Andraychak receiving a score of 84 points from each interviewer out of a
possible total of 85. Likewise, there was no evidHQFHWKDW0V$DOWR¶VVFRUHVKRXOGEHORZHUHG
[11]In terms of the data entry test, the evidence showed that the grievor made four errors,
which resulted in a score of 16, or 80%, while Ms. Aalto made two mistakes, for a score of 18 or
90%. Ms. Aalto was given a score of 10, or 100% on the prioritizing test, while the grievor
received a score of 9 or 90%. Why there was a difference in the scores is not clear on the
documents. There was no evidence presented as to why Ms. Andraychak was rated a 9. Her test
document does look like a 10 was changed to a 9, but again, there was no evidence presented
DERXWLW7KHLQVWUXFWLRQVVWDWHWKDW³WKHUHLVQRWQHFHVVDULO\DULJKWRUZURQJDQVZHU´,W
FRQWLQXHV³:KDWLVLPSRUWDQWDQGZKDWWKHPDUNLQJZLOOEHEDVHGRQDUHWKHUHDVRQVIRUZKLFK
\RXKDYHPDGH\RXUGHFLVLRQ´
[12]The results of the competition were close. On the interview questions, the grievor did
better than Ms. Aalto, receiving 73 points from Ms. Simmic and 70 points from Ms. Turek, while
Ms. Aalto received 60 points from Ms. Simmic and 67 points from Ms. Turek. The two scores
were averaged and then weighted to 70% of the hiring decision.Their weighted interview scores
were then added to their weighted results on the data entry and prioritization tests, leading to the
result that the grievor received a final score of 85% and Ms. Aalto received a score of 82%.
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[13]The Ministry, at stage 2 of the grievance procedure, provided a document that did not
weight the scores, but considered them all equally, which resulted in the grievor having a total of
SRLQWVFRPSDUHGWR0V$DOWR¶VVFRUHRI
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[16] After the second interview, the references of both Ms. Andraychak and Ms. Aalto
were contacted and reviewed. The reference from the grievor's supervisor, Jamus Dorey, was
thorough and very positive. The reference from Ms. Aalto's supervisor, Michael Wells, was
very brief, but supportive. A second reference, from an Acting Manager in the Probation Office,
was very positive.
[17] No personnel files or performance appraisals were reviewed. The Union asserts that
this was a fundamental flaw, but did not provide those appraisals or personnel file at the hearing.
At the time of her application, Ms. Andraychak had recently - approximately a month before the
competition - become a classified Income Support Clerk with the Ministry of Community and
Social Services. Her resume showed that she had a number of contract positions with various
Ministries - a contract position, beginning in January 2008 as a Receptionist/Mail Clerk with the
Ministry of Transportation, a contract position as a Client Services Representative with the
Ministry of the Attorney General, from July 2007 to December 2007, and as a Court Reporter,
since April 2006. Prior to that she worked as a secretary or administrative secretary from July
1999 to March 2006 for the Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre in different
capacities. Prior to that, in the early and mid-1990's, she worked in contract positions in the
Ministry of Community and Social Services and the Ministry of Transportation. Her work
experience before that was not with the provincial government. There was no evidence that Ms.
Andraychak received performance appraisals in her contract or unclassified positions. She may
well have, but there was no evidence to that effect.
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REASONS FOR DECISION
[18] In light of the grievor's seniority, the Union must establish, on the balance of
probabilities, that the grievor's qualifications and abilities in relation to the required duties of the
position in dispute exceed those of the senior applicant by a substantial and demonstrable
margin. Re OPSEU (Suave) and Ministry of Transportation, GSB No. 1695/81 (Gray). In this
case, although the grievor no longer seeks to be appointed to the position, she is seeking
compensation. To be awarded such compensation, the Board must find that the grievor's rights
under Article 6.3 were violated, and that she should have been awarded the position.
Article 6.3 provides:
In filling a vacancy, the Employer shall give primary consideration to
qualifications and ability to perform the required duties. Where qualifications and
ability are relatively equal, seniority shall be the deciding factor.
In this case, because the grievor has less seniority than the successful applicant, Ms. Aalto, she
must establish that her qualifications and ability to perform the required duties were superior by
a substantial and demonstrable margin. If Ms. Aalto's qualifications and abilities were
"relatively equal" to those of Ms. Andraychak, then Ms. Aalto was entitled to the position under
Article 6.3.
[19] After carefully reviewing the documents presented by the parties, their arguments and
the case law presented both at the hearing and after, I conclude that the Union did not sustain its
onus in this case, and that the grievance must therefore be dismissed.
[20] The Union's main complaint centred on the scores that the grievor received during
the interview. In the Union's view, Ms. Andraychak should have been scored 84 (out of 85) by
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both Ms. Simmic and Ms. Turek, for an additional 25 points, while Ms. Aalto should have been
scored a 51, rather than 60 and 67. The only evidence submitted to support this contention was
the score sheets of the two applicants.
[21] As noted above, my review of the score sheets, standing alone, does not reveal that
there was improper scoring by Ms. Turek or Ms. Simmic in relation to either the grievor or Ms.
Aalto. There were far more similarities in the scores issued to both candidates on individual
questions than differences, and the differences between them, with some exceptions, were
relatively minor. There was no allegation or evidence presented of bias. There was no evidence
that a check mark necessarily equalled a point.
[22] The two interviewers had different perceptions of some of the answers given by Ms.
Andraychak and Ms. Aalto, but that happens. Despite having model answers, there is some
subjectivity involved in scoring. As stated in Re OPSEU (Albert Simmons) and Ministry of
Government Services, GSB No. 483/82 (McLaren), at p. 14:
The evaluation of the candidates was of necessity a subjective process but one
which seems to have been carried out with the integrity and objectivity necessary
to arrive at a fair decision. While any candidate may quarrel with the subjective
assessment of the panel members individually or collectively, that of itself does
not mean that the process is defective.
In Re OPSEU (Nacynski) and Ministry of Economic Development and Trade, GSB No. 2003-
3124 (Abramsky), the Board found that where the panel followed their "minimum acceptable
response" in scoring, and evaluated the answers provided in comparison to that response, some
subjectivity in scoring was permissible.
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[23] The decision also quoted from the Board's earlier decision in Re OPSEU (Esposito)
and Ministry of Housing, GSB No. 2168/92 (Kaplan) where, despite evidence of potential bias,
the Board found that although the grievor may not have been given all of the credit for her
answers that she might have been, there was no overall unfairness in the grading process. The
Board stated, at pp. 28-29:
[W]hile a handful of questions might have been marked differently, and while
other assessors might have been more generous in the assignment of grades, we
cannot say, having carefully reviewed the grievor's answers and grades, ... and
those of the successful applicants, that there was any overall unfairness in the
grading process. Certainly, there was no evidence that the grievor was singled out
for particularly harsh treatment when it came time to assign grades, nor is there
any credible evidence supporting the assertion that Mr. McBride was biased
against the grievor... .While the evidence does suggest that the grievor might have
received some additional points for a number of questions, we find that, on
balance, her final grade accurately reflects her performance in this competition.
[24] In this case, assuming without deciding that the grievor may have received some
additional points on some questions, I cannot conclude that it would have changed the outcome
of the competition. It would not have established that she exceeded the qualifications and
abilities of Ms. Aalto by a substantial and demonstrable margin.
[25] The Union further argues that the panel improperly did not review the references
provided by the candidates until after the second interview. That is true, but they were reviewed
before the decision about the competition was made. They were not given a numerical score, but
that is not required. As stated in Re OPSEU (Bent) and Ministry of Transportation, GSB No.
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1733/86 (Fisher) at p. 6, "[i]t is sufficient to show that these matters were considered and given
due consideration, that it is not ignored."
[26] The Union also contends that no personnel files were reviewed or performance
appraisals considered. Again, that is true, but they were not submitted into evidence. Nor is
there evidence to establish that Ms. Andraychak had performance appraisals during her
numerous contract positions with different ministries. She may well have had them, and they
may well have been very positive, but they were not submitted into evidence. As stated in Re
OPSEU (Suave) supra at p. 31, "an unsuccessful applicant who complains that a selection
committee failed to gather appropriate sorts of information can be expected to put before the
Board any of the missing information which supports his or her claim to the job." In Re OPSEU
(Naczynski), supra at par. 65, I agreed with that conclusion, stating "it is not sufficient merely to
state that the information was improperly not assessed. It must be submitted and shown that it
would have, or could have, made a difference." That was not done here.
[27] It is unclear in the evidence whether any consideration was given to the applicants'
application and resumes, beyond using them to determine if an applicant received an interview.
There was no testimony or evidence concerning the applications. In this regard, the Union is
correct that Ms. Andraychak's resume reveals a wealth of secretarial and related administrative
experience, whereas the resume of Ms. Aalto reveals that apart from her acting assignment, her
experience was as a Correctional Officer. But this alone does not establish that the grievor was
demonstrably superior to Ms. Aalto. Ms. Aalto had been successfully acting in the position for
over six months, and although she did not do as well as Ms. Andraychak on the interview, she
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did reasonably well. She also did better on the data entry test, making only two errors to the
grievor's four, and, according to the documents in evidence, she did slightly better on the
prioritization test.
[28] The Board has held that the procedure and substance of a job competition must
provide "a fair and reasonable assessment of the relative strengths of the candidates." Re OPSEU
(Alam) and Ministry of Community and Social Services, GSB No. 140/84 (Roberts). In this case,
based on the evidence presented, I conclude that there was a "fair and reasonable assessment of
the relative strengths of the candidates." Although Ms. Andraychak was an excellent candidate,
on the evidence presented she has not established, on the balance of probabilities, that she was
superior in ability and qualifications to Ms. Aalto by a substantial and demonstrable margin.
[29] In the alternative, the Union argued that the competition should be rerun. Under the
specific facts and circumstances of this case, I find no basis to order a rerun of this competition.
CONCLUSION
[30] For the reasons set forth above, the grievance is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto this 26th day of October 2010.
I
Randi H. Abramsky, Vice-Chair