HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013-1446.Union-Gobran et al.23-03-11 Decision
GSB#2013-1446, 2013-1574, 2013-1696
UNION#2013-0999-0049; 2013-0999-0063; 2013-0999-0069
Appendix “A” attached
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 – Gobran et al) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Treasury Board Secretariat) Employer
BEFORE Reva Devins Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER George Parris
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING March 10, 2023
Crown 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
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Decision
[1] These grievances are part of a series regarding the operation of the Transition Exit
Initiative, (“TEI”), under Appendix 46 of the Collective Agreement. The parties
agreed that the current matters should be determined in accordance with Article
22.16 of the Collective Agreement with brief reasons for decision.
[2] The parties provided a Book of Documents that contained various documents,
including the grievance, Will Say Statements where provided, and accompanying
documents, that set out the circumstances that relate to each grievor and the
Ministry’s response. Generally, these grievances were filed by 8 grievors 1, none
of whom were approved to receive enhanced benefits under the TEI before they
retired from the Ontario Public Service (“OPS”).
Appendix 46
[3] The relevant provisions of Appendix 46 are set out below. I have included the
initial provision and noted where it was subsequently amended:
1. All regular, regular part-time and flexible part-time employees will
be eligible to apply to a Transition Exit Initiative (TEI).
2. An employee may request in writing voluntary exit from employment
with the OPS under the TEI, which request may be approved by the
Employer in its discretion [amended to in its “sole” discretion,
October 30, 2015]. The Employee’s request will be submitted to the
1 The names of the grievors are listed in Appendix A.
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Corporate Employer. The Employer’s approval shall be based on
the following considerations:
i. At the time that an employee TEI request is being considered, the
Employer has plans to reduce positions in the OPSEU bargaining unit; and
ii. The Employer has determined in its discretion that the employee’s exit
from employment supports the transformation of the Ontario Public
Service.
iii. The Employer will consider whether employees are on the TEI lists when
making surplus decisions [added to revised Memorandum of Agreement,
October 30, 2015].
3. If there is more than one employee eligible to exit under the TEI, the
determination of who will exit under the TEI shall be based on
seniority. [or]
If there is more than one employee eligible to exit under the TEI
within the same workplace, the determination of who will exit under
the TEI shall be based on seniority [amended, October 30, 2015].
Analysis
[4] I have now issued a series of decisions on the scope of the Employer’s discretion
to allow or deny a request and concluded that:
i. Appendix 46 confers a broad discretion on the Employer to determine
whether granting a request for TEI would support its vision of
transformation of the OPS: Koeslag et al., issued January 12, 2016.
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ii. Despite this broad discretion, the ordinary principles for the proper
exercise of discretion apply. Consequently, when the Employer considers
requests for TEI, the decision cannot be based on irrelevant
considerations or otherwise violate the principles set out in Re Kuyntjes,
GSB #513/84 (Verity); Koeslag, supra.
iii. While recognising that there may be several approaches that the Employer
could adopt with respect to transformation of the public service, it remains
in the Employer’s sole discretion to decide whether an ‘employee’s exit
from employment supports transformation’ and, in so doing, to determine
which factors are relevant to exercising their discretion: Vadera, issued
June 28, 2018.
iv. The Employer can offer the TEI as a targeted inducement to encourage
employees to voluntarily retire or resign, allowing them to eliminate a
position without the need to surplus other employees who wish to remain.
However, the Employer is not required to approve all requests for TEI,
even where there is evidence of change or transition. The Employer
retains the discretion to determine when and how the TEI will be offered:
Kimmel, issued November 29, 2018 and Anich, August 9, 2019.
v. An identical outcome for many grievors does not automatically mean that
the Employer improperly exercised their discretion by applying a blanket
rule. Where the common denominator among grievors was a rational
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consideration that was reasonably related to achieving transformation, the
discretion was properly exercised: Klonowski, issued November 7, 2019.
vi. Absent evidence of bad faith or discrimination, the approval of an earlier
request for TEI, on its own, is not sufficient to establish an improper
exercise of discretion: Koroscil, June 18, 2020. Similarly, the approval of
subsequent requests does not warrant an automatic conclusion that the
decision to deny an earlier request was arbitrary or unreasonable.
Inevitably, timing matters. A different outcome may result from the timing
of an employee’s request for TEI: Heath, March 3, 2021.
vii. A TEI application does not survive the departure of an employee from the
OPS. Appendix 46 is not available to employees after they retire, or their
employment relationship is severed. TEI provides enhanced benefits to an
employee when the Employer determines that their “exit from employment
supports the transformation of the OPS”. When an employee is no longer
an active employee, by definition, they cannot exit again and Appendix 46
has no application: Thompson, issued May 28, 2021.
viii. The failure to grant a request for TEI on compassionate grounds is not an
improper exercise of discretion. Nor is it evidence of bad faith where the
Employer reclassifies a position, or reassigns, all or part of the grievor’s
job duties to another location, or to an accommodated employee after a
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grievor retires: Bowman, issued March 4, 2020; Othman and Desjardine,
June 23, 2022; and Hachey, issued on June 24, 2022.
[5] I appreciate the continued disappointment and frustration of long service
employees who believe their applications could and should have been approved.
TEI is clearly a significant benefit for retiring employees. Regrettably, as I have
already determined, TEI is not a general retirement allowance provided to
everyone who requests it.
[6] After careful consideration of the evidence and submissions of the parties, I have
applied the principles established in earlier cases to the facts that pertain to these
grievors and determined that the Employer properly exercised its discretion when it
considered the grievors’ requests to exit under the TEI.
[7] The grievances are therefore dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario, 11th day of April 2023..
“Reva Devins”
Reva Devins, Arbitrator
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Appendix A
Name Ministry GSB# Union#
Gobran, Teresa MECP 2016-1852 2015-0553-0005
Banh, Toan MECP 2016-1852 2016-0553-0005
Kinvig, Dennis MECP 2016-1852 2015-0553-0005
Fracassi, Joe MECP 2016-1852 2015-0553-0005
Hawkins, John MGS/TBS 2015-2479 2015-0533-0044
Thompson, Deborah MOHLTC 2015-1789 2015-0468-0017
Jack, David MPBSD/TBS 2015-2478 2015-0533-0043
Gazzetta, Maurizio MPBSD/TBS 2013-3554 2013-0533-0019