Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-1463.Beek et al.11-02-22 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#2004-1463, 2004-1464, 2004-1473, 2004-1814, 2004-1984, 2004-1985, 2004-2277, 2004-2518, 2004-3174, 2005-0978, 2005-2501 UNION#2003-0517-0069, 2003-0517-0070, 2004-0517-0055, 2004-0517-0061, 2004-0368-0083, 2004-0517-0078, 2004-0234-0530, 2004-0234-0595, 2004-0234-0664, 2005-0517-0012, 2005-0234-0308 IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD BETWEEN Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Beek et al) Union - and - The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer BEFOREKen Petryshen Vice-Chair FOR THE UNIONTim Hannigan Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP Barristers and Solicitors FOR THE EMPLOYERPeter Dailleboust Ministry of Government Services Legal Services Branch Counsel HEARING February 16, 2011. - 2 - Decision [1]I have before me twelve grievances fLOHGE\HOHYHQ&RUUHFWLRQDO2IILFHUV ³&2V´  which essentially allege that the Employer improperly placed them at the first pay level of their classification when they were rehired by the Ministry. One grievance was filed in 2002 and the majority of the others were filed in 2004. In a decision dated July 12, 2007, I found that the GSB did have the jurisdiction to entertain these grLHYDQFHVDQGWKDW³WKH8QLRQZLOOKDYHWKH opportunity to establish that the Employer exercised its discretion improperly when it placed the grievors at the first step RIWKH&2VDODU\UDQJH´ [2]One of the twelve grievances, dated October 23, 2002, was filed by Ms. T. Shipticki. The parties resolved her grievance at the hearing on February 16, 2011. The facts which were relevant to the resolution of her grievance are very distinct from the facts giving rise to the other eleven grievances. [3]Counsel provided me with the essential circumstances giving rise to the unresolved grievances and the positions each party took with respect to them. During a transitional process taking place within the Ministry at the time, COs were leaving their respective institutions and the Ministry as well. A number of individuals were eventually rehired as COs. The remaining grievors were rehired as COs after a period of separation from the Ministry that exceeded 6 months, but was less than 24 months. When rehired, they were paid the minimum rate of the CO2 classification. They claim that other COs were rehired under similar circumstances, but were paid at a higher level on the grid. The Union takes the position that this different treatment constitutes a contravention of the Collective Agreement. - 3 - [4]7KH(PSOR\HUKDVD³3D\RQ$VVLJQPHQW2SHUDWLQJ3ROLF\´WKDWZDVUHYLVHG November 6, 1998. The relevant provision of this policy is as follows: INITIAL ASSIGNMENT±1(:(03/2<((6 Non-provisional . New employees must be paid at the minimum rate of the salary range of the class of the position to which they are assigned. Market conditions or cases where candidates have better-than-average experience and qualifications may justify exceptions. [5]The Employer also has a rehire policy for COs that is dated August 2004. Although WKH&RUUHFWLRQDO2IILFHUV5H+LUH3ROLF\ ³WKH3ROLF\´ KDVDQXPEHURIIHDWXUHVWKHUHOHYDQW aspects of the Policy are as follows: a)Re-employment within 6 months of separation from Correctional Services, shall be reappointed to same class and salary at time of separation provided clearance received in areas of references, security and medical. Individuals who have not completed basic training, i.e. the Correctional Studies Introductory Program, will be required to complete prior to re-hire. E 5HHPSOR\PHQWZLWKLQ±PRQWhs of separation from Correctional Services, shall be reappointed to minimum of salary rate of applicable classification (CO1/CO2) provided additional criteria as outlined in part A is fulfilled (clearances and training). Updating the training may be necessary and shall be reviewed by the manager and staff training representatives. c) Re-employment after 24 months of separation from Correctional Services, shall be treated as a new hire and all aspects of the recruitment, clearances and training program shall apply. [6]The treatment of the grievors when rehired was consistent with the Policy and they do not claim otherwise. They were rehired after a six month separation from the Ministry and placed at the first step of the CO2 salary range. As noted previously, they complain that they were in the same position as other individuals rehired by the Ministry, but were treated differently because these other COs were placed at a higher level of the salary range upon rehire. The COs with whom the grievors compare themVHOYHV ³WKHFRPSDUDWRUV´ ZHUHHPSOR\HG during their separation from the Ministry at the Central North CoUUHFWLRQDO&HQWUH ³&1&&´  - 4 - At the time, the CNCC was a privately run correctional facility. During their period of separation, the grievors were not employed performing correctional duties. [7]Although the grievors and the Union alleged otherwise, it is clear that the grievors and the comparator COs were not in the same situation. During their period of separation from the Ministry, the comparators were engaged in performing correctional duties at the CNCC, the same type of duties they performed for the Ministry before their separation and after they were rehired. In exercising its discretion as to where to place the comparators on the wage grid upon their rehire, the Employer took into account that they had continued to perform correctional duties during their separation from the Ministry and placed them above the entry level. In my view, there is nothing improper about the way the Employer exercised its discretion in this instance. It is not particularly surprising that the Ministry might exercise its discretion differently in the case of a returning employee who had worked during separation as a Correctional Officer at the CNCC than it would in the case of a returning employee who did not have correctional experience during their separation. Given that the grievors were in a different situation than the comparators and that the Employer exercised its discretion properly when it placed the grievors and the comparators on the salary grid, it is my conclusion that there has not been a contravention of the Collective Agreement in this instance. [8]Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, the eleven remaining grievances are hereby dismissed. nd Dated at Toronto this 22 day of February 2011. Ken Petryshen, Vice-Chair