HomeMy WebLinkAbout2022-11971.Union.2023-06-27 Decision
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
GSB# 2022-11971; 2022-12047; 2022-12048
UNION# 2023-0999-0002; 2023-0999-0003; 2023-0999-0004
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
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services
and the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Brian McLean Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Donald Eady
Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER George Parris
Treasury Board Secretariat
Counsel
HEARING May 12, 2023
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Decision
[1] I have several Union grievances before me all of which assert that the Employer
created a number of new positions and then directly assigned persons to those
positions contrary to the provisions in the collective agreement that require job
postings in such circumstances. The Employer’s response is that the
assignments in question were reclassifications and not assignments to a new
position. What underlies this dispute may be one of the longest running labour
relations issues in the public service. That is whether all or some of the first level
managers at correctional institutions (who I shall refer to as Sergeants but who
have historically been referred to by other titles), who have traditionally been
excluded from collective bargaining, ought to be granted the benefits of collective
bargaining on the assertion that they do not actually exercise managerial
functions.
[2] The quest by at least some of the Sergeants to obtain the benefits of collective
bargaining and the quest by unions to represent the Sergeants have been going
on for many years. However, in 2017 the issue came to a head when, after
much litigation, the Ontario Labour Relations Board determined that the Public
Service Alliance of Canada could not represent the non-managerial Sergeants
and that the only unions that could were either the Ontario Public Service
Employees Union (the “Union”) or the Association of Management,
Administrative and Professional Crown Employees of Ontario (“AMAPCEO”)
(2017 CanLII 51086 (ON LRB)). AMAPCEO filed a grievance to represent the
Sergeants, and OPSEU intervened. I was appointed to hear the grievance and
by decision dated February 24, 2022 (CanLII 31316 (ON GSB)), I determined
that OPSEU held the bargaining rights for any Sergeants who did not exercise
managerial functions or who were excluded because they were employed in a
confidential capacity in relation to labour relations (together “exercise managerial
functions”). Importantly, at the time, the Employer’s position was that there were
no such persons in that all of the Sergeants exercised managerial functions. The
position of both OPSEU and AMAPCEO was that there were many Sergeants
who did not exercise managerial functions.
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[3] As an aside, I note that the question of whether Sergeants exercised managerial
authority is an individual one to be determined on a Sergeant-by-Sergeant basis.
In this regard CECBA states that the CECBA does not apply to “employees
exercising managerial functions or employed in a confidential capacity in relation
to labour relations”. In light of this, at the time when AMAPCEO was claiming,
through its grievance, that it represented the Sergeants, AMAPCEO and the
Employer had agreed to a process for the litigation of the issue of which, if any,
Sergeants should no longer be excluded because they did not exercise
managerial functions. They decided to proceed by way of test cases at
institutions and in fact, one witness had been called in connection with that
process. The parties anticipated that the litigation of the duties exercised by
potentially all of the Sergeants could take a substantial period of time and many
days of hearing. However, once I found OPSEU was the correct bargaining
agent for any non-managerial Sergeants, AMAPCEO dropped out of the picture
and that process ceased. The Employer then took certain actions which gave
rise to these grievances.
[4] The issue before me at this time arises out of the fact that once I issued my
February 2022 decision, the Employer decided to try to put an end to this long-
standing issue. It did so, by creating a position in the bargaining unit called a
correctional supervisor. In general, the apparent intent was that correctional
supervisors would be a sort of lead hand who would, among other things, give
non managerial direction and oversight to the correctional officers. The
correctional supervisor would not have some of the responsibilities that had been
held by Sergeants which might be said to be managerial functions. In addition,
the Employer decided it would discontinue the use of the Sergeant classification
and increase its complement of Staff Sergeants (who it believed would exercise
managerial functions).
[5] These grievances arose out of the fact that the Employer decided to fill many of
the correctional supervisor positions with Sergeants, who, as noted, were
previously excluded from the bargaining unit (while keeping in mind that the
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Union took the position that many of them should have been in the bargaining
unit). The Employer assigned interested Sergeants to the position. The Union
was unhappy about this because it believed the correctional supervisor position
was a “new position” which, under its collective agreement, should have been
posted. The Employer’s failure to post meant that correctional officers (COs) did
not have the opportunity to be placed into the new role. It notes that there may
well be many COs that previously might not have wanted to leave the bargaining
unit to become a Sergeant but would be interested in staying in the bargaining
unit as a correctional supervisor.
[6] This decision determines whether the correctional supervisor position is a new
position and whether the Employer ought to have posted to fill the positions.
The Facts
[7] The parties did not call any witnesses. Instead, they entered into an agreed
statement of fact (“ASF”) which sets out some of the relevant history in more
detail than I have described above and the applicable collective agreement
provisions. The ASF states:
The Corrections Collective Agreement
Recognition Clause
1. OPSEU is the exclusive bargaining agent for the Correctional Bargaining Unit.
The full Recognition clause is found in Article 1 of the current Collective
Agreement between OPSEU and the Crown in Right of Ontario. The Current
Collective Agreement expired on December 31, 2021. The parties are currently in
bargaining for a renewal Collective Agreement. “Correctional Bargaining Unit
Collective Agreement”, Tab 1
2. At Article 1.1.2 of the Correctional Bargaining Unit Collective Agreement,
OPSEU is recognized, inter alia, as the exclusive bargaining agent for the
Correctional Bargaining Unit consisting of all Crown employees who are public
servants employed in positions responsible for:
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a. the security, control, supervision, care and rehabilitation of adult
offenders and young offenders in provincial correctional
institutions/facilities (including maximum security units at the provincial
psychiatric hospitals….)
b. (not relevant)
c. (not relevant)
d. Employees in positions or classes that have been or may be
established within the above description.
3. Excluded from the bargaining unit are Crown Employees covered by
subsection 1.1(3) of the Crown Collective Bargaining Act, 1993, all persons or
employees exercising managerial functions or employed in a confidential
capacity in relation to labour relations.
4. Article 1.4 of the Recognition Clause reads as follows:
Where the Employer establishes a new classification or creates a new
position within an existing class, the Employer shall provide the Union with
a copy of the class standard and/or position description, including
bargaining unit status (if applicable), at the relevant MERC.
5. Article 1.8 of the Recognition Clause reads as follows:
For clarity, the Employer agreed (sic) that any new positions or any new
classification of employees that fall within the definition set out in Article
1.1 will be placed in the Correctional Bargaining Unit represented by
OPSEU.
6. Therefore, if there is a position or classification that is not otherwise excluded
from collective bargaining and the position is within the description contained in
Article 1.1.2, then it must be represented by OPSEU.
Article 6-Posting and Filling of Vacancies or New Positions
7. Article 6.1.1 states:
When a vacancy occurs in the Regular Service for a bargaining unit
position or a new regular position is created in the bargaining unit, it shall
be advertised for at least ten (10) working days prior to the established
closing date. Notices of vacancies shall be posted either electronically or
on bulletin boards and, upon request, shall be provided in large-sized print
or braille where the posting location has the capacity to do so.
8. Article 6.6.1.1 states:
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With the agreement of the Union, the employee and the Employer, an
employee shall be assigned to a vacancy where:
a. the vacant position is identical to the position occupied by the
employee, and,
b. the vacant position is in the same ministry as the position occupied by
the employee, and the provisions of Articles 6.1.1, 6.2, 6.3, 6.4 and 6.5
shall not apply.
9. Article 6.6.2 states:
The assignment of an employee to a vacancy in accordance with Articles
7 (Pay Administration), 20 (Employment Stability), 25 (Leave-Special), 42
(Long Term Income Protection), 50 (Pregnancy Leave) and 51 (Parental
Leave) shall have priority over an assignment under Article 6.6.1.
An Abbreviated History of the Sergeant Position.
10. A “Sergeant” position has existed for many years in Corrections. Previously
they have been referred to as Operational Managers (“OMs”), in the past two
decades classified as the now defunct Operational Manager 16 (OM16) where all
Sergeants shared the same job specification. Prior to the use of the singular
OM16 position, there were OM14 positions in use, and prior to that the CO4
position. Subsequent to the OM16 position, Correctional Operational Managers
1 and 2 (“COM1 and COM2”) were utilized. Most recently, Sergeants were
classified as Management 07 (M7) and Management 08 (M8). M8s (and
previously COM2) are referred to as “Staff Sergeants”.
11. Since statutory collective bargaining rights began in the mid 1970s, the
“Sergeant” position has always been excluded from collective bargaining. The
Employer has always taken the position that none of the Sergeants are
employees as they all exercise managerial functions. OPSEU takes the position
that the Sergeants do not exercise managerial functions and should be included
in the Corrections Bargaining Unit.
12. There was a dispute between AMAPCEO and OPSEU about which union
was entitled to represent Sergeants if they were found to be “employees” within
the meaning of CECBA. That dispute was resolved by a decision of the GSB
(Vice Chair McLean), dated February 24, 2022, which found that “AMAPCEO has
no bargaining rights over Sergeants and Youth Services Managers as they were
relinquished in 2008/2009 and that any such rights are held by OPSEU as the
representative of employees at these institutions”.
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13. The GSB referred “this dispute to OPSEU and the Crown so that they can
consult and advise the GSB as to next steps they would like to take.”
The Reorganization of the “Sergeant” Position
14. In May 2022 the Ministry of the Solicitor General announced an “Institutional
Services Division organizational review of supervisory and management
functions and overall rank structure within the adult correctional institutions”.
15. The Ministry advised that the February 24, 2022, GSB Decision and the
challenge to the managerial exclusion would be given due consideration and the
Ministry considered whether the entire Sergeant cadre needed to be excluded
from collective bargaining or whether some front-line supervisory work being
performed could be performed through a non-excluded role. Understanding that
there had been numerous challenges to the exclusion of Sergeants from
collective bargaining on the basis that they were not performing “excluded work”,
the Employer’s intent was to determine what number of M7 positions could be
moved into the bargaining unit.
16. During the review it was determined that the M7 position would be collapsed
into either the M8 position or a bargaining unit role. The Employer determined
that in order to have the role of the M7 (less the managerial components) in the
bargaining unit, an OPSEU bargaining unit job specification would need to be
created in which the former M7 Sergeants would be placed as the Management
Compensation Plan (MCP) M7 classification could not be used for this purpose.
Furthermore, the M7 salary and salary progression were tied to the MCP and
would need to be completely revised if placed in the bargaining unit.
17. In creating the OPSEU position, the M7 job specification was taken as a
starting point and the management functions were removed. The result was an
initial job specification that then went to the Job Evaluation and Initiation Branch
(JEIB) for further refinements and eventual classification. The Employer
determined that existing regular (permanent) M7 Sergeants would either
successfully compete for vacant M8 positions or be reclassified to Correctional
Supervisor.
18. The Employer met with OPSEU on October 7, 2022 to provide OPSEU with a
preliminary overview of the reorganization and implementation of the new rank
and structure, including the newly created Correctional Supervisor role. OPSEU
took this information away to review and also requested a meeting in 3 weeks. At
the meeting OPSEU requested further information on the implementation of the
Correctional Supervisor position and the formula used to determine the number
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of positions. OPSEU also raised concerns with the 9-step wage grid for the
Correctional Supervisor role and how that was established. OPSEU was told
“that ship had sailed since Cabinet approval had already occurred” OPSEU told
the Employer that they would be providing a written response and that they
needed time for further review.
19. The Employer again met with OPSEU on October 31, 2022 to discuss any
further issues and advise OPSEU of an upcoming announcement for the
reorganization. During this meeting, OPSEU expressed concern with the
November 2, 2022 communication materials, for which the Employer reviewed
the materials with OPSEU and made one requested change. Also at this
meeting, the Employer advised OPSEU as to how the Correctional Supervisor
position would be implemented including that Correctional Supervisors would be
former M7 Sergeants given the M7 position was being reclassified. OPSEU
raised concerns regarding the direct assignment of former Sergeants to the
Correctional Supervisor position and indicated to the Employer that this should
be negotiated between the Union and the Employer.
20. On November 2, 2022 the Ministry announced its “Organizational Review
Update”.
21. In this Memorandum, the Ministry announced that “the current sergeant rank
will no longer be utilized, and the existing responsibilities will be shared by a new
position, the correctional supervisor, and a strengthened staff sergeant
complement”.
22. In this Memorandum, the Ministry announced that “a net new complement of
correctional supervisor positions that deliver supervisory functions exclusively”
and that this position will be represented by the OPSEU bargaining unit….”. The
Employer created a new position- a Correctional Supervisor position to be
represented by OPSEU and updated the Staff Sergeant job description. In
addition, the Employer increased the number of Staff Sergeant positions
throughout the Province.
23. In the Memorandum of November 2, 2022, the Ministry indicated that, in most
cases, there would be a competitive process for the staff sergeant position. With
respect to the correctional supervisor position, “a fair and equitable process will
take place on a site-by-site basis for sergeants to opt for staff sergeant or
correctional supervisor roles”. The Ministry indicated that this process would be
fully implemented in Spring 2023.
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24. Attached to the Memorandum of November, 2, 2022 was an Appendix
outlining the roles and responsibilities of the new positions as well as the existing
position of Correctional Officer and Q and A documents.
25. On December 14, 2022, OPSEU responded to the Memorandum with a
number of procedural and substantive concerns regarding the reorganization
including:
• that the new wage grid for the Correctional Supervisor Position was not
discussed nor negotiated with the Union;
• that there was an unacceptable overlap between the position
descriptions for the new positions;
• that the number and proposed distribution of the Correctional
Supervisor position made no operational sense; and
• that the Ministry was proposing to directly assign excluded staff to the
new Correctional Supervisor positions without a posting or competition
and that was a violation of the Collective Agreement.
There were other concerns raised around pension issues, fixed-term staffing
issues, the lack of information about the Youth Services Manager position in the
Youth Justice Division and how future vacancies would be filled in the
Correctional Supervisor position.
26. On January 24, 2023 the Employer and OPSEU met and discussed the
concerns outlined in the December 14, 2022 letter. The Employer did not change
its position or its implementation plans.
27. A copy of the position description for the new Correctional Supervisor
Position is at Tab 7 and the Staff Sergeant position at Tab 8.
28. The Ministry also released a proposed allocation of correctional supervisor
and staff sergeant positions by institution and across the Province.
29. On or about January 30, 2023, affected employees were sent an election
letter entitled “Re Institutional Services Organizational Structure”. In that letter,
employees were given 3 options:
1. to elect to remain in the Sergeant position and be reclassified to a
Correctional Supervisor position in the OPSEU bargaining unit;
2. elect to be considered for a promotional opportunity as a Staff Sergeant
(if a staff sergeant was not successful, they could apply to vacancies in
other locations or be “directly assigned” to a Correctional Supervisory
position within the OPSEU-COR bargaining unit or,
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3. Elect to resign/retire from the OPS.
30. On February 3. 2023, OPSEU filed three policy grievances covering both the
Corrections and the Youth Facilities.
31. On or about April 25, 2023, the Employer informed OPSEU that it was
“implementing a change to the institutional rank structure” and that it was “giving
the option of being reclassified into an OPSEU-represented Corporal position in
the Correctional Supervisor classification”. It appears that approximately 75
former Sergeants will be directly assigned to the Correctional Supervisor position
(Tab 12). Any remaining M7 Sergeants that are not promoted to M8 will become
Correctional Supervisors.
32. On or about April 26, 2023, the Employer posted 40 permanent Correctional
Supervisor positions and 67 temporary Correctional Supervisor positions. A copy
of the Job Posting is at Tab 13.
OPSEU’s Position at this stage in the proceedings
33. It is OPSEU’s position that the Ministry clearly has directly assigned or
appointed excluded employees into the Correctional Supervisor position, a
position which is newly created (see attached Position Description Form at Tab
5) without following the clearly outlined posting and competition process in Article
6 of the Corrections Collective Agreement. OPSEU’s position is that the
Employer should be required to post the vacancies in accordance with the
Collective Agreement. Should persons be directly assigned to those positions,
OPSEU will seek that they be removed from the position and that such position
or vacancy be posted in accordance with the Collective Agreement
Decision
[8] The starting point of the analysis is the collective agreement. First, Article 6.1.1.
says there must be a job posting “When a vacancy occurs in the Regular Service
for a bargaining unit position or a new regular position is created in the
bargaining unit”. There is no doubt that the Correctional Supervisor job is, on its
face, a “new regular position in the bargaining unit”. Such a job title did not exist
prior to the reorganization caused by my February decision.
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[9] This conclusion is also supported by the memorandums from Daryl Pitfield, the
Assistant Deputy Minister, Institutional Services to all employees which had the
“Re.: Line”: “Review of Supervisory and Management Functions Update
Regarding Grievance Settlement Board Decision”. The first memorandum stated
in part:
As part of the review, due consideration will be given to the recent
Grievance Settlement Board (GSB) decision that was issued regarding
AMAPCEO’s bargaining representation rights for front-line institutional
managers, specifically Sergeant positions in the Ministry of the Solicitor
General.
The Arbitrator, in his determination, found that AMAPCEO has no
bargaining rights over Sergeants and referred this matter to the Employer
and OPSEU (intervenor status) to address and report back to the Board.
The decision also referred the dispute regarding representation to
“OPSEU and the Crown so that they can consult and advise the GSB as
to any next steps they would like to take”.
We are committed to working with OPSEU on this matter and will be
providing you with updates as more information becomes available. There
are no current changes to reporting relationships or any terms and
conditions of employment resulting from this decision. No final decisions
have been made at this time, but we are having active conversations with
OPSEU and we will let you know once the consultations are complete.
[10] The memorandum from Mr. Pitfield was followed by another one in November in
which he announced what had been decided. It stated in part:
New Institutional Organizational Rank Structure
As a result of this review, I am announcing a change to the institutional
organizational rank structure which will optimize and integrate how we work
together as a team to keep Ontario safe in a modernized correctional service.
In this new structure, the current sergeant rank will no longer be utilized, and the
existing responsibilities will be shared by a new position, the correctional
supervisor, and a strengthened staff sergeant complement. A thorough
assessment has been conducted to determine appropriate staffing allocations
based on the unique operational needs of each institution, considering current
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and future state roles and responsibilities. Additional considerations included size
of institutions, design, and layout.
I want to stress that the operational need for frontline management positions in
all institutions remains essential, both now and in the future. The assessment
determined the need for:
• A net new complement of correctional supervisor positions that
deliver supervisory functions exclusively. This position will be
represented by the OPSEU bargaining unit, and will provide supervisory
functions to a floor or living unit such as coordinating daily routines,
directing workflow, etc. Note, a staff sergeant will assume supervisory
responsibilities in the absence of a correctional supervisor.
• An increased complement of staff sergeants which demonstrate and
deliver both supervisory and managerial functions (e.g., hiring process,
staff development, performance planning reviews, oversight, workplace
accommodations, disciplinary process, etc.)
• See the Appendix for a brief overview of duties and responsibilities of the
correctional supervisor and staff sergeant roles. (emphasis added)
[11] As can be seen, in this memorandum, the correctional supervisor was referred to
as a “new position”. Elsewhere in the memorandum there was reference to a
“new structure” reflecting the fact that this was something of a re-organization.
[12] Moreover, none of the exclusions to the job posting requirement apply here.
Article 6.6.1.1 does not apply because it provides circumstances where an
employee can be assigned to a vacancy but only with the agreement of the
Union. Article 6.6.2 provides exceptions in certain circumstances without union
agreement but none of those circumstances are present here. Accordingly,
these provisions support the Union’s position because they suggest that the
parties have turned their minds to when the Employer may directly assign an
employee to a new position and none of them are present.
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[13] Even after the Union advised the Employer that it objected to the way the
Employer proposed filling the correctional supervisor positions the Employer
continued to refer to the CS position as a new position:
As a result of this review, the Ministry will be implementing changes to the
institutional organizational structure based on the operational
requirements of each institution. This letter is to advise that front-line
managerial duties currently performed by the M07 Sergeant positions at
your institution will be completed by the Staff Sergeant position at the M08
classification level and front-line supervisory functions will be completed
by the new Correctional Supervisor* position in the OPSEU COR
bargaining unit.
[14] However, in other parts of the same memorandum the Employer referred to a
“reclassification”:
If you do not respond to this letter, you will be deemed to have selected
Option 1 (elect to be reclassified to a Correctional Supervisor* position
in the OPSEU-COR bargaining unit at [institution]). (emphasis added)
[15] The Employer argues that the Union’s argument puts form over substance. It
agrees that the correctional supervisor position is a new one in that there was
never such a position called that before. However, what is really going on is that
the Employer had a group of Sergeants who the Union claimed were in the
bargaining unit because they may not have usually performed the managerial
functions which Sergeants have the authority to perform. Accordingly, rather
than engage in an extremely lengthy legal process to determine precisely which
Sergeants exercised managerial duties and which did not, the Employer
reclassified some Sergeants as correctional supervisors and discontinued the
use of the old position of Sergeant. In doing so, it claims that what it did was
remove all of the duties from the old position that might be considered
managerial in nature. It then effectively kept the Sergeants in the new bargaining
unit position.
[16] Critically, in my view, the Employer has never conceded and does not concede
that there are any Sergeants who are including in OPSEU’s bargaining unit
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because they do not exercise managerial functions. This creates problems for
the Employer and its strategy in resolving this long-standing issue. In the
absence of the Employer’s concession, the Sergeants are all excluded from
OPSEU’s bargaining unit. The effect of this is that the Employer effectively
placed Sergeants into OPSEU’s bargaining unit into a newly created position,
thereby circumventing collective agreement rights. I am unaware of any
provision of the collective agreement which would allow the Employer to
reclassify excluded employees as bargaining unit employees without engaging or
impinging upon the Union’s rights under the collective agreement.
[17] In addition, while I understand the Employer’s position and have sympathy with it,
this is not putting form over substance. The situation of every Sergeant was
different. It may well be that Sergeants at a particular institution were clearly
properly excluded. In those situations, the Employer is effectively parachuting a
properly excluded person into the bargaining unit who is then given special
treatment to be appointed into the supervisor job without any consideration to
members of the bargaining unit who may by seniority, skill or ability have a right
to that job under the collective agreement.
[18] I recognize that the result of this decision may have terrible consequences for
some former Sergeants. Many of them wished to be represented by PSAC.
That was denied. Many wished to be represented by AMAPCEO. That was
denied. No doubt, many are content to be represented by OPSEU. However,
the end result is that at the moment of success when non managerial employees
(if any) were finally represented by a trade union the Employer embarked on a
course of action and the Union enforced its strict legal rights with the outcome
that it is possible that former Sergeants may lose their jobs with the public
service. These circumstances cry out for immediate open-minded and flexible
action by both parties to alleviate a situation that is deeply unfair.
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[19] For all of these reasons I find a breach of the collective agreement and uphold
the grievance. I reserve on the appropriate remedy and remit the issue of
remedy to the parties in the hopes that they can reach an agreement.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 27th day of June 2023.
“Brian McLean”
Brian McLean, Arbitrator