HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009-2072.Savdie.11-03-30 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#2009-2072
UNION#2009-0555-0001
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Savdie)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Government Services)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Bram Herlich
FOR THE UNION
Adrienne Liang
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Stewart McMahon
Ministry of Government Service
Counsel
HEARING
March 14, 2011.
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Decision
[1]This matter was scheduled before me by way of the mediation/arbitration
process contemplated by Article 22.16 of the collective agreement. In the interest of
expedition, that process results, where mediation is unsuccessful, in a succinct
arbitration award without precedential value. This is that award.
The statement of grievance in the matter reads as follows:
The employer has violated articles 2, 3, 9 and 10 and any other relevant articles of
the collective agreement by: failing to offer and improperly denying my request for a
compressed work week, harassing and discriminating against me i.e. by assigning the
work I would normally perform in my job description to others and giving me more
routine and demeaning work to do; treating me with disrespect and total disregard by
not allowing for my input on the retention and disposal of my files.
The settlement desired is set out as follows:
The employer shall cease and desist from all forms of harassing and
discriminatory actions. The employer shall ensure that I am assigned the duties relevant
to my job description and treat me with dignity and respect. The employer shall
identify clear activities relevant to my position and meaningful assignments
commensurate with my position. I should be kept informed and included on a regular
basis on all current work related communications and forums of discussions and input
to the planning process. A clear action plan addressing these grievances should be
developed and monitored by senior management to ensure that they are fully addressed
and not repeated in the future.
[2]It would appear that there had been some dispute between the parties regarding
the provision of particulars prior to the commencement of the hearing before me. In light of
that, the parties agreed that the union would set out its particulars orally during the course of
its opening statement. It did so and the employer then moved that the grievance be dismissed
as, it submitted, the facts alleged by the union, even if true and provable, failed to disclose a
prima facie basis to establish any violation of the collective agreement.
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[3]I will briefly set out the nature of the case as alleged by the union and then briefly
VHWRXWWKHHPSOR\HU¶VSRVLWLRQand conclude by briefly explaining why I am persuaded that
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[4]I note first of all, however, that while the grievance form adverted to four
different provisions of the collective agreement, the union, in its presentation, wisely chose to
rely upon only two: Article 2, which deals with management rights and Article 10, which
addresses aspects of Compressed Work Weeks.
[5]7KHXQLRQ¶VSULQFLSDODOOHJDWLRQVZHUHthreefold. First, the grievor was
improperly denied the opportunity to participate in a Compressed Work Week. To be clear,
however, the Compressed Work Week in question was a pilot project implemented on a trial
basis in three different locations. The grLHYRU¶VORFDWLRQZDVQRWLQFOXGHG+RZHYHU
because he reports to a manager who does work out of one of the locations that was selected
and because he feels that his work is integrated into the work performed at that location, the
grievor believes that he should have been included or otherwise permitted to participate in
the experiment.
[6]Second, the grievor is unhappy with the nature and quality of the work being
assigned to him. He asserts that it is less meaningful and challenging than it had been in the
past. In this respect, he claims he is being treated differently from other employees in similar
positions. His work is more clerical and less analytical than theirs. He also claims to have
been excluded from meetings and belittled in the workplace, thereby suffering a reduction in
stature.
[7]Finally, the grievor asserts that the employer has unfairly targeted him by
destroying some the files on which he had worked. Prior to August 2008 the grievor had
been working at a Sheppard Avenue location. From August to December 2008 he was absent
on leave. Prior to his return to work, he was advised that he would be working out of a
different location on Yonge Street. On his arrival he discovered that certain files he had
stored at his prior location had not been transferred to the new one. It was then determined
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that the contents of these files had been shredded. These files included examples of the
JULHYRU¶VSULRUZRUNDVZHOOas educational materials.
[8]The employer moved that the grievance be dismissed as failing to disclose any
possible violation of the collective agreement. It claims that no case is made out of any
possible violation of either of the 2 collective agreement provisions relied upon by the union.
[9]First, with respect to Article 10 and the Compressed Work Week, the employer
points out that the collective agreement contemplates that the parties may, on a local basis,
enter into agreements regarding the implementation of Compressed Work Week
Arrangements. But Article 10 is merely a possible template for such agreements and even if
it applied to the instant case, which it does not, there is nothing in it to support the claim that
the employer violated its terms by not requiring or permitting the grievor to participate.
Indeed, even when formal Compressed Work Week agreements are implemented, that may
not constitute a guarantee that any or all affected employees will, in fact, be
assigned/permitted to participate in a Compressed Work Week schedule. But the instant
facts do not even go that far. This was merely a trial feasibility project. It was not disputed
that the union did not object to its implementation and that upon its conclusion, the employer
determined not to take steps to implement any Compressed Work Week schedule. Neither
was it disputed that by the time the grievor voiced any complaint regarding this aspect of the
grievance, the trial period had already expired and there was no Compressed Work Week
arrangement, formal or otherwise, in place.
[10]Since Article 10 is of no assistance to the grievor, that leaves the balance of his
claim, whether in respect of the Compressed Work Week or otherwise to be assessed
exclusively on the basis of Article+HUHWRRWKHJULHYRU¶VFODLm must fail. It amounts to
nothing more than a bald challenge to the legitimate exercise of management discretion.
Obviously, no other collective agreement provision or right is engaged or affected by the
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[11]Having considered the positions of the parties, I am satisfied that the grievance
must be dismissed.
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[12]The grievor has no legal basis to assert any claimed entitlement to participate in
WKHHPSOR\HU¶V&RPSUHVVHG:RUN:HHNWULDOH[SHULment. Three locations were selected; the
grievor was not located at any of them. His assertion that because he is supervised by
someone in one of those locations and because his work may be integrated with the work in
that location as the basis of his claim resembles, at least in form, the other claims he makes in
relation to the exercise by the employer of its management rights. He advances no specific
legal collective agreement entitlement but essentially asserts that there was a better way for
the employer to have administered the workplace and his working life. Even if I were
SHUVXDGHGWKDWWKH³JULHYRU¶VZD\´LV³EHWWHU´DQG,PDNHno such finding) that is not a basis
upon which to have his views supplant those of the employer in the legitimate exercise of its
discretion.
[13]The Compressed Work Week experiment was one that could have, but did not,
include the grievor. Nothing in the collective agreement mandates or requires either option.
[14]7KHJULHYRU¶VFRPSODLQWVDERXWWKHTXDOLWy of his work similarly do not engage
any collective agreement rights. While he may truly subjectively feel that his work is
insufficiently challenging or that he is being demeaned, there is nothing in his presentation of
the case which either affords or necessitates such conclusions on any objective basis. In any
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particularly where, as here, there can be no demonstrated impact on any collective agreement
rights.
[15]Finally, there was no assertion that the files that were destroyed during the
JULHYRU¶VDEVHQFHZHUHDQ\WKLQJEXWWKHHPSOR\HU¶VSURSHUW\±WKHUHZDVQRVXJJHVWLRQDQ\
LPSURSHUFRQYHUVLRQRIWKHJULHYRU¶VSHUVRQDOSUoperty. This entire event may have been
little more than an unfortunate accident of timing. We simply cannot know how events
might have transpired had the grievor been at work at the time. There was no indication that
he had taken any steps to protect the files he now claims to have so valued or communicated
the nature of his attachment to them to the employer. In any event, I simply am unable to see
how the facts of this case, insofar as they relate to an employer decision to shred files, is one
that engages collective agreement rights.
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[16]In view of the foregoing, the grievance is hereby dismissed.
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Dated at Toronto this 30 day of March 2011.
Bram Herlich, Vice-Chair