HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-0202.Hollingsworth et al.11-06-21 DecisionCommission 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#2010-0202, 2010-0207, 2010-0211, 2010-1179, 2010-2203, 2010-2550, 2010-2551
UNION#2010-0212-0009, 2009-0633-0011, 2010-0526-0005, 2009-0317-0008, 2010-0526-0053,
2010-0526-0054, 2010-0551-0055
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
(Hollingsworth et al)
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
Employer
(Ministry of Attorney General)
BEFOREVice-Chair
Randi H. Abramsky
FOR THE UNION
Tim Hannigan
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Omar Shahab
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING
June 10, 2011.
.
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DECISION
[1]The grievances in this matter involve over fifty Court Reporters who contend that
the Employer is not applying the collective agreement to their work preparing and certifying
transcripts. With the exception of one group, the Employer has moved to dismiss these
grievances as raising the same issues currently being addressed in the remedial phase of Re
OPSEU (Hunt et al.) and Ministry of the Attorney General, GSB No. 2001-0534 (Abramsky).
Facts
[2])RUWKHSXUSRVHVRIWKH(PSOR\HU¶VPRWLRQto dismiss, the parties have accepted
WKH8QLRQ¶VVWDWHPHQWRISDUWLFXODUVUHJDUGLQJWKe claims made in the grievances. Basically, the
grievances allege that the Employer has violated the collective agreement by not compensating
Court Reporters appropriately for completing transcript work, and further that the Employer has
not provided employees with the tools and materials required to perform this work. In the
grievance of Colleen Groupil, the Union also alleges that the Employer failed to account for
losses to her transcript work due to a workplace injury to her arm and that she did not receive
any benefits concerning this work.
Reasons for Decision
[3]The Employer asserts that these new grievances are properly part of the remedial
issues over which the Board is already seized in the Hunt matter. It asserts that these grievances
raise the same issues. Accordingly, it submits that dismissal would not prejudice the grievors, all
of whose claims could be encompassed by the remedial relief sought by the Union in that case.
It points out that the particulars ordered to be produced by the Union include identifying each
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individual Court Reporter that the Union is asserting a claim for retrospective relief, the dates
and times associated with transcript production, and specifically how the collective agreement
applies to the individuals and quantifying the claim for each individual. The Employer asserts
that all of these claims are properly part of the Hunt remedial issues and that allowing these
claims to proceed would involve DGXSOLFDWLRQRIWKH%RDUG¶VDQGSDUWLHV¶UHVRXUFHVDVZHOODV
potentially lead to more and more individual grievances. The Employer submits that the Board
needs to send a message that all of these iVVXHVDUHWREHDGGUHVVHGLQRQHIRUXP±WKHHunt et al.
remedial case.
[4]In my view, an earlier ruling by the Board in Hunt et al., dated December 4, 2009,
LVGLVSRVLWLYHRIWKH(PSOR\HU¶V motion. The issue in that dHFLVLRQFHQWHUHGRQWKH%RDUG¶V
authority to order prospective relief. The Employer asserted that the Board did not have the
authority to order prospective relief, whereas thH8QLRQDVVHUWHGWKDWD³IXOODQGILQDO´UHPHG\
included prospective relief.
[5]The genesis of that decision was the EmSOR\HU¶VSURSRVDOWRDGRSWD³UHJXODWRU\
PRGHO´IRUWKHGHOLYHU\RIWUDQVFULSWV$IWHUreviewing the relevant case law and arguments of
the parties, I concluded that the Board did not have jurisdiction to determine whether the
(PSOR\HU¶VQHZSURSRVHGUHJXODWRU\PRGHOZDVFRQVLVtent with the collective agreement, or the
%RDUG¶VGHFLVLRQLQHunt, as part of the remedial aspects of the case. I determined that the
(PSOR\HU¶VUHJXODWRU\PRGHOSURSRVDO raised new issues, and that any challenge to it would be
based on new facts and require a full hearing and determination. I further stated at paU³7KH
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%RDUG¶VGHFODUDWLRQLQHunt does not give the Board continuing jurisdiction to ensure compliance
ZLWKWKHFROOHFWLYHDJUHHPHQWLQUHODWLRQWRWUDQVFULSWSURGXFWLRQ´
[6]This last sentence is key to the motion in this case. There is no continuing
jurisdiction under the Hunt case to address ongoing compliance with the collective agreement,
which is exactly the issue that these grievances raise.
[7]It is significant, in my view, that the Employer has not made any changes in
regard to transcript production since the July 27, 2006 decision in Hunt in regard to transcript
SURGXFWLRQ±DOPRVWILYH\HDUVDJR,WPDLQWDLQVWKHstatus quo ante. In fairness, for a significant
period there was an agreement to maintain the status quo.However, that agreement ended some
time ago. The retrospective remedial issues in Hunt have not been concluded. It is, therefore,
not surprising that new individual grievances have been filed alleging that the Employer has
failed to comply with the collective agreement in regard to transcript production. These are new
matters that do not fall within the jurisdiction of the Board in Hunt. It would therefore not be
appropriate to dismiss them on the basis that they are part of the Hunt matter.
[8]It may well be, as the Employer asserts, that allowing these grievances to proceed
may result in duplication of the issues and evidence. However, the Employer has not moved to
consolidate these grievances with Hunt, but, rather, has moved to dismiss them outright. It may
also be that a failure to dismiss these grievances might lead to many new individual grievances.
That is certainly possible given the continuation of the status quo ante. But that fact, and the fact
that the Hunt remedial issues have not yet been finalized, does not create jurisdiction where
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jurisdiction does not exist. These grievances are not before the Board in Hunt and there is no
basis to dismiss them for that reason.
[9]The Employer asserts that allowing these grievances to proceed is an abuse of
process. I cannot agree. These matters arise long after the decision in Hunt. They arise from the
fact that the Employer has still not complied with the decision in Hunt. They create no abuse of
process.
Conclusion:
[10])RUWKHIRUHJRLQJUHDVRQV7KH(PSOR\HU¶VPRWLRQWRGLVPLVVLVGHQLHG
st
Dated at Toronto this 21 day of June 2011.
Randi H. Abramsky, Vice-Chair