HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-1839.Leclair.11-07-22 DecisionCommission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
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Settlement Board
griefs
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G
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GSB#2004-1839
UNION#2006-0604-0001
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Leclair)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Children and Youth Services)
Employer
BEFOREFelicity D. Briggs Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONJackie Crawford
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYERNicholas Sapp
Ministry of Government Services
Centre for Employee Relations
Employee Relations Advisor
SUBMISSIONS
January 31, February 14, 2011.
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Decision
[1]The grievor, Lizanne Leclair, is a Probation Officer 2 who has been with the Ministry
since June of 1998. She is presently working in the Sudbury Probation Office. In
August of 2004, she filed a grievance alleging that she was improperly denied
relocation expenses flowing from her move from Elliot Lake to Espanola. By way of
remedy she seeks $3300. for various costs related to her move.
[2]In 2004 the Ministry of Child and Youth Services was established after a
disentanglement of the youth services from adult services. This occurred for
probation services as well as for correctional institutions.
[3]This matter was submitted to the Board for its determination by way of written
submissions. It was agreed by the parties that this decision would be without
prejudice or precedent.
[4]The Union asserted, and the Employer conceded the following facts:
In 2004, prior to the filing of the grievance the grievor was assigned to the
Elliott Lake Probation Office of the Ministry of Public Safety and Security (as
it then was) and was employed as a Probation Officer.
In 2004, the Ministry was in the process RI³GLVHQWDQJOLQJ´3UREDWLRQ6HUYLFHV
for youth from Probation and Parole Services for adults as part of Phase 2
Youth Justice Probation Services. On May 18, 2004, the grievor, along with
other affected staff, were informed that under the disentanglement process,
they would have the right to choose whether to accept or decline a transfer of
employment from Corrections to the Ministry of Children and Youth Services.
A letter dated May 18, 2004 advised employees that accepting the transfer
would give rise to an entitlement under Appendix 13 of the Collective
Agreement between OPSEU and the Employer. Appendix 13 provides
eligibility for reimbursement of relocation costs where headquarters are
relocated beyond a 40 km distance.
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Accepting the transfer would require the grievor to work in the Sault Ste
Marie Probation and Parole Office. Declining the transfer would render her
surplus and subject to the relevant provisions of the collective agreement.
On May 21, 2004, Ms Leclair accepted the transfer as evidenced by her
signature on page 3 of the May 18, 2004 letter referenced above.
On June 3, 2004, Corrections wrote to Ms Leclair indicating that she was
assigned to Sault Ste Marie MCYS Probation office and informing her of the
availability of relocation costs to reimburse her for her moving expenses.
[5] A few months before the above noted correspondence, the grievor made a request for
a lateral transfer. The documents reveal that she wanted to work in the Sudbury or
Espanola office. On March 23, 2004, in accordance with Article 6.6 of the Collective
Agreement, she made a request for a lateral transfer to move from her position in
Elliot Lake to Probation Services in Espanola, Probation and Parole Services,
Sudbury or Probation Services, Sudbury. Attached to her lateral transfer requests was
a letter from Ms. Leclair indicating that heUUHTXHVWZDVIRU³FRPSDVVLRQDWHUHDVRQV´
6KHRXWOLQHGKHUIDPLO\VLWXDWLRQDQGQRWHGWKDW³VKHZRXOGEHLQDEHWWHUSRVLWLRQWR
MXJJOHZRUNDQGIDPLO\UHVSRQVLELOLWLHV´ if she worked in the Sudbury office.
[6] The parties negotiated terms and conditions at the MERC level regarding the
disentanglement. It was noted in a letter to the grievor that:
In accordance with MERC Agreement #3A and Article 6.6.1 (lateral
transfers), on June 22, 2004 the Employer and the Union agreed to fill all
current Probation and Parole Officer vacancies and OAG8 vacancies
dedicated to Community Corrections functions in the Ministry of Community
Safety and Correctional Services and the Ministry of Children and Youth
Services.
Furthermore, it was agreed by the parties that the lateral transfer list would be
accessed for the purposes of the June 22, 2004 agreement. All lateral transfer
requests received by 5:00 pm on July 6, 2004 by the Workforce Adjustment
Unit, London were considered for the purpose of the implementation of the
June 22, 2004 agreement.
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[7] On July 5, 2004, the grievor submitted a lateral transfer request to move from her
position in Sault Ste. Marie to one of five positions that were located in Sudbury,
North Bay or Espanola. Again, attached to the lateral transfer request was a letter
from Ms. Leclair explaining that the need foUVXFKDWUDQVIHUZDV³IRUFRPSDVVLRQDWH
UHDVRQV´
[8] On July 5, 2004, the Workforce Adjustment Unit acknowledged in writing her
request. In that letter it noted that her current work location was Sault Ste. Marie
notwithstanding that the grievor had yet to move to that location.
[9] On July 27, 2004, the Workforce Adjustment Unit wrote to the grievor and informed
her that she had been granted a lateral transfer to the Espanola office. That letter
stated, in part:
I am pleased to confirm that your lateral transfer request has been accessed
and that you have been laterally assigned to the Espanola Probation Office.
[10] According to the Union, prior to being notified that she would be laterally transferred
to Espanola, the grievor visited Sault Ste Marie in an effort to secure new housing.
She put her house in Elliot Lake on the market, incurring expenses related to her
anticipated relocation to Sault Ste Marie. These expenses were reimbursed pursuant
to Appendix 13 of the Collective Agreement as set out in the June 3, 2004 letter.
However, she did not receive monies for the cost of her move to Sudbury. It is these
further expenses that she now claims.
>@,WZDVWKHJULHYRU¶VSRVLtion that she would not have moved to Sudbury if there had
been no disentanglement process, and that this move would actually involve less cost
to the employer in reimbursement than a move to Sault Ste Marie. Further, she
alleged that the vacancy in Espanola had been known to the employer for months
before she became aware of it and that had it been made known sooner, she could
have relocated to Sudbury as she had requested, rather than to Sault Ste Marie, with
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eligibility for relocation expenses as provided in Appendix 13 of the Collective
Agreement.
[12] In the facts outlined by the Union, the grievor further contended there was a vacancy
LQ6XGEXU\EXWLWZDVKHOGIRUD³IDYRXUHGHPSOR\HH´+DGWKH(PSOR\HUQRW
withheld information about this vacancy, it would have been available to her when
she accepted the relocation of work offered LQWKH(PSOR\HU¶V0D\OHWWHU,W
was asserted by the Union that the grievor would then have been appropriately
reassigned to Sudbury and would have received reimbursement of relocation
expenses. For those reasons, the move she made to Espanola was wrongly
categorized as a lateral transfer. Ms Leclair would not have considered moving to
Sault Ste Marie but for the disentanglement and the relocation of her work. Her move
from Elliott Lake to Espanola ought to have been a move to her preferred relocation
as part of the disentanglement and relocation options provided to her by the
Employer. Instead, it was treated as a lateral transfer because of the timing of the
manner in which the employer made the Espanola vacancy known.
>@,WZDVWKH(PSOR\HU¶VVXEPLVVLRQWKDWWKHgrievance must fail. It was asserted that
the facts reveal that the grievor was moved as the result of a lateral transfer request
and not as the result of a relocation of Headquarters as contemplated by Appendix 13.
According to Appendix 13, relocation expenses will be paid when the Employer
FKDQJHVWKHHPSOR\HH¶VKHDGTXDUWHUVWRDlocation beyond a forty kilometer radius.
7KDWLVZKDWRFFXUUHGZKHQWKHJULHYRU¶VSRVLWLRQZDVUHORFDWHGIURP(OOLRW/DNHWR
Sault Ste. Marie. However, at the point that the grievor was granted a lateral transfer
request there was no entitlement to relocation expenses. It was urged that lateral
transfers under the MERC Agreements dated March 22, 2004 temporarily expanded
the scope of Article 6.6.1 to allow inter-Ministry lateral transfers while maintaining
the other entitlements of Article 6.6.1. Accordingly, relocation costs are not owing to
the grievor.
>@7KH(PSOR\HUDOVRVXEPLWWHGWKDWWKHJULHYRU¶VDOOHJDWLRQUHJDUGLQJWKH³VDYLQJRID
SRVLWLRQIRUDIDYRXUHGHPSOR\HH´VKRXOGbe rejected because no evidence was
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provided in this regard. In any event, disentanglement did not give employees the
right to choose their locations.
[15] Appendix 13 of the Collective Agreement states, in part:
The Employer and the Union herewith agree that, when a ministry decides to
FKDQJHDQRSHUDWLRQ¶VKHDGTXDUWHUVWRDlocation outside a forty (40) kilometer
radius of that operations current headquarters, the following terms and
conditions will apply:
2) (a) employees may accept the change in headquarters location, in which
case they will be eligible for reimbursement of relocation costs in accordance
ZLWKWKH(PSOR\HU¶Vrelocation policy, or
(b) employees may reject the change in headquarter location, in which case
they will be given six (6
PRQWKV¶QRWLFHRIOD\RIf pursuant to Article 20.2.1
(notice and Pay in Lieu) and have full access to the provisions of Article 20
(Employment Stability) and Appendix 9 (Employment Stability) of the
Central Collective Agreement.
[16] Article 6.6.1 of the Collective Agreement states:
With the agreement of the Union, the employee and the Employer, an employee
may 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 Article 6.6.1, 6.2, 6.3, 6.4 and 6.5 shall not
apply.
[17] The MERC Agreement 3A allowed for inter-ministry lateral transfers between the
Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services and the Ministry of Child
and Youth Services. It stated, in part:
1.For the purposes of Article 6.6.1 (lateral transfer), positions identified
above which are currently treated as identical for the purposes of Article
6.6.1 shall continue to be treated as identical in the same ministry.
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2.The current practice for accessing lateral transfers with respect to the
position in #1 will continue.
[18] After considering the facts and submissions in this matter, I am of the view that the
grievance must be denied.
[19] I agree with the Employer that the JULHYRU¶VDOOHJDWLRQUHJDUGLQJDSRVLWLRQLQ
Sudbury being held for an employee was not substantiated with any evidence.
Accordingly, I dismiss that claim.
[20] There is nothing in the documents or submissions provided that would lead me to find
that the grievor was denied any rights found in the Collective Agreement or MERC
agreement.
[21] While it is true that the grievor had submitted a lateral transfer request prior to the
disentanglement process commencing, that request does not give her any preferential
treatment. The Employer provided a copy of a Vacancy Report for the Northern
Region at the salient time and it is apparent that there were no vacancies in the
Northern Region when Ms. Leclair applied for a transfer in March of 2004.
[22] The grievor was one of the employees involved in the disentanglement and according
to the evidence provided was treated in an appropriate fashion. She was offered a
position in the Sault Ste Marie Office and she accepted obviously deciding that it was
a better alternative than being surplused.
[23] The grievor did not move to Sault Ste Marie because she (and others) were allowed to
submit lateral transfer requests to move to a location more suitable to her individual
needs. She did that and one of her choices was granted. However, her move to
Espanola was as the result of a lateral transfer and therefore she was not entitled to
relocation costs.
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>@7KH8QLRQVXEPLWWHGWKDWWKHJULHYRU¶VPove from Elliot Lake to Espanola ought to
have been a move to her preferred location as part of the disentanglement with
relocation costs and not a lateral transfer. It was further urged that it was considered
a lateral transfer because of the timing and manner in which the Employer made the
Espanola vacancy known.
[25] I disagree. Simply put, the grievor does not have a right to her preferred location in a
disentanglement process. Notwithstanding her allegations, there was no evidence
provided that vacancies were manipulated so as to provide preferential treatment to
some employees.
[26] Ms. Leclair was offered a position in Sault Ste. Marie that she accepted. In
accordance with an agreement between the parties she was later given an opportunity
to submit a lateral transfer to a different location and that request was granted. There
was no evidence provided that would have me find there has been a violation of either
the Collective Agreement or any MERC agreement.
[27] The grievance is dismissed for those reasons.
nd
Date at Toronto this 22 day of July 2011.
Felicity D. Briggs, Vice-Chai