HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-3496.Black.11-10-20 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#2008-3496
UNION#2008-0205-0160
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Black)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Attorney General)
Employer
BEFOREBram Herlich Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONAlick Ryder
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYERJamie Kneen
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING
June 22, 2011.
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Decision
[1]The employer, by way of a preliminary motion, has asked that the grievance in this
matter be dismissed by the Board, without a heariQJRQWKHPHULWV,WDVVHUWVWKDWWKHXQLRQ¶V
allegations, even if accepted as true and provable, fail to disclose a prima facie case of any
violation of the collective agreement.
[2])RUWKHSXUSRVHVRIWKHHPSOR\HU¶VPRWLRQthe following particulars are assumed to
be both true and provable:
i. Ms. Black [the grievor] was hired on contract by the Ministry of the Attorney
General as a Court Reporter at the Hamilton Court in February 1999.
ii.0V%ODFN¶VGLUHFWVXSHUYLVRUZDV%HWW\0DF'RQDOG
iii. Ms. Black worked primarily in Family Court for the first three years on the job.
However, she had started receiving a variety of Superior and Ontario Court of
Justice Criminal trials.
iv. She received little training from the employer in this position.
v. Ms. Black received no negative feedback from Ms. MacDonald with respect to
her work performance.
vi. At some point in late 2001 or early 2002, Judy Mann assumed the role of
Supervisor of Court Operations.
vii. Within one year of Ms. Mann assuming supervision of Ms. Black, Ms. Black
stopped receiving trial work. Instead she was assigned SULPDULO\WR³%DLO´DQG
³6HW'DWH´&RXUWV
viii. From 2002, Ms. Black approached Ms. Mann at least once per month
requesting to be put on trials and asking why she was not receiving trial work.
Ms. Mann responded by stating that the employer could assign Ms. Black
wherever it wanted.
ix. Ms. Black also approached her group leader, Linda Laidman about assignment
to trials. Ms. Laidman referred Ms. Black to Ms. Mann.
x. [deleted on consent of the parties]
xi. [deleted on consent of the parties]
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xii. Ms. Black went on a medical leave from approximately April 2007 to August
2007 and from April 2008 to September 2008. Ms. Black returned to work in
approximately mid-September 2008.
xiii. Both Ms. Mann and Ms. Laidman had left the Ministry by the time Ms. Black
had returned to work.
xiv. Ms Black approached her new Group Leader, Deb Sine, in September 2008
about being assigned to trials. Ms. Sine informed Ms. Black that she had been
instructed by Ms. Mann and Ms. Laidman that Ms. Black was not to be
DVVLJQHGWRDQ\-XGJH¶VFRXUW0V6LQHVWated that she had been told that there
was a letter from a Judge on Ms. %ODFN¶VILOHWRWKLVHIIHFW
xv. Ms. Black became quite upset as she had never been informed of the existence
of any such letter. Ms. Black contacted the new supervisor, Bernadette Flis.
xvi. Ms. Flis stated she was not aware of any such letter on file. This information
was confirmed by Human Resources. In fact, there are no disciplinary letters on
0V%ODFN¶VILOH
xvii. Ms. Black filed a grievance on December 18, 2008 after receiving the
confirmation that there was not a letter on her file.
xviii. The preparation of transcripts is bargaining unit work.
xix. Transcript work flows mainly from the assignment to trials.
xx. The actions of Ms. Mann resulted in Ms. Black receiving significantly less trial
work, and therefore, less transcription work than she was entitled to.
xxi. Ms. Mann acted in an arbitrary or bad faith manner in her assignment of Ms.
%ODFNGXWLHV0V0DQQ¶VFRQGXFWWDUJHWed Ms. Black, was unjustified, and had
DQHJDWLYHLPSDFWRQ0V%ODFN¶VOHYHORILQFRPH
xxii. Ms. Black only became aware of the naWXUHRI0V0DQQ¶VDFWLRQVIROORZLQJ
0V%ODFN¶VGLVFXVVLRQZLWK0V6LQH
xxiii.$VDUHVXOWRI0V0DQQ¶VWUHDWPHQWRIMs. Black, Ms. Black has lost out on the
opportunity to work in trials. This also means she has lost out on the
opportunity to produce numerous transcripts. Ms. Black estimates this has cost
her approximately $20,000 per year in lost transcription work.
[3]The employer asks that the grievance be dismissed on a preliminary basis without any
further inquiry. Essentially, the employer asserts, the union is attempting to challenge the
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exercise of managerial discretion. The management rights provision of the collective agreement
is found at Article 2.1. And although both parties referred to and, to some extent, identified the
SUHVHQWPDWWHUDVUDLVLQJD³PDQDJHPHQWULJKWV´issue, neither party referred specifically to the
provision or identified which specific portions of it are relevant to the current inquiry.
[4]The employer, however, relies on authorities of this Board which it asserts stand for
the general proposition that there LVQR³IUHHIORDWLQJ´REOLJDWLRQon the employer to act in a good
faith and reasonable fashion in the exercise of its managerial prerogatives. Such a review may
only be performed by this Board when the result of that exercise (to appropriate some of the
language of the caselaw) is to negate or unduly restrict some right that emerges from the
collective agreement. And as thHPDWWHURIWKHXQLRQ¶VFRPSODLQt in the present case cannot be
linked to any such provision of the collective agreement, the grievance must be dismissed.
[5]For its part, the union asserts that the exerciVHRIPDQDJHPHQWULJKWVLV±UHJDUGOHVVRI
whether the particular subject matter in issue engages any other specific provision of the
FROOHFWLYHDJUHHPHQW±Vubject to review by this Board against a minimal good faith standard.
The employer cannot and should not be expected or permitted to exercise its discretion in bad
faith and for improper purposes. (I should note, however, that the union also asserted that the
impugned employer conduct does trench on certain collective agreement provisions.)
[6]It is, however, the question of whether there is any obligation on the employer to
exercise its management rights in good faith which I have found most troubling. As will become
clear, I have determined not to DOORZWKHHPSOR\HU¶VSUHOLPLQDU\PRtion, at least not in this stage
of the proceedings. I am doing so without (yet) deciding any or all of the legal issues which may
be necessary to its determination. I have come to this conclusion largely because of the fashion
in which the parties addressed this issue in their submissions before me and because I view the
issue as one which may have significant ramifications for the parties and for this Board beyond
the facts of the instant case.
[7]In that context, it would be improvident to express any views or come to any legal
conclusions without insuring that the parties are afforded every opportunity to address all of the
issues which may have to be determined in the resolution of this matter.
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[8]Having said that, however, it may benefit the parties in their preparation for the
continuing litigation in this matter, to identify some of the issues and concerns not yet fully
addressed by them before me.
[9]The employer referred to two decisions of this Board: OPSEU (Ashley) and Ministry
RI&RPPXQLW\)DPLO\DQG&KLOGUHQ¶V6HUYLFHV(2003),GSBNo. 1999-1997 (Abramsky) and
OPSEU (Lesieur) and Ministry of the Environment (2005), GSB No. 2002-1756 (Briggs).
Neither of these cases dealt directly with claims or findings of bad faith per se (although, in
Ashley the union did suggest that the employer had engaged in a negligent misrepresentation).
These cases (and others) make it clear that the WRXFKVWRQHRIWKLV%RDUG¶VMXULVSUXGHQFHLQ
respect of the appropriate review, if any, of the exercise of management rights is its decision in
OPSEU (Bousquet) and Ministry of Natural Resources (1991), GSB No. 541/90 (Gorsky).
Neither of the parties filed or reviewed that decision in their submissions before me.
[10]TheBousquet award is a nuanced, complicated and difficult analysis of the state of
general arbitral jurisprudence and its application to this Board. At least at that time, the general
state of the law in respect of arbitral review of the exercise of management rights was or had
been in considerable flux. Despite the intricacies of the award, more recent decisions of this
Board appear to have encapsulated its application as in the following observation from Ashley (at
page 14 et seq.):
The decision [in Bousquet@«GLGQRWDGRSWDJHQHUDOduty of good faith and
UHDVRQDEOHQHVVLQWKHH[HUFLVHRIPDQDJHPHQWULJKWV«
Nevertheless, the Board also concludeGWKDWWKHHPSOR\HUGLGQRWKDYH³carte blanche
to do what it wishes under the purported exerciVHRIDQH[FOXVLYHPDQDJHPHQWIXQFWLRQ«´
Instead, the Board had the right to review the HPSOR\HU¶VH[HUFLVHRIits discretion for good
faith and reasonableness because the developmHQWDORSSRUWXQLWLHVLPSDFWHGDQHPSOR\HH¶V
ability to compete in job competitions under then Article 4 of the collective agreement. The
%RDUGKHOGDWS³>7@KHVLJQLILFDQWIDFWrequired to place a limitation on the unfettered
exercise of a management right is the existence of a provision in the collective agreement
ZKLFKZRXOGHLWKHUEHQHJDWHGRUXQGXO\OLPLWHGE\DSDUWLFXODUDSSOLFDWLRQRIVXFKULJKW´
Consequently, under Bousquet, supra, the jurisdiction of the Board to review the
(PSOR\HU¶VH[HUFLVHRIDULJKWUHVHUYHGWRPDQDJHPHQWLVGHULYDWLYH±LWGHSHQGVRQWKH
existence of a provision in the collective agreement which might be adversely affected by
PDQDJHPHQW¶VDFWLRQ
- 6 -
[11]As indicated, neither of the parties before me referred to the Bousquet award. I trust
they will take the opportunity to address the appropriateness of the above³HQFDSVXODWLRQ´RILWV
application.
[12]The parties may also wish to address the question of whether, even assuming the
³HQFDSVXODWLRQ´LVDQDFFXUDWHUHDGLQJRIBousquet, the employer is still subject to an obligation
to exercise its management rights in good faith. In that regard, any cases in which involve
specific allegations of bad faith will, of course, be instructive.
[13]The parties may also wish to consider the cases referred to in Hadwen et al, Ontario
Public Service Employment Labour Law at pp. 572-575.
[14]I will make a brief comment about the facts. The employer did not aim its objection
at the sufficiency of the facts, per se. It did, of course, argue that the case, as pleaded, did not
disclose any violation of the collective agreement. It did not, however, specifically address the
question of whether the facts, as pleaded, might support a finding of bad faith. Rather, it argued
that its conduct was not subject to review as no provision of the collective agreement, apart from
the management rights clause, was engaged.
[15]Bad faith is generally difficult to establish. And I am not persuaded that a conclusion
of bad faith conduct flows inexorably from the facts as pleaded. The pleaded facts, however, are
certainly curious and afford no immediate orREYLRXVH[SODQDWLRQIRUWKHHPSOR\HU¶VLPSXJQHG
conduct. Of course, one would not expect that the HPSOR\HU¶Vreasons for its conduct would
necessarily be captured in WKHXQLRQ¶VSOHDGLQJV,WPD\EHWKDW there is a simple explanation not
grounded in any bad faith or improper purpose. If that is ultimately the case, the disposition of
this matter may be much simpler than some of the foregoing might otherwise suggest. I am not
prepared, however, to conclude, at this stage and based on the pleadings before me, that the
HPSOR\HU¶VFRQGXFWFRXOGQRWSRVVLEO\be found to constitute bad faith.
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[16] The Registrar is directed to confer with the parties to set a further hearing date in this
matter. The parties should be prepared to adduce all relevant evidence. Once the hearing is
completed and I have had the benefit of hearLQJWKHUHOHYDQWHYLGHQFHDQGWKHSDUWLHV¶
submissions, I will, with the benefit of the full evidentiary context, address all issues as may be
necessary.
th
day of October 2011.
Dated at Toronto this 20
Bram Herlich, Vice-Chair