HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-0756.Wong.12-03-05 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
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GSB#2010-0756
UNION#2009-0555-0002
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Wong) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Government Services) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Anne Cumming
Koskie Minsky LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Cathy Phan
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING February 21, 2012.
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Decision
[1] The board is seized with a grievance dated July 7, 2009, filed by Ms. Frances Wong. It
states “I grieve my rights have been violated specifically but not exclusively under Art: 2,
3, UN 9, UN 11 of the collective agreement”.
[2] At the commencement of the hearing, the board was advised that the parties had agreed to
present a motion by the employer seeking the dismissal of the grievance on the grounds
that the particulars provided by the union pursuant to a Board order fail to establish a
prima facie case supporting a violation of the collective agreement.
[3] The union’s particulars are as follows:
1. The Grievor, Frances Wong, is a mainframe technical specialist which is
classified at an SO6 level. She has held this position since 2005. Due to
internal restructuring, her position moved to MGS in approximately April of
2006.
2. Due to the restructuring of IT positions from cluster ministries to MGS, Ms.
Wong’s job duties changed. The changes were adverse to Ms. Wong and
she has been affected accordingly.
3. By memoranda dated January 28th and March 16th 2009, Ms. Wong was
advised that she was expected to perform the duties falling within a new job
description – that of Program Product and Reporting Advisor (S06). This
position has significantly different job duties associated with it than her
previous position.
4. In early 2009, Ms. Wong advised her manager of her concerns regarding her
new position. Ms. Wong was concerned with her lack of training in regards
to these new duties and the fact that the new position appeared to be a form
of demotion as compared to her last position. Ms. Wong did not receive a
satisfactory answer in regards to her concerns and inquiries in this respect.
Instead, Ms. Wong was advised by her manager that failure to perform her
new duties would be considered insubordination and that progressive
discipline would follow.
5. Ms. Wong was distressed by the threat of discipline. To the best of the
Union’s knowledge, Ms. Wong was the only employee in her group to have
been threatened with discipline for inquiring into the organizational changes
that affected her work duties.
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6. Ms. Wong was denied a new and upgraded computer (she used a borrowed
one) for a lengthy period of time. She has yet to receive a new computer.
Ms. Wong is the only employee in her group that had to use a borrowed
computer while at work. Furthermore, Ms. Wong’s inquiries and requests
regarding training and development programs in which she was interested
were denied by her manager.
7. As a result of the workplace changes including the change to her job
specifications such that she is now a Program Product & Reporting Advisor,
Ms. Wong lost the opportunity to perform on-call work and therefore also
lost the pay associated with the performance of on-call duties. Ms. Wong
performed on-call duties under her previous job specifications.
Management’s failure to ensure that under her new job specifications such
on-call work is provided to Ms. Wong is offered on-call work constitutes a
demotion.
[4] Counsel for the employer presented the decisions of the Board in Re Couture et al, 2008-
3329 (Dissanayake), Re Anthony et al, 1991-1979 etc. (Abramsky) and Re Seguin et al,
2010-1205 (Briggs). In Re Couture et al (supra) at paragraph 6, the Board set out the test
for a “prima facie motion” as follows:
… a prima facie motion would succeed if the facts asserted in support of a
grievance, if accepted as true, are not capable of establishing the elements
necessary to substantiate the violation alleged.
This test has been applied with approval in subsequent decisions of the board. See, re
Ministry of Government Services (Union grievance), 2010-0405 (Abramsky) at
paragraph 14, Re Seguin et al, (supra) at paragraph 40.
[5] Counsel submitted that on an application of that test the motion should succeed. She
argued that while the grievance alleges a violation of article 3, there are no facts set out
which could possibly establish discrimination on any of the prohibited grounds
enumerated in article 3 or discrimination or harassment due to the grievor’s union activity
as set out in article 3.2.
[6] Article UN 9 of the collective agreement reads:
ARTICLE UN 9 – CALL BACK
UN 9.1 An employee who leaves his or her place of work and is subsequently
called back to work prior to the starting time of his or her next
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scheduled shift shall be paid a minimum of four (4) hours pay at one
and one-half (1½ ) times his or her basic hourly rate.
UN 9.2 Where an employee is contacted by the Employer outside the
workplace prior to the starting time of his or her next scheduled shift,
in circumstances where such contact is considered to be a “call back to
work” but the employee is not required to physically attend at the
workplace, the employee shall be paid a minimum of four (4) hours’
of pay at one and one-half (1½) times his or her basic hourly rate. The
initial call and any subsequent calls during that same four-hour period,
will be treated as a single “call back to work” for pay purposes.
Counsel argued that article UN 9 obligates the employer to pay call back pay to an
employee at the rates specified where he/she is called back as defined in that provision.
The particulars do not assert that the grievor was called back to work so as to be entitled
to call back pay. She submitted that there is nothing in article UN 9 that obligates the
employer to call back the grievor or any other employee. The decision whether to call
back an employee is a management decision. Article 9 only obligates the employer to
pay for call back where it decides to call back an employee in the exercise of its
management rights.
[7] Article UN 11 is about on-call duty. Article UN 11.1 defines “On-call duty” as follows:
UN 11.1 “On-call Duty” means a period of time that is not a regular working
period, overtime period, stand-by period or call back period during
which an employee is required to respond within a reasonable time to
a request for:
(a) recall to the work place, or
(b) the performance of other work as required.
Where an employee is required to be on-call as defined, article UN 11.7 entitles the
employee to receive on-call pay at specified rates.
[8] Employer counsel submits that the particulars of the union do not show that the grievor
was ever required to be on-call so as to be entitled to on-call pay under article UN 11. As
with Article UN 9, counsel submits that article 11 does not impose any obligation on the
employer to request the grievor or any other employee to be on-call. That is strictly a
matter of management rights, as part of its right to schedule work.
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[9] Addressing the last provision cited in the grievance, Article 2, employer counsel drew to
the Board’s attention the following excerpt from Re Anthony (supra) at p. 8:
But for the Board to have jurisdiction, an inequitable situation is not enough.
In OPSEU (Ashley et al) and Ministry of Community, Family and Children’s
Services, supra at p. 14-15 the Board held:
The decision in OPSEU (Bousquet), supra, does not assist the
Union. The Board in that case did not adopt a general duty of
good faith and reasonableness in the exercise of management
rights. …[U]nder Bousquet, supra, the jurisdiction of the Board
to review the Employer’s exercise of a right reserved to
management is derivative – it depends on the existence of a
provision in the collective agreement which might be adversely
affected by management’s actions.
The Board’s jurisdiction depends on an allegation that the Employer’s action
interfered with the grievors’ rights under the collective agreement.
[10] Counsel submitted that since the union’s particulars do not support a prima facie
violation of any of the other articles cited, the only other way the union can assert a
violation article 2 is by showing that the employer exercised its management rights in bad
faith. Counsel argued that accepting for the present purposes that the assertions in the
particulars are established, they do not provide a factual basis for a finding of bad faith.
[11] Union counsel argued that its particulars make out a prima facie case in two ways. First,
it was submitted that while the particulars do not allege bad faith explicitly, such an
allegation is implied in the assertions that the grievor was not provided a satisfactory
answer when she raised concerns about the new position she was placed in and the
resulting change in duties. Moreover, the grievor was threatened with discipline if she
failed to perform duties in her new position, and the grievor was the only employee to be
so threatened. Counsel also referred to the allegation in the particulars that the grievor
was denied a new and upgraded computer. It is the position of the union that those
assertions by implication suggest that the employer exercised its management rights in
bad faith in the manner it dealt with the grievor.
[12] Secondly, counsel submits that a prima facie case for contravention of article UN 11 is
made out because it is alleged by the grievor that as a result of the change of her position
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she lost the opportunity to earn extra money by way of on-call pay, a benefit she enjoyed
in her previous position.
[13] The grievance itself alleged violations of article 2, 3, UN 9 and UN 11. The employer
took the position that the particulars do not make out a prima facie violation of any of
those provisions. In response, the union argued that a prima facie case is made out with
respect to article UN 11, and article 2 based on bad faith. Therefore, the disposition of
the employer’s motion requires the Board to determine whether or not the facts asserted
in the union’s particulars, if accepted as true, are capable of establishing the elements
necessary to substantiate violations of articles 2 and/or UN 11.
[14] The Board finds that the particulars do not meet that test with regard to article UN 11. As
employer counsel correctly pointed out, the right conferred on employees under article
UN 11 is to be paid on-call pay when they perform on-call duty. There is no obligation
on the employer under article UN 11 to assign on-call duty. That is a decision to be made
in the exercise of the employer’s management rights. The employer is free to exercise its
management rights at its discretion provided its actions are not taken in bad faith and do
not infringe upon a right conferred under a provision of the collective agreement.
[15] This leads to the union’s submission that the particulars, if accepted as true, disclose a
prima facie case that the employer exercised its management rights under article 2 in bad
faith. The particulars acknowledge that the changing of the grievor’s position and the
resulting change in her duties, was “due to the restructuring of IT positions from cluster
ministries to MGS”. Thus there is no allegation that her change of position and duties in
itself was tainted by bad faith.
[16] The particulars go on to allege certain facts following the change of the grievor’s
position:
- That the grievor expressed concern about her lack of training in regard to her new
duties.
- That she expressed concern that her new position “appeared to be a demotion as
compared to her last position”.
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- That the grievor did not receive a satisfactory answer in regard to the concerns she
had expressed.
- That the grievor was advised by her manager that failure to perform her new duties
would be considered to be insubordination and progressive discipline would follow.
- That the grievor was the only employee in her group to be threatened with discipline.
- That the grievor was distressed by the threat of discipline.
- That the grievor was denied a new and upgraded computer and she was the only
employee who had to use a borrowed computer.
- That her requests for training and development programs were denied by her
manager.
- That she was denied the opportunity to perform on-call duty in her new position.
[17] If all of the foregoing assertions are accepted as true, as the Board must for the present
purposes, they indicate that the grievor was disadvantaged in different ways as a result of
the change of her position. Taken at its highest, the facts may also indicate that in some
instances the employer may not have utilized the best management practices. For
example, it is not a good management practice to not respond to employee inquiries and
expressions of concern. However, that falls far short of establishing “bad faith” as it is
commonly understood, or as defined in the legal authorities.
[18] The union’s particulars also allege differential treatment of the grievor – with regard to
the alleged threat of discipline if the grievor refused to perform her new duties and her
having to use a borrowed computer. However, in order to infer bad faith there must at
least be evidence that similarly situated individuals were treated differently. For
example, there is no suggestion in the particulars that other employees raised objection to
new duties resulting from the change of position in the same way the grievor did.
Therefore, the fact that the grievor was the only one to be told that refusal to perform
duties in her new position could result in discipline, cannot lead to an inference that the
employer acted in bad faith.
[19] The particulars indicate that the grievor was disadvantaged in several ways as a result of
the change of position and duties. There is also a clear assertion that she was distressed
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by what transpired. It is also likely that the grievor sincerely believes that the employer
acted in bad faith in the manner she was treated. However, a mere allegation of bad faith
and a sincere belief that her allegation is well-founded is not sufficient to establish a bad
faith exercise of management rights. The grievor’s subjective belief, however strongly
and sincerely held, is insufficient. There must be some objective facts that could
reasonably lead to a finding of bad faith. The particulars of the union do not disclose any
objective facts which could lead to a finding of bad faith. They only would establish that
the grievor was adversely impacted by management action. In the result, the employer’s
motion succeeds and the instant grievance is hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto this 5th day of March 2012.
Nimal Dissanayake, Vice-Chair