HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011-0758.Perretta et al.12-03-27 Decision
Crown Employees
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nce Settlement
oard
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l. (416) 326-1388
x (416) 326-1396
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UNION#2011-0202-0005, 2011-0446-0003,
2011-0446-0004, 2011-0599-0009, 2011-0446-0010
IN THE MATTER ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
ETWEEN
G
B
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G
Te
Commission de
règlemen
d
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Oues
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1
Té
Té
Fa
B#2011-0758, 2011-0803, 2011-0830, 2011-0835, 2011-0836, 2011-1281, 2011-2112, 2011-2972
2011-0546-0006, 2011-0599-0002, 2011-0599-0003,
OF AN
Before
B
Ontario Publioyees Union
(Peal) Union
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Revenue) Employer
c Service Empl
rretta et
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BEFORE Ken Petryshen Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION
lmes LLP
d Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Tim Hannigan
Ryder Wright Blair & Ho
Barristers an
Services
ractice Group
Paul Meier
Ministry of Government
Labour P
Counsel
HEARING February 15, 2012.
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Decision
[1] I have before me seven group grievances that were signed by more than 200
employees at different locations and one individual grievance. The grievances were signed by
Ministry employees affected by the Employer’s Sales Tax Reform Initiative (“the STR
Initiative”) whereby Ontario converted to a single sales tax, the Harmonized Sales Tax (“HST”),
to be administered by the Canada Revenue Agency (“CRA”). The grievances allege that the
Employer contravened the management’s rights provision of the Collective Agreement. The
“Statement of Grievance” provides as follows: “We grieve that the employer has violated Article
2.1 of the collective agreement by failing to provide incentive pay for staff divested through the
sales tax reform project when they did provide it under the corporate sales act divestment. This
change is an inconsistent, unfair and unjust use of management’s rights.” The remedy sought is
“the payment of an incentive to impacted Retail Sales Tax Staff in the amount of 1 week for
every completed year of service, on the same terms and conditions that it was provided to staff
transferred under the Corporate Tax Act Redesign project.”
[2] Although the Employer has more than one objection to the grievances, the parties
agreed to only address the Employer’s contention that the GSB has no jurisdiction over the
subject matter of these grievances. The Employer’s motion to dismiss the grievances for lack of
jurisdiction is based on the absence of a requirement in the Collective Agreement for it to
provide incentive pay to Ministry employees affected by the STR Initiative who accepted job
offers from the CRA. The Union argued that the subject matter of the grievances has a sufficient
connection to the Collective Agreement to make the grievances arbitrable.
[3] Counsel made their submissions on the basis of an agreed statement of fact. For
the purposes of this motion, the facts giving rise to the grievances and to the Employer’s motion
are as follows.
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[4] In October of 2006, Ontario and the federal government executed an agreement
providing that the CRA would administer a single corporate tax on behalf of Ontario (“the CTR
Initiative”). In July of 2007, the Ministry concluded a Human Resources Agreement (“CTR
HRA”) with the federal government to obtain the best possible employment arrangements for its
CTR Initiative –impacted employees. The CRA required a sufficient number of auditor positions
to ensure the continuity of corporate tax knowledge and revenue generation, but did not require
administrative and operational staff. As well, the auditors required by the CRA would have to
make their job offer acceptance decisions in the face of a number of uncertainties, including
geographic uncertainty, given that the CRA did not have Durham region offices and Ministry
auditors worked at Pickering, Whitby and Oshawa, and financial uncertainty, given that
legislation to provide CTR Initiative-impacted auditors with the option of transferring their
pension assets was not tabled in the Legislature until just before their transfer date, on or about
April 3, 2008.
[5] Following the efforts of a Ministry and OPSEU working group, the Ministry and
OPSEU entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (“the 2007 Agreement”) to address the
transfer of OPSEU employees to the CRA. The relevant provisions of the 2007 Agreement are
as follows:
1. The parties agree that the Ministry of Revenue has made a reasonable attempt
to conclude a Human Resources Agreement with the Canada Revenue Agency
(CRA), in accordance with Appendix 18 and related articles of the OPSEU
Collective Agreement.
…
5. The parties further agree that OPSEU-represented employees who are offered,
and accept, employment with the Canada Revenue Agency pursuant to the Human
Resources Agreement:
Will receive severance entitlements pursuant to Article 53 or 78 of the
Collective Agreement, and
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ount of one week’s
pay for every completed year of continuous service.
8. This agreement is made without prejudice or precedent.
[6] In November of 2007, the CRA offered jobs to 329 CTR Initiative-impacted
employees under the CTR HRA. Ultimately, 304 of these employees did accept job offers from
the CRA as of the transfer date. A total of 155 administrative and operational staff did not
receive CRA job offers.
[7] As noted previously, the grievances before me arose out of the STR Initiative. On
March 26, 2009, as part of the Budget, Minister Duncan announced that Ontario would convert
to a single sales tax, the HST, to be administered by the CRA. The Legislature subsequently
approved the introduction of the HST and established July 1, 2010, as the effective date for the
new tax system. On or about November 9, 2009, the Ministry and the CRA entered into an
agreement wherein the CRA assumed responsibility for various tax administration services
formerly performed by the Ministry in relation to the Retail Sales Tax Act (“RSTA”). Notably,
the STR Initiative did not involve the transfer of Ministry work to the CRA as the HST’s
implementation involved increasing the percentage of tax that the CRA already collected as
Goods and Services Tax.
[8] To understand the impact of the new tax system, the Ministry conducted an
analysis of its RSTA-related work. It identified 1550 positions that performed varying
percentages of RSTA-related work, spread across 13 Ontario communities. With respect to these
positions, the Ministry estimated that the equivalent of 1253 full-time positions performed RSTA
Will receive a job offer acceptance incentive in the am
…
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work. Therefore, the move to a federally administered single sales tax impacted approximately
one-half of the full-time positions of the Ministry.
[9] In March of 2010, the Ministry entered into a Human Resources Agreement
(“STR HRA”) with the federal government to obtain the best possible employment arrangements
for its STR Initiative-impacted employees. Under this agreement, all 1253 STR Initiative-
impacted employees received guaranteed CRA job offers. With respect to the OPSEU
bargaining unit, the Ministry secured job offers with the CRA for a total of 744 employees. The
CRA job offers contained benefits and terms and conditions of employment that were
comparable to, or that in some instances exceeded, those that the employees had enjoyed with
the OPS, including under the OPSEU Collective Agreement. As well, the CRA opened new
offices in Whitby and Oshawa to accommodate oncoming STR Initiative-impacted staff.
[10] On or about March 9, 2010, the Ministry published a Q & A document which it
distributed to all Ministry employees. This document included the following two questions and
answers at pages 13-14:
41. Will there be any incentives offered to accept positions with the CRA?
There are no incentives being offered to employees. Senior Management is
satisfied that the HRA negotiated kept the interests of our impacted
employees first and foremost. One hundred job offers, in geographic regions
that match ours, and with salary and job protection guarantees are notable
achievements.
42. How does this agreement compare with the HRA negotiated for the
ministry’s corporations tax employees?
Ontario was able to achieve 100 per cent job offers for all employees
impacted by the HST implementation, which was not the case for the CTAR.
This is significant given the current economic climate and the fact that the
CRA is not assuming any of our work in progress as they did for corporations
tax.
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[11] CRA job offers for “Wave 1” STR Initiative-impacted employees were rolled out
on or about June 25, 2010 and CRA job offers for “Wave 2” staff were rolled out on or
about December 17, 2010. Employees who accepted job offers have commenced or will
commence CRA employment on either November 25, 2010 (for Wave 1) or March 1,
2012 (for Wave 2).
[12] As a schedule B Negotiated Transfer, the circumstances of the STR Initiative and
the affected employees are governed by Appendix 18 of the OPSEU Collective Agreement.
Particular reference was made to the following:
6.4 Employees who accept a job offer in accordance with Article 6.1.1 with a receiving
employer will be deemed to have resigned effective the date they commence employment
with the new employer, and no other provisions of the Collective Agreement will apply
except for Article 53 or 78 (Termination Pay).
…
6.6 Where the salary of the job offered by the receiving employer is less than eighty-five
percent (85%) of the employee’s current weekly salary, or if the employee’s service or
seniority are not carried over to the receiving employer, the employee may decline the
offer. In such a case, the employee may exercise the rights prescribed by Article 20
(Employment Stability) and/or paragraphs 2 to 5 of Appendix 9. The employee must
elect whether or not to accept employment with the receiving employer within three (3)
days of receiving an offer. In default of election, the employee shall be deemed to have
accepted the offer.
…
8.3 When an employer signs a transfer agreement with a hospital, municipality or other
employer in respect to transfers under Schedule B, the employer agrees that OPSEU will
be provided with a copy of the transfer agreement that the employer has signed with the
municipality, hospital or other receiving employer. If OPSEU believes that the transfer
agreement is not in compliance with Article 6.0, OPSEU may refer the matter to
mediation/arbitration within a seven (7) calendar day time period and the matter must be
resolved within that time period.
[13] With both the CTR Initiative and the STR Initiative, employees who accepted a
CRA job offer did not carry over their seniority. The only rights they enjoyed upon accepting
the CRA job offer were pursuant to 6.4 of Appendix 18 of the Collective Agreement. The
Ministry and OPSEU did not enter into any Memorandum of Agreement in respect of the STR
Initiative, let alone a provision that provided for a job offer acceptance incentive.
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[14] In support of the Employer’s position that the GSB lacked jurisdiction to
adjudicate these grievances, Employer counsel referred me to the following decisions: OPSEU
(Dobroff et al.) and Ministry of the Environment (2008), GSB Nos. 2003-0905 et al.
(Dissanayake); OPSEU (Sutherland) and Ministry of Labour (2008), GSB No. 2006-0519
(Dissanayake); OPSEU (May et al.) and Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional
Services (2007), GSB No. 2001-1151 (Abramsky); OPSEU (Nadeau et al.) and Ministry of
Transportation (2009), GSB No. 2007-3497 (Gray); OPSEU (Vitorino et al. and Ministry of
Government Services (2010), GSB Nos. 2009-1293 et al. (Abramsky); and, Re Cuddy Food
Products and U.F.C.W., Locs. 175 & 633 (2003), 121 L.A.C. (4th) 56 (Etherington). Union
counsel relied on the following decisions: Re United Electrical Workers , Local 512 and Tung-
Sol of Canada Ltd. (1964), 15 L.A.C. 161 (Reville); OPSEU (Union) and Ministry of
Community, Family and Children’s Services (2004), GSB Nos. 2000-0447 et al. (Leighton);
OPSEU (Union) and Ministry of Revenue (2010), GSB No. 2010-0045 (Leighton); OPSEU
(Beek et al.) and Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services (2007), GSB Nos.
2004-1463 et al. (Petryshen); and, OPSEU (Williams/Barber) and Ministry of Correctional
Services (1991), GSB Nos. 1448/90 et al. (Samuels).
[15] Having reviewed the facts and having considered the submissions, I am satisfied
the grievances are problematic in a number of respects. Article 8.3 of Appendix 18 provides that
a transfer agreement can be challenged by OPSEU within a narrow time frame. In this instance
however there is no Union grievance challenging the transfer agreement that arose from the STR
Initiative. The only challenge with respect to the transfer has been made by the grievances now
before me. As well, the grievances before me rely on the incentive payment provision in the
2007 Agreement between the Ministry and OPSEU, even though that agreement was made
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“without prejudice or precedent”. Although unnecessary to decide whether one of these features
would be fatal to these grievances, I mention them simply to illustrate that the grievances raise a
number of challenges for the Union.
[16] I agree with the Employer’s contention that the GSB does not have jurisdiction to
deal with the grievances. As Employer counsel argued, the basis of the monetary claim being
made here is a classic “me too” argument. The employees affected by the STR Initiative claim
entitlement to an incentive payment simply because employees affected by the CTR Initiative
were offered an incentive payment. The key difference is that the incentive payment provided
for in the circumstances of the CTR Initiative was a term of the 2007 Agreement and that there is
no Collective Agreement provision which obliges the Employer to provide for an incentive
payment to employees impacted by the STR Initiative. I disagree with Union counsel’s
contention that there is a link between the claim advanced here and the Collective Agreement.
The following comments at page 7 in OPSEU (Sutherland), supra, are applicable in this case:
“…I agree with employer counsel that the union’s claim amounts to a “me too” argument, which
this Board has repeatedly rejected in the absence of a link to a substantial right under the
collective agreement, i.e. that it resulted in a violation or abridgement of a right under the
collective agreement. The Board has held that it has no jurisdiction over a grievance which
alleges that the employer had failed to treat equals in similar fashion when exercising its
management rights.”
[17] It is arguable that incentive pay was warranted in the CTR Initiative but not in the
STR Initiative having regard to the different circumstances in these Initiatives. Nonetheless, on
one level, one can appreciate why some employees affected by the STR Initiative may feel
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unfairly treated. However, whatever the reasons for offering the incentive in one situation but
not in the other, the absence of a Collective Agreement provision to base the monetary claim
being advanced here leads me with no alternative but to conclude that the GSB has no
jurisdiction to hear these grievances.
[18] For the forgoing reasons, these grievances are dismissed.
Dated at Toronto this 27th day of March 2012.
Ken Petryshen, Vice-Chair