HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-0334.Barry.82-08-12,
334180
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
For the Crievor:
For the Employer:
Hearing:
OLBEU (Cecil Barry)
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
Grievor
Employer
K. Swinton - Vice-Chairman
SD. Kaufman - Member
E. Orsini - Member
P. Cavalluzzo, Co&e1
Golden, Levinson
M.P. Moran, Counsel
Hicks, Morley, Hamilton, Stewart d( StOrie
June I, 1982
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In this case, Mr. Cecil Barry grieves that he has been unjustly
denied a promotion to the position of Assistant Store Manager in Store 202
in Sarnia.
The job was posted, in compliance with the collective
agreement requirements, on March 17, 1980. The successful applicant was
Mr. P. Lehn, who was given notice of the proceedings before this Board but
chose not to attend.
The relevant collective agreement provisions (July 1, 1980 to
June 30, 1982) are the following:
16.6(a) Where employees are being considered for pro-
motion, length of service from appointment date will be
the determining factor provided the employee is qualified
to perform the job.
16.10 In the event an employee who has been promoted
Is unable to perform the requirements of the position in a
satisfactory manner within a period not exceeding three (3)
months from date of appointment, the employee shall be re-
classified by the Boards to the employee’s previous classi-
fication.
At the time of the posting, Mr. Barry held the position of
~Clerk 3. He had been employed by the Liquor Control Board since
February 2, 1972, although at the time’bf the posting, he had recently
returned from an absence on Workmen’s Compensation caused by a back
problem. This absence extended from June 10, 1978 until
February 25, 1980.
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After the applications for the job were submitted,
Mr. Jack Jennings, Director of Store Operations for the LCBO, sent the list
of candidates to the District Supervisor, Mr. Fred Varey, and asked him to
review three or four of the applicants, chosen because of their seniority or
classification. The Manager of the Store at which each applicant worked
was also asked for a recommendation. In Mr. Barry’s case, both his
Manager, Mr. Evans, and the District Supervisor, Mr. Varey, recommended
that he be given consideration for the position (Ex. 10, II). In a letter to
Mr. Jennings, Mr. Evans mentioned that Mr. Barry had been back at work
for a short time but “I find him capable to do all store work asked of him”.
Mr. Varey appears to have relied on a review of Mr. Barry’s file which, he
noted, contained nothing detrimental, and Mr. Evans’ view that Mr. Barry
was acting as a capable employee, for Mr. Varey had only met Mr. Barry
once. Both Mr. Evans and Mr. Varey also recommended Mr. Lehn be given
consideration for the position.
Mr. Jennings decided that the grievor was not qualified for the
job at that time because of his lengthy absence. Over the period of that
absence some 184 Store Operations Circulars had been, issued. from
Mr. Jennings’ office, written by him. -*These circulars often changed
procedures in the Store, although some contained several announcements
such as recent promotions. Each LCBO Store has a Manual of Procedures
which is updated by these circulars. The circulars are sent to the Stores
and made available for the employees’ information for a period before
being filed chronologically. Each year these circulars are moved from
active to inactive operation and then discarded. Mr. Jennings felt that the
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grievor had been back at work for an insufficient period to learn of
changed procedures during his absence. As well, he felt that it was
important for an Assistant Manager to know such procedures because the
Assistant Manager should act as a leader for the other employees in the
Store.
Mr. Barry admitted that he was not familiar with all the
changes in procedure by March or April, 1980. Although he had come into
the Store every two weeks during his absence to pick up his cheque, he had
not kept up with procedural changes, nor had he checked the file of
circulars on return to work. He felt that he would be adequately briefed on
changes by the other employees with whom he worked in the usual monthly
rotation of jobs at the Store, whereby employees worked at shelving, at the
front, and in the office. During the period of the competition, he had not
yet rotated through each stage and he was unsure whether he had worked in
the office. Mr. Barry also testified that he would have no trouble learning
of changes in procedure if given a three month trial period. He had acted
as an Assistant Manager in the past when sickness or vacation required him
to do so, both at Store 202 and at others. He also acted as Assistant
Manager and Manager at Store 202 in June of 1980, without any criticism of
his performance. At that time, he did not find many changes in procedure
that were difficult, and he felt that he could learn any procedural changes
in a short period.
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-I-T This case turns on the meaning to be attributed to
Articles 16.6(a) and 16.10, quoted earlier. Article 16.6(a) establishes a
“sufficient ability” clause, rather than a competitive seniority clause; The
focus is on the griever’s ability and qualifications to perform the job which
he seeks, rather than his ability relative to other applicants. In a case such
as this, an arbitration board’s task is to ask whether management has acted
arbitrarily, discriminatorily or unreasonably in establishing qualifications
for the job and then acted correctly in applying those qualifications to the
grievor.
In this case, counsel for the union did not attack the
qualifications set for the job. He appears to have accepted the
reasonableness of management’s requirement that an Assistant Manager be
familiar with current Store Operations procedures. Indeed, it would be
difficult to quarrel with such a proposition. Instead, counsel focused on
two arguments. First, he argued that Mr. Jennings acted improperly in
deciding that the grievor was not qualified for the position. He pointed to
the facts that Mr. Jennings had no knowledge of the griever’s current
familiarity with procedures at the time of the decision, while the gr,ievor’s
Store Manager and District Supervisor, who were both familiar with the
Store’s operations, recommended the griever for promotion. In addition,
counsel argued that Article 16.10 provided for a three-month trial period
and Mr. Jennings erred in failing to ask whether the grievor would be able
to perform the job within three months. Counsel suggested that the
grievor would be able to do so, referring to the minor nature of the changes
as evidenced by two Store Operations Circulars entered as exhibits, and the
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fact that the grievor successfully acted”&- Assistant Manager in June,
1980.
Counsel for the employer disputed that the grievor was
qualified at the time of appointment, as he had not rotated through all
phases of the Store’s operations and Mr. Jennings was satisfied that
familiarization was needed after the griever’s lengthy absence.
Furthermore, counsel described Article 16.10 as a provision designed to
protect the job security of an employee who has been promoted and then
faiJs to meet the requirements of the job rather than provided a trial
period. He emphasized the words “has been promoted” in Article 16.10 to
demonstrate that the section comes into play after an employee has
demonstrated his qualifications.
Arbitrators have generally held that an employee seeking
promotion must be qualified at the time of the job posting, and he or she is
not entitled to either a trial or training period absent collective agreement
Ianguage specifying such entitlement (e.g.’ Re Reynolds Aluminum Co.
Canada Ltd. and International Molders and Allied Workers Union, Local 28
(1974), 5 L.A.C. (Zd) 251 (Schiff) at 256; ll;e Canadian Trailmobile Ltd. and
United Automobile Workers, Local 397 (1975), IO L.A.C. (2d) 92 (Adams)).
Some arbitrators have, however, stated that while an employee is not
entitled to a trial or training period, he or she should be given a period of
“familiarization” in the new job, where the job is not highly technical and
the employee needs only a limited amount of instruction to learn the
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routine of the job (Re International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine
Workers, Local 542 land RCA Victor Ltd. (19711, 22 L.A.C. 329 (Simmons)
at 331; Re St. Catherines General Hospital and Service Employees Union
(19751, 10 L.A.C. (2d) 258 (Adams) at 266). Otherwise, it would be difficult
for an employee to qualify who had not previously performed the job.
After reviewing the evidence, we have concluded that the
grievor was not immediately qualified for the job at the time of posting or,
decision-making. While Mr. Jennings acted only on an assumption that the
griever would not be familiar with procedures after a lengthy period of
absence, as well as discussions with Mr. Varey and Mr. Evans, we heard
evidence from the grievor admitting that he was not up-to-date on current
procedures. He had not, tried to keep current while away, nor to
familiarize himself immediately on return and, therefore, in March and
April of 1980 he was not technically “qualified”.
His counsel suggested that many of the Store Operations
Circulars contained information of minimal importance, such as changes in
Store telephone numbers or notices of promotions. However, there were
184 circulars issued during his absence, and we are satisfied that some of
the information in these bulletins was of a more significant nature - for
example, changes in check-off procedures for warehouse deliveries. The
grievor would have to be familiar with such procedures to function
effectively as an Assistant Manager.
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Although some arbitrators have indicated that an individual
need not be immediately qualified so long as a familiarization period would
qualify the employee for the job, that line of jurisprudence does not assist
the grievor in this case. We have here a need for more than a
familiarization period or brief introduction to routines in order to take on
the Assistant Manager’s job. The. grievor needed a period of rotation
through the Store to refresh and update himself on procedures. In effect,
he needed some retraining with the assistance of the other employees in
order to meet the job requirements of the Assistant Manager position. This
seems to go beyond familiarization and invoIve some on-the-job training.
As well, it seems inconsistent with the team leader functions of the
Assistant Manager.
While counsel for the union stressed the fact that the grievor
met the job requirements of Assistant’ Manager in June, it is important to
remember that he had then been back in the job for over three months,
rather than about one and one half to two at the time of the posting and
recommendations. It is clear that Mr. Barry is,a good employee and that
he would learn the changes in routine. Unfortunately, the timing of the job
posting intervened before he could acquire that necessary knowledge.
While we do not find the griever to be qualified because of the
evidence which we heard at the hearing, we do feel some disquiet about
Mr. Jennings’ method of proceeding in this job competition. At no time did
he contact the grievor to determine the griever’s qualifications or current
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knowledge of procedures. Instead, he relied on recommendations from the
griever’s supervisors, in writing followed up by verbal communication (of
which we had no evidence), as well as his own assumptions.. This board has
stressed over and over again, in many cases, the importance of fair
procedures in job competitions (e.g. Re Quinn, 9178; Re Remark, 1491771.
While an employer need not interview every applicant for a job, it should be
fair in deciding who is eligible for consideration and should make efforts to
obtain accurate, first-hand information about serious contenders.
Mr. Jennings did not do.that here. In this case, his procedure does not
affect the outcome of the case, as Mr. Barry’s evidence indicated that he
was not qualified. In another case, the result might well be different
because of the board’s inability to decide whether the grievor might have
been qualified.
This brings us to the issue of the trial period, which the union
argues is found in Article 16.10. Arbitrators require collective agreement
language in order to find a trial period, for the employer is put to expense
if it must wait for a period before determining whether the employee is
qualified for the job. In this case, the language of that section does not
seem to contemplate a trial period. Rather, it protects an employee who
has qualified for the job at the time of the competition, if he subsequently
fails to meet the job requirements. While the language is not synonymous
with that in other cases, Article 16.10 is similar to the clause in Reynolds
(above at 256). In that case, a collective agreement clause protecting an
employee’s right to revert to his old position was not held to be equivalent
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to a trial period provision. lhe board held-that an employee must qualify
for the job before the provision took effect. In Re Domtar Fine Papers and
United Paperworkers International Union, Local 212 (19741, 5 L.A.C. (2d)
191 (Simmons), the board again held, on the language of the agreement,
that a trial period was not required. An employee by that agreement had a
threshold requirement to prove “equal efficiency” with other employees in
order to obtain a trial period. Here, the grievor is required to prove
qualification at the time of posting.
Therefore, as the griever did not meet the requirements of the
job at the time of posting, his grievance must fail.
DATED at Toronto this 12th day of August, 1982.
K. S?inton Vife Chairman
“1 dissent” (Dissent to follow)
5. Kaufman Member _s
. . .F
E. Orsini h!ember