HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-0570.Mepham.82-08-12570/81
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN,EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
iHE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
Before:
For the Griever:
For the Emoloyer:
HearinK:
OLBEU (Bob Mepham)
and
Crievor
The Crown in Rix:ht of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
Emplover
S.B. Linden, O.C. Vice Chairman
P. Craven .Llember
J.H. ,Morrow Yeriiber
M.A. Green, Counsef
Golden, Levinson
R.J. Drmai, Counse!
Hicks, Xlorley, Hamilron, Stewart & Storie
April 16. 1982
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This is the grievance of Mr. Bob Mepham, who alleges that
he was improperly denied promotion to the position of
'B' Store Assistant Xanager (Liquor Store Nanager 2) by his
employer, the Liquor Control Board of Ontario. By circular
dated May 19th, 1981 and addressed to 'all employees at a
list of Toronto-area stores, tk employer so1icite.d
applications "for promotion in the Toronto area" to the
disputed position ("Job Posting #910", Exhibit 3). m.
Mepham appears as one among the 112 applicants who responded '
to this posting in-a list of qlicants dated June 23rd, 1981,
Exhibit 4. On September lst, 2981, then employer issued
alother circular, entitled "J~I Posting #910 (announcement)",
Exhibit 5, which communicated tiat four promotions had been
awarded, listing the successful applicants and their seniority
dates. Four-promotions to-&he post of n'B' Store Assistant
Manager 2" had been made. Mr. Mepham was not one‘of these
four, and he had greater seniority than any of them. On
September 18th, 1981 he grieved the denial of promotion. A
grievance meeting was held betmeen the parties on December
18th, 1981 and by letter of December 24th. 1981, Exhibit 2,
the employer denied the grievamce saying, "it has been
decided that the grievor as evidenced by recent performance
was not qualified for promotim at the time of the selection".
??le grievance was subsequently remitted to this Board for
determination, and a hearing wz held on April 16th, 1982.
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The relevant provision of the Collective Agreement is
Article 16.6(a):
"Where employees are being considered for
promotion, length of service from appoint-
ment date will be the determining factor
provided the employee is qualified to
perform the job."
As noted above, Wr. Plepham was senior to all four successful
candidates for the promotion. (Ten other unsuccessful
.candidates were senior to Mr. Mepham, a fact whose bearing
we consider later-in this award.) He chose at the hearing
to challenge the promotion of the most senior of t!-te
successful candidates, Mr. A. E. Warwick, who, we are informed,
had been notified of the hearing.% heard no evidence as to
Mr. Warwick's qualifications for the position, but on the
language of the Article quoted above, this is not material to .,..Y .,,.. . .
the determination of the grievance, The.Article requires that
the most senior candidate who possesses the requisite qualifi-
cations is to be awarded the promotion. The clear implication
is that candidates are to be considered in the order of their
seniority. The first candidate (i.e. the one with the greatest
seniority) who qualifies for the job is to'be awarded the
first vacant position, the next the second vacant position and
so on until all the vacancies have been filled. It follows
+hat if Nr. :!epham was qualified for 'ue position he was in
line to receive it even before :lr. !jarwick, who had less
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whether Mr. Megham was qualified for the position of 'B'
Store Assistant Manager (Liquor Store Yanager 2).
The parties agreed that the onus is on the grievor in the
first instance to establish a prima facie case that he was
qualified for the promotion. The onus then shifts ‘to the
employer to show that in fact the grievor was not qualified.
In the ordinarycourse of such matters, then board would expect
to be presented with evidence establishing what qualifications
the position requires. It would then be up to the grievor to
show that he possessed these qualifications. Then the
employer would seek to demonstrate that the grievor was not
qualified or, if in the employer's view the grievor had failed
to satisfy the initial onus, it might choose to present no
evidence and ask the board to find that the grievor, on his
or her own showing, was unqualified.
In this case, however, the matter was complicated by the
employer's submissions. First, that there was no Collective
Agreement requirement that there be qualifications for the
job (although in its submission the grievor was required to
show he was qualified); second, that if there were qualifications
it was within the unfettered discretion of the employer to
determine what they were; third, that in any event there was no
C'oliective Agreement obligation on the emc:oyer to disclose
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what '&e qualifications were if in fact there were any.
Further complications were introduced with the employer's
related submissions going to the selection procedure. First
that there was no requirement that there be any such procedure:
second that if there was to be a procedure the employer had
unfettered discretion to design and implement it: and third
that this board lacks jurisdiction to enquire into the
adequacy of the procedure employed if in fact there was any
procedure employed. -Before 'moving to the evidence about P!r.
Nepham's qualifications, then, it is necessary to consider
these submiss ions.
Are Qualifications Required? 7
The first question we are called upon to decide here is whether,
on the langxiage of this Collective Agreement, it is necessary
that *here be qualiiications attached to specific positions.
On the language of Article 16.6(a), quoted above, it is plain
that we must answer'in the affirmative. The article requires
that the senior qualified candidate receive the promotion. If
there were in fact~no requirement that a Tcsition carry qualifi-
cations with it,, it would necessarily folloij that the most
senior applicant automatically receive the promotion; But it
is a comx3n rule of construction that Collective >greement
?rovisicns are to beinterpreted so as to gi>:e meanin< to --'leir
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words. The parties obviously intended (and indeed it is a
matter of basic common sense) that there be qualifications,
and that unqualified candidates, no matter what their seniority,
not be promoted. We find that the Collective Agreement requires
that there be qualifications attached to positions.
The second question asks, in effect, how those qualifications
are to be determined, and whether this Board has jurisdiction to
enquire into the adequacy of the employer's determination of
what qualifications are to be required of applicants for a
position. Counsel for the employer directed us to the "Management
Functions" provisions of the Collective Agreement, and in
particular to Article 3.1, which mirrors the language of the
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act, Section 18, and provides
as follows:
"The Union acknowledges that it is.the exclusive
function of the Boards to m,a.naget which function, without limiting the gene?%lity of the foregoing,
includes the right to determine,
(a) employment, appointment, complement; organi-
zation, assignment, discipiine, dismissal, sus-
pension, work methods and procedures,, kinds and
locations of equipment and classificationof
positions; a,nd.,,
(b) merit system, training and develcpment,.
appraisal and superannuation, the governing
principles of whrch are subject to review by ^,e
employer with the bargaining agent,
and such matters will not b.e the subject of
collective bargaining nor come within-'L!e jcris- diction of a Board."
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On this language, it was s.ubmitted, the employer enjoyed
an unfettered discretion to determine what qualifications
were appropriate for appointment to the various positions.
Counsel for the employer pointed to the absence of any
provisions requiring that the employer tact "fairly" in
making such determinations, and argued that this Board is
prevented in law from imposing such a requirement in the
absence of plain language in the Collective Agreement.
Up to a point, WB accept these submissions. There is no
doubt on this language that it is the, exclusive.province ,,
of the employer to determine what qualifications should
be required. In our view, however, the employer's exercise
of that right to determine is qualified in some respect.
First, since, as we have already found, the Collective
Agreement requires that there be a set of qualifications
associated with a position , we do not believe that the
employer isfree, to exercise his right by determining that
there are to be nr~ qualifications for a particular position.
Second, the exercise of the, right is qualified by the rules
of natural justice. The employer must not make its deter-
mination arbitrarily, discriminatorily or in bad faith.
iYi.nally, with respect to the question of "fairness"-;we
do not find that the current jurisprudence on this issue
absolves the employer of the more limited duty of reason-
ableness. Thus is was determined long aqo ',at in cst3blis!~i::c
t3 e :?!;a 1 L _ ;'ications for.a'?ositlbn, t!!ie i:?:~)loyer zus: t&e
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into account the nature of the positions and avoid taking
into account irrelevant considerations. See, for example,
the well known cases of St. Lawrence Seaway Authority (1969) ..,
23 LAC 156 (Weiler) and.Polymer Corp. Ltd. (1968) 19 LAC 38~6
."~ (Wea.therill), in which,it was determined that thetests used
to assess candidates' qualifications for a posi~tion must be
relevant to the position: if the tests must be' relevant, so
a fortiori must be the specifications of qualifications
themselves.
Finally we turn to the question whether the employer is
required to communicate to candidates what qualifications I..
are required for the position for which they are applying.
We must say we were quite surprised to hear counsel for the
employer insist.that there was no such obligation on the
employer, particularly in light of his equally insistent
claim that the grievor was obliged to show he met the
qualifications. In any event, this argument is easily
disposed of on the language of the Collective Agreement.
Article 16.5(a) governs job postings and provides as follows
(emphasis supplied): .I
"If a new job classification within the
bargaining unit is created or a x3aner.t
vacancv occurs in an exjstinq job classifi- cation berore ~n~.~~tmq appilcat~o~~s from
La?? the qecgraphic area as speciiied, notice of such .new job or v.acanc? for a
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period of ten (10) working days during
which employees within such area who have
comoleted their orobationarv oeriod mav wiy- The notice shall stipulate -
oualifications, classifications, salary
range, department and location concerned."
We find that when a positionis posted.pursuant to this
Article, as occurred in the present grievance, the employer
ins required to include on the posting a.statement of qualifi-
cations for the position. We note that Exhibit 3, the job
posting at issue here, fails to satisfy this requirement,
It is accordingly in breach of Article 16.5(a). It should qo
without saying that the employer cannot be' permitted to rely
on this breach, so as to continue to maintain that it need
not supply the particulars of the qualifications to the grievor.
Is a Selection Procedure Reouired?
We have already stated that in our view the language of Article
16.6(a) clearly contemplates that candidates are to be ranked
by seniority and then examined in turn to determine whether
they meet the qualifications for the position. As candidates
are found, in order of seniority, to be qualified, the vacancies
are filled. It must be emphasized that on this language there
is no question of comparing candidates one with another, or
asking whether one candidate is more qualified than another.
The plain language of the Article requires +&at Lhis mode of ~.
filling vacancies be adhered to, and it PlaLnly fol?ck.s.t!!at
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a selection procedure must be devised that will ensure such
proper consideration. It follows, first, that there must
be a procedure, and second, that in designing it the
discretion of the employer is fettered to the extentthat .the
procedure must ensure that the requirements of the Article
are met. The employer's discretion is similarly fettered by
the requirements of natural justice discussed in the preceding
section, and by the same requirement of relevance.
This Board is of t6e view that it does have .jurisdiction to
determine whether the selection procedure employed meets the
requirements set out above. Of co*rse, the employer retains
the right to design a procedure that suits its administrative
convenience, so long'as the procedure is one that will satisfy
these requirements. We shall have more to say about this
matter below, once we have consrdered the evidence in the
current grievance.
Evidence as to aalification -
The grievo:, Mr. Mepham, joined the staff of the LCBO in 1969.
He was employed first at the Avenue Soad sto're, transferred
to a store at Eglinton and Laird in 1977, and transferred.to
his present store, $58~4 (Finch'and kCallui) in 198i. Ee
e:<pericnced the usual progress.ion thro-gh k!e~-salary ranges,
reaching the maximum salary in his current clsssification
in July, 1979. He began his employment with the LCBO as a
Clerk 2, and is currently a Clerk 4. This is a bookkeeping
position. His duties involve keeping reports of the store's
cashflow and sto'ck, "cashing,,out" the store's cashiers, and
filing weekly and monthly reports of sales and stock with the
LCBO's head office. His current store is classified as a
'C' store, which means that it has no Assistant Manager. A
'C' store has a Manager, and a 'B' store, by contrast, has a
Manager, an Assistant Manager, and a Clerk 4 bookkeeper, along
with a complement of Clerk 3'5, Clerk '2's, and SO on. m . ,...L .
Mepham testified that in the course of his career he has
served as Stors~Manager or Assistant Manager in an acting
capacity on a number of occasions. Prior to April, 1980,
his current store was classified 'B' and he regularly served
as acting Assistant Manager and acting Manager on Thursday or
Friday evening shifts. When the store was reclassified as a
'C' store he continued to have charge of these shifts on a
regular basis, in the capacity of acting Store Manager.
Moreover; he filled in as acting Manager when the then Store
Xanager was away sick or on, vacation. Plr . %epham's employee
appraisal reports, dated September, 1979 and September, 1980
were submitted as Exhibits 6 and 7.respectively. ('2 furtier
annual appraisal for 1981 is.discussed below.) T2e 1979
appraisal showed him as "above average" on three of'L'e
t.tl.irtcrn catc~orles, tind "average" on c!?+z othrrs. 'me l"SO
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appraisal was identical in this respect. The Store Xanager-.
at the time, Mr. Cramer, commenti& on the 1979 appraisal,
"Mr. Mepham performs his duties 5-n a satisfactory manner.
He gets along well with his fellLaw employees, and very
courteous with the public. At rmagimum salary in his classifi-
cation as a Clerk IV." On the IL.980 appraisal he wrote, "XX.
Plepham gets along well with his fell? employees, and very
courteous with the customers. Bas a good knowledge of store
operations. At ma&nnu salary as a Clerk IV." The District
Supervisor wrote on the 1979 form, "Ifir. Mepham (sic) is a
mature employee, whose work is acceptable in his present
classification. He co-operates fully, contributes to the
operation~of this small conventional store and is receiving
maximum salary for present position. Recommend no change at
present time." The District Supervisor wrote on the 1980 form,
"Mature,,dependable employee with a hearing problem who
believes that this is holding him back from becoming an
.I~. Assistant manager. He has requested a transfer to another
store for further evaluation. I concur. Recommend no change
at this time." (It was no part of the employer's argLr,ent
in this grievance that Kr. Kephan's hearin#played a part in
the decision to deny his promotion. It therefore did not fall
to us to determine whether it interfered with his ability to
perform his job. ??!r . !,Ie$an wears two hfaz<iis aicls, a?.d
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the questions put to him by counsel.)
Since Mr. Mepham's other evidence was directed to responding
to what he perceived might be the contrary evidence of the
employer (and we deal with this below), this amounted in
essence to his evidence that~he was qualified for the position
of Assistant Manager for which he had applied. It will be
recalled, first that there eqists an initial~onus on the
grievor to present a prima facie case that he is qualified
for the position, and second that the employer had failed in
its duty to supply particulars oft the qualifications required
for the position. As will become apparent, at no point in
these proceedings was the employer able or willing to Trovide .
the grievor or, for that matter, this Board, with a statement
of qualifications. The Board has therefore to determine
whether :Ir. Mepham has satisfied the initial onus, without
the benefit of having.the employer's statement of required
qualifications before it. We are satisfied on the evidence,
having regard to these circumstances, that ?lr. Mepham has
shown prima facie grounds for'considering him to have been --
qualified for the position of Assistant Xanager. In Tarticu~lar,
his evidence that he has filled this position in an acting
capacity (and indeed has acted.as :?anager as well) indicates
t:,at he is fanCliar with the requirements of the job and has
shown himself able to carry then out. :le have also taken ix20
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account the evidence of the job appraisals, including the
comment of his Manager that he "has a good knowledge of
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store operations". On this evidence, we are satisfied that
the onus must shift to the employer to show that Mr. ;4epham
was not qualified for promotion to Assistant Manager.
We have already alluded to the fact that in the course of
I4r. Xepham's evidence, counsel for the Union intrcduced a
third performance appraisal, dated October, 1981, Exhibit 8.
We note that this document was produced after the decision
to deny Mr. Mepham the promotion he sought had already been
. taken, and that it was introduced into evidence to offer ilr.
,Yepham an opportunity to speak to two incidents to which it
refers, incidents that took place before the'promotion
decision was made and which, the Union anticipated might have
been the grounds upon which the denial decision was taken.
The first of these incidents had to do with errors in the
store reports that were found by head office auditors. We
are satisfied on the evidence of :4r. :lephan and the other
witnesses that this problem arose out of a simple misunder-
standing, and that the "errors" complained of occurred, to
the extent that they were Yr. !.lepham's responsibility at all,
>~cause t!!e auditors examined a report that had not yet~befn
completed and checked. ;Je fi?d Llat I;iis incident dces net
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or his suitability for promotion. The second incident
had to do with an alleged improper procedure in "cashing out"
a cashier. We heard a great deal of evidence from all witnesses
about this incident, and we note that the employer's witnesses,
the current Store Manager and the current District Supervisor,
disagreed in their account of what the proper procedure should
have been. In any event, we find that the procedure used.by
Mr. Hepham at the time of the incident was the procedure in
common use by employees at his store (including the Store
Manager) and probably at other stores as well. We are satisfied
on the evidence that this incident does not reflect adversely
on Mr. Plepham's qualifications or- suitability for promotion to
the job of.Assistant Manager. Raving made these findings of
fact, we do not consider the appraisal of October, 1981 to have
any further relevance to the determination of the matter before
'US .
At this point it is necessary to refer to a procedural submission
placed before us by the parties. The Union took the view
initially that the only grounds upon which the employer relied
in determining that flr. Xepham was not qualified.for tie
:>romotion were the two incidents cited above. It was t??e Unicn's
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having restricted itself to these two incidents. The Board
then proposed hearing evidence'as to whether or not the
employer had indicated at some earlier stage of the procedure
that'it rested its denial on these two incidents alone.
Counsel for t&e employer objected to this procedure however,
and submitted that under no circumstances could the employer
be?estopped from raising additional grounds for denial, no
matter what had transpired before. Counsel asked,that we
determine this quedtion in the hypothetical. We indi.cated
our reluctances to deal with questions of this sort on purely
hypothetical grounds, but ruled unanimously that in our view
circumstances could hypotheti'cally a'rise whereby the employer
was estopped from introducing new grounds at the hearing stage
in a denial of promotion grievance. We .indicated our
reluctance to hear evidence about what had transpired during ..:+ i
the grievance procedure, particularly as it might,relate to
attempts at settlement, but held that if an employer were to
indicate in the course of the grievance procedure that
certain matters were the sole reasons for its decisions, "Aat
this would be evidence in .the nature of a response'to the
grievance, that it would properly be before the Board, and
that th,e Union would be entitled to rely on this statement by
&!!I? e!!@oyer . Having so ruled in L\e hypothetical, we ?roceeGd
to hear evidence as to whether this employer had so restricted
itself in this :;ric\~2ncc, *2?nci WC. fc::rr? that i.: ?c,:.'. ,nlylt. I
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It fell next to the employer to rebut the griever's case
that he was qualified for the position. Its first witness
was the grievor's present Store -Tanager, Kr. Cameron. i xr .
Cameron supported Wr. Mepham's evidence on the "cashing out"
incident, and with respect to the audit errors-incident he
testified that the errors reported.in Exhibits 10 and 12 were
either not clearly traceable to the grievor, or were "the
sort of.small error you see all the.time~"; saying, for
example, of one df them, "it is not unusual for this error
to occur, every store will have. that". He acknowledged that
the errorscould have been Mr. Nepham's or the typists, and
that it was his responsibility to check the reports. Mr.
Cameronwas asked in cross-examination whether he knew Xr.
Mepham was applying for the promotion. His reply is
informative: "I gave him and.Mr. McHugh and Mr. McPherson the
notice of the posting. They were all qualified." (Emphasis
supplied.) Mr. Cameron was shown a letter hehad written to
his Area >lanager in August, 1981;complaining about Xr. Kepham,
Exhibit 11. He testified that he had written it because Of
criticism and reprimands he was receiving 'from head office
arising out of the incidents referred to earlier. We find on
14r. Cameron's evidence that Mr. Xepham bias not particularly
at fault in these incidents, and that the letter of complain:
bias therefore ill-founded. I&? found \!r. C2neron to be a _Erzzk
.?!Y1 candi:! 'wi'-T!e5s. ',:I2 concludf2 on iI15 c*:it;2nc? cat h.L.!
considered Mr. Elepham to be qualified for the promotion,
and. that none of the incidents he related has any bearing
on the question of Mr. Mepham's suitability or qualifications
for the promotion'. We note that Mr. Cameron was not consulted
as to whether Ilr. Mepha,should or should not be promoted.
The employer's only other witness was 'the District Supervisor
in the griever's, district, Mr. Fletcher. Y?. Fletcher gave
evidence aboutthe audit and "kashing out". incidents referred
to earlier. In some respects his evidence was in.conflict
not only with that of the grievor but with that of Mr. Cameron
as well. In light of Mr. Fletcher's general demeanor as a
witness, we are not inclined to adopt his versions of these
occurrences. In any event, Mr. Fletcher introduced no new
incidents that might go tq,,fhe question whether th' grievor
was qualified. He was the only witness who had actually been
present at the selection meeting where.the grievor's application
was denied, and he appears to have been the only person at that
meeting who was at all familiar with the griever. Fe testified
that he had not seen Mr. Cameron's letter,‘Exhibit 11, prior to.
that meeting, and so we must assil%e that it played no ?art in
the determination. Similarly, he had not seen the "follow-up
audit report", Exllibit 12, which is in any event dated after
CLe determination ~;;a* made. !ie conclu?e the:eEore, that at tie
tine IX. !leph<am's application for ~~roco:icn was consi?ered.
::lcre were no well-fc;:ndc:! c:;73!a::?t5 3hoct his ~erfor::t.~s3re
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within the knowledge of the selecto.rs. We find that the
employer has failed,to show that we 'should overturn Hr.
Mepham's & facie claim that he was qualified, and indeed
that the only employer witness who testified as to whether
or not Mr. Mepham was qualified - Mr. Cameron - said that
in his opinion he was. We concur in that view. We find that
~Mr. Mepharn was qualified for the position of Assistant Xanager,
subject to our earlier reservatio&'about not having a formal
statement of qualifications before us.
The Selection Process -
On the evidence we have already reviewed, it is apparent that'
the employer violated article 16.6(a) in failing to promote
Mr. Mepham (whom we found, with the reservations already noted,
.,. to have been.qualified) .before promoting Mr. Warwick, who was a
less senior employee. In order to see wherein that violation
arose, we~must now turn to the evidence we heard about the
process undertaken by the employer to select employees for
promotion under Job Posting $910. The only evidence before us
on this matter is the testimony of Xr. Fletche,r, which can be
sumnarized as follows:
A meeting was held of the seven District SuPervisors in the area
to which the Posting was rel*vant, and tieir ;\:ea !lanager, a !!r.
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have before them a statement of the qualifications ~for
the posted position (Mr. Fletcher testified that there had
at some indeterminate time been a circular issued listing
these qualifications, but it was not before the selection
meeting, nor did he recall.when the circular was issued,
which circular was involved, or when he had last read it).
Nor., it would appear, did the selectors have before them
any .documentation as to the qualifications of the various
candidates for the 'position. Apparently the Area Xanager
read the names from the list one by one, and the District
Supervisor. in charge of the store where each of the applicants
was employed gave his recommendation as to whether or not
the candidate should be promoted. As Mr. Fletcher put it, 0,
"basically all thathappenedwas as we went down the, list the
Supervisor would say, 'I recommend (or) 'I don't recommend'".
When Mr. Mepham's name came up, f4r. Fletcher said,"not
recommended". He could not recall whether anything except
this was said, although he thought that Mr. Brady might have
said something. It is clear on the evidence that no ex&-ination
of the various candidates' qualifications,was undertaken at
this meeting. It is equally clear that in not recommending
Mr. Nepham, Mr. Fletcher had not turned.his mind to tie formal
qualifications for the job-, or to whether or no;-!lr. !!e;ham
possessed the required qualifications. T.here is 20 evi?e.nce~
to suggest, and ,WE are not inclined to beliel'e, that a
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different situation resulted with respect to any of the
other candidates for the posting.
This selection proce~dure leaves a great deal to be desired;
We have already noted that the language of the Collective
Agreement clearly contemplates a process in which candidates
are takenin order of seniority, examined as to t!!eir
qualifications, and appointed seriatim to the vacant Fositions
until these are all filled. The procedure employed here
satisfied only the first of these requirements, and that only
in form. Similarly, we have already noted a violation of
Article 16.5(a) in that candidates were not informed through
the posting of the qualifications,required. We now find that
the selectors themselves were left equally in the dark. It is
beyond the capacity of. this Board to understand how a selection
committee could assess whether a candidate was qualified for
a position when it had before its neither a statement of the
qualifications for the position nor a listing of the candidate's
/ own qualifications.
Remedy'
We have found that Xr.. Ilepham's application for promotion,to
the position of 'B' Store Assistant Xanaqer ,(Liguor Store
:%nnager 2) was improperly denied, in violation of the ~rovisL0r.s
of the Collective lqreement. Pie hi3.e found that 2. I:z;h2;n
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presented a cogent prima facie case that he was qualified --
for the promotion, given the rather unusual circumstance
that no formal statement of qualifications for the post
was available to the Board. We, have found that he was Fassed
over in order of seniority in favour of Mr. WarWick.
A number of remedial options are available to us. If we were
satisfied that on the employer's own criteria the grievor
possessed the requisite qualifications we might order his
appointment to the position. Alternatively, we might take
,~ into account the fact that other candidates, more senior
than the grievor, were passed over, and depending upon the
circumstances of the particular case, we might conclude that
their applications should be reconsidered. If we were
unsure that the grievor was qualified but weresatisfied that
the selection procedure was so flawed as to have rendered it
unlikely that the question of his qualif.ications was properly
addressed, we might require the employer to conduct the
entire selection process over again. Depending on the nature
and severity.of the flaws in the process, we might find it
necessary to attach conditions to this reprocessing SO as to
ensure that it was carried out properly.
In the present case, where we do not, have before us a
statement of positicn qualifications, \<e fiend it cifflcult ~~
Lo shape a wholly satisfactory r~:medy. I: we felt able to
. .c - 23 -
rely on our judgment of Mr. Mepham's qualifications,'we
would have no hesitation in appointing him to the position
even in the face of the ten more senior unsuccessful
candidates, for they have apparently exercised their option
not to grieve the outcome. !qe are satisfied that ?Ir. :leFham
has established a prima facie case for his qualifications.
This does not necessarily mean, however, that he was
qualified, but only that the onus fell upon the employer to
show that he was not. The employer has not discharged that
onus successfully, but is has also not supplied us with any
evidence-upon which to base a further assessment of Hr.
Mepham's qualifications (other than the opinion evidence of
the Store Manager, who said Mr.Mepham, in hi,s,view, was
qualified). We are certain of one thing: that the selection
procedure was flawed so that the question of qualifications
was never properly addressed. It follows that we must take
into account the ten senior candidates who have not grieved,
for this is not a case of a griever saying "they looked at
my qualifications and they made a mistake" ,~,under which
circ'umstances it would have been open to any of the senior
unsuccessful applicants to grieve; but instead a case where
the grievor alleges a far more fundamental breach: 'I they
failed to look at my qualifications".. And here any 'or all
of the applicants, and tie union in its own right as ti@ll,
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albeit with some regret, to conclude that Xr. !lepham must
be placed in the position. Instead we find Cne whole
procedure to have been so flawed as to have been a nullity.
It must be redone properly.
It is our award that the posting be reprocessed as follows:
1. The employer is to produce the formal statement of
qualifications for the position of 'B' Store Assistant Yanager
(Liquor Store Manager 2) and circulate them forthwith to each
of the original applicants for Job Posting $910. These
applicants are to be informed that the original selec~tion
procedure has been found by this Board to have been improper, .
and they are to be invited to submit a statement of their
qualifications for the positions (four in number) if they
wish to reapply. The employer shall allow a reasonable time for
reapplication. Only the original applicants shall be permitted
to reapply.
2. Within 30 days from the release of this award, the employer
shall establish a procedure'for selecting from among these
candidates, specifying the personnel- to be tivolved, the
documents to be placed before them, and the manner in which
the selection shall operate, and it shall meet with representa-
tives of the Union to discuss the adequacy of this procedure.
If there is any dispute ab0,u.t the proce2::re to.be ft??loWed,
25 -
days from the time of the meeting with the Union, the Union
has not moved to have this Board determine such a c?is?ute,
the employer shall put the procedure into effect.
3. The time limits.specified above may be varied on the
mutual. agreement of the parties.
4. Employees who are promoted as a result of the procedure
specified above shall have their appointments backdated to
September lst, 1981. However, the the 'purposes of Article
16.10 of the Collective Agreement, the three month period
specif,ied therefin shall begin on the date.on which the
appointment is announced.
5. This Board shall remain seized to determine any dhs?utes
arising out of the implementation of this award, including
(but not restricted to) any disputes that may arise as to
incidzntal compensation.
Because~we are confident that the enoloyer will m&e every
effort to implement the terms of #is award in good faith,
we are not prepared to concedes t.\e Vnion's request that we
provide for the attendance of a Union observer at the .~
selection meeting. This does not mean, however, that the
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parties may not mutually agree, if they SO desire, to have
such an observer present.
DATED at Toronto this 12th day of August, 1982.
S. 8. Linden, Q.C. Vice Clxhnm
.P. Craven Senber