HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-0390.Brooks.82-11-22IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES, COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
.Before:
Fo;the Griever:
For the Employer:
Hearing:
OPSEU (Kathleen Brooks)
Grievor
- And -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health)
'Employer
R. L. Verity, Q.C. Vice Chairman
E. McIntyre ,Member
E. A. McLean Member
G. Richards Grievance/Classification Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
R. Rey Regional Personnel Administrator
Human Resources Branch
Ministry of Health
November 8, 1982
- 2 -
DECISION
In a Grievance dated June 16th, 1982, Kathleen
Brooks grieves her failure to be awarded the posted position
of "Group Leader, Information and Assistance Clerk" (Clerk 4
Classification) at Kingston. By way of settlement, she
requests that she be awarded the position.
The successful applicant, Robert Barr, was notified
of the Hearing, and elected not to attend.
The Griever's seniority substantially predates that
of Mr. Barr: The Grievor has accumulated some 13 years experience
with the Ministry of,Health, and her seniority dates back to
November 3rd, 1969. She has held her present position as
Information Clerk at the O.H.I.P. Hamilton office since March .~
30th, 1981. Her prior experience was that of a Claims Clerk
from 1969 to March of 1981, during which time she worked in
Hamilton, Kingston and Mississauga. The successful incumbent's
seniority dates back to 1974. From June of 1974 to February of
1978, he was a Claims Clerk (General 3 Classification), and from
February 1978 to the date of the competition in May of 1982 he
had been an Information Services Clerk at Kingston.
A Position Specification and Class Allocation Form
for the position title "Group Leader, Information and Assistance
Clerk" (Clerk 4 General) was introduced into evidence (Exhibit 2).
- 3 -
The job posting for the position in question was
prepared pursuant to that Position Specification and reads
as follows (Exhibit 3):
"MINISTRY OF HEALTH
KINGSTON DISTRICT OHIP OFFICE
HAS A VACANCY FOR
CLERK 4 GENERAL
(GROUP LEADER INFORMATION AND ASSISTANCE)
$321.80 e $366.06
The Kingston District OHIP Office has an opening for
a Clerk 4 General, Group Leader Information and
Assistance.
The successful applicant will be required to provide
leadership, technical guidance and instruction to
Customer Services staff who provide service to the
general public, subscribers, groups, hospitals,
practitioners and other Health care facilities
administered by the Ministry of Health through a
public counter facility, by telephone and in writing.
QUALIFICATIONS:
A sound background in a related.clerical environment. .
Thorough knowledge of all OHIP functions, departments,
governing acts, regulations and manuals, and a basic
knowledge of office administration. Ability to
communicate effectively with various levels of OHIP
staff and the public. Must display strong leadership
qualities and supervisory skills as well as courteous
manner.
LOCATION:
1055 Princess Street, Suite 401, Kingston, Ontario.
Qualified applicants should submit applications to:
Personnel Department
Kingston District OHIP Office'
1055 Princess Street; Suite 401
P. 0. Box 9000
Kingston, Ontario K7L 5A9
COMPETITION #HL-43-006-82
-4-
AREA OF SEARCH: ALL OHIP OFFICES
POSTING DATE: MAY 4, 1982
CLOSING DATE: MAY 17, 1982
EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY FOR EMPLOYMENT"
In the instant Grievance, 17 candidates applied for
the job, and 8 of those candidates were interviewed on May 26th,
1982. The selection committee was comprised of How,ard McKever,
Manager of Customer Services O.H.I.P. Office, Kingston,; Dorothy
Bright, Administration Manager; and Pat Sherry from the Ministry's
Human Resources Branch. Mr. McKever and Mrs. Bright knew all of
#the applicants personally, with the exception of the Grievor.
Pat Sherry knew none of the applicants.
Interviews for the position were approximately 30 to
45 minutes in duration. APP~ icants were assessed on the, basis
of their individual applicati, ons, and their answers to a list of
questions presented at the interview. The questions and their
mark assignments read as follows (Exhibit 7):
COMMUNICATION
"COMPETITION #ML-43-006-82
GRP LDR INFO & ASSIST CLK
5 pts. A) Having
specif
duties
read the job posting and position
ication describe briefly what your
as a Group Leader, Information and
Assistance Clerk would be?
5 pts. 8) Would you elaborate on the skills that you
have developed that are relevant to this
position?
,
- 5 -
MOTIVATION
5 pts. A) What do you think will be the most
challenging part of this position?
5 pts. 8) Where do you see yourself going in this
organization in 3-5 years?
FLEXIBILITY
4 pts. A) What effect to drastic changes in policy
and application have on you?
6 pts. B) It is 11:45 and you are helping a subscriber
with multiple problems, one of the, clerks
reporting to you.needs your advice and your
have someone waiting-to go to lunch with you.
What would you do?
JUDGEMENT
5 pts. A) What qualities would you look for in a
Supervisor or Group Leader?
5 pts. B) What is your strongest quality?
What is your weakest quality?
RELIABILITY
5 pts. A) In our assessment of employees one of the
criteria we use is under the heading
reliability/dependability. Explain
reliability/dependability means to you.
5 pts. B) What importance do you place on punctuality?
Are you usually punctual?
STRESS TOLERANCE
7 pts. A) As you probably know there are applicants
within the unit who have applied for the
position. If you are the successful
applicant how would you handle obvious
resentment in an employee?
3 pts. 8) What kind of pressu.res bother you most? Why?
- 6 -
5 pts. A) You answer the phone and immediately a
very irate individual starts shouting
at you, usins abusive lanauao,e. How would
handle the situation? " -
5 pts. B) You overhear one of your clerks giving a
subscriber at the counter wrong informat
what would you do?
ATTENDANCE
ion,
5.pts. A) What do you think is an acceptable attendance
record for a 12 month period?
perfect - 5 points
1 day absence - 3 points
2 days absence - 1 point
over 2 days - 0 points
EXPERIENCE
5 pts. 6 months,- 1 year 1 poi
1 - 2 year 'years 2 poi
2 Years and over 3 poi
nt
nts
nts
application neatness 2 points"
The selection committee assigned 10 marks for each
of the following categories - Communication; Motivation;
Flexibility; Judgement; Reliability; Stress Tolerance; Tact;
and Personal Suitability. In addition a possible 5 marks were
.assigned for Attendance and Experience. The total possible
marks were 90.
-7-
Each member of the selection committee assigned
marks independently for the individual candidates, and the
candidates'total scores by each of the three interviewers
were compiled and averaged. Mr. Barr was awarded a total of
73 marks, while Kathleen Brooks received 61 marks. The Grievor
placed third highest in total average marks in the overall
interviews of the 8 applicants.
On behalf of the Grievor, George Richards argued that
there was no substantial difference between the Grievor and the
successful incumbent, and that accordingly seniority should
have governed to award the position to the Grievor. In addition,
he was critical of the subjectivity of the selection procedures.
Mr. Rey on behalf of the Ministry argued that there was
a substantial difference between the two applicants, and in
particular that the Grievor's one year of related experience
in customer services .did not equal the incumbent's four years
of related experience in that position.
The Article in dispute is Article 4.3 of the Collective
Agreement which reads as follows:
In filling a vacancy, the Employer shall give
primary consideration to qualifications and
ability to perform the required duties. Where
qualifications and ability are relatively equal,
length of continuous service shall be a
consideration.
.
-a-
In a determination of the issue, this Board has
real concerns regarding the adequacy of the selection board
procedures. In our view, these procedures were so patently
defective that the results of the competition should be set
aside.
The selection committee did not review the Grievor's
personnel file. In addition the Grievor's appraisals were not
available to the Selection Committee. Two of the three panel
members had an appraisal of each of the other candidates, with
the exception of the Grievor, as a result of a working relationship
with those other candidates. Appraisals should have been utilized
'at least for then Grievor to minimize the possibility of bias.
While it is acceptable to ask a series of que~stions
during an interview for a job posting, the questions must be
relevant and related to the job, and must be properly weighted.
In the instant Grievance, in our view the questions posed were
poorly designed, and not properly weighted in relation to the job.
For example, the questions posed bore little or no reference to
technical knowledge. Surely, one of the main purposes of an
interview is to assess knowledge. Questions should have been
designed to obtain objective knowledge concerning each of the
candidates relative abilities.
- 9 -
During the interviews Communication and Motivation
were weighed equally. In cross-examination, Mr. McKever
admitted that the Communication component of the job was the
single most important criteria. Accordingly, Communication
should have received a higher weighting in the selection criteria.
In addition, in our opinion, the second question under the
heading of Motivation has little relevance to the job in question.
I
Und.er the heading of Personal Suitability in Exhibit
8, it is our view that a selection committee was engaging in a
highly subjective area which is of questionable value in the
end result. In our view, the question related t'o absenteeism
and the scoring for the various answers is absurd.
Arbitral jurisprudence of the Grievance Settlement
Board is now well established in competition grievances. We
adopt the rationale of Mr. Jolliffe as stated in Ellsworth et al
and Ministry of Community & Social Services, 361/80 at page 24:
A better approach would have been to prepare a
file on each candidate, including the application
and attached history, all available performance
appraisals and letters of reference, if any, and
to study the file carefully befo
The 'track record' of a candidat
i
i
indifferent, may well be more s
the impression made by the cand
interview.
re each interview.
e, good, bad or
gnificant than
date at a brief
In Hoffman et al and Ministry of Transportation
& Communications, 22/79, Professor Barton states at page 7:
Included in the process of reviewing the
selection process is a requirement that if
certain questions were asked of each
applicant, those questions be tested to
see whether or not they reasonably relate
to the requirements of the job. A finding
that some of these questions were not so
relate.d, provides some evidence at least of
an irregularity in the selection process.
In Puinn it was held that the Selection
Committee was not sufficiently well informed
and this Board directed the Ministry to reopen
the competition and try again. In particular
the Board there was concerned that there was
no evidence given of any regular system of
work performance appraisal and that no
supervisors~were asked about the candidates.
The Board was also concerned that only one
member of the Interview Committee read the
personn.el files of the applicants and that
the.re were few if any questions concerning
one of the qualifications required, super-
visory skill. The Board was also concerned
that th.e decision seemed to rest exclusively
on the interview.
In the instant Grievance, the decision was made
exclusively on total scores obtained in answer to questions
at the interview. It may very well be that the successful
incumbent was the superior candidate in terms of relative
ability. However, on the evidence presented, it is this
Board's finding that the management selection procedures were
so defective that the competition results must be set aside
and a fresh competition between the Grievor and the successful
candidate is merited. The selection procedures followed in
- 10 -
- 1
?+ .ck
- 11 -
this case were unduly subjective.
On the evidence, it is difficult to determine
whether the qualifications and abilities of the Grievor were
relatively "equal" to those of Mr. Barr. The reason is
obviously the deficiency in the selection procedures followed.
The Grievor has considerable experience to her credit, and is
both tactful and articulate. At the Hearing, the portrayal
of the qualifications and abilities of the successful incumben
are less clear.
Accordingly, we would order a rerun of the competition
restricted to Mr. Barr and the Grievor. We are of the opinion
that the Selection Committee should be a fresh panel having
knowledge of the requirements of the position and appointed
by the Ministry or other appropriate authority. That Selection
Panel should not take into consideration any experience gained
by either party subsequent to the date of the initial application.
In addition, Mr. Barrand the Grievor shall have the right to
make fresh applications as of the date of initial application.
The intervi ews should review in detail the personnel file and
appraisals of each applicant, and the testing procedures should
be designed to elicit relevant technical knowledge.
This Award should not be viewed as a criticism of
the actions of Mr. McKever. He was thoroughly honest and
candid in his testimony before the Goard. We recognize that
- 12 -
it is not an easy task for managers to develop objective
criteria for selection procedures. In view of the considerable
accumulation of arbitral precedent available to senior Ministry
personnel, it is indeed surprising that there is not some form
of standardization of procedures and guidelines developed from
the Ministry for the assistance of.junior management.
Accordingly, this Grievance shall succeed in.part.
DATED at Brantford, Ontario, this 22nd day of November,
A.D., 1982.
?i-. L. VERITY, Q.C. -- VICE CHAIRMAN
E. MCINTYRE -- MEllEER
2100
2310 E. A. MCLEAN -- MEMBER