HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-1444.Timleck.86-11-07IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
- Under -
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between
Before:
For the Griever:
For the Employer:
Hearing
OPSEU (J. Timleck)
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional Services)
R.J. Delisle
J. McManus
G. Peckham
Alick Ryder
Counsel
Gowling & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
Doug Milic
Staff Relations Officer
Ministry of Correctional Services
May 15, 1986
Griever
Employer
Vice-Chairman
Member
Member
The grievor complains about a job competition for the
position of Client and Information System Document Processing
Clerk in which she was an unsuccessful candidate. That
position. was classified Clerk 3, General and the grievor was,
at that time, classified as Clerk 2, general. An Opportunity
Bulletin, (Exhibit 4), was posted for this position on August
27, 1984, with a closing date of September 11, 1984. On
November 9, 1984, the grievor was advised that she was
unsuccessful in the competition as the Selection Committee
believed that other candidates possessed a more suitable
combination of knowledge and skills. The grievor met with
Merle Grey, Personnel Administrator, on November 21, 1984, to
consider why she had been unsuccessful. Ms. Grey advised the
grievor that "most of what I didn't know was because I needed
more on the job training and this is what helped the people who
got the positions". The grievor filed a grievance November 23,
1984.
The essence of the grievor's complaint is that the
competition was unfair in that the successful candidates had
received on the job training which she had been denied. By her
grievance she asks that she be assigned to the job with
retroactive pay and benefits to November 5, 1984, the day on
which the successful candidates were appointed to the job. In
February, 1985, the grievor was reclassified to Clerk 3,
General retroactive to November 1, 1984, and the grievor has
therefore suffered no monetary damages even if her present
claim proves successful. The grievor seeks, then, a
declaration that the competition was unfair and the opportunity
to take the job.
-2-
The grievor came to the Binistry of Correctional
Services as a Filing Clerk 2 in Inmate Records. She was Shop
Steward between 1981 and 1984. The three successful candidates
were Mamome, Bradford and Rennick. Mamome and Bradford were'
contract employees who began work with the Ministry in 1982.
The work assigned to them was with respect to records of
Probation and Parole. This work was performed in the same
large office where the grievor worked in Inmate Records.
Rennick joined Mamome and Bradford in working on the Probation
and Parole Records in May, 1983, while on secondment from a
probation office.
In October of 1982 the grievor learned that the work
on Probation and Parole Records was being done by contract
employees. The.grievor testified that she did not grieve at
that time as she was not aware that she had the right. She
spoke with another shop steward about the situation and
requested that it be brought up at an Employee Relations
Committee Meeting. The matter was placed on an agenda for a
meeting on September 20, 1983 (Exhibit 10). The grievor did
not attend the meeting and was unable to advise us if any
discussion was had or action taken.
On July 31, 1984, the grievor applied, (Exhibit 111,
for a temporary assignment to the position of Clerk 3, General,
Probation and Parole, so that she might receive training in the
job. R.A. Wills, Manager, Client Information Systems, replied
on the same date, (Exhibit 12), that there was no need to
replace anyone working in the Probation and Parole module and
therefore the request would have to be denied.
‘i .
-3-
The grievor did work in the Probation and Parole
module, with Mamome and Bradford, on a temporary assignment
from March 15, 1985, to February 1, 1986. The grievor
testified that the work then performed by her was the same work
that Mamome and Bradford performed in 1982. She testified that
had she had this experience at the time of the competition her
performance would have been 100% better. Mamome testified that
the job she was performing in 1984 was the same job she had
been given to do in 1982. While some of the techniques for
performing the job had changed, e.g. microfiche to computers,
the job itself had basically not changed. Mamome testified
that all three persons grew with the job. She allowed that
knowing the job helped her in the competition. Mamome
testified that it was clear in 1982 that a new department, and
a new job was being created. Rennick testified that in her
view "there was a job to be done and nobody to do it - there
was no complement" before Namome, Bradford and Rennick took it
on.
The Ministry takes the position that a new job was
created by the Ministry in June, 1984, when the Position
Specification for C.1.S . Document Processing Clerk was written
and classified as Clerk 3, General (Exhibit 13). It was then
that the employer recognized that the duties there described
needed to be performed on a long term basis. The Ministry was
justified in using contract help until it had identified its
long term needs. Counsel for the Ministry recognizes that an
acting assignment does give an advantage but maintains there
was nothing amiss with respect to the posting and competition
in this case.
-4-
The grievor's position is that the incumbents had
experience in Probation and Parole that was not shared by other
people in the competition. There is fundamental unfairness
since the grievor had to compete with others who had an
advantage, given by the Ministry, that could not be overcome.
Management picked the winners in 1982 and the competition was a
formality. The posting and job competition process must be
fair and the posting must therefore be soon after the creation
of the vacancy. A vacancy occurred in 1982 when there was a
job of work to be done and management assigned employees to do
the job.
The grievor was denied the experience of the
others. Counsel for the grievor argues that the Ministry
should have posted the job in 1982 and cannot avoid the
obligation to post by delaying the creation of the paperwork
which recognizes the job.
There is no allegation of anything improper in the
procedures followed by the Ministry after the job was posted in
August, 1984. The complaint of unfairness is born out of an
allegation of impropriety in 1982.
The equity in the grievor's
case is plain. She was disadvantaged in the competition by her
lack of knowledge and experience in the job. Others, placed in
the job by the Ministry in 1982,
had an advantage that could
not be overcome. Any unfairness by the Ministry, however,
occurred at that time and the complaint of the grievor is
accordingly out of time. She was aware in 1982 of the grounds
for complaint, made some tentative steps toward a resolution
-5-
but did not follow through. Despite the equity it is now too
late to complain. Accordingly the grievance is dismissed.
DATED at Kingston, Ontario this 7th day of November, 1986.
Delisle, Vice-Chairman
“I dissent” (see attached)
J. McManus, Member
Board File #1444/84
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
BETWEEN:
OPSEU (J. Timleck)
- and -
Grievor
THE CROWN IN THE RIGHT OF ONTARIO (Ministry of Correctional Services)
(Employer)
DISSENT
I have read the majority award but with respect find that I
must disagree for the following reasons.
My first observation is that no objection to the timeliness
of the grievance was made by management during the course of
the grievance procedure or during the hearing itself.
Secondly, the decision of the majority to dismiss the grievance
on the ground that it was untimely mischaracterizes the
grievance we were obliged to determine. The grievance does
not contest the "acting appointments" in 1982 even though they
now turn out to have been a breach of the collective agreement
respecting "acting appointments". Neither the grievor nor the
union had any basis, in 1982, for knowing whether or not the
appointments were authorized by the collective agreement.
Clearly the union cannot grieve every temporary or acting
appointment on the supposition that some of them may turn out,
as the ones here, to be a breach of the collective agreement.
- 2 -
Rather the grievance contests the validity of the competition
in.19855and it is that question we were obliged to decide.
The majority agrees that the competition was unfair and,
accepting the decisions of the Board that an unfair competition
is a breach of Article 4, it follows that the grievance ought
to,succeed if it was timely.
Admittedly the grievance was filed within the time limits
necessary to challenge the validity of the competition. Just
because the chain of events which resulted in the invalid
competition can be traced to the 1982 appointments, does not
mean that the invalid competition in 1985 had to be grieved
in 1982. That is the logic of the majority decision.
The truth of the matter is that the effects of the improper
1982 appointments were not spent in 1982. Rather they rose
again in 1985 when the competition was held. Management cannot
escape the consequences of an invalid competition in 1985 by
virtue of an earlier breach occuring in 1982.
In short I believe the majority is wrong when it translates
the competition into an untimely grievance against the 1982
appointments and accordingly I would have upheld the grievance
and ordered an new competition.