HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2023-03118.Mancini.24-08-14 DecisionPublic Service
Grievance Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Commission des
griefs de la fonction
publique
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
PSGB# P-2023-03118
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Mancini Complainant
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Brian Smeenk Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Anthony Mancini
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
- 2 -
DECISION
[1] The Complainant, Anthony Mancini, was previously a Sergeant at the Central East
Correctional Centre (“CECC”). He has been placed into the position of Staff
Sergeant as part of the restructuring of various classifications by the Ministry of the
Solicitor General (“the Employer”). In this complaint under The Public Service of
Ontario Act, 2006 1 Mr. Mancini challenges his treatment in the restructuring. He
complains about the changes to his terms and conditions of his employment when
he was assigned to the Staff Sergeant position on January 8, 2024.
[2] Mr. Mancini’s three main arguments about being placed into the Staff Sergeant
position are summarized in his application as follows. He alleges that the
placement involved:
a. violation by the Employer of its employment policies, in particular its
“Statement of Ethical Principles – Institutional Services Policy and
Procedure Manual”;
b. the Employer’s pressuring him with undue influence to sign an “Option
Letter” to opt for the Staff Sergeant position; and
c. breach of his rights under Section 2(d) of the Charter.
[3] The Employer makes a preliminary objection regarding the Board’s jurisdiction to
consider all three arguments, as well as disputing the application on its merits.
The Employer submits that the application is precluded by section 4(2) of Ontario
Regulation 378/07 (“the Regulation”). That section circumscribes the Board’s
jurisdiction. It provides in part that, “The assignment of the public servant to a
particular class of position,” cannot be the subject matter of a complaint. That is
the essence of the complaint and is thus outside the Board’s jurisdiction, argues
the Employer.
[4] The parties agreed to proceed first with the preliminary objections regarding issues
[a] and [b], while holding issue [c] in abeyance for possible later determination.
[5] This decision therefore deals with the Employer’s preliminary objections regarding
the first two issues. For the reasons that follow, I have concluded that the
preliminary objections must be upheld regarding issues [a] and [b].
1 S.O 2006, c.35, Sched. A
- 3 -
THE FACTS
[6] The relevant facts are not in dispute. For the sake of clarity and completeness I
will expand to some extent on the facts that the parties have expressly agreed
upon by referencing other facts set out in the documents admitted into evidence on
consent. This set of facts parallels those considered in two other, recent decisions
of the Board dealing with the same restructuring of jobs: Dobos 2 and Cornish &
Beattie 3.
[7] The employment status of Sergeants has been in dispute for some time.
Protracted litigation occurred before the Ontario Labour Relations Board (“OLRB”)
in respect of efforts by the Public Service Association of Canada to represent
Sergeants in the Employer’s Corrections division. The OLRB ruled 4 that if
Sergeants were deemed not to be managers pursuant to the traditional
management function test, then either OPSEU or Association of Management,
Administrative and Professional Crown Employees of Ontario (“AMAPCEO”) must
represent those positions as a result of restrictions within the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act, 1993.5
[8] On February 24, 2022, the Grievance Settlement Board (“GSB”) issued the
decision of Arbitrator Brian McLean (“McLean Decision No. 1”)6 The arbitrator
found that AMAPCEO had relinquished its bargaining rights for the Sergeant and
Staff Sergeant cadre. He found that any such rights were assumed by OPSEU as
the bargaining agent for all employees employed at correctional institutions.
[9] The issue of whether the Sergeant position was incorrectly excluded from the
OPSEU bargaining unit for being supervisory or managerial, was left for future
determination. Arbitrator McLean referred the matter back to the Employer and
OPSEU to jointly address.
[10] On May 5, 2022, the Employer announced that it had begun an organizational
review of the supervisory and management functions within the correctional
system, as a response to McLean Decision No. 1.
[11] On November 2, 2022, the Employer announced the result of the organizational
review. It advised staff of a restructuring of its management level, introducing a
2 Dobos v Ontario (Solicitor General), PSGB #P-2023-02515 (June 6, 2024).
3 Cornish & Beattie v Ontario (Solicitor General), PSGB #P-2023-02648 and #P-2023-02650 (June 6,
2024).
4 Public Service Alliance of Canada v. The Crown in Right of Ontario, 2017 CanLII 51086 (ON LRB).
5 S.O. 1993, c. 38.
6 Association of Management, Administrative and Professional Crown Employees of Ontario (Association)
v Ontario (Solicitor General), 2022 CanLII 31316 (ON GSB).
- 4 -
supervisory level within its Institutional Services Division. More particularly, the
Employer stated that, “In this new structure, the current Sergeant rank will no
longer be utilized, and the existing responsibilities will be shared by a new position,
the Correctional Supervisor, and a strengthened Staff Sergeant complement.”
[12] On December 14, 2022, the allocation of Staff Sergeant and Corporal (i.e.
Correctional Supervisor) positions was announced. All together there had been
620 Sergeant and Staff Sergeant positions, out of which 572 were Sergeant and
48 Staff Sergeant positions. 572 Sergeant positions were eliminated, and the Staff
Sergeant positions were inflated from 48 to 438. 182 Corporal positions were
created within the OPSEU bargaining unit.
[13] On January 30, 2023, “Option Letters” were sent out to Sergeants asking them to
choose between being assigned to a Staff Sergeant or a Corporal position. They
also had the option to resign or retire from the Ontario Public Service. They were
given twenty business days to make their decision by checking, signing and
returning the election form. Mr. Mancini chose “Option 2”, i.e. to be considered for
a Staff Sergeant position at Central East Correctional Centre. He was ultimately
assigned to that position effective January 8, 2024, with a confirming letter dated
January 11, 2024. It describes the “job title” as “Staff Sergeant”, and the
applicable “classification” as “Manager 8 (M8)”. The applicable job description
states that Staff Sergeant is the “Position Title”. The M8 classification is, as I
understand it, a class of position within the Public Service’s compensation
structure.7
[14] On June 27, 2023, the GSB issued another decision of Arbitrator McLean
(“McLean Decision No. 2”)8. It dealt with OPSEU’s contention that the Employer
was in violation of its collective agreement when it purported to directly assign
individuals including Sergeants into the newly-created Corporal position. Arbitrator
McLean ruled that the Employer had no right to do so and upheld OPSEU’s
grievance. McLean Decision No. 2 required the Employer to respect the job
posting provision of the OPSEU collective agreement, thus allowing OPSEU
members to apply for the new Corporal positions in competition with the non-union
Sergeants. While this did not affect Mr. Mancini, many Sergeants who had elected
to move into the Corporal position were affected.
7 See for example the policy entitled, “In Range Movement Policy for Executives and Managers –
Government of Ontario – May 26, 2023, at pp. 1 and 16.
8 Ontario Public Service Employees’ Union v Ontario (Ministry of Children, Community and Social
Services and the Solicitor General), 2023 CanLII 61433 (ON GSB)
- 5 -
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[15] Sections 4(1) and 4(2) of the Regulation, upon which the Employer relies, provide
in material part as follows:
4.(1) Subject to subsection (2), a public servant who is aggrieved about a
working condition or about a term of his or her employment may file a
complaint about the working condition or the term of employment with the
Public Service Grievance Board,
(a) if the public servant is eligible under sections 5 and 7 to file
such a complaint…
(2) The following matters cannot be the subject of a complaint about a working
condition or about a term of employment:
…
2. The assignment of the public servant to a particular class of position.
[16] The question before me is therefore whether the subject matter of Mr. Mancini’s
complaint is about a working condition or conditions and, if so, whether it is about
his assignment to a particular class of position. If the answer to the latter question
is “yes”, the Board lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter.
JURISDICTION REGARDING THE FIRST ISSUE
[17] To rule on the Board’s jurisdiction to consider Mr. Mancini’s first issue, it is
important to examine what he is arguing. He complains that, in assigning him to
the Staff Sergeant position, the Employer “…changed my uniform from a blue shirt
with epaulettes that have three bar rank chevrons to epaulettes with a crown
followed by three bar rank chevrons.” He also complains that the Employer, “…
changed the colour of my shirt from blue to white.” He argues that such changes
are “… not consistent with my working conditions as a front-line manager…” He
states that, “…wearing a white shirt is ludicrous, arbitrary and degrading…”
because it is inconsistent with the nature of his actual duties. He says, “The notion
of working frontline operations while wearing a white shirt and trying to keep it
clean is a change to my working conditions which is arbitrary, degrading and
disrespectful.” He further argues that it is “…arbitrary and degrading based on the
compensation structure for managers in the OPS,” in part because managers like
him make substantially less money than the people they supervise.
- 6 -
[18] Mr. Mancini relies on the Employer’s Statement of Ethical Principles. He alleges
that the working conditions of which he complains violate Statements 2 and 4
thereof. Statement 2 provides in part as follows:
Under no circumstances shall any person be subject to… humiliating ... or
degrading treatment.
Statement 4 provides in part as follows:
Contribute to sustaining an environment which is fair, equitable and free from all
forms of discrimination and harassment.
[19] Mr. Mancini argues that his case is “parallel to” that considered by the Board in
Drakos.9 In that case the Board had before it a complaint of a group of
Operational Managers within the Employer who contended that they had been
demoted or degraded contrary to the Statement of Ethical Principles, when the
Employer unilaterally changed their rank titles from Lieutenant to Sergeant. There
was no jurisdictional objection by the Employer in that case. The Board upheld the
complaint, finding that the Employer’s action had been, “arbitrary, in the sense of
not taking account of the relevant considerations of the impact on the Operational
Managers, and in the sense of being basically unexplained.” The Board held that
such treatment constituted “… a breach of the Complainants’ terms and conditions
of employment, including the Statement of Ethical Principles and its prohibition of
degrading treatment.” 10
[20] In his oral argument, Mr. Mancini emphasized that he does not dispute the re-
assignment from pay classification M7 to M8, but rather the change of his uniform
and rank of Sergeant. He says that many of his job functions are still the same,
but he is now doing them as a Staff Sergeant. But he is now responsible for two
prisoner pods rather than one. He argues that, as was the case in Drakos, his
dispute is about the change of title and change of uniform, which are arbitrary; not
the change of his classification. The changes complained of are contrary to the
requirement of the Statement of Principles of having a fair and equitable
workplace, he argues.
[21] Mr. Mancini recognizes, however, that there have been some changes in his
obligations and duties as a result of his assignment to the Staff Sergeant position,
along with an increase in pay. His requirement to supervise two pods instead of
9 Drakos v. Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, 2013 CanLII 88258 (ON PSGB)
10 Ibid. at para. 52.
- 7 -
one has already been mentioned. His increased responsibilities also include, on
paper at least, an increase in his duty and power to discipline subordinates.
[22] As noted above, the question before me is whether the subject matter of the
complaint is about a working condition and, if so, whether it is about the
assignment of Mr. Mancini to a particular class of position.
[23] In my view, while this complaint is about working conditions, it is also about being
assigned to a particular class of position. It is therefore not within the Board’s
jurisdiction.
[24] The complaint clearly addresses working conditions such as the change of
uniform, including the epaulettes and the change to white shirts. These changes
are alleged to violate several standards contained in the Statement of Principles,
which is itself a working condition.
[25] While addressing the new working conditions, the complaint at the same time
addresses Mr. Mancini’s “assignment to a particular class of position.” He has
been assigned to the position of Staff Sergeant in the higher class of position of
Manager 8 (M8). The working conditions complained of are those arising from and
integral to his assignment to that class of position. While he states that he is not
complaining about being placed in the higher M8 class, he nonetheless is
complaining about being assigned to the Staff Sergeant position and all that comes
with it except the pay grade. Mr. Mancini seeks remedies that include, “the return
of my rank of Sergeant and blue shirt which is consistent with my roles and
responsibilities as a frontline manager. I seek to have my working conditions
restored…” But Mr. Mancini cannot un-bundle the working conditions of which he
complains from the assignment to the position of Staff Sergeant in the M8 class of
positions. His complaint is precisely that which is precluded by S. 4(2)(2) of the
Regulation. He cannot escape that reality by saying that he does not complain
about the increase in pay grade.
[26] I do not accept Mr. Mancini’s argument that his case is like that considered by the
Board in Drakos. In that case, there was no objection under S. 4(2)(2) of the
Regulation regarding the Board’s jurisdiction. The complainants’ classification
remained that of OM16. There was also no change to their duties and
responsibilities. Thus, the case did not involve their “assignment to a particular
class of position.”
[27] The complaints in Drakos were really about working conditions per se. In the
absence of any changes in their duties and responsibilities, the complainants’ rank
title of Lieutenant had been eliminated and they were required to wear a different
- 8 -
uniform. These changes were found to be degrading. They were found to have
been made without due consideration and in an arbitrary manner, thus violating the
Statement of Ethical Principles.
[28] Unlike in Drakos, we have in this case a jurisdictional objection. We have an actual
change in the pay classification of the complainant. We also have a number of
changes to his duties and responsibilities. Thus, here, it is not simply a matter of a
change of title or rank that may be considered to be degrading. This case, instead,
involves an actual re-assignment to a different “class of position.” Mr. Mancini
complains about being assigned to the position of Staff Sergeant within the M8
class. Such an assignment or re-assignment is precisely what Section 4(2)(2)
precludes a manager from bringing before the Board.
[29] I turn next to Mr. Mancini’s argument that this case is like that recently considered
by the Board in Cornish & Beattie 11. In that case, the Board dismissed the
Employer’s jurisdictional objections. Again, I disagree that the cases are alike.
[30] While Cornish & Beattie also involved a situation where Sergeants were re-
assigned to another classification (in that case to the Corporal classification), the
essence of the complaints was quite different from the instant one. Unlike Mr.
Mancini, the complainants were not seeking a reversal of their re-assignments.
Nor were they complaining about the terms and conditions applicable to their new
position of Corporal. This again is unlike Mr. Mancini who complains about the
uniforms, the title and indeed all other terms and conditions of his new
classification assignment except the pay class. Cornish and Beattie, by contrast,
complained about the Employer having allegedly reneged on their “final and
binding” elections which arguably became contractual agreements; about being
required to participate in an allegedly unfair competition process for the Corporal
position; and about the Employer’s alleged violation of various policies that were
terms and conditions of their employment, throughout the restructuring process.
Those complaints were found to be about the complainants’ existing working
conditions that were not precluded by S. 4(2)(2) of the Regulation, rather than
being about assignment to a particular class. Those subject matters are quite
different than what Mr. Mancini is arguing here.
[31] Finally regarding this first issue, I turn to Mr. Mancini’s argument that the
challenged changes to his working conditions were arbitrary in nature. He asks
me to consider paragraph 43 of Drakos where the Board made the following
statement:
11 See above, footnote 3.
- 9 -
The Board’s jurisprudence has long recognized its jurisdiction to deal with
allegations that treatment by the Employer is arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad
faith, or in breach of policy such as the Statement of Ethical Principles. See for
instance Chyczij v. Ontario (Ministry of Labour), 2006 CanLII 26472 (ON PSGB)
and the older cases cited therein…
[32] While that statement of the law is accurate as far as it goes, as the Employer
pointed out in its submissions, there is an important limitation to that principle. The
limitation is that, as has been ruled in a number of its decisions, the Board cannot
use that authority to delve into matters that are excluded from its jurisdiction by the
Regulation or the Act. Thus in Bowmaster, the Board stated as follows:
[34] …. However, what is being fundamentally complained about are those
matters excluded from the Board’s purview by paragraphs 4 and 5 o sub-section
4(2) of the Regulation…
[35] Having regard to the specific exclusion in the Regulation, I find that the
Employer is effectively protected from a complaint at the Board asserting that it
acted in a manner that was arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad faith in respect of
matters concerning pay for performance…. [T]his Board has no inherent authority
and the clear language of the Regulation specifically excludes these allegations
from the Board’s jurisdiction to consider and/or remedy.12
[33] More recently, in Cornish & Beattie I described the principle and the limitation this
way:
[51] Thus, in addition to being entitled to try to prove and argue specific
violations of the Employer’s policies, it is open to the Complainants to seek to
demonstrate the unfair, unreasonable, arbitrary or bad faith application of
existing terms and conditions of employment that are not expressly
excluded from the Board’s jurisdiction, as described in the preceding
passages. This is what I understand the Complainants to be arguing.13
[emphasis added]
[34] In this case, as in Bowmaster but unlike the situation in Cornish & Beattie, Mr.
Mancini seeks to demonstrate arbitrary and unreasonable changes in his working
conditions in relation to a subject matter that is expressly excluded from the
Board’s jurisdiction: his assignment to a class of position. The Board’s ability to
12 Bowmaster et al. v. Ontario (Solicitor General), 2020 CanLII 105698 (ON PSGB)
13 Cornish & Beattie, footnote 2 above, at para 51
- 10 -
consider complaints about arbitrary decisions does not extend to such excluded
subject matters.
JURISDICTION REGARDING THE SECOND ISSUE
[35] In the application, Mr. Mancini complains that the Employer exercised undue
influence in forcing him to make an election to accept the Staff Sergeant position
too quickly and without sufficient information. While this was not pursued by Mr.
Mancini in oral argument, as it was not expressly withdrawn, I will address it.
[36] In his application, Mr. Mancini argues that, while he signed the Option Letter and
chose “Option 2” to be considered for the Staff Sergeant position, he “felt
pressured to make a selection without sufficient information.” He alleges that the
Option Letter, “… was not really an option, but an ultimatum…” Forcing him to
make a choice in that manner was an exercise of undue influence by the
Employer, which had a fiduciary obligation towards him, he alleges. The exercise
of his option should therefore be considered void.
[37] I have concluded that this issue is also beyond the Board’s jurisdiction, by
operation of section 4(2)(2) of the Regulation.
[38] To repeat, section 4(2)(2) excludes from the Board’s jurisdiction any working
condition complaint that is about, “The assignment of the public servant to a
particular class of position.” That is clearly what Mr. Mancini is complaining about
even though he is here addressing the manner of the election process that the
Employer opted to apply when making the assignment in question.
[39] The application of section 4(2)(2) to oust the Board’s jurisdiction is not dependent
on how the Employer chooses to assign managers to a particular class of position.
The Employer ordinarily has the discretion to make such assignments in the
manner it sees fit.14 If it has not fettered its discretion, it may normally decide to
assign without according the manager[s] with the kinds of elections that were
offered here. The fact that an election process was implemented in order to
facilitate these assignments does not give Mr. Mancini any greater right to bring a
complaint to the Board about the assignment than if there had been no election
process.
[40] Put another way, there is nothing in Mr. Mancini’s complaint that would indicate
that any particular kind or quality of election process had become an enforceable
14 See for example Maiwand v. Ontario (Solicitor General), 2021 Can LII 57993 (ON PSGB) a para 37.
- 11 -
working condition for Mr. Mancini. There is nothing before the Board that would
indicate that Mr. Mancini had any right to a process that differed from the one that
the Employer had designed. For example, there is nothing to substantiate a right
to a longer time to make his election nor a right to more information than that
provided, such as he claims was his due. To the contrary, section 4(2)(2) indicates
that the Employer may make assignments to a class of position in the manner it
deems appropriate, without those decision being the subject of an application to
the Board, unless the assignment involves the violation of other employee rights
that the Board is empowered to enforce.
[41] In summary, the Regulation explicitly removes from the Board’s jurisdiction the
subject matter of “assignment to a particular class of position.” Mr. Mancini’s
allegations about the process used by the Employer to assist it in making his
assignment to Staff Sergeant, the election process, in the absence of any alleged
violation of enforceable terms and conditions of employment, are beyond the
Board’s jurisdiction.
DISPOSITION
[42] For all of these reasons, the Employer’s preliminary objections to the Board’s
jurisdiction to hear and consider evidence and argument regarding the first two
issues outlined in paragraph 2 of this decision are upheld. Those elements of the
application are dismissed.
[43] There remains the third issue outlined in paragraph 2: whether the placement of
Mr. Mancini into the Staff Sergeant position resulted in breach of his rights under
Section 2(d) of the Charter and any jurisdictional objection the Employer may have
regarding that issue.
[44] The Registrar is directed to schedule a Case Management Meeting with the parties
in order to discuss and determine the process for dealing with this remaining issue.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 14th day of August 2024.
“Brian Smeenk”
Brian Smeenk K.C., Chair