HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-0492.Union.86-02-07INTHEMA?TEROFAGRDVANCE
under
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Before
THEGR.EvANcEs-BOARD
Between: OPSEU @Con Grievance) Grievor
The CL-o& in Fight oft Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation and Cimnnmications) mloyer
Before: R.J. Roberts Vice-Chairman
E. McVey Member
W.A. Lobraico Member
For the Grievor: S. Goudge, QC.
Cowling & Henderscm
Barristers & Solicitors
For the Rnployer: L. Horton Staff Relations Officer
Staff Relations Branch
Civil Service Commission I
HW5.t-g: November 26th, 1985
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_.. DECISION
ive
In the grievance leading to this arbitration, the
Union requested a declaration that Article 5.8 of the Collect
Agreement was violated when the Ministry refused to meet
to negotiate a salary range for a classification which, to
the knowledge of the Union, was beings reviewed for purposes
of revision. The Ministry refused to consider arranging
any such meeting until after the revised class standards
were completed and issued by the Civil Service Commission.
For reasons which follow, the grievance is allowed in part.,
The evidence indicated-that in early 1985,-the -
Union became aware that the class standards for the TechnicLan,
Photographic Series, were being reviewed by the Civil Service
Commission in conjunction with the Ministry for purposes
of revision. On March 18, 1985, the Union sent the following
letter to the Commission:
MT. J. R. Scott
Assistant Deputy Minister
Civil Service Commission
Staff Relations 6 Compensation Division
Frost Building South, Room 249
Queen's Park, Ontario
M7A 125
Dear Mr. Scott:
Re: Classification Grievance of Bargaining Unit
Members in the Reprographic Centre -
Ministry of Transportation h Communications
We are aware that for some period of time stretching
over a number of years that the Commission and the
Ministry of Transportation & Communications have been
engaged in the revision of the classification of
bargaining unit employees working in the abode-
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captioned centre. Further, we are aware. that certain
dates for discussion of these revisions have been
offered by line-management to representatives of
employees in the Reprographic Centre, but have not’been
kept.
Therefore, under the provisons of Article 5.8 ‘of the
existing Collective Agreement between Management Board
of Cabinet and’OPSEU, we.are.requesting a meeting
within 30 days to negotiate a salary range pursant to
the revisions and/or modifications currently under
consideration by the Ministry and’ the Commission. In
our opinion, failure to hold such meeting would
clearly,~ under the facts of this case, be the subject
of a policy grievance.
Kindly contact the writer to arrange a mutually
convenient mee,ting.
very truly,
Patrick A. Sheppard
Grievance Officer
This letter was styled as a request under Article 5.8 of
the Collective Agreement for a meeting within 30 days to
negotiate a salary range for the revised class standards.
On April 1, 1985, Mr. W. J. Gorchinsky responded
on behalf of the Commission with the following letter:
Ontario Public Service
Employees Union,
1901 Yonge Street,
Toronto, Ontario
M4S 225.
Attn. Mr. Patrick A. Sheppard,
Grievance Officer.,
Dear Sir:
Re: Reprographic Centre
Ministry of Transportation & Communication
:
This will acknqwledge'your'letter dated March 18, 1985. with
4.
respect to the classification of employees in
the above noted centre.
The classification standards for these employees
are under review. At such time as the standards
are completed and when issued as revised standards,
a meeting can be arranged to discuss the salary
ranges for the revisedstandards, in accordance
with the provisions of Section 5.0 of the Working
Conditions and Employee Benefits Agreement. Any meeting prior to the completion and issue of the
revised standards would be at.a minimum, premature.
It is also to be noted that salaries for the Technical
Services Category are now to be determined by a
Board of Arbitration. If the Union is concerned
about the level of salaries now paid, the Union
is;, of course, free to make submissions to the
Board in this respect.
Yours truly,
W. J. Gorchinsky,
Director.
In this letter, the Commission took the position that Article
5.8 did not require a meeting until after the ~revised standards
had been issued by the Commission. On June llth, the Union
grieved that this refusal by the Commission violated the
Article.
At the hearing, the Ministry called as a witness
MS . Judy Kroon, a Standards Project Supervisor with the Pay
and Classification Branch of the Civil Service Commission.
MS. Xroon gave detailed testimony as to the time,-consuming
and pains-taking nature of the process that is undertaken
in the review of classification standards for purposes of
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revision. The revision of the class standards at hand, she
testified, commenced before she arrived on the scene in May,
1983. She then guided the project through three di.stinct
stages. The first of these involved gathering preliminary
background information reqarding.the problems being experienced
by the requesting Ministry in classifying jobs against the
existing standards. Ms. Xroon testified that ifit were
to be found that the problem did not reside in the standards
but, instead, with the Ministry, the review could end at ;
this stage.
If'it was decided that the standards d~ii&%>ision,-
the project would go to stage two,. which was described as
a data collection and primary analysis stage. Essentially,
this involved job audits, interviews with personnel and line
managers, and other forms of information gathering. Thereafter,
the information would be analysed to, e.g., tentatively identify
how many levels of work were involved. Finally, a tentative
draft of revised class standards would be produced. These
tentative class standards would be circulated to major-user
Ministries for comment and pre-allocation of all positions
against the proposed,standards.
Once this process was completed, Ms. Kroon
testified, the proposed revisions and pre-allocation information
would be put together in a package and sent to Pay Policy
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for ~consideration of the cost implications of the new standards.
At the same time, a copy of this package would be sent to
the Union for comment. Ms. Xroon stressed that at this
stage the class standards could still be changed to clear
up ambiguities, inconsistencies,‘or inaccuracies. She stated
that she and her staff would change the draft in response to
Union's comments and advise Pay Policy of such changes in
order to update the standards.
MS. Xroon further testified that it was only after
the above steps had been completed that the project would
go to its final stage, i.e.~,-submission ofm~the final-draft
of the proposed revised standards to the Chairman and Board
of the Civil Service Commission with a recommendation that
they be approved. Once this approval was obtained, Ms. Kroon
stated, there would be an automatic mandate from'Management
Board of Cabinet to negotiate new rates with the Union.
It was at this point, she testified; that Article 5.8 of
the Collective Agreement would come into play.
Article 5.8 of the Collective Agreement provides
as follows:
ARTICLE 5 - CLASSIFICATION PROCEDURE
. . . . .
5.6 When a new classification is to be created or an existing classification is to be revised,
at the request of either party the parties
shall meet within thirty (30) days to negotiate
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the salary range for the new'or revised classifi-
cation, provided that should no agreement
be reached between the parties, then the Employer
will set the salary range for the new or revised
classification subject to the right of the
parties to have the rate determined.by arbitration.
The ambiguity which has led to the present proceeding is
obvious at first glance. Initially, it appears that either
party may make an Article 5.8 request "when...an existing
classification is to be revised." Halfway through its
text, however, the Article speaks as if a "new or revised
classification" to which both parties can refer already exists.
In resolving this ambiguity, the'Board must, as
a matter of construction of the intent of the parties, determine
which of several different dates should be the one to trigger
an Article 5.8 request. Should it be the commencement date
of the review project, the~date of submission of the proposed
package to Pay Policy and the Union, the date~of the final
submission and recommendation to the Civil Service Commission,
or the date of approval by the Commission? As we understand
the submissions of the parties, the Union contends for the
first of these dates while the Ministry contends for the
last.
On balance, we have reached the conclusion that
neither of these could have been contemplated by the parties
as the "trigger" date for an Article 5.8 request. On its
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face, Article 5.8 contemplates that there must be something
on the table for which to negotiate a new salary range.
If',the "trigger" date for the Article were to be the date
of commencement of the review project, it would be a virtual
certainty that within the 30~day.s established inArticle
5.8, nothing of the sort would e.xist. Moreover, in light
of MS. Kroon's testimony that some projects are abandoned
at the end of stage one, there would be no certainty that
any concrete form of revised classification would ever come
forward for purposes of attracting a new salary range. Accordingly,
the submissions of the Union on this score must be rejected.
At the same time, the date for which the Ministry
contended, i.e., the date of approval by the Civil Service
Commission, likewise. must be rejected. This date, it seems
to the Board, comes too late in the day to satisfy the requirements
of Article 5.8. Article,5.8 plainly speaks in futuro ,
in the sense that it contemplates a request being made when
an existing classification "is to be revised". For all intents
and purposes, it .appears to the Board that once the Civil Service
Commission approval is obtained, the classification 12 revised.
Nothing save implementation is left for the future. This
cannot be what the parties must have contemplated when they
negotiated the in futuro lanaquage of Article 5.8.
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on all of the evidence, it seems to the Board that
the most appropriate "trigger" date for an Article 5.8 request
must be the date of the submission of the final form of the
proposed revised standards to the Chairman and Members of
the Board of the Civil Service Commission. It is at this
point in time that there exist concrete proposals with no
reasonable likelihood of further revision, and about which
the parties might confidently negotiate a salary range.
At no ,earlier stage in the process would this be true. Again,
referring to Ms. Kroon's testimony, the proposed revisions
stand liable to be revised even after transmission of the
.packages to Pay Policy and the Union. Moreover, using~this
date as the "trigger" date, satisfies the in futuro tenor
of Article 5.8, in that at this stage the proposals remain
proposals and will not become "revised" until the Commission
gives its approval.
The grievance is allowed to the extent indicated
in the preceding paragraph of this award. There will be
a declaration to the effect that the "trigger" date for an
Article 5.8 request is the date of the submission to the
Civil Service Commission, and not the date of approval.
10.
DATED at London, Ontario, this 7th day.of February 1986.
1986.
Vice-Chairman
E. McVey, M,ember ~
,
W. A. Lobraico, Member