HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-0694.Simpson.87-01-15i..
January 15, 1987
Mr. J. F. Benedict,
Manager, Staff Relations,
Personnel Branch,
Ministry of Correctional Services,
2001 Eglinton Avenue East, 2nd floor,
Scarborough, Ontario,
MlL 4Pl
Dear Mr. Benedict:
RE: 694/85 OPSEU (Joanne Simpson? and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional Services
Enclosed herewith, for your information, is a copy of J. D. McManus'
dissent with respect to the above noted matter.
Yours truly,
TAI/ah
encl.
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
694/85
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
UNDER THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
BEFORE
THE GKIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN:
Grievor
- and -
THE CROWN IN RIGHT OF ONTARIO
MINISTRY OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Employer
DISSENT
The majority of this Board has concluded that the
Grievor "became a public servant under the provisions of
Section 8 of the (Public Service) Act," and that her status as
an employee was entirely dictated by the nature of the
"appointment" of the Employer, irrespective of the
circumstances. The majority concluded the Grievor was covered
toy Article 3 of the Collective Agreement, as she was "not
formally created a civil servan t within the meaning of the
Public Service Act" (majority Award, p.14).
The Employer purports to have the right to rely upon
the individual contract of employment it entered into with
Ms. Simpson. It did not renew this contract, after several
years of continuous employmen t which arose based on a series of
uninterrupted contracts. Specifically, the Employer relied
upon the expiry date of the last contract to sever the
employment relationship. The majority of the Board accepted
this argument put forward by the Employer.
The majority went on to conclude that it had no
jurisdiction to entertain the grievance because of “the timing
of the purported termination of the employment status”
(majority Award, p. 16). The majority found that the expiry
and non-renewal of Ms. Simpson’s individual contract meant that
“her employment status ceased by operation of statute”
(majority Award, p. 17). This is a reference to Section 9 of
the Public Act, which provides:
“a person who is appointed to a position in the Public
Service for a specified period ceases to be a public
ion
servant at the expiration of that period.”
I do not accept either the .reasoning or the conclus
reached by the majority. It fails to recognize a number of
important and applicable legal principles.
3.
THE COLLECTIVE BARGAINING REGIME
UNDER THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
- NO INDIVIDUAL CONTRACTS OF EMPLOYMENT ARE PERMITTED
The employment relationship between Ms. Simpson and
the Employer has been superceded by the exclusive collective
bargaining relationship. Section 15 of the Crown Employees
Bargaining Act and Article 1 of the Collective Agreement
recognizes the Ontario Public Service Employees Union ("OPSEU")
as the exclusive bargaining agent of, inter alia, Ms. Simpson.
In such circumstances individual contracts of
employment can be of no force or effect. This includes an
individual contractual term that brings the employment
relationship to an end on a specific date.
"(T)he reality is, as has been for many years now
throughout Canada, that individual relationships as
between employers and employees have meaning only at
the hiring stage and then there are qualifications
that arise by reason of union security clauses in
collective agreements".
1 54 Mctiavin Toastmaster Ltd. vs Aniscough et al (1975
DLR (3d) 1, at p. 6 (S.C.C.)
Similarly in CPR vs Zambri (1962) 34 DLR (2d) 654 -
(S.C.C.), at p. 666 Mr. Justice Judson pointed out that,
"when there is a collective agreement in effect, it is
difficult to see how there can be anything left
outside, except possibly the act of hiring".
t ?
4.
Dealing with the narrow individual relationship
embodied in the act of hiring that may persist in the
circumstances of a collective agreement, the Ontario Court of
Appeal (Kelly J.) explained the very narrow reach of this
exception. It is restricted to the legal acts of offer and
acceptance of~an employment relationship. The substance of the
relationship is entirely embodied in the collective agreement.
“(N)o doubt the existence of a collective agreement
between an employer and a Union which is the
bargaining agent for the employees precludes the negotiation of a contract of employment, the terms of
which do not incorporate the terms of the collective agreement. But leaving aside the situation where the
collective agreement compels the employer to seek his
employees through the union hiring hall, the Supreme
Court of Canada does no t deny the right of the
employer and the employee, at the moment of hiring, to
establish or refuse to establish the relationship of employer and employee ; the consensus reached by the
employer and the employee is essentially a contractual one. Granted, the only contract which may then be
made is one embodying the terms of the collective
agreement in favour of the employee, but until there
is a consensus on the acceptance by both the employer
and employee of such a relationship, neither employer
or employee is obliged to the other.”
re Telegram Publishing Co. Ltd. and Zwelling and Essig
(1975) 67 DLR (3d) 404, at p. 411
The circumstances in which the employment relationship
may be severed by the employer are fundamental to the
employment relationship, and encompassed wi thin the phrase
"terms and conditions of employment” found in Section 7 of the
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act ( “CECB Act"). This
phrase must be given a broad meaning, consistent with the
scheme of that Act, which is to permit a wide ambit of
5.
bargaining that is narrowed only by those matters specifically
excluded from bargaining by the CECB Act.
The severence of the employment relationship, apart
from dismissal, has been dealt with by the parties in
Article 3.11 of the Collective Agreement. Dismissal is dealt
with in the Agreement (see Article 27.6.1) and by the CECB Act
where the Employer's right to "dismiss" an employee is
restricted by Section 18 (Z)(c).
The Board has held, and the Court confirmed, that
"dismissal" and "termination" are not synonymous (see OPSEU
(Miller and McPhail) and the Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional Services) GSB 530/82 and 531/82,
Award dated April 7, 1983; Her Majesty The Queen in Right of
Ontario and QPSEU, Divisional Court, unreported, dated
March 21, 1984; appeal to Court of Appeal dismissed February
18, 1986). The Divisional Court stated that "the Collective
Agreement distinguishes clearly between "dismissal" and
"termination" (see Article 3.il and Article 27.6.2)".
"Dismissal" comes about because of a reason or cause
that is particular to the individual employee. The cause is
generally related to culpatory misconduct (disciplinary
dismissal) but may also be brough t about by a non-culpatory
reason such as frequent absences of an employee for legitimate
medical reasons (non-disciplinary dismissal).
6.
“Termination” must be given a different meaning than
“dismissal” and one that is reasonable and consistent with the
provisions of the scheme of the Collective Agreement as a
whole. It is significant that the parties have agreed to
exclude Article 3 employees from the protection afforded by
Article 24 (layoff and recall). In place of the Job Security
provisions of Article 24 the parties have substituted the much
narrower protection afforded by Article 3.11.
Like the concept of layoff, “termination” must be
understood to focus on the job functions and duties rather than
on the individual. It is analogous to a layoff in that it
comes about because of a shortage of work or funds or an
abolition of a position or other material change in
organization of the Employer that makes the employee surplus.
It has nothing to do with the individual characteristics of the
employee.
“Termination” differs from the typical layoff
provision in a significant respect. Employees who have been
laid off generally have some ongoing rights in the Collective
Agreement such as recall, and sometimes some other benefits,
whether or not the employer-employee relationship itself has
been severed (see Article 24).
7.
By contrast, “termination” as used in- Article 3.11 is
a complete severence of the employment relationship.
In summary, the parties have substituted “termination”
on one weeks notice, as set out in Article 3.11, for the
detailed “job security” provision set out in Article 24 of the
Agreement (see Article 3.14 1. Article 3 employees are entitled
to one weeks notice of termination rather than a detailed and
much more expansive rights including recall (called
“re-appointment” in Article 24.14.2 and 24.14.3) found in
Article 24.
The collective bargaining relationship no more permits
the Employer to enter into individual contracts of fixed terms
of employment for Article 3 employees than it does for
employees covered by all of the provisions of the Collective
Agreement. The Employer may not individually contract terms of
employment with 3 bargaining unit employees, and in
particular it may not enter into an individual contract whereby
the employment of any particular employee is severed
automatically on a specific or fixed date by the imposition of
a “term appointment”. The Employer has only two means of
severing the employment relationship, by “dismissal” (subject
to Section 18(l)(c) of the CECB Act) and by “termination” (as
provided in Article 3.11).
8.
The Employers has neither properly dismissed nor
terminated the Grievor in this case. The majority has found on
the facts, with which I agree, that the Employer’s allegations
with respect to the Grievor’s attendance and punctuality are
not supported by the evidence and thus cannot found cause for
her dismissal. Nor was she “terminated” as that term is used
in Article 3.11. Her job “continued to exist” and “another
contract employee with considerably less seniority than the
Grievor had to be trained to fil,l” it (see p. 18 of Majority
Award). Absent a proper “dismissal” or “termination”. There
is no basis upon which the Employer may sever the employment
relationship with the Grievor.
SECTION 9 OF THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT
As already indicated earlier in these reasons
Section 9 of the Public Service Act provides:
“a person who is appointed to a position in the Public
Service for specific period ceases to be a public servant at the expiration of that period.”
At p. 16 of the Majority Decision an earlier decision
of this Board in Henderson 506/85 (Berity) is quoted as follows:
“there is no provision in the Collective Agreement, or
in the Public-Service Act, or in the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act that compels an employer to
renew a term contract of employment. On the contrary,
Section 9 of the Public Service Act makes it clear
that the employment of a Public Servant expires on the
expiration of term contract (p. 9)“.
9.
Does Section 9 of the Public Service Act authorize the
Employer to enter into individual fixed term contracts of
employment with bargaining unit members to the extent that it
overrides the exclusive representation rights of the Union?
Prior to 1972 the Public Service Act constituted the
statutory terms and conditions of employment for public
servants. In that year the CECB Act was passed. Thereafter
the terms and conditions of employments are governed by the
CECB Act and collective agreements negotiated or imposed
thereunder for those public servants who are members of
bargaining units for which representation rights have been
granted under the CECB Act.
This does not mean that the Public Service Act and its
provisions have ceased to have any continuing operation or
relevance. They continue to represent the terms and conditions
of employment for those public servants who are not included in -
the collective bargaining regime. In addition, there remains
some matters that are excluded from the collective bargaining
regime such as “conditions applicable to leaves of absence...
for any elective public office or political activities or
training or development” (see s.7 CECB Act). However, the
Public Service Act cannot itself impinge upon the collective
bargaining relationship, the hallmark which is the displacement
10.
of the rights of the Employer and employees to enter into
individual contractual agreements.
It seems to me that there are strong and well
recognized labour relations principles that support this view
of the limited effect of the Public Service Act when viewed in
the context of collective bargaining representation. To give
effect to the intent ~of CECB Act one must give the ambit of
bargaining contemplated therein a broad and liberal
interpretation.
The CECB Act recognizes that “employees” should have
the right to collectively negotiate terms and conditions of
their employment with their Employer (the Crown in Right of
Ontario) and where agreement cannot be reached, matters are to
be resolved by independent third party arbitration (see
Sections 11, 12 and 13 of the CECB Act).
Limits to this bargaining have been imposed in the
CECB Act itself (see Section 7), and these limitations include
some matters that are also found in the Public Service Act.
For example, conditions applicable to leaves of absence for
other than any elective office, or political activities (see
Section 7 of the CECB Act, and Section 12-16 of the Public
Service Act). From this one must conclude, expressio unius est
11.
exclusio alterus, that the Legislature did not intend to
super-impose section 9 of the Public Service ‘Act on the parties
by permitting individual “term contracts” outside the
Collective Agreement. To do so creates a separate and distinct
means by which the Employer could dispense with the employment
of a bargaining unit member, that is, by imposing individual
term contracts with fixed expiry dates. This is a new and
different method of dispensing with the employment of such
employees~ which is in addition to the only two methods
(“discharge” or “termination”) to sever the employment
relationship of Article 3 employees agreed to by the parties or
provided by the CECB Act.
For these reasons I would allow the grievance and
require the employer to reinstate the Grievor as an Article 3
employee with no loss of pay or benefits from June 28, 1985.
Dated at Toronto this 15th
day of January, 1987
1288r