HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-1136.Singh.88-09-26EMPLOYESOELA CO”RONNE
CROWNEMPLOYEES
! GRIEVANCE
DE L’ONTARIO
C~Mry’lISSION DE
:=LEMENT REGLEMENT
RD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNOAS STREET WEST. TORONTO. ONTARlO. MS0 I.?8 - SWTE 2100
mo, RUE OUNOAS OUEST. TORONTO, (ONTARIO, MS0 IIS - BUREAU 2100
Between:
Before:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (Mahaish Singh)
1136/85 I
I
Griever
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation and Communications)
Employer
R.J. Delisle Vice Chairperson
I. Freedman Member
G. Milley Member
For the Griever: P. Cavalluzzo
Counsel
Cavalluzzo, Hayes & Lennon
Barristeis and Solicitors
For the Employer.: M. Furanna
Staff Relations Advisor
Ministry of Transportation and Communications
M. Smeaton
Staff Relations Advisor
Ministry of Transportation and Communications
May 14, 1988
April 28, 1988
Hearings:
I 1
DECISION
The grievor complains that he was unfairly denied a
promotion to the position of Rehabilitation Technician. That
position was created by the Ministry and advertised as open for
competition, Ministry wide, to applications filed before~.August
15, 1985. There were five applicants for the position and they
were interviewed by a panel of three. The questions asked,
Exhibit 4, / were in relation to Technical Skills,
Interpersonal/Communication Skills, and Judgment. The successful
candidate, Edward Gulis, was graded by the panel so far in front
of ~the other four, that, for them, seniority was never in issue.
The griever. is a more eenior employee than Gulis.
The grievor filed his grievance October 22, 1985. On
November 21, 1985 the Assistant Deputy Minister, Bruce Alexander,
held a second stage meeting with respect to that grievance and on
November, 27 he wrote to the grievor, Exhibit 5, advising that in
his view the selection process was flawed. Alexander's letter
states that' the selection was based solely on the responses to
the questions in the interview and that the failure of the
interviewing panel to review the files or work record of the
candidates was a fatal flaw. In addition, he believed that one"
of the questions was ambiguous and given its subjective nature it
constituted an unfair basis for selection. Alexander directed
that the interviews be reheld with~a panel of new members, with a
new set of questions, and that the panel should review the
2
personnel file of each applicant or discuss each applicant's work
record with their supervisor. A second set of interviews was
arranged but the grievor declined an invitation to participate,
Exhibits 6 and 7. In the second selection process Gulis was
again the successful candidate.
At the hearing before us both the grievor and Gulis were
examined regarding their qualifications for the job. The "Must
HavesV1 and,~ 88Should Haves", as detailed on the notice of
competition, Exhibit 3, were thoroughly explored. The griever's
evidence was that he lacked three of the five "Must Have"
qualifications. He testified that he did not have a "sound
knowledge of Ministry specifications and practices for the
preparation of rehabilitation contract packages," nor a "sound
knowledge of concrete deck and concrete structure rehabilitation
methods and equipment", nor a knowledge of "survey policies,
procedures and practices81. Gulis' evidence was that he had all
the "Must Haves" and all the "Should Haves". Roger Northwood,
Head, Concrete Section, Highway Engineering Division, the
griever's then supervisor, testified that on reviewing the
applications the panel members believed the grievor was only
marginally qualified. In their view the job required someone
with construction experience and the griever's experience with
the Ministry .was solely in the laboratory testing building
materials. An interview was offered since the grievor indicated
he had done construction design before joining the Ministry in
1968. Northwood testified that after the interviews the panel
3
believed the grievor had shown some knowledge and had there been
no other applicants he would have been awarded the job. 'The
experience of Gulis, who joined the Ministry in 1973, ~was almost
totally involved in construction and heavily into rehabilitation
of structures. On the basis of the evidence before us it is
quite clear that Gulis had much better qualifications for the
job.
Northwood's evidence' was that, contrary to what the
Assistant Deputy Minister believed, the applicants' supervisors
were consulted. He, Northwood, had supervised three of the
applicants, he contacted the supervisor of another, and another
panel member contacted Gulis' supervisor. The panel took a&l
this into account and. the A.D.M. was simply wrong. In cross-
examination however, a detailed analysis of the grading of the
answers left the Board disquieted to say the least. It was
especially disturbing to learn that Northwood was prepared in his
language, "to horse-trade" with the other panel members over
grades to be assigned, to gain a consensus, and that as a result
the griever's grades were lowered.
What are we left with? The grievor complains in October,
1985 that the selection process conducted in September, 1985 was
flaued and that he was prejudiced. The Ministry appears to
agree, Exhibit 5, and seeks to remedy the situation by a new
selection. The grievor refuses to participate. The grievor
testified that he'd had a flawed interview the year before and on
the new interview the result was the same. Also, the grievor
c 5 .i
4
felt he was placed in a disadvantage vis-a-vis Gulis because
Gulis had been, by the time of the new interviews, on the job for
some five months. Now it's 1988 and the grievor seeks~ a remedy.
The Board can, and does, recognize and declare that by the
process engaged in, in September 1985, the grievor was unfairly
denied a promotion and the allegation in his grievance, then
filed, was correct.
Counsel for the grievor argues that this Board should award
the position to the grievor with appropriate compensation.
Counsel relies on two decisions: a decision of the Board in &Z
Zuibrvcki (1981) 30 L.&C. 2d 206 (Prichard) and a private
arbitration, Re Bank of Montreal and C.W.U, (1982) 6 L.A.C. (3d)
289 (Carter). .Both decisions are distinguishable. In &
Zuibrvcki this Board bemoaned the fact that the employer there
elected to call no evidence and concluded that it was "forced" to
conclude from the griever's evidence that a case had been made
out that the grievor had successfully established a claim to
equality of ability. The Board, commenting on the failure to
call evidence, noted:
Through its conduct, the employer has restricted the range of appropriate remedies, eliminating the appropriateness of a re-run. (p. 217).
" In Re Bank of Montreal, the Board noted that virtually no
evidence of the successful candidate's qualifications was offered
and concluded:
. ..the union has established on the balance of probabilities that the ability, skill, and performance of the grievor was at least relatively equal to that of (the incumbent). In light of this conclusion and the griever's greater
5
I seniority, we find that the employer did breach the
I collective agreement by not awarding the job to the grievor.
In our case, far from persuading us that his qualifications were
relatively equal at the time of the competition, we are
satisfied of the reverse. We cannot award the job to the
grievor.
Counsel for the grievor argued that the Ministry's action of
running a new competition was unilaterally ,deciding on a
settlement of the grievance. We prefer to regard it as a bona
fide attempt to set things aright when the Ministry recognized at I
the second stage that the process was flawed. Despite his
apprehensions the grievor could have participated in the second
set of interviews and if dissatisfied with the new selection
process he could have grieved that.. We think that, at this
distance, given Gulis' experience in the job, and the failure of
the grievor to further participate in the competition process it
would be impractical and wrong to order the competition re-run.
In the end we find that by the interview process conducted
in September, 1985 the employer did breach the collective
agreement. Some thought was given to compensation as an
alternative remedy. However, although the grievor established a
duty in the employer, and a breach! there was no evidence of
actual damage suffered and we limit our award to the declaratory
relief mentioned above.
Dated at King&On this 26th day of ,September, 1988.
I
G. MilleY,’ Member