Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-0093.Reitman.90-03-18 ON~ ~0 EMPLOYES DE ~ GOURONNE CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L~N~R~ GRIEVANCE CpMMISSION~DE SE3'rLEMENT REGLEMENT ~' BOARD DES GRIEFS 1~ DUN~S STREET WEST TORONTO, ON~Q M5G 1~- S~ 2100 TEL~HONE/T~PHONE 18~ RUE DUNDAS OUES~ TORON~ (ON~ MSG 1~ - 8UR~U 2100 ~1~ 5~-0~8 93/89 IN TH~ MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT' Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD BETWEEN: OPSEU (Reitsma) Grievor - and - The Crown in Right o[ Ontario (Ministry of Natural Resources) Employer BEFORE: O.D. McCamus Vice-Chairperson M. Vorster Member D. Daugharty Member FOR T~E I. Roland GRIEVOR: Counsel Gowling, Strathy & Henderson Barristers & Solicitors FOR THE M. Furanna EMPLOYER: Staff Relations Officer Management Board of Cabinet HEARING: July 27, 1989 Ruling' on Preliminary Objection This ruling pertains to a preliminary objection made by the employer at the commencement of these proceedings. The Grievor was a seasonal member of the unclassified staff who Worked for a number ofyears as a Program Technician (Resource Technician 3) at. the G. Howard Ferguson Forest Station for the Ministry of Natural Resources. During the 1988 work season, this position was held by two employees, the Grievor and a Mr. T. Vandenberg. As a result of a reorganization of the' work force at the G. Howard Ferguson Forest Station in 1988, the Program Technician position was eliminated and replaced by a new seasonal position at a lower classification level (Resource Technician 2) called Technical Assistant. As the Employer determined that there would need to be only one seasonal employee holding the. position of.Technical Assistant, the job was. posted, a. competition was held, and Mr. Vandenberg was appointed to the position. On February 14, 1989, the present grievance was filed by the Grievor. The. statement of grievance is expressed in the following terms: "I grieve violation of, but not limited to, Article 3.20.1 of the Collective Agreement in that I was not recalled to my former position.'" Paragraph 3.20.1 provides as follows: "Seasonal employees who have completed their probationary period shall be offered employment in their former positions in the following season on' the basis of seniority." The grievance form goes on to set forth .as the desired form of settlement; "That I be recalled to my former position as required by Article 3.20.1 with. ali pay and benefits normally paid, retroactive to my normal recall date." The Unionfurther allpges on behalf of the Grievor that the Grievor has .greater seniority than Mr. Vandenberg. On the face of it, then, the obvious theory of the grievance is that the Grievor alleges that the new Technical Assistant position is, in reality, his former Program Technician position and' accordingly, that he ought to have been appointed to the position -which he refers to as his "former position" -.on the basis of.seniority as is required by Article $.~0.1. At' the co~_encement of' these proceedings concerning, the Employer advanced a preliminary objection to this 'grievance. First', the Employer argues that it ha~ received, only shortly before the commencement of these hearings, notice of what it views as a material alteration in the theory of the grievance which should lead this Board to decline jurisdiction in this matter. Second, the Employer argues that the Unionis now seeking to review the reorganization of the work assignment that took place at the G. Howard Ferguson Forest Station and, further, that this Board lacks jurisdiction to review such a reorganization on the ground 'that it is an exclusive function of the Employer pursuant to Section 18(1)(a) o~ the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act R.S.O. 1980, C. 108, as amended. As will be seen, these two grounds for this preliminary objection to our Jurisdiction are related. After a brief exchange on these points at the hearing, it was agreed by counsel, with the consent of the Board, that further written submissions would be filed by counsel, dealing with these matters in due ~ourse.. These submissions have been received and reviewed by the members of this panel of the Board. We will· deal with eac~ of the two grounds for the Employer's preliminary' objection in turn. ' With respect to the alleged material, alteration in the theory of the grievance, some further background information is necessary. As' the, written submission on behalf of the Union indicates., there appears~to be. no doubt that. when the grievance was. initially filed in February of 1989, it· was' the. Grievor's impression that the allegedly new position of Technical Assistant was virtually the same position as the position of· Program Technician which he had previously occupied. Thus, the. gravamen of the grievance at this early stage was simply that the new position was not materially different from the old position and therefore that recall rights under Article 3.20.1 should have been made available to the Grievor. The Grievor's explanation for the difficult situation in which he finds, himself rests on allegations concerning certain tensions in his relationship with one of his superiors, Mr. All Campbell. Among the sources of the alleged tension in the relationship between the Grievor and Mr. Campbell was the Grievor's involvement in providing information that led-'ultimately to the successful prosecution of. Mr. Campbell for the commission of an offense under the Pesticides Act. It was apparently the Greivor's belief that the non-renewal of his seasonal employment' was in some fashion an act'of retaliation undertaken at the initiative of Mr. Campbell. What is' unclear, however, is the extent to which this explanation' or concern was communicated to the Employer at. earlier stages of the grievance process. The Union alleges that the problems with Mr'. Campbeli were brought to the Employer's attention at the pre- hearing stage of the process. The Employer's response, on the other'hand, is. that while a series of allegations weremadeby~the Grievor, they were vague and imprecise and. that the Grievor indicated that more would be heard of' all of this at the arbitration stage. For present purposes, however, the Board accepts that the Grievor's concern that his relationship with Mr. Campbell may provide, some explanation for the treatment he had received and with respect to which he now grieved, was brought to the Employer's attention at least by the pre-hearing stage of the grievance process. On June 29, 1989, after the grievance had been scheduled for a hearing before the Grievance Settlement Board, counsel for the : Union wrote a letter to the Employer asking for copies of the job descriptions for the positions of Technical Assistant, Program Technician' and for the'i, two positions~held before and after the reorganization by the immediate superior to the Technician Assistant and Program Technician positions~ Copies of those Job descriptions were forwarded on July 14th, 1989 by the Employer'. On July 19th, counsel for the Employer wrote to counsel for the Union indicating that "it is our understanding that Mr. Reitsma will be making allegations of' malice and a personal vendetta at arbitration". The letter went on to indicate that when this matter' was- raised ak the pre-hearing, the Grievor' refused to provide details' except to indicate that he had witnesses to prove his. allegations~ Further, the letter indicated that this situation created difficulty in preparing for the arbitration and asked for particulars, of the allegations. Counsel for the Union replied on July 26th, 1989 providing, such particulars'. Counsel. for Employer then replied that same day - this. being the day prior to the ~te mche~uled for the first day of hearings concerning this matter -indicating that the Employer would make an objection and that if' the objection was unsuccessful the Employer would request an adjournment to provide an Opportunity to prepare to deal with these matters. The. substance of the. Employer's allegation that a material change in the Union's theory of this grievance has occurred is as follows. The initial theory of the grievance, as indeed the Union concedes, was thatthe Technician Assistant job was essentially the same position as the Program Technician position which the Grievor had previously occupied. The position now taken by the Union, however, as the written submission~ made on behalf of the' Union indicate, is that although there 'do appear .to be differences between the Job descriptions of the two positions, the reorganization, which has resulted in those differences is a sham in the sense that -it ha~ been undertaken at Mr. Campbell's initiative as an exercise in retaliation. It is alleged that the "new" job has been created for the exclusive purpose of subverting the Grievor's recall rights. Thus, though there are or may be. differences in the two positions, they are differences upon which the Employer cannot rely. In this-somewhat different sense, then, the Grievor's original position may be. said to persist and it is that'former position to which the grievance, alleges that-he should. be recalled. From the Employer's perspective, then, the. theory of' the grievance has changed from one in which the central question was whether the two jobs were essentially the same to a theory of the grievance which rests upon an allegation that apparent differences in the two jobs are illusory and rest. on an exercise in reorganization undertaken by the Employer in bad faith. That' change, it is alleged, is a change in the "fundamental substance of the grievance" and therefore takes the matter outside the jurisdiction of this Board. In making this argument, the Employer relies on a number' of previous decisions of the Grievance Settlement Board in which the Board has refused to consider grievances which have. in some sense been fundamentally' altered. In ~acPherson and Ministry of Community and Social Services 83/84 (Brandt) fo~: example, a grievance wa~ brought on the explicit theory that a particular communication to the Grievor from the Employer constituted discipline. The communication in question allegedly imposed additional responsibilities on the Grievor to communicate directly to a particular third party rather than through the medium of a co- worker in a different' classification. The change was made in response to perceived difficulties in the working relationship between the Grievor and the co-worker in question. The Grievor argued that~the requirement to communicate directly with the third party constituted discipline and'had been imposed by, the Employer without just cause. The Employer argued in respohse- that. the Ietter was-not' intended to and did not amount, to discipIine but rather, amounted to a work assignment' which was not g{rievable. At the hearing., the Union persisted in advancing the. theory that the letter did indeed constitute discipline. The Union added an alternative theory at this stage, however, to the effect that'even if the letter constituted a work assignment, the ~ssignment in question was arbitrary and therefore grievablel The Board held that this "was a position which the Union could not %ake. in these proceedings. The grievance protests, the action of the Employer on the basis that it was discipIinary. We understood t~he grievance to have been processed on that assumption. The UniOn cannot now invite the Board to dispose of that grievance as ~.f it were a 8 grievance protesting a work assignment" (at P.8). The Board concluded that' the letter in question was not. disciplinary and the grievance was therefore dismissed. Similarly, in Heffering and Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations 504/80 (Delisle) the Board refused to consider a grievance which had been initially cast in the form of a straight-forward promotion-posting grievance when the Union sought to argue its case, at the arbitration hearing, on the basis that the grievor had certain "bumping rights" when her position was eliminated and should therefore have been simply transferred to one oft_he new'~acant positions without the necessity of competing with others for the promotion. In dismissing the grievance, the Board outlined, (at page 4) the test that should be applied, in our view, in. circumstances of the present kind: "The Board feels, however, that to accommodate the grievor's present allegations within this grievance would require more than simply a technical enlargement of form; it would require a very real change in substance. The Board recognizes that it must not strictly construe the grievance but also recognizes the necessity of giving Some meaning to the words chosen by the parties. In fairness to both sides in the preparation and presentation and to assist tbs Board in understanding and resolving the real dispute between the parties, that the dispute must be framed with some accuracy. Unfairness cannot be alleged in the air. Accordingly, the Board rules that the grievor cannot proceed along the path her counsel has described but rather is confined in presenting her case to the single issue .... " A fact situation somewhat similar to MacPherson arose in Gwin and Liquor Control Board of Ontario 27/83 (Draper) in which a discipline grievance was put forward at the arbitration hearing on the basis that the case was not in fact a discipline case at all but rather a dispute about attendance credits. The Employer raised a preliminary objection to the effect that the fundamental basis of the grievance had been altered. In reaching its conclusion that it should dismiss the grievance for this reason, the Board noted as follows at page 5: "In our opinion, we are thus faced-not with a request to entertain an amended grievance that would retain the essential identity of the original issues, but a request to entertain a grievance so fundamentally altered as to be tantamount to a separate grievance raising different issues. We recognize the force of the numerous court and arbitration cases rejecting a legalistic approach to the treatment of grievances and we acknowledge the desirability of acting upon grievances so as to achieve settlement of the true dispute. However, the problem raised by the Grievor's late change of strategy, if it may be so termed, is not one of form, or procedure, or of merely construing the language of the original grievance, butb is one going to the substance of the grievance. We find nothing in the jurisprudence, offering a basis upon which we might reasonably find the grievance, as now presented, to be arbitrable and permit the case to proceed as proposed." On the basis of authorities such as these, we are persuaded that it is established jurisprudence of this Board that the Union cannot be permitted to fundamentally alter the character' of the grievance at the arbitration stage of the process. Although there are obviously a number of ways in which the proposition might be stated, we are attracted by the language of the Gwin decision, quoted above, in which it is suggested that the grievance should be ~i~issed where the a~ende~ grievance does not "retain the essential identity of the original issues" but amounts in effect to a request "ko-entertain a grievance so fundamentally altered as to be tantamount to a separate grievance raising different issues". It is not necessary to belabour the policy reasons underlying this proposition. There is evident unfairness to the Employer in permitting a grievance to unfold on the basis of a particular set of allegations and a particular theory of liability, only to have it altered fundamentally at the arbitration process. The integrity of the earlier steps in the dispute resolution process would obviously ~e undermined by a willingness to allow what' is, in effect, a new grievance at this stage. Further, the prejudice to the. Employer in terms of its ability to prepare its case is self.- evident.. On' the other hand, if the Board were to give too sweeping a view to the application of this proposition, other harmful effects to the dispute resolution process provided for in the collective agreement would follow. As the Board noted in Gwin, an overly legalistic approach to the treatment of grievances may frustarte the objective of "acting upon grievances so as to achieve settlement of the true dispute." Thus, it cannot be the case that the Union is precluded from advancing legal arguments at the arbitration process that may not have been precisely, formulated by the representatives ofthe Union at earlier stages in the process. 11 There are two reasons for' this. First, the. various steps in the' grievance process envisage increasing'levels of familiarity with the factual circumstances underlying the dispute. Iris therefore obvious that the Grievor's understanding of the factual basis of his or her claim will evolve as this process unfolds. Thus', even though the fundamental nature of the grievance may not be effected, the factual contours-of the dispute may be adjusted over time and may lead the Union, for example, to rely on facts of which it was not completely aware at the initial stages of the process.. Second, if the initial grievance document and the initial statements made on behalf of the Grievor by the Union at step one, for example, were held,' ~n effect, to be legal pleadings in the technical sense from which no deviation could be contemplated at a later stage, the early stages of the process would, in our'view, become' needlessly technical and legalistic. It' i~ entirely within the spirit'of the mechanism set forth in the collective agreement that lawyers may not become involved in the process until its later stages. Accordingly, it is consistent with that general structure that the gravamen of the Union's grievance may be. put forward at the arbitration stage within the framework of a legal, analysis or argument that may not have been precisely formulated by the Union's representatives at earlier stages in the process. It is therefore necessary to distinguish, then, between the kind of fundamental change in the nature of the grievance that engages the line of jurisprudence set out above with the result that the grievance must be dismissed and the introduction of legal arguments and analysis that do not have this result. in the present case, we have come to the conclusion that the position taken by counsel on behalf of the Union comes within the second category for a number of reasons. First, unlike the cases upon which the-Employer has relied, we note that in the present case the Union both Persists in alleging the same breach of the collective agreement as that set out in the grievance and continues to seek the remedy sought therein. The Grievor wishes to be recalled to his former position on the basis that the Employer's failure to do so constitutes a breach of Article 3.20.1 of the Agreement. To be sure, the Union's view of the kinds of arguments that need now to be made in support of that alleged violation of the Agreement have altered.. They have altered, however~ in the light of. factual circumstances that. became known to the Union only by the time that the matter had been scheduled for a hearing before this Board. That is to say, as far as the information before us indicates, the Union'did not have available to it copies ofthe job descriptions in question until that point in time. Moreover, the '' theory advanced by the Union with respect to the illusory nature of the reorganization provides a legal analysis of what the Union believes to be the significance of the Grievor's allegations concerning the extent to which the treatment of the Grievor is, in effect, an exercise in retaliation undertaken by Mr. Campbell. That is to say, the Grievor had previously indicated that he believed that retaliation had occurred. The argument now advanced by the Union purports to provide a legal reason for making a connection between the Grtevor's assertion that his treatment was so motivated and the analysis of his recall rights under Article 3.20.1. Where, as. here, the significance ofthe "new argument" made at the hearing is to provide a legal basis for a.complaint advanced by the Grievor at an earlier stage in the process, it would, for the reasons advanced above, be unattractive to conclude that the Union is limited only to those arguments of a legal character which, have been made at earlier steps in the process.. For each of these. reasons, then, we are of the view that the argument advanced on behalfb of the Union at the arbitration stage is not in effect a request to this Board "to entertain a grievance so fundamentall~ altered as' to be tantamount to a separate grievance raising' different issues". Rather, the Union appears to be attempting to rely on the. e~olving understanding it has. developed of the factual circumstances of the presentdispute and a correspondingly evolving nature of the legal theory underpinning the grievance. The "new argument"-is being advanced, however, in support of what is essentially the same grievance seeking essentially the same relief. The Employer has further argued, in support of its preliminary objection, that the Board lacks jurisdiction to deal with the grievance as argued at this stage by the Union on the basis that it touches upon a question of reorganization, this being an area of discretion secured to the Employer under Section 18(1) (a) of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act. That provision states as follows: "18.-(1) Every collective agreement shall be deemed to provide that it is the exclusive'function of the employer to manage, which function, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, includes the right to determine, (a) employment, appointment, complement, organization, -assignment, discipline, dismissal, suspension, work methods and procedures, kinds and locations of equipment and classification of positions; and and such matters will not be the subject of collective bargaining nor come within the jurisdiction of a board." The Employer submits that this legislation has the effect of prohibiting this Board from .assuming jurisdiction to investigate the Employer's reasons for- reorganizing the work' place and reassigning work. While we are persuaded that this is, an area of. management discretion which is normally beyond the purview of review in proceedings of this kind, we note that it is well established in the arbitral jurisprudence that "there is a general arbitral presumption that the right to reorganize the work force must not be carried out in bad faith~ arbitrarily, or disriminatorily" (See Brown and Beatty, Canadian Labour Arbitration, 3rd ed., 1988 p. 5-25. Section 18(1) (a) of the Act, by stipulating that a provision concerning management rights in this and in other areas shall be deemed to be included in every collective agreement covered by the statute, does not appear to preclude the application of jurisprudence of this kind. Indeed, it would be surprising if the intention of the legislature was to exclude review on such grounds. AccOrdingly, one would wish to find explicit language in the statute to that effect in order to reach such a conclusion. For purposes of dealing with this preliminary objection, of course, it must be assumed, that there is' merit in the allegations of bad faith made by the Union. If, indeed, it were th~ case that an alleged reorganization' were undertaken not for legitimate reasons but for the very purpose of denying an individual recall rights otherwise secured to an employee by Article 3.20.1 of the Collective Agreement, we. are prepared to assume that this would be sufficient evidence of bad faith that it would confer jurisdiction on this Board to consider the grievance in question. Accordingly,. we view the Union's allegation to this effect as a sufficient basis for engaging the ~oard.'s Jurisdiction to enquire into such matters. For the foregoing reasons, the preliminary objection raised by the.Employer is hereby dismissed. Dated at Toronto this 18th day of March, 1990. Vice-Chair I. ~~dissent "David P. Daugharty" (See attached dissent) --' David P. Daugharty Member I concur/~' "Menno Vorster" Menno Vorster Member Dissent I' have had an' opportunity to review the reasons of my colleagues for dismissing the preliminary objection raised by the Employer. I. wish to dissent for the following reasons. I agree with the Vice-Chair that the central question raised by the Employer is whether the Union seeks at this late stage to alterthe fundamental nature of the grievance. My view, however, is =hat such a change is present in this case. The original version of~ the grievance alleged, in effect, that the new Technician Assistant job was not materially different from the Program Technician job. The Union now takes~ the. position, apparently' for the first time, that though there appear to be differences between the two jobs, those differences are the result of an artificial exercise in reorganization undertaken in bad faith for the purpose of denying the Grievor's recall rights. While I appreciate the difficulty of drawing the distinction between fundamental change in the nature of the grievance, on the one hand, and an amended' grievance that retains its essential identity, on the other, the present case, in my view, comes within the category of fundamental change. An allegation of bad faith in the exercise of management' rights raises rather different issues from an allegation that two positions are essentially the same job. For this reason, I would uphold the Employer's preliminary objection and dismiss the grievance. I wish to further note, however, that I am in agreement with my colleagues on the second issue raised by the Employer, the extent of the Board's jurisdiction to review a reorganization and assignment of duties. Although work assignments and their reorganization are, of course, an exclusive function of management under Section 18 of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act. R.S.O., 1980, Chapter 108, I share the view of the majority of this panel that Section 18 does not preclude review by this Board of a. reorganization on the grounds of alleged bad faith. I express no opinion, at thi~ stage, as to whether such bad faith has in fact occurredin'the present case. The making of such an allegation by the Union does, however, open up this issue for review by the Board. "David P. Daugharty" David P. Daugharty