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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-0478.Taylor et al.87-10-21File # 470/U IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD Between: Before: For the Grievor: OPSEU (Taylor et al) Grievor - and - The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Health) Employer G. Brent Vice Chairman F. Taylor Member G.J. Milley Member M. Farson Counsel Cornish & Associates Barristers & Solicitors For the Employer: R.D. Smith Regional Personnel Administrator Human Resources and Personnel Development Branch Ministry of Health Hearings: November 10, 1986, June 9, 1987 and September 14, 1987 2 DECISION The grievance alleges that the grievor's position of Camera/Reader - Printer Operator in the Ministry of Health is improperly classified as an Operator 2, Microfilm and shouldbe reclassifiedas an Operator 3, Microfilm. The parties filed the following statement (Ex. 1) with us: The parties have agreed to the following: 1. 2. The Grievance Settlement Board has jurisdiction in this grievance. The Collective Agreement with respect to Working Conditions and Employee Benefits signed on December 17, 198.2 and covering the period from January 1, 1982 to December 31, 1983 was in effect at all times relevant to this grievance. The Taylor grievance is beforetheGrievance Settlement Board as a single grievance. Effective September 1, 1984 the duties and responsibilities of the positions of Camera operator 05-7326-11 (attached to the Audit as Appendix 1) and Reader-Printer Operator 05- 7326-12 (attached to the Audit as Appendix 11) were~combinedinto a single position titled Camera/Reader - Printer Operator 05-7326-11 (Attached hereto as Attachment 1) I,. The position description (Attachment 1) was in place on the date the grievance was lodged. An audit was carried out on Apri130, 1985, the report of which, together with comments by the grievers and supervisor is attached as Attachment 11. The grievers' OPSEU Staff Representative completed the incumbents' coranents on their behalf. The class standards for the Operator, Microfilm Series, as revised October 1965, are attached hereto as Attachment 111. Ms. Susan Taylor was employed in the Ministry of Health's Regional Microrecords Service in Kingston from September 26, 1983 to August 31, 1984, as a Reader-Printer Operator. She worked as a Camera/Reader Printer Operator from September 1, 1984 (date of the combined positions) until August 30, 1985. On September 3, 1985 she was appointed, through competition, to a position with the Ministry 3 in Toronto which is not affected by this classification grievance. It should be noted that counsel for the grievor informed the Board at the outset that in making the case for reclassification there would be no argumentthattheposition was improperly classifiedbased on a comparison with the relevant class standards. Counsel stated that the case would rest entirely on a %sage" argument comparing the grievor's position with that of Microfilm Operator in the Ministry of Transportation andcommunications, Licencing and Control Branch, in Kingston. Atthetimethe grievance in this case was filed, February 18, 1985, that position was classified as Operator 3 Microfilm. It was subsequently reclassified as Operator 2, Microfilm effective January, 1986. The Board heard evidence about the duties and responsibilities involved in the two jobs with which the argument is concerned. While it is usual in classification cases to set out that evidence in some detail and to make comparisons between the two jobs, this case is somewhat unusual in view of the positions taken by the parties. The grievor's case does not allege that her job is improperly classified according to the class standards: therefore, we can assume that if the grievor's job were compared to the class standard for Operator 2 Microfilm, it would fit within that class standard. The Employer's argument hinges on the submission that the Ministry of Transportation and Communication job was improperly classified as Operator 3 Microfilm and that the proper olassification of that job at all material times should have been Operator 2 Microfilm. As a consequence, the only logical conclusion that can be drawn fromthesetwo arguments is thatthesetwo jobs are essentially, substantially, or virtually the same for the purposes of 4 classification That is, since the Employer's view is that both jobs are properly classified as operator 2 Microfilm, the Employer cannot he heard to say that the two jobs are significantly different; and since the Union's view is thatthetwo jobs are the same, it would not argue that they are significantly different. Therefore, we can safely accept that there is no significant difference for classification purposes between the two jobs. There is therefore no need to canvass the evidence of job duties and responsibilities thoroughly. On the occasion of the downgrading of the Ministry of Transportation and Communication jobs to Operator 2 Microfilm, the Union launched an action before the Ontario Public Service Labour Relations Tribunal alleging violations of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaininq Act, R.S.O. 1980, chap. 108. - Grievances were also filed by the employees concerned. On July 10, 1987 the Tribunal released its decision dismissing the complaint(T/OO08/86). It is clear from the findings of the Tribunal and from the evidence before us that the.. Ministry of Transportation and Communications perceived in 1984 that the position in its Ministry might be improperly classified, and commenced an examination of the situation in November, 1984, before the grievance in this case was filed. According to the uncontradicted evidence of MS. Joan Crowther, Senior Policy and Standards Advisor, Classification and Compensation Unit, Human Resources, Ministry of Transportation and Communications, the grievances were withdrawn. In view of these facts, we consider that we are justified in concluding that there was nothing improper in the reclassification of the Ministry of Transportation and Communications job, and that the employees affected have accepted the reclassification as correct, It should be noted, though, that for some reason whichwas not made clear, while the re-examination was taking . 5 place the position was reconfirmed as Operator 3 Microfilm approximately two and one-half weeks before this grievance was filed. At the commencement of this case there was a dispute between the parties as to whether the bsage"argument could be on its own, and as to whether the Employer could argue that the Ministry of Transportation and Communication position was improperly classified. On November 21, 1986 the Board issued the following directive to the parties: 1. The Union can make the usage argument even if it is not alleging that the position measured against the class standard should be in the higher classification. 2. It will be a matter appropriate to final argument whether the Union has proven on balance that the grievers perform substantially the same work as the employees in the higher classification to which the Union is making the comparison. 3. If the Employer is asserting the right to argue that the comparison is inappropriate because the higher classified position was in fact wrongly or improperly classified according to the class standards as of the date of the grievance, then we will hear that evidence and will hear argument at the end of the case as to whether that position is possible inview of the decisions which have followed Acton 456/83. As we have already noted, we arepreparedto acceptthatthe only logical conclusion which can be reached in view of the positions which both parties are taking is that the Microfilm Operator in the Ministry of Transporation and Communications and the job which the grievor performs involve substantially the same duties and, for classification purposes, are indistinguishable. Counsel for the grievor arguedthatto defeattheusage argument the Employer could not rely on the fact that the comparison job was improperly classified. In particular, counsel referred us to the decision of the Divisional Court in the Lowman case and to the'cases which followed it. We were asked to uphold the grievance and reclassify the grievor's position as Operator 3 Microfilm. In essence, the Employer's position is that the usage argument made on behalf of the grievor must fail because the Ministiy of Transportation and Communications position was an anomaly in the system, the anomaly has been corrected, and the corrected anomaly is not a:valid basis for making the usage argument. In connection with these arguments the parties referred us to the following cases: Acton (GSB File 456/83); Lowman (GSB Pile 13/82,: etc.) reversed by the Ontario Divisional Court in an unreported decision dated April 22, 1985; Carvalho (GSB File 1484/84); Bahl (GSB File 891/85): srick (GSB File 564/80); Montague (GSB File 110/78); Kahn (GSB File 290/82)1 Wallace (GSB File 274/84); and Ontario Public Service Employees av- The Queen in right of Ontario et al. (Brecht) (198i), 40 O.R.(2d) 142 (Div’l Ct). Many of the cases cited to us dealt with the application'of the "usage"test in various circumstances where no mistake is being alleged by the EmplOyer. For most purposes, we accept that the usage test was definedby the Divisional Courtinthe judicial review of the Brecht case (supra) in the underlined portion of the following passage: ' On a classification grievance the Board is generally mandated to consider two matters, namely, whether or not the grievor's job measured against the relevant class standard comes within a higher classification which he seeks, and,. even if he fails to fit within the higher class standards, whether there are emplovees performinq the same -- duties in a higher, more senior classification.... - i&39= 145 -- underlining added) In ActOn (supra) the Board concluded that the jobin question was , 7 I properly classified in view of the class standard. It then went on to consider the classification question in view of the following set of circumstances outlined at pages t2 and 13 of the award: There is, however, another issue, one which raises questions of principle. Some time before this grievance was filed, an issue had arisen in respect of a seventh payroll clerk job. In December, 1982, a Ms.'A.Collin retired from a job entitled Senior Payroll Clerk and classified as Clerk Grade 4.~ This job was virtually identical to the work being performed by all of the other Payroll Clerks, except that the Senior Payroll Clerk.was responsible forperformingthepayroll for headofficepersonnel, andofficers andboard members. Traditionally, this access to payroll information relating to the senior management and personnel had been used to justify a Grade 4 classification. Prior tothepostingofthis job, there was a request for a job evaluation and a position identification questionnaire was prepared. That questionnaire was in evidence, and it is difficult to see any substantial distinctions between it and the documentsusedinthepresentgrievance. The evaluation wentthroughthe usual process,... and the salary committee took the view that the correct classification was at the Clerk Grade 3 level. ( . . At this point . . . the Assistant Director Finance intervened in the process. He argued to the salary committee that the position should be at the Clerk Grade 4 level because of the confidentiality issue, the requirement to deal directly with senior management and board members, and certain minor technical differences because of management compensation methods. Ultimately, apparently for the reasons just set out, [he1 was successful in convincing the salary committee that a Grade 4 classification ought to be assigned. Therefore, the employer in that case was not arguing that the ClerkGrade level was inappropriate for the Senior Payroll Clerk or that the Senior Payroll Clerk classification had been an error. The Board, on examining the two positions and comparing the job duties for the purpose of the "usage" test, believed that it had to determine whether the higher classifiedposition was properly classified, and reached the conclusion that the Senior Payroll Clerk was not properly classified as a Clerk Grade 4. At pages 15 and 16 of the award the Board said: In circumstances where the Grievance Settlement Board is justified that a classification is wrong, is it proper nevertheless to use that classification to justify the reclassification upwards of another employee? In our view, we do not think that it is. Classification is an inexact science, and it may be that an employer will apply the classification criteria differently from case to case; where that has occurred, and where it appearstbata grievor is disadvantagedby a more stringent application in his or her case than in the great majority of other cases, there is an argument for an upward classification adjustment. The Grievance Settlement Board has accepted such an argument on a number of occasions in the past, and undoubtedly will do so again. In the present circumstances, however, where one employee appears to have been given a windfall in the classification system because of what appear to us to be inadmissible factors, factors covered neither by the classification guide nor by the general principles of job evaluation, we think it would be incorrect to pass that windfall to other employees as well. While the assignment of a-higher classification to another employee doing similar work may be evidence that the job of the grievor should be classified at the higher level, the evidentiary value of that fact is completely underminedonce it has been made to appeartothe Grievance Settlement Board that the higher classification is the incorrect one, rather than the lower classification. In other words, whatever persuasive value the fact of [the employee's1 higher classification may have had, that persuasive value is vitiated by our finding,,at least on the evidence before us, that she is misclassified. In that decision the Board was giving the classification system as it ought to be properly administered greater weight than the system as it was administered in the case of the higher classified employee. The employer there was not admitting that it made a mistake in the case of the higher classified employee and was not trying to ask the Board to regard the higher classification as anomalous. The Board considered . 9 that in dealing with a usage argument ithadto determine whether the higher classifiedposition was in fact properly classified before it could award the higher classification to the grievor*. The correctness of the approach taken in ACtOn (supra) must be viewed as being open to considerable question since the decision of the Divisional Court in reviewing Lowman (supra). In Lowman the Board had before it five employees, all of whom it concluded were doing the same job. Four of the employees were in one classification and one was in a higher classification. The employer had at one time reclassified the higher job downward; butduringthe course of the hearing it returned the job to the higher classification. These were the only five employees in the civil service who were performing this work or whose jobs were so classified. The Board held that the fact that all five were doing the same work even though they were not all classified identically was not determinative of the issue, and said at page 10: As previously stated, the essence of the Board's inquiry in a case of this nature is to determine whethertheBmployer has conformed to its actual classification standards. These standards are measured by the Employer's written class standards unless there is proof that the Employer has varied the written standard. If there are employees classified at a higher level who are doing the same work as the Grievors, it may indicate that the Employer has by its practice varied its written class standards (E Montague 110/7S). In these circumstances, the EmplOyer'S practice of classifying employees is a form of extrinsic evidence which may indicate that the Employer has in fact reinterpreted its written class standards. However, in order to rely on such evidence, there ordinarily must be a consistent practice of varying the class standards and, in the usual case, the class standard must be sufficiently broad to cover the job in question. In essence, the Board's decision was that one variation does not a consistent practice make. The decision was quashed by the Divisional Court on April 22, 1985. The complete decision is set out below: In our opinion, the Boasderredin failing to apply the second test in OPSEU v. The Queen in --- Right of Ontario c & (1982), 40 O.R.(Zd) 142 (Brecbt's case). Having found that there was an employee performing substantially the same duties as the grievor8 andthatsuch employee had been deliberately classified by the respondent in a higher classification, the Board acted unreasonably and without jurisdiction in failing to find that the grievor6 wouldbeproperly classified in the higher classification. The higher classified employee and the four grievor6 are the only persons in the Public Service performing the function of remote sensory supervision. In the circumstances we are of the opinion that it does not assist the respondent to argue that the senior employee may have been improperly classified. The decision of theBoardis quashed and set aside and the matter remitted back to the Board, costs to the applicant. The Divisional Court seems to be saying that the fact that the employer "deliberately" classifies one employee in a classification is sufficient for the purposes of determining the classification of other employees doing substantially the same work, regardless of the class standard. That is the general statement contained in the first paragraph. In the second paragraph the Court said that in the circumstances before it the employer could not argue that there was an error in the classification of the one job. The court does not say that the employer can never successfully argue error in other circumstances. In the particular case before the Court the employer had done nothing to correct the error which it was trying to rely on to avoid reclassifying other employees, and so by its own deliberate act was continuing an inequity and could be said to have varied its own classification system. Three cases whichhavebeenconsideredbythe BoardsinceLowman 11 (supra) are Wallace (which predated the judicial review), Carvalho, and Bahl (all cited supra). None of the cases dealt with situations similar to the one before us where the Employer was alleging that the position which was being used as a comparison was classified in error and where the error had been corrected by the time the grievance was heard. Clearly the Boards in Carvalho and @& disagree about the effect of the Divisional Court's decision in Lowman on the usage test. Following the Lowman decisioni it is our view that the Employer is precluded from pleading error or anomaly where there is a deliberate decision to classify substantially similar jobs differently. It would appear that the overriding consideration, in view of that decision, is that the classification system be applied uniformly and consistently so that positions which are alike in all relevant respects are classified alike. The Court did not consider a situation where the Employer recognisedan error and then did something to restore consistency and uniformity to its classification system by applying the class standard as written. It is our view that for a classification system to workproperly and to ensure that the same work attracts the same pay there must be a mechanism for correcting the errors which will inevitably arise in the application of the system. No classification system can hope to achieve even a semblance of equity and fairness if errors must be frozen for evermore. If the Employer recognises an error and then does nothing to correct it, it would appear that since Lowman it can no longer refuse to acknowledge that the "error" has in effect become a relevant standard of comparison. Where the Employer recognises that a mistake has been made and acts to correct it, then surely it has restored consistency and uniformity to the system and can once again rely on the class standard 12 as written as being the applicable standard against which to measure the job which is the subject of the classification grievance. In our view, it is irrelevant that the error was not corrected by the date the grievance was filed, andin this csse the fact that the Employer was engaged in correcting the error at the date of the grievance and subsequently did correct it is sufficient to show that it was applying the class standard se written and did not intend to vary it through application. It would be strange result, indeed, if the effect of this decision were to force the Employer to reclassify a job which is classified correctly according to the class standards simply because it was substantially the same job as one which had once been improperly classified higher than the grieved job but which was now properly classified in the same classification as the grieved job. If we were to do this we would be forcing the Employer to perpetuate a mistake it had already corrected and leave it vulnerable to claims for reclassification from every employee occupying jobs classified as Operator 2 Microfilm. Such a result would not benefit anyone interested in encouraging a reasonable, fair and equitable application of any system of job classification. The question before us is whether the position in question was properly classified. In view of the evidence, we conclude that it was properly classified, and can see no justification for granting the relief sought, which would result in the job being classified at a higher classification than warranted by a proper application of .either the class standard or of the usage test. For all of the reasons set out above, the grievance is dismissed. :. ,. ’ 13 , : DATED AT LCNDON. ONTARIO TaIS 2lst DAY OF October , 1987. &J 3243 Gail Brent, Vice-Chairman ~,&.&& : . - 'F. Taylor, Memb 6 lsli.y G.J. Milley, Member‘ I