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A-46-82
Economists', Sociologists' and Statisticians' Asso ciation (Applicant)
v.
Public Service Staff Relations Board (Respond- ent)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Urie JJ. and Kerr D.J.— Ottawa, September 23 and 24, 1982.
Judicial review — Applications to review — Public Service — Whether P.S.S.R.B. has jurisdiction to add terms to collec tive agreement dealing with downgrading of positions and rights of employees to refuse to work, in view of s. 7 of Public Service Staff Relations Act giving Treasury Board exclusive authority to classify positions — Public Service Staff Rela tions Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, ss. 7, 70(1) — Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. F-10, s. 7(1) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
This is a section 28 application to review and set aside an arbitral award of the Public Service Staff Relations Board. The Arbitration Board concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to add the following terms and conditions of employment:
(a) continuance of former rates of pay after downgrading of certain positions;
(b) right of employee to withdraw from work where he has reasonable grounds to believe that his duties impose a danger to health or safety;
(c) right of employee to refuse to do the work of striking employees without being subject to disciplinary action.
Held, the appeal is allowed in respect of (a). A clause which pertains to rates of pay for employees affected by downward reclassification does not encroach upon the exclusive authority of the Treasury Board to classify or reclassify under section 7 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act. The article clearly deals with "rates of pay" and is thus included in the jurisdiction of an arbitral board.
With respect to (b) and (c), the appeal is dismissed. Article (b) is, in pith and substance, a provision dealing with conditions of employment relating to health and safety in the workplace. Although Article (c) is linked to the quantum of disciplinary penalty that may be assessed, its essential subject matter does not fall within section 70.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
The Queen v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1980]
1 F.C. 801 (C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
The Queen v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1981]
2 F.C. 625 (C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Catherine H. MacLean for applicant.
John E. McCormick for respondent.
Joseph A. Pethes for Attorney General of
Canada.
SOLICITORS:
Nelligan/Power, Ottawa, for applicant. John E. McCormick, Ottawa, for respondent. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for Attorney General of Canada.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside an arbitral award of the Public Service Staff Relations Board dated December 14, 1981. The arbitral award related to a dispute between the Economists', Sociologists' and Statisticians' Association (E.S.S.A,), the applicant herein, and Her Majesty in right of Canada as represented by the Treasury Board. The Board of Arbitration concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to determine certain matters referred to it for resolution by the applicant. Those matters are as follows:
(a) Proposed Article 16.08 and accompanying Pay Notes 10-14;
(b) Proposed Article 25.01; and
(c) Proposed Articles 30.02 and 30.03.
The applicant challenges these portions of the Arbitral Board's decision which thus form the subject matter of this section 28 application.
(a) Proposed Article 16.08 and accompanying Pay Notes 10-14
It was agreed by counsel for the parties that the position of Pay Notes 10-14 which accompanied Article 16.08 is identical to that of Article 16.08 and that the Court's decision with respect to Article 16.08 should apply equally to the said Pay Notes. Turning now to Article 16.08, that pro posed Article reads as follows:
16.08 Employees whose positions have been downgraded as a result of the reclassification of the E.S. group on July 1, 1981 shall be paid at the rate of pay in Appendix A corresponding to their former level until such time as they vacate that position.
The Board dealt with this matter as follows (Case, page 079):
With respect to the Association's proposed new Clause 16.08, the Board is of the opinion that its subject matter does not fall within the boundaries of section 70 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act and therefore cannot be dealt with by a board of arbitration. While the Association's proposal purports to deal with "pay administration" its essential purpose is to limit the effects of a downward reclassification of positions on particular employees. Section 7 of the Act establishes the Treasury Board's exclusive authority to classify positions in the Public Service and an arbitral award cannot encroach on this author ity by modifying the effects of classification (or reclassifica- tion). It may be noted that the Treasury Board has issued Regulations Respecting Pay on Reclassification or Conversion (Sub-chapter 510-1 of the Personnel Management Manual-- September 20, 1978), in Part I of which provisions are made for "Incumbents of Positions which have been reclassified to a group and/or level having a Lower Maximum Rate of Pay".
I agree with the Board that its jurisdiction to deal with Article 16.08 must be found in subsection 70(1) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, if it is to be found at all. That subsection reads as follows:
70. (1) Subject to this section, an arbitral award may deal with rates of pay, hours of work, leave entitlements, standards of discipline and other terms and conditions of employment directly related thereto.
The Board, in its reasons quoted supra, also made reference to section 7 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act. That section reads as follows:
7. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to affect the right or authority of the employer to determine the organization of the Public Service and to assign duties to and classify positions therein.
The Board found that "the essential purpose" of Article 16.08 "... is to limit the effects of a downward reclassification of positions on particu lar employees" and that since section 7 gives to the Treasury Board exclusive authority to classify positions in the Public Service, an arbitral award which would modify the effects of classification or reclassification encroaches on that authority. I am not persuaded that this view of the matter is the correct one. I do not agree that a clause such as 16.08 which admittedly pertains to rates of pay for the employees affected by the downward reclassifi-
cation encroaches upon the exclusive authority of the Treasury Board to classify or reclassify. A reduction in pay is only one of the possible conse quences of a downward reclassification. As was pointed out by counsel for the applicant, there are many other possible consequences or results such as, for example, the loss of perquisites attendant upon employment in the higher classification'. But these consequences do not affect the right of the Treasury Board to reclassify. I agree with appli cant's counsel that subsection 7(1) of the Finan cial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. F-10, clearly separates the power of the Treasury Board to classify positions on the one hand from its power to determine and regulate pay on the other. Para graph 7(1)(c) empowers the Treasury Board to: "provide for the classification of positions and employees in the public service" while paragraph 7(1)(d) empowers it to: "determine and regulate the pay to which persons employed in the public service are entitled for services rendered, the hours of work and leave of such persons and any matters related thereto". Because one of the results of a reclassification is a change in rates of pay, that circumstance cannot, in my view, operate so as to deprive an arbitral board of jurisdiction conferred upon it pursuant to subsection 70(1) supra. Article 16.08 clearly deals with "rates of pay" and is thus included in the jurisdiction of an arbitral board. In the case of The Queen v. Public Service Alliance of Canada 2 , I said:
The kind of question which I think is contemplated under section 70(1) when "rates of pay" are referred to, is a question as to whether the present pay rate of employees should be increased, decreased, or left at the present rate ....
Article 16.08 in the case at bar clearly deals with such a question'.
' It is possible to think of many such perquisites, e.g.: the right to First-Class air travel; the right to a private secretary; the right to a Government automobile, etc.
2 [1980] 1 F.C. 801 (C.A.) at p. 804.
3 Compare: The Queen v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1981] 2 F.C. 625 (C.A.) where this Court held that an arbitral board had jurisdiction under subsection 70(1) to consider a clause providing for a further payment to an employee dis missed under section 31 of the Public Service Employment Act since he was considered to have earned such amount by the performance of his duties of employment.
Accordingly and for the foregoing reasons I have concluded that the Board was in error in declining to exercise jurisdiction in respect of pro posed Article 16.08 and accompanying Pay Notes 10-14.
(b) Proposed Article 25.01
This proposed Article reads as follows:
25.01 An employee shall not be penalized, discriminated against, or suffer any loss of wages as a result of exercising the right to withdraw from work where an employee has reasonable cause to believe that a particular work process or condition directly associated with the employee's duties poses a danger to his safety or health or that of another person.
The Board declined jurisdiction in respect of this clause because in its opinion it "is essentially concerned with rights of employees to conditions of health and safety in the work place" and "as such it clearly falls outside of subsection 70(1) of the Act and is therefore not arbitrable". Counsel for the applicant submitted that Article 25.01 fell within the ambit of subsection 70(1) because it deals with "standards of discipline and other terms and conditions of employment directly related thereto". I do not accept this submission. In my view, the essence of this proposed Article is that it would permit an employee to withdraw from work where an employee has reasonable cause to believe that there is a danger to his safety or health or that of another. The Article is entitled "Health and Safety" and in my view, it is, in pith and substance, a provision dealing with conditions of employment relating to health and safety in the work place. I have thus concluded that the Board was not in error in declining jurisdiction in respect of Article 25.01.
(c) Proposed Articles 30.02 and 30.03 These proposed Articles read as follows:
30.02 The Employer recognizes the right of an employee, on grounds of conscience, to refuse to cross picket lines and shall not take additional disciplinary action beyond that specified in the PSSRA against such an employee which would be more severe than a written reprimand.
30.03 The Employer recognizes the right of an employee, on grounds of conscience, to refuse to do the work of striking employees and shall not take disciplinary action beyond that specified in the PSSRA against such an employee which would be more severe than that of a written reprimand.
Here again, the Board declined to exercise juris diction because in its view, the essential subject
matter was not encompassed by subsection 70(1) of the Act and is therefore not arbitrable. Here again counsel for the applicant submitted that Articles 30.02 and 30.03 fall within the term "standards of discipline and other terms and con ditions of employment" as it is used in subsection 70(1). As in the case of Article 25.01 supra, I do not agree with this submission. The sub-heading to Article 30 is entitled "Illegal Strikes" and, in my opinion, neither Article 30.02 nor 30.03 in essence, deals with "standards of discipline". I agree with the Board that: "The fact that these new proposals are linked to the quantum of the disciplinary penalty that may be assessed by the Employer does not change their essential subject matter which is not arbitrable." Accordingly, I agree with the Board's decision to decline jurisdiction in respect of Articles 30.02 and 30.03.
In summary, it is my conclusion that the Board was in error in declining jurisdiction in respect of proposed Article 16.08 and accompanying Pay Notes 10-14 but correct in declining jurisdiction in respect of proposed Article 25.01 and proposed Articles 30.02 and 30.03.
I would therefore allow the section 28 applica tion in part, and set aside the decision of the Board in so far as it declined jurisdiction in respect of proposed Article 16.08 and accompanying Pay Notes 10-14 and refer the matter back to the Board on the basis that the matters in Article 16.08 and accompanying Pay Notes 10-14 fall within its jurisdiction.
URIE J.: I agree. KERR D.J.: I agree.
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