T-2044-94
BETWEEN:
GARY
BARNETT
Applicant
-
and -
HER MAJESTY
THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF CANADA,
THE
COMMISSIONER OF THE ROYAL
CANADIAN
MOUNTED POLICE,
DEPUTY
COMMISSIONER HUMAN RESOURCES,
J. BEAULAC, and THE
ROYAL CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE
Respondents
REASONS
FOR ORDER
SIMPSON J.
This application is
for judicial review, pursuant to s. 18.1 of the Federal Court Act R.S.,
1985, c. F-7 of a decision dated July 7, 1994 (the "Decision") made
by Herman J.R. Beaulac, the Deputy Commissioner Human Resources (the
"Deputy Commissioner") for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (the
"RCMP"). In his Decision, the Deputy Commissioner, who was
performing the role of a level II adjudicator, denied the applicant's grievance
against a RCMP policy, known as Administrative Manual Bulletin or (AM) 1646.
BACKGROUND
The applicant was
hired by the RCMP as a special constable in August 1979. Special constables
received modified training which was less than the training provided for full
constables. Special constables' training was specific to their duties which
included, among other things, airport policing, diplomatic protection and
property security. In 1988, special constables were paid a salary which was
approximately 82% of a full constable's salary.
In 1988, the RCMP
decided to change the services it provided at airports by eliminating special
constables and staffing airports with fully trained RCMP officers. This
decision was motivated by an awareness that hijacking was no longer the sole
security threat at airports; terrorism had also become a threat and it was felt
that it could only be met by fully trained officers.
It appears from a
memo dated February 2, 1994 to the Deputy Commissioner (Administration) from
the Director of Personnel that the RCMP's initial plan was to phase out special
constables in the airport and, as well, in surveillance and
executive-diplomatic protection work. However, approximately two years later,
it was decided that all promotable special constables, regardless of their
duties, would be promoted. These changes were accomplished by two new
policies.
The First Policy
This policy was
directed to airport and surveillance special constables and was known as
Administration Manual 1215 ("AM 1215"). It was issued on March 3,
1988 and provided that:
1.Applicants for promotion would apply;
2.To apply, applicants had to be eligible which meant, inter
alia, that they had to be prepared to relocate;
3.Applicants would be accepted if they met specific
promotability and releasability criteria;
4.Successful applicants would be promoted and posted just
before training;
5.Pay increases would be effective on promotion; and
6.If promoted applicants were unsuccessful at training,
they would be demoted to their former positions as special constables.
An amendment to AM
1215 ("AM 1215-A") was issued on November 10, 1989. It changed AM
1215 in the following two material respects:
-A willingness to relocate was removed as an eligibility
criterion;
-Demotion no longer followed unsuccessful training.
The applicant was
promoted under this amended policy. At the time AM 1215 was first issued, he
had been unwilling to relocate and was, therefore, ineligible for promotion.
However, when the relocation requirement was dropped in AM 1215-A, his
application went forward. On May 6, 1990, 6 months after the issuance of AM
1215-A, he was promoted and sent for training. He received a pay raise
effective in May of 1990.
As a practical
matter, when AM 1215 and 1215-A governed, the timing of promotions was
dependant on the training schedules. The RCMP training facilities, which are
located in Saskatchewan, had a limited capacity, and not all successful
applicants could be trained at the same time. Accordingly, since a special
constable was not promoted until just before training, promotions and salary
increases occurred at different times. However, while the training and
promotion process was ongoing, RCMP airport duties remained the same for
special constables and constables. This meant that former special constables
who had been promoted and trained and were receiving full constable pay worked
alongside and performed the same duties as eligible special constables who had
not been promoted and trained and who were, therefore, still receiving special
constable pay. Although everyone received their pay increase on promotion, due
to normal training schedules, promotions occurred at different times.
The Second Policy
More than two years
after the special constable promotion process began with AM 1215, a second
policy was issued on June 6, 1990. It was AM 1646 and was directed to the
promotion of the balance of special constables. It provided that:
1.Applicants were to be recommended for promotion;
2.If recommended, all applicants would immediately be
conditionally promoted. (This meant, in practice, that they were conditionally
promoted on June 7, 1990.)
3.Training would be from 4 to 15 weeks in length depending
on an applicant's prior training;
4.After successful training, an applicant's salary increase
became effective and he or she received a posting; and
5.Candidates who were conditionally promoted, but failed to
complete training successfully, reverted to their former special constables'
status.
Under AM 1646,
training schedules again dictated the dates of promotion and the related salary
increases. However, in 1990, regular troops were also receiving training to
meet an increased demand for members in contract divisions of the force. As a
result, the training of newly promoted special constables, did not proceed as
scheduled. This meant that officers who received training became entitled to
their pay raise before those who had not been trained even though all special
constables had the same promotion date.
The inequity of this
situation was recognized at a Commanding Officers/Divisional Staff Relations
Representatives Conference in November 1990 and AM 1646 was thereafter amended
on January 31, 1991 ("AM 1646-A"). Its text contained an admission
of the inequity and provided a solution; all special constables conditionally
promoted or after June 7, 1990, would receive salary raises retroactive to
their date of promotion following the successful completion of training. This
amendment did not, however, cover the applicant, as AM 1646-A did not apply to
those promoted under Am 1215 or 1215-A. Hereafter, AM 1215 and 1215-A will be
referred to together as the "First Policy" and AM 1646 and 1646-A
will be described together as the "Second Policy".
The Grievance
The applicant's
grievance was made on form 3081 dated March 2, 1992 and was supplemented by a
memorandum dated April 10, 1991 (the "Grievance"). The applicant
suggests that the logic which drove amendment AM 1646-A should have been
extended to the entire promotion process and should have covered all those
promoted under the First Policy. This, according to the applicant, would have
been achieved if salary increases for all special constables who were promoted
under either the First or Second Policy had been made retroactive to June 24,
1988. This was the date of the first special constable promotion.
Specifically, the Grievance raises the Canadian Human Rights Act R.S.,
1985 c. H-6 and asks why all RCMP officers working at the airport did not
receive equal pay for work of equal value.
The Decision
It is important to
recall that it is not the First and Second Policies which are at issue in this
judicial review. This review is of the Decision of the Deputy Commissioner.
The substantive part of his Decision is quite brief and reads as follows:
In my view, the policy change was a proper exercise of
management's rights and it is inevitable that there will be members who feel
disadvantaged when new policy is implemented. The Griever and others in the
same situation as himself, were all treated equitably, to the extent that the
former policy was uniformly applied to them.
If all policy was made retroactive to suit all
situations, we would be continuously amending past actions. Constables hired
in one year were not necessarily paid the same wages as those hired in another.
The grievance is denied. Please ensure that Cst.
Barnett receives a copy of my decision.
From this passage, I
have determined that the Deputy Commissioner concluded that, since the
applicant received the same treatment as everyone else to whom the First Policy
applied, he had been treated equitably. He also appears to have concluded that
there was nothing wrong by reason of the fact that the Second Policy was not
applied retroactively to those who were promoted under the First Policy. This
conclusion was apparently justified on the basis that, to impose such
retroactivity would create administrative difficulties.
THE ISSUES
The applicant says
that the Deputy Commissioner erred in law because he failed to take into
account two relevant considerations in his assessment of the Grievance.
Firstly, he failed to have regard for the fact that the airport duties of the
special constables and constables were identical and, secondly, he failed to
give weight to the fact that, under the First Policy, the timing of the
promotion and the accompanying pay raise were beyond a special constable's
control because they depended on the training schedule. These objections mean
in substance that the Deputy Commissioner erred in that he failed to address
the applicant's argument under the Canadian Human Rights Act.
ANALYSIS
The issue raised by
the Grievance is whether the Second Policy should have been made retroactive to
a date which covered those promoted under the First Policy. This, it is
argued, would have provided all eligible special constables in the course of
promotion with equal pay for equal work.
It is not my role on judicial review to resolve this issue. However, its
resolution will require an assessment of what constitutes equal treatment. The
fact that all of the special constables were treated alike, in that they
received pay raises at the time of promotion under both policies, does not
necessarily mean that they received equal treatment or what has been described
as "substantive equality".
In my view, the
Deputy Commissioner erred in law by failing to render a Decision which squarely
addressed the issues. No mention is made of the Canadian Human Rights Act,
or of the fact that special constables and constables performed identical airport
duties, or of the fact that training
schedules drove the timing of pay
raises under the First Policy and that this situation was found to be
inequitable under the Second Policy.
Accordingly, the
matter is sent back for redetermination by the Commissioner or by a different
Deputy Commissioner.
Judge
Ottawa, Ontario
December 21, 1995