Date: 20080131
Docket: T-1859-06
Citation:
2008 FC 115
Ottawa, Ontario, January 31, 2008
Present:
The Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
BETWEEN:
ANDRÉ JULIEN, CHRISTINE
ALMEIDA, BARBARA ATTWATERS, HILDEGARD BARTER, JEFFREY BECK, BEVERLEY ANNE
BLAIR, KELLY FRANCES CADDICK, DIANE CASSEL, JOAN CLAYTON, KAREN CSESZNEKI,
MAUREEN CUMMINGS, GERALD CUNNINGHAM, BRIGITTE DAVIAU, MARGUERITE DEAN, LORRAINE
DIAPER, RITA DREW, PEGGI DUGAS, ALBINA FACCHIN, KAREN KRCEL, EVA KUHN, PANSY
LAM, JACQUELINE MATCHETT, DEBBIE ANN MCLEAN, DANUTA MAGIER, LESLIE MITCHELL,
LAURA MUSCUTT, WAYNE PARRINDER, MICHAEL PAYEUR, BARBARA JEAN RAWLINGS, JASMINE
ROZELL, LORRIE SEXSMITH, DAVID THOMSON, PAUL TRUAISCH, CONSTANCE TRUAISCH,
CHRIS WAKEFIELD, DEBORAH ZALITACH, NATHALIE ZANDBERGEN, RON BEAULIEU, MARY
ARGYRACOPOULOU, DANIELLE ARSENAULT, JOANNE AUGER-BOUDREAU, LYNE BEDARD,
LOUISELLE BERGERON, PAULINE BERNARD, CHRISTIANNE BERNIER, GERALD BIBEAULT,
CELINE BIRON, MONIQUE BOITREAU, ANDRE DONNELLY, SYLVAIN BORDUAS, JOSEE BOUCHARD
LAVASSEUR, JOHANNE BOUCHER, LUC BOUDREAULT, MARTINE BOULANGER, MARTIN BOULARD,
CHRISTIANE BRIEN, LYNE BRISSON, MYCHEL BRODEUR, JOHANNE CARLOS, LOUISE
CHIASSON, JOVETTE COTE, HUGUETTE COULOMBE, SYLVIE COURNOYER, JOCELYNE DAIGLE,
MAURICE DEMERS, CLAUDE DUFRESNE, ROGER FERGUSON, SUZANNE FRAPPIER, SYLVAIN
GAUDETTE, VALERIE GINGRAS, JOHANNE GOBEIL, ISABELLE GODIN, MONIQUE GOSSELIN,
CHANTAL HAMEL, DIANE JACQUES, LORRAINE JOBIN, FRANCINE LACOSTE, YOLANDE
LAFRENIERE, NICOLE LANDRY, CAROLE LATOUCHE, CAROLLE LAVOIE, MARC ANDRE LAVOIE,
MARCEL LAVOIE, HELENE LEMIEUX, LOUISE LEMIEUX, LUCIE LEMIEUX, DENISE LEPAGE,
DIANE LESIEUR, LARRY LEWIS, KATHLEEN LOWDE, LUCETTE MARCOUILLER, PIERRE
MARCOUX, DANIELLE MATTE, LISE MENARD, YOLANDE MINCHILLO, MAURICE MORIN, DORIS
MORISSETTE, MARIE MYETTE, LOUISE PHILIPPON, SOPHIE PESANT, LIETTE QUENNEVILLE,
DORIS RANCOURT, SYLVIE RANGER, CLAIRE ROY, JEAN-CLAUDE ROAY, LUC ROULEAU,
ANDREE SANTERRE, GISELE ARSENAULT, NORMA BRINE, PAULINE GIROUARD, ANDRE LANDRY,
JANICE LEBLANC-ROBICHAUD, STELLA LEBLANC, MURIELLE POWERS, CLAUDETTE WARD,
CHARLENE WOODWORTH, ARLENE BEST, JOHN CAMPBELL, BARBARA COCHRANE, MARGARET
DELANEY, CATHERINE HÉBERT, WILLIAM KEIRSTEAD, MICHÈLE LEAMON, MARJORIE POWER,
EMILY REHBERG, CLAIRE STEWART, PAULINE WALKER, PATRICIA BRYANT, SANDRA DODD,
PATRICK KIRBY, INGRID GRACE, JANET LACEY, SHARON LEARNING, DAN NOFTALL, GARY
STONE, MARLENE WOODLAND
Applicants
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
CANADA REVENUE AGENCY
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
“It
is not uncommon for employees who have a common Work Description to have
different duties and responsibilities. So long as those different duties and
responsibilities all fall within the general language of their common Work
Description, all is well. . . . ”(Currie v. Canada (Customs
and Revenue Agency), 2006 FCA 194, [2006] F.C.J. No. 784 (QL),
para. 1).
[2]
To take a case that turns on its own facts out
of context would be going from the particular to the general when, in fact, a
case decided on its own facts remains just that. Can a specific example be
cited to create a cause célèbre of general application, given that
taking a case out of context to use as an example in a broader sense would be
describing a situation as something other than it is?
[3]
A
work description cannot be engraved in stone; if an exceptional situation
arises infrequently, should it become the rule? Should infrequent work that
does not fall under a compulsory or even a normal work description alter a
position?
[4]
Mr. Justice Denis
Pelletier of the Federal Court of Appeal explained that adhering to a work
description that some adjudicators describe as “sufficiently complete” “speaks of a
relatively rigid conception of the role of an employee’s Work Description. That
view is not shared by all adjudicators” and such a “view of the role of a Work
Description suggests that it is a document which must reflect the realities of
the employee’s work situation since so many aspects of the employee’s rights
and obligations in the workplace are bound to his or her Work Description.” (Currie,
above, paras. 25-26).
[5]
Therefore,
any job that calls for cooperation between individuals requires team work where
the individuals are connected by a real or symbolic chain to ensure that things
run smoothly; this does not remove the real and essential need for each
individual to have an accurate description of his or her own daily, or rather,
ordinary work, without denying that in certain infrequent circumstances
an individual could go beyond his or her work description to assist a person who
has another job description within this real or symbolic chain.
LEGAL PROCEEDING
[6]
This
is an application for judicial review under paragraphs 18.1(4)(b) and (d)
of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7, of the decision by the
Classification Grievance Committee (the Committee) dated May 25, 2006, and
supported by the Assistant Commissioner who recommended that the grieved
position, i.e., collection officer (INA0241/PM-0066), be classified at the
PM-01 group and level, effective February 17, 1999.
Procedure for the handling
of classification grievances
[7]
The
Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-11 (FAA), as amended,
authorizes the Treasury Board to manage the organization of the federal public
administration, which includes the classification of positions in the public
service.
[8]
Madam
Justice Johanne Gauthier of the Federal Court analyzed and explained the
Committee’s role in Maurice v. Canada (Treasury Board), 2004 FC
941, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1165 (QL). It is important in this case to reproduce
the analysis:
[25] As these classification grievances cannot
be dealt with under the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. P-35 (sections 91, 92(1)(a) and (b) and 96(3)), the
Treasury Board has adopted Chapter 4 of the Treasury Board Manual, titled
“Personnel Management, Classification, Classification Grievances”, which
defines its policies and rules on this matter. It appeared that the primary
objective of the Treasury Board policy is:
To ensure that the relative value of all
jobs in the Public Service is established in an equitable, consistent and
effective manner and provides a basis for the compensation of public servants.
. . .
[26] In 1994, the Treasury Board also adopted
a supplement to Chapter 4, mentioned above, which describes the general outline
of the methods and procedures to be used in submitting and disposing of
classification grievances.
[27] The Committee's mandate is described in
section V(a) as follows:
The Classification Grievance Committee
is responsible for establishing the appropriate classification and evaluating
the grieved position based on the duties assigned by management and performed
by the employee and additional information provided by management and by the
grievor and/or his or her representative. It must review and analyze all
information presented in a gender neutral way. The classification recommended
to the deputy head or nominee must be fair, equitable and consistent with the
classification principles. . . .
[28] In Schedule I of the Procedure, the
Treasury Board even sets out the format which the Committee's report must
observe. It states at paragraph 7, titled:
COMMITTEE
DELIBERATIONS
7. This
section is the heart of the report and must clearly indicate how the Committee
arrived at its recommendation. It should analyze the grievor's work in relation
to the classification standard(s), the arguments made by or on behalf of the
grievor and management's information, and provide a detailed explanation for
the Committee's evaluation. It should state why the Committee evaluated the
position in the specific category and occupational group and level, what, if
any, other categories or groups were considered and the reasons why these were
considered inappropriate. If the existing category, group, level and rating are
being confirmed, a complete rationale must, nevertheless, be developed.
Statements such as “No change to present rating” are not acceptable. . . .
[29] On the Committee's procedure, it is
indicated at paragraph 5 that the classification grievance process was not
intended to be an adversarial system, but one providing for a meeting to be
convened during which information would be presented and sought, allowing
Committee members to make a recommendation to the deputy head or his nominee.
[9]
In
addition, the Classification Standard - PM – Programme Administration, of the
Public Service Agency provides:
INTRODUCTION
This standard describes the plans to be used in classifying and
evaluating positions in the Programme Administration Group.
…
Use of the Position Classification Plan
…
2. The position
description is studied to ensure understanding of the position as a whole and
of each factor. The relation of the position being rated to positions above
and below it in the organization is also studied.
…
Determination of Levels
The ultimate objective of job evaluation is to determine the
relative value of positions in each occupational group so that employees in
the positions may be paid at rates consistent with the relationship
indicated. Positions that fall within a designated range of point values
will be regarded as of equal difficulty and value and will be allocated to
the same level.
|
INTRODUCTION
La
présente norme décrit le plan à utiliser pour classer et évaluer les postes
du groupe d’administration des programmes.
[...]
Utilisation du plan de classification des postes
[...]
- Étudier la description du poste pour s'assurer que l'on
comprend bien le poste tant dans sa totalité que dans chacun de ses
facteurs. Étudier également la relation qui existe entre le poste à
évaluer et les postes de l'organisation qui sont situés au-dessus et
au-dessous.
[...]
Détermination des niveaux
Le but ultime de l'évaluation des emplois est d'en déterminer la
valeur relative dans chaque groupe professionnel, de façon qu'on puisse
rémunérer les titulaires de ces emplois selon des taux qui correspondent aux
rapports indiqués. Les emplois qui se classent dans une échelle désignée de
valeurs numériques, seront considérés comme des emplois d'égale difficulté et
d'égale valeur et on leur attribuera le même niveau.
|
[10]
The
procedure provides that once a complainant files a grievance, it is heard by a
committee of three members. Both the complainant and the employer are given the
opportunity to present their arguments before the committee at separate
hearings. The committee must review all the information that was provided and
then submit a recommendation on the classification of the grieved position to
the deputy head or to his or her nominee. The deputy head or the nominee
receives a report containing the committee’s recommendation. The deputy head or
the nominee must then either confirm or set aside the committee’s
recommendation, and his or her decision on the recommendation is final
(Respondents’ Record, Affidavit of Paul Lamont, sworn
January 19, 2007, Tab A; Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) Classification
and Work Description Grievances Procedures, Tab 1, p. 13).
[11]
How
the committee deals with information is also set out in the procedures:
If significant new information is
presented to the committee by management, the grievor and/or the representative
will be provided with the information and have 10 working days to respond. (My
emphasis.)
(Respondents’ Record, Affidavit of Paul
Lamont, above; CRA Organizational and Classification Policy, Tab 1, p. 16)
FACTS
[12]
Between
October 2001 and May 2002, 136 complainants, all employed at the Department of
Human Resources and Development Canada (now the Department of Human Resources
and Social Development Canada) filed classification grievances requesting that
the “collection officer” position at Social Development Canada be reclassified.
[13]
On
August 1, 2005, position INA0241, which is the grieved position, was
transferred to the Canada Revenue Agency and renumbered PM-00666; the
grievances in question were handled by the Agency.
[14]
The
Classification Grievance Committee met on March 15, 2006.
[15]
Jacqueline
Préfontaine-Moor of the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) represented
the applicants and presented oral and written arguments. André Julien, one of
the applicants and the local representative of the union at Social Development
Canada Union (SDC), formerly HRDC, was also present and also provided a number
of documents in support of the grievance to establish the relative value during
the job evaluation.
[16]
At
the hearing, the complainants’ representatives submitted a number of documents
illustrating the relative value of the position during the job evaluation as
well as documentation concerning the points awarded to the collection officer
position and comparator positions. The Committee members questioned Ms.
Préfontaine-Moore and Mr. Julien to obtain clarifications regarding the
documents submitted and the arguments made.
[17]
Following
the applicants’ presentation, the Committee members asked the functional
management for further clarification regarding, inter alia, the
responsibilities of the grieved position. Management provided details about the
process of federal certification and the interrelationship between the grieved
position and other positions in the SDC regional organization.
[18]
On
April 26, 2006, the applicants submitted additional evidence to show that, as
collection officers, they had to appear in Court.
[19]
On
May 26, 2006, the Committee concluded that the PM-01 group and level assigned
to the INA0241/PM-0066 position was appropriate as of February 17, 1999, the
effective date of the work description.
[20]
The
applicants maintain that the Committee’s decision contains erroneous facts and
contradictions presented by the employer’s representatives and that it was made
without considering four key parts of the evidence:
[translation]
§
The
employer’s representatives stated that the applicants were not responsible for complex
cases and that such cases could be referred to collection consultants (PM‑03),
monitoring and training officers officers (PM-02), the manager, overpayment
collections (PM-04) or even to the managers of collection services (PM-05);
§
The
Committee’s decision stated that the responsibilities of the collection officer
position (PM-01) at the Department of Citizenship and Immigration
were similar to those of the grieved position and that both positions
required the same level of knowledge and decision making to perform the duties.
However, the applicants provided the Committee with evidence that this position
was reclassified from the PM-01 level to the PM-02 level on November 13, 2002;
§
The
Committee did not take into account the fact that the collection officers were
summoned to appear in Court because of their obligations as employees;
and
§
The
Committee also determined that the collection officer position did not require
issuing third party demands, which includes garnishing salaries from third
parties. However, Instrument B-44 states that this authority was delegated to
them.
(Applicants’ Record, Vol. II, Tab 5,
Applicants’ Memorandum of fact and law, p. 304, para. 14)
[21]
The
respondents contend that there is nothing in the Committee’s analysis showing
that it ignored or refused to recognize the applicants’ duties as set out in
the job description. The Committee’s analysis, as it should, dealt with the
weight it assigned to those duties compared with those described in various
benchmark positions that were provided for comparison purposes in the
classification standard.
[22]
In
addition, the respondents note:
[translation]
(a) Contrary to the
applicants’ argument about the complexity of the files assigned to the
collection officers, the information that the Committee obtained from
management (the employer) confirms that advice and guidance were available
for the complex cases and that such cases were referred to senior employees in
the organization to obtain advice on how to proceed;
(b) With respect to the
collection officer position (PM-01) at the Department of Citizenship and
Immigration, the Committee commented on the notices of reclassification
submitted by the applicants and indicated that the fact that other positions
had eventually been reclassified was of little importance to the applicants’
classification grievance proceeding;
(c) With respect to the
possibility that the applicants could be summoned to appear in Court, the
Committee referred to this evidence and to the supporting documentation in its
report; the Committee also considered the difference between a responsibility
that is clearly described in a work description and the civic duty to appear in
court after being summoned to do so by an officer of the court; and
(d) Contrary to the
applicants’ argument pertaining to their duty to issue third party demands,
Instrument B-44 does not delegate this authority to them, and the Committee
commented on this fact in its report.
(Respondents’
Record, Respondents’ Memorandum of fact and law, Tab 2-C, para. 5, p. 176)
ISSUES
[23]
(1) Did
the Committee beach its duty of procedural fairness?
(2) Was the
classification at the PM-01 level patently unreasonable?
ANALYSIS
Standard of review
[24]
The
recent jurisprudence of this Court is clear regarding the standard of review
applicable to the merits of a decision by the Classification Grievance
Committee. However, the jurisprudence distinguishes between the appropriate
standard for reviewing a question of procedural fairness and the standard to be
applied where the question is one of classification.
[25]
Mr.
Justice Michael L. Phelan determined in Adamidis v. Canada (Treasury Board),
2006 FC 243, [2006] F.C.J. No. 305 (QL), at paragraph 15, that “the
standard of review in respect to the merits of the classification decision is
patent unreasonableness. The standard of review in respect of the issues of
procedural fairness is correctness.” These reasons were
adopted by Mr. Justice James Russell in Utovac v . Canada (Treasury
Board), 2006 FC 643, [2006] F.C.J. No. 833 (QL), at paragraph 14.
[26]
Consequently,
since the issue in this case is similar and engages the recognized expertise of
the Committee, i.e., whether it acted appropriately in the selection, weight
and analysis in its classification exercise, the appropriate standard of review
is “patent unreasonableness”.
[27]
With
respect to questions relating to procedural fairness, it is settled law that
the proceeding before the Committee is administrative and non-adversarial, thus
suggesting less deference (Chong v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995]
F.C.J. No. 1600 (QL) (Chong I); Chong v. Canada (Treasury Board), [1999]
F.C.J. No. 176 (QL) (Chong II); Argyracoupoulou v. Canada (Treasury Board), 2003
FC 1304, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1641 (QL); Utovac, above).
[28]
These
guarantees are thus limited to the applicant’s right to have his arguments considered
by the Committee and to be kept informed of information that is crucial
to the dispute and that he could not reasonably have known (Chong I and
Chong II, above; Hale v. Canada (Treasury Board), [1996] F.C.J. No.
685 (QL)).
Did the Committee breach its
duty of procedural fairness?
[29]
The
applicants allege that the Committee breached the rules of procedural fairness.
They contend that the Committee considered evidence about the responsibility
for complex cases that was obtained without their knowledge and that they did
not have the opportunity to respond to this evidence.
[30]
The
applicants argue that, on the one hand, the employer’s representatives directly
contradicted some of the facts pleaded by the applicants. In particular, the
employer’s representatives stated that the applicants were not responsible for
complex cases and that such cases can be referred to some of their superiors.
Since the Committee relied on this contradictory submission in rendering its
decision, the Committee had an obligation to give the applicants the right to
reply.
[31]
The
respondents’ position is that the evidence in the record does not support these
arguments and that the Committee did not breach its duty of fairness towards
the applicants by deciding as it did.
[32]
The
Federal Court and the Federal Court of Appeal considered the general principles
and obligations of the Committee with respect to procedural fairness in Chong
I and Chong II, above.
[33]
In
Chong II, Mr. Justice Robert Décary reiterated the principle that the
content of the duty of fairness will be more or less comprehensive depending on
the nature of the interests affected by the decision and the nature of the
process and that, in the case of a classification grievance, the applicants
have the right to only a minimum level of equity. He wrote as follows:
[12] In our view, nothing turns on whether the
process is defined as being adversarial or non-adversarial. There is clearly a
dispute between parties which the grievance process seeks to resolve and the
duty of fairness clearly applies to that process. The content of the duty of
fairness will be more or less comprehensive depending upon the nature of the
interests affected by the decision and the nature of the process involved. In
the case at bar, the level of fairness is somewhere in the lower zone of the
spectrum rather than in the upper zone and we do not read Madam Justice Reed's
reasons in Hale v. Canada (Treasury Board) as saying otherwise. While
Reed J. in Hale, and McKeown J. in Chong 1, have adopted a
different approach, we do not see any significant difference into [sic]
the conclusion they reach with respect to the content of the duty of fairness
as it applies to grievances governed by the Classification Grievance Procedure
of the Treasury Board.
[34]
In
the specific circumstances of Chong II, Décary J.A. also adopted Reed
J.’s reasons in Hale, above, that the Committee has an obligation to
provide the employee with information that he or she was never told about:
[13] Wherever one finds oneself on the
spectrum, there are essential requirements and one of those requirements is
that expressed by Justice Reed at para. 20 of her reasons:
. . . when the committee decides to
review an aspect of the classification assessment, which the employee did not
think was in dispute, and decides to elicit and rely on evidence with respect
thereto about which the employee had no notice or information, fairness
requires that that information be disclosed to the employee and he be given an
opportunity to comment thereon.
. . .
[35]
The
applicants maintain that the Committee had an obligation to apprise them of the
employer’s information because this information influenced its decision. They
point out the following:
[32] In these circumstances, it has
already been shown that the Committee must give an employee or his or her
representative an opportunity to make submissions on additional or
contradictory information obtained from the employer or on new facts that may
influence the Committee's decision. In Chong, supra, at paragraph 45, McKeown
J. also held that the Committee should take current comparable positions into
account in its assessment, even if these were positions in other regions.
Further in Argyracoupoulou, supra, Blanchard J. clearly indicated that
in view of the union's submissions the Committee had a duty to consider the
Revenue Canada PM-02 position.
(Maurice, above)
[36]
The
respondents maintain that the Classification Grievance Committee did not breach
its duty of procedural fairness in any way. Furthermore, there was no information
in this case that the applicants did not know about or could not have
anticipated.
[37]
Contrary
to the applicants’ submission, the Committee’s report does not state that the
applicants were not responsible for complex cases but, rather, that the information
obtained from the employer confirmed that advice and guidance were available
for the complex cases and that such cases were referred to senior employees in
the organization to obtain advice on how to proceed (Applicants’ Record,
Classification Grievance Committee Report, Vol. I, Tab 2, p. 8).
[38]
Gauthier
J. confronted the principle of the right of reply in Maurice, above. She
noted the following:
[31] .
. . the Committee had a duty to act fairly. Case law
has clearly established that the degree of fairness applicable in the
circumstances tends toward a lesser requirement rather than a more limiting
standard (Chong v. Canada (Treasury Board), [1999] F.C.J. No. 176
(F.C.A.) (QL) (Décary J.A., para. 12); Chong v. Canada (Attorney General),
[1995] F.C.J. No. 1600 (McKeown J.) (F.C.T.D.) (QL); Bulat v. Canada
(Treasury Board), [2000] F.C.J. No. 148, para. 9)).
[32] In these circumstances, it has already been shown that the Committee
must give an employee or his or her representative an opportunity to make
submissions on additional or contradictory information obtained from the
employer or on new facts that may influence the Committee's decision. In Chong,
supra, at paragraph 45, McKeown J. also held that the Committee should take
current comparable positions into account in its assessment, even if these were
positions in other regions. Further in Argyracoupoulou, supra, Blanchard
J. clearly indicated that in view of the union's submissions the Committee had
a duty to consider the Revenue Canada PM-02 position.
(My emphasis.)
[39]
She
concluded that “the Committee should have informed the applicant that it could
not consider her arguments because the evidence submitted was not in an
acceptable form and given her a short period of time to provide additional
information.”
(Maurice, above, para. 35).
[40]
However,
the case at bar can be distinguished from the Maurice case since the
facts here do not raise the issue of a document that is not in an acceptable
form. The issue is that, in the applicants’ view, the Committee had to give
them a right of reply because the employer’s information was not accurate and
misled the Committee.
[41]
However,
according to Paul Lamont’s evidence, which was not the subject of any
cross-examination, this information had already been confirmed by the
applicants and their representative during the applicants’ presentation. Mr.
Lamont explains in his affidavit:
[translation]
12. The clarifications
provided by the functional management were not significant or large enough to
require or justify a reply or additional arguments on the part of the
applicants. The clarifications did not involve any information that the
applicants did not know about or that could have had a considerable impact on
the Committee’s recommendation. Other than the fact that management adopted a
different position than the applicants with respect to certain responsibilities
associated with the numerous job descriptions submitted to the Committee,
management did not provide any new or contradictory information.
[42]
The
applicants’ position is that the alleged errors regarding their duties as
collection officers were sufficiently important and that the Committee had an
obligation to provide them with an opportunity to respond to the employer’s
information.
[43]
Consequently,
was there sufficient disclosure to enable the applicants to truly participate
in the proceeding? The respondents explain that, in this case, the Committee
considered the applicants’ key arguments and addressed them in its report.
There is nothing in the Committee’s analysis to indicate that the requisite
rational connection for its findings was not established.
[44]
The
respondents note that the Committee hearing, however, was conducted pursuant to
Canada Revenue Agency’s grievance classification process and in accordance with
the objectives and principles governing classification as described in the Treasury
Board Manual, the “Classification Grievances Policy” (Applicant’s Record,
Affidavit of Paul Lamont, above, p. 4, para. 11).
[45]
However,
Russell J. notes in Utovac, above:
[19] The classification grievance process is not an adversarial
process, and in my view neither griever nor employer has a vested right to
respond to the other's submissions to the Committee. Appendix B to the Policy
states as follows:
Employees and/or their representative
must be given the opportunity to appear before the committee and state their
views on the classification of the position. They must withdraw from the
meeting once their presentation is complete. Representations by the complainant
or his or her representative may also be submitted in writing. All aspects of
the decision being grieved, i.e., group and sub-group allocation, level and
ratings (where applicable) accorded to all factors, must be examined even
though, in some instances, not all are being challenged.
If invited to appear before the
classification grievance committee to provide information on the assigned
duties and responsibilities, management must withdraw once the committee has
completed its questioning.
The Policy does not grant the griever the
right to respond to management's answers.
[20] Neither is the Court persuaded that the Committee omitted to
grant the Applicant an opportunity to address a central issue to its
classification grievance decision, namely the comparison of the Applicant's
position to the proposed ES group. After hearing from both the Applicant and
the employer, the Committee invited the Applicant to make further submissions
regarding which benchmarks of the ES Standard he believed would justify the classification
of his position in the ES group. The affidavit sworn by Richard Joyal on behalf
of the Respondent discloses that the Applicant declined to make further
representations because “he had already provided evidence to support the rating
he has assigned to the job description.” In these circumstances, it cannot be
said that the Committee breached its duty of fairness to the Applicant.
[46]
The
legislation grants discretion to the Committee to assign probative value to the
parties’ representations. Unlike Chong II, above, where the Federal
Court of Appeal determined that the Committee had breached one of the essential
requirements of the duty of fairness by failing to inform the applicants that
the basis of the comparison they were seeking to establish had been
dramatically altered and thus the Committee had a duty to grant a right of
reply, the facts in this case and the basis of the Committee’s decision do not
disclose any perceived unfairness.
[47]
The
applicants were given the opportunity to make representations, which the
Committee considered. The fact that the Committee, based on the representations
and the evidence adduced, chose to maintain the level and rank of the
collection officer position at PM-01 does not constitute an error warranting
the intervention of this Court.
[48]
The
procedure followed by the Committee in reaching its conclusion did not breach
its duty of procedural fairness. Accordingly, the Committee exercised its
discretion properly.
Was the PM-01 classification
patently unreasonable?
[49]
In
the applicants’ view, however, the Committee made patently unreasonable errors
of fact.
[50]
According
to the respondents, the applicants must show that the Committee’s analysis is
so flawed that the Court will be unable to understand how the Committee arrived
at the result that it did. The respondents maintain that as long as there is a
rational connection between this analysis and the findings, the Court should
not intervene (Respondents’ Record, Memorandum of fact and law, p. 182, para.
13).
[51]
In
Adamidis, above, Phelan J. explained the classification level in the
“PM” group. He wrote:
[7] The classification level in the Program
Administration (or “PM” group) is assessed according to the factors below.
Where the factor has sub-factors, the first sub-factor is given an alphabetical
designation, and the second factor is given a numerical designation. For
example, the Knowledge factor could be scored from A to E for
“Program/Technical”, and from 1 to 4 for “General Administration”.
Factors
|
Factor Weights
|
Min. Value
|
Max. Value
|
Knowledge
·
Program/Technical
·
General
Administration
|
400
|
81
|
400
|
Decision Making
·
Scope
·
Impact
|
300
|
69
|
300
|
Operational Responsibility
Nature of Responsibility
Complexity and size of
subordinate organization
·
|
150
|
10
|
150
|
Contacts
|
150
|
30
|
150
|
[8] The point
levels required for each level in the PM group are as follows:
Level 1: 190-300
points
Level 2: 301-400
points
Level 3: 401-500
points
Level 4: 501-610
points
Level 5: 611-720
points
Level 6: 721-1000
points
[9] Each factor or sub-factor has a number of
different levels within it. These levels are defined in the Classification
Standard. Those definitions are then assessed against the work description of
the position at issue to determine what level the position should be at for
each sub-factor. Also, there are a number of “Benchmark” positions identified
in the Classification Standard. These “Benchmark” positions are helpful guides
to determining a position’s classification: if the position at issue is similar
to the Benchmark position for a particular sub-factor, then it will be scored
the same as the Benchmark position. Positions are also compared to other
non-Benchmark positions within the public service, to ensure that all positions
are classified fairly.
[52]
In
this case, the Committee assessed the grieved position as follows:
Factors
|
Level
|
Value
given
|
Knowledge
- Program/ Technical
- General Administration
|
A1
|
081
points
|
Decision
Making
- Scope
- Impact
|
A1
|
069
points
|
Operational
Responsibility
- Nature of Responsibility
- Complexity & size of organization
|
A
|
010
points
|
Contacts
|
2
|
070
points
|
|
Total
|
230
points
(190
to 300)
PM-01
|
|
|
|
[53]
In
the applicants’ view, the Committee’s decision stated that the responsibilities
of the collection officer position (PM-01) at the Department of Citizenship and
Immigration are similar to those of the grieved position and that these two
positions require the same level of knowledge and decision making to perform
the duties. They point out, however, that the collection officers at
Immigration were reclassified from PM-01 to PM-02 on November 13, 2003
(Applicants’ Record; Affidavit of André Julien, sworn November 30, 2006,
Reclassification Department: Citizenship and Immigration Canada, Vol. I, Tab
3-A, p. 131).
[54]
However,
the respondents say that far from not considering the applicants’ arguments
about the collection officer position (PM-01) at the Department of Citizenship
and Immigration or the supporting documentation, the Committee considered and
commented on the reclassification notices submitted by the applicants and
indicated that the fact that other positions were eventually reclassified had
little impact on the applicants’ grievance classification proceeding
(Respondents’ Record, Memorandum of fact and law, p. 186, para. 28; Applicants’
Record, Classification Grievance Committee Report, Vol. I, Tab 2, p. 13;
Respondents’ Record, Affidavit of Paul Lamont, above, p. 6, para. 16).
[55]
The
Committee even stated that it was unable to establish how the staffing action
would prove that the grieved position was under-classified. Furthermore, Mr.
Lamont clarified that [translation]
“the applicants provided the Committee with separate work descriptions
pertaining to separate PM-01 and PM-02 positions at the Department of Citizenship
and Immigration. The Committee took into account the similarities and the
differences between these two distinct positions (PM-01 and PM-02) and the
grieved position . . . ”(Respondents’ Record, Memorandum of fact and law,
above; Applicants’ Record, Classification Grievance Committee Report, above;
Respondents’ Record, Affidavit of Paul Lamont, above).
[56]
The
applicants also note that the Committee erred in determining that the position
did not require issuing third party demands, which included salaries from third
parties. It noted that Instrument B‑44 clearly provides as follows:
The Canada Employment and Immigration
Commission, pursuant to subsection 18(3) of the Employment and Immigration
Department and Commission Act, hereby authorizes the officers and employees
of the Commission occupying, on an acting basis or otherwise, the positions
identified below to require a person who is or is about to become indebted or
liable to make a payment to a person liable to make a payment under Part I of
the Unemployment Insurance Act to pay, in whole or in part, the monies
otherwise payable to the person liable under Part I to the Receiver General on
account of the liability under that Part, pursuant to subsection 94(4) of this
Act.
(Applicants’ Record, Affidavit of André
Julien, above, Reclassification Department: Citizenship and Immigration Canada,
Vol. I, Tab 3-A, Instrument B-44, p. 92).
[57]
However,
the Committee notes in its report:
[translation]
The authority to strike and to
issue third party demands was not granted to the collection officer position at
SDC. Recommendations are presented to the supervisor who approves or
rejects their implementation. The recommendations are then sent, depending
on the case, to a review committee or to the Department of Justice to be
accepted or rejected.
The grieved position has the
delegated authority to formally ask for information from clients or their
representative. However, if the clients or a third party refuse to comply with
the demand or ignore it, the case is deemed to be more complex and is sent to
the next higher level. The positions at the higher level can give opinions and
advice. If the collection officer does not take advantage of this expertise,
the problem is operational, since the higher positions are responsible for
giving technical opinions and guidance to the collection officers. This
responsibility is set out in the work descriptions of collection consultants,
monitoring and training officers and supervisors. (My emphasis.)
(Applicants’ Record, Classification
Grievance Committee Report, Vol. I, Tab 2, p. 11)
[58]
Contrary
to the applicants’ submissions, the Committee considered the argument that they
were required to issue third party demands and found that Instrument B-44 did
not delegate this power to them (Applicants’ Record, Classification Grievance
Committee Report, above, p. 13).
[59]
Contrary
to the Committee’s finding, the applicants state that collection officers are
summoned to appear before the Court as a result of their obligations as
employees. This is not a question of civic duty but, rather, is a consequence
of the nature of the work of collection officers and the signing authority that
has been granted to them. Consequently, in their view, the Committee did not
attribute significant value to this document, and this constitutes a patently
unreasonable error (Applicants’ Record, Affidavit of André Julien; above;
E-mail dated April 26, 2006, Tab C, p. 223).
[60]
The
evidence to support the applicants’ allegation that they are required to appear
in Court in their capacity as collection officers is corroborated by only one
claim for costs. Because of the large number of applicants, this evidence
cannot confirm that, in fact, this duty occurs so often that a reclassification
of the grieved position is warranted (Affidavit of André Julien, above; E-mail
dated April 26, 2006, above).
[61]
In
addition, the respondents note that the Committee considered this argument
because the Committee referred to the documentation supporting this argument in
its report. The Committee also considered the difference between a
responsibility that is clearly described in a job description and the civic
duty to appear in Court when summoned to do so (Respondents’ Record, Memorandum
of fact and law, p. 186, para. 29; Affidavit of Paul Lamont, above, p. 5, para.
14).
[62]
It
is important to bear in mind that, regardless of where a person is classified,
situations arise in which people are called upon to perform duties that do not
necessarily or ordinarily fall within their work descriptions. This can happen
from time to time, but it does not mean that every time a person wears a
different hat, knowing that it is not during a career in these particular
positions, that this person would be called upon to perform duties that are
outside or beyond or at a higher level, hierarchically speaking.
[63]
Pelletier J.
explained that adhering to a work description that some adjudicators describe
as “sufficiently complete”, “speaks of a relatively rigid conception of the
role of an employee’s Work Description. That view is not shared by all
adjudicators” and such a “view of the role of a Work Description suggests that
it is a document which must reflect the realities of the employee’s work
situation since so many aspects of the employee’s rights and obligations in the
workplace are bound to his or her Work Description.” (Currie, above, paras. 25-26)
[64]
He
also notes “[that it] is not uncommon for employees who have
a common Work Description to have different duties and responsibilities. So
long as those different duties and responsibilities all fall within the general
language of their common Work Description, all is well.” (Currie, above,
para. 1)
[65]
It
must be noted that to take a case that turns on its own facts for a particular
situation or a very specific event within a context that is generally limited
would be going from the particular to the general when, in fact, a case decided
on its own facts remains just that. Can a specific example be cited to create a
cause célèbre of general application, given that taking a case out of
context to use as an example in a broader sense would be describing a situation
other than it is?
[66]
Therefore,
any job that calls for cooperation between individuals requires team work where
the individuals are connected by a real or symbolic chain to ensure that things
run smoothly; this does not remove the real and essential need for each
individual to have an accurate description of his or her own daily, or rather,
ordinary work, without denying that in certain infrequent circumstances
an individual could go beyond his or her work description to assist a person
who has another job description within this real or symbolic chain.
[67]
According
to the PM-01 and PM-02 work descriptions, the difference is clear. In the work
description of the grieved position, the Committee observed that there were
similarities between the principal activities of this position and the
positions submitted as relative value. At the conclusion of the review, the
Committee determined that, in the majority of cases, the jobs presented for
purposes of comparison with the PM-02 jobs had more important responsibilities
than the grieved position (Applicants’ Record, Classification Grievance
Committee Report, above, p. 9).
[68]
Mr.
Lamont, a member of the Classification Grievance Committee that heard the
grievance brought by the 136 applicants, stated that the Committee members
studied all the information and documents submitted by the applicants along
with any other document they considered relevant in order to carry out a complete
evaluation of the grievance. The members reviewed the work description for the
grieved position. The flow charts in support of the grievance (the flow charts
from various regions, indicating positions as collection programs consultant,
PM-02; collection services consultant, PM-03; etc.), the work descriptions of
the regional supervisors and senior positions, the Alliance’s written
presentation and the documents submitted by Mr. Julien. The Committee members
also examined the work description of the grieved position in comparison with
the classification standard of the programme administration group (PM)
(Respondents’ Record, Affidavit of Paul Lamont, above, p. 6, para. 17).
[69]
In
addition, he stated that the Grievance Committee, after deliberating and considering
all the evidence and the documentation submitted and mentioned above, including
the comparisons used by the applicants, concluded that the PM-01 group and
level assigned to the INA0241/PM-0066 position was appropriate as of February
17, 1999, the effective date of the work description and that all of this
complied with the objectives and principles governing classification as
described in the Treasury Board Manual, Classification System Policy
(Respondents’ Record, Affidavit of Paul Lamont, above, p. 6, para. 18).
[70]
Based
on the evidence in this case and as stated earlier, cases that turn on their
own facts where people infrequently go beyond their duties does not mean that
this happens systematically, and, similarly, because a person is called upon to
perform a duty as an individual in an institution for a civic reason should not
mean that this falls within a work description for the particular position. A
work description cannot be engraved in stone; if an exceptional situation
arises infrequently, should it become the rule? Accordingly, does the
infrequent duty that does not fall within a compulsory or even a normal work
description alter a position?
CONCLUSION
[71]
At
the meeting with the Committee, the applicants had the opportunity to file
written submissions and to present oral arguments. As part of its
deliberations, the Committee considered the official work description as well
as the applicants’ submissions. In its decision, the Committee summarized the
applicants’ presentation, then considered each of the evaluation factors
individually in relation to the description for the benchmark positions, in
order to determine the appropriate degree and the number of corresponding
points. As a result of this analysis, the Committee concluded that the classification
of the position should be maintained at the PM-01 level.
[72]
In
addition, in considering the functions and responsibilities assigned by
management and regularly performed by the employee, the Committee made a
decision based on assessing the probative value of all the available work
descriptions. Through this analysis, the Committee determined that [translation] “in the majority of cases,
the jobs presented for purposes of comparison with the PM-2 jobs had more
important responsibilities than the grieved position” and that the result
of weighing the classification factors was that the Committee would not
reclassify the position upwards (Applicants’ Record, Classification Grievance
Committee Report, above, p. 9).
[73]
The
Committee’s decision to not reclassify the position is not patently
unreasonable.
[74]
Furthermore,
the Committee did not breach its duty of procedural fairness when it exercised
its discretion to evaluate the evidence and the representations.
[75]
Therefore,
the application for judicial review is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial review is dismissed.
“Michel
M.J. Shore”
Certified true translation
Mary Jo Egan, LLB