Date: 20100513
Docket: T-789-09
Citation: 2010 FC 528
Ottawa, Ontario, May 13,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Keefe
BETWEEN:
AL
MACKLAI
Applicant
and
CANADA
REVENUE AGENCY
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
O’KEEFE J.
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of the assistant director
of the respondent’s Scientific Research and Experimental Development Program,
dated April 20, 2009. In that decision, the assistant director denied the
applicant’s request that the applicant’s appointment to a higher position be
made retroactive to July 4, 2006.
[2]
The
applicant requests:
1. An order setting aside the
decision of Mr. Khan;
2. An order remitting the matter
back to a different representative of the respondent and requiring the
respondent to make the applicant’s appointment to the position of senior financial
reviewer retroactive to July 4, 2006; and
3. Costs of this application.
Introduction
[3]
The
Canada Revenue Agency (the Agency or CRA) is responsible for the administration
of Federal Government tax programs as well as the delivery of economic and
social benefits. Pursuant to the Canada Revenue Agency Act, S.C. 1999,
c. 17 (the Act), the CRA is a body corporate and is a separate agency under the
Public Service Labour Relations Act, S.C. 2003, c. 22, (see subsection
4(1) and section 50 of the Act).
[4]
Parliament
has given the CRA broad responsibilities over the management of its human
resources (see subsection 51(1) of the Act). Section 53 of the Act also grants
the CRA the exclusive right and authority to appoint any employees that it
considers necessary for the proper conduct of its business. Then, pursuant to
section 54, the CRA is responsible for developing and administering a program
governing staffing.
[5]
The
Agency’s current staffing program contains the Directive on Recourse for Assessment
and Staffing (the recourse directive). The recourse directive sets out in
detail the parameters of the recourse scheme developed pursuant to the Act and
includes provision for the independent third party review (ITPR) of CRA
staffing decisions, including selection process decisions. The recourse directive,
however, requires independent third party reviewers to limit corrective
measures to those actions required to correct the errors made during the
selection process.
Background
[6]
The
applicant is a financial reviewer (AU-03) with the CRA. He applied for a
promotion to the position of senior financial reviewer (AU-04), but was
unsuccessful in the selection process. The successful candidates in the process
were appointed to the AU-04 level on July 4, 2006.
[7]
The
applicant complained about the selection process and engaged the recourse directive.
The staffing decision was then referred to ITPR, where the applicant obtained a
favourable decision. An independent third-party reviewer (the reviewer),
ordered the CRA to correct an error in the selection process and recommended
that the appointments made under the process be rescinded and that the process
be conducted de novo, “in a manner that more closely reflects the
Agency’s Staffing Principles”.
[8]
The
CRA decided not to fully comply with the reviewer’s order. Instead, the CRA
reassessed the candidates and subsequently the applicant’s supervisor offered
the applicant a position at the AU-04 level in a letter dated March 25, 2009.
The applicant accepted the offer immediately, but had misgivings about the
effective date of his appointment. He requested that he be paid retroactively
to July 4, 2006 (the date that the other placements were originally made). The
applicant referred to the fact that the Agency in similar cases had provided
aggrieved employees with retroactive pay.
The Decision under
Review
[9]
On
April 6, 2009, a steward with the Professional Institute of the Public Service
of Canada, met with the applicant’s supervisor regarding the applicant’s request
for retroactive pay. The applicant’s supervisor informed the steward that prior
to March 25, 2009, the applicant had not performed the duties of an AU-04 and
that the applicant could not be paid for work at the AU-04 level which he had
not performed. In response to the steward’s claim that other employees had been
paid retroactively, the applicant’s supervisor indicated that he was of the
view that he should focus on the facts of the applicant’s case.
Issues
[10]
The issues
are as follows:
1. What is the standard of
review?
2. Was the decision of the
applicant’s supervisor reasonable?
Applicant’s Written Submissions
[11]
The
applicant submits that the standard of review should be correctness. Whether
retroactive pay is appropriate is a question of law and questions of law on
staffing matters attract the standard of correctness because the decision maker
has no expertise. The question was akin to an assessment of damages question,
because the matter arose in the wake of the reviewer’s determination that the
staffing exercise had been carried out improperly. The fact that the decision
is made by an individual not independent from the employer and the lack of a
privative clause also suggest that correctness is the appropriate standard.
[12]
The
applicant points out that both in the law of contract and tort, damages are
meant to put the injured person in the position they would have been had the
breach or tort not occurred. In this instance, the applicant should have been
appointed to the AU-04 position originally and thus should have received
retroactive pay. Indeed, this is the standard practice in labour arbitration where
it is determined that a grievor should have been promoted. There is no
discretion concerning remedy once it is determined that a grievor ought to have
been appointed. The length of the retroactive period is not a relevant
consideration. Given that the CRA never explained on what basis it ultimately
offered the applicant the appointment, the applicant and Court are left to
assume that it was on the basis that the applicant would have been successful
in the original competition.
[13]
The
applicant further submits that the Agency’s staffing program is governed and
guided by eight staffing principles including the principles of fairness and transparency.
If retroactive compensation is not required, the Agency would have no incentive
to implement corrective measures in a timely manner and this would result in
unfairness. In light of the principle of fairness and the arbitral
jurisprudence, the CRA’s concern that the applicant had not performed the work
of an AU-04 was unreasonable. In light of the principle of transparency,
employees have a legitimate expectation that like cases will be decided alike.
Here, the CRA has openly refused to consider past internal precedents.
Regardless of the standard of review, the decision of the applicant’s supervisor
was unreasonable.
Respondent’s Written Submissions
[14]
The
Agency takes the position that the standard of review is reasonableness. The
question before the applicant’s supervisor was a question of fact and policy
that involved the exercise of discretion. A standard of review analysis is not
necessary as this Court has already determined that the reasonableness standard
should apply to questions of this type.
[15]
Even
on a standard of review analysis, the appropriate standard should be
reasonableness says the Agency. First, while there is no privative clause or
right of appeal, the recourse directive provides that recourse is not available
following the implementation of corrective measures. Analysis of the purpose of
tribunal reveals that through the enabling legislation, Parliament has given
the CRA a significant degree of autonomy with respect to a wide variety of
labour relations issues, including employee recourse issues which necessarily
include the implementation of corrective measures. As stated, the nature of the
question before the applicant’s supervisor involved the exercise of discretion
in the particular facts of the case. Finally, the applicant’s supervisor’s
position as a CRA manager responsible for all aspects of human resources in his
office, suggest that he has relative expertise in deciding what was a human
resources matter.
[16]
The
supervisor’s decision not to pay the applicant as an AU-04 for the period July
4, 2006 to March 25, 2009 was based on the particular facts of the situation.
In particular, it was based on the substantive differences between work done at
the AU-03 and AU-04 levels and the fact that the applicant had not done the work
of an AU-04. The supervisor’s decision was, at a minimum, within the range of
acceptable outcomes.
[17]
Furthermore,
it was the correct decision. An ITPR reviewer, upon determining that there was
an error in the selection process, can only order that the procedural errors be
fixed but cannot order how they must be fixed. It is open to the CRA to
determine how to address the error. Here, the reviewer ordered the CRA to
address the error, but only recommended rescinding the appointments and
conducting the process de novo. The Agency was adverse to the idea of
rescinding the appointments of the successful candidates who had been working
at the AU-04 level for some time, to conduct a de novo selection process
which at best would only have provided the applicant with a possibility of
being appointed. Instead, the CRA reassessed the candidates and subsequently
offered the applicant an AU-04 position. Now, the applicant seeks an order
requiring the Agency to appoint him retroactively to July 4, 2006, which goes
well beyond what could have been ordered by a reviewer and would undermine
Parliament’s intention and the scheme created by the CRA.
Analysis and Decision
[18]
Issue
1
What is the standard of review?
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 190, [2008] S.C.J. No. 9 (QL), revolutionized the
approach to determining the appropriate standard upon which to review
administrative decisions.
[19]
With
the goals of efficiency and certainty in mind, the Dunsmuir Court taught, in
particular, that a full standard of review analysis would not always be
required if the appropriate standard was readily apparent:
62 In summary, the process of
judicial review involves two steps. First, courts ascertain whether the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
defence to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.
Second, where the first inquiry proves unfruitful, courts must proceed to an
analysis of the factors making it possible to identify the proper standard of
review.
[20]
In
the above passage, the Court indicated that the key factor to analyze
when determining whether the jurisprudence had resolved the standard of review is
the nature of the question. Indeed, the Dunsmuir Court identified
certain types of questions which will be automatic determinants of the
appropriate standard. At paragraph 51, the Court stated:
…As we will now demonstrate, questions of
fact, discretion and policy as well as questions where the legal issues cannot
be easily separated from the factual issues generally attract a standard of
reasonableness while many legal issues attract a standard of correctness….
Then again at paragraph
53:
Where the question is one of fact,
discretion or policy, deference will usually apply automatically….
[21]
I am
satisfied that the question before the applicant’s supervisor was one that
involved the exercise of his discretion in his capacity as a manager and was
dependent on the facts of the applicant’s particular case. Despite the
applicant’s assertions, his supervisor was not dealing with a question of law
or jurisdiction, nor was his decision precedent setting. In my view, the
standard of reasonableness should apply.
[22]
The
applicant has characterized the question as a legal one because it involved
principles similar to those used in the assessment of damages in breach of
contract or tort cases. I cannot agree. While the applicant may be able to draw
some similarities between his situation and a tort or contract plaintiff, the
fact remains that this was not a decision involving tort or contract law. Nor
is it a fact situation evoking adherence to the law of labour arbitration. None
of that case law is relevant in the present context, given the particular
legislative scheme provided for under the Act and the detailed staffing program
including the recourse directive developed by the CRA in discharging its
obligations under the Act.
[23]
Nor
was the question a legal one because it involved interpretation of the
employee’s de facto contract of employment as was the case in Appleby-Ostroff
v. Attorney General of Canada, 2010 FC 479. The
recourse directive, even if it became part of the applicant’s terms and
conditions of employment, did not address the precise question at issue, the
awarding of retroactive pay.
[24]
Finally,
the recourse directive was solely within the sphere of management and human
resources expertise and did not involve subject matter for which the courts have
relative expertise as was the case in Canada (Attorney General) v. Assh,
2006 FCA 358, [2007] 4 F.C.R. 46, 274 D.L.R. (4th) 633, regarding the
interpretation of a conflicts of interest code.
[25]
I
also note that though no case has dealt with the precise question before this
CRA manager, in Barry Gerus v. Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 1344,
[2008] F.C.J. No. 1717, this Court considered an application for judicial
review in connection with a decision of a CRA manager rejecting the applicant’s
application for preferred status, a designation under the staffing program.
Since the question before the manager was one of fact and policy, the Court
concluded that the reasonableness standard ought to apply (see Barry Gerus
above, at paragraph 16).
[26]
Issue
2
Was Mr. Khan’s decision
reasonable?
In my view, given the
legislative scheme of the Act and the authority to determine matters relating
to human resources, a discretionary decision of a CRA manager is not the type
of decision for which this Court ought to substitute its own opinion for that
which was made at the operational level. There may be cases where a manifestly
unjust decision will require this Court to engage in micromanagement of the
CRA, but there are no such circumstances here.
[27]
In
terms which I believe are particularly apt in the present case, the Dunsmuir Court described
the reasonableness standard as follows:
47 Reasonableness is a deferential
standard animated by the principle that underlies the development of the two
previous standards of reasonableness: certain questions that come before
administrative tribunals do not lend themselves to one specific, particular
result. Instead, they may give rise to a number of possible, reasonable
conclusions. Tribunals have a margin of appreciation within the range of
acceptable and rational solutions. A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[28]
Peering
into the oral decision of the applicant’s supervisor, his reasons seem
abundantly transparent. His primary reason for not awarding retroactive pay to
the applicant was that the applicant had not performed the work. This is a fact
which makes the decision of the applicant’s supervisor reasonable. A managerial
decision regarding whether to award a benefit in a notably low procedural
fairness environment, need not require any more in the way of reasons. It is
enough that the applicant’s supervisor clearly turned his mind to the
particular facts of the applicant’s situation. At minimum, the decision of the
applicant’s supervisor was one possible acceptable outcome for which I would
not choose to intervene in.
[29]
The
applicant, of course, does not frame the issue this way and proceeds on the
implicit assumption that he had a legal right to retroactive pay for which the
CRA had no discretion whether or not to award. While I have already stated my
disagreement with this characterization of the type of question at issue in my
analysis of the standard of review, I will now elaborate on the reasons why I
find this assumption to be flawed.
[30]
The
applicant’s demand for retroactive pay arose in the context of the
implementation of the reviewer’s decision relating to the selection process.
Article 7 of the recourse directive sets out the corrective measures that may
be ordered or recommended where recourse is sought by an employee. With respect
to ITPRs in staffing decisions, paragraph 7.4 of the recourse directive
provides as follows:
7.4 The corrective measures that the
Independent Third Party Reviewer may prescribe are limited to:
(a) Ordering the Authorized Person that
an error in the internal selection process or staffing action be corrected. The
ITPR Reviewer has no authority to order the Authorized Person as to how the
error should be corrected;
(b) Recommending the revocation of the
employee’s appointment, if required;
(c) Recommending that another Authorized
Person be involved in the decision.
[31]
With
respect to staffing decisions, it is the ITPR reviewer’s job to identify errors
made in the selection process, if any, but under paragraph 7.4, a reviewer may
only issue an order requiring that an error be corrected. In other words, the
reviewer can only order that procedural errors in a selection process be
corrected. A reviewer cannot order how such errors should be corrected and to
that extent, is prohibited from ordering a substantive result (see Canada
(Attorney General) v. Beall, 2007 FC 630, 314 F.T.R. 159 at paragraphs 19 to
21, Canada (Attorney General) v. Gagnon, 2006 FC 216, [2006] F.C.J. No.
270 at paragraph 21, aff’d 2007 FCA 164).
[32]
In
the present case, the reviewer identified several errors in the selection process
and ordered their correction. It was her recommendation that the appointments
which had been made pursuant to the process be rescinded and the process
conducted de novo. As stated above though, it is within the CRA’s
purview to determine how to address the errors. Had those recommendations been
followed, the applicant would have only gained a possibility of being appointed
in a new process and no possibility of any retroactive pay. Instead, the
applicant was offered the result which would have been the optimum outcome and
he accepted the appointment to the AU-04 position.
[33]
Now
the applicant seeks an order requiring the Agency to appoint him retroactively
to July 4, 2006. I agree with the respondent that such an order goes well
beyond what he could have obtained pursuant to ITPR and the recourse directive which
the Agency developed and administers pursuant to section 54 of the Act.
[34]
In its
decision in Beall above, this Court declared that the ITPR reviewer’s
decision that Ms. Beall be appointed retroactively was unlawful and exceeded
his jurisdiction under the Agency’s staffing program (see paragraphs 18 and
19).
[35]
Ordering
retroactive pay to July 4, 2006, where under the recourse regime created by the
CRA, an ITPR reviewer could not make such an order, would appear to be contrary
to Parliament’s intention to provide the CRA with the responsibility to
establish and administer a staffing and recourse program. Though the applicant
did not challenge the legitimacy of the CRA’s staffing program or any of its provisions,
such an order would undermine that scheme by encouraging employees who had been
successful in the ITPR process to seek additional relief not provided for under
the scheme.
[36]
The CRA’s
staffing program does contemplate and even allows for awards of retroactive pay
by ITPR reviewers in situations involving non-disciplinary termination or
demotion. Such a situation was the subject of this Court’s decision in Sherman v. Canada (Customs and Revenue Agency), 2005 FC 173, [2005] F.C.J.
No. 209 (QL). In any event, the applicant has not challenged the staffing
program or any provision in the recourse directive in respect of the jurisdiction
of ITPR reviewers.
[37]
Thus,
there was no legal right to retroactive pay in the applicant’s situation and no
reason to treat such a decision as anything different from what it would be in
the normal course of employment; a discretionary decision by management.
[38]
While
the applicant brings up the CRA’s staffing principles of fairness and
transparency, those principles cannot be contorted into a legal right to pay
for work not done. In any event, I find that the applicant was treated fairly
and with transparency in the implementation of the reviewer’s order.
[39]
As
a final matter, the applicant relies on the decision in Vera Gerus v. Canada
(Revenue Agency), 2009 FC 55, [2009] F.C.J. No. 90 (QL), a case involving
the CRA’s failure to give effect to Ms. Gerus’ preferred status.
[40]
Section
2 of the CRA’s Preferred Status Directive creates certain mandatory
requirements with respect to employees who have preferred status. It, in part,
provides:
2.1 To be considered for appointment,
individuals with Preferred Status must meet the minimum requirements of the
position to be filled including requirements for education, official languages
and security.
2.2 In order to maximize permanent
placement opportunities for individuals with Preferred Status, Authorized
Persons, with the assistance of Human Resources, are responsible for ensuring
that individuals with Preferred Status are considered for permanent vacancies
prior to initiating staffing with or without selection process. Authorized
Persons are also responsible for advising individuals with Preferred Status of
the outcome, and for granting, upon request, the recourse rights specified in
this Directive to those who are not placed.
2.3 Authorized Persons must consider
individuals with Preferred Status as part of the area of selection when they
conduct a selection process. Such individuals must already be living at a
reasonable commuting distance to the location of the position being staffed
(even those whose substantive position is in another location or region) and
must meet the minimum requirements of that position. Individuals with Preferred
Status must also be fully qualified to be included in the pool.
2.3.1 If individuals with Preferred
Status qualify as a result of such a selection process, and if there
substantive positions are already at the same group and level or equivalent
level as the position to be filled, these individuals must be considered in
priority over other qualified candidates and will be appointed as a result of
their Preferred Status.
[41]
While
Ms. Gerus, who had preferred status, was awaiting appointment, certain
positions were filled without giving Ms. Gerus notice or an opportunity to
submit an application for consideration. In the final decision available under
the recourse directive, the Agency advised her that she had been considered for
the positions but that she did not meet the minimum requirements. On judicial
review, this Court overturned the decision criticizing the Agency’s
interpretation of the term “minimum requirements” in relation to Ms. Gerus’
rights as an individual with preferred status stating:
25 The decision under review, the
letter of January 25, 2008 states that the Applicant "did not meet the
minimum requirements". This is clearly an error. It is an unreasonable
interpretation of the Program. The Applicant met the "minimum
requirements" - she did not however have "full qualifications".
The decision does not address the fact that certain positions were filled
without a selection process whereby the Applicant's lack of "full
qualifications" would have been irrelevant. The decision is unreasonable
and will be set aside.
[42]
When the
matter was returned to the Agency for redetermination, the decision was made to
appoint Ms. Gerus retroactively to a CS-02 position.
[43]
In my view,
Vera Gerus above, presented a very different situation than the present
case. Here, the applicant had no right under the staffing program to
retroactive pay as Ms. Gerus did due to preferential appointment in her case.
Further, the disposition of the Vera Gerus case seems to reaffirm that
decisions to appoint an individual retroactively are discretionary decisions
made by CRA management based on the facts of each case before them.
[44]
For
the preceding reasons, I would dismiss this application for judicial review
with costs to the respondent.
JUDGMENT
[45]
IT
IS ORDERED that the application for judicial review is dismissed with costs
to the respondent.
“John
A. O’Keefe”
ANNEX
Relevant
Statutory Provisions
Canada
Revenue Agency Act,
S.C. 1999, c. 17
50. The Agency is a separate agency under
the Public Service Labour Relations Act.
51.(1) The Agency may, in the exercise of
its responsibilities in relation to human resources management,
(a) determine
its requirements with respect to human resources and provide for the
allocation and effective utilization of human resources;
(b) determine
requirements for the training and development of its personnel and fix the
terms and conditions on which that training and development may be carried
out;
(c) provide
for the classification of Agency positions and employees;
(d) determine
and regulate the pay to which persons employed by the Agency are entitled for
services rendered, the hours of work and leave of those persons and any
related matters;
(e) provide
for the awards that may be made to persons employed by the Agency for
outstanding performance of their duties, for other meritorious achievement in
relation to those duties and for inventions or practical suggestions for
improvements;
(f) establish
standards of discipline for its employees and prescribe the financial and
other penalties, including termination of employment and suspension, that may
be applied for breaches of discipline or misconduct and the circumstances and
manner in which and the authority by which or by whom those penalties may be
applied or may be varied or rescinded in whole or in part;
(g) provide
for the termination of employment or the demotion to a position at a lower
maximum rate of pay, for reasons other than breaches of discipline or
misconduct, of persons employed by the Agency and establish the circumstances
and manner in which and the authority by which or by whom those measures may
be taken or may be varied or rescinded in whole or in part;
(h) determine
and regulate the payments that may be made to Agency employees by way of
reimbursement for travel or other expenses and by way of allowances in respect
of expenses and conditions arising out of their employment; and
(i) provide
for any other matters that the Agency considers necessary for effective
personnel management, including terms and conditions of employment not
otherwise specifically provided for in this subsection.
(2) The
Commissioner must apply the penalties, including termination of employment
and suspension, under paragraph (1)(f) and provide for termination or
demotion under paragraph (1)(g) on behalf of the Agency.
. . .
53.(1) The Agency has the exclusive right
and authority to appoint any employees that it considers necessary for the
proper conduct of its business.
(2) The
Commissioner must exercise the appointment authority under subsection (1) on
behalf of the Agency.
54.(1) The Agency must develop a program
governing staffing, including the appointment of, and recourse for,
employees.
(2) No
collective agreement may deal with matters governed by the staffing program.
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50.
L’Agence est un organisme distinct au sens de la Loi sur les relations de
travail dans la fonction publique.
51.(1)
L’Agence peut, dans l’exercice de ses attributions en matière de gestion des
ressources humaines :
a) déterminer
les effectifs qui lui sont nécessaires et assurer leur répartition et leur
bonne utilisation;
b) déterminer
les besoins en matière de formation et perfectionnement de son personnel et
en fixer les conditions de mise en oeuvre;
c)
assurer la classification des postes et des employés;
d) déterminer
et réglementer les traitements auxquels ont droit ses employés, leurs
horaires et leurs congés, ainsi que les questions connexes;
e)
prévoir les primes susceptibles d’être accordées aux employés pour résultats
exceptionnels ou réalisations méritoires dans l’exercice de leurs fonctions, ainsi
que pour des inventions ou des idées pratiques d’amélioration;
f)
établir des normes de discipline et fixer les sanctions pécuniaires et
autres, y compris le licenciement et la suspension, susceptibles d’être
infligées pour manquement à la discipline ou inconduite et préciser dans
quelles circonstances, de quelle manière, par qui et en vertu de quels
pouvoirs ces sanctions peuvent être appliquées, modifiées ou annulées, en
tout ou en partie;
g)
prévoir, pour des motifs autres qu’un manquement à la discipline ou une
inconduite, le licenciement ou la rétrogradation à un poste situé dans une
échelle de traitement comportant un plafond inférieur et préciser dans
quelles circonstances, de quelle manière, par qui et en vertu de quels
pouvoirs ces mesures peuvent être appliquées, modifiées ou annulées, en tout
ou en partie;
h)
déterminer et réglementer les indemnités à verser aux employés soit pour des
frais de déplacement ou autres, soit pour des dépenses ou en raison de
circonstances liées à leur emploi;
i)
prendre les autres mesures qu’elle juge nécessaires à la bonne gestion de son
personnel, notamment en ce qui touche les conditions de travail non prévues
de façon expresse par le présent paragraphe.
(2)
Le commissaire, pour le compte de l’Agence, inflige les sanctions, y compris
le licenciement et la suspension, visées à l’alinéa (1) f) et procède au
licenciement ou à la rétrogradation visés à l’alinéa (1) g).
. . .
53.(1)
L’Agence a compétence exclusive pour nommer le personnel qu’elle estime nécessaire
à l’exercice de ses activités.
(2)
Les attributions prévues au paragraphe (1) sont exercées par le commissaire
pour le compte de l’Agence.
54.(1)
L’Agence élabore un programme de dotation en personnel régissant notamment
les nominations et les recours offerts aux employés.
(2)
Sont exclues du champ des conventions collectives toutes les matières régies
par le programme de dotation en personnel.
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