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- 97. The complaint (Case No. 1172) of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), on behalf of its affiliated organisations the National Union of Provincial Government Employees (NUPGE), the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) and the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), is contained in a communication dated 15 November 1982. The CLC supplied additional information in communications dated 15 December 1982, 16 February and 28 October 1983 and 10 January 1984. The World Confederation of Organisations of the Teaching Profession (WCOTP), presented its complaint, on behalf of its affiliates the Canadian Teachers Federation and the Ontario Teachers Federation, in a letter of 8 February 1983 and further information in a communication of 7 March 1983. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) presented its complaint in a letter dated 6 April 1984. The Government sent its observations in communications dated 25 April 1983 and 7 June and 16 October 1984.
- 98. The Confederation of Alberta Faculty Associations (CAFA) presented a complaint (Case No. 1234) of violations of trade union rights against the Government of Canada/Alberta in a communication dated 19 September 1983. The Government supplied its observations in a communication dated 21 February 1984.
- 99. The Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) presented a complaint (Case No. 1247) of infringements of trade union rights in Alberta in a communication dated 1 November 1983 on behalf of the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE), a component of the National Union of Provincial Government Employees (NUPGE) which is the CLC's second largest affiliate. The Government transmitted its observations in a communication dated 3 May 1984.
- 100. The Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) presented a complaint (Case No. 1260) of infringements of trade union rights in Newfoundland in a communication dated 3 February 1984 on behalf of the Newfoundland Association of Public Employees (NAPE), a component of the National Union of Provincial Government Employees (NUPGE) which is affiliated to the CLC. The Government transmitted its observations in a communication dated 29 May 1984.
- 101. The Governing Body Committee on Freedom of Association, at its meeting in November 1984 (236th Report, para. 7, approved by the Governing Body at its 228th Session, November 1984), decided to postpone its examination of the cases concerning Ontario, Alberta and Newfoundland since it was of the view that, before reaching conclusions in these cases, it would be necessary to obtain additional information, particularly through a study and information mission, which could assist in clarifying aspects of the laws and practices involved. The Committee accordingly requested the Government to indicate its consent to such a procedure.
- 102. In a letter dated 1 February 1985 the Government indicated that, after consultation with the various provincial governments concerned, it had no objection to such a mission taking place.
- 103. In its 238th Report, para. 10 (approved by the Governing Body at its 229th Session, February-March 1985), the Committee explained that the study and information mission would take place within the context of its examination of the cases. It emphasised that its proposal for such a mission stemmed from a desire on its part to reach conclusions in as full a knowledge and understanding as possible of the complex issues involved. It said that it was convinced that its work would be greatly facilitated by an on-the-spot appreciation of the day-to-day practical operation, in local conditions, of the legislation that was the subject of the complaints.
- 104. Arrangements were accordingly made for a study and information mission to take place in Canada - in particular, the Provinces of Ontario, Alberta and Newfoundland - from 12 to 25 September 1985. The Director-General of the ILO appointed Sir John Wood, CBE, LLM, as his representative to carry out the mission; he was accompanied during the mission by Mr. William R. Simpson, Chief of the Freedom of Association Branch of the International Labour Standards Department and Mrs. Jane Hodges, an official of the Freedom of Association Branch. The report of the representative of the Director-General is annexed to this paper.
- 105. Canada has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87); it has not ratified the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98) or the Labour Relations (Public Service) Convention, 1978 (No. 151).
- 106. The Committee wishes first to express its deep appreciation to Sir John Wood for having undertaken this study and information mission as representative of the Director-General. It is thanks to his detailed report on all the cases examined that the Committee has been able to reach its conclusions in a fuller knowledge and with a greater understanding of the complex issues involved in these cases. In the view of the Committee, the report of the representative of the Director-General clearly demonstrates the usefulness of missions of this kind especially in difficult cases where, despite the voluminous documentation submitted by the parties, on-the-spot discussions can throw much additional light on the problems involved.
- 107. The Committee also wishes to express its thanks to the Government of Canada and to the Governments of the Provinces of Alberta, Ontario and Newfoundland for their co-operation with the mission. It also thanks the representatives of the Canadian Labour Congress, the National Union of Provincial Government Employees and those of the many other international, national or provincial unions who assisted the representative of the Director-General in carrying out his mandate.
- 108. Since the complaints and the replies of the various governments, as well as the information obtained during the mission, have all been fully analysed in the report of the representative of the Director-General, it only remains for the Committee to proceed to the formulation of its conclusions in the cases which it has now fully examined.
A. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1172/Ontario
A. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1172/Ontario
- 109. The Committee has taken note of all the information contained in the various complaints submitted in this case, the reply transmitted by the Government of the Province of Ontario and the detailed information obtained by the representative of the Director-General during the study and information mission.
- 110. The allegations in this case concern the enactment, in 1982, of the Inflation Restraint Act (or Bill 179) which came into effect on 21 September of that year. Since September 1983 Bill 179 is no longer in force, having been replaced by a further enactment, on 10 October 1983, known as the Public Sector Prices and Compensation Review Act (or Bill 111). No formal complaint has been submitted regarding this latter enactment. Since, however, as the representative of the Director-General has pointed out in his report, it is directly relevant to the issues raised in the complaint and is the latest act by the Government in the area of public sector collective bargaining, the Committee considers it appropriate to express its views on this legislation which, it notes, was also due to expire at the end of September 1985. The Committee further observes that the representative of the Director-General was able, during his mission, to obtain the views both of the unions and of the Government on the content and effects of Bill 111.
- 111. Bill 179 was enacted in the face of what the Government considerd as an emergency situation requiring action to counter rising inflation. It placed restrictions on collective bargaining for provincial public servants and employees of semi-public provincial institutions. The provisions of the Act have the effect of extending for a period of 12 months compensation plans that were in the process of negotiation or due to expire during the period from 1 October 1982 to 30 September 1983.
- 112. The complainants have alleged that, although they were consulted about future government action, their observations and opinions went unheeded. In their opinion the economic situation at that time did not warrant emergency legislative measures being taken to restrain public service incomes.
- 113. On this first point, the Committee notes from the report of the representative of the Director-General that there has been a lively debate as to the depth or even the existence of economic problems, but that, particularly in the present case, the Government was convinced that the economic situation in the province demanded urgent attention. Whatever the situation, there were, in the Government's view, obvious economic problems which it decided to tackle through the application of wage restraint legislation in the public sector. It is not for the Committee to question the economic arguments that formed the basis of that view or of the action that the Government took.
- 114. It is, however, for the Committee to express its views on the question whether, in taking such action, the Government went beyond what the Committee has considered to be acceptable limits that might be placed temporarily on free collective bargaining.
- 115. In the first place, the immediate effect of the legislation (Bill 179) was to limit public sector wage increases, for a period which did not exceed one year, to 5 per cent (in some cases 9 per cent). In this respect, the Committee recalls that it had acknowledged that stabilisation measures restricting the right to collective bargaining are acceptable on condition that they are of an exceptional nature, and only to the extent that they are necessary, without exceeding a reasonable period, and that they are accompanied by adequate safeguards to protect workers' living standards. The Committee considers, on the basis of all the information now at its disposal, that, in the present case, all these criteria were met or at least serious efforts were made by the Government to respect these criteria.
- 116. Another immediate effect of Bill 179 was to reduce increases negotiated in compensation plans prior to the date on which the legislation became applicable where such increases exceeded those provided for in the Act. While the Committee appreciates that the introduction of wage restraint measures must be timed in order to obtain the maximum impact on the economic situation, it nevertheless considers that the interruption of already negotiated contracts is not in conformity with the principles of free collective bargaining because such contracts should be respected.
- 117. As regards the complainants' original allegations that Bill 179 not only imposed financial restrictions but also interrupted all trade union activity, including the right to bargain on non-monetary items and the right to change bargaining agents, the Committee notes that, from a strictly legal point of view, these arguments were proved to be unfounded by the Ontario Court of Appeal in the Broadway Manor case. This decision, however, was handed down too late to be of any practical assistance to the parties during the control period and it is clear that, despite the Court's ruling, much difficulty and tension were caused as a result of the problems that arose on these matters. It is clear that bargaining on non-monetary items was obstructed during the course of the legislation so as not to undermine the intended financial control. It is also clear that it was the Government's intention to prevent any change in the bargaining agent during the restraint period in order, according to the representative of the Director-General, to secure as much industrial relations tranquility as possible during that period. The Committee is of the view that, where wage restraint measures are taken by a Government to impose financial controls, care should be taken to ensure that collective bargaining on non-monetary matters can be pursued and that unions and their members can fully exercise their normal trade union activity.
- 118. The Committee further notes that forceful arguments were submitted by the unions that the regular industrial relations machinery had been adversely affected by Bill 179 and subsequently by Bill 111. The fixed norm imposed by Bill 179 in effect constituted a substitute for arbitration. Under Bill 111 the unions argue, the freedom to bargain as well as the freedom of interest arbitrators is severely curtailed by the necessity to take account of the ability of the employer to pay as well as government fiscal policy. Questions were also raised concerning the independence of arbitrators.
- 119. Bill 111, the Committee observes, was introduced as a substitute for Bill 179 and removed many of the restrictions on wage bargaining that Bill 179 had been designed to cover. Bill 111, however, it seems clear, did constitute - although in a much less rigid manner - a continuation of the policy of restraint by the introduction of such concepts as "the employer's ability to pay" and "government fiscal policy" as criteria for consideration in arriving at wage settlements. There was much controversy, even amongst arbitrators, as to the extent to which these criteria actually influenced bargaining and arbitration awards or whether they were indeed at all times taken into account.
- 120. The Committee would emphasise, in this connection, that restrictions on the right to strike in the public service or in essential services should be compensated by adequate, impartial and speedy conciliation and arbitration proceedings. The Committee would also emphasise that the independence and impartiality of the arbitration system are paramount. If, however, as in the present case, arbitrators are directly appointed by a government which lays down in legislation certain criteria which arbitrators are bound to follow in the determination of awards it is inevitable that confidence in the system will diminish.
- 121. In the view of the Committee, the expiry of Bill 111 now renders possible a return to a normal situation in which collective bargaining can take place freely with recourse being available, when appropriate, to arbitration. The loss of confidence of the unions and other residual negative effects on industrial relations that have resulted from the recent wage restraint legislation could, at least to some extent, be offset by consideration being given by the Government, in consultation with the unions, to ensuring that the arbitration system, including the selection of arbitrators, enjoys the fullest possible confidence of all the parties.
- The Committee's recommendations
- 122. The Committee recommends the Governing Body to approve this part of the report and in particular the following conclusions:
- (a) The Committee is of the view that, in general, the Inflation Restraint Act (Bill 179) did not go beyond what the Committee has previously considered to be normally acceptable limits that might be placed temporarily on collective bargaining;
- (b) The Committee, however, considers that the interruption, by Bill 179, of contracts that had been already negotiated is not in conformity with the principles of free collective bargaining because such contracts should be respected;
- (c) The Committee would emphasise that, where wage restraint measures are taken by a government to impose financial controls, care should be taken to ensure that collective bargaining on non-monetary matters can be pursued and that unions and their members can fully exercise their normal trade union activity;
- (d) The Committee stresses that restrictions on the right to strike in public or essential services should be compensated by adequate, speedy and impartial conciliation and arbitration proceedings;
- (e) The Committee would express the hope that, since the legislation which was the subject of complaint has now expired, the Government, in consultation with the unions, will endeavour to overcome any residual negative effects of that legislation on industrial relations; more particularly, the Committee hopes that the arbitration system, and the procedures for the selection of arbitrators, will be revised in such a manner as to ensure that they enjoy the fullest confidence possible of all the parties.
B. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1234/Alberta
B. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1234/Alberta
- 123. The Committee notes that this case concerns allegations that amendments to the Universities Act deny freedom of association to faculty staff by empowering the employers (the Boards of Governors) to determine the membership of academic staff associations. The complainant cites the negative effect of the amendments on staff association membership at Athabasca University.
- 124. The Committee observes that this situation arises from the combined effect of two provisions of the Act, namely section 21.2(2) which defines "academic staff association" as a body consisting of "academic staff members", and section 17(1)(d.1) which empowers the Boards of Governors to designate "academic staff members". Although the Government's written reply stresses that the university environment requires a special approach to the employer-employee relationship because of the involvement of faculty staff in all levels of university management, it acknowledges that the employer at Athabasca University - after consultation with the faculty association - altered its restrictive designation of "academic staff members".
- 125. It appears from the report of the representative of the Director-General that only at Athabasca University did the employer's use of its designation power lead to problems. In the three other universities of the Province, designations of "academic staff members" were arrived at without difficulty in consultation with the faculty associations. Moreover, it appears that the peculiar circumstances at Athabasca University (namely, that it is an open university and was recently transferred from the provincial capital to a town in the north of Alberta) might have led to misunderstandings regarding the employer's restrictive designation of academic staff at that particular point in time. In any event, the Committee notes that designations have now been made in all four provincial universities to the satisfaction of both sides.
- 126. What remains is the fear that future designations could be made to exclude faculty members and non-management administrative or planning personnel from membership of the staff associations whose purpose is to protect and defend the interests of these categories of workers. If designated as non-academic, these workers - who are specifically excluded from the Labour Relations Act and the Public Service Employee Relations Act - would have no possibility of forming or joining an association to further their interests. In these circumstances the Committee draws the Government's attention to the terms of Article 2 of Convention No. 87, ratified by Canada, which guarantee the right of all workers, without distinction whatsoever, to join or establish organisations of their own choosing. The particular circumstances of university decision-making in Alberta do not appear to the Committee to justify any restriction on this right through the vesting of wide designation powers in the employer body. The Committee recalls that it already came to this conclusion in its examination of past cases concerning the Provincial Government of Alberta to which the complainant refers in its written complaint.
- 127. The Committee accordingly considers that, in order to ensure full compliance with the principle of Article 2 of Convention No. 87, measures should be taken to repeal section 17(1)(d.1) and introduce an independent system of designation where agreement cannot be reached (for example, as suggested during the study and information mission, third party arbitration machinery). The Committee stresses this latter point because although the report of the representative of the Director-General indicates that consultations between the parties have led to satisfactory designations, the Provincial Government pointed out during the mission that it could not envisage any major change in policy regarding the Universities Act. The Committee is of the opinion that some independent machinery should be available, if necessary, to assist in the designation of "academic staff members" for the purpose of joining an academic staff association. Machinery such as that referred to in the report of the representative of the Director-General could alleviate the complainant's fear of abuse of section 17(1)(d.1).
- Recommendations of the Committee
- 128. In these circumstances, the Committee recommends the Governing Body to approve this part of the report and, in particular, to request the Government to take measures to repeal the provision in the Universities Act which empowers the employer body to determine the membership of academic staff associations. The Committee also recommends that consideration be given to the possibility of introducing an independent system for the designation, where necessary, of academic staff members, either through third party arbitration or some form of informal machinery as referred to in the report of the representative of the Director-General.
C. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1247/Alberta
C. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1247/Alberta
- 129. The Committee notes that this case concerns allegations that 1983 amendments (contained in Bill 44) to the Labour Relations Act and the Public Service Employee Relations Act of Alberta, on the one hand, restrict freedom of association by excluding numerous employees from bargaining units, and, on the other hand, interfere with the right of workers' organisations to organise their activities in full freedom by restricting the collective bargaining process and rendering the previously impartial arbitration system subject to government fiscal policy.
- 130. First, the Committee notes that, although not referred to in the written complaint, section 93 of the Public Service Employee Relations Act which bans the right to strike of provincial government employees was brought to the attention of the study and information mission. The Committee considers that an examination of this provision is important since it sets the background against which the formal allegations must be viewed. The AUPE claims that the Government's main justifications for this total ban on provincial public service strikes is that the employees concerned were so closely linked to those providing essential services as to make it reasonable to treat them in the same way and that there is no alternative supply for these services. AUPE made the point that section 93 does not apply to public servants employed by municipalities and school boards and it told the representative of the Director-General that there was no evidence of close links between essential and non-essential persons such that a strike by the latter would hinder the provision of essential services. Nor was there any evidence that there was no alternative source of supply for the services provided by the employees affected.
- 131. The Committee recalls that it has been called to examine the strike ban in a previous case submitted against the Government of Canada/Alberta (Case No. 893, most recently examined in the 204th Report, paras. 121 to 134, approved by the Governing Body at its 214th Session (November 1980).). In that case the Committee recalled that the right to strike, recognised as deriving from Article 3 of the Convention, is an essential means by which workers may defend their occupational interests. It also recalled that, if limitations on strike action are to be applied by legislation, a distinction should be made between publicly-owned undertakings which are genuinely essential, i.e. those which supply services whose interruption would endanger the life, personal safety or health of the whole or part of the population, and those which are not essential in the strict sense of the term. The Governing Body, on the Committee's recommendation, drew the attention of the Government to this principle and suggested to the Government that it consider the possibility of introducing an amendment to the Public Service Employee Relations Act in order to confine the prohibition of strikes to services which are essential in the strict sense of the term. In the present case, the Committee would again draw attention to its previous conclusions on section 93 of the Act.
- 132. Linked to this question of restrictions on the right to strike is one of the specific written allegations, namely that an amendment contained in Bill 44 to section 117.1 of the Labour Relations Act prohibits the right to strike of all hospital employees. The Committee notes that this broad exclusion covers kitchen help, janitors, gardeners, etc. but that the Government told the representative of the Director-General that only small groups were affected by section 117.1 and that this question was, in any event, being challenged in the Alberta Court of Appeal and the Canadian Supreme Court. Given that this provision is not sufficiently specific as regards the important qualification of "essential employee", the Committee refers to the principle set out in the above paragraph concerning circumstances in which recourse to strike action may be prohibited. It requests the Government to re-examine section 117.1 so as to confine the prohibition of strikes to services which are essential in the strict sense of the term.
- 133. As regards the exclusion from the collective bargaining process of disbursement control officers, hearing officers and employees performing substantially similar duties, as well as employees in the Legislative Assembly Office, Auditor General's, Electoral Office and Ombudsman's Office (section 21(1)(g) and (h) of the Public Service Employee Relations Act), the Committee notes from the Government's written reply that the previous situation has not been altered, but has been "further refined". It also notes from the information contained in the report of the representative of the Director-General that these amendments to section 21(1) were a legislative reversal of several decisions of the Public Service Employee Relations Board. Moreover, during the study and information mission, the AUPE expressed concern over a 1985 amendment to section 21(1)(l) which allows exclusion "for any other reason". Although disputes over subsection (1) exclusions may be referred to the Board for decision under section 21(2), the AUPE remained suspicious of the wide ambit of possible exclusions; they stated that, in practice, over 400 employees had been denied access to the collective bargaining process by these amendments to section 21. The Government, on the other hand, told the mission that only 260 employees had been affected, all being mainly involved in the managerial/personnel policy area.
- 134. In the light of the voluminous information provided to the mission as to the non-managerial nature of some of these employees' tasks, the Committee would draw the Government's attention to the principle that only civil servants engaged in the administration of the State (i.e. employed in various capacities in government ministries or comparable bodies) and not other persons employed by the Government, by public undertakings or by independent public corporations, can be excluded from the guarantees of collective bargaining. Under this criterion, the Committee cannot accept that all the public employees now listed in section 21(1) should be excluded from representation in the collective bargaining process. It accordingly requests the Government to reconsider this section in the light of this principle.
- 135. Although not referred to in the written complaint, much information was given to the mission on section 48(2) of the Public Service Employee Relations Act which limits the subject-matters which may be referred to arbitration. According to the AUPE, although the Board may determine disputes as to whether certain items are non-arbitral, the unions have lost all confidence in the Board because of its recent decisions in this area which, the union claims, regard all matters as part of the managerial prerogative of the employer and thus not appropriate for arbitration. Moreover, the AUPE claimed that the Board often delayed or prevented reference of whole bargaining disputes to arbitration. The Committee takes note of the information on this question reflected in the report of the representative of the Director-General since it forms part of the background to the second main allegation in the present case, namely that Bill 44 has damaged, if not destroyed, the arbitration system. More specifically, it is claimed by the union that the arbitration system has been weakened by the use of a procedural body (the Public Service Employee Relations Board) to screen issues before they reach arbitration. The Committee also notes the examples that were given to the misson of matters that had been considered by the Board as not being appropriate for submission to arbitration (e.g. hours of work, certain leave periods, transfer, promotion, etc.). The Committee has emphasised that restrictions on the right to strike in the public service or in essential services should be accompanied by adequate, impartial and speedy conciliation and arbitration in which the parties can take part at every stage and on which the awards, once made, are binding on both parties. The Committee is of the view that the existing system, under which the Public Service Employee Relations Board can prevent the referral to arbitration of matters which have formed the basis of a dispute, is not fully in accordance with ILO principles and is one which has led to considerable tension between the parties and to a loss of confidence by the unions in the arbitration machinery.
- 136. As regards the alleged interference in the arbitration process itself by the listing of factors - including government fiscal policies - to be taken into account by arbitrators in reaching awards (section 117.8 of the Labour Relations Act and section 55 of the Public Service Employee Relations Act), the Committee notes the Government's written reply that various factors are merely listed in the legislation without indications as to the importance which the arbitration boards should give them. The Committee observes from the report of the representative of the Director-General that, in practice, arbitration boards were not giving overriding predominance to government fiscal policy and in some cases did not find it useful at all. Nevertheless, the complainant still fears potential abuse. It is this lack of confidence that obliges the Committee to recall again the principle that adequate, impartial and speedy conciliation and arbitration procedures should be available in the event of the right to strike being subject to limitations in the public or essential services.
- 137. In the present case, it appears to the Committee that the independence of the arbitration boards set up to compensate public employees for the loss of their right to strike (being composed of a representative of each of the parties to the dispute plus a chairman jointly appointed by the representatives) is not called into question by the listing in legislation of factors to be taken into account.
- 138. As regards the eight other amendments to the Labour Relations Act (one of which was copied in the Public Service Employee Relations Act) contained in Bill 44, the Committee notes from the report of the representative of the Director-General that many of these have not given rise to problems in practice and that some have not even been utilised. In particular, the Committee sees no threat to freedom of association with the following sections:
- - Section 1(w.1), introducing a new concept of "trade union organisation", was never adopted;
- - Section 74(1), requiring a duly authorised representative for collective bargaining to be resident in Alberta, may cause minor inconvenience to the union but is in fact clearly intended to avoid delays in the final settlement and signing of agreements. It does not fetter a trade union's right to seek assistance in bargaining from persons outside the province;
- - Section 87, allowing only one Board-supervised strike or lock-out vote, restricts certain union tactics but does not prevent the polling of members to determine the position prior to calling for a vote;
- - Section 49(1), requiring a 90-day moratorium before applying for a further certification order, again affects union tactics but was clearly intended to remove uncertainty as to a union's real strength in the bargaining unit and to avoid abuses of certification proceedings;
- - Section 132, allowing application to the Board to determine successor rights, only regulates and expedites normal past practice and is not unreasonable;
- - Section 102.2, empowering the recommendations of a Disputes Inquiry Board to be put to the employees concerned, may raise the question of the role of a union executive but does not deprive individual workers of their trade union rights.
- 139. On the other hand, the Committee would express some concern over two other individual amendments to the Labour Relations Act:
- - Sections 105 and 106, prohibiting the threat of an illegal strike, could impede the freedom of workers' organisations to organise their activities in full freedom and place trade union officials in some jeopardy, given the broad definition of "strike" in the Act. The Government told the representative of the Director-General that section 105 had not been used and that it would be up to the Board to highlight any difficulties with its drafting if and when called to apply this provision. The Committee considers that the uncertainty and imprecision of the definition of a "strike" could, as the representative of the Director-General suggested, lead to difficulties for trade unionists who take bona fide action that is subsequently found to be illegal. The Committee would request the Government to take steps to clarify the situation in consultation with the unions and, if necessary, amend the provision accordingly.
- - Section 117.94 (and section 92.2 of the Public Service Employee Relations Act), allowing the employer to suspend check-offs if an illegal strike takes place, have not been used. The precise scope of the provision is, however, uncertain in the sense that it is not clear whether the suspension would apply to a whole bargaining unit or only to the illegal strikers. Discussion should take place with the unions to clarify the manner in which the provision would be applied in practice.
- The Committee's recommendations
- 140. In these circumstances, the Committe recommends the Governing Body to approve this part of the report and, in particular, the following conclusions:
- (a) The Committee considers that the provisions of the Public Service Employee Relations Act and the Labour Relations Act prohibiting the right to strike of a broad range of provincial public servants and hospital workers go beyond acceptable limits on the right to strike recognised as deriving from Article 3 of Convention No. 87. The Committee requests the Government to re-examine the provisions in question in order to confine the ban on strikes to services which are essential in the strict sense of the term.
- (b) As regards the broad range of public servants excluded from the collective bargaining process by section 21(1) of the Public Service Employee Relations Act, the Committee would draw the Government's attention to the principle that only civil servants engaged in the administration of the State may be so excluded. It requests the Government to reconsider this section in the light of this principle.
- (c) Although the Committee does not consider that the listing of government fiscal policies as a factor to be considered by arbitrators calls into question the principles of freedom of association, it notes with some concern the power given to the Public Service Employee Relations Board (by section 48(2) of the relevant Act) to determine all matters in a collective dispute that may be referred to arbitration. The Committee hopes that provisions such as these which have undermined the union's confidence in the arbitration system - which is meant to compensate the employees concerned for the lack of the right to strike - will be reconsidered in consultation with the parties and appropriate amendments made with a view to enabling arbitrators to examine all matters in dispute.
- (d) The Committee sees no threat to freedom of association with the various amendments to the Labour Relations Act contained in Bill 44 and outlined in paragraph 138 above, i.e. section 74(1), section 87, section 49(1), section 132 and section 102.2.
- (e) As regards sections 105 and 106 of the Labour Relations Act, as amended, prohibiting the threat of an illegal strike, the Committee requests the Government to take steps to clarify the precise scope of this provision in consultation with the union and, if necessary, amend the provision accordingly; (f) As regards section 117.94 of the Labour Relations Act and section 92(2) of the Public Service Employee Relations Act, concerning the suspension of check-off in the event of an illegal strike, the Committee recommends that discussion takes place with the unions in order to clarify the manner in which this provision would be applied in practice.
D. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1260/Newfoundland
D. The Committee's conclusions on Case No. 1260/Newfoundland
- 141. The Committee notes all the detailed information supplied by the complainants in this case, the equally detailed information transmitted by the Government and the information contained in the report of the representative of the Director-General.
- 142. In essence, the complainants had alleged that the Public Service (Collective Bargaining) Act - known as Bill 59 - which came into effect on 1 September 1983, was in contradiction with international standards on freedom of association in three particular areas: the definition of "employee" contained in section 2(1)(i) of the Act; the designation of "essential employees" (section 10) and the limitation on strike action (sections 10, 23 and 24).
- 143. Before examining these individual aspects, the Committee would first note the information now at its disposal concerning the introduction of the legislation in question. It can only express regret that, in spite of what appears to have been a good relationship between the complainant union and the Government, the process of consultation with the union prior to the introduction of Bill 59 was inadequate. The attitudes of both parties were to an extent the reason for this inadequacy. The Government, for its part, had what it considered to be solid reasons, based on experience, for amending existing legislation, whereas the union was opposed to such a course of action. The result was an enactment which, in the opinion of the union, casts suspicion on the Government's real motives in proclaiming it. It was also an enactment which, had proper consultations taken place, may well have taken a different form and thereby avoided the tension and suspicion that obviously exists between the union and the Government. The Committee, in particular, notes that only two years after the enactment of Bill 59, important amendments were made in 1985.
- 144. The Committee would emphasise the importance which should be attached to full and frank consultation taking place on any questions or proposed legislation affecting trade union rights. It would express the firm hope that the Government and the union will, in the light of the problems which have emerged from the procedure used to introduce Bill 59, engage in systematic and genuine discussions and negotiations with a view to resolving the problems that have arisen in the present case.
- 145. As regards section 2(1)(i)(xii) of Bill 59 (definition of "employee"), the union's principal concern was the exclusion from the definition of persons employed in an employment opportunity programme administered and financed by the Provincial Government, and/or financed by the federal Government. According to the union, not only did the provisions prevent such persons from joining a union, but the presence of this non-unionised labour in workplaces where the union had members, constituted an obstacle to collective bargaining and a threat to union effectiveness in the event, for example, of a strike.
- 146. On this question, the Committee notes that there seemed to be a considerable amount of misunderstanding between the parties as to the precise number of persons covered by this subsection. Whatever the case, the Committee cannot accept that persons engaged in an employment opportunity programme should be excluded from the right to belong to a trade union of their choice. The Committee considers that the extension of the right to organise of these persons would not necessarily interfere with the proper functioning of the programme and that, in addition, it would diminish the fear of the union that unionised workers might be replaced by workers engaged under the programme.
- 147. A further exclusion from the definition of "employee" is the category of workers who advises the employer in relation to the development or administration of policies or programmes (section 2(1)(i)(xv). The Committee notes that the Labour Relations Board, tripartite in character, appears in the past to have exercised its powers fairly restrictively in deciding exclusions from the bargaining unit. It considers that this subsection is not contrary to the principles of freedom of association.
- 148. In view of the problems and the climate of suspicion to which the above provisions in Bill 59 have given rise, the Committee would urge the Government to reconsider the question of exclusions in full consultation with the union.
- 149. The Committee notes that the right to strike is available to public service employees in Newfoundland subject to a number of limitations concerning, in particular, employees deemed to be essential. Essential employees are defined in the principal Act as "employees whose duties consist in whole or in part of duties, the performance of which at any particular time or during any specified period of time is, or may be, necessary for the health, safety or security of the public" (section 10.1).
- 150. In this connection, the Committee would, in the first place, recall that it has accepted that the right to strike may be limited or prohibited as regards public servants acting in their capacity as agents of the public authority or engaged in services whose interruption would endanger the life, personal safety or health of the whole or part of the propulation. Such limitations or prohibitions should, however be offset by adequate, impartial and speedy conciliation and arbitration procedures. In addition, the Committee observes that the 1985 amendments to the legislation exclude a substantial number of bargaining units from the application of section 10 of the Act. The Government had also agreed with the union in writing that no essential services would be sought in some ten bargaining units.
- 151. The problem in Newfoundland is that, although strikes can take place even in services such as health-care institutions, the strike may be rendered ineffectual as a result of the procedure for the designation of a certain number of "essential workers". In addition, recourse to arbitration may be impeded if the number so designated by the Labour Relations Board falls below 50 per cent of the employees involved. In other words, it would seem in such circumstances that the limitations placed on unions to carry out an effective strike are not adequately compensated by unimpeded access to arbitration machinery.
- 152. The Committee considers that, while the method of designating essential employees is not inconsistent with the principles of freedom of association, the Government should nevertheless review the relevant provision in such a manner as to facilitate access to independent arbitration in the event of a dispute.
- 153. Further amendments introduced to the principal Act by Bill 59 affecting the right to strike were also criticised by the union. Section 2 of Bill 59 repealed and substituted section 10 of the principal Act in such a manner as to prevent a bargaining agent from taking a strike vote or going on strike until agreement has been reached on or the Board has determined the number of essential employees in the unit concerned. Moreover, amendments to section 23 and 24 of the Act made it necessary not only to give seven days' notice of a strike but also to indicate the date on which the strike would start. If the strike did not start on the date specified in the notice, no strike could take place for one month, and then only if a further seven days' notice was given with a further proposed date on which the strike would commence. These amendments also prevented strikes on a rotating basis in health service institutions.
- 154. As regards these amendments and the allegations that were made, the Committee does not consider the modalities that they impose to be an undue hindrance on unions in the exercise of their right to strike and thereby going beyond what is acceptable under international standards and principles on freedom of association. The Committee also notes, in particular, that the further amendments introduced in July 1985, the one-month period referred to above, now only applies to the hospital sector. The Committee, however, notes from the report of the representative of the Director-General that these limitations are seen by the unions as an interference by the Government in the determination of strike tactics and, in particular, that the notice requirement could be used to delay strikes by last-minute bargaining. The Committee observes that there is no evidence that these fears are justified, particularly in view of the Government's statement that the parties could always agree to extend the seven-day notice period by one day if necessary. This is yet another matter which the Committee considers could be jointly discussed between the parties with a view to removing the doubts and suspicions that remain as to the manner in which the legislation will be applied.
- The Committee's recommendations
- 155. The Committee recommends the Governing Body to approve this part of the report and, in particular, the following conclusions:
- (a) The Committee emphasises the importance which should be attached to full and frank consultations taking place with the trade unions on any questions or proposed legislation affecting trade union rights; it expresses regret that consultation with the complainant union prior to the enactment of Bill 59 was inadequate.
- (b) The Committee considers that persons engaged in employment opportunity programmes should not be excluded from the right to belong to a union of their choice; it urges the Government to reconsider the question of the exclusion of this category in full consultation with the union.
- (c) The Committe emphasises that limitations on strike action in the public service or in essential services should be compensated by adequate, impartial and speedy conciliation and arbitration procedures in which the parties can take part at every stage and in which the awards should, in all cases, be binding on both parties.
- (d) The Committee requests the Government to review the provisions of the legislation concerning the designation of essential employees in order to facilitate access to independent arbitration in the event of a dispute.
- (e) The Committee does not consider the modalities for strike action imposed by sections 23 and 24 of Bill 59, as amended, to be inconsistent with the principles of freedom of association.
- (f) The Committee expresses the firm hope that the Government and the union will, in the light of the problems which have emerged from the enactment of Bill 59, engage in systematic and genuine discussions and negotiations with a view to resolving the problems that remain concerning the practical application of this legislation.
ANNEX
ANNEX- REPORT ON A STUDY AND INFORMATION MISSION TO CANADA BY SIR JOHN WOOD, CBE,
- LLM, REPRESENTATIVE OF THE DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR
- OFFICE, CONCERNING THE FOLLOWING CASES BEFORE THE GOVERNING BODY COMMITTEE ON
- FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION: ONTARIO (CASE NO. 1172), ALBERTA (CASES NOS. 1234 AND
- 1247) AND NEWFOUNDLAND (CASE NO. 1260)
- Table of contents
- I. Introduction ....................................... 1-7
- II. General remarks .................................... 8-21
- (a) Economic and political pressures .............. 9-10
- (b) Public sector ................................. 11-13
- (c) Collective bargaining machinery ............... 14-15
- (d) Legislation ................................... 16-21
- III. Case of Alberta - No. 1247 ......................... 22-84
- A. Introduction .................................. 22
- B. The issues .................................... 23
- (i) Exclusion of certain employees from collective bargaining ...............
- . 24-25
- (ii) The arbitration system ................. 26-28
- (iii) Other issues ........................... 29-45
- C. Information obtained during the mission ....... 46-75
- (a) Collective bargaining and arbitration .... 48-56
- (b) Excluded employees ....................... 57-58
- (c) The right to strike ...................... 59-67
- (d) Other issues ............................. 68-75
- D. Concluding remarks ............................ 76
- Collective bargaining and arbitration ......... 77-78
- Individual items .............................. 79-80
- General considerations ........................ 81-84
- IV. Case of Alberta - No. 1234 ......................... 85-96
- A. Introduction .................................. 85
- B. The issues .................................... 86-92
- C. Information obtained during the mission ....... 93-94
- D. Concluding remarks ............................ 95-96
- V. Case of Ontario - No. 1172 ......................... 97-157
- A. Introduction .................................. 97
- B. The issues .................................... 98-119
- C. Information obtained during the mission ....... 120-143
- D. Concluding remarks............................. 144-157
- VI. Case of Newfoundland - No. 1260 .................... 158-218
- A. Introduction .................................. 158
- B. The issues .................................... 159-160
- (i) Definition of "employee" ............... 161-165
- (ii) Designation of "essential" employees ... 166-173
- (iii) Limitations on strike action ........... 174-177
- C. Information obtained during the mission ....... 178-179
- (a) Consultations ............................ 180-181
- (b) Definition of employee ................... 182-185
- (c) Questions concerning the right to strike . 186-208
- D. Concluding remarks ............................ 209-218
- VII. Final remarks ...................................... 219-232
- 1. Inflation control ............................. 222-223
- 2. Consultation .................................. 224-225
- 3. Public servants - bargaining and the right to strike .....................
- .............. 226
- (a) Collective bargaining .................... 227-228
- (b) Independent dispute resolution ........... 229-232
- ANNEX .................................................... 113
- I. Introduction
- 1. The Governing Body Committee on Freedom of Association, at its meeting in
- November 1984, decided to postpone its examination of the cases concerning
- Ontario, Alberta and Newfoundland since it was of the view that, before
- reaching conclusions in these cases, it would be necessary to obtain
- additional information, particularly through a study and information mission,
- which could assist in clarifying aspects of the laws and practices involved.
- The Committee accordingly requested the Government to indicate its consent to
- such a procedure.
- 2. In a letter dated 1 February 1985 the Government indicated that, after
- consultation with the various provincial governments concerned, it had no
- objection to such a mission taking place.
- 3. The Committee explained that the study and information mission would take
- place within the context of its examination of the cases. It emphasised that
- its proposal for such a mission stemmed from a desire on its part to reach
- conclusions in as full a knowledge and understanding as possible of the
- complex issues involved. It said that it was convinced that its work would be
- greatly facilitated by an on-the-spot appreciation of the day-to-day practical
- operation, in local conditions, of the legislation that was the subject of the
- complaints.
- 4. Arrangements were accordingly made for a study and information mission to
- take place in Canada - in particular, the provinces of Ontario, Alberta and
- Newfoundland - from 12 to 25 September 1985. The Director-General of the ILO
- appointed me as his representative to carry out the mission, and I was
- accompanied, during the mission, by Mr. William R. Simpson, Chief of the
- Freedom of Association Branch of the International Labour Standards
- Department, and Mrs. Jane Hodges, an official of the Freedom of Association
- Branch.
- 5. Through the efficient services of the officials of the Canadian Ministry of
- Labour responsible for these matters, and the equally efficient services of
- the officials of the Canadian Labour Congress, arrangements were made to
- establish a programme of meetings with representatives of the federal
- Government and those of the provincial governments involved and with the
- various national and provincial unions who had been involved in the submission
- of the complaints (for a detailed list of the persons involved, see Annex). It
- is also thanks to the facilities that were extended to me by the governments
- and unions of the provinces of Ontario, Alberta and Newfoundland that I was
- able to carry out successfully the mandate that had been entrusted to me.
- 6. Prior to my departure to Canada I had had the opportunity to examine the
- complaints that had been presented in these cases, the various replies of the
- respective governments and the very voluminous documentation and legislative
- texts which had accompanied the many communications addressed to the ILO. In
- preparing this report I found it appropriate in the first place, to describe
- in some detail the main issues raised by the complainants in their written
- allegations as well as the respective goverments' arguments in rebuttal of
- those allegations. The information which I was able to collect during the
- mission concerning these matters is then described. I have attempted thus to
- provide the Committee on Freedom of Association with a report that gives as
- complete a picture as possible of the situation from the time the complaints
- were presented until the present time. I am hopeful that, in presenting my
- report in this manner, I have been successful in facilitating the work of the
- Committee in reaching its conclusions in these cases.
- 7. I would emphasise that it was at no time my intention or desire - nor
- indeed was it part of my mandate - to formulate any conclusions on the various
- issues that I was called upon to examine. That responsibility rests
- exclusively with the Committee on Freedom of Association itself. I did,
- however, carry out this mission having in mind the international standards and
- principles concerning freedom of association, the application of which had
- been brought into question by the complainant organisations and I have not
- hesitated in this report to set forth certain personal opinions or impressions
- that I was able to form regarding possible breaches of international
- obligations or regarding any remedial steps that might be taken if ILO
- standards and principles did not seem to be fully applied. In so doing, my
- intention was not to prejudge the conclusions of the Committee, which will no
- doubt attach to these opinions or impressions the weight which it considers
- appropriate and correct.
- II. General remarks
- 8. It is not necessary for me to emphasise that the individual complaints
- arise in three provinces of a federal State. The structure and complexities of
- such a constitutional arrangement will be well known to the Committee.
- Although each issue has to be assessed in the confines of the individual
- provincial context it is instructive to note that the problems have some
- common aspects. This is well known to the parties. Indeed, on the trade union
- side the influence of trade union centres inevitably leads to attention being
- given to the general similarities of the issues. It may be worth while to draw
- attention to a few of these general points. The purpose is not to divert
- attention from the duty to treat each case indpendently but to illustrate more
- clearly the underlying problems.
- (a) Economic and political pressures
- 9. The legislation which lies at the heart of most of the complaints
- represents an attempt by the government concerned to tackle perceived economic
- problems. These problems have provoked a political response which in turn
- lends shape to the objects and scope of the consequent legislation. This is
- very clearly the case with Bill 44 in Alberta and Bill 179 in Ontario. Bill 59
- in Newfoundland is less obviously concerned with economic problems but the
- steps taken appear to flow, however indirectly, from such considerations.
- 10. There is, of course, a lively debate as to the depth, even as to the
- existence, of economic problems. Whatever view is taken on this it is plain
- that the governments concerned were clear that the economic problems demanded
- urgent attention usually described as an attack on inflation. It is the impact
- of these legislative steps on the implementation of ILO principles such as
- those enshrined in Conventions Nos. 87 and 98 that lies at the core of these
- complaints. The debate on the validity of economic judgements lies elsewhere.
- (b) Public sector
- 11. The complaints are raised by public service trade unions and concern the
- impact of legislative measures on the collective bargaining arrangements in
- the public sector. One factor in the minds of the complainants is that there
- is a lack of even handedness in the treatment of the public as opposed to the
- private sector. Such comparisons are not always easy to make and anyway lie
- outside the concern of the Committee. None the less it is a feeling that has
- to be noted.
- 12. There is a crucial difficulty which is very obvious. Collective bargaining
- involves the concept of two parties, the employer and the trade union,
- settling their mutual concern by discussion and negotiation. Where the
- employer is the government there is an added difficulty. The Government has
- the wider task of managing the economy and this will in particular often
- involve the task of seeking to influence the level of settlements in
- collective bargaining by fiscal and economic argument. It is extremely
- difficult for the Government to separate the two roles so as to equate
- bargaining in the public sector with that in the private sector.
- 13. The usual way in which this separation is attempted is by the
- establishment of a sound set of bargaining structures in the public sector.
- These can then operate in the normal way and the wider concerns of government,
- which need not necessarily be the same in respect of public as opposed to
- private employment but generally will be, can be imposed from outside the
- collective bargaining machinery, for example by legislation.
- (c) Collective bargaining machinery
- 14. It is difficult and dangerous to generalise about the structure of
- collective bargaining which is constructed separately by each province, as
- well as by the federal Government. There are obviously so many variations that
- cannot be properly assessed in a short study. Consideration of the formal
- statutory-based machinery does not necessarily give an accurate picture of
- what actually happens in practice. It is even more difficult to assess the
- ability of structures to meet pressures which will inevitably be encountered
- as a result of, for example, a recession or growth of unemployment.
- 15. Collective bargaining in Canada has been established at both the national
- and provincial level since the 1960s, so does not have a long history. Three
- differing aspects of the employer-employee relationship can be distinguished.
- Consultation is the process most difficult to assess since it will often be to
- a large extent informal. It follows that a study of the processes laid down
- may fail to indicate the level of consultations in practice. Bargaining itself
- is likely to follow fairly closely the rules laid down in the legislation
- setting it up and the practices developed over the years by agreement between
- the parties. Finally, and most elusive, it is hard to describe the impact of
- the power to legislate. The use of legislation of course lies to the hands of
- one of the parties, the employer. The various ways in which it is used raise
- difficulties and appear to lead to possible misunderstanding and bad feeling.
- (d) Legislation
- 16. The complaints before the Committee arise from specific pieces of
- legislation and their interpretation and application in practice. The next
- part of this report will take the form of a more detailed examination of the
- specific issues raised against aspects of Bill 59 in Newfoundland, Bill 44 in
- Alberta and Bill 179 in Ontario.
- 17. At this stage it is necessary to refer to a more general point. It seems
- important to distinguish the objects of government legislation and its impact.
- In the context of this study it has been apparent that two features of
- legislation should be given careful attention.
- 18. The scope of legislation varies. It may be permanent or temporary. It may
- affect the employment generally or apply to specific bargaining relationships.
- Its genesis may be the regulation of the economy on the one hand or the
- control of the structure of bargaining procedures on the other. Often the two
- strands will be interwined and the purposes of the legislation difficult to
- separate.
- 19. It appears, secondly, that it is possible to intervene more directly in
- the collective bargaining process. Steps can be taken to affect the outcome of
- a particular bargain by recourse to one form of the legislative processes.
- Whereas the process alluded to in the last paragraph may be regarded as
- strategic intervention, what is being described here is more in the nature of
- tactical.
- 20. The standards secured by the Committee on Freedom of Association apply, of
- course, with equal rigour to action, whatever its character. Viewed from the
- standpoint of trade unions concerned, it may be difficult to appreciate these
- distinctions since all actions of the type that leads to a complaint is
- obviously notable for its perceived deleterious effect. The concerns that this
- Committee have shown in the past, however, indicate that the distinctions have
- a bearing on ILO deliberations. Emergency legislation even handedly applied to
- collective bargaining overall to meet a perceived economic crisis is of a
- markedly different character to legislation aimed at a particular section of
- employment or individual collective bargaining process. Here the process of
- collective bargaining, it must be stressed, covers the totality of the steps
- available, including, it is important to stress, any access given to
- independent arbitration.
- 21. An attempt will be made in the next section to assist the Committee with
- indications formulated with these analytical distinctions in mind.
- III. Case of Alberta - No. 1247
- A. Introduction
- 22. In this case the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) presented a complaint of
- infringements of trade union rights in a communication dated 1 November 1983.
- The complaint was presented on behalf of the Alberta Union of Provincial
- Employees (AUPE), a component of the National Union of Provincial Government
- Employees (NUPGE) which is the CLC's second largest affiliate. The Government
- transmitted its observations in a communication dated 3 May 1984.
- B. The issues
- 23. In its letter of 1 November 1983 the CLC alleged that new legislation in
- Alberta violated Conventions Nos. 87, 98 and 151. On 1 June 1983, an Act to
- amend various pieces of labour legislation (the Labour Statutes Amendment Act
- (known as Bill 44)) had been proclaimed. According to the CLC, Bill 44 was
- aimed at attacking in particular public sector workers in Alberta. One
- amendment denied the right to strike of thousands of non-essential hospital
- workers, and another destroyed any degree of impartiality in the arbitration
- system which had been intended to compensate public sector workers for the
- loss of their right to strike.
- (i) Exclusion of certain employees from collective bargaining
- 24. The complainant referred specifically to new section 21(1) of the Public
- Service Employee Relations Act which reads as follows:
- A person employed by an employer in a position classified under the Public
- Service Act as a budget officer, a systems analyst, an auditor, a disbursement
- control officer or a hearing officer who hears matters under the Summary
- Convictions Act, or performing for an employer substantially similar duties to
- a person employed in any of those positions, (and) in any of the following:
- the Legislative Assembly Office, the Office of the Auditor General, the
- Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, or the Office of the Ombudsman or who
- in the opinion of the (Public Service Employee Relations) Board should not be
- included in a collective bargaining unit by reason of the duties and
- responsibilities he has to his employer or for any other reason shall not be
- included in a bargaining unit or in any other unit for collective bargaining.
- According to the complainant, this amendment had reversed a series of
- decisions of the Public Service Employee Relations Board (one of which was
- unsuccessfully challenged by the Government before the courts) to the effect
- that the Government could not legitimately exclude certain groups of employees
- from the right to engage in collective bargaining and be represented by a
- trade union.
- 25. On this point the Government, in its communication of 3 May 1984,
- explained that the legislative amendments with respect to section 21(g) and
- (h) of the Public Service Employee Relations Act did not represent a
- significant change in the policies originally contained in those subsections;
- the exclusion of managerial and confidential employees, those involved in the
- implementation of personnel-related programmes, those involved in supporting
- the collective bargaining function, and those involved in the operations of
- the Government financial control system, activities of the Ombudsman, the
- courts and the Legislature itself had not been altered, but further refined to
- reflect continuing alterations in the structure of Government and the nature
- of employment in these cases.
- (ii) The arbitration system
- 26. The complainant stated that the amendments to section 117.8 of the Labour
- Relations Act and section 55 of the Public Service Employee Relations Act
- contained in Bill 44 showed the Government's lack of faith in the impartial
- arbitrators who determine the wages and working conditions of many public
- sector employees in Alberta in recent months. According to the complainant,
- rather than reassess the adequacy of cases presented to the arbitrators by
- government representatives and rather than take direct political
- responsibility for the imposition of wage controls, the Government had
- fettered the discretion of arbitrators and imposed an informal system of
- controls. The amendments, which were identical, read as follows:
- To ensure that wages and benefits are fair and reasonable to the employees
- and employer and are in the best interest of the public, the arbitration board
- (a) shall consider, for the period with respect to which the award will apply,
- the following: wages and benefits in private and public and unionised and
- non-unionised employment; the continuity and stability of private and public
- employment including employment levels and incidences of lay-offs, incidences
- of employment at less than normal working hours, and opportunity for
- employment; any fiscal policies that may be declared from time to time in
- writing by the Provincial Treasurer for the purposes of this Act; and (b) may
- consider, for the period with respect to which the award will apply, the
- following: the terms and conditions of employment in similar occupations
- outside the employer's employment taking into account any geographic,
- industrial or other variations that the board considers relevant; the need to
- maintain appropriate relationships in terms of conditions of employment
- between different classification levels within an occupation and between
- occupations in the employer's employment; the need to establish terms and
- conditions of employment that are fair and reasonable in relation to the
- qualifications required, the work performed, the responsibility assumed and
- the nature of the services rendered; any other factor that it considers
- relevant to the matter in dispute.
- 27. According to the complainant, the foregoing provision required that an
- arbitrator take into account government fiscal policy and thereby sought to
- impose a system of informal wage restraint. The complainant recalled that in
- many cases dealing with the rights of employees in the civil service and in
- essential services where the right to strike has been withdrawn and a system
- of arbitration substituted, the Committee on Freedom of Association had
- stressed the importance of impartiality. The complainant claimed that it was
- dishonourable for the Government to withdraw the right to strike in these
- sectors and then impose a system of binding arbitration which was not even
- apparently impartial.
- 28. To the allegation that section 117.8 of the Labour Relations Act and
- section 55 of the Public Service Employee Relations Act unreasonably
- restricted the freedom of arbitration boards and in so doing amounted to a
- disguised form of wage controls, the Government had replied that amendments
- concerning the nature of factors to be considered by a board did not, as
- alleged, impose restrictions. The criteria considered relevant to the
- decisions were merely listed, including wages and benefits elsewhere in the
- provincial labour market and the fiscal policies of the Government. The
- Government stated that the legislation did not stipulate how consideration of
- these factors was to be employed in the decision-making process. The shifting
- relevancy of criteria over time was recognised to the extent that "any other
- factor" might be considered, and given whatever weight was deemed appropriate.
- The comprehensive result of all listed factors was to give unfettered
- discretion to a board as to the weight it would assign to any particular
- criterion. According to the Government, the factors listed were evidentiary
- rather than substantive in nature.
- (iii) Other issues
- 29. The complainant further alleged that many of the amendments contained in
- Bill 44 were designed to undermine the bargaining authority of trade unions
- and thereby to impair free collective bargaining. It cited in particular
- section 74(1) of the Labour Relations Act which required that every trade
- union appoint only persons residing in Alberta with authority to bargaining
- collectively, conclude and sign a collective agreement. That section reads as
- follows:
- On the service of a notice to commence collective bargaining by or on an
- employer or trade union, the employer or trade union shall appoint a person
- resident in Alberta with authority to bargain collectively, to conclude a
- collective agreement, and to sign a collective agreement on its behalf.
- According to the complainant this requirement would seriously impair the
- operation of those small local unions which relied on out-of-province business
- agents associated with the national or international federations to conduct
- collective bargaining.
- 30. In response to this allegation the Government pointed out that section 74
- of the Labour Relations Act had been amended to require the parties to
- collective bargaining to "appoint a person resident in Alberta". The
- Government explained that where trade union locals were part of a national
- labour organisation, accessibility to someone with authority to sign and
- conclude a collective agreement had been a problem in the past. Under the
- amendments to section 74, a small local union might still utilise
- out-of-province business agents associated with a national or international
- network as part of the bargaining committee and to act as a principal
- spokesman, but someone resident in the province must have authority for the
- purpose of facilitating the conduct of bargaining, including the conclusion of
- a collective agreement.
- 31. The complainant referred to section 87 of the Labour Relations Act which
- provided that only one strike or lock-out vote might be taken with respect to
- a dispute. This section reads as follows:
- During the open period, a bargaining agent may apply to the board to
- supervise a strike vote or an employers' organisation may apply to the board
- to supervise a lock-out vote. Only one strike or lock-out vote may take place
- with respect to a dispute. According to the complainant this provision would
- prevent unions and employers' associations from canvassing the opinions of
- their membership as to whether a strike or lock-out should take place in any
- given set of circumstances; the pro-strike or pro-lock-out vote would become a
- mere formality to be obtained at the commencement of collective bargaining.
- The complainant stated there was no sound reason why the members of a
- bargaining unit should not be free to change their mind as to whether to
- strike as circumstances changed.
- 32. In relation to section 87 of the Labour Relations Act, the Government
- stated that a strike or lock-out was the commencement of the economic contest
- and therefore such votes were supervised by the Labour Relations Board of
- Alberta. The changes to section 87 did not prohibit a union from conducting
- its own vote or canvassing the opinion of its membership as to whether a
- strike should take place in any given set of circumstances. Such a vote,
- conducted by the union, was part of the internal administration of the trade
- union and accordingly the provision did not interfere with a private vote
- within the union. The Government explained that such a vote or canvassing was
- not in substitution of a vote supervised by the Labour Relations Board which
- is a precondition for a lawful strike. Moreover, continued the Government, if
- the vote carried whether for strike or lock-out, then one party or the other
- had chosen the economic forum as the means of resolving the dispute. The
- policy as represented by this provision was that the members were free to
- strike, but should do so only when that appeared the only means of resolving
- the dispute. The alternative would be to open the door to a series of strike
- votes.
- 33. According to the complainant, section 102.2(2) of the Labour Relations Act
- as amended by Bill 44 empowered the Minister of Labour to require that the
- members of a bargaining unit affected by the recommendations of a Disputes
- Inquiry Board vote whether or not to accept the recommendations. This section
- reads as follows:
- Unless a party to the dispute notifies the (Labour Relations) Board of its
- acceptance of the recommendations of the disputes inquiry board within ten
- days after receiving a copy of the recommendations from the Minister, the
- (Labour Relations) Board shall supervise a vote on the acceptance or rejection
- of the recommendations by the employees or employers affected by the dispute
- who are represented by that party. According to the complainant this power
- amounted to unwarranted interference in the internal affairs of a trade union
- which had the right and responsibility to canvass its own members as to the
- acceptability of any particular settlement proposal; it believed that the
- conduct of labour relations ought to be left to the parties and not to the
- Minister of Labour.
- 34. With regard to section 102.2(2) the Government stated that the amendments
- to this section were aimed at recent situations in which a trade union had
- refused to resolve a dispute notwithstanding that a majority of employees in
- the unit had wished the dispute to be resolved under certain conditions.
- According to the Government, this provision ensured that the wishes of the
- majority in the unit might be expressed on the question of acceptance of a
- board award.
- 35. The complainant alleged that sections 105 and 106 of the Labour Relations
- Act created a new and dangerous offence by prohibiting persons acting on
- behalf of trade unions or employers from threatening a strike or lock-out in
- circumstances where a strike or lock-out would not be permitted under the Act.
- The sections read as follows:
- Section 105(3). No employee, bargaining agent, or person acting on behalf of
- a bargaining agent shall threaten to strike or to cause a strike unless the
- strike is permitted by this Act.
- Section 106(3). No employer shall threaten to lock-out unless the lock-out is
- permitted by this Act. The complainant pointed out that the question of
- whether a strike or lock-out was illegal was a complicated one and the parties
- should not therefore be prohibited from talking about it. The complainant
- questioned whether it was the Government's intention to penalise employees
- under section 105 who, for example, refused to perform work which they
- believed to be unsafe.
- 36. With regard to the inclusion of "threats" to strike or lock-out in
- sections 105 and 106 of the Labour Relations Act, the Government stated that a
- strike or lock-out was not permitted where the preconditions as set out in the
- Act had not been satisfied. However, if a strike or lock-out with its serious
- consequences upon employees and employers might only occur when certain
- conditions had been satisfied then neither the trade union, employees or
- persons acting on behalf of the trade union or the employer should be able to
- threaten an illegal act to achieve other purposes, such as threatening a
- strike to force an alteration of a collective agreement during its term
- against the will of the other party. In any case, the Government pointed out
- that these provisions were being reconsidered primarily because of evidentiary
- difficulties. The Government added that it was not the intention of this
- section to penalise workers who refused to perform work which they believed
- was unsafe. Questions of unsafe work were fully addressed in legislation
- concerning health and safety. According to the Government, the essential
- element of a strike was that it was a concerted refusal by two or more
- employees aimed at compelling an employer to accept terms and conditions of
- employment; the Labour Relations Board had never interpreted a strike to
- include a refusal to work when conditions were unsafe.
- 37. The complainant alleged that several provisions in Bill 44 were designed
- to make it more difficult for trade unions to obtain and maintain certificates
- enabling them to represent workers in collective bargaining. It refered in
- particular to section 49(1) of the Labour Relations Act which reads as
- follows:
- Notwithstanding anything in this Act, if an application for certification as
- a bargaining agent, revocation of the certification of a bargaining agent, a
- declaration that a bargaining agent is no longer entitled to bargain
- collectively, registration of employers' organisation or cancellation of
- registration of an employers' organisation, has been refused by the Board or
- withdrawn by the applicant, the applicant shall not, without the consent of
- the Board, make the same or substantially the same application until after the
- expiration of 90 days from the date of the withdrawal or refusal. According to
- the complainant this section would prevent trade unions from withdrawing
- applications for certification when they realised that there was no majority
- support and resubmitting the application when a majority had been obtained.
- The only effect of this amendment would be to make organisation campaigns more
- difficult and accordingly more expensive.
- 38. The Government explained that amendments to section 49 of the Labour
- Relations Act required an applicant for certification to obtain board
- permission to reapply before the expiry of 90 days from the date of withdrawal
- or refusal of a previous application. It stated that these amendments had been
- implemented in recognition of the administrative effects on the employer,
- employees and the Labour Relations Board itself where repeated failed
- applications are made.
- 39. The complainant further stated that before the introduction of section 132
- of the Labour Relations Act, a trade union's certificate remained in full
- force notwithstanding the sale or disposition of the business of an employer
- and that the previous situation had aimed at preventing the employer from
- selling or transferring his business to an allied operator in order to get rid
- of a certified trade union. According to the complainant, the new situation
- (whereby the Labour Relations Board may, upon application by any employer,
- trade union or person affected, determine what rights, privileges and duties
- have been acquired or retained) provided an opportunity to successor employers
- to frustrate the desires of employees who might wish to continue being
- represented in collective bargaining by their previously certified bargaining
- agents.
- 40. As regards the amendments to section 132, the Government stated that these
- were designed to prevent incongruous results. Before the introduction of these
- changes, if the Labour Relations Board had concluded that there had been a
- sale, lease or transfer of a business or part of it, then automatically the
- certificate and the collective agreement to which the vendor was party applied
- to the purchaser. The Government stated that the intention of the provision as
- amended remained to that effect; however if a question arose under section
- 132, the Labour Relations Board might declare the certificates, collective
- agreement or proceedings to be binding on the purchaser in contrast to the
- former provision where the Board was required to so declare. The new provision
- allowed for conflicts to be resolved by the Labour Relations Board by allowing
- the Board to amend the certificate or collective agreement in question or even
- revoke it. The Government stressed that the Board had only been given power
- permissibly to resolve conflicts.
- 41. The complainant further alleged that new section 1(w.1) of the Labour
- Statutes Amendment Act, creating the concept of a "trade union organisation",
- would create a situation in which the national or provincial organisation
- which had authority to bargain on behalf of local unions would be subjected to
- the penalties prescribed in the Act for trade unions. The Government pointed
- out that the amendments proposed in section 1(w.1) had never been adopted and
- did not form part of the Labour Relations Act.
- 42. The complainant referred to section 117.94 of the Labour Relations Act -
- which was identical to new section 92.2 of the Public Service Employee
- Relations Act - as the most pernicious example of anti-union legislation in
- Bill 44. According to the complainant, the clear intention of this section was
- to cripple a union financially if its members went on a strike. The section
- reads as follows:
- (1) If a strike of employees to which this Division applies (i.e. public
- employees who are prohibited from striking) commences, the employer,
- notwithstanding any collective agreement or any other provision of this Act,
- may serve the bargaining agent that represents those employees with a notice
- of intention to suspend the deduction and remittance of union dues,
- assessments and other fees payable to the bargaining agent.
- (2) A notice of intention shall specify the bargaining unit or part of the
- bargaining unit with respect to which the employer intends to suspend the
- deduction and remittance of union dues or other fees and a time period of not
- less than one month and not more than six months with respect to which the
- employer intends the suspension to be in effect.
- (3) A bargaining agent affected by the notice may apply to the board within
- 72 hours of service ... for a determination as to whether or not a strike has
- occurred.
- 43. As regards section 117.94 of the Labour Relations Act and section 92.2 of
- the Public Service Employee Relations Act as amended by Bill 44, the
- Government stated that, unless the union committed an illegal act, the
- forwarding of union dues continued. It added that, if the employer served
- notice that union dues were to be withheld, an expeditious and inexpensive
- appeal to the appropriate quasi-judicial Board was available and the Board
- would decide whether a break in collection and remittance should occur based
- on evidence that the union had or had not contravened the Act in question and
- illegally interrupted the employer's operations. Adequate and appropriate
- appeal provisions existed to protect the interests of all parties.
- 44. With regard to the withdrawal of the right to strike from hospital workers
- contained in section 117.1 of the Labour Relations Act, the complainant
- alleged that all hospital workers, including kitchen help, janitors,
- gardeners, registered nurses, health service technicians and clerical staff,
- were covered by this new section.
- 45. The Government stated its position as regards the international standards
- relevant to the question, namely that freedom to associate was protected but
- specific association objectives and dispute resolution mechanisms were not. It
- pointed out that the evolutionary nature of labour relations precluded
- commitment to a single universal approach to dispute resolution. The objects
- of association within the context of labour relations, principally the
- protection of the interests of the workers, could be and were achieved without
- utilisation of the strike mechanism. According to the Government, public
- sector collective bargaining must be approached within the larger framework of
- the governing process itself of which it was but one part. A number of
- extremely important characteristics had to be recognised in the design of the
- collective bargaining system intended to be compatible with it: the governing
- process in Canada was one in which decisions were reached by compromise and
- response to pressures brought to bear; those interests which influenced the
- distribution of scarce resources were involved in a political process and must
- therefore be subject to the contraints normally associated with such
- participation; in order to maintain the essential and delicate balance within
- this process, particularly with respect to essential administrative
- decision-making outside the normal review and evaluation associated with the
- electoral process, no single interest could be allowed to place other
- interests at a disadvantage. The Government also pointed out that while the
- nature of the work performed by public service employees was often unique in
- most ways, the unique nature of the employer remained constant, in that the
- Government was subject to scrutiny. Lastly, the Government stated that
- continuance of the right to withhold services by health care workers would
- place these interests at an unacceptable advantage and priority over those
- whose legitimate health care needs must be met by the system, for which there
- was no acceptable alternative, and as such would compromise the
- decision-making process relating to the provision of health care. This
- situation had been altered only to the extent that an alternative to the
- withdrawal of services had been provided and the Government considered that
- this was an effective compromise which would permit proper representation of
- employee interests within a framework that complied with international
- standards.
- C. Information obtained during the mission
- 46. In the course of the mission I had the opportunity of discussing the
- various issues involved in this case; first, in Ottawa, with representatives
- of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) and the National Union of Provincial
- Government Employees (NUPGE), and secondly, in Edmonton, with representatives
- of the Alberta Union of Public Employees (AUPE) and its component divisions.
- Discussions were also held with the Assistant Deputy Minister of Labour and
- other provincial government officials. In addition to the oral submissions
- that were made by the parties, voluminous documentary evidence was
- communicated to me in support of the arguments put forward by them.
- 47. From all these discussions it was clear that the three main issues causing
- concern to the unions as a result of the enactment of Bill 44, which amended
- both the Public Service Employee Relations Act of 1980 and the Labour
- Relations Act, were the curtailment of collective bargaining rights for
- public-sector employees and the manner in which the arbitration procedures
- functioned, the further restrictions that Bill 44 placed on the right to
- strike of public employees and the exclusion of certain employees from the
- bargaining unit. Several other issues, which also formed part of the
- complaint, were also examined in detail and will be dealt with later.
- (a) Collective bargaining and arbitration
- 48. The claim of the unions was that the introduction of Bill 44 had been a
- clear and deliberate attempt to place further restrictions on the collective
- bargaining rights of provincial government employees. In addition, the result
- of Bill 44 had been to destroy any credibility in the fairness and
- impartiality of the arbitration system, the only dispute-settlement mechanism
- available to this category of workers.
- 49. Much information was obtained concerning the manner in which collective
- bargaining takes place between the Alberta Union of Public Employees, as the
- certified bargaining agent covering 12 separate divisions of public employees
- (approximately 38,000 employees), and the Crown in the Right of Alberta, as
- employer. Under section 50 of the Public Service Employee Relations Act, in
- the event of a dispute arising, if the the Public Service Employee Relations
- Board is satisfied that the parties to the dispute have failed to make
- reasonable efforts to conclude a collective agreement, the Board may direct
- the parties to continue collective bargaining. Section 51(1)(c) of the Act
- permits the Board to establish an arbitration board if it is satisfied that
- not only are there additional items which should be referred to arbitration
- but also that it is the appropriate time to refer the matter to an arbitration
- board.
- 50. At the time the mission took place collective agreements had been
- concluded in respect of eight out of the 12 divisions of the AUPE; the four
- groups in respect of which no agreement had been reached being nurses,
- economic staff, social workers and teachers.
- 51. The chief negotiator for the AUPE explained that Bill 44 had been enacted
- following the discontent of the Government at the awards granted by 12
- separate arbitration boards in 1983. These arbitrations had been preceded by a
- decision of the Public Service Employee Relations Board that there had been a
- failure on the part of the employers to bargain in good faith. The current
- round of negotiations, commenced in January 1984 for the biennium 1984-85, had
- taken place in the context of the new atmosphere created by the enactment of
- Bill 44 and the employers demonstrated an aggressive attitude at the
- bargaining table. The failure of negotiations led to a request being made in
- April 1984 by the union for arbitration but this was rejected by the Board. In
- July 1984, following the failure of mediation, the Board referred the main, or
- master agreement, to arbitration.
- 52. Evidence was also submitted concerning the negotiating process which the
- unions claimed was frustrating and time-consuming. The Public Service Employee
- Relations Board often served to delay or prevent references to arbitration. In
- one case involving some 14,000 administrative and clerical workers,
- negotiations had commenced in January 1984; the Board had, on no fewer than
- three occasions, rejected an application for arbitration on the grounds that
- it was "untimely and inappropriate". This was followed by an application to
- the court which, in March 1985, upheld the Board's discretionary power to
- establish an arbitration board and stated that the Board's decision in the
- present case was not "patently unreasonable". It was only after the lapse of
- at least 18 months from the commencement of negotiations that arbitration was
- obtained and, as the unions pointed out, the question of retroactivity of wage
- increases was itself a matter of negotiation.
- 53. More specifically, as regards the arbitration process, the unions
- expressed considerable concern over the practical application of section 48(2)
- of the Public Service Employee Relations Act which limits the subject-matters
- that may be referred for arbitration. The Public Service Employee Relations
- Board has jurisdiction to determine whether any particular claim falls within
- the list of non-arbitral items set out in this provision. In the view of the
- unions this provision conferred upon the employer the unilateral right to
- determine terms and conditions of employment. They claimed that all matters
- covered by this provision should fall within the scope of bargaining and
- arbitration since they did not entirely concern questions of management
- prerogative.
- 54. Examples of matters that had not been considered arbitral by virtue of
- section 48 included the right of an employer to contract out work of the
- bargaining unit, questions concerning hours of work and shift work, certain
- leave periods and the calculation of overtime (section 48(2a)); questions of
- job evaluation, creation of job descriptions, questions of equal pay for work
- of equal value (section 48(2b)); selection, transfer, promotion, training, the
- provision of training in the safer operation of equipment, etc. (section
- 48(2c)). In a recent case (December 1984) the Public Service Employee
- Relations Board had determined that a union's proposal to protect the
- positions of laid-off employees by requiring an employer to give notice of
- intended lay-offs was non-arbitral because it limited employer discretion. The
- unions, accordingly, claimed that these examples showed that the Board gave a
- broad interpretation of section 48(2) in order to protect the managerial
- prerogative of the employer.
- 55. Furthermore, the unions claimed that, even where items in dispute were
- referred to arbitration, the discretion of arbitrators was curtailed by the
- requirement that they take certain matters into consideration. These criteria
- are set out in section 55 of the Act, and in particular, oblige arbitrators to
- give special consideration to statements of government fiscal policy. In the
- unions' view, these provisions were introduced in 1983 in response to the
- series of arbitration awards which the Government had criticised as being too
- generous. Some recent statements of fiscal policy issued by the Government
- were made available to the mission. According to the unions, arbitrators were
- required to promote government fiscal policy and, accordingly, the results of
- arbitration were a reflection of that policy. In other words, such control of
- arbitral decision-making meant that the Government was, in fact, legislating
- results for itself as employer. Arbitrators were thus prevented from
- exercising the degree of independence that was necessary to constitute an
- adequate substitute for collective bargaining.
- 56. In this connection, a number of recent arbitration awards were made
- available to the mission. From these it was clear that the arbitration boards
- involved had given careful considerations to the provisions of section 55(a)
- and (b) and had explored at length the conflicting roles of government as the
- determiner of provincial labour fiscal policy, and as employer. In some cases,
- the board had, in fact, not considered it necessary to take account of the
- optional provisions contained in section 55(b) of the Act. In one case, in May
- 1984, the arbitration board had stated that it did not find the government
- fiscal policy useful since, inter alia, it did not prescribe the exact amount
- of the increase.
- (b) Excluded employees
- 57. The mission also heard evidence concerning the exclusion, by virtue of
- section 21(1) of the Act, of certain categories of employees from the
- bargaining unit for the purpose of collective bargaining. The recent
- amendments under Bill 44 had broadened the range of persons denied the right
- to engage in collective bargaining. Some of these categories had previously
- enjoyed this right. It was recalled that section 21 substantially provides
- that persons employed who have or exercise management responsibilites or
- duties or who are primarily engaged in the administration of personnel
- policies or pesonnel programmes, shall not be included in any bargaining unit.
- 58. In the view of the unions, the exclusion of such employees was not
- justified and the amendment, under Bill 44, had removed the right to
- collectively bargain from a number of groups of employees who had been granted
- that right by the Public Service Employee Relations Board under the previous
- statute. The Governmment had used its legislative authority to reverse a
- series of decisions of the Board. For example, the Board, in one case, had
- held that employees in occupational health and safety programmes and
- organisational development programmes and activities were not within the scope
- of "personnel policies or programmes" defined in section 21(1)(b) of the Act.
- The Board, in its decision, had stated that personnel, in the sense described,
- encompassed policies or programmes concerning the recruitment of candidates,
- the hiring, the appointment and promotion of employees, or the classification,
- evaluation, discipline or discharge of employees. The unions submitted further
- examples of cases in which the amendments of Bill 44 denied the right to
- belong to a bargainging unit to groups of workers, or individual officers, to
- whom that right had been recognised by the Board. According to the unions,
- over 400 persons had been denied the right to collective bargaining by the
- amendments to section 21.
- (c) The right to strike
- 59. The mission also heard submissions from the unions concerning the overall
- denial of the right to strike imposed by section 93 of the Public Service
- Employee Relations Act on those employees to whom the Act applies. According
- to the unions, the Government had sought to justify this denial by stating
- that, although all the employees concerned did not provide essential services,
- they were so closely linked to those providing essential services as to make
- it reasonable that they should be treated in the same way; that there was no
- alternative supply for these services; and that these employees were in a
- special position to place more pressure on the Government than other citizens.
- 60. The unions claimed that there was no evidence of close links between
- essential and non-essential persons and, more importantly, that the withdrawal
- of labour by non-essential persons would not adversely affect the provision of
- essential services. Nor was there any evidence that there was no alternative
- source of supply for the services provided by the employees affected.
- Moreover, the unions stated, the same rationale had not been applied in the
- private sector in cases where no alternative source of supply for many
- services was available.
- 61. At meetings with representatives of the provincial Government of Alberta,
- the issues that had been brought to the attention of the ILO and discussed
- with the mission, were explained in detail. The government representatives
- explained to the mission that the response by the private sector to the
- dramatic decline in the economy had been constructive, and the claims of the
- public-sector unions that they were being selected for special, unfavourable
- treatment were unique to that category of workers.
- 62. As regards the collective bargaining process, the government
- representatives explained that either party had the right to veto matters that
- were suggested for reference to arbitration. Those which the Public Service
- Employee Relations Board had excluded from those parts of the master agreement
- with AUPE in respect of which arbitration had been sought concerned
- exclusively management rights. The Government conceded, however, that the
- definition of management rights was a complex question.
- 63. In this connection, I suggested to the government representatives that the
- Public Service Employee Relations Board, by refusing to consider certain
- specific issues as arbitral, was itself arbitrating on these issues. Where
- arbitration was fundamental in a non-strike situation, it seemed anomalous
- that the Board, which was a procedural body, should be seen itself to be
- acting as arbitrator on certain issues. Such a procedure was certain to
- destroy the unions' faith and confidence in the Board. I further indicated
- that it seemed that the Government's use of the legislative process to deal
- with collective bargaining had also led to a loss of confidence by unions in
- the bargaining system.
- 64. As regards arbitration itself, the government representatives indicated
- that, from the limited experience that the Government had of arbitration of
- interest disputes, there had been no evidence of misuse of the provision
- (section 55 of the Act) requiring arbitrators to take account of provincial
- fiscal policy. There was no way of knowing what attention arbitrators paid to
- the section, but, in any event, the fiscal policy provided wide scope for
- arbitrators. Examples of government fiscal policy were given to the mission.
- 65. On the question of exclusions under section 21(1) of the Act, as amended,
- the Government explained that 260 employees in all were affected by the
- amendment. These were mainly involved in the personnel policy area and only
- about 12 in the field of safety and health had been excluded from the
- bargaining unit.
- 66. Concerning the denial of the right to strike, I informed the Government
- generally that the Committee on Freedom of Association was likely to express
- some concern about the provisions in the legislation on this matter in the
- light of its stated principles. The government representatives took note of
- this and informed me that certain issues concerning the right to strike for
- public employees were presently before the court.
- 67. I also brought to the attention of the Government the question, also a
- concern of the unions, of the lack of prior consultation with the unions on
- legislation concerning matters affecting them or their members. In response,
- the government representative informed me that any failure to consult on such
- matters would be caused by the emergency of the situation and not from any
- systematic policy not to consult. Even on issues that were urgent, public
- hearings would take place in Parliament, but normally legislation was the
- result of lengthy and constructive discussions with any parties that would be
- affected.
- (d) Other issues
- 68. During discusssions with the AUPE, I was informed that, although that
- organisation had initially feared that the use of experienced out-of-province
- negotiators might have been restricted by section 74(1), the provision as it
- stood was not a problem. The provincial government representatives explained
- that this provision had been introduced solely to deal with the practical
- difficulties which had arisen in the past, when out-of-province negotiators
- had not been able to be contacted during negotiations or, even at the time of
- settlement, for signature of an agreement. Given that there appeared to be no
- serious problem with section 74(1) in practice, I expressed my hope that the
- parties would be able to discuss its application if, in the future, any
- problems might arise in this respect.
- 69. It was explained to the mission that section 87 of the Labour Relations
- Act (providing for only one strike or lock-out vote with respect to a dispute)
- had been introduced in reaction to a strike in 1982 by nurses at the Banff
- Mineral Springs Hospital during which one of the trade unions involved had
- disputed the results of a pro-strike vote. The Government also pointed out
- that, under this provision, the unions could meet and discuss possible strike
- action as often as they wished, but could only apply for one strike vote
- supervised by the Labour Relations Board. Both sides agreed that there
- appeared to be no problem with the present situation in practice.
- 70. It was explained to the mission, in relation to section 102.2(2)
- (providing for a Labour Relations Board supervised vote on the acceptance by
- employees of a settlement in a dispute) that the Disputes Inquiry Board was a
- form of binding mediation set up to examine particular disputes. The provision
- addressed the question as to whether union executives were free to accept
- awards or whether individual union members should decide this at a vote and it
- has not been used as yet.
- 71. During discussions with the union representatives, it was made clear to
- the mission that the effect of section 105(3)'s introduction of an offence for
- the mere threat of illegal strike action had added to their fears as to the
- real purpose behind Bill 44. They stressed that the danger of this provision
- was compounded by the fact that the strike action had been broadly defined in
- the legislation. The Government, on the other hand, pointed out that there
- were many Labour Relations Board decisions which clarified the definition of
- strikes. It also stressed that this provision stemmed from the principle of
- fair collective bargaining in that the threat of illegal action did not
- contribute to the resolution of a particular bargaining issue or negotiations
- in general. I pointed out that "persons acting on behalf of the bargaining
- agent" were also covered by this broad provision. The Government explained
- that section 105(3) had not been used and that it would be up to the Labour
- Relations Board, when faced with the application of this provision, to
- highlight any drafting difficulties regarding the position of union agents.
- 72. As regards the allegation relating to section 49 (introducing a 90-day
- delay before the filing of further certification applications) of the Labour
- Relations Act, it was explained to the mission that, under the Labour
- Relations Act, the Labour Relations Board was empowered to grant a collective
- bargaining certificate in three sets of circumstances: firstly, when satisfied
- that a majority of employees in the unit were paid-up union members having
- selected the trade union to be their bargaining agent; or secondly, when
- satisfied that a majority of employees in the unit had applied for union
- membership and paid a fee (or "deposit") not longer than 90 days before the
- date of the application for certification, or thirdly, after conducting a
- vote. Before the amendment only 30 days had applied to fee-paying employees.
- The union representatives felt that this time extension was yet another
- example of the real intent of Bill 44. The Government explained that section
- 49 was aimed at situations where there was not a constant organising drive by
- trade unions for the purposes of collective bargaining certification. This
- amendment had been introduced to remove any uncertainty as to a union's real
- strength in the bargaining unit and to avoid the possible abuse of
- certification proceedings as, for example, a defence to organising drives by
- other unions in the same bargaining unit. The Govenment pointed out that since
- this amendment there had been no evidence of its impact on a trade union's
- ability to organise and apply for certification. Since a union's own
- constitution would set out the time limit for the lapse of fee-paying
- applicants' membership, any procedural problem that section 49 might raise for
- unions could possibly be avoided by simple amendment of their constitutions.
- In addition, it was pointed out that the Labour Relations Board had the
- discretion to conduct a vote even if a majority (51 per cent) of employees in
- the bargaining unit had indicated its selection of a trade union as its
- bargaining agent.
- 73. The union representatives told me that the amendment to section 132
- concerning successor rights had no labour relations rationale. The Government
- explained that the amendment was a reaction to a court decision which had
- interpreted the previous provision too broadly, thus enabling successor rights
- to bind employees in "other related activities"; the position on successor
- rights was now clarified in the Act and the Labour Relations Board only had a
- discretion, not an obligation, to determine what rights, privileges and duties
- carried on where a question arose under the provision.
- 74. From information obtained during the mission concerning section 117.94 of
- the Labour Relations Act and section 92.2 of the Public Service Employee
- Relations Act concerning withdrawal of the check-off, it was clear that the
- complainant's initial allegations related to a draft provision which had not
- provided for notice and the right to appeal to the appropriate board. The
- union representatives acknowledged that there was no problem at the moment
- with sections 117.94 and 92.2 as drafted and currently in force since they had
- not been utilised. The Government stressed the fairness of the notice, appeal
- and time limit aspects of the present section; it nevertheless acknowledged
- that the possibility existed for an employer to suspend all employee check
- offs in a situation where only one employee had withdrawn his services. It
- considered that in such cases the appropriate board would have to decide
- whether an illegal strike had taken place and, if not, order the employer not
- to go ahead with suspension of the check-off.
- 75. During discussions on the withdrawal of the right to strike from hospital
- workers (section 117.1 of the Labour Relations Act), the AUPE representatives
- emphasised their concern over the indiscriminate nature of section 117.1 in
- that non-essential staff were covered by the strike ban. This has been
- discussed in a more general context in some detail above. Evidence was put
- forward from hospital clerical staff to the effect that their job description
- and duties did not differ from clerical work carried on outside the hospital
- system and could not be described as essential. The Government pointed out
- that there was much uncertainty, both at the national and international
- levels, as to what was an "essential service". It was explained that the
- Provincial Government decided to clarify the situation through legislation
- rather than through Labour Relations Board decisions or arbitration decisions.
- The Government stressed that only small groups were affected by section 117.1.
- After it was pointed out to the Government that in some specific cases the
- international bodies had been very clear in defining the concept of essential
- services, the question of possible abuse was raised. The Government explained
- that this question was before the courts in two jurisdictions, namely the
- appeal of an Alberta Court of Appeal decision to the Canadian Supreme Court
- (challenging Bill 44 on grounds of violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights
- and Freedoms - to be heard in October 1985) and an AUPE appeal to the Alberta
- Court of Appeal which has been stayed pending the afore-mentioned Supreme
- Court decision.
- D. Concluding remarks
- 76. The complaints lodged against the Government of Alberta fall into two
- groups. A number of them appeared to indicate that recent legislative changes,
- in particular Bill 44 had changed the process of collective bargaining and
- submission to arbitration. This it was alleged was in clear breach of ILO
- principles applying to a structure where limitation on the right to strike is
- balanced by free access to binding arbitration. Others were individual points
- of detail. These taken together it was suggested presented serious obstacles
- to freedom of association and free collective bargaining. Together the two
- groups of complaints were felt - and the feeling was strong and genuinely held
- - to form a coherent policy aimed at weakening the public service trade union.
- I feel it would be helpful to the Committee on Freedom of Association if I
- summarised the position as I saw it treating each of the groups separately and
- then assessing the overall position.
- Collective bargaining and arbitration
- 77. Bill 44 has made several changes to the structure of bargaining, and
- recent practice has led to the feeling that major limitations have been
- imposed and damage done. The system as it is now working raises these issues
- to which the Committee's attention is specially drawn:
- (a) the system denies public service employees who are covered the right to
- strike. It offers in its place access to binding arbitration;
- (b) the access to arbitration is limited by a jurisdictional clause (section
- 48(2)). That clause is in effect the equivalent of a management rights clause
- commonly found in a collective agreement. Two questions were raised:
- (i) the drafting of the statute enables the adjudicating body to take a wide
- view of management rights. In such instances there will be a strong counter
- argument raised by the trade union since the exercise of such rights will
- undoubtedly, on many occasions, raise the issue that a trade union feels
- properly falls within the ambit of bargaining;
- (ii) the procedural methods adopted put the jurisdictional issue in the hands
- of the Public Service Employee Relations Board. This has the effect of taking
- from the arbitrator, seized with problems arising from the break down of
- negotiations, some of the issues in dispute. The trade unions do seem to be
- hampered by this duality.
- A study of arbitration awards indicates that the application of these
- provisions has produced results that narrow considerably the arbitrator's
- jurisdiction. It appears that the system, which it will be recalled is aimed
- at balancing the lack of the right to strike, is narrowing the issues that are
- deemed arbitrable. It is a matter that calls for careful attention.
- (c) The addition within the statutory rules governing the work of the
- arbitrator set out in section 55 of the duty to consider "any fiscal policies
- that may be declared from time to time in writing by the Provincial
- Treasurer". It appears from what I was told that it is the potential impact of
- this clause that is feared. It is difficult to see the effect of the clause,
- taken at face value, on the practice of arbitration. It cannot be seriously
- contended that such fiscal policy would not be considered by an arbitrator
- without such direction. The dangers are, however, there:
- (i) an arbitrator aware of the precariousness of the profession may give
- paramountcy to this one provision. Although it has to be said that this
- realistically is a theoretical danger, such a problem exists whether the
- position is statutory or not;
- (ii) the Government may issue its fiscal policy in such a form, for example,
- as a pay increase norm. That would undoubtedly raise the impact of the
- particular criterion that is being considered. It would seriously fetter the
- freedom of the arbitrator. Indeed it would prove to change the concept of
- independent arbitration. Such intervention should be directly, rather than
- indirectly, statutory. The fiscal policies I was shown show no sign of such
- interference. They state clearly and succintly general economic factors of
- concern to the Government. Awards studied cannot be said to show any misuse of
- this section to destroy independence.
- (d) exclusions from the process of the Act have been recently extended. This
- increases the number of public servants who lack the protection of the system.
- The facts are clearly set out in the evidence given by the parties and
- summarised above. The numbers under the Public Service Employee Relations Act
- are not excessive. Whilst it would be possible to argue about the validity,
- under ILO standards, of a few categories there is no flagrant neglect of the
- appropriate principles.
- 78. Attention must be given, however, to the exclusion of health care workers
- from the parallel bargaining structures secured by the Labour Relations Act.
- That exclusion is widely drawn and gives too little attention to the important
- qualification of "essential worker". Its width gives real cause for concern.
- Individual items
- 79. These have been set out in detail above and the views of the parties
- recorded. They can be partially grouped: Four involve statutory changes to
- legal structures. Undoubtedly these changes make the trade unions' position
- less favourable, hence the reason for the complaints. They do not appear,
- however, to involve significant fetters on trade union rights. The Committee
- will be able to judge them from the views expressed; I found little to add.
- (a) s. 74(1) - Labour Relations Act
- Requires a duly authorised representative for collective bargaining to be
- resident in Alberta. It was made clear that the legislation does not debar the
- trade unions seeking assistance in bargaining from persons resident outside
- the Province.
- (b) s. 87 - Labour Relations Act
- Allows only one strike or lock-out vote. This restricts certain previously
- allowable trade union tactics but does not prevent sufficient polling to
- determine the position prior to calling for a vote.
- (c) s. 49(1) - Labour Relations Act
- Where a certification ballot is lost there is provision now for a 90-day
- moratorium. This affects the current practice of signing members on a short
- (30 day) basis. No doubt it will lead to a change of tactics.
- (d) s. 132 - Labour Relations Act
- Where a business or enterprise changes hands there has been automatic
- transfer to the new employer of the collective bargaining rights and duties.
- This provision now allows the Board to intervene. Since it is only likely to
- do so where difficulties are anticipated the provision appears merely to
- regulate and expedite normal practice. There was no indication that this
- provision would be used to change previous grounds for intervention.
- (e) s. 1(W. 1) of the Labour Relations Act was never promulgated.
- 80. Three issues require separate comment.
- (a) s. 102.2 - Labour Relations Act
- This provides the power to put the recommendations of a Disputes Inquiry
- Board to the workers concerned after 10 days of issue. Calling for such a vote
- is seen as a denial of the right of the trade union officials to manage their
- own union. It does not, however, deprive individual workers of their rights.
- (b) s. 105 and s. 106 - Labour Relations Act
- The crime of threatening an illegal strike created by these provisions needs
- careful consideration. It appears to put employees and trade union officials
- in some jeopardy. Two problems arise:
- (i) the definition of a strike is by no means certain and precise. In many
- instances it is possible that the matter could only be determined by a court.
- An employee or trade union official either has his conduct widely fettered
- (fearing possible but not certain transgression) or acts in good faith,
- believing the strike to be lawful and subsequently finding that it is not. It
- seems essential that an individual who has no subjective guilt (i.e. knowledge
- or belief in the illegality) should be protected;
- (ii) the question of the authority of individuals to act on behalf of the
- trade union also may arise. Again it is to be hoped that clarification will be
- undertaken to avoid uncertainty.
- (c) s. 117.94 - Labour Relations Act and s. 92.2 - Public Service Employee
- Relations Act
- These provisions provide that where illegal strike action takes place the
- employer may suspend the deduction of union dues from employees' pay and their
- remission to the trade union. This is an instance of fear that the provisions
- may be used unfairly. The statute appears to allow the stopping of all dues in
- the unit consequent upon the action of one individual. We were told that such
- response was most unlikely, except in the instance of specially selected key
- workers. Again, it is important to note that there may be circumstances where
- the trade union itself is trying to prevent or end the illegal action.
- Retaliatory measures in these circumstances would not appear to be fair. Again
- it is a matter, once aired, that can be dealt with by clarification of the
- exact scope of the provision.
- General considerations
- 81. Consultation: The complaints relate to a period when the perceptions of
- the Government and the public service trade union were markedly divergent.
- Routine consultation on matters such as health and safety appeared to have
- continued unaffected. However, the Government's determination to act quickly
- as a result of the major downturn in economic activity meant that consultation
- on the legislative changes in Bill 44 were almost entirely restricted to a
- public hearing before a committee of the whole legislature. Since the
- legislation affected procedures in which the Government and the trade union
- played a joint part, it is unfortunate that more time was not found for
- consultation. It would appear that now the urgency of the economic pressures
- has abated, the process of consultation can be re-established. At the very
- least this will enable misconceptions to be ironed out before changes are
- promulgated.
- 82. Attitudes: It was clear that the trade union believed that it had been
- singled out for a concerted attack on its position and rights. The steps taken
- by the Government, both in their obvious intent to restrict monetary rises and
- the individual changes, viewed in the worst light, gave a basis for the
- formation of such a view. Whether these fears and the harshest reading of the
- legislative changes reflect what were intended is not easy to determine. I saw
- little objective evidence to support this pessimistic view although I accept
- that the fear was genuine.
- 83. Two aspects of the underlying problem should be mentioned.
- 1. It is important and practically sensible to review the questions raised as
- to fears of ways in which the legislation may be used to seriously impede the
- trade union in carrying out its bargaining role. Many of these, it seemed,
- could be resolved by an internal understanding secured, for example, by an
- exchange of letters.
- 2. The second is somewhat more complicated. The procedures appear to have
- changed the perceived independence of both the Public Service Employee
- Relations Board and the process of arbitration. The reasons for this are set
- out at the beginning of this section. It is vital that consideration be given
- to ensuring that the independence of arbitration is maintained and seen to be
- valued.
- 84. The establishment of better relationships between the parties is desirable
- and even possible given the present, less alarming economic position and the
- increased awareness of both unions and Government of their respective
- responsibilities and obligations. It will not be easy to build mutual trust
- quickly, but if attention is jointly given to the problems that were disclosed
- to me better relationships should be attainable. It is clearly in the
- interests of both parties to make efforts to this end and to eliminate the
- fears that exist at present of a disregard of ILO principles.
- IV. Case of Alberta - No. 1234
- A. Introduction
- 85. It was in a communication of 19 September 1983 that the Confederation of
- Alberta Faculty Associations (CAFA) presented a complaint of alleged
- violations of trade union rights in Alberta. The observations of the
- Government of Alberta were contained in a communication dated 21 February
- 1984.
- B. The issues
- 86. In its communication of 19 September 1983 the CAFA alleged that a November
- 1981 amendment to the Universities Act denied the academic staff of the
- universities of the Province of Alberta the rights bestowed by Convention No.
- 87, ratified by Canada. The complainant explained that a new section 17(1)
- (d.1) empowered the Board of Governors at each university to designate those
- employees who shall be "academic staff members" and therefore eligible to join
- the faculty staff associations at each university. The provision reads as
- follows:
- After consultation with the academic staff association, (The Board of
- Governors is entitled) to do one or more of the following: (i) designate
- categories of employees as academic staff members at the university; (ii)
- designate individual employees as academic staff members at the university;
- (iii) change the designation made under the subclauses above.
- According to the complainant, this provision gave the right to the employer to
- determine who should belong to a faculty association, contrary to Article 2 of
- Convention No. 87.
- 87. The CAFA explained that the present complaint was similar to previous
- complaints brought by various Canadian workers' associations against the
- Government, in particular, in 1977, the Canadian Labour Congress and the
- Canadian Association of University Teachers' complaint (Case No. 893, last
- examined in detail by the Committee in its 194th Report, paragraphs 92 to 118)
- and the 1981 complaint of the Alberta Association of College Faculties (Case
- No. 1055, examined by the Committee in its 214th Report, paras. 332-350).
- 88. The CAFA pointed out that it had delayed presenting a complaint to the ILO
- concerning the Universities Amendment Act of 1981 in order to observe what
- would actually occur in the initial determination by the Board of Governors of
- who should be designated as academic staff, and hence members of an
- association under the new legislation. It cited an example of such a
- determination: the governing authority of Athabasca University declared its
- intention to designate as "academic staff members" fewer than one-third of the
- persons who had formerly been members of the Athabasca University Faculty
- Association by an arbitrary declaration of who were to be excluded on the
- basis that they were involved in senior management or that their activities
- did not meet the governing authority's definition of "academic". According to
- the complainant, the Athabasca University Faculty Association was able to
- persuade the governing authority concerned that the original definitions were
- unwarranted, and eventually an agreement on designation was reached. However,
- according to the complainant, given that the Act continued to give governing
- authorities the right to revoke designation at will, following consultation,
- the legislative threat to freedom of association continued.
- 89. In its communication of 21 February 1984, the Government explained that
- universities in Alberta were created and structured in accordance with the
- principle of academic freedom, the right of each individual member of the
- faculty of the institution to enjoy the freedom to study, to inquire, and to
- communicate ideas. The Government added that the principle of academic freedom
- must be safeguarded through appropriate institutional structures and the role
- of academic professionals in the management of universities had long been
- recognised.
- 90. According to the Government, from the complexity of the academic and
- administrative functions undertaken by such institutions stemmed the
- recognition that university management is the joint responsibility of the
- various major elements of the academic community, including faculty,
- administrators, governing boards and students. In particular, the faculty must
- play a major role in determining curriculum, subject-matter and method of
- instruction, research, requirement for degrees, academic appointments and
- granting of tenure and dismissals, since only the faculty had the competence
- needed for making and forming judgements on such matters. The Government cited
- the example of the structure at the University of Alberta where faculty
- members played a substantial role in administration and in setting the overall
- university policy; "staff members" are defined in the faculty association
- collective agreement as all persons who have been appointed to full-time
- teaching and research positions which includes all senior academics and
- administrators, such as the president, vice-president and deans. The Board of
- Governors there consists of, amongst others, the president of the university
- and two members of the academic staff. The General Faculties Council, which is
- responsible for the academic affairs of the university subject to the
- authority of the university, consists of, inter alia, the president, the
- vice-president, the deans of all the faculties, the directors of each school,
- the chief librarian, the registrar and elected members from all faculties and
- schools. The Government explained that all these persons are "academic staff"
- yet they are active and influential members of the very body that acts as the
- university board's instrument for internal college management, which includes
- dealing with questions of tenure, salaries and promotions and the hearing of
- appeals and disciplinary matters.
- 91. The Government, therefore, concluded that within the university
- environment traditional employer/employee or managerial/non-managerial
- distinctions did not apply. All interest groups active within the institution
- played a role in its management, including the designation of "academic
- staff", because the Board of Governors comprised significant staff
- representation. The Government stressed that the Universities Amendment Act
- attempted to create a framework within which dialogue regarding more
- traditional conditions of work issues could take place, while at the same time
- recognising the unique nature of the universities. In particular, the Act
- designated the Board of Governors as the final authority and, secondly, the
- Act required "consultation" which the Government interpreted as including full
- consultation enabling the persons involved to have reasonable, ample and
- sufficient opportunity to express their views.
- 92. Referring to the example cited by the complainant, the Government
- explained that in early 1983 the Athabasca University Governing Council
- declared its intention to designate as "academic staff members" fewer than
- one-third of those persons who were formerly members of the Athabasca
- University Faculty Association. The Governing Council had felt that many
- professional staff were involved in senior management positions and their
- activities did not fall in the Governing Council's definition of "academic";
- as a result of consultation between the Governing Council and the Faculty
- Association, an altered scope of designation had been reached, with the result
- that many of the persons involved - whose designations had been changed - had
- been redesignated as "academic staff members". According to the Government,
- this example proved the effectiveness of consultation as required under the
- Universities Amendment Act, in particular in view of the fact that the
- Governing Council had recognised that fragmentation of the professional staff
- into small bargaining units was not an advantage to the University.
- C. Information obtained during the mission
- 93. During discussions with representatives of CAFA, two points were
- emphasised. First, the union was trying to have consultations, in good faith,
- with the employers (the Boards of Governors) in an effort to overcome the
- restrictive nature of s. 17(1)(d.1); such informal consultations had, in fact,
- worked in the Athabasca situation referred to in the written complaint.
- Secondly, CAFA stressed its concern that there was no right to appeal a
- designation of academic staff made by the Boards of Governors under s.
- 17(1)(d.1). CAFA considered that a possible solution to the situation would be
- to include provisions in the legislation for third party arbitration on the
- question of designation, such as exists for collective bargaining deadlocks. I
- noted that this was a useful suggestion since, in most cases, the job
- descriptions indicated those members of the university staff who were involved
- in teaching and research and those who were employed in managerial tasks.
- 94. The Government pointed out that the Athabasca situation had been
- particularly tense since the campus had, at the time of the complaint, just
- been transferred from Edmonton to the northern town of Athabasca (after which
- the university had been named) to continue its "open university" curriculae.
- According to the Government none of the three other Alberta universities had
- had problems, and the employees of the University of Alberta (in Edmonton) had
- indeed been surprised at the complaint because they had no trouble in
- negotiating with their Board of Governors the question of academic staff.
- Nevertheless, the Government recognised that the legislation did not address
- the radical differences in the four universities of the Province. I pointed
- out that, although no problems were occurring at present with the legislation,
- CAFA wanted some form of machinery to protect against situations such as had
- occurred in Athabasca. To this the Government replied that since the other
- universities had managed to arrive at designations, no major change in policy
- could be envisaged. I indicated that informal machinery such as a letter of
- understanding would perhaps suffice.
- D. Concluding remarks
- 95. The issue here is a simple one. The power given to the employer to
- designate staff as academic or not gave a high degree of control over the
- nature and size of the bargaining unit. Industrial relations in universities,
- which have a large degree of participation and consultation, is of an
- individual nature. Relationships have been excellent but the designation power
- led to a serious problem in Athabasca University, a body which because it
- concentrated upon "distance learning", that is to say students not on campus,
- has a special staff structure. That problem has been satisfactorily resolved
- but the Staff Association has been alerted to a weakness in the law.
- 96. There is no doubt that a unilateral power to designate does potentially
- put the trade union at a serious disadvantage. All that is being sought is
- access to independent arbitration of disputed designation. This appears to be
- a necessary safeguard to protect the integrity of the bargaining unit. It
- seems most unlikely that the machinery will often be used for the relationship
- appears to be good. Consideration could, accordingly, be given to the
- introduction of the simple safeguard that is being sought by the union.
- V. Case of Ontario - No. 1172
- A. Introduction
- 97. The complaint of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), on behalf of its
- affiliated organisations the National Union of Provincial Government Employees
- (NUPGE), the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) and the Canadian
- Union of Public Employees (CUPE), was contained in a communication dated 15
- November 1982. The CLC supplied additional information in communications dated
- 15 December 1982, 16 February and 28 October 1983 and 10 January 1984. The
- World Confederation of Organisations of the Teaching Profession (WCOTP)
- presented its complaint, on behalf of its affiliates the Canadian Teachers'
- Federation and the Ontario Teachers' Federation, in a letter of 8 February
- 1983 and further information in a communication of 7 March 1983. The Service
- Employees International Union (SEIU) presented its complaint in a letter dated
- 6 April 1984. The Government sent its observations in communications dated 25
- April 1983 and 7 June and 16 October 1984.
- B. The issues
- 98. In its initial communications the CLC alleged that new Ontario
- legislation, "the Act respecting the restraint of compensation in the public
- sector of Ontario and the monitoring of inflationary conditions in the economy
- of the province" (known as Bill 179), violated Articles 3 and 4 of Convention
- No. 87 and Article 4 of Convention No. 98. The Act came into force in late
- 1982 and covered employees of the Ontario Public Service, all Ontario
- municipalities, municipal and provincial corporations, commissions, boards and
- agencies including universities, colleges, hospitals and health boards. In
- particular, the CLC alleged that of the Act took away the right of the workers
- covered to organise and bargain collectively because it allowed the Provincial
- Government to extend, arbitrarily, collective agreements for a 12-month period
- during which it could unilaterally determine employees' wage increases. In
- addition, according to the CLC, the Inflation Restraint Board established
- under the Act had been given sweeping powers to resolve disputes without
- reference to the unions or employees concerned.
- 99. The WCOTP, in its communication of 8 February 1983, stated that Bill 179
- constituted an unjustifiable interference with bargaining rights. It pointed
- out that Bill 179 overrode the usual collective bargaining process prescribed
- in various specific Provincial Acts by imposing legislated limits on the wages
- of public sector employees, including teachers, because it took effect
- "notwithstanding any other Act, except the Human Rights Code, 1981 ...". The
- WCOTP further stated that no grave national emergency existed in Ontario such
- as to justify this substantial restriction on the fundamental right to
- collective bargaining, the Government's professed commitment to the reduction
- of inflation not being a sufficient reason for this suspension by legislative
- action.
- 100. According to the additional information provided by the CLC on 16
- February 1983 the Act in fact had become law on 15 December 1982 with
- retroactive operation as from 21 September 1982 and applied also to privately
- owned, para-public sector companies contracted to or funded by the Provincial
- Government, for example, nursing homes, ambulance services, garbage
- contractors as well as to certain private charitable organisations and
- non-government agencies such as the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Botanical
- Gardens (section 6). The complainant stated that the coverage of the Act might
- further be extended by regulation by the Lieutenant Governor in Council,
- without legislative discussion (section 25).
- 101. The CLC explained its dissatisfaction with the Act as follows: the Act
- imposed a 5 per cent increase on the compensation received by employees
- concerned for at least a one-year period (called "the control year"),
- regardless of the rate of inflation and the value of wage and benefit
- settlements in the private sector (section 12); it "rolled back" or
- expropriated, without compensation, the existing contractual rights of
- employees under collective agreements which extended beyond 1 October 1983 and
- limited the increase in compensation and monetary benefits payable to such
- employees under such agreements (sections 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12); it removed the
- right to strike or to binding arbitration in so far as such activities related
- to efforts to obtain monetary benefits in excess of those dictated by the Act
- (section 13); it appeared to allow the parties to a collective agreement to
- amend non-monetary issues of that agreement without providing a mechanism for
- such amendment because the right to strike and the right to binding
- arbitration were removed (section 15); it prevented a union from negotiating a
- first agreement with an employer where the certification of the bargaining
- unit had occurred after 21 September 1982 because employees could only strike
- or obtain binding arbitration on non-monetary issues (section 13, in
- conjunction with Ontario Regulation 57 of 21 January 1983 made under the Act
- whereby first agreements made after 21 September must comply with the 5 per
- cent increase in compensation laid down in the Act); it discriminated against
- public sector employees by subjecting them to the above restrictions whereas
- private sector employees were not so restricted. The complainant pointed out,
- in addition, that even if the parties to a collective agreement had agreed to
- an increase in wages or monetary benefits in excess of that permitted by the
- Act, the Inflation Restraint Board - consisting of appointed officials of the
- Ontario Government - could issue an order preventing the parties from
- implementing their agreement (section 21 of the Act). In addition, the orders
- of the Board might be filed with the Supreme Court of Ontario so that they had
- the force of a judgement, thus allowing the Government to enforce them through
- any of the judicial methods of enforcement, such as imprisonment and fines.
- 102. According to the CLC, such restrictions on collective bargaining as
- listed above violated Article 4 of Convention No. 98 and Article 7 of
- Convention No. 151, and the lack of disputes settlement machinery infringed
- Article 8 of Convention No. 151. Moreover, the CLC considered that Article 3
- of Convention No. 87 was violated because of the alteration, by legislation,
- of the conditions of work over a certain period of time and the removal of the
- unions' possibility to act through negotiation. The CLC pointed out that under
- section 2(d) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, incorporated as
- part of the Federal Constitution in 1981, all persons had the right to freedom
- of association in Canada; in view of the new legislation, public servants and
- other individuals covered by the Act in Ontario were now denied freedom of
- association.
- 103. The WCOTP, in its communication of 7 March 1983, recalled that, under the
- Ontario School Boards and Teachers Collective Negotiations Act 1975, a
- collective bargaining process had been established according to which - if
- initial negotiations between teachers and their employing boards failed - the
- following action could be taken: initial fact-finding, mediation, voluntary
- binding arbitration, final offer selection, strike or lock-out. According to
- the complainant, free collective bargaining under this process had not
- resulted in inflationary wage pressures; in fact, in every quarter since 1978,
- the rate of teachers' salaries had fallen below the rate of inflation
- producing a cumulative decline in purchasing power of more than 7 per cent.
- 104. In addition, the WCOTP listed its principal criticisms of the new
- legislation as follows: in cases where negotiations relating to the 1981-82
- contract period were continuing, Bill 179 terminated negotiations, declared
- the previous agreement to be still in force until the first anniversary
- following 1 October 1982 (called "the transition period") and imposed a wage
- increase not to exceed 9 per cent. Agreements already in effect and expiring
- before 30 September 1983, were deemed to be extended for a period of 12 months
- (again, "the control year"), with a wage increase of 5 per cent. According to
- the WCOTP, Bill 179 also forbade the payment of any merit award,
- service-related increment, long-service bonus or allowance in respect of
- successful completion of a training programme or course of education,
- regardless of whether such payments were provided for in collective
- agreements, if the effect would be to increase total remuneration to a level
- above $35,000 per annum. This extension by legislation of collective
- agreements eliminated the possibility of negotiation even on non-monetary
- items, such as conditions of work, and, since strikes were not permitted
- during the life of a contract, Bill 179 amounted to denial of the right to
- strike; thus, affected employees would have no way to make any changes to
- their working conditions.
- 105. Lastly, the WCOTP criticised the membership and procedures of the
- Inflation Restraint Board set up under Bill 179 - in particular the lack of
- appeal of its decisions - as well as the wide powers conferred on the
- Lieutenant Governor in Council. The WCOTP stated that where the right to
- strike was removed, it was imperative to replace it with an adequate dispute
- resolution mechanism - Bill 179 left affected employees with no such
- mechanism.
- 106. In its communication of 28 October 1983, the CLC referred to a recent
- decision of the Supreme Court of Ontario (Broadway Manor case) and the
- Government's public announcement of its intention to extend the duration of
- its control programme by legislation at the beginning of November 1983. The
- decision, dated 24 October 1983, ruled that section 13(b) of Bill 179 was
- invalid because it infringed the right to freedom of association - which
- included the right to change bargaining agents, to bargain collectively and to
- strike - which was guaranteed under the Canadian Constitution. Only this
- section of the legislation was held to be unconstitutional because it
- restricted collective bargaining over non-compensation matters which,
- according to the Court, could not be justified as being reasonably necessary
- to control wage increases. On 10 January 1984, the CLC sent certain
- documentation referring to the replacement of Bill 179 by new draft
- legislation (known as Bill 111) which, if enacted, would take effect as of 1
- October 1983.
- 107. On 6 April 1984 the Service Employees International Union presented its
- submissions against Bill 179 reiterating the above-mentioned points for
- dissatisfaction with the legislation (it removed the right to change
- bargaining agents, to bargain collectively on non-monetary as well as monetary
- matters and the right to strike or resort to interest arbitration for a
- broadly defined public sector) and adding that the legislation is not in
- harmony with Convention No. 154.
- 108. Referring to the importance of the independence and autonomy of parties
- to the collective bargaining process and the voluntary negotiation of
- collective agreements recognised by the Committee on Freedom of Association as
- fundamental aspects of Convention No. 98, the SEIU claimed that Bill 179, by
- interfering with existing provisions of freely negotiated collective
- agreements, constituted an unnecessary and unacceptable interference in the
- results of free collective bargaining and contravened Convention No. 154. It
- cited the example of the Sensenbrenner Hospital employees who were awarded an
- 11 per cent overall pay increase in the summer of 1982 by a three-man interest
- arbitration board and some of whom - since they were among the lowest paid
- workers in the hospital sector - were awarded a supplementary award in October
- 1982. On 2 November 1983 the Inflation Restraint Board ruled that the special
- wage increases contained in the supplementary award were null and void to the
- extent that they exceeded the 5 per cent limit prescribed by the Act, and
- ordered that any wages received by the 72 employees concerned in excesss of
- the prescribed increase were to be repaid to the hospital. In January 1984 the
- Board had refused a request made by the SEIU that it recommend, under section
- 17(5) of the Act, that the employees of the Sensenbrenner Hospital be exempt
- from its application. According to the SEIU, there had not been any
- recommendations or exemptions granted to workers under these provisions of the
- Act.
- 109. Lastly, the SEIU criticised the Government's statements that conditions
- of work other than compensation were not disrupted by Bill 179, that
- non-monetary aspects of a compensation plan might be made under section 15 of
- that Act, that the right to select a bargaining agent was only delayed for at
- most one year and, most importantly according to the complainant, that
- although the scope of collective bargaining had been temporarily narrowed it
- still covered trade-offs between wages and benefits and the determination of
- non-monetary terms and conditions of employment. The SEIU alleged that this
- last justification was entirely inaccurate and unfounded especially in view of
- the Act's suspension of the obligation to bargain in good faith as required
- under the Labour Relations Act.
- 110. Responding to the complaints in its communication of 25 April 1983, the
- Government stated that its adoption of the new legislation was a responsible
- and necessary action, taken only after consideration of a wide range of
- restraint options to overcome the worst recession since the Great Depression.
- According to the Government, in 1981 and the first half of 1982 public sector
- wage increases were higher than private sector settlements in Ontario and
- there was evidence that administered prices - prices set or directly
- authorised by ministries or public agencies - were a major factor perpetuating
- inflation.
- 111. The Government pointed out that the compensation restraint programme
- provided for a temporary (in most cases, only one year) constraint on wage
- increases of up to 5 per cent or 9 per cent, allowing conditions of work other
- than compensation to be changed by mutual agreement (section 15 of the Act).
- It stated that special provision was made for workers with low incomes
- (section 12) and emphasised that the Lieutenant Governor in Council could
- exempt compensation plans from the Act (section 25). According to the
- Government, trade-offs between wages and benefits could be made with the
- permission of the Inflation Restraint Board under section 14, and it listed
- examples of such trade-offs.
- 112. As regards the alleged infringement of Convention No. 87, the Government
- emphasised that the legislation in fact favoured worker organisations in one
- way because workers with collective agreements were automatically entitled to
- a 5 per cent wage increase whereas other workers could receive less (section
- 12(1)(d)). For workers already represented wishing to change certified
- representatives, the Government admitted that the extension of collective
- agreements under the Act would delay this for, at most, one year, but pointed
- out that under the normal collective bargaining system such a change was in
- any case also subject to a time-limit - of 90 to 120 days, for example under
- the Labour Relations Act. As for the alleged limitation on the unions' freedom
- of action, the Government stated that this was incorrect: while the scope of
- negotiations had been temporarily restricted, the collective bargaining system
- remained in place and unions were free to organise their activities, the right
- to strike and to binding arbitration only being delayed temporarily. An
- example of this freedom of action was the case of groups which had been
- certified before 21 September 1982 but which had not attained their first
- collective agreement. Under Regulation 57/83 made under the Act, such groups
- could use all of the normal collective bargaining procedures - including
- strike action - to arrive at first collective agreements on condition that the
- agreement provided for a compensation increase of 5 per cent for a 12-month
- period commencing between 1 October 1982 and 1 October 1983 and that the
- provisions of the whole agreement were substantially comparable to those of
- employees in related labour markets.
- 113. As regards the alleged infringement of Conventions Nos. 98 and 151, the
- Government stated that the Act did not discontinue the voluntary negotiation
- machinery but merely prolonged collective agreements, with specified
- provisions for wage increases, for the period stipulated. It stressed that
- non-monetary terms and conditions could be altered by mutual agreement and the
- parties were free to agree to use mediators and arbitrators in this
- connection. According to the Government, there had been quite a few instances
- of collective bargaining resulting in the full 9 per cent being granted for
- the 12-month period prior to the control year under section 10 of the Act. As
- for the limitation on disputes settlement procedures, the Government stated
- that, under section 14 of the Act, the Inflation Restraint Board could
- arbitrate, giving decisions which were binding on the parties and also
- indicating its reasons although the Act did not require it to do so. Moreover,
- the Government pointed out that under sections 17 and 25 of the Act groups of
- employees could be exempted from the application of Part II of the Act; it
- recognised that these provisions had not yet been utilised.
- 114. In its communication of 7 June 1984, the Government referred to the
- appeal lodged against the decision of the Divisional Court of the Supreme
- Court of Ontario dated 24 October 1983 which held section 13(b) of the
- Inflation Restraint Act to be invalid. The Government enclosed extracts from
- Hansard containing statements made by the Attorney General of Ontario which
- reflected the Government's concern over "the implications of the very broad
- interpretation given by the Court to freedom of association".
- 115. In its communication of 16 October 1984, the Government again referred to
- the economic crisis of 1981 which had led all Canadian provinces except
- Manitoba to introduce public sector restraint programmes. According to the
- Government, 71 per cent of all agreements and 69 per cent of all employees
- affected by the Inflation Restraint Act had been subject to controls for 12
- months only. It also presented statistics to show that after the Act had been
- introduced there had been a dramatic decrease in the rate of inflation.
- 116. As regards the negotiation of non-monetary issues under section 15 of the
- Act, the Government pointed out that the Ontario Ministry of Labour had
- continued to offer and provide mediation services to parties covered by the
- Act who agreed to bargain non-compensatory issues, and negotiations had taken
- place on such items as grievance procedures, pupil-teacher ratios and job
- security. The Inflation Restraint Board had made 655 decisions and orders
- between 1 December 1982 and December 1983, a number of which resulted from
- issues which had arisen in negotiation. The Government contended that such
- mediation fulfilled the requirements of Convention No. 151.
- 117. The Government also pointed out that the Lieutenant Governor's power
- under the Act to terminate the application of the controls to any compensation
- plan had been used with respect to certain municipal employees' retirement
- plan (Regulation 92/83) and to exclude certain handicapped people, persons not
- covered by minimum wage legislation and persons who received less than 50 per
- cent of their expenses from a government employer (Regulations 819/82 and
- 844/82). Moreover, the Act required the Inflation Restraint Board to
- investigate price increases in government services called "administered
- services" referred to it by the Minister. For example, in 1982, the Board had
- investigated a price increase for Northern and Central Gas which had been
- approved by the Ontario Energy Board, and had concluded that the price
- increase did not comply with the Minister's criteria; the proposed price was
- subsequently reduced to bring it into compliance. Moreover, the Cabinet
- Committee on Administered Prices had maintained an increase of only 5 per cent
- in over half the cases submitted to it, e.g. for legal aid fees, beer prices,
- school-bus tariffs, tuition fees for Canadian students, provincial park fees,
- resident fishing licence fees and Northern Telephone Ltd. charges. Thus 92 per
- cent of the adminstered prices had kept within the 5 per cent increase
- guide-line.
- 118. The Government explained that the legislation which replaced Bill 179 as
- of October 1983 - the Public Sector Prices and Compensation Review Act (known
- as Bill 111) - provided for full collective bargaining of both compensation
- and non-compensation issues and allowed the normal strike or arbitration
- procedures when the parties were unable to conclude a collective agreement.
- 119. Lastly, the Government referred to the SEIU's allegations, stating that
- at no time during the operation of the Inflation Restraint Act had the right
- of employees to establish, join and participate fully in organisations of
- their own choosing been withheld. Only situations such as that which had
- arisen in the Broadway Manor case had been affected by the Act; in that case
- only certification had been delayed and certification under Ontario law was
- not a prerequisite to the lawful establishment of or participation in a "new"
- union. The Government stated that its appeal to the Ontario Court of Appeal
- against the Divisional Supreme Court decision in the Broadway Manor case had
- been heard on 4 June 1984 but the decision had not, at the time of the
- Government's reply to the ILO, been rendered. As for the situation in the
- Sensenbrenner Hospital, the Government denied that the Inflation Restraint
- Board had ordered a recovery of the excess payments that had already been
- made, but merely referred the matter back to the parties.
- C. Information obtained during the mission
- 120. During the mission's stay in Toronto I had the opportunity to meet
- representatives of the following organisations: Service Employees
- International Union (local 204), the Ontario Public Service Employees' Union,
- the Canadian Union of Public Employees and the Ontario Teachers' Federation.
- These meetings were followed by a meeting with a number of Government
- officials representing the Province of Ontario. In the course of my meetings
- with the trade union organisations I obtained information in the form of oral
- presentations and written submissions. Written submissions and documentation
- were also supplied on behalf of the provincial government.
- 121. At my initial meetings with the Canadian Labour Congress in Ottawa the
- problems referred to in the complaint resulting from the coming into force, on
- 21 September 1982, of the Inflation Restraint Act (Bill 179), had already been
- mentioned.
- 122. Since the main thrust of the arguments advanced by all the trade unions
- was virtually identical as regards what they considered to be a violation of
- their trade union rights consequent upon the enactment of Bill 179, and to
- some extent, the later enactment, on 10 October 1983, of the Public Sector
- Prices and Compensation Review Act (Bill 111), it will suffice here to
- summarise these arguments and the information supplied in substantiation of
- them.
- 123. I should, at this point, state that I emphasised to all the parties that
- no formal allegations concerning Bill 111 had been submitted to the ILO and
- that, strictly speaking, this legislation fell outside my terms of reference.
- However, since Bill 111 is directly relevant to the issues raised in the
- formal complaints and is the latest act by the Government in the area of
- public sector collective bargaining, I felt that it was appropriate to record
- the unions', as well as the Government's views on this later enactment and its
- effect on public sector bargaining. Indeed, at the time of the mission, Bill
- 111, itself a temporary enactment, was due to expire.
- 124. The principal claim of all the unions was that the enactment of Bill 179
- in September 1982 not only put an end to collective bargaining, and indeed to
- trade union activity, for a period of almost two years, but also prevented the
- coming into force of collective agreements freely concluded prior to the Act.
- Generally, agreements that were due to expire on or after 10 October 1981
- would be extended for a period of 12 months provided that compensation rates
- did not exceed 9 per cent. These agreements on their expiry and every other
- agreement would be deemed to include a provision increasing compensation rates
- by 5 per cent for the ensuing 12-month period. The unions argued that it was
- questionable that the economic situation in the country, and more specifically
- in the province, justified these measures and even if there were economic
- difficulties there was no justification for what amounted to a virtual ban on
- trade union activity for the period during which the Act was to remain in
- force. In effect, since collective bargaining was excluded, even on
- non-monetary issues, there could be no arbitration, which was an accepted
- substitute for the denial of the right to strike in the public service.
- 125. The SEIU, the majority of whose 33,000 members were employed in the
- hospital and nursing home sector said that it had always accepted the
- substitution of the right to strike for the right of independent and binding
- third party arbitration. Bill 179, and subsequently Bill 111, showed that the
- Government supported neither the right to strike nor truly independent and
- impartial arbitration. Similar arguments were advanced by OPSEU, representing
- 80,000 members, who added that the 5 per cent limit on wage increases had
- widened the gap between lower-paid and higher-paid employees. Some 15,000 of
- their members employed in part-time employment, for whom protracted
- negotiations had resulted in a two-year agreement for a 9 per cent and 11 per
- cent increase in increment, had been denied the 11 per cent increase on the
- enactment of Bill 179. Other categories of workers had been similarly
- affected. OPSEU also introduced witnesses who described the effects of Bill
- 179 on laboratory workers and on the support staff of community colleges
- (approx. 5,000) who had been guaranteed, during the 1981 bargaining operation,
- that their wages would be increased by 20 per cent over the following three
- years. All of these categories had suffered under the wage controls imposed by
- Bill 179.
- 126. The CUPE emphasised that Bill 179 not only restrained compensation but
- eliminated the right to bargain effectively with employers over non-monetary
- provisions in a collective agreement. This, they added, had been criticised by
- the Ontario Court of Appeal (Broadway Manor case) in a decision issued on 22
- October 1984, a decision that was of little practical relevance since Bill 179
- had then, for all practical purposes, been replaced by other legislation (Bill
- 111). CUPE also emphasised that during the existence of Bill 179, workers
- governed by the Labour Relations Act were effectively deprived of the right to
- strike. In addition, the possibility of resorting to arbitration by workers
- governed by the provisions of either the Hospital Labour Disputes Arbitration
- Act or the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act was effectively
- eliminated.
- 127. Another point made by CUPE was that, as a result of Bill 179, they had
- originally claimed that the right to organise was infringed since workers
- could not change bargaining agents during the control period. This was another
- matter which has been settled by the Court of Appeal of Ontario in the
- Broadway Manor case. The Court held that the effect of Bill 179 was not to
- extend collective agreements themselves, but only to extend the terms and
- conditions of such agreements. Bill 179 did not, therefore, curtail the right
- to change bargaining agents. As stated above, however, the decision in the
- Broadway Manor case was only handed down on the expiry of Bill 179.
- 128. CUPE provided a number of examples of some 100 agreements, concluded
- prior to the enactment of Bill 179, that had been "rolled back" by the Act,
- and explained that many low-paid workers were affected by this measure. This
- union also mentioned that, in the hospital sector, a close wage relationship
- had always existed between workers represented by CUPE and those represented
- by SEIU. However, the SEIU hospital members, who do exactly the same work as
- CUPE members, were awarded 11 per cent in a one-year contract arbitrated just
- prior to the institution of Bill 179, whereas CUPE members received a maximum
- of 9 per cent in the first year of their agreement, pursuant to the provisions
- of Bill 179. As a result CUPE members were adversely treated in comparison
- with SEIU members simply because of the luck of different termination dates of
- collective agreements.
- 129. The Ontario Teachers' Federation, which represents over 104,000 teachers
- employed in the publicly supported elementary and secondary schools in
- Ontario, also complained that Bill 179, and later Bill 111, had the effect of
- overriding the negotiating process established under the School Boards and
- Teachers' Collective Negotiations Act, 1975, as amended in 1983. In its view
- no economic emergency existed in Ontario to justify the enactment of Bill 179.
- In addition, the right to strike which teachers have in Ontario, was suspended
- during the control period imposed by the Act. Detailed information was
- supplied by the Federation showing the impact of Bill 179 on the wages of
- teachers in the province.
- 130. The Public Sector Prices and Compensation Review Act, 1983 (known as Bill
- 111), which replaced Bill 179 did not, according to the unions, restore free
- collective bargaining but imposed, in a more subtle manner, a further period
- of restrictions on collective bargaining. In effect, Bill 111 provided that,
- during a "restraint period" of 12 months, the Inflation Restraint Board was
- empowered to fix and monitor all changes in compensation in the same broadly
- defined public sector as Bill 179, in order to determine whether compensation
- changes complied with the fiscal policy of the province as determined by the
- Treasurer of Ontario. The Treasurer had announced that increases in average
- compensation should not exceed 5 per cent during this restraint period.
- Furthermore, the Government had announced that government grants and transfers
- to publicly funded institutions covered by Bill 111, as well as allocations to
- its own civil servants would provide for average compensation increases of up
- to 5 per cent. While compensation increases in excess of 5 per cent were
- possible, the Inflation Restraint Board, the Government and leaders of
- municipalities had made it clear that any attempt to exceed the 5 per cent
- guide-line would result in lower transfer payments from the province.
- 131. In submitting these comments on Bill 111, both CUPE and SEIU also
- referred to the requirement, under section 10 of the Bill, that arbitrators
- take into account the "employers' ability to pay (...) in the light of
- existing provincial fiscal policy". According to the unions, the Government,
- using this device, could unilaterally determine the funding of public-sector
- institutions, and the reliance on the employer's ability to pay effectively
- meant that the Government could also unilaterally establish wage rates. Any
- claim of independence and impartiality of the arbitration process was also
- undermined. The Canadian Teachers' Federation submitted similar comments in
- connection with Bill 111.
- 132. In addition, all the unions referred to the fact that a number of a
- well-known interest arbitrators had rejected the criterion of "ability to pay"
- for public-sector wage determination. Statements made by some leading
- arbitrators were produced in which they referred to the "atmosphere of
- intimidation" which the legislation engendered and to the public statements
- made by the Treasurer indicating that, unless the economic policy of the
- Government was followed, restrictive legislation of a long-term nature would
- be introduced.
- 133. With the representatives of the Government of the Province of Ontario I
- raised all the issues that had been brought to my attention during my meetings
- with the various public sector unions. The Government representatives claimed
- that compelling reasons of national and provincial economic interest had led
- the Government to conclude that it should control wage rates in the public
- sector. In 1982, they explained, Ontario was experiencing recession,
- double-digit inflation (11-12 per cent), loss of international competitiveness
- and loss of jobs in the private sector (approximately 164,000 jobs in Ontario
- alone). The restrictions on public-sector wages contained in Bill 179 were
- imposed as an exceptional measure. The Bill was not intended to restructure
- labour legislation in the province, nor was it intended to be permanent. Bill
- 179 imposed wage controls for only 12 months for the majority of the
- employees, and only 31 per cent of the employees affected were subject to the
- transition period which could extend controls for two years. No employees were
- now affected by Bill 179.
- 134. The subsequent legislation (the Public Sector Prices and Compensation
- Review Act, 1983 - Bill 111), established a guide-line for public-sector
- increases for a one-year period. In the case of public-sector employees whose
- agreements were determined by interest arbitration, the new legislation
- required interest arbitrators to cost any change in the terms of collective
- agreements and to consider the employer's ability to pay. In the case of
- public-sector employees who negotiated agreements (including those who had the
- right to strike) the legislation required the filing of information with
- respect to any changes in the compensation plan. If an arbitrator determined,
- or the parties agreed to wage increases in excess of the 5 per cent
- guide-line, the legislation had no mechanism to "roll back" the wage increases
- thus determined or negotiated. The Government representatives added that,
- since Bill 111 was now at an end, no wage restraint legislation was presently
- in force in Ontario.
- 135. The Government representatives further explained that, in considering the
- economic situation in 1982 a number of options for action had been considered,
- including a national programme of wage and price controls. Because a consensus
- with the other provinces could not be reached on this, and because of the
- difficulties encountered by reason of the nature of the Province of Ontario
- itself as regards a possible programme covering public and private-sector
- workers, a programme controlling prices and wages in the public sector alone
- was decided.
- 136. The Government emphasised that safeguards were provided to protect
- workers' living standards. In addition to controlling prices, the rate of
- inflation was lowered (to less than 11 per cent during the third quarter of
- 1982). Since Bill 179 was introduced, inflation had continued to drop, and for
- the first quarter of 1985, it stood at 3.6 per cent. Public-sector job
- security and employment was also maintained at a time when there was much job
- loss in the private sector. Fair and reasonable increases were also ensured
- for employees covered by the legislation. In this connection, the Government
- supplied statistical information showing that increases under the legislation
- were comparable to private-sector wage increases and had in fact exceeded
- private-sector wage increases since the fourth quarter of 1983. Bill 179 also
- made provision for minimum increases, low-income earners and for wage
- adjustments. It also permitted newly certified unions, i.e. those certified
- prior to the enactment of Bill 179, to freely negotiate compensation increases
- for the period leading into the control period in their first agreements. The
- ability to change non-compensatory items of a collective agreement by mutual
- consent was also maintained by the Act as was eventually shown by the decision
- of the Ontario Court of Appeal to this effect in the Broadway Manor case.
- 137. Referring to the SEIU complaint that Bill 179 had suspended the right to
- change bargaining agents, the right to bargain collectively on non-monetary
- items and the right to strike or to resort to interest arbitration, the
- Government representatives referred to the decision of the Court of Appeal in
- the Broadway Manor case which established that the union was wrong in its
- allegations. The Court had, however, expressed some doubt that the employees
- could strike or resort to arbitration without actually making any decision on
- this point.
- 138. The Government added that a wide range of consultations had taken place
- prior to the enactment of Bill 179 and there had been a broad political
- consensus for its adoption. The Government had been satisfied with the results
- of Bill 179 and had replaced it by Bill 111 which was not an exceptional
- measure taken in a period of crisis. Bill 111 was intended as a further step
- towards a normal situation and re-established collective bargaining in the
- public sector. The continuing existence of the Inflation Restraint Board was
- merely for the purpose of ensuring its participation in current litigation.
- 139. As regards the requirement, under Bill 111, that interest arbitrators
- take account of provincial fiscal policy and the ability to pay of the
- employer, the Government representatives pointed out that sums transferred to
- public institutions had always been decided upon by the Government. Under Bill
- 111 the amounts were clearly stated. In cases where the 5 per cent norm was
- exceeded either by arbitrators or by the needs of a public institution ways
- could be found to provide the extra funds required.
- 140. Regarding the unions' concern that the Government had appeared to be
- constantly trying to find ways of reducing flexibility and placing pressures
- on arbitrators, which eroded and damaged confidence in the arbitration system,
- the Government representatives emphasised that arbitrators were merely asked
- in Bill 111 to keep certain criteria in mind. Many did not feel bound by these
- criteria and some 200 awards had been made in 1984/85, the majority of these
- exceeding negotiated settlements. Under the Labour Relations Act, a panel of
- arbitrators had been established for grievance disputes and it was generally
- from this panel that arbitrators were selected to deal with interest disputes.
- The Government admitted that its information on wage settlements in certain
- sectors (e.g. in the municipalities) was inadequate but that efforts were
- being made to resolve this problem.
- 141. On the question of "roll backs", the Government admitted that this had
- been seen to be harsh but again stated that they had been dictated by economic
- necessity. The Government also pointed out that it could not recall, apart
- from one or two cases, that the problem of the absence of negotiations on
- non-monetary items to have been a significant one.
- 142. The Government also admitted that there might be some longer-term effects
- of Bill 179, for example on job evaluation and classification programmes, but
- it was expected that the return to collective bargaining would resolve any
- anomalies that remained. It was also clear that, in some cases, employers had
- taken advantage of the legislation by refusing to pay negotiated wage
- increases. This was, however, a matter for the courts and one over which the
- Government had little control.
- 143. Referring again to the decision in the Broadway Manor case and the
- problem of changing bargaining agents during the one-year period of control
- under Bill 179, the Government explained that it had considered this matter
- prior to the Bill's adoption. It had been thought that it was inappropriate
- for a change in bargaining agent to take place during that period since the
- incoming union would not be able to negotiate. The Government had discussed
- this question with the unions whose reaction to the problem had been a mixed
- one. In any event, according to the Government, since the public service
- unions were well-established it was unlikely that any challenge would have
- been made during the control period. The Government recalled that newly
- certified unions were not affected by what was subsequently proved - by the
- decision in the Broadway Manor case - to be a false problem.
- D. Concluding remarks
- 144. An obvious feature of this complaint is that it concerns the provisions
- and effects of the Inflation Restraint Act, 1982 (Bill 179) which is no longer
- in force. Indeed, that statute was followed by Bill 111, a measure which
- itself is due to expire at the end of September 1985. No further legislation
- in this area has been proposed at the present time. It is none the less
- important to complete the process of assessing Bill 179 against ILO standards.
- Even though it is no longer in effect, apart from some residual matters
- remaining for technical purposes, there is still a strong divergence of views
- in the province as to its nature and effect. In addition, it has been
- suggested that some practices introduced by the legislation will continue to
- operate as a result of informal administrative action. This point, too, has
- to be considered.
- 145. Bill 179 was enacted to counter rising inflation. Its effect, put
- generally, was to impose a fairly rigid control of wages in the public sector.
- This was built around a "control year" with a limit of a 5 per cent increase.
- This was embedded in less severe controls which could be effective as a 9 per
- cent ceiling. The whole exercise could affect a particular bargaining unit
- over a two-year period. It was suggested that the Government had failed to
- establish that there was in fact an economic crisis. There had been
- insufficient research and understanding of the problem. It was also said that
- wage increases would have fallen year by year without legislative
- interference. Both these beliefs are of course matters of opinion. The basic
- data is not seriously in dispute. There is a marked difference of
- interpretation between the trade unions who made these points and the
- Government. It was suggested that such divergence of view should be resolved
- by some independent mechanism, such as the courts. It is difficult to see the
- necessity in principle for such a fetter upon the exercise of the political
- will. There is every opportunity for the matters concerned to be tested
- through debate in the political forum.
- 146. Since the public sector was being singled out for special control, on the
- assumption that wages in the private sector would follow the trend set, it
- does seem essential that there should be ample time allowed for consultation.
- Failure to do this might indicate that the action was indeed precipitate and
- partisan. There was no complaint about lack of consultation. What was said was
- that the views of the trade unions had no discernible effect on the attitude
- and actions of the Government. That is a different matter.
- 147. So far, these remarks relate to the political aspects of the concern
- expressed. The actions do raise, however, practical and legal considerations.
- The most obvious is the impact the legislation had upon existing collective
- agreements. They were subject in many cases to amendment in particular a
- lesser wage increase being allowed. A lawyer can characterise such action as
- the expropriation of rights.
- 148. Such a result is difficult to avoid where a scheme of restraint is
- imposed which it is intended should have a speedy effect. The Government was
- aware of the problem and chose to apply what it regarded as "rough justice".
- Indeed attention was paid to attempting to mitigate some of the consequences.
- Most notable was some degree of protection of the first agreement, that is to
- say, the first agreement made after a trade union has secured bargaining
- rights. Such agreements often involve substantial improvements in terms and
- conditions. This was recognised by the leglisation and the impact of the 5 per
- cent delayed to allow the first agreement to operate.
- 149. Despite these concerns, the legislation appears to have had a greater
- impact on free collective bargaining than was intended or anticipated. Three
- aspects of this appear to be particularly important: the "chilling effect" on
- collective bargaining generally, damage to policies being pursued by the trade
- unions from bargain to bargain and the machinery for certification during the
- so-called "open" period.
- 150. Although the legislation applied only to monetary items it seems to have
- had an effect on matters not covered by the Act on which the parties were free
- to bargain. In part this was made more likely because there had been the
- anticipation of a switch of bargaining to non-monetary items. Some steps had
- been taken to prevent this being used to undermine the intended financial
- control. There can be little doubt that there were items adversely affected,
- health and safety issues spring to mind. Now the problem can be seen in the
- light of experience; it can be tackled should such a need arise in the future.
- Particular attention should be paid to the availability of the disputes
- resolution mechanisms so that normal relations can continue hampered only by
- the minimum of restrictions needed to secure the objects of the emergency
- measures.
- 151. The general objectives which the trade unions in the public sector were
- pursuing and which suffered setbacks are, for example, remedying low pay and
- seeking equality for women. Both objectives are legitimate, indeed
- praiseworthy. There can be no doubt that Bill 179 constituted a check to their
- progress. Most obvious is the use of a norm for pay increases expressed as a
- percentage, rather than as a flat increase. The Government accepts that this
- consequence occurred and points out that some steps had been taken to mitigate
- the result. Some of the provisions did seek to give special advantages to the
- lower paid: the highest were to some extent held back. Whether enough was done
- is in dispute. Recognition of the need to take into account such
- considerations when legislation is being prepared seems to be accepted. This
- seems to be an important point.
- 152. The third example of the wider effects of the legislation concerns the
- "closing" of the "open" period which is a feature of the Canadian industrial
- relations system. The legislation purported to close the open period of the
- control year. This was thought to deny the unions the right to gain
- certification. The matter was taken to the courts. Again, it is clear that the
- object of the provision was to secure as much industrial relations tranquility
- as possible during the restraint period. The question raised is whether such
- action was convenient and useful rather than necessary. It would need detailed
- knowledge of what the precise effect was during the operation of Bill 179 but
- prima facie the limitation appears to seek to avoid disturbance rather than
- secure an essential component of the limitation plan.
- 153. Attention was drawn to the Broadway Manor case and two comments might be
- useful. The decision was that the open period was not in fact closed - a
- distinction being made between terms and conditions which were continued and
- the collective agreement which did not. The decision turned of course on the
- precise wording of the provisions of Bill 179. In that it has narrow interest,
- but wider considerations arise. The case shows the importance of prior
- discussion of all the possible consequences of proposed legislation, that is
- to say, of consultation. What is decided then will be effective. On the other
- hand, reliance on the courts to clarify or interpret the legislation may bring
- changes but these will almost invariably prove ineffective since the decision
- is unlikely to be available during the currency of legislation which is short
- term. Consultation not only on the wider issues - should a provision be
- enacted - may merely lead to reaffirmation of the policy proposed but, on the
- practical consequences, what exactly is likely to happen might lead to
- sensible modifications being adopted.
- 154. One of the clearest and most important points put to us by the various
- trade unions was the impact the legislation has had on the regular industrial
- relations machinery. Various examples were given. It was felt that the
- employer, where his financial ability to meet trade union claims was severely
- limited by government fiscal policy, was unable to bargain with freedom. The
- scope of his flexibility might vary but his attitude was significantly
- altered. There were some signs of this in some of the instances put but there
- was too little information to enable the position in the Province of Ontario
- to be confidently assessed.
- 155. The problems the legislation and subsequent practice have posed for the
- important component of the system, independent arbitration, are much clearer
- and were put forward with much greater force. During the period when Bill 179
- operated on collective bargaining, of course norms were in effect substituted
- for arbitration. Since then, under Bill 111, the idea of a norm, or desirable
- maximum increase formulated by the Government has continued. Arbitrators are
- given quite specific indications of the Government's view and are expected to
- take this into account. There are widely differing views on the effect of this
- practice, which appears likely to continue. It must be true that arbitrators
- will always have in mind the economic background in which they are operating.
- Many independent arbitrators are academics but few live in such ivory towers,
- as is commonly supposed, as not to have a clear awareness of these factors. In
- the unlikely chance of this being lacking, no doubt the parties will raise the
- issue in their statements. On the other hand, the publication to the
- arbitrator of a norm may have some effect. Again empirical evidence is less
- than clear since, alas, it is not possible to assume that when an arbitrator
- says he has "taken into account" such a figure, he is indicating that he has
- or has not been greatly influenced by it. There are ample instances of the
- arbitrator expressing scepticism. To balance this it appears that several
- arbitrators have refused to act feeling that their freedom of action was
- fettered.
- 156. The independence of arbitration is of paramount importance. It is the
- feature of the system in the public sector which seeks to balance the
- non-existence of the right to strike. That equation is one which not all those
- giving evidence accept as fair or proper but that question does not arise at
- this time. What is important is that where that system operates, arbitration
- must be independent. Confidence in arbitration is easily destroyed so
- everything must be done to ensure that doubts as to independence should be
- assuaged. It is not a question of testing or challenging their validity. It is
- essential to see whether steps can be properly taken to strengthen
- independence. One significant point put concerns the appointment of
- arbitrators. If at all possible, this should be done by a body independent of
- Government, a Labour Relations Board, a court and so on, depending on the
- particular structure. It is a matter that would require serious consideration
- by the provincial authorities.
- 157. Finally, it is necessary to note that the way in which these remarks are
- to be interpreted depends very much on whether inflation restraint secured by
- putting pressure on the public sector in particular is to continue. It has
- already been noted that Bill 111 does not appear to have a successor.
- Continuation of the policy, if at all, will be through administrative and
- practical measures. Experience indicates that they can play an important part
- in the Government's policy. If they do, since the method adopted is informal,
- greater care will be essential to ensure that the damage to industrial
- relations structures, especially the right to seek certification, to bargain
- collectively and to enjoy truly independent arbitration, does not occur. The
- trade union apprehensions appear to run ahead of what is happening -
- justifiably so. Awareness of these fears and discussion of the problems should
- help to avoid unwitting damage to the very vital safeguards built into current
- Ontario legislation.
- VI. Case of Newfoundland: No. 1260
- A. Introduction
- 158. This case has its origin in a formal complaint submitted, on 3 February
- 1984, by the Canadian Labour Congress on behalf of the Newfoundland
- Association of Public Employees (NAPE) which belongs to the National Union of
- Provincial Government Employees (NUPGE), an affiliate of the CLC. The
- Government's observations in response to the complaint were contained in a
- communication of 29 May 1984.
- B. The issues
- 159. On 19 August 1983 an Act (known as Bill 59) was proclaimed the object of
- which was to introduce amendments to the the Public Service (Collective
- Bargaining) Act, 1973. According to the CLC these amendments are in violation
- of ILO Conventions Nos. 87, 98 and 151 in three different areas: the
- definition of "employee" contained in section 2(1) of the Bill, the
- designation of "essential" employees (section 10), and the limitation placed
- on strike action (sections 10(12), 23 and 24). According to the CLC Bill 59
- was the latest in a series of restrictive anti-union enactments introduced to
- control wages in the public service and limit the possibilities for strike
- action.
- 160. The Government of Newfoundland explained that, between 1973 (when the
- Public Service (Collective Bargaining) Act extended bargaining rights to
- employees of the Provincial Government) and 1983, it had become obvious that
- section 10 of the Act was not effective in that almost every application
- before the Labour Relations Board had been found by either the Board or the
- courts to be defective in some respect. Section 10 clearly needed to be
- amended to provide for the designation of essential employees whose services
- were necessary for the health, safety or security of the public. In addition,
- unions continued to apply to the Labour Relations Board for inclusion in
- bargaining units of management and confidential employees and, although the
- Board generally rejected these efforts, it was determined that the Act should
- also be amended to remedy an oversight in the legislation and explicitly state
- the exclusions. According to the Government, no amendments had been made to
- the basic Act prior to Bill 59. Because of preliminary discussions with
- various public service unions and concerns expressed regarding three
- particular sections, the Act had been made subject to proclamation. The
- Minister of Labour had contacted each of the public service unions and had
- invited recommendations to be submitted to the Government regarding expressed
- concerns. No concrete proposals or written submissions were received by the
- Government and, accordingly, on 19 August 1983 the amending Act was proclaimed
- to come into force on 1 September 1983.
- (i) Exclusions from the definition of "employee"
- 161. The CLC maintained that the amended definition of "employee" had resulted
- in the exclusion of more than 2,000 government employees from membership of
- NAPE and prevented them from joining any other union. This group included
- justice department solicitors, legislative staff, middle management and
- consultants and could exclude a number of employees who currently had union
- membership with the bargaining agent that represented provincial government
- employees, namely NAPE. The complainant considered as particularly offensive
- new section 2(1)(i)(xii) which specifically prohibits people hired for
- programmes sponsored by Government grants and working for the provincial
- government from joining a union; it suspected that the provincial government
- would use this subsection to lay off permanent employees and hire non-union
- personnel to do the work of those laid off, work which had traditionally been
- done by members of the bargaining unit concerned.
- 162. In its written response to the complaint, the Government stated that the
- amendments to section 2 had been necessary to prevent interference by
- employers in trade union activities and to avoid conflicts of interest
- involving management staff. It pointed out that the exclusions described in
- section 2(l)(i)(viii), (ix), (x) and (xi) concerned high-level employees whose
- functions are normally considered as policy-making or managerial, or employees
- whose duties are of a highly confidential nature as contemplated in Article
- l.2 of Convention No. 151. The Government stated that none of these employees
- had been members of bargaining units at the time of enactment of Bill 59, nor
- had the union involved ever made application for inclusion in a bargaining
- unit of any of these categories of employees. According to the Government, the
- exclusions provided for in section 2(1)(i)(xiii), (xiv) and (xv) concern
- persons on whom the Labour Relations Board, and not the Government, makes a
- determination as to the appropriateness of inclusion in a bargaining unit.
- These employees would be those who, in the opinion of the Board, performed
- management or supervisory functions, or were employed in a confidential
- capacity in matters relating to labour relations. In the past, in utilising
- these criteria the Board had taken a fairly restrictive approach to exclusions
- from the bargaining unit.
- 163. The Government stated that section 2(l)(i)(xv) allows for the exclusion
- of employees who, in the opinion of the Board, provide advice to the employer
- in relation to the development or administration of policies or programmes and
- that it was senior consultants who were intended to be excluded from the
- bargaining units under this provision. Although these employees might not be
- supervisors in the normal sense of the word, or have access to confidential
- labour relations information, according to the Government they did form an
- essential part of the senior management team in many government organisations
- and were therefore clearly inappropriate for inclusion in a bargaining unit.
- The Government emphasised that there had been no decisions by the Labour
- Relations Board interpreting this provision to date.
- 164. As regards section 2(l)(i)(xii) the Government stated that this was an
- amendment to deal with a unique situation concerning which there had been a
- written agreement with the union concerned, namely that of individuals
- receiving social assistance from the Provincial Government, with the aim of
- helping them to become self-sufficient by introducing them to the workforce
- and of qualifying them for unemployment insurance benefits. The Government
- explained that many of these individuals had no work experience or job skills,
- thus making it virtually impossible for them to obtain employment in difficult
- times; they were placed throughout the province with a variety of employers,
- many in the private sector, in order for them to learn a skill or gain some
- experience so that they might find a job in the future; they were not
- employees in the true sense of the word since they were not required to report
- for work, and, if they did not, they simply returned to social assistance; the
- Government paid their wages and employment was for a specified period of time.
- The Government pointed out that the union had agreed that these individuals
- would not be required to pay union dues and would not be covered by collective
- agreements. However, in May 1983, the union refused to honour its agreement,
- which had led to the introduction of this legislative amendment. The
- Government maintained that it was clearly inappropriate for normal union
- hiring and recall provisions to apply to this type of unique programme; if
- this had been the case, the programme would have been significantly impaired,
- if not rendered inoperable, causing hardship for many needy people.
- 165. The Government's final point concerning the definition of "employee"
- under the amended Act was that the excluded employees did enjoy freedom of
- association and the right to organise. Neither did Convention No. 87 nor
- Convention No. 98 impose an obligation on Government to grant certification
- rights for the purpose of collective bargaining. Excluded employees were able
- to organise and negotiate their conditions of employment collectively, often
- on an informal basis, and often on a formal basis when the Government had
- voluntarily recognised certain associations and bargained with them on behalf
- of their membership, e.g. Newfoundland and Labrador Association of
- Superintendents of Education and the Newfoundland Medical Association.
- (ii) Designation of "essential" employees
- 166. As regards the amendment to section 10 of the Act which defines the
- method of designating essential employees, the complainant cited the
- restrictions contained in subsections 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 and 8. Subsection 1
- empowers the employer of employees in a bargaining unit to provide the
- provincial Labour Relations Board with a statement in writing as to the number
- of employees whom it considers to be essential. Under subsection 2, where no
- objection is made to this statement before the Board the number of employees
- specified shall be deemed to be the number of essential employees; where an
- objection is made to the written statement before the Board, under subsection
- 3, the Board after considering the objection and affording the bargaining
- agent and employer an opportunity to make representations and to be heard
- shall determine the number of employees who are essential. Once this process
- is completed the employer, under subsection 7, shall name the employees in the
- unit who are essential; under subsection 8 the employer has the right to
- substitute names. According to the complainant, subsection 1 allows the
- employer to make a statement at any time to the Board on the number of
- employees it considers essential, there being no restrictions as to the number
- of times that the employer can make that statement. This permits the employer
- to participate in strike-breaking activities because, for example, an employer
- could designate few employees as essential in the initial stages of a strike
- and designate more and more employees as essential as the strike progressed so
- as to make strike action pointless. In addition, the combination of
- subsections 2, 3 and 7 of section 10 enables employers to determine that only
- some employees in a classification are essential while certain other employees
- performing exactly the same duties need not be declared essential.
- 167. The complainant alleged another discriminatory element in the process of
- designating essential employees under Bill 59: the Labour Relations Board was
- now restricted from operating in an independent manner because, under section
- 10(3), it could not increase the number of essential employees from the figure
- that was contained in the employer's statement. For example, when an employer
- designated 49 per cent of bargaining unit members as essential, for all
- practical purposes strikes were outlawed, and employees were prevented from
- taking their case to arbitration under the Act because a majority was
- necessary for such action.
- 168. According to the complainant section 10(12) also violated the rights of
- public sector workers; it provides that a strike vote cannot be taken until
- any dispute involving the determination of essential employees is settled.
- Thus even the polling of a union's members to get an indication of the
- feelings towards strike action is prohibited.
- 169. The complainant stated that the most repressive feature of the amendment
- to the designation of essential services employees was the fact that employees
- who had been deemed essential lost all their rights with respect to employment
- - they were not covered by a collective agreement and they were not covered by
- the basic labour standards legislation. In addition, section 10(11) allows the
- employer to terminate immediately the employment of an essential employee who
- fails to report to work, without that employee having access to any appeals
- procedure. Subsection 11 reads as follows: "Where an employee named by the
- employer as an essential employee does not report for work as required under
- subsection 10, the employer shall forthwith terminate the employment of that
- employee, unless the employer is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds
- for the employee not so reporting".
- 170. In its written observations on the question of essential employees, the
- Government stated that the 1973 Act did not take away the right to strike from
- any particular group of employees, but only from those individuals in any
- given bargaining unit which the Labour Relations Board might determine were
- necessary for the health, safety or security of the public. The Government
- stated that the 1973 version of section 10 had not achieved its purpose since
- the unions effectively thwarted the Government's applications to the Board for
- a determination of essential employees. At first, few strikes had taken place
- in areas affecting the health, safety or security of the public and those that
- had taken place were of relatively short duration; emergency services could be
- provided by management employees and, in some cases, the unions had allowed
- some bargaining unit members to work in emergency situations. The situation
- changed, however, in 1981 when the laboratory and X-ray employees took strike
- action. According to the Government, the union provided emergency services but
- not essential services, emergency services being provided only in cases where
- there was an immediate threat to life. Management employees were able to
- provide additional services so that for a period of time hospitals had been
- able to cope. The strike continued beyond a month's duration and difficulties
- arose, forcing the Government to act by introducing Bill 111 which provided
- for the designation of approximately one-third of the bargaining unit to
- provide essential services. This Act had been repealed with effect from the
- date of signing a new collective agreement to cover laboratory and X-ray
- employees and, in any case, on the date of the enactment of Bill 111, the
- union had called off the strike. Following the conclusion of this difficult
- situation, the Government had decided that the 1973 Act would have to be
- amended to provide a workable method of designating essential employees by an
- independent tribunal prior to a strike. Therefore Bill 59 introduced new
- essential employee provisions; employees could strike but essential services
- would have to be maintained. The Government explained that, under the
- amendment, the Labour Relations Board determined the number of employees in
- any particular classification that was required to provide essential services.
- This determination was based on the submission from the employer and provided
- for intervention by the bargaining agent. After the union and the employer had
- agreed, or the Board had determined the number of employees, the employer
- named the individuals and might substitute those names. This was necessary,
- stated the Government, so that the employer might choose employees who could
- do the required work since employees in the same classification might be
- somewhat specialised, e.g. critical-care staff or general day nurses. It also
- allowed the employer to substitute names of employees who had resigned,
- retired or taken leave of absence.
- 171. Regarding the allegation that the Labour Relations Board was now
- prohibited from operating independently, since it could not increase the
- number of essential employees contained in the employer's statement, the
- Government stated that it or the employer, and not the Labour Relations Board,
- had to determine the level of service which had to be provided to ensure that
- the health, safety or security of the public was not jeopardised. It claimed
- that there would be a dereliction of public duty if the employer were to seek
- a lower number of employees than reasonably necessary to perform the required
- level of service. It pointed out that where the number of employees deemed
- essential exceeded 50 per cent, the bargaining unit had the right to advise
- the employer and the Board that every employee would be deemed essential, and
- thus the right to compulsory binding arbitration was available to the
- bargaining agent pursuant to section 29 of the Act.
- 172. The Government stated that, under section 10(12), strikes and strike
- votes which led to strikes were not permitted until the number - not the names
- - of essential employees had been agreed between the parties or determined by
- the Board. The employer could not delay the determination of the number of
- essential employees unilaterally since section 10(1) allowed the union to
- request the Labour Relations Board to order the employer to make the necessary
- submissions. The Government emphasised that section 10(12) did not prohibit
- the union in any way from polling its members to ascertain their feelings
- towards job action; it merely provided that a strike vote leading to a strike
- pursuant to section 23 could not be taken prior to a determination of
- essential employees. According to the Government, this was similar to a
- provision which stated that a strike vote could not be taken until
- conciliation proceedings have been completed.
- 173. The Government maintained that employees who were named essential and
- reported to work did not lose all their rights with respect to employment.
- Section 10(10) provided that they must report to work as if a strike were not
- taking place, which meant that the provisions of the expired collective
- agreement continued to govern essential employees. The essential employees who
- worked through a strike were automatically entitled to all benefits that the
- striking employees were able to obtain upon settlement of the strike. In
- addition, the Government repeated that, if more than 50 per cent of the
- employees in a bargaining unit were deemed essential, all employees had the
- right to binding arbitration. As regards the allegation that because of the
- designation of essential employees, strike action would prove a useless tool,
- the Government stated that this was a premature statement in view of the fact
- that no orders had yet been issued by the Board. The Government also pointed
- out that an essential employee who failed to report to work without reasonable
- grounds was subject to termination, but since the expired collective agreement
- continued to govern essential employees who were not on strike, the grievance
- provisions likewise remained in effect. Employees were always subject to
- dismissal for just cause and the legislation merely stated that failure to
- report to work without a valid excuse would be just cause. The employer's
- action and the employee's reasonable grounds would continue to be subject to
- the scrutiny of arbitrators and the courts.
- (iii) Limitations on strike action
- 174. The third amendment introduced by Bill 59 which was the subject of the
- complaint concerned section 23, which now provided that employees who opt for
- strike action are required by law to give 38 days' (one month plus seven days)
- notice before they are legally able to strike. In addition, section 24 of the
- Act had been amended so that workers in health care institutions did not have
- the right to strike on a rotating basis. According to the complainant,
- sections 23 and 24 as they now read served no other purpose than to limit
- union members in their freedom to express themselves, as well as the right to
- strike to a particular means of striking. It pointed out that the employer,
- when drafting the legislation, had decided to attack solely the union since
- the legislation did not provide for any reciprocal provisions concerning the
- employer, such as lock-out.
- 175. Concerning the limitation on strike action, the Government pointed out
- that, under the 1973 Act, a seven-day notice prior to taking strike action was
- required. This provision had not been altered except that where strike action
- did not commence on the notified date, a one-month's delay was required before
- another notice was permitted. The Government explained that this provision had
- been included to prevent a union from closing an institution, such as a
- hospital, without actually going on strike. When a hospital was notified that
- a strike was to take place, operations had to be significantly curtailed and
- the hospital was geared down to providing only essential services whether or
- not the employees actually withdrew their services. The new provision required
- that the employees give the institution an opportunity to return to
- operational status for a reasonable period of time if they did not strike on
- the date originally intended.
- 176. Regarding rotating strikes, the Government stated that such action in
- health service institutions had been prohibited so as to avoid a situation
- where persons were admitted to hospital and scheduled for surgery and, with no
- further notice, employees of that hospital went on strike. Rotating strikes in
- health service institutions created life-threatening situations and, stated
- the Government, were completely unacceptable. It pointed out, however, that
- these two provisions covering the timing and nature of strike action had no
- effect on the right to strike or the effectiveness of job action once taken,
- but were reasonable limitations taken only in the interests of protecting the
- health and safety of the public and did not amount to an infringement of
- freedom of association. The Government considered that the allegation that the
- amendment did not include an accompanying prohibition on rotating lock-outs is
- difficult to understand since such action would never benefit health service
- institutions.
- 177. In conclusion, the Government stated that the amendments under
- examination had been made to protect the health, safety and security of the
- public and not intended to discriminate or interfere in lawful union
- activities. It pointed out that the Committee on Freedom of Association had
- recognised that exclusion from trade unions and the collective bargaining
- process of public servants occupying managerial or supervisory positions of
- trust was justified. The Government maintained that the amendment to section
- 2(1) had excluded such employees from a bargaining unit but left them free to
- join associations to protect their occupational interests; such associations
- had been recognised by the Government and bargaining had taken place with
- them. As regards the other specific exclusions listed in section 2(1)(i)(viii)
- to (xii) the Government stated that it had no control over such exclusions
- since applications had to be made to the Labour Relations Board which made
- decisions based on established precedent and labour law principles relevant to
- exclusions from the bargaining unit. It pointed out that, over the past
- several years, most inclusions/exclusions in government departments had been
- settled by agreement between the union concerned and the employer with only a
- very few disputed positions being taken to the Labour Relations Board for a
- determination. As regards the allegation that the new method of designating
- essential employees discriminated against union activists, the Government
- stated that there had been no interference in union organisation and no
- instances of an employee having to join or relinquish membership in a trade
- union. According to the Government it was in the employer's interest to have
- employees who would perform essential services and it was employer policy not
- to designate union executives and officials unless they were the only
- individuals in the classification who were able to perform the required work.
- It reiterated that the amendments to the legislation concerning the timing or
- nature of strike action were not unnecessary interferences in the union's
- activities or programmes, but merely laid down preconditions to the
- implementation of a strike. It stated that the union was free to poll its
- members and conduct ballots to determine the feeling of the membership towards
- job action and that only the formal strike vote which culminated in a strike
- might not be taken until essential employees had been designated.
- C. Information obtained during the mission
- 178. I had extensive discussions on the issues raised in this case with both
- the NAPE and the provincial government representatives, headed by the
- Assistant Deputy Minister, on the spot in St. John's, Newfoundland and in
- Ottawa where CLC and NUPGE representatives also spoke to me about Bill 59.
- Once again, the oral submissions of the parties were supplemented by extensive
- written submissions, handed to me in St. John's.
- 179. The first point that emerged during these discussions was that the
- healthy industrial relations climate which had reigned in the Province since
- the 1950s had fallen to an adversarial one. According to the union, partly due
- to the recession, partly in over-reaction to an increasing radicalism in
- certain civil service unions, and perhaps partly due to an aversion on both
- sides to seek interest arbitration, the Government interferred in the
- collective bargaining process with Bill 59. NAPE's view was that, prior to
- Bill 59, responsibility for the decline in labour relations lay as much with
- the unions because of their radicalism as with the Goverment because of its
- paternalistic approach. The unions, however, could not be blamed for the
- "panic" of the Government in enacting Bill 59 which was utterly pro-employer
- in character and which would only lead to a further deterioration in labour
- relations. The background to the introduction of the legislation in Parliament
- evidences the misunderstanding between the parties at present, a point which
- will be referred to further on in this report.
- (a) Consultations
- 180. The union stressed during our discussions that it had, in effect, only
- been given one day's notice when the draft legislation was tabled. There were
- no public hearings on the proposed amendments and NAPE had been under the
- impression that Bill 59 as a whole was subject to proclamation whereas only
- the three disputed areas (definition of employee, designation of essential
- employees and the strike provisions) were held in abeyance and gazetted at a
- later date. NAPE claimed that Bill 59 had eroded any previous trust that
- existed beween the parties and caused a situation of confrontation. According
- to the union, the reason for the introduction of this legislation had been
- clearly a growing contempt by the Government for the unions and their
- increasing strength as well as a lack of respect for the unions' ability to
- represent the interests of their members. The situation prior to Bill 59 had
- been satisfactory with 294 contracts having been concluded. The arbitration
- system and the selection of arbitrators from a panel established by the Labour
- Management Co-operation Committee had also been satisfactory.
- 181. The Government, on the other hand, explained that copies of the draft
- amendments had been given to the union very shortly before they were tabled in
- Parliament. The difficulties with the basic collective bargaining Act and with
- section 10 in particular had been discussed with NAPE representatives on many
- occasions in the past. The Government delayed proclamation of the disputed
- parts of Bill 59 and informed the union that it wanted to receive its
- suggestions on them. However, according to the Government, no written
- submissions were received; only a general tape-recorded description of the
- problems was handed in to the Ministry of Labour. This the Government took to
- be a lack of interest in face-to-face discussion. The provisions were then
- proclaimed and came into force on 1 September 1983. The Government could not
- explain why the union backed off at this juncture although it recognised that
- it may had been due to the breakdown in the informal, co-operative relations
- which the union had had with the Government as employer in the past.
- (b) The definition of employee
- 182. According to NAPE, in the amendment of section 2(1) in Bill 59 the
- Government had effectively excluded up to 2,000 workers from union membership
- which some had previously enjoyed. NAPE was concerned with the exclusion from
- the definition of employee of persons employed in an employment opportunity
- programme administered by the provincial Government with its own and/or
- federal monies (section 2(1)(i)(xii)). The union pointed out that this
- exclusion from coverage of the Act does not apply to similar programmes
- administered by other levels of government such as school boards and
- municipalities. It claimed that the aim of such programmes was not to train
- the unemployed to enter the workforce, but to transfer them from the
- provincial payroll to the federal payroll. Since such persons could not join a
- union, it was more difficult to negotiate increases in union members'
- benefits, and the union felt threatened by this source of scab labour should
- strikes occur and the possible reduction in working time of union members.
- NAPE was particularly suspicious of this provision given that it has made many
- agreements with employers not covered by the Act (municipalities, the College
- of Fisheries, private hospitals) allowing employment opportunity programmes in
- workplaces where it represents workers. From copies of such agreements handed
- to me, it appeared that NAPE's only precondition for accepting non-union
- workers in such workplaces was the protection of the job security and benefits
- of its members. The union's other concern with this provision - that it denied
- these persons the right to join a union - was not related to an earlier
- agreement NAPE had had with the Government concerning non-unionisation; that
- agreement had only concerned persons on welfare. According to NAPE, when the
- Government started using these people in programmes, that understanding fell.
- Given that the union was prepared to represent these people on matters not
- connected to their rates of pay which were set under the scheme, more or less
- in line with the minimum wage, and would not expect them to pay dues, it felt
- that the Government ought to have negotiated their situation with NAPE instead
- of legislating them out of coverage under the Act.
- 183. The Government pointed out that the employment opportunity programmes
- were designed to enable unemployed persons to accrue the 20 weeks' workforce
- experience required for entitlement to federal unemployment benefits. When
- NAPE's position on coverage of such persons for non-collective bargaining
- items was put to the Government, there appeared to be further
- misunderstanding: the Government stated that, in 1984-85, about 600 people had
- been involved in the programmes and therefore not entitled to collective
- bargaining, whereas the union had claimed that 2,000 had been without
- collective agreements. Given the temporary employment of people in these
- unique programmes, the Government found it hard to understand why the union
- would be interested in recruiting these people for membership per se but did
- not express opposition to this possibility.
- 184. As regards the exclusion contained in section 2(1)(i)(xv) (persons
- providing advice to the employer in relation to policies or programmes), NAPE
- explained that the past practice of negotiations and Labour Relations Board
- decisions had worked well when disputes - which were quite rare - over this
- type of employee arose. It feared that this amendment could be stretched to
- include such persons as social workers or consultants. It pointed out that the
- Labour Relations Board has refused to grant exemptions for the present until
- judicial challenges to Bill 59 as a whole are completed. The Government
- considered that it had only put into legislative form the criteria of the
- Board's past practice, namely the exclusion of managerial, confidential and
- policy-making employees. It pointed out that this was an exclusion
- specifically recognised in Article 1 of Convention No. 151. I pointed out that
- the union's suspicion might have been the result of a lack of communication as
- to the intent of this provision.
- 185. During these discussions on section 2(1), the Government also emphasised
- that there was no hidden motive behind subsection (ix) - which excludes
- solicitors and legislative counsel from the Act - and pointed out that they do
- form associations and bargain collectively with the employer.
- (c) Questions concerning the right to strike
- 186. Section 2 of the Amendment Act of 1983 (Bill 59) repealed section 10 of
- the Public Service (Collective Bargaining) Act of 1973 which related to the
- designation of essential employees, that is to say "employees whose duties
- consist in whole or in part of duties the performance of which, at any
- particular time or during any specified period of time, is or may be necessary
- for the health, safety or security of the public". While the definition of
- essential employees remained the same after the 1983 amendment, a number of
- issues arose from the further amendments introduced by Bill 59 to the Act of
- 1973.
- 187. NAPE claimed that public-sector unions had always provided essential
- services to protect the health, safety and security of the public. It was
- NAPE's belief, however, that the legislation was being used to give the
- employer, the Government and the Newfoundland Hospital Association, an
- advantage in collective bargaining. NAPE representatives insisted that they
- were fully conscious of the need to provide essential services during labour
- disputes. Bill 59, however, empowered the Labour Relations Board to be final
- arbitrator with respect to essential services. The Board would always err on
- the side of caution in its decisions on essential services, thus favouring the
- employer. It was NAPE's contention that the Board would not appoint more
- essential employees than the number requested by the Government. The result
- was the prevention of more than half of any bargaining unit being designated
- as essential, thereby preventing in turn a resolution of a dispute by
- arbitration; it was obviously the Government's intention to eliminate the
- right to strike, but also to prevent disputes from being resolved through
- arbitration.
- 188. NAPE argued that it was difficult for the union to agree on the
- determination of essential employees since the employer refused to give it
- information on the total number of workers in bargaining units and their job
- classifications.
- 189. According to NAPE, the workers in liquor stores who had previously been
- considered essential, had had their right to strike restored, whereas the
- status of hospital food service workers had not changed, their right to strike
- always having remained intact. It was an anomalous situation when health
- inspectors employed by the provincial Government were considered essential but
- workers not working for the province but who prepared food for a number of
- hospitals were not.
- 190. The Government, according to NAPE, had always been unwilling to settle
- questions of essential employees through negotiation or by following
- alternative disputes settlement procedures. This question was one which had
- been going on for years and the courts and the Labour Relations Board had
- decided that the Government's approach had been impractical.
- 191. If, for example, through negotiations or by decision of the Labour
- Relations Board, 33 per cent of hospital support staff were declared
- essential, this would mean that out of a bargaining unit of 800, 265 would
- remain at work. To this latter figure would be added management and
- non-bargaining unit workers and workers of other bargaining units. In other
- words, a major hospital, during a strike, could have more workers available
- than during the peak annual leave period. It was, in addition, the practice in
- Newfoundland to recruit other workers to replace striking workers. Hospital
- support staff had, therefore, lost their collective bargaining rights through
- this procedure which, in addition, denied them any other disputes settlement
- machinery.
- 192. Under Bill 59, employers could select essential employees as they wished
- or otherwise manipulate strikes by making it difficult to deal with a dispute
- if a large minority of workers were deemed essential and received full pay and
- benefits while those on strike had their regular income interrupted.
- 193. Another aspect of the matter was the ability, according to NAPE, of the
- employer to have a small percentage of the bargaining unit declared essential
- and to return periodically to the Board for further increases in that
- percentage. Such a practice would have the effect of destroying strikes.
- 194. NAPE agreed that the legislation had never been used by the employer in
- this manner but claimed, nevertheless, that these advantages written into the
- legislation had a prejudicial effect on the morale of the workers and on the
- collective bargaining process. The belief, shared by NAPE and by the
- Government, is that there must be levels below which public services should
- not be reduced, should not be used, either by unions or by government, to gain
- advantages in collective bargaining.
- 195. In NAPE's view, the question of essential services should be decided
- through negotiation between the Government and the union, or decided by an
- expert third party. No one should gain any advantage and essential services
- should be shared equally amongst the qualified members of the bargaining unit.
- Since the question of essential services destroys the right to strike, any
- bargaining unit in which the question arises must have an alternative disputes
- settlement procedure at its disposal.
- 196. NAPE also questioned the need of sections 27-29 of the Act which provide
- for a declaration of a state of emergency during a strike where such a strike
- would be injurious to the health or safety of persons, or a group or class of
- persons, or the security of the province.
- 197. The union referred to one case concerning a strike in 1981, of laboratory
- technologists, X-ray technologists, technicians, etc. following the failure of
- the Government to accept the report of a conciliation board. Although a strike
- was declared, the union set up an essential employees system and provided
- specialist skills, on a permanent basis. A renewed offer by the employer was
- refused by the union. The Government introduced legislation (Bill 111)
- declaring up to half the bargaining unit as essential, thus putting an end to
- the strike. In the view of NAPE, the Government could have referred the issues
- in dispute to arbitration or returned to the negotiating table. Instead, by
- introducing legislation, it destroyed collective bargaining for the unit
- concerned. The union thereafter signed a collective agreement and Bill 111
- came to an end.
- 198. NAPE also argued that section 2(12) of Bill 59 denied union members the
- right to vote to take strike action. If the employer made an offer, the only
- vote that could be taken would be one to accept it, otherwise it would be
- illegal. The designation of essential employees should follow - and not
- precede - a decision to strike.
- 199. Another problem was that posed by section 23 of the Act, as amended by
- section 6 of Bill 59. Under the previous legislation of 1973, bargaining units
- were required to give seven days' notice of any strike. Under Bill 59, if the
- union did not go on strike on the date specified in the notice, 30 days had to
- elapse before a further notice of seven days could be given. Again, in the
- view of the union, this was an attempt to control collective bargaining to the
- advantage of the employer.
- 200. Section 24 of the 1973 Act was also amended by Bill 59 to prevent
- rotating strikes which, in NAPE's view, should not be banned. Here again, this
- prohibition gave the employer great influence on the union's negotiating
- strategy. In addition, rotating strikes would ensure that only a portion of
- the hospitals in the province would be on strike at any given time.
- 201. In its submissions on the question of strikes, the Government explained
- that the 1973 Act granted this right to all workers covered by it, i.e. civil
- servants, hospital employees and vocational school instructors, with the
- exception of those who might be designated as essential. Prior to Bill 59, the
- employer, at the time of certification of the union, made an application to
- the Labour Relations Board for designation of a list of named employees.
- Almost every such application had been contested by the union and in some way
- found wanting by the courts which themselves said that the Act required
- substantial modification on this question. Even on one occasion, when the
- Board had appointed a panel of experts to designate, the court had found that
- this panel did not have jurisdiction to do so.
- 202. This unsatisfactory situation lasted for almost ten years and it was only
- after the strike, in 1981, of laboratory and X-ray workers during which a
- threat was made to call out even essential services, that amendments were
- introduced in Bill 59. As regards the 1981 strike, the Government added that
- arbitration was not provided for in the legislation nor, from an economic
- point of view, did the Government consider it appropriate to refer the issues
- to arbitration. Although the conciliation results had been rejected by the
- Government, it was often the union that rejected such results. In any event,
- the emergency legislation was enacted since there was an urgent and grave risk
- to the health of patients.
- 203. The 1973 Act had, accordingly, proved to be unworkable as regards
- essential services and Bill 59 had introduced amendments which were procedural
- rather than substantial. Instead of asking the Board to designate named
- employees, a number was requested. The employer could apply to the Board at
- any time and not, as before, only at the time of certification, most unions
- being in any event voluntarily recognised. According to the Government, the
- union's claim that the employer might make successive requests to the Board in
- order to increase the number and thus break a strike was a misunderstanding on
- its part. Not only was it not the employer's intention to do this but it was
- also practically impossible since there were major difficulties in convening
- the Board at short notice.
- 204. According to the Government, there had been meetings with NAPE concerning
- these problems but in spite of all the explanations given to them, the
- misunderstanding remained. No such problems, however, existed between the
- employer and other bargaining units, e.g. the Canadian Union of Public
- Employees, on these matters. Agreements as to the designation of essential
- employees had been reached with other unions, but NAPE who had knowledge of
- the employer's current proposals, had requested the Board not to proceed with
- hearings on them. The Government supplied the mission with detailed
- information on the recommendations it had made to the Board as to the
- percentage of essential employees that might be fixed by the Board. Since
- 1983, however, NAPE had steadfastly refused to participate in the process of
- negotiating essential employee requirements.
- 205. It was important to emphasise, continued the Government, that in June
- 1985, section 10 of the Act was amended and a significant number of Government
- employees in nine specific bargaining units were excluded from the designation
- of essential requirement. Other government agencies or boards had identified a
- minimal or no essentials requirement and, in the overall government sector, it
- had been determined that 21 per cent (17.7 per cent including section 10
- units) of the employees were essential. This group included 100 per cent of
- prison warders (who now had automatic access to arbitration) and others such
- as forest-fire suppression crews, social workers, etc. The requirement in the
- health-care sector was greater (33 per cent) to ensure a minimum standard of
- care for the sick and the aged.
- 206. The Govermment pointed out that five years ago the union would not have
- been prepared to accept arbitration as an alternative to its right to strike.
- Now it was the Government which, in the present economic situation, was
- reluctant to seek arbitration. Bill 59, the Government insisted, resulted from
- court decisions and was precipitated by the 1981 strike. Now, the Government
- pointed out, the rules were set and well known and this was preferable to the
- adoption - as was the case in 1981 - of emergency legislation in the event of
- a strike in an essential service. There had been no strikes in the hospital
- sector since 1981.
- 207. As regards sections 23 and 24 of the Act, as amended by Bill 59, the
- amendments introduced in June 1985 had repealed section 23 but had maintained
- the seven-day notice period in respect of hospitals and health-care
- institutions. If workers in these sectors did not go on strike on the date
- specified in the notice, a further 30 days had to elapse before another notice
- was given. The reason for this was to deal with the problem of sending
- patients home and bringing them back to hospital if the strike did not occur.
- The system did not exclude eleventh-hour bargaining and, in the view of the
- Government, there was no reason why there could not be an agreement between
- the parties to extend by one day the seven-day notice period if a new offer
- was made.
- 208. Concerning rotating strikes, the Government explained that Bill 59 had
- amended section 24 of the Act to prohibit such strikes in health service
- institutions only. The Act concerned the bargaining unit only, and while part
- of that unit could be called out on strike, there could be no question of that
- part striking on a rotating basis. This provision had been introduced to avoid
- the kind of problem that had been experienced during the 1981 strike of
- laboratory and X-ray workers.
- D. Concluding remarks
- 209. Public servants represented by NAPE basically retain the right to strike.
- The counter-inflation measures overrode the bargaining system which remained
- intact for use once the special legislation had run its course. The complaint,
- therefore, relates to limitations which appear to have recently been
- introduced into the usual process of bargaining.
- 210. The first point raised, and it is a very important one, was that the
- measures in Bill 59 were never the subject of proper consultation. It is
- obvious to an outsider coming to Newfoundland that, although industrial
- relations in the public sector are not without their share of problems and
- some strife, there has been a good relationship between the trade union and
- government. This did not prevent disharmony on Bill 59. It is difficult to
- describe accurately the extent of consultation on Bill 59 since perceptions
- differed. Such contact as there was took place in an atmosphere where the
- Government, having recently reviewed industrial relations was determined to
- seek revision built on experience. Whilst the trade union viewed the changes
- as a threat to its position, indeed it felt that the position had not been
- adequately assessed and felt threatened by the provisions of the Bill, some of
- which it found far from clear. It appeared to NAPE that a series of incidents
- over the previous few years had led to a somewhat extreme reaction which did
- not reflect what was really to be anticipated. The underlying confusion and
- suspicion were clear.
- 211. The Act has been in place now for some two years. Misunderstandings and
- hesitancies still exist. It has to be noted that very recently some important
- modifications have been made by an amendment Act of June 1985. This serves to
- underline the need for a resumption of co-operative consultations. It is still
- possible to detect divergent views on the meaning and intent of various
- provisions of Bill 59: several practical difficulties can be foreseen and both
- sides are looking predominantly at the possiblity of extreme reactions from
- the other. This is surely fruitful ground for consultation and it would seem
- that there is scope for jointly clarifying, tidying up and more closely
- defining the rules and, in the process, re-establishing a better working
- relationship.
- 212. One of the most serious points put by the union relates to the limitation
- on collective bargaining by amendments to the definition of employee. This has
- two components. Section 1(b)(xii) excludes from the crucial definition of
- employee, those employed in an opportunity employment programme. There was
- some confusion between the accounts given as to the exact coverage of this
- subsection. What is clear is that it excludes workers offered opportunity
- placements from bargaining units. This is understandable since the principal
- terms and conditions are governed by the terms of the scheme. However two
- worries remain. The trade union seeks the right to be consulted on such
- workers who are used in work within or connected with the bargaining unit.
- There also appears to be no reason why such workers could not be admitted as
- members with limited or notional dues so that residual services other than
- bargaining could be provided. The second provision to which objection is
- raised in that of advisers to the Government in the development or
- administration of policies or programmes to be determined by the Labour
- Relations Board. This subsection, it was agreed, enshrined what had been the
- practice. It is illustrative of the lack of understanding that both agree on
- this, yet the trade union has a suspicion that some change was intended. Only
- an open dialogue can remove such apparent misunderstandings.
- 213. Most complicated and central to the complaint are the changes made by
- Bill 59 to the concept of essential employee. The bargaining units concerned
- include for example, hospitals and air traffic controllers. Although there
- have been few strikes the Government has sought in the Bill to give added
- protection to essential services. The trade union in almost all cases has
- offered "emergency personnel". There is a discrepancy in thinking as to what
- this should cover which is epitomised by the use of different words -
- "emergency" and "essential". The process of designating a proportion of each
- bargaining unit as essential has ground to a halt. The figures suggested by
- the Government have been made knowing the Labour Relations Board has power of
- decision. Two difficulties arise. The trade union challenges some of the
- numbers which, it appears, have been selected with a liberal eye. It fears the
- Labour Relations Board will be unable to look at such an issue with rigour
- since the decision, possibly affecting safety and health is an onerous one.
- That should not be too difficult to resolve.
- 214. Of much greater concern is the effect designation is likely to have on
- strikes and it should be remembered that the right to strike is an important
- feature of the relationships being considered. If more than 50 per cent of a
- unit are designated as essential then the right to strike is replaced by
- independent binding arbitration. Neither the Government nor the trade union
- has a great liking for this mechanism. None the less it is clear that if a
- substantial proportion of the workers are designated as essential then it
- becomes more attractive to the trade union than a weak strike. As with so much
- in the complaint the issue cries out for study and compromise. Unless some
- relaxation in the rules is made, those sectors where say 33-50 per cent are
- designated will fall between the two systems and trade unions rights will be
- restricted unacceptably. The relationship between designation of essential
- workers and the strike vote is a further point raised. Again there is a
- different view of how the system will work in practice. There appears to be a
- chance that designation of a proportion outside the context of a strike, i.e.
- as a normal procedure, and of individuals after the strike vote might go some
- way to alleviating the problem.
- 215. Two strike tactics have been dealt with by Bill 59. Both have arisen from
- isolated examples in the past and the provisions again appear to have a degree
- of ambiguity. The prohibition of a strike where the stated date has passed,
- for a period of 30 days, and fresh notice could be used to delay a strike by
- last-minute bargaining. There is no evidence that that is intended, and a
- simple amendment, or even letter of intent, should remove the genuinely held
- fear. The provision against so-called rotating strikes does appear to
- interfere with the trade union's power to determine how it shall conduct a
- strike in the tactical sense. Again the provision gives rise to a justified
- fear but unless it is misused cannot be said to be a serious fetter on action.
- 216. It will be obvious that the Government has looked at past practice and
- has decided to prevent practices which were felt to be abuses of trade union
- power that caused potentially difficult management problems in key public
- sector areas. This has led to a strong reaction and even stronger suspicion.
- The trade union has suggested, for example, that provisions which appear at
- first sight to be enshrining useful and common practice (such as section 18
- allowing the Minister power to defer the statutory process to introduce a
- conciliator or mediator) are devices that can be used to defer or delay. There
- can be no clearer example of the need to clarify attitudes and intentions. A
- relatively small number of agreements or statements of intent on both sides
- would ensure that the possible use of the legislation to damage or hamper the
- proper use of trade union power would be accepted as not being the intention
- of the legislation.
- 217. The Committee on Freedom of Association will appreciate that the purpose
- behind the legislation has been left unclear since it can be used in several
- instances with differing results. One interpretation would seriously limit the
- right to strike effectively using normal criteria. If this is to be a
- possibility the underlying basis of the system could be in jeoparady. It has
- to be remembered that the usual formula in the public sector is that if the
- right to strike is withdrawn, the alternative protection in these special
- cases is access to independent binding arbitration. Where the right to strike
- exists but is seriously fettered or put in jeoparady, then the workers
- concerned lack effective protection.
- 218. It is important that the exact meaning and possible uses of the
- provisions of Bill 59 are clarified. This will undoubtedly lead to some
- adjustments - it was pleasing to hear that the 1985 Bill has already started
- that process, albeit unilaterally. Once this process is complete it will be
- necessary to see whether the right to strike, with reasonable limitations to
- protect the health, welfare and safety of the people, exists. Where it does
- not, alternative protection will be required.
- VII. Final remarks
- 219. Three of the complaints arise as a reaction to recently enacted
- legislation in Alberta (Case No. 1247) - Bill 44, in Ontario (Case No. 1172) -
- Bill 179 and in Newfoundland (Case No. 1260) - Bill 59. The fourth, Alberta
- (Case No. 1234), is a much narrower point. Although the industrial relations
- system varies from province to province, in some respects markedly so, and
- although the three pieces of legislation take differing approaches, there is a
- strong underlying similarity of policy and aims. It seems appropriate
- therefore in these concluding remarks to draw the Committee on Freedom of
- Association's attention to the underlying currents.
- 220. All three statutes were enacted as a result of the Government's need to
- combat inflation. All three applied to the public sector, that is to say,
- direct employees of the Government and others employed by independent bodies
- largely dependent upon government funding. This special attention had two
- prime causes. The Government itself was the employer or had a strong influence
- over the employer and it was felt that control of the public sector was both
- necessary and would set the level for the private sector. Most of the queries
- raised on this belong to the economic debate. What concerned the trade unions
- and must concern the Committee is the damage such legislation has done to
- industrial relations, in particular of course, in breach of the principles set
- out in the ILO freedom of association Conventions (i.e. Conventions Nos. 87,
- 98 and 151).
- 221. Several major features merit attention. The Canadian industrial relations
- system has a structure that at first sight mirrors that developed in the
- United States. That is to say it is fairly closely regulated by legislation.
- However there is also a strong tradition of informal contacts which have
- enabled the parties to reach voluntary agreements and to determine a not
- insignificant part of the relationship. It has been suggested that this
- consultative process has been damaged. Certainly the use of legislation has
- given that impression. One major problem is that the Government, when it is
- using legislation in the public sector is at the same time carrying out two
- functions. It is the democratic government acting to protect the economy but
- it is also the employer, altering the balance of its relationship with the
- trade union. This gives ample opportunity for confusion, misunderstanding and
- a serious breakdown in internal relationships. It is easy to overestimate this
- since normal relationships tend to carry on in many spheres, but the fear and
- suspicion were apparent in all three provinces. Ironically it can be said that
- the greatest need is the re-establishment of normal industrial relations
- processes - consultation, conciliation and mutual understanding.
- 1. Inflation control
- 222. Whereas inflation control is an important task of government, a
- distinction has to be made between short-term measures aimed at bringing a
- situation under control, and a more permanent structure. Action is taken under
- the first head because a particular problem overshadows the system. This was
- the position in Alberta where the economic decline was sudden and serious. It
- applied with somewhat less force to Ontario and Newfoundland although the
- economic problems in those provinces were clear. The legislation in Ontario
- had already lapsed. In all three provinces, however, it is the lasting effects
- of the legislation, or in the case of Ontario of practices springing from the
- period of legislation, which have to be measured.
- 223. In each case there has no doubt been some lasting effect. This involves
- either changes in the structure of collective bargaining or influences on the
- independent dispute resolution machinery which is the predominant safeguard in
- Alberta and Ontario and plays a small part in Newfoundland. It is an
- assessment of this damage which is crucial to these cases.
- 2. Consultation
- 224. Although the Canadian system of industrial relations operates legally
- regulated bargaining procedures the importance of consultation remains. This
- is particularly so where a government introduces proposed legislation to amend
- the rules governing that system and to change the relative position of the
- parties to the bargaining. It has already been remarked that such consultation
- is doubly important where the Government seeks to alter bargaining structures
- in which it acts actually or indirectly as employer. Time available for
- consultation must be adequate. Obviously it may be limited by the urgency of
- action in face of economic problems. Its effectiveness can be reduced by the
- attitude taken by the trade unions concerned. But it is a truism that
- proposals should be openly discussed, clarified and doubts, fears and
- misunderstandings resolved before legislation takes its final form. Otherwise
- suspicion grows and attention is diverted to lengthy and often untimely
- challenges in the courts.
- 225. In Alberta the Government took the view that the rapid fall in economic
- prosperity called for urgent action. Consultation appears to have been limited
- to a formal presentation of views to the legislature. In Ontario there appears
- to have been ample opportunity for consultation which does not seem to have
- been used constructively. In Newfoundland there has been a long-established
- and strong commitment to consultation which had been a valued feature of the
- relationship. Unfortunately although there was some consultation the usual
- relationship appears to have broken down at least temporarily.
- 3. Public servants - bargaining
- and the right to strike
- 226. In most Canadian provinces, but not Newfoundland, the right to strike is
- withheld and access to independent binding arbitration takes its place. This
- only occurs in very limited circumstances in Newfoundland. To ensure the
- integrity of the system it is essential that the bargaining procedures are
- unfettered and that there is truly independent machinery to settle disputes of
- interest that are not agreed in bargaining. Most of the details of the
- complaints, from all four cases, relate to one or other aspect of this crucial
- balance. If the balance is seriously destroyed, leaving aside short-term
- economic intervention in time of emergency, then the ILO principles on freedom
- of association are called into question.
- (a) Collective bargaining
- 227. It is not necessary to draw the Committee's attention to every complaint
- made of provisions that were felt to destroy the fair balance of collective
- bargaining. Equally it is only necessary to underline the common view of
- governments that it has become important in times of economic stringency to
- introduce into public sector bargaining factors which correspond to the gloomy
- information a private employer is able to bring to the bargaining table by way
- of declining profits and slim order books.
- 228. Several examples will suffice. In Alberta a considerable number of
- changes to the machinery of bargaining have been promulgated. In Newfoundland
- significant limitations in the bargaining units and in the participation of
- members of those units in strikes have been enacted. It is not an easy task to
- assess the extent of the damage but trade unions point to flexible provisions
- which give rise to fear of loss of effectiveness.
- (b) Independent dispute resolution
- 229. This aspect is vital to a proper system. All the provinces have a Labour
- Relations Board that acts as an independent regulator and decision maker
- within the system. Although some suspicions of bias were mentioned there is
- not a great deal of evidence to substantiate this. Of more concern is the
- position of binding arbitration. Disliked at times by both sides, it remains
- the crucial keystone to the alternative pattern of no strikes - independent
- dispute resolution.
- 230. Arbitrators have a notoriously short professional life, and their
- decisions often give one side the view, almost invariably erroneous, that the
- arbitrator lacks independence. There is no doubt that in times of economic
- stringency the pressures increase. Governments resent a system which passes
- control of financial decisions to a third party. They naturally tend to
- attempt to influence the arbitrator. Asking that the economic background be
- taken into account seems inevitable and sensible. Insisting on conformity to a
- norm destroys independence. In practice the pressure tends to lie between
- these extremes. It is essential that care be taken to protect independent
- arbitration: both the mode of their appointment and their tenure must be
- carefully regulated. The system inevitably, however reluctant the parties may
- be, insists that arbitrators be trusted to act fairly and sensibly.
- 231. Finally it has to be stressed that a large number of the grounds on which
- these complaints have been raised could be settled, not easily it is true, by
- agreement between the governments and the trade unions. Until they are, the
- tendency will be to use legislation, powers and practices which damage the
- essential balance enshrined in ILO Conventions. How far that has occurred is
- not a matter for me: the detailed information above is intended as material on
- which the Committee on Freedom of Association reach its decisions.
- 232. In concluding this report, I wish to express my sincere appreciation to
- the Government of Canada and to those of the Provinces of Alberta, Ontario and
- Newfoundland for the efficient and courteous manner in which my mission was
- received and for the genuine spirit of co-operation in which the discussions
- with the representatives of the various governments took place. I also wish to
- thank the Canadian Labour Congress, the National Union of Provincial
- Government Employees, the Canadian Teachers' Federation and all the provincial
- unions of public employees whose representatives were of the greatest
- assistance to me throughout the mission. A special word of thanks is due to
- Ms. Lucille Caron, of the Federal Ministry of Labour, Mr. Brian Mallon of the
- Canadian Labour Congress and Mr. Derek Fudge of the National Union of
- Provincial Government Employees, who accompanied me at various stages of the
- mission and whose valuable assistance regarding practical arrangements was
- much appreciated. Thanks is also due to Mr. John R.W. Whitehouse, Director of
- the ILO Office in Ottawa who, along with his efficient staff, facilitated
- practical arrangements. Finally, I must express my deep indebtedness to Mr. W.
- R. Simpson, Chief of the Freedom of Association Branch of the ILO and Mrs.
- Jane Hodges also of that Branch, who accompanied me during my mission to
- Canada. Their mastery of ILO principles, deep understanding of industrial
- relations, combined with their ability to work at speed, were essential to the
- completion of my mission and this report.
- John Wood, LLM, CBE.
- ANNEX
- Meetings in Ottawa (12-13 September 1985)
- Mr. M. Dorais, Director-General, Policy and Liaison, Department of Labour of
- Canada together with Mrs. L. Caron, Mr. B. de Laat, Mr. A. Torobin, Mr. P.
- Sorokan, Ms. C. Racine, Mrs. J. Godon, Mr. J. Lynch, Mr. P. Hewson and Mr.
- Beaupré Bérard of the Federal Ministry; from the Alberta Ministry of Labour
- and Education Department, respectively: Mr. A. Kennedy (Assistant Deputy
- Minister of Labour) and Ms. C. Mead; from the Ontario Ministry of Labor and
- Treasury, respectively: Ms. M. Kenny and Ms. J. Bass; from the Newfoundland
- Ministry of Labour, Treasury Board and Department of Justice, respectively:
- Mr. H. Noseworthy, Mr. L. Powell and Ms. D. Fry. From the Union side, Ms. S.
- Carr, Secretary-Treasurer of the Canadian Labor Congress (CLC), Mr. J. Fryer,
- President of the National Union of Provincial Government Employees (NUPGE) and
- representatives of their affiliated organisations: Mr. F. March, Mr. J.
- Shields, Ms. M. Hedley, Mr. A. Kube, Mr. D. Bean, Mr. D. Fudge, Ms. L.
- Nicholson, Ms. N. Riche and Mr. F. Moorgen. Meetings were also held with
- representatives of the Canadian Teachers' Federation (CTF), namely, President
- Mr. F. Garritty, Mr. S. McDowell, Mr. R. Barkar, Ms. E. McMurphy, Mr. D. Yorke
- and Mrs. S. Hanley.
- In Edmonton (16-17 September 1985)
- Assistant Deputy Minister Mr. A. Kennedy, Ms. C. Mead, Mr. R. Maybank, Mr. W.
- Sawadsky, Mr. P. Whittaker and Ms. D. Gares; and representatives of the
- Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE), namely President Mr. J. Booth,
- Mr. T. Christian, Mr. G. Bourgeois, Mr. F. McRae, Mr. F. Moorgen, Ms. M.
- Sykes, Mr. S. Nymchuk, Ms. P. Wocknitz and Ms. K. Lilly as well as several
- other witnessess including Mr. B. Olien, Mr. D. Andersen, Mr. W. Leeson,
- Professor J. Robb and Mr. D. Werlin. Meetings were also held with
- representatives of the Confederation of Alberta Faculty Associations:
- Professor R. Heron, Mr. G. Unger, Mr. A. Mandelbaum and Professor M.
- Sandilands.
- In Toronto (18-20 September 1985)
- Mr. D. Gilbert, Director of Policy Branch and Ms. J. Bass, Ms. K. Boney, Ms.
- M. Kenny, Mr. R. Peebles, Mr. Q. Silk and Mr. R. Huston; and representatives
- of the Service Enployees International Union (SEIU), namely President Mr. T.
- Roscoe and Mr. J. van Beek together with legal counsel Mr. J. Sack, Mr. S.
- Barrett and Mr. Poskranzer; the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)
- , namely President Mr. J. Clancy, Mr. C. Paliare, Mr. A. Todd, Ms. J. Gates,
- Ms. S. Vallance, Mr. J. Bernard, Ms. R. Lees and Mr. R. Martin; the Canadian
- Union of Public Employees (CUPE), namely President Ms. L. Nicholson, Mr. L.
- Kovacsi, Mr. D. Macleod, Mr. G. Williams, Mr. D. Foley; as well as the Ontario
- Teachers' Federations, namely, President Mr. G.Matte, Ms. S. Hildreth, Mr. D.
- McAndless, Mr. K. Kennedy, Mr. M. Buchanan, Mrs. M. Wilson, Mr. M. Green, Mr.
- J. Carey and Mr. D. Halesworth.
- In St. Johns (23-24 September 1985)
- Assistant Deputy Minister Mr. H. Noseworthy, Ms. D. Fry, Mr. L. Powell, Mr. A.
- Andrews and Mr. J. O'Neill; and representatives of the Newfoundland
- Association of Public Employees (NAPE), namely President Mr. F. March, Mr. E.
- Seward, Ms. M. Fleming, Mr. P. Ivany, Mr. E. Hogan, Ms. E. Price, Mr. D.
- Curtis and Mr. D. Harnett.