PSAC Pay Equity Bulletin
Federal Court issues decision on Section 99 reference
In June 2001, hearings
were held on the PSAC’s section 99 reference to the Public Service Staff
Relations Board (PSSRB). The PSAC asked the Board to declare that the federal
pay equity adjustments were pay for all purposes, except for two specific areas
covered in the pay equity agreement. The union was asking for this declaration
so that all salary-related benefits found in the collective agreement (such as
salary protection, cash-out of annual leave, education leave, etc.) would be
adjusted as a result of the pay equity adjustments. (More information about the
case can be found in PSAC Pay Equity Bulletin 46.)
The PSSRB Chairperson
dismissed the PSAC’s section 99 reference and ruled that unless PSAC and
Treasury Board could come to an agreement on this issue, the matter should go
back to the Federal Court or to the Human Rights Tribunal. Mediation did not
produce a resolution and the union decided to pursue the matter in the Federal
Court.
On November 13, a
panel of three Justices in the Federal Court of Appeal heard the PSAC’s
application for judicial review against the PSSRB decision. The Court issued its
ruling the same day and ruled against the union. The Court agreed with the
Public Service Staff Relations Board that the Tribunal Consent Order permitted
Treasury Board’s interpretation of the Consent Order as not requiring that all
salary related benefits be recalculated.
The only avenue for
recourse against the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal is the Supreme
Court of Canada. However, the Supreme Court must initially grant ‘leave’ to the
PSAC to bring an appeal. The Supreme Court only grants leave to appeal in a
small fraction of civil cases and generally only those appeals that raise legal
issues with a national impact.
The union has carefully reviewed the Court of Appeal’s decision and determined
that it is highly unlikely that the Supreme Court will grant leave to appeal in
this case. As a result, the case will not be pursued any further.
The Federal Court of Appeal’s decision, while disappointing, has resulted in
some positive statements in favour of pay equity and the issue of pay for all
purposes. The Court of Appeal confirmed that a Tribunal appointed under the
Canadian Human Rights Act has the authority to order that pay equity
adjustments be pay for all purposes. While the Tribunal Consent Order did not do
so in this case, the Court’s decision has positive implications for our
complaint against Canada Post (which is still before a Tribunal) as well as for
other unions pursuing pay equity at the Tribunal level.
The PSAC is not moving away from its support of the principle of pay for all
purposes. The union will also be raising this issue in its final brief to the
Pay Equity Task Force. This year, the Task Force has been receiving submissions
from unions, employers, women’s groups and individuals with proposals for new
pay equity legislation. PSAC is advocating proactive legislation with a pay for
all purposes approach. The union’s brief will be posted on the web site later
in December.
Pay equity for
part-time employees
The union is still
actively pursuing enforcement of the Tribunal Consent Order. While the ‘pay for
all purposes’ / recalculation of all salary-related benefits issue has
concluded, the issue of pay equity adjustments for part-time employees based on
actual hours worked versus their scheduled hours of work is still active.
In early 2002, PSAC
representatives met with Treasury Board officials after the union advised them
that they were proceeding to Court with this issue. Although Treasury Board
promised to look into the matter, there has been no resolution. We have
continued to meet, but will be proceeding to litigation if the matter is not
resolved in the near future.
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