Close X
Saturday, January 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Municipalities Eye OPP Negotiations To See If Benefit Is Whittled Out

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2015 12:23 PM
    TORONTO — Ontario municipalities are keeping a close eye on provincial police contract negotiations to see if the province can whittle out years-of-service bonuses that communities say are becoming difficult to afford.
     
    The benefit, known as retention pay, began in Toronto a little over a decade ago. The Ontario Provincial Police followed suit soon after, and over the years it found its way into most police and firefighter contracts across Ontario as recognition or service pay.
     
    It gives an extra three-per-cent pay after about eight years of service, six per cent after about 17 years and nine per cent after about 23 years. In Toronto, the base pay of a first-class constable is $92,433.
     
    Though the provincial government does not control the deals municipalities reach with their police services, it can set trends with the agreements it strikes with the Ontario Provincial Police.
     
    As the Liberal government tries to eliminate a $10.9-billion deficit it has said any public-sector contracts must have "net zero" increases, so any small compensation boosts would have to be offset.
     
    Neither the government nor the Ontario Provincial Police Association would say if retention pay — also known as 3-6-9 — is on the table as they bargain a new deal.
     
    But most police service boards are hoping it is, says their provincewide association.
     
    "Today, 3-6-9 does not serve a practical purpose," says Fred Kaustinen, the executive director of the Ontario Association of Police Service Boards.
     
    Kaustinen said police forces have not faced retention issues for some time now, and there are no performance-related benefits associated with 3-6-9.
     
    "The only impact or relevance...is to increase the pay of long-serving police officers and increase the cost of the overall police wage envelope across Ontario by roughly 4.5 per cent."
     
    The president of the Police Association of Ontario says the bonus pay may be the reason why retention issues no longer exist. It has now become part of the negotiated salary, says Bruce Chapman.
     
    "It's a dangerous profession and it's part of their overall compensation package, which fairly reflects the duties and the work that they do," he says.
     
    Firefighters also receive bonus pay, but the head of their union says it's more a benefit for years of service than an incentive not to move elsewhere.
     
    "It's unfair for pretty much the same type of first responder protection services that we provide and police provide that we be paid any less than a police service," says Carmen Santoro, president of the Ontario Professional Fire Fighters Association.
     
    In Toronto, the chair of the police services board refused to be interviewed, but in a 2011 letter to then-premier Dalton McGuinty he blamed the provincial government for the practice's spread across Ontario. Toronto had a retention problem — the OPP didn't, Alok Mukherjee wrote.
     
    "Other police services had settled their contracts after Toronto without giving it, but once the province made it a provincewide feature, all of the other police services subsequently followed," he wrote.
     
    "Our province has a long history of driving up the costs of policing through deals given to the OPP."
     
    The mayor of Stratford says municipalities are finding it tougher than ever to fund emergency services — nearly 40 per cent of the tax levy in his small city goes toward them — and clauses such as 3-6-9 need to be taken into account.
     
    "It's not affordable, nor is it sustainable," says Dan Mathieson.
     
    In Stratford, the clause was first included in the negotiated settlement for police in 2009. The city could have gone to interest arbitration over 3-6-9, but since it was already in other comparable police forces across Ontario, there's no doubt the arbitrator would have awarded it anyway, Mathieson said.
     
    If negotiated contracts can't be reached with emergency service workers, disputes are settled at interest arbitration because they don't have the right to strike.
     
    The Association of Municipalities of Ontario has been pushing for years for changes to the system, arguing that arbitrators place greater priority on replicating agreements from similar communities over local fiscal circumstances. Private member's bills have made unsuccessful attempts at changing the system.
     
    The municipalities want to see stronger fiscal criteria for determining capacity to pay as police and fire budgets are on the rise, says Jeff Lehman, the mayor of Barrie and chair of the Large Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario.
     
    "Whether it's 3-6-9 or other issues, whether benefit or compensation based, the broader issue here for all of us is the financial sustainability of the kind of increases we've seen," he says.
     
    The Liberal government says it is "continuing to assess options to reform the interest arbitration process."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt
    A Canadian family is demanding action from the federal government after a 28-year-old man died under mysterious circumstances at an airport in Laos.

    Family Of Canadian Man Who Died In Laos Wants Answers, Demands Action From Govt

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant
    TORONTO — A Winnipeg girl, whose family went public with its plea for a liver donor, was undergoing transplant surgery in Toronto on Monday after suddenly receiving word about a possible organ match.

    Winnipeg Girl, Whose Family Went Public With Plea For Help, Gets Liver Transplant

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks
    Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government is backing the motion to get rid of so-called pay-to-pay fees because people feel they are being nickeled and dimed by the big banks.

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile
    The woman's complaint in January prompted a search for Phillips and evacuations in two Halifax-area communities where chemicals were found, including what a police hazardous devices technician described as 750 bottles and other containers.

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group
    Dr. Brian Day was declared the winner last week by just one vote, but the group's CEO Allan Seckel says there was another vote that should have been counted.

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Judge Nearly Declared Mistrial In Terror Case Over Crown's 'American' TV Closing

    The trial of a husband and wife accused of plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature came close to being declared a mistrial over the Crown's closing address, which the judge said was so inflammatory and inappropriate it took her breath away.

    Judge Nearly Declared Mistrial In Terror Case Over Crown's 'American' TV Closing