HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-0042.Pavlovski.88-08-15SETTLEMENT
BOARD
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO, ONTARIO. M5G SUITE 2100 TELEPHONE:
0042/86
IN THE MATTER OF ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE
BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
Before:
OPSEU (Walter Pavlovski)
G e v o r
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry
of Services)
Employer
I. Springate
S. Hennessy .
M.
Vice-Chairman
Member
Member
For the Grievor: R.R. Wells
Counse 1
Gowling and Henderson
Barristers and Solicitors
For the Employer: J.F. Benedict
Manager, Staff Relations & Compensation
Ministry of Correctional Services
Hearing : October 1, 1987
r
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DECI SlCON
The grievor is a correctional officer employed at the Mimico
Correctional Centre. He was scheduled to work November 11, 1985,
which was Remembrance Day. He was, however, ill that day and thus
unable to work. In accordance with what had been its practice for at
least 25 years, the employer paid the grievor on the basis that he
had taken the holiday. The grievor claims that he was also entitled
to receive sick pay for the day.
The relevant provisions of the collective agreement provide as
follows:
19.1 Where an employee works on a holiday included
under Article 48 (Holidays), he shall be paid at
the rate of two (2) times his basic hourly rate
for all hours worked with a minimum credit of
seven and one-quarter (7 1/4), eight (8), or the
number of regularly scheduled hours, as
applicable.
19.2
48.1
In addition to the payment provided by section
19.1 an employee shall receive either seven and
one-quarter (7 1/4) or eight (8) hours as
applicable, provided the employee opts for
compensating leave prior to the holiday.
An employee shall be entitled to the following
holidays each year:
New Year's Day
Easter Monday
Dominion Day
Labour Day
Remembrance Day
Boxing Day
Good Friday
Victoria Day
Civic Holiday
Thanksgiving Day
Christmas Day
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Any special holiday as proclaimed by the
Governor-General or lieutenant Governor.
0.0
52.1 An employee who is unable to attend to his duties
due to sickness or injury is entitled to leave-
of-absence with pay as follows:
(i) with regular salary for the first six (6)
(ii ) with seventy-f ive percent (75%) of regular
working days of absence.
salary for an additional one hundred and
twenty-four (124) working days of absence
in each calendar year.
Also referred to by the parties in their submissions was Article
54.2, which states:
54.2 Where an employee is absent by reason of an
injury or an industrial disease for which an
award is made under The Workmen's Compensation
Act, his salary shall continue to be paid for a
period not exceeding three (3) consecutive months
for a total of sixty-five (65) working days where
such absences are intermittent, following the
date of the first absence because of the injury
or industrial disease, and any absence in respect
of the injury or industrial disease shall not be
charged against his credits.
Board jurisprudence regards Article 19.2 as being applicable both
to employees who work and those who do not work a holiday. Both
parties adopted this interpretation at the hearing. Article 19.2
states that an employee is to receive 8 hours holiday pay, or, in the
alternative, compensating leave provided he has opted for the leave
prior to the holiday. The grievor opted for compensating leave with
respect to the holiday in question, but nevertheless was paid by the
employer. The union does not now seek to "unwind" this payment. The
union does, however, contend that the grievor should also have received
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sick pay under Article 52. In that the grievor had already been off
ill in excess of six working days in 1985, his claim is for an
additional 75 percent of a day's pay.
One of the earliest awards to deal with an employee unable to
work a holiday as scheduled due to illness was Cooper 145/77 (Swan).
In that case an employee scheduled to work a statutory holiday
reported for work, but two and three-quarter hours into his shift
became ill and left. The employer paid him one and half times his
regular salary for the two and three-quarter hours worked pursuant to
the then wording of Article 19.1, plus eight hours holiday pay under'
Article 19.2. The employee claimed an entitlement to a full eight
hours at one and one-half times
The Board disagreed, reasoning
employee is actually available
the Board commented:
his regular salary under Article 19.1.
that Article 19.1 applies only if an
to work. In reaching this conclusion
In the case of illness on a holiday, an employee
under this agreement simply receives holiday pay,
and that is how Mr. Cooper was treated once he
left work.
In Parsons 81/78 (Prichard), the Board dealt with the situation
of an employee who worked a holiday. The employer paid him for eight
hours at time and a half pursuant Article 19.1, as well as for eight
hours under Article 19.2. The employee claimed yet an additional
eight hours pay under what is now Article 48.1. This is the provision
which lists the various holidays that employees are entitled to
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receive. The contention of the union in Parsons was that Article 48.1
creates a general entitlement to be paid for a holiday whether worked
or not, and Articles 19.1 and 19.2 set out the additional amounts that
an employee who works a holiday is entitled to receive. The Board
disagreed, concluding that Article 19.2 sets out the amount payable to
all employees for a holiday, whether worked or not, while Article 19.1
provides for an additional amount for employees
holiday. In reaching this determination the Board
as follows:
who actually work a
described Article 19
In our view, the better interpretation of Article
19 is that it is a relatively comprehensive code
of entitlement to holiday pay dealing with both
persons who are required to work and those not
required to work on statutory holidays.
The case of Martin
was scheduled to work a
suffered a heart attack.
pursuant to Article 19.2 .
434/81 (Delisle) dealt with an employee who
holiday but did not do so because he had
The employer paid the employee holiday pay
The employee claimed an additional eight
hours pay at one and a half times his regular rate under Article 19.1.
In support of his claim, the union relied on Article 52, contending
that its purpose to give an employee his "regular salary", which in
this case, it contended, what the amount he would have received had he
worked the holiday. The Board disagreed, reasoning that Article 19.1
is triggered by the actual performance of work, and since the employee
had not worked on the day in question, only Article 19.2 applied. As
an alternative basis for dismissing the grievance, The Board- concluded
that the employee's claim ran counter to a prohibition in Article 21
against pyramiding premium payments or compensating leave.
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The next relevant case was Charbonneau 544/81 (Barton ). That
case dealt with an employee who was scheduled to work two holidays but
did not do so on account of his being off work on workers'
compensation. He was paid eight hours' pay for both days pursuant to
Article 19.2. The Board concluded that he was also entitled to
receive eight hours' pay under Article 54. The final paragraph of the
award reads as follows:
On balance although the matter is not totally
clear, the resolution of the problem is as
follows:
1.
2.
30
4;
5.
Article 21 does not apply.
Article 19 . 1 does not apply because -the
Grievor did not work on the day in question.
The Grievor is entitled to his regular
salary under Article 53 (now Article 54).
The Grievor is entitled to 8 hours' pay or a
lieu day under 19.2. I might add that were
it not that Vice-chairman Pritchard and
Delisle seem to accept Article 19.2 as
standing apart from Article 19.1, I would not
have so found.
Because the Grievor indicated in advance that
he wished the lieu days, he is entitled to
those days and the grievance is allowed, the
Employer being directed to grant him those
days .
The employer applied for judicial review of the Charbonneau
award. Before the Divisional Court, the employer took a somewhat
different position than it had before the Board concerning how the
relevant provisions of the collective agreement should be interpreted.
The employer also relied on the fact that the Charbonneau award had
not followed the reasoning adopted in the Board's earlier awards. The
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Divisional Court declined to grant the application for judicial
review, reasoning that the award in Charbonneau was not patently
unreasonable. On July 4, 1985, the Court endorsed the record as
f lows :
We express no opinion on the correctness of the
interpretation of articles 19 and S3 of the
agreement given by the majority of the Board of
arbitration. We simply say that, in the light of
what we were told was a different argument made
before the Board, we see no necessity in this
case, to resolve the apparent controversy among
arbitrators. Despite an extremely persuasive
argument by Ms. McIntosh on behalf of the
employer, we are not convinced that the
interpretation found in the majority award is
patently unreasonable.
The next relevant case in time was Walberq et 259/84
(Delisle). That case dealt with the holiday pay entitlement of eight
employees on workers ' compensation. The Board expressly followed the
reasoning in Charbonneau. The case 'of McDermid 366/83 (Springate)
dealt with an employee who had been scheduled to work two holidays but
did not do so because he was off on workers' compensation. The
employer approached the matter on the basis that the employee had
taken the two holidays in question, and paid him his regular rate for
both days. The union contended that pursuant to the reasoning adopted
by the Board in Charbonneau, the employee was entitled to an
additional eight hours pay for both days. In. the interests of a
uniform approach to the situation of employees on workers" compen-
sation, the Board panel unanimously decided to follow the reasoning in
Charbonneau. In so doing, the Board commented as follows:
I
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We are of the view, however, that where reasonably
possible the Board should strive for consistency
when dealing with a particular issue. To do
otherwise would mean that the outcome of any
particular grievance on an issue might depend on
the composition of the Board panel assigned to
hear the case. In Charbonneau, the Board dealt
with the very issue now before us, namely the
holiday entitlement of an employee scheduled to
work a holiday but unable to do so because of a
compensable in jury. The majority award in
Charbonneau was judicially reviewed by the
Divisional Court, which declined to quash it. In
the interests of a uniform approach to the issue,
we propose to apply the reasoning in the majority
in Charbonneau to the grievance before us. In
doing so, we express no opinion as to whether the
reasoning in should be applied to
employees who are off work due to a
non-compensable illness.
The issue of whether the reasoning adopted in should
also be applied to employees off work due to illness was dealt with by
the Board in Robertson 0641/85 (Springate) and Bergsma 0126/86
(Fisher). The cases were heard at about the same time and decided
independantly of each -other. In both cases, unanimous panels of the
Board concluded that the Board should follow the reasoning adopted in
the illness cases decided prior to Charbonneau and limit the reasoning
in Charbonneau only to employees off work on workers' compensation.
In the Robertson decision, which was released on January' 28, 1988, the
Board commented as follows:
As already noted, Charbonneau was a case involving
an employee off on workers' compensation. The
reasoning in that case has not, as far as we are
aware, been applied to any case involving an
employee off work due to a non work-related
illness. The union contends that this matters
not, relying on the fact that in the prior illness
cases the union did not frame its position in the
same way as it has in this case, namely claiming
that the grievor is entitled to be paid under both
Articles 19.2 and (52.1). In .the prior cases the union
claimed payment under both 19.1 and 19.2 but not under
Article (52.1).
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The manner in which the union approached illness
cases prior to the award in Charbonneau, as well
as the employer's long standing practice of
treating ill employees as if they had taken a
holiday, indicates that neither the employer nor
the union viewed an ill employee as being entitled
to both sick pay under Article (52.1) and holiday
pay under Article They disagreed only as to
whether a sick employee was entitled to be paid
under Article 19 on the same basis as if he had
actually worked the holiday. It was in-light of
this shared approach to the issue that the Board in
Cooper made the comment that "In the case of an
illness on a holiday, an employee under this
agreement simply receives holiday pay Prior to
Charbonneau the union did make one attempt to claim
payment for a holiday in addition to the amounts
provided for under Article 19. That case was
Parsons, where a claim was made under both Articles
19 and (48.1) with respect to an employee who
worked a holiday. The claim was rejected on the
basis of the Board 's conclusion that the employee 's
entitlement was limited to Article
Notwithstanding the jurisprudence and prior common
understanding of the parties that an ill employee
was entitled only to payment under Article 19, a
majority of the Board panel in Charbonneau
concluded that an employee on workers compensation
was entitled to payment under Article 19.2, as well
as an additional payment under Article In
McDermid, the Board, in the interests of a
consistent approach to employees off on workers
compensation, followed the reasoning in
Charbonneau. The desire for consistency does not,
however, produce the same result with respect to
employees off work due to a non work-related
illness.
We are satisfied that in the instant case we
should follow the past understanding of the
parties and the Board, namely that the entitlement
of an employee off work due to illness is to be
found only under Article 19. We view this as a
reasonable interpretation of the collective
agreement. We recognize that as a result of our
conclusion employees scheduled to work a holiday,
but unable
to do so, will be treated differently
depending on whether they are off work on workers'
compensation or because of a non work-related
illness. This result, however, flows from the fact
that the Board, when dealing with an employee off
work on workers compensation in Charbonneau,
adopted a different interpretation of the
collective agreement than the parties and the Board
had previously applied to employees who were ill.
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The award in Bergsma was released on March 17, 1988. In that
award the Board made the following comments:
At first blush there seems to be a difference in
which the older cases (especially Martin) and the
newer cases (Charbonneau 1 have decided the issue.
However, there is an important distinction between
the cases, namely whether the illness is work
related so that Section 52.2 applies.
However, Martin and Charbonneau are not
irreconcilable, as long as Charbonneau is limited
to W.C.B. cases. For non-W.C.B. cases, the
principles in Martin should still apply in that
the arguments made by the Union in this case
mirror their arguments in Martin. Those arguments
were rejected in Martin,. and for the of
maintaining certainty in the field
relations, Martin should be followed.
As was said in Walberq,
"It is trite to observe that finality in
decision-making is an attribute much to be
prized. Counsel for the Ministry does not
say that certain facts or laws were
inadvertently not brought to the attention
of the Board in Charbonneau. Counsel does
not say the decision was rendered per
incuriam. Rather it seeks to argue simply -- that Charbonneau was wrongly decided.
Finding the "right" answer, the "right"
interpretation, -is obviously our pursuit
but there comes a point in litigating an
issue when enough is enough. As a brake
against repeatedly re-opening an issue this
Board asks whether an earlier decision on
the point is "manifestly wrong."; see e.g.
684/83 (Samuels Unless the earlier
decision is manifestly wrong the Board
should be consistent and adopt its
reasoning. "
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In the instant case the union seeks to apply the reasoning
adopted in Charbonneau to the grievor, who was off-work due to a non
work-related illness. This is the very approach which was expressly
rejected by the Board in both Robertson and In the interests
of consistency, we are also not prepared to adopt it in the instant
The grievor was entitled to receive holiday pay under Article
19.2 for November 11, 1985, which amount he did receive. We are
satisfied that he was not entitled to receive any additional payment
for the day. In the result, the grievance is hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto this 15th day of August, 1988.
Vice-Chairman
I dissent, (Dissent attached)
S.R. Hennessy
Member
M. F. O'Toole
Member
0042/86
DISSENT
This Board has spent a considerable amount of'
time on the issue of,an employee who is unable to work
a holiday as scheduled due to illness. As the
points out it starts with Cooper 145/77 (Swan) and runs
through to Bergsma 0126/86 (Fisher).
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The result has been, to say the least, rather
unsatisfactory. It has resulted in, as the Board in
Robertson stated:
as a result of'our conclusion ft
employees scheduled to work on a
holiday, but unable to do so, will be
treated differently depending on
whether they are off work on Workers'
Compensation or because of a non work
-related illness" .
(Underlining my own)
This conclusion appears to be based on a
distinction which is drawn between the reasoning in the
older cases (See Martin
343/811 as opposed to what is
called the newer cases (See Charbonneau 544/81). This
distinction has been identified in Bergsma as:
"Whether the illness is work-related
Dissent
so that Section 52.2 applies",
2
In my view, the proper and fair interpretation
of this matter is that the grievor should be dealt with
in. the same manner as that of an employee on
Compensation. In order to do so the grievor is
entitled to the benefits of Article 19.2 and 52.1. In
this regard I concur with the approach of Board Member
Robinson, who dissented in Martin, namely that an
employee can claim both holiday and sick pay if he is
able to bring himself within the terms of the
collective agreement. After reviewing the scheme of
the collective agreement he concluded that Articles
19.2 and 51.1 (now 52.1) met those requirements.
Article 19.2, as the majority points out,
applies "both to employees who work and those who do
not work on a holiday". Article 52.1 also applies to
employees unable to work because of sickness. The
majorities view would negate the effect of Article 52.1
which is to compensate the grievor who is off sick and
unable to work. This view avoids, in my opinion, the
clear intention
of the.wording "regular salary" by not
paying the grievor his entitlement
to sick pay for the
holiday, since he was unable to work it.
In my view, in order for the Board to be
consistent, the grievor should be entitled to the
payments under both Article 19.2 and Article 52.1
because they are based on different benefits and the
Dissent
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grievor has clearly met the test for those benefits
under the collective agreement, The grievor should
therefore be awarded payment for both. Since they are
different benefits the prohibition against pyramiding
does not apply in this case.
The employer argued that the Board should use
the past practice of the parties to assist it in its
interpretation of the collective agreement. I would .
have found that there was no evidence that the Union
has acquiesced in a contrary view
or practice which .the
employer asserts. If I am wrong in this conclusion
would have found that this
if any, was
contrary to a clear interpretation of Sections 19.2 and
and have declared this practice to be at an end as
a result of the filing of this grievance,
In conclusion then I would have awarded the
grievor his sick pay for November 11, 1985 based on 75%
of a day's pay since the grievor had already been off
sick in excess of 6 working days in the year.
Dated at Ottawa, this 15th day of August, 1988.
S.R. Hennessey
Member