HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-1848.Henderson.88-08-26Between:
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ONTARIO EMPLOY& OEM CO”RONNE CROWNEMPLOYEES DEL’ONI/IRIO
’ GRIEVANCE
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CPMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
1.
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1048/87
IN THB MATIER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THB CRONN EMPLOYEES COLLBCTIVB BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Before:
For the Grievor:
OPSEU (Mary Henderson)
-and-
Grievor
The Crown in the Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health) Employer
For the Employer:
pearins:
R. J. Delisle Vice-Chairman
G. Caplan Member
D. Montrose Member
M. Ruby
Counsel
Gowling and Henderson
Barristers and Solicitors
K. Raymond
Legal Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Ministry of Health
June 29, 1988
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DECISION
The grievor claims that she was not properly compensated,for
hours worked on July 12 and 13, 1987.
The parties are agreed on the ~facts. The grievor was
employed as a Psychiatric Nursing Assistant at the Whitby
Psychiatric Hospital. The shift schedule for July, 1987, which
was properly posted in accordance with Article 10 of the
Collective Agreement, provided that the grievor work the No. 1
shift on July 12 and 13, i.e. she was scheduled to work from 0700
hours to 1530 hours on each of these dates. After the end .of the
grievor's regular shift on July 12, 1987, she volunteered to work
overtime to replace other staff members who were absent. As a
result she worked overtime from 2300 hours on July 12 to 0700
hours on July 13 and then continued to work her regular shift on
July 13 from 0700 hours to 1530 hours. The grievor was
compensated at straight time pay for each of the 0700 hours to
1530 hour periods and at overtime premium in accordance with
Article 13 of the Collective Agreement for the period 2300 hours
to 0700 hours. The grievor claims that she is further entitled
to an overtime premium in accordance with Article 10.2 of the
Collective Agreement. The pertinent Articles provide:
10.2 "Every reasonable effort shall be made to avoid
scheduling the commencement of a shift within twelve
(12) hours of the completion of the employee's previous
shift provided however, that if an employee is required
to work before (12) hours have elapsed he shall be paid
time and one half (It) for those hours that fall within
the twelve (12) hour period."
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13.2 "In this Article, llovertimeV' means an authorized period
of work calculated to the nearest half-hour and
performed on a scheduled working day in addition to the
regular working period, or performed on a scheduled
day(s) off".
21.1 "There shall be no duplication or pyramiding of any
premium payments or compensating leave provided by this
Agreement".
A major stumbling block in the grievor's path is a recent
decision of this Board, Medland, 1199/86 (Kirkwood) handed down
May 17, 1988. Counsel for the grievor agrees.that the Medland
decision is on all fours with our situation and the decision is
against him. He undertook to persuade us that Medland is
manifestly wrong and ought not to be followed.
The Medland decision followed earlier decisions of this
Board in Morin, 74/77 (Adams), MUrohy, 593/83 (Palmer) and Gram,
1339/84 (Brent). In the Murvhv decision, affirmed by the
Divisional Court, January 21, 1986, the grievor worked as his
regularly scheduled and duly posted shifts 2300 hours to 0715
hours beginning on June 25 and June, 26. In addition he worked an
overtime shift on June 26 from 0700 hours to 1500 hours and for
those hours received an overtime rate. In Murvhv the grievor
claimed he was also entitled to an overtime rate for the 2300
hours to 0715 hours shift beginning June 26 because the same was
scheduled within twelve hours of the employee's previous shift
which had ended at 1500 hours on June 26. The employer's
position was that the "previous shift" referred to in Article 10
was the previous regularly scheduled shift which had ended at
0715 hours on June 26 and the employee was therefore not
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entitled. The Board's decision however was that
. ..the time of the completion of an employee's previous
shift relates to when the actual period of work ended; not
some notional point where the scheduled straight-time ended
and overtime began.
The Gram decision followed this line of thinking that a "previous
shift" for the purposes of Article 10, would include both
previously scheduled regular hours and the overtime hours that
resulted from any extension. so too, in Medland:
As we find that a shift includes the unit of time that
constitutes a day's work as extend~ed by overtime then ,it
does not make a difference in this context whether the
overtime precedes or follows the hours worked at straight
time.
The period of time worked is not to be broken into
shifts dependent upon the rate at which the time worked is
paid.
The Board has then been consistent in its interpretation of
Article 10; and far from being manifestly wrong, appears to be an
interpretation that the language can reasonably and properly
bear. Indeed it is an interpretation that this panel can agree
with.
Counsel for the grievor was driven to accept that the hours
worked from 2300 hours on July 12 to 1530 hours on July 13 were
hours worked on one continuous shift and the hours worked from
0700 hours to 1530 hours on July 13 could not then attract an
overtime rate as being hours scheduled within twelve hours of .a
previous shift, 2300 hours to 0700 hours, Counsel sought then to
argue that this entire shift, 2300 hours on July 12 to 1530 hours
on July 13, was entitled to an overtime rate as it was a shift
scheduled within twelve hours of the employee's previous shift
from 0700 hours to 1530 hours on July 12. This argument must
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fail however since Article 10.2 provides an overtime rate only
"for those hours that fall within the twelve hour period.". Those
hours however would be the hours of 2300 hours on July 12 to 0330
hours on July 13 and these hours have already been paid at the
overtime rate and Article 21.1 proscribes duplication or
pyramiding any premium payments.
The grievance is accordingly dismissed. Counsel for the
grievor expressed concern for the inconvenience, if not
prejudice, to the employee sought to be guarded against by
Article 10.2. by the Board's interpretations, but the parties can
always subject those considerations to negotiation.~
Dated at Kingston this 26th day of August, 1988.
R.J. Delisle, Chairpersm
D. MontkoSe, Member