HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-1942.Algerson et al.88-04-15IN THE tiATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLL&TIVE B.ARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between : ------- OPSEU (Algerson er 31.)
Foi Tne G:levor: H. Ryder ____ -_-_-------
COUIlSf?l
: Gowling and Henderson
BarrisFers and Solicirors
<or The-EmAoyer: C. Slater
Senior Counsel
Human ReSOUTCeS Secretariat
Hearing: ------.-
e.
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INTERIM AWARD
This proceeding arises from fourteen (14) grievances filed by
employees in the Information Services Branch of.the Ministry of
Government Services. The wording of each ~of the grievances is virtually
identical both in terms of the complaint and the settlement desired. The
grievance of C. Algerson, which may be treated as representative, reads
as follows:
"STATEMENT OF GRIEVANCE
That the Ministry of Government Services, represented
by Eric Steeves, Director, Carmen Debono and Micheline
deBruyn, all of .the Information Services Branch, and
Maria Wacyk, Director of Hunan Resources, and Peter
Van Horne, Manager Staff Relations'at MGS, have
contravened Article 7.7’of the Collective Agreement in
that they will not,modify the hours of work.
SETTLEMENT DESIRED
That the compressed work week be introduced in the
Information Services Branch, Ministry of Government
Services.”
At the commencement of the hearing, counsel for the Employer raised a
preliminary objection as to the arbitrability of the grievances.
Specifically, he argued that panels of this Board in Glenny, 317/83
(Roberts) and in Ropars, 400184 (Jolliffe) had determined, in response to
similar objections, that the then equivalent of Article 7.7 did not
provide a right to grieve should the Employer be unwilling to enter into
an arrangement for a variable work week. This Board was asked to render
a ruling on the preliminary objection prior to proceeding with the merits
of the case. The award in Se United Steelworkers of America and
I
Construction Products Inc., Canadian Division, 22 L.A.C..125 (Brown,
August, 1970) was relied on insupport of the wisdom-inherent in such an
approach.
Article 7.7, formerly article 7.6, provides as follows:
"It is understood that other arrangements regardiq
hours of work and overtime may be entered into between
the parties on a local or ministry level with respect
to variable work days or variable work weeks. The
model agreement with respect to cunpressed work week
arrangements is set out below....”
After considering the submissions of counsel on the preliminary
objection and on the bifurcation of the hearing, the Board ruled that it
would first
proceed to resolve the objection before turning to the merits
of the case. We therefore adjourned for this purpose. We have now had
the opportunity to more fully consider the Glenny and Ropars awards. it
is our opinion that they are dispositive of the issue presently before us
in that there is a material similarity between the issues confronted
therein and that which has been presented to this Board. The factual
circumstances, the wording of the grievances and the issue arising
therein are indistinguishable from the case before us. In Glenny,
Arbitrator Roberts, in sustaining the preliminary objection, stated:
II
. . . . however, it seems to us that Article 7.6, when
fairly construed, falls far short of obligating
management to exercise any discretion. Article 7.6
seems to provide no more than a consensual framework
to enable individual locals and Ministries mutually to
agree to institute compressed work week arrangements.
Article 7.6 does not compel an unwilling party to
enter into negotiations regarding the establishment of
compressed work weeks. Both parties have to be
willing to take advantage of the option that Article
7.6 makes available.
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6
It follows from the foregoing characterization
of Article 7.6, which we believe is the proper one,
that it is not within the jurisdiction of this board
to review a complaint of the type which was submitted
in the grievance at hand. As already indicated, the
canolaint essentially was that the Director of the
Legal Branch of the Ministry refused to enter into an
agreement, or perhaps to negotiate an agreement, with
the local Union regarding canpressed work weeks.. In
neither case might there have been any v,iolation by
the Employer of any obligation under Article 7.6. The
Article merely provides an option; It does not
obligate either party to negotiate, let alone reach
,final agreement. Where there is no mutuality, in the
sense of a desire on the part of both parties to agree
with respect to ccmpressed work weeks, Article 7.tX of
the collective agreement does not come into play.
The objection to jurisdiction is sustained. We
do not have jurisdiction of the subject matter of the
grievance. ‘1
(PP. 3-4)
This reasoning was accepted by Arbitrator Jolliffe in the Ropars award.
After quoting much of the above statement, he concluded:
II
We fullv aaree with the foreaoina statements.
Entirely apart-from any doctrine of-stare decisis or
the reasons given in Bateman 2/77 for respecting
orevious decisions of this Board. it seems obvious to
us that Article 7.6 is purely permissive and creates
no obligation in either party; it merely provides an
option whereby the parties, "on a local or ministry
level" may by mutual agreement arrange Qariable work
days or variable work weeks.” Thus it does not give
any individual employee the right to complain that
some such arrangement has not been unilaterally
instituted by the Ministry. Unless the arrangement is
mutually agreed upon, no obligation comes into
existence."
(PP. 4-5)
We have not been persuaded that these prior Boards of Arbitration
were wrong in their interpretations of the article in question. We are
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in agreement with their ultimate conclusion that Article 7.7 does not
provide forla discretion to~be exercised by the.En@oyer. Rather, it
simply provides a mechanism for the parties to mutually arrive at “other
arrangements? vis & vis a variable work week. In view of our assessment
in this regard, the award in Kuyntjes, 513/84 (Verity) is distinguishable
in that it 'dealt with an article of the collective .agreement which
clearly called for the Employer to exercise.a conferred discretion in the
context of 'a request for a special leave. In such an instance, the
, Employer was properly found to be subject to certain restrictions in the
exercise of; their discretionary decision making.
It wouid appear to this Board that the processing of these grievances
to arbitration constituted an attempt to relitigate the issue canvassed
in Glenny and Ropars. With respect to such a practice, we are inclined
to agree with the position adopted in Bateman, 2/n (Prichard) to the
following effect:
I, ;
Tnerefore, we are of the view that this panel
of the Board should not accept or advance a wholly
contradictory interpretation of the relevant
provisions of the coilective agreement in the absence
of a demonstration that the interpretation arrived at
by an earlier panel is "clearly wrong” (Re RCA Ltd.
(19731, 2L.A.C. (2d) 143 (Rayner)). That is to say
we are of the conviction that where one panel of this
Board has adopted an interpretation of a particular
clause in the agreement, the parties can not be
permitted and should not be encouraged to relitigate
that determination unless the prior award is
manifestly erroneous. .Were it otherwise and were this
panel, or any other, to simply disregard earlier
determinations made by this Board, the parties would
be precluded from ever being able to rely upon our
decisions with any sense of certainty or finality. To
the contrary, such a practice would actually encourage
I
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an unsuccessful party in,one case to seek such further
hearings before different panels of this Board in the
context of other grievances until such time as it
secured a result it considered just and proper.
Needless to say this Board does not intend to pursue
such a policy. Rather, both canmon sense and the
arbitra!. jurisprudence recognize that if issues
between the parties are, pursuant to Section 18 of The
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act, to receiF.
a final and blndlng determination, the parties must
accept, in the.first instance and subject to judicial
review the interpretations placed on their agreement
by this Board. In the event those interpretations are
unacceptable to either or both of the parties their
recourse for relief lies in the negotiatioh of the
succeeding collective agreement and not by way of the
re-adjudication of the same issue before a different
panel of this Board."
(pp.~ 9-10)
For the reasons aforesaid, this Board has no jurisdiction to proceed
with the merits of the case. The grievances are therefore dismissed.
Dated at Windsor, Ontario this 15th day of Xgril , 1988.
;-I rL& L’ iJ l7Itk4h
h . V. Watters - Vice Chairman
‘L-z- . -
. Traves - Member
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