HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-2185.Seguin.81-01-09SETTLEMENT
EMPLOYtS DELA COURONh’E
DE L’ONTARIO
COMM,SS,ON DE
RiiGLEMENT
DES GRIEFS
Between:
Before:
,For,the Grievor:
For the Employer:
Hearing: April 18, 198%
2185187
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (R. Seguin)
Grievor
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources)
Employer
T.H. Wilson
I. Freedman
G. Milley
Vice-Chairperson
Member
Member
A. Ryder
Counsel
Gowling & Henderson
Barristers and Solicitors
T. Sargeant
Counsel
Central Ontario Industrial Relations Institute'
DECISION
The grievor is a rotary wing (helicopter) pilot in
Timmins with the Ministry of Natural Resources. As such he
is a Schedule 6 employee under the
regulation (R. R. O., Regulation 88
hours. He flies for all sorts
Public Service Act
1). His work week is 365,
of reasons. In the
summertime he does a great deal of flying because of wild
fires and planned forest burns. He also flies for other
offices in the Ministry which arrange for his services
through a dispatcher. The grievance claims that he has not
been paid daily overtime for fire fighting under clause
13.72 of ,the Collective Agreement. The Ministry states that
he is not covered by that provision but by the' Float
Agreement between then Ministry and the Union.
The Float Agreement is dated 1% June, 1981 and
covers all Pilots (lFR,VFR) and Regional Air Engineers at
Operating Bases in the Ministry of Natural Resources. It
states in the Preamble:
In recognition of the fact that. Pilots and
Regional-Air Engineers assigned to ,operating bases
may operate under irregular hours of work
necessitated by the Ministry's role in air
transport, the following conditions will apply
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ARTICLE 2 Work Schedule - Float Operating Season
2.1 Pilots and Regional Air Engineers will have a
pre-scheduled 5 day work week during the float
operating season. The hours in a day could be
more or less than 8 hours.If it is necesary that
Pilots or Regional Air Engineers work on the sixth
or seventh day, or statutory holiday, they will
receive time off at one and one-half times the
number of hours worked with a minimum credit of 8
hours. If time off is not granted by the end of
the float season, they will be paid one and
one-half times their basic hourly rat~e for all
accrued hours. The payroll for this time is to be
submitted within one month after the end of the
float operating season. If however, they prefer
time off and it can be granted before March 31st
of the following calendar year, then time off may
be granted.
2.2.1 At the beginning of the fiscal year, Pilots
and Regional Air Engineers will be credited with
five (5) days leave. This time off to be taken
with the permission of their Supervisor. The extra
days are being granted to compensate for the
flexibility of the work period and must be used by
March 31. Days not used by March 31 will be paid
on a day-for-day basis.
Article 4 Term
4.0 The effective date of the Agreement is April
1, 1981 to March 31, 1982. It shall be renewed
automatically for annual periods unless either
party notifies .the other in writing prior to
January 1 of their desire to alter or amend the
Agreement for the following year,
The relevant provisions of Article 13 of
the collective agreement are:
13.7.1
13.7.2
Employees who are in classifications
assigned to Schedule 6 and who are
required to work on a day off, shall
receive equivalent time off.
Notwithstanding 13.7.1 and Article 19.6
(Holiday Payment1 employees who are in classifications assigned to forest fire fighting or related duties, shall be paid one and one-half (1%) times the
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employee's basic hourly rate, to be
calculated on the basis of thirty-six and
one-quarter (36%) hours per week, for all
such work after eight (8) hours in a
24-hour period
Article 13.7.2 resulted from an Interest
Arbitration Award delivered the 28th day of July, 1982 in
which the Chairman was Howard D. Brown. The Union had
proposed two overtime provisions for Schedule 6 employees:
a) Any Schedule 6 employes assigned to forest
fire fighting or related duties shall be entitled
to the provisions of Article 13, for all hours so
worked.
b) In lieu of daily overtime compensation
Schedule 6 employees are to be entitled to claim 5
days off with pay per year.
Arbitrator Brown noted that Schedule 6 employees
who under Article 7.3 have a 364 hour work week were not
paid for daily overtime hours, but get compensation for work
on days off or statutory holidays. That compensation was
set out before that Arbitration Board in Schedule H of the
Employer's brief.
1.
2.
3.
A credit of $ of the daily equivalent of the
employee's existing salary or the equivalent in
compensating leave for each. four-hour segment
of time worked in excess of 88 hours in each two-week period.
Application to employees assigned to Schedule
6, except for pilots and air engineers whose hours of work arrangement are subject to a
memorandum of understanding between the Ministry of Natural Resources and the union.
No application to hours'for which compensation
is provided under Article 19.6.
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After referring to paragraph 2, Arbitrator Brown
concluded at pages 16-7 of his Award:
"We are persuaded,by the Union's Submission that
Schedule 6 employees assigned to firefighting duties,
should be compensated for such work, in like manner,
to other employees involved in the same activity.
"The Board therefore awards the following:
"Any Schedule 6 employee assigned to forest
firefighting or related duties, shall be paid 1%
times the employee's hourly rate, calculated on
the basis of 36% hours per week, for all such
work after 8 hours, in a 24 hour period".
[Article 13-7.2
"Schedule 6 employees'include such
classifications as Biologists, Foresters,
Educational Officers, Psychologists, and
Industrial Development Officers, who work in
circumstances without supervision, or
control of the hours worked and thus have
been described in the Schedule with a
minimum and not a maximum schedule of hours
of work. The overtime provisions of Article 13,
do not apply to these employees, but in
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Arb trator Brown then went on to reject the
Union's 5 day off with pay proposal. Consequently, Article
there is a provision for Article 19.6
equivalent t
are required
ime off, where such employees
to work on a normal day off or
on a holiday . . . ..'I
13.7.2 appeared in the new Collective Agreement in 1982.
The grievor was hired in 1981. He had always put
in for an eight (8) hour day prior to 1987, but at that time
he became aware of.Clause 13.7.2. At the beginning of the
forest fire season in 1987, he began to put in for overtime
on the forest fire fighting on week days. In September,
1987, he checked with the payroll clerk's office in Timmins
to see how much time he had accumulated and discovered that
the payroll clerk had been striking out the daily overtime.
He kept his own records and claims 266 hours at 1% times for
fire fighting, excluding planned burns.
Roger Gordon is the acting Personnel Director for
the Ministry of Natural Resources. His regular position is
Manager of Personnel Policy and Staff Relations. He
testified that the 1988 negotiations for the Pilot's Float
Agreement are still in course. He explained that the float
season (firefighting season) generally extends from April 1
to October 1. It varies with the ice conditions in the
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lakes. He testified that the pilots have always been
compensated under the Float Agreement and not clause 13.7.2.
The union employee relations committee raised the issue in
October, 1987 that the float agreement did not provide
sufficient compensation. He testified that the commitee was
aware of the Ministry's interpretation and policy. The
parties agreed for purposes of negotiation to extend the
agreement to May 1 from January 1. If the union had raised
the issue before January 1, 1987, he would have raised it
with senior management with a view to giving notice under'
the Float Agreement. The air service source is in
competition with the private sector since people in other
offices such a,s biologists do have the option of hiring
private pilots. At the same time, the other pilots not on
firefighting duty would not receive any benefit.
In cross-examination, Gordon agreed that the whole
float agreement was up for negotiation and the union was
seeking compensation for non-firefighting overtime which was
increasing because wheeled planes were replacing the float
planes.
The union argues that Article 13.7.2 applies
unless superceded by the Float Agreement. The float
agreement does not apply to overtime on regularly scheduled
days. The Float Agreement as shown by its preamble was
intended to deal with the fact that the pilots work
irregular hours. This is shown by the union's situation.
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Usually he begins before 8 a.m.. Article 2.1 of the Float
Agreement deals with a particular type of overtime namely
the sixth and seventh days of the week and statutory
holidays. The union's position is that by addressing that
particular type of overtime, the Float Agreement implicitly
indicates that it is not addressing other overtime. Indeed
in 1981, when that language was drafted in fact there was no
other kind of overtime. The other kind of overtime came
into existence when 13.7.2 was added to the Collective
agreement. Article 2.1 of the Float Agreement is addressing
irregularity of hours, not overtime.
In support of that approach, the union argues that
the material before Arbitrator Brown supports their
interpretation of his award. Brown saw it as unfair that
Schedule 6 employees worked under different deals from other
employees. It was not Brown's intention to exclude the
supplementary agreements but to superadd Article 13.7.2 and
where that Article covers the same benefits as the
supplementary deals, Article 13.7.2 prevails.
The Ministry argues that the fact that only the
grievorasserts this claim and the agreement has always been
administered in this matter, indicates that the Float
Agreement does supercede Article 13.7.2. Counsel points out
that Arbitrator Brown's Award makes no mention-of the pilots
though he speaks of the biologists and psychiatrists within
Schedule 6. At the same time the information on the pilots
was before him. This, Counsel contended, is compounded by
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the fact that the Float Agreement gives the pilots more than
Article 13.7.1 gave to Schedule 6 employees. In his
.submission, 2.2.1 of the Float~Agreement is the counterpart
of Article 13.7.2 of the Collective Agreement and 2.1 of the
Float Agreement is the counterpart of Article 13.7.1 of the
Collective Agreement. In his view 2.1 speaks both to
week-end, overtime and the flexibility of hours, and 2.2.1
gives five days for flexibility and overtime. It is a total
package.
A close reading of the Float Agreement leads me to
the conclusion that it deals with all the possibilities:
flexible hours, week-end and statutory holiday work - and -
week-day overtime. It specifically alludes to all three.
With regard to week-day overtime, I note that Article 2.1
specifically says, "The hours in a day could be more or less --
than 8 hours." (emphasis mine). Then in Article 2.2.1, it
provides for five days leave, "to compensate for the
flexibility of the work period...". But the flexibility
includes that an employee's work day may be more than eight
hours. It is not just compensation for having to report for
work at odd-ball hours. It is a compensation both for that
and possibly longer working days. The week-ends and
statutory holidays are compensated under 2.1. Turning next
to Arbitrator Brown's Award. The language set out above in
his Award was directed at those Schedule 6 employees who got
nothing for week-day overtime. Indeed he ~rejected for them
the Union proposal for a five day off for that overtime. He
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clearly was not speaking of the pilots who, he knew, had the
Float Agreement which already gave them the five days. I am
satisfied that he did not intend the addition of what is now
Article 13.7.2 to oust the pilot’s agreement nor to
supplement it. That being so the grievance has no merit.
The grievor was correctly compensated under the Float
Agreement and is not covered by Article 13.7.2. The
Ministry also claimed there was an estoppel against the
Union and the grievor. However, since I am satisfied that
the Ministry's interpretation of the Float Agreement and
Article 13.7.2 of the Collective Agreement is correct. I
need not decide the estoppel question which the union
forcefully opposed as unproven. Accordlingly, the grievance
is dismissed.
DATED at TORONTO this 9th day of Janus 1989.
3&~,, ;dg
'momas H. Wilson
Vice-Chairperson
I. fJ!;_ ~
.:I,
G. Milley, Metier