HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-1154.Bouchard et al.90-01-29 ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE L4 COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DEL'ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE CPMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO, ONTARIO, M5G 1Z8-SUITE 2100 TELEPHONE/TktPHONE
i 180,RUE DUNDAS OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO)M5G 1Z8-BUREAU 2700 (41 ' 88
IN THE
MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
I THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
s j Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
if Between:.
OPSEU (Bouchard et al )
Grievor
— and —
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Environment)
Employer ~
Before:
N.V. Dissanayake vice—Chairperson
G. Nabi Member
E. Orsini Member
For the Grievor: B. Hanson
Counsel
Cavalluzzo, Hayes & Lennon
Barristers & Solicitors
For the Employer: M. Farso-n
Counsel
Fraser, Beatty
Barristers & Solicitors
Hearings: March 20 , 1989
May 29 , 1989
August 18 , 1989 ,
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AWARD
These are eight grievances dated June 28 , 1988 wherein
the grievors allege that the Employer has denied them
participation in, the after hours Emergency Response Programme
("ERP") . Sind the early 1970's the Ministry has had a
contingency plan to deal with environmental spills. However,
because the Ministry viewed the existing procedures to be
inefficient, in March 1986 a new procedure was. introduced to
deal with after hours spills and other emergencies. Under
this plan employee duty rosters were established on a
voluntary basis. When an emergency occurred outside the
regular work hours, employees were to be called in from this r
duty roster. Those, included in the roster stood to benefit
financially because for any time spent on the ERP after hours
they were remunerated on the basis of on-call and stand-by
rates.
The Ministry's ultimate decision on the composition of
the duty roster gave preference to abatement staff. The
grievors are all members of the technical support staff
complement. Technical support employees were included in the
roster only if sufficient numbers of abatement employees did
not volunteer for the programme. Even then, technical support
employees were required to possess certain qualifications,
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mainly relating to safety, before they were considered
eligible.
The Counsel for the Employer raised two preliminary
objections. First, that the grievances are untimely and
second, that in any event these grievances are not arbitrable
because the subject matter dealt with comes within
"organization" and "assignment", which are declared by section
18 (1) of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act to be
exclusive functions of the Employer, and as such not within
this Board's jurisdiction.
The Union concedes that the ERP was first introduced in
March 1986 and that the grievances were not filed until June
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28, 1988. . Nevertheless, it is submitted that' the Employer is
estopped from relying on the mandatory time limits in the
collective agreement for filing of grievances. The Union also
agrees that there is no provision in the applicable collective
agreement, which grants to the grievors a right to participate
in the ERP. However, the Union submits that the Ministry had
made a commitment to permit technical. support staff
participation and that the doctrine of estoppel precludes it
from subsequently reneging. The Union seeks a direction that
the grievlrs be included in the ERP roster for a period of one
year and for compensation. -
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The parties agreed that the .evidence relating to the
preliminary issues and the merits of the grievance overlapped.
Accordingly it was agreed that evidence will be received on
all of the issues, before hearing submissions on the
preliminary issues. -
The Board will first deal with the objection to its
jurisdiction based on section 18 (1) , because if this
objection is upheld the other issues become moot. The
following provisions of the Act were relied on by the parties.
7. Upon being granted representation rights, the
employee organization is authorized to bargain with
the employer on terms and conditions of employment,
except as to matters that are exclusively the
function of the employer under subsection 18 (1) ,
and, without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, including rates of remuneration, hours
of work, overtime and other premium allowance for
work performed, the mileage rate payable . to an
employee for miles travelled when he is required to
use his own automobile on the employer's business,
. benefits pertaining to time not worked by employees
including paid holidays, paid vacations, group life
insurance, health insurance and long-term income
protection insurance, promotions, demotions,
transfers, lay-offs or reappointments of employees,
the procedures applicable to the processing of
grievances, the classification and job evaluation
system, and the conditions applicable to leaves of
absence for other than any elective public office
or political activities of training and development.
18 (1) Every collective agreement shall be deemed
to provide that it is the exclusive function
of the employer to manage, which function,
without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, includes the right to determine,
(a) employment, appointment, complement,
organization, assignment, discipline,
dismissal, suspension, work methods and
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procedures, kinds and locations of equipment
and classification of positions; and
(b) merit system, training and development,
appraisal and superannuation, the governing
principles of which are subject to review by
the employer with the bargaining agent,
and such matters will not be the subject of
collective bargaining nor come within the
jurisdiction of a board.
(2) In addition to any other rights of grievance
under a collective agreement, an employee
claiming,
(a) that his position has been improperly
classified;
(b) that he has been appraised contrary to
the governing principles and standards;
or
(c) that he has been disciplined or
dismissed or suspended from his
employment without just cause,
may process such matter in accordance with
the grievance procedure provided in the
collective agreement, and failing final
determination under such procedure, the
matter may be processed in accordance with
the procedure for final determination
applicable under. section 19.
19 (1) Every collective agreement shall be deemed
to provide that in the event the parties are
unable to effect a settlement of any
differences between them arising from the
interpretation, application, administration
or alleged contravention of the agreement,
including any question as to whether a matter
is arbitrable, such matter may be referred
for arbitration to the Grievance Settlement
Board and the Board after giving full
opportunity to the parties to present their
evidence and to make their submissions, shall
decide the matter and its decision is final
and binding upon the parties and the
employees covered by the agreement.
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Article 27 . 16 of the collective agreement provides:
26, 16 The Grievance Settlement Board shall have no
jurisdiction to alter, change, amend or
enlarge any provision of the Collective
Agreement.
On the issue of arbitrability Counsel for the Union
submits that the subject matter of these grievances do not
fall within section 18 (1) . He relies on section 7 . He
submits that even if the participation in the ERP is within
section 18 (1) as claimed by the Employer, it also comes within
the phrase "hours of work" in section 7 , which is declared to
be a term of condition of employment which is bargainable.
It is counsel's contention that the issue of participation in
the ERP is primarily an issue relating to hours of work and,
if at all, only incidentally a matter of organization and
assignment.
The Board in OLBEU AND L.L.B.O (Samuels) 2499/86 was
called upon to deal with a similar issue. The following
excerpt- from the Board's decision is very instructive on the
application of section 7 and 18 (1) of the Act:
The issue is whether or not the use of a
vehicle and the rates to be paid for use of an
employee's personal vehicle are matters of
"management" [that is, within the exclusive
jurisdiction of management, pursuant to Article
18 (1) ) or matters of "terms and conditions of
employment" (which_ can be bargained, pursuant to
Article 7) .
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In our view, the answer is not straight-
forward.
In some cases, these matters would be simply
"terms and conditions of employment" . For example,
suppose that the Employer is indifferent in
operational terms to whether the employee uses -a
Ministry vehicle or a personal vehicle, and the
parties have agreed that the compensation package
for the employees would consist of an hourly rate,
plus a reasonable mileage rate for use of personal
vehicles. For various reasons, this compensation
package may be more desirable to the employees than
simply receiving an hourly rate. In these
circumstances, we would say that an agreement
between the parties covering the use of personal
vehicles falls within Section 7 of the Act, and is
not precluded by Section 18 (1) .
Generally, all matter of dollars and cents
which relate . to compensation for employees can be
bargained between the parties. These matters are
"terms and conditions of employment" . The Employer
may, if it wishes, agree to give employees the right
to use their own vehicles andto pay a mileage rate
for this use. . This would be one of the matters
concerning compensation for the employees. Of
course, the Employer may decide not to give these
rights under the collective agreement. But these
are matters over which the Employer can bargain, and
these rights if given will be part of the "terms and
conditions of employment" as. envisaged by Section
7 of the Act.
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On the other hand, there may be a legitimate
"management" concern related to the use of vehicles
[in the sense meant in Section 18 (1) ] . For example,
if the Employer wants an employee to travel in a
vehicle marked specially as a Ministry vehicle (with
special colors and markings) , because it is
necessary to maintain the Ministry's image, or if
the Employer wants an employee to use a Ministry
vehicle because - of concerns about insurance and
public liability, this -would be , a matter of
"management" and would be within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Employer. In these
circumstances, the use of vehicles would fall within
Section 18 (1) and the Employer could not tie its
hands by an agreement with the Union which
interfered with the Employer's power to determine
this use of vehicles.
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With respect to an agreement 'concerning
mileage rates to be paid for authorized use of
personal" vehicles,this would always be a matter of
"terms and conditions of employment" under Section
7 of the Act. Once the Employer has made the
decision to authorize the use of personal vehicles,
the compensation to be paid to employees for this
use is a matter of "terms and conditions of
employment" .
In that case, since the Ministry had exercised its
exclusive management rights to authorize the use of personal
vehicles, the_ Board held that the issue of mileage rates for
the use of personal vehicles was a term or condition of
employment, which was negotiable under section 7 .
The situation here is just the reverse. The Employer has
established a procedure to meet its needs relating to after
hours emergency response. It had then to decide which
employees will' be utilized. It has concluded that abatement
employees are most - suitable and qualified to perform that
-work, and that technical support employees will only be
utilized as a second resort. The' Employer has further
determined that if technical support employees are to be
included in the duty. roster they must obtain certain
qualifications. In our view, these decisions made by the
Employer are analogous to the Employer's decision in the LLBO .
case (supra) whether or not to allow the use of personal
vehicles for ministry work. The Board there held that the
decision as to use of personal vehicles was a management
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function within the meaning of section 18 (1) . So also we
must find that the decision as to which group of employees
will be utilized in the ERP is a management function. If the
Employer had decided that technical support employees would
be included in the roster, then any concerns arising out of
the decision as to appropriate rates, distribution etc. may
have been negotiable as terms and conditions of employment
under section 7 . The Employer decision under challenge
directly , relates to organi.zation of the workforce and
assignment of work and are clearly within the exclusive
management functions in section 18 (1) . And section 18 -(1)
declares that " . . . such matters will not be the subject of
collective bargaining nor come within the jurisdiction of a
board" . [See Hendrix, 0700/86 (Draper) holding that assigning
of employees to the stand by list is a management function
within the meaning of section 18 (1) 3 .
That leads us to the alternate submission of the Union
that even if the 'subject matter of the grievances 'is an
exclusive management function within section 18 (1) , because
of a commitment made by the Employer it is estopped. from
relying on management rights. Counsel argues that promissory
estoppel applies even with regard to those matters within
section 18 (1) . Counsel relies on article 35 (1) of the
collective agreements which contemplates local agreements.
The contention is that because of the commitment made by the
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employer, the Union was misled and denied the .opportunity to
negotiate a local agreement with regard to participation in
the ERP.
Article 35.1 reads:
35. 1 It is agreed that all ministries may enter
into local and ministry employee relations
negotiations such that ax'e _appropriate as
not being excluded by the rovisiohs of The
Crown EmRloyees Collective_ Bargaining Act.
Such negotiations shall not be subject to
the mediation and arbitration procedures
under the Act, provided however, that nothing
shall preclude a grievance alleging a
violation of the Collective Agreement, as
provided .in the said Act.
(Emphasis added)
The emphasized portion of article 35. 1 clearly indicates
that the parties recognized that only matters not excluded by
the provisions of the Act can be the subject- of local
agreements. We have already determined that the question of
who will have the right to participate in the ERP is a matter
excluded from collective bargaining under section 18 (1) . It
follows that that issue could not have been the subject of a
local agreement under article 35. 1 either. Therefore, it is
not open for the Union to claim detrimental reliance, that is;
to claim that they were deprived of the opportunity to
negotiate a local agreement. They would . not have I been
deprived of anything, because they had no right to negotiate
with regard to the particular subject matter in the first
place.
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APPENDIX
LIST OF GRIEVORS
BOUCHARD, Michel
COWIN, Cindy
CROSSLEY, Frank
ELLIOTT, Steve S.
MITTON, Alida M.
MULDER, James R.J.
REEVES, Ted C.
RICKEY, Neil
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For all of the foregoing reasons, the Board upholds the
Employers submission that the subject matter of these
grievances are exclusive functions of management within the
meaning of section 18 (1) of the Act and are therefore
inarbitrable. In view of this finding it is unnecessary for
the Board to consider the Employer's objection based on time-
liness.
These grievances are accordingly dismissed.
Dated this.-29th day of January_,I." 1990 at Hamilton, Ontario
N. Dissanayake
Vice-Chairperson
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G. Nabi
Member
E. rsini
Mem er