HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-1375.Lariviere.01-04-10 DecisionONTARIO EMPLOYÉS DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L’ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT RÈGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, SUITE 600, TORONTO ON M5G 1Z8 TELEPHONE/TÉLÉPHONE, (416) 326-1388
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GSB#1375/99
UNION FILE#OLB043/99
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Liquor Boards Employees’ Union
(Lariviere)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
Employer
BEFORE Daniel A. Harris Vice-Chair
FOR THE Craig Flood, Counsel
GRIEVOR Koskie Minsky
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE Michael G. Sherrard, Counsel
EMPLOYER Ogilvy Renault
Barristers and Solicitors
HEARING September 25, 2000 and December 4, 2000.
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DECISION
The Proceedings
This matter first came on for hearing on February 3, 2000 in Guelph,
Ontario. At that time the parties entered into negotiations with a view to resolving
or focusing the issues. The matter resumed April 28, 2000, at which time the
employer raised a preliminary objection that the Board had no jurisdiction to hear
the matter by operation of either the principle of res judicata or issue estoppel. An
interim decision dated May 12, 2000 resolved that aspect of the proceedings.
The matter was resumed September 25, 2000 for argument on this further
preliminary issue as to jurisdiction. Those arguments were completed December
4, 2000. The parties agree that this matter raises the following questions and now
ask the Board to answer the first question:
1.) Does the language of the collective agreement, on its face, establish the
arbitrability of a grievance concerning long-term income protection (hereafter
LTIP)?
2.) Is there a patent ambiguity concerning the arbitrability of LTIP benefits?
3.) Is there a latent ambiguity concerning the arbitrability of LTIP benefits?
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The Facts
The facts giving rise to the grievance are straightforward. The grievor, Mr.
Lariviere was denied LTIP benefits. He filed a grievance, which sought an order
confirming eligibility and directing the LCBO to provide him with LTIP benefits.
The parties have resolved the grievor’s claims but none the less agreed that the
legal questions set out above should be determined. They are to be commended for
taking this approach. The grievance alleges a breach of article 20 of the collective
agreement, the relevant portions of which read as follows:
ARTICLE 20
Employees’ Group Insurance and Medical Benefits Plans
The summaries contained in Article 20.1 through 20.5 inclusive and 20.7, are intended
merely as a convenient reference to the more important terms and provisions of these
benefits. The master contracts covering these plans shall be the governing documents.
. . .
20.5 Long Term Income Protection Plan (L.T.I.P)
(a) The L.T.I.P. Plan shall be continued and shall be upon the same basis as
heretofore in effect.
(b) Plan Details
(i) L.T.I.P. benefits will become payable if while insured the
employee becomes “totally disabled” – benefits continue during
disability to age sixty-five (65), after an elimination period of six
(6) months, or the expiration of accumulated attendance credits,
whichever is the latter.
(ii) “Total disability” under this plan means the continuous inability
as the result of illness or injury of the insured employee to
perform each and every duty of normal occupation during the
elimination period, and during the first twenty-four (24) months
of the benefit period; and thereafter, during the balance of the
benefit period, the inability to perform any and every duty of
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each gainful occupation for which the employee is reasonably
fitted by education, training or experience.
(iii) L.T.I.P. benefits shall be sixty-six and two-thirds percent (66
2/3%) of the employee’s gross salary, earned on the last day
worked, including any retroactive salary adjustment to which the
employee is entitled.
(iv) While the employee is receiving L.T.I.P. benefits, the Employer
will maintain the employee’s pension contribution in accordance
with the OPSEU Pension Plan text.
(v) If the employee becomes disabled again while still insured for
this benefit, the income benefits will be payable on completion
of the elimination period however, if within three (3) months
after benefits have ceased, the employee has a recurrence of a
disability due to the same or a related cause, it will not be
necessary to satisfy the elimination period again.
(vi) An employee in receipt of L.T.I.P. benefits who is able to
resume activity on a gradual basis during recovery, partial
benefits may be continued during rehabilitative employment –
“rehabilitative employment” means remunerative employment
while not yet fully recovered, following directly after the period
of total disability for which benefits were received – when
considering rehabilitative employment benefits, L.T.I.P will take
into account the employee’s training, education and experience –
the rehabilitative benefit will be the monthly L.T.I.P benefit less
fifty percent (50%) of rehabilitative employment earnings – the
benefit will continue during the rehabilitative employment
period up to but not more than twenty-four (24) months –
rehabilitative employment may be with the Employer or with
another employer.
(vii) L.T.I.P. was optional for employees appointed up to June 30th
1971 – these employees may opt out of the L.T.I.P. plan in the
future if they so desire – employees appointed July 1, 1971 and
subsequently, do not have the privilege of opting out the L.T.I.P.
benefit.
(viii) The L.T.I.P. benefit under (iii) will be increased for each
employee who commenced to receive L.T.I.P. benefits:
(a) from and including January 1, 1981, to and including
December 31, 1982, by eighty dollars ($80.00) per month;
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(b) from and including January 1, 1983, to and including
December 31, 1984, by sixty dollars ($60.00) per month;
(c) from and including January 1, 1985, to and including
December 31, 1986 by forty-five dollars ($45.00) per month;
(d) from and including January 1, 1987, to and including
December 31, 1988 by forty dollars ($40.00) per month;
(e) from and including January 1, 1989, to and including
December 31, 1990, by twenty dollars ($20.00) per month;
(f) from and including January 1, 1991, to and including
December 31, 1992, by ten dollars ($10.00) per month;
In respect of each month the employee continues to receive
L.T.I.P. benefits under the plan.
(ix) The L.T.I.P benefit to which an employee is entitled under (iii)
and (viii) above will be reduced by the total of other disability or
retirement benefits payable under any other plan toward which
the Employer makes a contribution except for Workplace Safety
and Insurance Benefits paid for an unrelated disability.
(c) The Employer shall pay one hundred percent (100%) of the premium as
may be amended from time to time.
(d) (i) When an employee, who has been receiving L.T.I.P benefits, is
able to return to full time employment the Employer may assign
the employee to a vacancy which is in the same class or position
as the employee’s former class or position, for which he/she is
qualified.
(ii) Where there is no such position the employee may be assigned to
a lower classification for which he/she is qualified, in the work
area.
(iii) An employee who is assigned under this clause shall be paid at
the same step he/she had attained in the salary range of the
classification of the position he/she occupied prior to disability
for a period of six months. At the end of that period he/she shall
be paid at a rate within the salary range of the classification of
the position to which he/she has been assigned.
(iv) Where there is no available position in the work area for which
the employee is qualified, he/she shall be declared surplus
subject to the provisions of Article 5.
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(v) Where an employee does not accept an assignment under this
clause he/she shall be laid off and the provisions of Article 5.7
shall not apply.
(vi) It is understood that when it is necessary to assign an employee
under this section the provision of Article 21 shall not apply.
20.6 Joint Insurance and Benefit Committee
(a) The Committee shall be referred to as the Joint Insurance Benefits Review
Committee.
(b)
(i) The purpose of this Committee is to facilitate communications
between the Employer and the Union on the subject of Group
Insurance including Basic Life Insurance, Supplementary Life
Insurance, Supplementary Health & Hospitalization Insurance
(including vision care), Long Tern Income Protection Insurance,
Dental Plan and such other negotiated benefits as may from time
to time be included in the Group Insurance Plan.
(ii) It is understood that the Group Insurance benefits to be provided
to employees and the cost sharing arrangements between the
Employer and its employees shall be as set out in any applicable
collective agreement or arbitration award, and the matters for
consideration by this Committee shall be only as set out in these
terms of reference.
(c) The Committee shall be composed of an equal number of representatives
from the Employer and the Union with not more than eight (8)
representatives in total. At meetings of the Committee, each party may be
accompanied by an actuary and/or consultant to provide technical advice and
counsel.
(d) (i) The duties of the Committee shall consist of the following:
(a) development of the specifications for the public
tendering of any negotiated benefits which may be
included in the Group Insurance Plan (to cover the
bargaining unit only);
(b) determination of the manner in which the specifications
will be made available for public tendering;
(c) consideration and examination of all tenders submitted
in response to the specifications for tender and
preparation of a report theron;
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(d) recommendation to the Government of Ontario on the
selection of insurance carrier or carriers to underwrite
the Group Insurance Plans;
(e) review of the semi-annual financial reports on the Group
Insurance Plan; and,
(f) review of the contentious claims and recommendations
thereon, when such claim problems have not been
resolved through the existing administrative procedures.
(ii) The specifications for tender will describe the benefits to be
provided, the cost sharing arrangement between the Employer
and its employees, the past financial history of the insurance
plans, the employee date, the format for the rentention
illustration for each coverage and the financial reporting
requirements. Tenders shall be entertained by the Committee
from any individual insurance carrier acting solely on its own
behalf. This shall not preclude such carrier from arranging
reinsurance as may be necessary.
(iii) The basis for recommendation of an insurance carrier(s) will
include the ability of the carrier(s) to underwrite the plan,
compliance of the carrier’s quotation with the specifications for
tender, the carrier’s service capabilities and the expected long
term net cost of the benefits to be provided.
(e) (i) The Committee will also meet every six (6) months to review the
financial experience under these coverages. The specifications
for tender will describe the information to be included in the
semi-annual financial statements to be prepared by the insurance
carrier(s). These statements will include paid premiums, paid
claims, changes in reserve claims, incurred claims, the retention
elements of commissions, taxes, administrative expenses,
contingency reserve charges and interest credits on claims and
other reserves. The insurance carrier(s) will also be required to
report on the level and method of administering the Employer’s
and employee’s deposit accounts.
(ii) The Committee shall request the insurance carrier(s) to provide
such additional information for the Committee’s consideration as
may be required by either the Employer or the Union.
(iii) If the Joint Insurance Benefits Review Committee fails to agree
on a recommendation to the Government of Ontario on the
selection of insurance carrier(s) to underwrite the Group
Insurance Plan, the members of the said Committee nominated
by the Employer and the Union may each make a
recommendation in writing to the Government of Ontario on the
selection of the insurance carrier(s) supported by reasons for
their respective recommendations.
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(iv) It is understood that the Government at all times retains the right
to select whatever carrier(s) (to underwrite the Group Insurance
Plan) it may consider what would best serve the “public interest”
and, in so doing, is under no obligation to select a carrier(s) that
may be recommended by the Joint Insurance Benefits Review
Committee.
The Submissions of the Parties
The employer argued that the terms of the collective agreement do
not impose on it an obligation to determine eligibility of any employee to receive
LTIP benefits. It is only obliged to pay the cost of premiums to obtain the
necessary coverage, and there is no allegation that the employer failed to secure
appropriate benefit coverage through insurance.
The employer argued that the appropriate legal framework for
considering this matter has been laid down by the Ontario Court of Appeal in
London Life Insurance Co. v. Dubreuil Brothers Employees Assn., a Division of
IWA Canada, Local 2693 (2000), 49 O.R. (3d) 766 (leave to appeal to S.C.C.
dismissed, March 15, 2001). Paragraphs 10 and 37 of the Court of Appeal’s
decision read as follows:
10 On judicial review the Divisional Court approached the matter differently. It
acknowledged the arbitration jurisprudence has over the years developed a well
9
understood method of deciding the arbitrability of benefit entitlement claims. This
involves determining into which of four categories the language of the particular
collective agreement falls. These four categories were originally identified in Brown and
Beatty, Canadian Labour Arbitration, 3rd ed. (1988) and are as follows:
1. where the collective agreement does not set out the benefit sought to be enforced,
the claim is inarbitrable;
2. where the collective agreement stipulates that the employer is obliged to provide
certain medical or sick pay benefits, but does not incorporate the plan into the
agreement or make specific reference to it, the claim is arbitrable;
3. where the collective agreement only obliges the employer to pay the premiums
associated with an insurance plan, the claim is inarbitrable; and
4. where an in insurance policy is incorporated into the collective agreement, the
claim in arbitrable.
. . .
37 In the result, the decision of the Divisional Court quashing the arbitration award
is correct and the appeal must be dismissed with costs including the costs of the motion
seeking leave to appeal.
The employer submitted that the preamble of Article 20 is a promise to buy
insurance and does not incorporate the contracts by reference. Accordingly, the
essential character of this dispute is the grievor’s entitlement to LTIP benefits,
which this collective agreement provides is a determination to be made by the
insurance carrier. The denial of entitlement is a matter for the courts to decide at
the suit of the grievor.
The employer relied on the following authorities: London Life Insurance
Co. v. Dubreuil Brothers Employees Association, a Division of IWA Canada,
Local 2693, (supra); Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada v. National Automobile
10
Aerospace, Transportation and General Workers Union of Canada, [2000] O.J.
No. 2608 (C.A.); Re Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. Burkett (1997), 155 D.L.R.
(4th) 159 (Ont. C.A.); Re Esselte Canada Inc. v. G.C.I.U., Local 100-M (1998), 76
L.A.C. (4th) 32 (Nairn); Brown and Beatty, Collective Labour Arbitration, 3rd ed.
(Aurora, Ont: Canada Law Book, 1999) at ¶ 4:1400; Re Coca-Cola Bottling v.
U.F.C.W. (Boud) (1994), 44 L.A.C. (4th) 151 (Swan); O.P.S.E.U. (Hooey) v.
Ministry of Health, (November 15, 1982, GSB #348/81, unreported Weatherill,
Craven, Reistetter); Re Public Service Alliance of Canada v. Alliance Employees’
Union (1998), 77 L.A.C. (4th) 47 (Burkett); Re Dominion Tanners and U.F.C.W.,
Local 832 (1996), 56 L.A.C. (4th) 392 (Hamilton); Re Abbott Laboratories and
R.W.D.S.U. (1998), 74 L.A.C. (4th) 331 (R.Brown); Re SKD Co. and C.A.W. –
Canada, Local 89 (Pereira) (1999), 82 L.A.C. (4th) 248. (Williamson); Re
Renfrew (County) and O.N.A. (1995), 49 L.A.C. (4th) 270 (Fraser, Herbert,
Pearlman)
The union argued that the issue before the Board is the extent to which the
LTIP benefit language is arbitrable. The union said that the provisions of Article
20.5 are a commitment to provide the benefits listed, bringing this collective
agreement within the second category set out above. The union pointed to the
extensive recitation of the benefits covered as a promise to provide the benefits
and an indication that the parties intended that entitlement be arbitrable. On that
basis, the failure to provide the benefits is arbitrable.
11
Further, and in the alternative, this collective agreement has elements of
category four because there is sufficient reference to the insurance documents as to
incorporate them by reference and thereby render their terms arbitrable.
The Union said that the Board must be careful not to impose rigid
categories upon the collective agreement. Rather, the essential character of the
collective agreement is to be determined. In so doing, there are elements here of
categories 2, 3, and 4, which indicates an intention to impose upon the employer
enforceable promises beyond the mere payment of premiums. By way of
example, the union noted that the collective agreement contains anti-
discrimination provisions that may be abridged by the provisions of the insurance
contracts. There was said to be a residual arbitrability that allows the Board to
assure itself that the policies are in compliance with the general law, such as
human rights and equality law. That is, arbitrable gaps in coverage do not stop at
the benefits provided by the insurance but include a quasi-constitutional rights
analysis. Therefore, whatever the answer to question one, the Board may always
assess whether there are gaps in coverage. At stake are the rights of disabled
workers. It is article 2.1 (b) that deals with discrimination. It reads as follows:
2.1 (b) There shall be no discrimination or harassment practised by reason of race,
ancestry, place of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual
12
orientation, age, marital status, family status, or handicap as defined in the
Ontario Human Rights Code.
The union also submitted that Article 20.6 supports a finding that the
intention of the parties was that the employer is liable for the provision of benefits
not simply the payment of premiums, since that article provides for comprehensive
joint administration.
The Union relied on the following authorities: Gibbs v. Battlefords and
District Co-operative Ltd. (1996), 140 D.L.R. (4th) 1; London (City) (Dearness
Home) and London & District Service Worker’s Union, Loc. 220, Re (1991), 19
L.A.C. (4th) 213 (Hunter); A.E. McKenzie Co. and U.E.C.W., Loc. 832, Re (1993),
37 L.A.C. (4th) 129 (Hamilton); British Columbia Rapid Transit Co. and Office &
Technical Employees Union, Loc. 378 Re (1989), 6 L.A.C. (4th) 310 (McColl);
Domglass Inc. and United Glass & Ceramic Workers, Local 201, Re (1985), 22
L.A.C. (3d) 355 (Beatty); ICG Utilities Greater Winnipeg Gas Co. and E.C.W.U.,
Loc. 681, Re (1989), 8 L.A.C. (4th) 289 (Freedman); Coca-Cola Bottling Ltd. and
R.W.D.S.U., Loc. 1065 (Colpitts) (Re), (1998), 76 L.A.C. (4th) 105 (Christie);
Longlac (Town) and I.W.A. – Canada, Loc. 2693 (Abernot) (re) (1999), 82 L.A.C.
(4th) 368 (Haefling); Atlantic Packaging Products Ltd. and G.C.I.U. Loc. N-1
(Ramnarine) (Re) (1997), 68 L.A.C. (4th) 174 (Carrier); Oakville (Town) and
C.U.P.E., Loc. 136 (Pillon) (Re) (1997), 68 L.A.C. (4th) 117 (O’Neill).
13
The employer said in reply that the cases relied on by the union dealt with
gaps in the insurance coverage provided. It conceded that an allegation of a gap in
coverage would be arbitrable; however, there is no gap alleged here. Also, in this
matter there is no allegation of a breach of human rights or the anti-discrimination
clause of the collective agreement, which would also be arbitrable. Finally, with
respect to article 20.06, the employer said that the scope afforded to joint
administration was very limited and did not support the argument concerning the
arbitrability of benefit denial.
Reasons for Decision
Leave to appeal the decision in Dubreuil (supra) was denied by the
Supreme Court of Canada on March 15, 2001. Accordingly, the four well-known
and long-established categories under which benefits are provided in a collective
agreement continue to give the labour-relations community a framework within
which the parties are taken to operate. As submitted by the union, the categories
are not hard and fast compartments into which a collective agreement must be
press-fit. Rather, they are a compendious statement of how a great many
collective agreements have chosen to express benefit provisions. Now, as always,
the source document for determining the parties’ intentions is the collective
agreement, not Brown and Beatty’s text, as helpful a tool as it is.
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In Dubreuil (supra), the Court of Appeal settled the controversy engendered by
Pilon v. International Minerals and Chemical Corp. (1966), 31 O.R. (3d) 210 by
reviewing the benefit provisions of the collective agreement in light of the
analytical framework of Weber v. Ontario Hydro [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929. The proper
application of the common law led the Court of Appeal to the conclusion that the
dispute in Dubreuil did not arise out of the collective agreement and was therefore
beyond the exclusive jurisdiction of the arbitrator. The collective agreement and
the disputes that arise from it are the core of that exclusive jurisdiction.
In Regina Police Association Inc. v. Regina (City) Board of Police Commissioners
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 360. Bastarache J., in paragraph 25, elaborated on the analytical
approach of Weber. There are two elements to consider: the nature of the dispute,
that is, its essential character, and the ambit of the collective agreement Bastarache
J.’s comments are cited in Dubreuil at paragraph 21 and read as follows:
To determine whether a dispute arises out of the collective agreement, we must therefore
consider two elements: the nature of the dispute and the ambit of the collective
agreement. In considering the nature of the dispute, the goal is to determine its essential
character. This determination must proceed on the basis of the facts surrounding the
dispute between the parties, and not on the basis of how the legal issues may be framed:
see Weber, supra, at para. 43. Simply, the decision-maker must determine whether,
having examined the factual context of the dispute, its essential character concerns a
subject matter that is covered by the collective agreement. Upon determining the essential
character of the dispute, the decision-maker must examine the provisions of the collective
agreement to determine whether it contemplates such factual situations. It is clear that the
collective agreement need not provide for the subject matter of the dispute explicitly. If
the essential character of the dispute arises either explicitly, or implicitly, from the
interpretation, application, administration or violation of the collective agreement, the
dispute is within the sole jurisdiction of an arbitrator to decide: see, e.g., Weber, at para.
54; New Brunswick v. O'Leary, supra, at para. 6.
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It is agreed that the essential character of this dispute is the grievor’s
entitlement to LTIP benefits. Is that a dispute that the parties intended to settle
between themselves at arbitration? That is, does the collective agreement govern
that dispute? It is important to note that I am here asked specifically to consider
the plain meaning of the words of the collective agreement.
Article 20, entitled “Employees’ Group Insurance and Medical Benefits Plans”,
includes the important preamble set out above and again reproduced for
convenience as follows:
The summaries contained in Article 20.1 through 20.5 inclusive and 20.7, are intended
merely as a convenient reference to the more important terms and provisions of these
benefits. The master contracts covering these plans shall be the governing documents.
A “plain-meaning” parsing of that paragraph neither indicates neither that
the employer is obliged to provide those benefits nor that the employer is obliged
only to purchase insurance. Further, the reference to Articles 20.1 through 20.5
and 20.7 being merely convenient references “to the more important terms and
provisions of these benefits” also does not speak to the obligation of the employer
to either provide the benefits or purchase insurance to provide them. Also, it
cannot be said that the reference to the “master contracts” plainly intends to
incorporate those contracts. They are said to be the governing documents, but
their status as part and parcel of the collective agreement is not clearly expressed.
They are not defined with such precision as to be capable of incorporation by
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reference. The preamble simply sets out that the provisions that follow are the
benefits that have been negotiated. It does not say how eligibility will be
determined.
Article 20.5 deals directly and comprehensively with LTIP benefits. The
LTIP plan is said to continue. There is no description of its form, which is neither
a clear indication of its enforceability at arbitration nor incorporation by reference.
The article does go on to clearly define the various benefits to be accorded covered
employees. Covered employees are described as “insured” employees. Article
20.5 (b) (i) provides in part that “LTIP benefits will become payable if while
insured the employee becomes ‘totally disabled’ ” and in article 20.5 (b) (ii)
reference is made to the “insured employee”. These are clear indications that
benefit coverage is intended to be achieved through insurance. Article 20.5 (c) also
clearly requires the employer to pay “one hundred percent (100%) of the
premium”. The rest of the article goes on to provide for the employer’s and
employee’s rights and obligations on return to work after having received LTIP
benefits.
The union relied on article 20.6 “Joint Insurance and Benefit Committee”
as an expression of the parties’ intention that the employer itself is liable for the
benefits promised to the members of the bargaining unit. It submitted that such a
17
comprehensive joint administration is inconsistent with devolving entitlement
questions to an outside insurance company.
Article 20.6 (b) describes LTIP benefits as negotiated benefits. However,
that does not amount to a promise to provide benefits rather than purchase
insurance to cover the enumerated benefits. Of particular interest is article 20.6
(b) (ii). That article bears repeating:
It is understood that the Group Insurance benefits to be provided to employees and the
cost sharing arrangements between the Employer and its employees shall be as set out in
any applicable collective agreement or arbitration award, and the matters for
consideration by this Committee shall be only as set out in these terms of reference.
That provision is a clear expression that the “Group Insurance benefits” are
as defined in the collective agreement.1 There is no reference here to any master
contracts, or incorporation of contracts by reference. That is, the agreement sets
out a list of benefits to be provided by “Group Insurance”. The subsequent
provisions lay down a comprehensive joint procedure for obtaining the “Group
Insurance” being the purchase of insurance to provide the benefits set out in the
“collective agreement or arbitration award.”
1 There is also a reference to benefits set out in an arbitration award. I take that as the potential for an
interest arbitration award, in view of this Board’s exclusive jurisdiction over rights matters and the standard
prohibition contained in Article 27.10 against altering, modifying or amending the collective agreement.
18
In my view, taken as a whole, the language of article 20, on its plain
meaning, indicates an intention by the parties that specific enumerated LTIP
benefits will be provided to eligible members of the bargaining unit by means of
insurance. That is the ambit of this collective agreement. The ambit does not
include an obligation by the employer to directly provide those benefits nor does
the collective agreement incorporate the insurance contracts by reference. It
would require clear language to do so and that language is absent. Indeed the
language of Article 20.6 is completely consistent with, and indicative of, an
intention to create contracts of insurance that are distant from the collective
agreement. It is the Government of Ontario that ultimately selects the carrier. It is
free to ignore the recommendation of the Joint Committee if it is in the “public
interest” to do so.
The present dispute over the grievor’s denial of entitlement is not within the
ambit of the collective agreement. The union has expressed other concerns,
examples and situations such as potential human rights violations. Those are
different disputes with different facts and essential characters that may or may not
fall within the ambit of the collective agreement and the exclusive jurisdiction of
this Board. In such cases the issue would be whether the employer has purchased
a lawful insurance policy that covers the enumerated benefits. That is, whether or
not there is a gap between the insurance obtained and all of the promises of the
collective agreement, considered within the context of the general law. In this case
19
there is no allegation that there is a gap between the insurance purchased and the
benefits promised by the collective agreement. If the employer fails to purchase
the insurance necessary to provide for the benefits negotiated in the collective
agreement, that failure would be arbitrable. In my view, this is an example of
Brown & Beatty’s third category.
The Decision
The employer’s obligation is to pay the premiums associated with an
insurance plan for defined benefits. The language, on its face, does not establish
the arbitrability of a grievance concerning eligibility for long-term income
protection.
Dated at Toronto, this 10th day of April, 2001.
Daniel A. Harris, Vice Chair.