HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009-2681.Hogue et al.13-10-10 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2009-2681
UNION#2009-0551-0012
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Hogue et al.) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Barry Stephens Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Frank Inglis
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Felix Lau
Ministry of Government Services
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING June 26, 2013
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Decision
[1] By agreement of the parties, this decision is issued in accordance with Article 22.16 of
the collective agreement, and is without prejudice or precedent.
[2] This grievance relates to the application of COR 8.1.2, which deals with the distribution
of overtime, and reads as follows:
COR 8.2.1 In the assignment of overtime, the Employer agrees to develop
methods of distributing overtime at the local workplace that are
fair and equitable after having ensured that all its operational
requirements are met.
[3] The grievance also alleges a breach of COR 11, relating to on-call duty and the premium
associated with such duty.
[4] The grievors all work as Electronic Supervision Resource Officers (ESRO) in the
Ministry’s Electronic Supervision Program (ESP), which monitors individuals who
have been sentenced by the courts to home supervision through the use of electronic
devices such as affixed anklets. The grievance allege that the employer is in breach of
COR 8.2.1 and COR 11 as a result of the fact that the employer has not established a
method for the equal distribution of overtime, and that the ESRO’s no longer have
access to on-call duty pay.
[5] The facts behind the dispute are not complex and not in dispute. The ESRO’s work out
of different communities spread across the province. At one point there were
approximately twelve, but the current number of active ESRO’s is nine. Prior to 2008,
the ESRO’s performed the bulk of the work associated with the ESP, which meant, in
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addition to their regular duties, they worked significant amounts of overtime to cover
for their colleagues and also regularly worked a set on-call schedule to cover after-hour
alerts. Both the overtime work and on-call duty attracted premium pay under the
collective agreement.
[6] In 2008, the Ministry advised the ESRO’s that a new monitoring centre would be
created in Mississauga. This centre is staffed on a 24/7 basis. The employer created
nine Monitoring Centre Officer (MCO) positions. These positions were posted but none
of the grievors applied to move to the new jobs in Mississauga. There is considerable
overlap in the job duties of the MCO and the ESRO, as reflected in the Positions
Description Reports (PDR). However, the MCO PDR stipulates that those working at
the monitoring Centre in Mississauga are required to work rotating shifts on a “24 / 7 /
365 basis.” There is no similar requirement for the ESRO position, and the grievors are
not required to work shifts.
[7] The employer argues that the purpose for establishing the Monitoring Centre was to
centralize a large portion of the ESP work. Since the Ministry uses an external
contractor to do home inspections and installations, all of the related tasks can now be
performed by use of computer monitoring software and telephone communication with
key stakeholders, such as clients, collateral contacts, parole officers and, ultimately, the
police. The employer stated that it prefers to have all of the shift work, and any related
overtime, performed at a single, secure location, as this obviates the concerns related to
employees in the field working alone after hours at local parole offices. Also,
electronic systems are centralized at the location, which assists with the process of
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installation and troubleshooting. In addition, stakeholders access the ESP resources
through one toll-free number, and it is preferable to channel all such calls to a single
location for processing. Moreover, the physical files related to each offender are located
at the Mississauga Centre and centralization of the work improves access to such
information. Finally, the Centre contains a backup system in the event that there is a
disruption of regular servers or government Internet services. For all of these reasons,
the employer argues, the restructuring of the work serves a legitimate business need.
More importantly, these factors also differentiate the MCO positions from those of the
ESRO’s, such that there is clearly a separate “local workplace” at the Mississauga
Centre. There is a system in place at the Centre for the fair and equitable distribution of
overtime, and there is no basis for a grievance related to the overtime claims made by
the grievors.
[8] The union argues that they perform the work in question during the day shift, they have
performed the same work in the past, and there is no technical impediment to the
employer treating the ESRO’s and the MCO’s as working in the same “local
workplace” for the purposes of distribution of overtime.
[9] The union asserts that the PDR’s for the two positions are “virtually identical”, aside
from the stipulation that the MOC position are said to require work rotating shifts,
whereas there is no such stipulation for the ESRO’s. However, the union relies on the
fact that the ESRO’s were required to work shifts in the past, and when they did so,
they performed precisely the same role as the MOC’s now perform. Both positions,
however, are classified at Rehab Officer 2, and the purpose, duties and knowledge
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aspects for both jobs are, according to the PDR’s, essentially the same. The union
argues that the only significant effect of the establishment of the Centre is that the
senior employees performing the same job have now been deprived of overtime and on-
call work.
Decision
[10] The employer is not required to establish a system for the fair distribution of overtime
across a given classification or even across a group of employees performing the same
job. Overtime opportunities do not have to be equally distributed between all
correctional officers across the province, for example, but only within each institution.
This follows from the collective agreement language, in which the obligation is
restricted to the “local workplace.” Therefore, this dispute is not to be determined on
the basis of a finding that the duties of the MCO’s and the ESRO’s are “virtually
identical.” Even if I found that the jobs were identical, such a finding would not require
a system for the fair distribution of overtime. The question is whether the two groups
form a “local workplace” for the purposes of COR 8.2.1.
[11] The problem for the grievors is that the collective agreement contains a specific
reference to the “local workplace” as the defining group of employees among whom
overtime opportunities must be distributed. This phrase is, in my mind, unambiguous
and it clearly refers to a physical geographic location. It is difficult to see how widely
distributed workplaces can be considered to be “local”. To be sure, the language does
not seem to take into account the fact that there might be positions which may
constitute “virtual” workplaces, in that all of the employees are interconnected via the
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internet and are required to assist and cover off for each other, as was the case for the
ESRO’s prior to the creation of the MCO positions and the Mississauga Centre.
However, the fact that the parties may not have accounted for all types of work in the
collective agreement does not alter the meaning of the phrase in question.
[12] The issue before me is whether the MCO’s at the Mississauga Centre and the ESRO’s
working out of their various local probation offices across the province constitute a
“local workplace” for the purposes of COR 8.2.1. It is my conclusion that the language
cannot be stretched so far. First, it is clear that the grievors do not work in the same
physical location, and none of them works at the same physical location as the MCO’s.
I do not agree that COR 8.2.1 was intended to capture a circumstance in which one
group of employee’s works at the same location, while a number of others perform
similar work at different locations across the province. I do not see how such an
arrangement can be seen to constitute a “local workplace” in any sense.
[13] Moreover, the employer has clearly decided to concentrate all shift work at the
Mississauga location, while the ESRO’s are now only required to work day shifts. In
my view, this was an exercise of management rights with respect to the organization of
the workplace, and the evidence does not support a conclusion that the decision was
made in a manner that was arbitrary, discriminatory or in bad faith. While the union
offers a number of suggestions as to how the work could be re-distributed with changes
in practice and technology, the collective agreement does not require the employer to
make such changes or to take positive steps to maintain or create overtime opportunities
for any group of employees, other than those within a “local workplace.” Indeed, with
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respect to the on-call work, the collective agreement contains no control over the
assignment of such work. The loss of such work, properly reassigned to a separate
workplace, is not evidence of the breach of a collective agreement right.
[14] As a result, the grievance is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, this 9th day of October, 2013
Barry Stephens, Vice-Chair