HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-0224.Reed.88-10-20~' . · ONTAR/O EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
'? CROWN EMPLOYEE.~ DE L'ONTARIO
GRiE¥~NCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
~80 DIJNDA3 STREET WEST, TORONTO, ONTAR;O, MSG 1Z$- SUITE 2100 ~'E£EPHONE/T~eL~'PHONE
180. RUE DUNOA$ OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO)' MSG ~Z8 - BUREAU 21~0 (416) 598-0888
224/88
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION'
Under
THE-CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
! OPSEU (Dave Reed)
~ .. Grievor
and
The Crown in Righ~ of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional Services)
Employer
Before: D*H. Kates Vice Chairperson T. Kearney Member
G. Milley Member
For the Grievor: P. Chapman
Counse!
Gowling & Henderson
Barristers and Solicitor~
For the Employer: G. Lee
Senior Staff ~elations Officer
Minls~ry of Correctional Services
Hearing: September.2, 1988
Dec i -~ i o n
By grievance dated January 7, 1988, the trade union referred
the following complaint to the ~SB fur de~.ermination:
STATE,SENT OF GRIEVANCE:
"I am submit~i~g ~his grlevan~e because I believe ~hat ~he
managemen~ at ~he M.T.E.D.C., are exercising ~l~eir managemen~
rights under C.E.C.B.A. both unfairly and ~ith
discrimination" · '
SETTLEMENT DESIRED:
"l)'That COs are equally rotated thru all posts. 2) The'
p~actice of gel,'eral averaging of sick time cease until staff
are trea~ed equal. 3) }lanagement acknowledge that some
staff work ~reas of timber stress more often than other
staff. 4) That management design a fairer sick time
assessment system. ~) That P.P.R.'s indicate w~'y staff are
not being rotated".
In repiy, to the grievance at both levels of the grievance
procedure the employer took the followin~ position:
After carefully reviewin~ ~ou~.arguments, I must advise you
that it is the exclusive function of the employer to manage,
including the right to determine assignme~ts and as you
provided no evidence that management is exercising its
rights unfairly and with discrimination, I am denying your
grievance, Mowever, as I advised you durin~ the hearing,
you concerns will be raised at the Employee Relations
Committee with a view to determining if ~he presen~
procedures of assigning staff can be improved upon. In this
regard, I wou%d encourage-you'to submit your ideas ~o your
local union executives.
At the outset of the hearing scheduled for this matter the
employer made a preliminary motion challenging the jurisdiction
of this Board.to pro'ced with tl~e grievor'm complaint for the
reasons set out in its reply. In essence the employer argued
that Section 18(1) of the CECBA precluded the Board from'
asserting jurisdiction to entertain any ~:omplai~,L relating to
the assignment of dut'ies a,~d responsibil~ities to employees and,
moreover, such assignments "will not be the subject of
collective bargai~ing t.~or come within tile jurisdiction of the
Board" .
Sectio~ 18(1) reads as follows:
18..-(1) Every collective
provide that it is the 'exclusive functio~ or the employer to .
mal~ge, which function, withou~ limitin~ the ~enera!ity
~he foregoing, includes
.(a) employment, ~ppointment, complement,
methods and p~ocedures, kinds and locations of
equipment, and classification of positions; and
(b) merit system, trainin~ and devel6pmen~,, appraisal
and superannuation, the governing principles of 'which
are subject to review by the employe~ with the
bsrgaining agent,
and such ~atter~ will not be the. subject of collective
bar~aini~ no~- oome .ithi. the .jurisdiction of a board.
Several GSB Oases were referred to this Board in support of
the empl6yer's preliminary motion. They included Re OPSEU and
The Crown in Right of Ontario iMinistry of Health) decision
dated January 9, i~85 (Kenned~; Re OPSEU (CriDDs) and The Crown
in Right of Ontario. (Ministry of Correctional Services) decision
dated February 2, 1988 {Verity); Re OP~EU {Tsiang) ~nd The Crown
in Hight of Ontario (Ministry of Industry and Tour/sm} de6ision
dated February 15, 1982 (Jolliffe).
The trade union did not dispute the correctness and the
prudence of the jurisprudence relied upon by the employer
support of its jurisdictional challenge.
~athei- the trade u~io. submitted that notwitl)standi.~ tBe
ostensible language used in the text oF the grievance the
griever's complaint related to a matter of health and safety-
affecting oorrectional officers generally and the griever
particularly. The underlying health and safety component of the
complaint was expressed in the remedial relief requested in the
event o'f success in the merits of'the grievance.
· It therefore followed that since health and sa£e~y is a
legitimate matter that is relevant ~o colleCtive'bargaining and
therefore within the jurisdictional authority'of the GSB we
ought to find that we are properly seized of jurisdt¢:i0n - .to
entertain this grievance. In support of itl mesponse"%o the
employer's ~urisdictional challenge' we were referred %o a
decision of the GSB authored b~ Mr. Jolliffe (%he ~otu~l text of
the o~se was'not submit%ed) where he seized ~urisdietion "on
· hem/th and safe~ grounds~ to review an "assignment" m~de. b~ ~he
employe~ at the Mfllbrook Correctional Facility.
Hmving found there was a health mhd smfet~ "oonoe~" the
Board directed'that 'the parties meet with a view to finding a
remedy to resolve that con~ern. The impugned "assignmen~''~ was
~ot nullified as that would have been'~utside the Board's
~urisdic~ion.
After the completio~ of the' parties' argument on the
employer's preliminar~ motiou the Board recessed .~nd upon its
return made the Following ruling:
Im dealing with the employer's p~el~minary motion with
respect to our jurisdiction to entertain this grievar;ce we
are of tJ~e opinion that the grievance expressly raises in
pith ~nd substance s work assignment complaint. Accordingly
we ~re precluded b~ Section 18(1) of the Act from asserting
jurisdiction.
It may very well be that ther~ are health and safety
considerations that underlie the grievor's complaint. 'There
is mothing suggested herein to prevent a gr.ievance being
presented where the appropriate provisions of the collective
agreement alleged to have been violated are expressed. In
that regard the parties might'deal with the health and
safety issue aa the main complaint and if the complaint has
any substance, might raise remedies that do not infringe
upon the governing statute,
Accordingly the proceedings are terminated'fo~ want of
jurisdiction. '
The Board reaffirms its decision acceding the employer's
· preliminary motion,
David H. Kates - Vice-Chairperson
Kearney - Member
G. Milley - Member