HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-0738.Union.89-03-20 ' ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
- ~ . ' ~i CROWN EMPL 0 YEE$ DE L 'ON TA RIO
GRIEVANCE C,OMMlS$1ON DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO, ONTARIO. MSG 1Z8- SUITE 2100 TELEPHONE/T~L~PHONE
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO) MSG 1Z.8. BUREAU2100 (416)598-0698
0738/88, 0739/88
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
OPSEU (Union Grievance)
Grievor
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources)
Employer
Before: M.G. Mitchnick Vice-Chairperson J. Solberg Member
A. Stapleton I~ember
For the Grievor: A. Ryder
Counsel
Gowling & Henderson
Barristers and Solicitors
For the Employer: No Appearance
Hearing: December 22, 1988
738/88
AWARD
This matter involves a grievance brought against two
private-sector employers, one being Charmaine's Janitorial
Services, and the other an individual by the name of ~arold
Luckasavitch. The only issue before the Board at this stage is
whether it has the jurisdiction to entertain the present
grievance, or whether the matter falls to be dealt with through
"private" arbitration, under the machinery of the Labour
Relations Act. Mr. Barry Campbell has been acting as counsel
for the two employers in these proceedings, but in view of the
limited nature of the issue currently before us, advised the
Board that the employers would not be appearing at the hearing
to make submissions. The only appearance at the hearing
therefore, was made by the Ontario Public Service Employees'
Union, through its counsel, and the Union took the position
that on the basis of the relevant statutory provisions, it
would appear that the matter has become one for private
arbitration, and not one falling within the jurisdiction of the
Grievance Settlement Board established under the Crown
Employees Collective Bargaining Act. we agree.
The only background necessary to a determination of
the issue before us can be found in a decision of the Ontario
Labour Relations Board involving these parties, inter alia, and
dated August 26, 1988. That decision emanated from
proceedings brought by the Union under the Successor Rights
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(Crown Transfers) Act, seeking a declaration that the Crown in
Right of Ontario, as represented by the Ministry of Natural
Resources, had transferred various undertakings, previously
performed by it under the terms and conditions of the Union's
collective agreement, to private employers, and that those
private employers were accordingly bound by the terms of the
said collective agreement. Section 2(1) of the Successor
Rights (Crown Transfers) Act provides:
where an undertaking is transferred from the
Crown to an employer and a bargaining agent has
a collective agreement with the Crown in respect
of employees employed in the undertaking, the
employer is bound by the collective agreement as
if a party to the collective agreement until the
Board declares otherwise.
The proceedings before the Ontario Labour Relations Board
involved a number of consolidated files, the undertakings (and
alleged transfers) with respect to each of which are described
at paragraph 5 of the Labour Board's decision:
5. The allegation in File No. 0815-88-R is that
the Crown transferred "janitorial services for
comfort stations, vault toilets, vault privies
and garbage-disposal buildings" in Algonquin
Provincial Park ("the Park") to Charmaine
Olmstead c.o.b, as Charmaine's Janitorial
Services ("Charmaine's"). In File No.
0848-88-R, OPSEU alleges that "the transplanting
[of] black and white seedlings at the Dryden
Nursery" has been transferred from MNR to Moose
Creek Forestry Company ("Moose Creek") which, as
part of the same transaction, transferred it to
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Gullwing Forestry Ltd. ("Gullwing"). The ~
alleged transfer in File No. 0850-88-~ is of ~
"the concession to provide Algonquin Park ~
interior access point and campground services at
Rock Lake Campground, Coon Lake Campground and
Rock Lake Interior access point" from MNR to Hal
Luckasavitch ("Luckasavitch").
The issue which the Labour Board had before it is
then set out at paragraph 7:
7. In each case, whether transplanting
seedlings, performing janitorial services or
providing information and permits to Park users,
the functions being performed by the employees
of the private respondent (or by Luckasavitch
and his wife) were previously carried out by
employees of MNR. The questions to be
determined by us are two: do these functions
constitute an "undertaking" within the meaning
of clause l(1)(h) of the Crown Transfers Act;
and if they do, have they been "transferred"
from the Crown to the private'respondents within
the meaning of clause l(1)(f) of the Act?
Counsel for the Crown contends that all these
contracts constitute "sub-contracts" of the work
involved and therefore do not fall within the
meaning of "undertaking" in clause l(1.)(h) of
the Act.
The position of the Union prevailed with respect to all three
of the applications, with the Labour Board finding in each case
that there had been a transfer o~ a part of the ~inistry of
Natural Resource's undertaking known as "Algonquin Park" to the
private-sector respondent. The Labour Board's conclusions are
set out in paragraphs 19 to 31, in the following terms:
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29. We declare that there has been a transfer
to Moose Creek Forestry of the undertaking or
part of an undertaking encompassed by the
contract between the Crown and Moose Creek
Forestry and that Moose Creek Forestry is bound
by the collective agreement between the Crown
and OPSEU.
30. We further declare that there has been a
transfer to Luckasavitch of the undertaking or
part of an undertaking encompassed by the
contract between the Minister of Natural
Resources and Luckasavitch and that Luckasavitch
is bound by the collective agreement entered
into by the Crown and OPSEU.
31. We further declare that there has been a
transfer to Charmaine's of part of an
undertaking encompassed by the contract between
the Minister of Natural Resources and
Charmaine's and that Charmaine's is bound by the
collective agreement entered into by the Crown
and OPSEU.
The nature of the present g~ievances were not gone
into before us in any detail, but we understand them to consist
of allegations of violations of OPSEU's collective agreement
which the Ontario Labour Relations Board. decided in the
above-quoted decision is applicable at the present time to the
private-sector employers to whom portions of the Crown
undertaking were found to have been transferred. Had those
portions of the undertaking remained in the hands of the Crown,
any grievances under the collective agreement pertaining
thereto would of course have been matters to be dealt with by
the Grievance Settlement Board established for the Ontario
public service under the terms of the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act. Section 19(1) of that Act provides:
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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.
The Act, as its title indicates of course, only applies to
"Crown employees", and "parties" are in fact defined as:
"party" means the employee organization that is
the bargaining agent for a bargaining unit, on
the one hand, and the employer, on the other
hand, and "parties" means the two of them.
"Employer", in turn, means only
"employer" means the Crown in right of Ontario.
And, in case any doubt still remains for anyone as to the scope
of the Act, that same definition of "employer" applies to what
for the purposes of this Act is meant by a "collective
agreement", being:
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"collective agreement" means an agreement in
writing between the employer and an employee
organization covering terms and conditions of
employment.
(emphasis added)
From all of that it can be seen that the "Grievance
Settlement Board" is a tribunal set up under the specific terms
of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act to arbitrate
grievances arising out of the collective-bargaining
relationship between the Crown in Right of Ontario and its
employees. The term'"employee", we might simply add, is
· defined in the Act as "a Crown employee as defined in the
Public Service Act..."', in other words, an employee in the
Ontario public service.
The application of the Crown Employees Collective
Bargaining Act (with its dispute-resolution mechanism, the
Grievance Settlement Board), therefore, is not determined by
who the bargaining agent is. It is not unusual for the present
bargaining agent, for example, while identified as the "Ontario
Public Service Employees Union", to maintain collective-
bargaining relationships with employers who are not "the
Crown", and'whose employees are not members of the Ontario
"public service" (as defined by the Public Service Act). And
those collective-bargaining relationships, we recognize, are in
practice dealt with not by the terms of the Crown Employees
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Collective Bargaining Act, but of the broader-based Labour
Relations Act. What, then, happens when an undertaking or part
thereof that was formerly operated by "the Crown" under the
terms of the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act is
transferred to an employer other than the Crown? Exactly what
you would expect: section l(1)(e) of the Successor Rights
(Crown Transfers) Act states that
"employer" means an employer other than the
Crown
and section 6(2) provides:
Except as otherwise provided in this Act, where
an undertaking is transferred from the Crown to
an employer, the Labour Relations Act applies to
a bargaining agent that has representation
rights in respect of the employees employed
in the undertaking and to the employees and
where an undertaking is transferred from an
employer to the Crown, the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act applies to a
bargaining agent that is certified as a
bargaining agent in respect of the employees
employed in the undertaking and to the
employees.
The section could, perhaps, have used broader terms in its
drafting than the "bargaining agent" having representation
rights, but it makes no sense to suggest that the new Act is
made to apply to the "bargaining agent", but not to the various
aspects of the bargaining relationship for which the bargaining
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agent holds those representation rights. Rather, the intent of
the section is obvious: when an undertaking is transferred
from the Crown to a non-Crown employer, the Labour Relations
Act thereafter applies, and not the Crown Employees Collective
Bargaining Act; conversely, when an undertaking is transferred
from a non-Crown employer to the Crown, the opposite occurs.
Thus, in the present case, with the Ontario Labour
Relations Board having declared a transfer of part of an
undertaking to have taken place between the Crown and
Charmaine's janitorial Service, and between the Crown and
Harold Luckasavitch, the enforcement of the collective
agreement thereby transferred to the two non-Crown employers
becomes a matter governed by the provisions of the Labour
Relations Act. That Act, we would note finally, has a
provision which parallels section 19(1) of the Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act, and which states:
44.-(1) Every collective agreement shall
provide for the final and finding settlement
by arbitration, without stoppage of work, of
all differences between the parties arising
from the interpretation, application,
administration or alleged violation of the
agreement, including any question as.to
whether a matter is arbitrable.
The remainder of section 44 (in the absence of a statutory and
permanent Grievance Settlement Board) then deals with the
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mechanics of the parties setting up an ad hoc tribunal to
arbitrate any dispute they may have under the collective
agreement, in the event that they themselves are unable or
unwilling to do so on a mutually-agreed basis.
The Board accordingly finds that it does not have
jurisdiction in this matter, and the proceedings are hereby
terminated.
DATED AT TORONTO THIS 20th DAY OF March , 1989.
M. G. Mitchnick, Vice-Chairman
J. Sol'erg, Member~
/
A. Sta~leton, Member