HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-0807.Warren.91-12-04 ONTA RIO EMPLO YL~S. DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EM,eL OYEES DE L 'ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE C~OMMISSlON DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
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807/88,' 845/88
IN THE MATTER OF ~NARBITI~TION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEE8 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GR~EV/~NCE SETTLEMENT
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Warren)
Grievor
The CrOwn in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional Services)
.. Employer
BEFORe: W. Low ~ice-Chairperson
M. Vors.ter Member
F. Collict 'Member
FOR THE S. Ursel
GRIEVOR Counsel
Cornish Roland
Barristers & SOlicitors
FOR THE P. Pasieka
EMPLOYER Counsel
Winkler, Filion & Wakely
Barristers & Solicitors
HEARING May 30, 1991
DECISION
William Warren, the Grievor, brings two grievances. The
first, dated July 8, 1988, is a competition grievance in which Mr.
Warren alleges that Competition No. CI-1005B/88' was awarded
unfairly. The second grievance, dated September 23, 1988, alleges
dismissal without just cause. .
William Warren is a member of the unclassified service of
the public service and works at the Whitby jail as a Correctional
Officer 1. .
By reason of-his status as an unclassified employee up
until the time of the end of his employment on September 30, 1988,
the employer makes a preliminary motion challenging the
jurisdictio~ of 'the Board to entertain the grievances. Ir'is'the
employer's position that the Grievor was an unclassified employee
whose contract expired and was not renewed. Section 9 of the
Public Service Act provides as follows:
"A person who is appointed to a position in the public
service for a specified period ceases to be a public
servant at the expiration of that period."
Mr. Warren was employed pursuant to a series of term
contracts lasting for differing numbers of months from time to time
starting in 1984. He had a number of contracts with the Ministry
which ran usually for six months, but in other cases for shorter or
longer periods of time. At the end of the last contract which ran
from April 1, 1988 to September 30, 1988, no further term contracts
were made with Mr. Warren, and he therefore ceased to be a public
servant pursuant to s. 9 of the Statute. Next, it is the
employer's Position that the Grievor was properly designated as a
member of the unclassified service, being .an employee falling
within that class of persons defined tin s. 6(1)(a)(iv) of
Regulation 881 made under the Public Service Act, namely a person
who is employed on an irregular or "on call" basis. That being the
case, the Grievor has no status to bring his grievance by reason
that Article 3 of the Collective Agreement provides that: ·
"3.1 The only terms of this Agreement that apply to
employees who are not civil-servants'are those that are
set Out in the Article."
Article 3 does not confer rights on an Unclassified employee to
bring the grievances whiCh Mr. Warren haS brought before the Board
in Jthis proceeding.- Members of the unclassified service, while
members of the public, service, are not members of the civil
servioe. As classified service under s. l(b) of the Public Service
Act means the part of the public service to which civil.servants
are appointed, ergo it follows that the Unclassified service means
the part of the public service comprising persons who are not civil
servants, and therefOre the term in Article 3.1 "employees who are
not civil servants" is equivalent to "unclassified employees"~
It is pursuant to Article 4 that a classified employee
may grieve a competition. Article 4, however, is not one of the
articles which is stipulated in Article 3 as being applicable to
the unclassified service. The Grievor therefore has no status to
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grieve a competition.
We are referred to the decision in GeorGe Daniels and
Ministry o~ the Solicitor General, a. decision of Arbitrator Fraser
(1544/87), which held that an alleged violation of Article 4 is not
arbitrable at the instance of a member of the unclassified service.
We find no reason to disagree with this proposition.
There is a second ground for dismissing the competition
grievance and that is the ground of the ~ntimelines$ of the
grievance. It is no~ disputed that the Grievor was told on or
about'April 12, 1988, that he was unsuccessful in the competition,
yet he did not grieve until July 8, 1988. The provisions of
~Articlm'27.as to the time within which an aggrieved employee must
complain to his supervisor and subsequently file a grievance in
writing are mandatory. Mr. Warren's grievance relating to the
competition was untimely and there is no explanation therefor, and
on that ground we would dismiss the competition grievance
regardless of the status of Mr. Warren as a classified or
unclassified employee.
As to the issue of dismissal without just cause, we are
referred to a number of cases which draw the distinction between
termination of a contract by the employer and the expiry of a
contract pursuant to its own terms. The cases have held that where
a contract of a fixed duration expires pursuant to its own terms
4
and the employer does not renew the contract or enter into. a
further contract with the employee, the employee has no right to
griev~ for he has no 'contractual right to a renewal of the
contract, vide Shipley and The Ministrv of Correctiona~ Services
(0223/86); Hicks~ v. Ministry of Community and Social Services,
(2563/87).; and Bond v. Ministrv'of Natural Resources (173/78). It
· is well established that where, a fixed term contract expires with
the effluxion of time and in accordance with its own terms, it
cannot be said that there has been a termination or a dismissal as
contemplated in s. 18(2)(c) of the Crown Employees Collective
Bargainin~ Act, which requires an act on the part of the employer
terminating the agreement.
The issue is raised by th~ Grievor that the motive or.the
emplQyer is a relevant consideration. In our view, if there is no
contractual right to a renewal of a fixed term contract, the right
cannot be~ created out of the employer's reasons for not so
renewing. As Arbitrator Fisher held in Heale~ and Ministry of
Correction Services (0485/88), the presence of bad faith in a
decision not to renew a contract at its expiry does not give the
Board jurisdiction in the matter.
On the part of t~e Grievor, it is contended that Mr.
Warren was not properly designated a member of the unclassified
service, that we .have jurisdiction to designate him properly a
member of the classified service, to entertain his grievances on
5
their merits and to fashion an appropriate remedy. It is submitted
on behalf of the Grievor that in order to determine whether or not
he was properly'designated as a member of the unclassified service,
evidence should be examined as to.the nature of his employment. It
is said that his employment was not of the nature defined in s. 6
of the Regulation under the ~ublic Service Act, but instead was
employment of a regular nature, although he was sometimes on call.
The parties have prepared an agreed statement of facts in
this respect. It is agreed that:
"A~REED STATEMENT'OF F~CTS
1. The Grievor was hired by the Ministry on a series
of eight (8) contracts which are found at Tab 7 Of
the 'Ministry's documents, from June 1, 1984 to
September 30; 1988-.
2. The Grievor, while on these contracts, fulfilled
the fundamental duties of Correctional Officer at
the Whitby jail. His job duties and
responsibilities were similar to those performed by
'Correctional Officers in the classified service at
the Jail except certain special duties: Community
Escorts; Hospital Escorts; Special Assignments and
Control Office were not assigned to unclassified
staff.
3. From April 13~, 1987 to March 31, 1988, the Grievor
replaced Correctional Officer Goddard. He
performed the same job. duties as that officer
except as described above and was scheduled as that
officer had been scheduled.
4. As ~ general .rule, whenever the Grievor was
required to work on regularly scheduled shifts of
eight hours or more, he was scheduled onto these
shifts in advance of working them and his name was
on the shift schedule for unclassified staff for
that work week so that he could refer it and
apprise himself of his'schedule for the week.
5. For the balance of the days the Grievor worked when
'. he was working 'for less than regularly scheduled
shifts of eight hours,'he was often scheduled for
them in advance. Some of them were "call ins"
immediately prior of his schedule for the week.
6. Correctional Officers appointed to the classified
staff worked twelve (12) hour .shifts or eight (8)
hour shifts and their hours per 'week for those
classified positions were averaged to forty (40)
hours on an annual basis.
7. The Grievor's actual hours of work are shown'on the
summaries .submitted with this statement."
The charts showing the Grievor's hours of work over the
period June 1984 to March 1988 indicate no discernable pattern as
a standard practi~e. There is no consistency in the number of
hours worked, the number of days off or' the timing of days off
except when the Grievor.was relieving for a sick employee, Officer
Lawson, from NOvember 1987-to January 1988. Otherwise,' what one
gleans' is an absence of pattern or regularity, and' the 'proper
factual inference to.be drawn in our view, is that the'Grievor was
employed on an irregular, on-call basis, thus placing him within
Group i set out at s. 6(1)(a)(iv) of Regulation 881/89 under the
Pubkic Service 'Act.
The Grievor relies also, however, on the facts that the
Employer gave as much advance notice as was possible as to 'the
hours he'would be required to work and that on occasion, Mr. Warren
was asked to work in excess of 40 hours. These factors,
in our view,' do not take him out of the unclassified service and
into the classified service if in fact he was working on an
irregular or on-call' basis. Indeed, the term contract which
governed the relationship speak to "normal" hours of not more than
7
40 per week, thus ~uggesting that there would be circumstances in
which more tha~ 40 hours per week might be required. As to the
inference to be drawn from advance notice, what we are left with is
advance notice of irregular work and we do not consider the concept
of "on-call" to import a requirement that the employer notify of
its requirements only at the last possible moment. In our view,
"on-call" is more properly interpreted to mean "as and when
required", and it would be a startling result if an effort on the
part of the employer to give ample advance notice to the employee
as to £ts requirements of him were interpreted as creating a
"regular" employment if in fact· the requiremen~ was irregular
though planned. Indeed, the fact that notice is.given at all leads
only to ~he inference that the Grievor works if, when an~ for the
perioa he is advised he is needed.
On the evidence, we do not find that Mr. ·Warren was
improperly designated a member of the unclassified service. That
beingthe case, we therefore dismiss the grievances forthe reasons
set out above.
DATED this 4th day of December , 1991.
M. VORSTER
F. ¢