HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-0392.Gervais et al.90-04-10 ONKYO EMPLOYS DE ~ COURONNE
-' CROWN EMPLO YENS DE L 'ON ~RtO
~h~ : GRIEVANCE CQMMISSION DE
SETFLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180. DUNDAS STREET WE$~ ~RONTO, ON~Rt~ MSG 1~ - S~ 21~ TEL~HONE/~PHONE
186 RUE DUNDAS OUE$~ TORONTO, (ON~RI~ MSG 1~. BUR~u 21~ ~1~ 5~-0~8
392/89
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN:
0PSEU {Gervais et al)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Health)
Employer
BEFORE: N.V. Dissanayake Vice-Chairperson
I. Thomson Member
· D. Clark Member
FOR THE D. Wright
GRiEVOR: Counsel
Ryder, whitaker, Wright and Chapman
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE M. Farson
EMPLOYER: Counsel
Fraser & Beatty
Barristers & Solicitors
HEARINGS: October ~0, 1989
March 6, 1990
2
DECISION
These are similarly worded grievances filed by fifty
Registered Nurses occupying positions classified as Nurse 2,
General. The list of grievors is attached to this decision
marked as Appendix A.
In substance, the grievors claim that they are entitled
to be paid acting pay for when they are assigned as Team
Leader. To be more specific, the claim is that when they are
assigned to perform the duties of a team leader they are being
"assigned temporarily to perform duties of a higher
classification" within the meaning of Article 6.1.1 of the
collective agreement (namely to the Head Nurse position
classified as Nurse 3 General) and that therefore they are
entitled to acting pay pursuant to that article. The parties
agreed that the Board should confine its decision initially
to a determination of whether the assignment of a Nurse 2
General to the Team Leader duties is a temporary assignment
to perform duties of a position of a higher classification of
a higher maximum within the meaning of article 6.1.1 and defer
the decision as to whether the~0ther preconditions for the
application of the article have been satisfied.
At the outset of the hearing, the parties filed with the
Board copies of a decision of the Board dated February 8, 1990
in Nichols et al, 778/89 (Knopf). That was a decision that
3
dealt with 31 grievances. The bulk of the grievors in that
case are also grievors in the case before us. There, the
grievors claimed that when they were assigned as Charge Nurse,
they were being temporarily assigned to perform the duties of
the Head Nurse position, so as to trigger article 6.1.1. In
a well reasoned decision, the Board dismissed the grievances.
Having reviewed the duties and responsibilities undertaken by
the grievors when assigned to the Charge Nurse position, the
Board stated at pages 15 and 16:
However, the facts are simply not sufficient
to support the grievance. Whether we compare the
position specifications of a Registered Nurse and
a Head Nurse or the Class Standards of a Nurse 2 to
a Nurse 3 General or the actual functions as
revealed in the Statement of Facts given to us by
the parties, we are led to the inescapable
conclusion that the functions performed by the
Charge Nurse are functions which were fully
contemplated in the Nurse 2 and Registered Nurse
position and level. It is true that the Head Nurse
position contemplates more supervisory and
administrative work than the Registered Nurse. The
Head Nurse is responsible for the effective
operation of a ward whereas the Registered Nurse is
looked upon to provide nursing care. However, a
Registered Nurse is also expected as a core function
or essential element of his/her duty to provide
administrative duties on the ward such as relieving
a Head Nurse, providing instructions to other nurses
and other clinical staff, monitoring nursing
efforts, reporting unusual occurrences and
participating as part of ~the clinical treatment
team. Further, part of the job standard is that a
Nurse 2 General may "supervise the assignment of
duties and check the work of subordinate staff on
the same shift." Further, it is specifically
provided in the Nurse 2 General Standard that
"depending on factors such as the hours of duty,
the size and the amount of active nursing required
in the administrative unit, they are responsible to
a supervising nurse for all or part of the nursing
or personal care in the administrative unit as
assigned." The Standard even goes so far as to say
4
"They may, on occasion, relieve supervising nurses."
This is clearly what the Charge Nurse does. Thus,
it is clearly part of a Nurse 2 General's essential
responsibility to be able to and to act in the role
which has been assigned to a Charge Nurse at this
facility. Thus, we have not been satisfied that the
grievors perform functions which go beyond those
expected of a Nurse 2 General or a Registered Nurse.
As in the Nichols case, the facts relevant to these
grievances were presented to the Board by agreement. Based
on these facts, Counsel for the Union attempted to distinguish
the Nichols case. It was submitted that when a nurse is
assigned as Team Leader, he or she assumed a greater
proportion of duties of the higher classification (Head Nurse/
Nurse 3, General) than when assigned as Charge Nurse.
Therefore it was argued that the basis for the decision in
Nichols did not exist here.
We do not propose to set out here the differences in the
job functions undertaken by a Team Leader as opposed to a
Charge Nurse. It is apparent that a Team Leader has some
duties that are not performed by a Charge Nurse. However, we
are also convinced that these 'differences are not of any
substance or significance as would make the Board's reasoning
in Nichols inapplicable. On the contrary, that reasoning
applies equally, if not more convincingly, to the facts before
US.
5
Briefly stated, as the Board in Nichols, we are led to
the inescapable conclusion that the functions performed by the
Team Leader are functions fully contemplated in the Nurse 2
General position and level. Similarly, we are also of the
view that the alternate basis relied upon by the Board in
dismissing the Nichols grievances is also squarely applicable
here. That is, that when performing as Team Leader, the
grievors were not assigned to the position of Head Nurse, nor
did they share the same level of responsibility,
accountability or overall functions of the Head Nurse. Like
a Charge Nurse, a Team Leader was not expected to undertake
a large number of critical functions of the Head Nurse.
The Board's function is to simply interpret and apply the
collective agreement as we find it. In doing so, we find that
the grievors are not entitled to the relief sought and the
grievances are accordingly dismissed. NeVertheless, we have
no difficulty in understanding the sense, of frustration felt
by the grievors. We echo the following observation made by
the Board in Nichols, at p. 18:
We reiterate that we h~ve no difficulty seeing
why these grievances were brought. We note that
these Charge Nurses (in this case Team Leaders) lack
an institutional recognition, by way. of premiumpay
or otherwise, for their additional responsibilities
over and above those they undertake as registered
nurses. Such recognition is often found in other
sectors and may well be. sought by the Union at the
bargaining table. However, the function of the
Board of Arbitration is simply to interpret and to
apply the existing collective agreement.
Unfortunately for these grievors, the collective
agreement, as currently framed, does not give them
the relief they seek.
Dated this ]0th ~ay of April, 1990 at ~amilton, Ontario
Nimal V. Dissanayake
Vice-Chairperson
./~. Thomson Member
D. Clark
Member
GRIEVOR~
Suzanne Babando
Barbara Barker
John Beaucham9
Klm Bo=man
Laurie Buttineau
Cindy Chre=ien
Barbara Clifford
Hadine Cooger
Briane Cresswell
Don Cruise
Catherine Dickie
Charles Dyer
Elizabeth Gerds
Roselynn Gervais
Aime Gignac
Marylou Gosselin
Cynthia Henderson
Cindylou Hepins~atl
Dorothea Holmes
Cam Kurrle
Bob Lachlan
Karen Leduc
Helen Liscombe
Diane Loughran
Candace Maconachie
Susan Magee
Annemarie Marshall
Timothy Merkley
Angela Moreau
Laura Moreau
Monica Murphy
Bruce Nichols
MaryLynn O'Connell
Glenys Parent
Bonnie Pauze
Ken Quesnelle
Richard Quesnelte
Peter Quesnelle
Shelley Richie
Donna Sallows
Mark Shelsffell
Cathy Smith
Sandra Stonehouse
Jennifer Swales
Peg Symons
Catherine Szafranski
Timothy Tyrian
Paul Walma
Sylvia Westco~t
Christine Zurawski