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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-1192.Union.90-08-23 ONTARIO EMP~.OY£S DE LA COU,qONNE CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE SEITLEMENT R~GLEMENT BOARD DES GRIEFS DUNOAS STREET WEST, TORONTO. ONTARtO. MSG 17-8- SUITE 2~O0 TE£EPHONE/T~L~PHONE RuE DUNDAS OUES T, TORONTO, (ONTARIO) M5G 1Z8 - BUREAU 2100 (416J 598-O6~,~ I192/89 IN TEE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD BETWEEN OPSEU (Union Grievance} Grievor - and - The Crown in Right of ontario (Management Board of Cabineti Employer - and - G. Simmons Vice-Chairperson J. C. Lanie! Member A. G. Stapieton Member FOR THE I. Roland GRIEVOR Counsel Gowling, Strathy & Henderson Barristers & Solicitors .. FOR THE W. Kenny EMPLOYER Counsel Hicks Morley Hamilton Stewart Storie Barristers & Solicitors HEARING: June 2lr 1990. 2 The Union grieves a change in the practice in applying Article 23 "Time Credits While Travelling" insofar as Schedule 6 employees are concerned. Schedule 6 employees are those employees who perform various forms of work on which it is difficult to put firm time strictures because of the nature of the work they perform. There are various kinds of schedule employees and these are addressed in Article 7 of the Collective Agreement. Article 7 reads as follows: ARTICLE 7 - HOURS OF WORK 7.1 SCHEDULE 3 and 3.7 The normal hours of work for employees on these schedules shall be thirty-six and one-quarter (36-1/4) hours per week and seven and one-quarter (7-1/4) hours per day. 7.2 SCHEDULE 4 and 4.7 The normal hours of work for employees on this schedule shall be forty (40) hours per week and eight (S) hours per day. 7.3 SCHEDULE ~ The normal hours of work for employees on this schedule shall be a minimum of thirty-six and one- quarter (36-1/4) hours per week. 7.4 SCHEDULE A Averaging of Hours of Work ~ see Appendix 3 attached. 7.5 Where the Employer adjusts the number of hours per week on a schedule, the employee's weekly salary based on his basic hourly rate shall be adjusted accordingly. The adjustment will be discussed with the Union prior to such adjustment being made. 7.6 Where the Employer intends to transfer employees or an employee from one schedule to another schedule, the Employer will discuss the transfer with the Union prior to such transfer. When the transfer occurs, the employee's weekly salary based on his basic hourly rate shall be adjusted accordingly. 7.7 It Ks understood that other arrangements regarding hours of work and overtime may be entered into between the parties on a local or ministry level with respect to variable work days or variable work weeks. The model agreement with respect to compressed work week arrangements is'set out below: MODEL AGREEMENT WITH RESPECT TO COMPRESSED WORK WEEK ARRANGEMENTS MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT BETWEEN: THE MINISTRY OF AND: THE ONTARIO PUBLIC SERVICE EMPLOYEES UNION (and its local ) This compressed work-week arrangement is made in accordance with Article 35 (Local and Ministry Negotiations) and Article 7 (Hours of Work) of the Collective Agreement on Working Conditions and Employee Benefits, between the Ontario Public Service Employees Union and the Crown in Right of Ontario, represented by Management Board of Cabinet. Unless otherwise specified in 'this Agreement, all articles of the Working conditions and Employee Benefits Agreement apply to employees covered by this Agreement. Article 1 - Work Unit and Employees Covered Detailed and specific description of work unit and. employees covered. Article 2 - Hours of Work 2.1 Detailed description of the regular hours of work with an attached schedule where appropriate. 2.2 Article 10.2 of the Working Conditions and Employee Benefits Agreement shall not apply to employees covered by this compressed work week agreement. 4 Article 3 - Overtime 3.1 Authorized periods of work in excess of the regular working periods specified in Article 2.1 or on scheduled day(s) off will be compensated for in accordance with Article 13 (Overtime) of the Working Conditions and Employae Benefits Agreement. Article 4 - Holiday Payment 4.1 Where an employee works on a holiday specified in Article 48 (Holidays) and opts for compensating leave under Article 19.2, he may elect, at that time, to receive, in addition to his entitlement under 19.2, further leave equal to the difference between the number of hours'in the employee's normal work day and his entitlement under 19.2. Where an employee makes this election, there shall be deducted from the employee's pay for time worked under 19.1, an amount equal to the number of additional hours of leave granted under this article. (Additional leave to be determined by length of regular work day. For an employee on Schedule 4, whose regular work day is 10 hours and who works 10 hours on a holiday:' Entitlement under 19.1 10 hr. @ double time = 20 hr. (straight time) Entitlement under 19.2 = 8 hr. Where an employee elects additional leave under this article ~ Entitlement under 19.2 = 8 hr. Additional leave under this article (10 hr. - 8 hr.) = 2 hr. Reduced entitlement under 19.1 = 18 hr.) Article 5 - Short Term Sickness Plan and Vacation Credits 5.1 Short Term Sickness - Employees shall be entitled to'full pay for the first (43-1/2 or 48) hours of absence due to sickness or injury and seventy-five percent (75%) for the next (899 or 992) hours of absence due to sickness or injury. Employees may exercise their option· under section 52.6 of Article 52 of the Working Conditions and Employee Benefits Agreement by deducting one-quarte~ (1/4) of an accumulated credit for each (7-1/4 or 8) hours of absence. 5.2 Vacation Credits - A deduction from an employee's vacation credits will. be made for each day of approved vacation leave-of-absence as follows: (Prorating determined by length of workday. For an employee on Schedule 4, off on a ten (10) hour day, deduct 10/8 x 1 credit ~ 1.25 credits. For an employee on Schedule 4, off on a twelve (12) hour day, deduct 12/8 x 1 credit - 1.5 credits.) A partial day's absence will be prorated on the same formula. Article 6 - Workers' Compensation 6.1 For the purposes of section 54.2 of Article 54 of the Working Conditions and Employee Benefits Agreement "sixty-five (65) working days" shall be deemed to be (471-1/4 or 520) hours. Article 7 - Training Assignments 7.1 When an employee covered by ~his compressed work week agreement attends a training program, the Employer may change the employee's scheduled hours of work to the greater .of: (i) 7-1/4 or 8 hours per day, as applicable, or '(ii) the actual number of hours spent receiving training, for each day that the employee participates in the~- training program. 7.2.1 Where the Change prescribed in 7.1 results in fewer or more hours than the employee was previously scheduled to work on the day(s) in question, the "extra" or '~deficit" hours shall be reduced to zero within 60 working days of the completion of the training program, without any loss of pay by the employee or'overtime payments by the Employer, as follows: (i) the employee shall be required to work a corresponding number of hours to make up for any deficit hours; or (ii) the employee shall be scheduled off duty for a corresponding number of hours to offset any extra hours. 7.2.2 Where there is mutual agreement, an employee may receive pay at his basic hourly rate for extra hours in lieu of being scheduled off duty in accordance with 7.2.1 (ii). 7.2.3 Where an employee's extra hours have not been reduced to zero within 60 working days in accordance with 7.2.1, any such hours remaining to the employee's credit shall be paid at the employee's basic hourly rate. Article 8 - Term 8.1 This Agreement shall be ( x months, until either Dartv notifies the other of its desire to rene~otiate~ etc.) and will be' effective from the (day) of (month) , 19~ to the (day) of (month) , 19 __. 8.2 Either party may, on written notice of (days, weeks) to the other party, terminate this Agreement. DATED THIS DAY OF , 19 For The Ontario Public For the Ministry of Service Employees Union Article 13 addresses the issue of "overtime" and that article reads as follows: ARTICLE 13 - OVERTIME 13.1 The overtime rate for the purposes of this Agreement shall be one and one-half (1-1/2) times the employee's basic hourly rate. 13.2 In this Article, "overtime" means an authorized period of work calculated to the nearest half- hour and performed on a scheduled working day in addition to the regular working period, or performed on a scheduled day(s) off. 13.3.1 Employees in Schedules 3.7 and 4.7 who perform authorized work in excess of seven and one- quarter (7-1/4) hours or eight (8/ hours as applicable, shall be paid at the overtime rate. 13.3.2 Overtime shall be paid within two (2) months of the pay period within which the overtime was actually worked. 13.4 Employees in Schedules 3 and- 4 who perform ~authorized work in excess of seven and one- quarter (7-1/4) hours, or eight (8) hours as applicable, shall receive compensating leave of one and one-half (1-1/2) hours for each hour of overtime worked, at a time mutually agreed upon. Failing agreement, the ministry shall reasonably determine the time of the compensating leave. 13.5 Where there is mutual agreement, employees may receive compensating leave in lieu of pay at the overtime rate or may receive pay atLthe overtime rate.in lieu of compensating leave. 13.6 Compensating leave accumulated in a calendar year which is not used before March 31 of the following year, shall be paid at the rate it was earned. Effective March 1, 1978, the March 31 date may be extended by agreement at-the local or ministry level. '~ 13.7.1 Employees who are in classifications assigned to Schedule 6 and who are required to work on a day off, shall receive equivalent time off. 13.7.2 Notwithstanding 13.7.1 and Article 19.6 (Holiday Payment), employees who are in classifications assigned to Schedule 6 and who are assigned to forest fire fighting or related duties, shall be · - paid one and one-half (1~1/2) times the employee's basic hourly rate, to be calculated on the basis of thirty-six and one-quarter (36- 1/4) hours per week, for all such work after eight (8) hours in a 24-hour period~ Article 23 is also relevant and it reads as follews: ARTICLE 23 - TIME CREDITS WHILE TRAVELLING 23.1 Employees shall be credited with all time spent in travelling outside of working hours when authorized by the ministry. 23.2 When travel is by public carrier, time will be credited from one (1) hour before the scheduled time of departure of the carrier until one hour after the actual arrival of the carrier at the destination. 23.3 When travel is by automobile and the employee travels directly from his home or place of employment, time will be credited from the assigned hour of departure until he reaches his destination and from the assigned hour of departure from the destination until he reaches his home or place of employment. 23.4 When sleeping accommodation is provided, the hours between eleven (11:00) p.m. and the regular starting time of the employee shall not be credited. 23.5 When an employee is required to travel on his regular day off or a holiday listed in Article 48 (Holidays), he shall be credited with a minimum of four (4) hours. 23.6 All travelling time shall be paid at the employee's basic hourly rate or, where mutually agreed, by compensating leave. It is to be noted that Schedule 6 employees under Article 13 are not entitled to receive overtime pay. Article 13.7.1 entitles them to receive equivalent time off when they are required to work on a day off. There is one exception to being compensated at overtime rates as set out in Article 13.7.2 and this involves those employees who are assigned to forest fire fighting or related duties. Article 23.6 sets out how employees are to be compensated when they are credited with time spent in travelling outside of 9 working hours when authorized by the Ministry and that is at the employee's basic hourly rate or, where mutually agreed, by compensating leave. The issue before us as to whether a~Schedule 6 employee is entitled to travel credits under Article 23 first arose in O.P.S.E.U. (Fawcett) and Crown in RiGht of Ontario ~Ministry of Transportation ~ Communicationsl, File Number 275/82 when an employee who had been previously a Schedule 4 employee was reclassified and transferred to Schedule 6. Prior to this transfer, he had been entitled to travel pay and overtime pay but this' ceased, following the transfer. We note in the majority opinion of that decision that he received a salary increase at.the time of the transfer. When one looks to the dissenting opinion there appears the comment, "He received a substantial increase in pay and at the same time received an annual salary rather than an hourly rate". The Majority in the Fawcett decision determined that Article 23.'1 applied to Schedule 6 employees and that his working hours for the purposes of that article are a minimum of seven and. one-quarter (7-1/4) hours per day. The Board in the instant proceeding was not presented with any evidence counsel electing instead to argue the poiDt of entitlement to compensation or compensating leave as a general matter. Therefore, we are not aware of the practice that has been followed with respect to compensating Schedule 6 employees when and if they fall within Article 23.1. However, we were presented'with a recent decision O.P.S.E.U'. (T. Burrows) and the Crown in Right of Ontario (M~nistry of Labour), File Number 0379/88, a decision dated May 30, 10 1989 wherein the issue in that decision was primarily one of retroactivity. Burrows involved a Schedule 6 employee who claimed travel time incurred outside working hours pursuant to Article 23. It was conceded in Burrows that the grievor was entitled to travel time pursuant to Fawcett and the only issue was retroactivity. Another decision of this Board, O.P.S.E.U. (Pin~ue et all and the Crown in Right of Ontario CMinistrv of the Environment), File Number 1355/87, 1565/87, 1588/87, 1589/87, 1590/87 which was released on November 24, 1988, involved five grievances by Schedule A employees who likewise do not receive overtime but as Article 7.4 states, they are compensated on an averaging hours of work basis as set o6t in Appendix 3 to the Collective Agreement. Basically, Schedule A of Appendix 3 provides for the number of hours of work per week to be computed as a weekly average over one. year. The grievors in that particular case sought to have travel time compensable under Article 23 and not be a part of the averaging provisions under Appendix 3. The Board stated at page 5 and 6 as follows: Although counsel for the Grievors has put their case as forcefully as possible, we are of the view that the weight of decisions by this Board is clearly contrary to their position. The only decision which could be cited in their favour was OPSEU (Fawcett) and Ministry of TransDortation and Communications G.S.B. 275/82. However, that grievance involved a Schedule 6 employee and the Board observed: It is important to note that this is not a case in which the issue is whether an employee, who is eligible for both, is entitled to pay at the overtime rate or compensating leave under Article 13, or to credits for time spent in travelling .under Article 23 .... the Grievor is not eligible for overtime pay or compehsating leave in any circumstances, and is eligible for equivalent time off only, for work performed on a day off. (p.9) It.is true that the Board also stated that: We see no authority in the collective agreement for the .~ charactsrization of time spent by the Grievor in travelling as overtime work. ~(p.9) However, numerous subsequent decisions of the Board clearly depart from that view The Stahl decision which was cited at the ~.outset, refers to many of these decisions and isolates the two elements which distinguish 'travelling time' from 'overtime'. These are: '...travel as a necessary part of the job, and the employee's responsibility for the Ministry's v~hicle.' (p.6) There can be little doubt that these elements are present in the facts before us. The Board in the Pingue case refused to follow the Fawcett case completely. Instead., it preferred to follow a line of cases that differentiated between travel outside of working hours tha~ is responsibly free and travel outside of working hours that is some way related to work. In the latter case, Boards have held that it is "work" and therefore compensable by the overtime provisions in Article 13. In the former situation, however, when the travelling is outside~ of working hours, authorized by the Ministry, and is responsibility free such as being a passenger in a vehicle owned 12 by the Ministry and not responsible for it, then Article 23 would apply and travel time credits would be applicable. See O.P.S.E.U. (Robert W. Anwyll} and the Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Government Services], file 406/83; O,P.S.E.U. CPileggi) and the grown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Transportation & Communications), file 992/86 and the cases cited therein. On June 22, 1989, the Staff Relations Branch of the Human Resources Secretariat in the Management Board of Cabinet issued a memorandum to all human resources services directors and all directors, human resources branches concerning the impact of the Pingue case which reads in part as follows (Exhibit 3): The Pingue case involved employees whose' hours of work were subject to averaging in accordance with Appendix 3 of the collective aqreement. The Board found that, because travel was an inherent part of the grievors' jobs, travel undertaken by the grievors outside of their 'normal' hours of work constituted work and not travel; as a result, time spent travelling was subject to averaging, and did not attract compensation under Article 23 (Time Credits While Travelling). It is our view that this principle applies equally to schedule 6 employees. In those cases Where travel is an inherent part of a schedule 6 employee's work (and that will be a question of fact in each case), then any work-related travel undertaken by that employee outside of his or her 'normal' working hours is work, and does not attract any form of compensation. The exception to this is the situation where a schedule 6 employee travels outside the course of his normal duties - for instance, where he or she must travel to attend an employment-related course, etc. In those circumstances, ministries are advised to continue to compensate employees in accordance with the principles set out in the Fawcett award (#275/82). The Pin~ue award, and earlier awards cited in that decision also affect schedule 6 employees for whom travel is not an inherent part of the work they do. Where travel is not responsibility-free for these employees (for instance,~ because they have been assigned responsibility for driving a Ministry vehicle), those employees are performing work and Article 23 has no application. Where a schedule 6 employee is merely a passenger in a Ministry vehicle, or travels by public carrier, he or she should continue to be compensated for travel outside of 'normal' working hours in accordance with Article 23 and the Fawcett award. The Human Resources Services Branch in the Ministry of Government Services issued its own memorandum dated August 16, 1989, to various individuals in the Ministry of Government Services and it too addressed this issue as follows (Exhibit 2): The travel time issue focuses on bargaining unit employees whose hours of work are in Schedule A (.averaging of hours). The Grievance Settlement Board found that where travel is an inherent part of the employee's job, travel outside of normal working hours is considered work,~ not travel. Therefore, time spent travelling is included in the number of hours worked but is not compensated.under Article 23, Time Credits While Travelling. The principle has a different effect when aDpli~d to Schedule 6 bargaining unit employees (employees working a minimum of 36-1/4 hours per week). Where travel is an inherent part of the job, work-related travel outside of normal working hours is considered work and therefore is not compensated. Where travel is outside the course of the employee's normal duties (ie: travelling to a work-related course), compensation under Article 23 (Time Credits While Travelling).is necessary. In terms of Schedule 6 '~employees for whom travel is not an inherent part of their work, if the travel is responsibility-free (ie: employee is a passenger in a Ministry vehicle), compensation under Article 23 is required. However, if the travel is not responsibility- free (ie: the empToyee is assigned to drive the Ministry vehicle), the employee would be performing work and would not be entitled to travel time credits. Please consult with your Human Resources Consultant prior to determining compensation in these circumstances. It is recognized that these interpretations by the Grievance Settlement Board do not reflect the Ministry's current practice. Therefore, it is essential that this information is communicated to your managers so that changes to practices c~n be implemented immediately. A review of these procedures for management employees will be undertaken in the near future. Should you have any questions in the meantime, please contact your Human Resources Consultant. The reason for reproducing Exhibit 2 is due to the fact that it was the document that came to the attention of the Union and was the one that the Union relies on. However,.it is a~reed that Exhibit 3 is the seminal document and that both are therefore relevant. As a consequence of the bssuance of Exhibit 2, the Union filed the following grievance: The Union grieves the violation of Article 23 of the Collective Agreement in that it has come to our attention that the Human Resources Secretariat has directed Ministries to discontinue the practice of paying Schedule 6 employees travel time credits for travel outside normal working hours in those cases where travel is an inherent part of the employee's job. We request the Secretariat to publish forthwith a notice to all Ministries cancelling its directive to the above effect. In order to avoid needless grievances by individual Schedule 6 employees, we also request the Secretariat to direct individual Ministries to maintain travel records for all Schedule 6 employees, even where t~avel is an inherent part of the job, and to maintain funds in trust· for all claims that may arise from this alleged violation of Article 23 in the event that this matter is eventually referred to the GSB and decided in the Union's favour. Counsel for the Union pointed out that only Fawcett and Burrows address the issue of Schedule 6 employees. All of the other cases are concerned with other schedule employees. The competition in the other cases (except Pinque) is between overtime on the one hand and travel time on the other. That is, they involve a contest between Article 13 and'Article 23. The focus in those cases is on what pay entitlements is there when travelling outside one's regular working hours.' In those cases, employees sought overtime pay versus travel time because overtime pay is calculated at one and one-half times the regular rate of pay. The Board developed the concept in those cases that if the employee· travelling outside regular hours of work on the authority of the Ministry is responsibility free, then the situation falls within Article 23 which entitles the employee to travel time credits. But if the employee has responsibiiities such as being responsible for the vehicle or some other responsibility related to work in addition to travelling, then Article 13 was applicable. However, as stated earlier, the Union claims that because Schedule 6 employees are not entitled to· overtime pay (except in Article 13.7~2) they. should therefore be entitled to time credits when~ 16 travelling whether they have responsibilities or are responsibility free. The Pingue case while involving Schedule A employees and not Schedule 6 employees (both schedules not being entitled to overtime) applied the reasoning of the long line of cases that has been cited above. It was as a result of Pincue together with the Fawcett decision that the Employer issued the memoranda supra. We are asked to issue a declaration as to whether or not the memoranda are in keeping with the Collective Agreement and prior jurisprudence of this Board. In resolving this issue we are of the view that it is paramount to look at the Collective Agreement as a whole. -Article 13.2 defines "overtime" to mean an authorized period of work in addition to the regular working period, whereas Article 23 refers to authorized travelling time outside of working hours. By having included both Articles 13 and 23 in the Collective Agreement it is trite that the parties must have contemplated that a different interpretation would be applied to them. The line of cases other than Fawcett supra have interpreted Articles 13 and 23 to mean that if an employeer is carrying out duties or is incurring responsibilities for the employer out of normal or regular hours of work then overtime is payable pursuant to Articles 7 and 13. However, when an employee is authorized to travel outside of working hours but is responsibility free than Article 23 applies. In the instant situation there is no competition between Articles 13 and 23 because Schedule 6 employees do not receive 17 overtime so we are requested to declare that Article 23 applies at. all times whether the travel is work related or Ks responsibility free. We are unable to make such a declaration. In our opinion the interpretation that has been placed on Article 23 by previous Board decisions (other than Fawcett) are to be followed. We cannot place a different interpretation on Article 23 simply because Article 13 is inapplicable to Schedule 6 employees. We must assume that'the parties had justifiable reasons' for excluding Schedule 6 employees from Article 13 (except Article 13.7.2). Moreover, we agree with respect to the interpretations placed on Articles 13 'and 23 by the previous decisions (other than Fawcett). It is to be remembered Burrows wasnot concerned with this issue. 'In our respectful opinion, therefore, the memor'andum or statement-of the Human Resources Secretariat is a proper interpretation on the C611ective Agreement and the jurisprudence of this Board and we declare therefore that ~here has been no violation of the Collective Agreement by the Human Resources Secretariat in issuing its memorandum of June 22, 1989 nor is the memorandum dated August' 't6, 1989 a violation of the Collective Agreement or the jurisprudence of this Board. Accordingly, the grievance is dismissed. 18 DATED at Kingston, Ontario this 23rd. day of August 1990. C. GordOn Simmons Chairperson " Jean Claude Laniel Member Arne Stapleton Member