HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-1727.Daniels.90-07-19 ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L 'ONTARIO *
GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSION DE
$ TTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
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1727/89
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN:
OPSEU (Daniels)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Revenue)
Employer
- and -
BEFORE: E. Ratushny Vice-Chairperson I. Thomson Member
J. R. Scott Member
FOR THE N. Luczay
GRIEVOR: Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees
Union
FOR TEE D. Daniels
EMPLOYER: Counsel
Mathews, Dinsdale & Clarke
Barristers & Solicitors
BEARING: May 18, 1990
DECISION
The Grievor claims that he was denied time credits and
overtime hours on November 9, 1989, because of his union activities
contrary to Article 27.6.1 of the Collective Agreement which
provides that:
An employee who is a grievor or complainant and who
makes application for a hearing before the
Grievance Settlement Board or the Public Service
Labour Relations Tribunal shall be allowed leave
of absence with no loss of pay anU with no loss of
credits, if required to be in attendance by the
Board or Tribunal.
There is no dispute that the Grievor was given permission by his
senior supervisor to attend the meeting in question.
The Grievor is a field auditor with the Motor Fuels and
Tobacco Branch of the Ministry of Revenue. He resides in Oshawa
and works out of the Ministry office there. When he works in that
office, he starts at 8:15 a.m. and finishes at 4:30 p.m. with one
hour for lunch included. More frequently, he works irregular hours
as he travels to various locations to conduct field audits. On
these days, his day starts at between 6:00 a.m. and 8:45 a.m. when
he leaves his home and between 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. when he
returns to his home. The actual times are largely determined by
traffic reports. His hours of work are subject to Schedule A of
the Collective Agreement. His hours of work are averaged on the
basis of a 36 1/4 hour week or 7 1/4 hour day. In addition, he
receives credits for time spent travelling.
The meeting in question was a "pre-hearing" in relation to
another grievance in which he was a grievor. A "pre-hearing"
meeting is an informal meeting which is attended by the parties on
a voluntary basis. The purpose is to attempt to expedite the
subsequent hearing through the admission of facts and the
crystallizing of issues. On occasion, these proceedings may also
lead to the informal, consensual resolution of grievances. The
parties are assisted in this process by a representative of this
Board whose role is similar to that of a mediator.
On the day in question, the Grievor commenced work at 8:15
a.m. at the Oshawa office, then travelled to Toronto by "Go
Transit" in time to meet with legal counsel and attend the meeting.
The testimony on behalf of the Employer indicated that the meeting
ended at 4:10 p.m. while the Grievor testified that it ended at
approximately 6:10 p.m. The parties asked that, in the event that
we should find for the Grievor, the actual hours involved should
be left to them to determine subject to the panel remaining seized.
In either case, when travel time is added back to Oshawa, it is
clear that the actual work and travel time amounted to more than'
7 1/4 hours. However, the Grievor was credited only with 7 1/4
hours of work for the day and received no travel Credits.
The central issue is whether the Grievor is entitled to be
treated as though he had actually worked and travelled in his
employment on the day in question or whether the Collective
Agreement requires the Employer only to pay him for an average day.
In the absence of existing precedents, the a~gument of the Grievor
is attractive. However, the precedents of this Board compel a
contrary conclusion.
In McKie and M.T.C. G.S.B. 80/80, a Stage Two grievance
meeting was scheduled for a particular day which coincided with a
scheduled day off for the grievor. As a result his attendance
resulted in him having to use his own time for attendance, for
which he was not paid. The Board (Vice-Chair Palmer) dismissed the
Grievance and stated:
Quite clearly the meaning of this clause is that
where a grievance meeting is scheduled during times
when the grievor is scheduled to work, the Employer
is required to permit him to attend this meeting,
pay him for the time while he is so engaged and,
finally, treat the time when he is at the meeting
as if he had worked for the purpose of credits for
vacation and the like. (pp. 7-8).
In other words, under Article 27.~6.1, the employee is not "deemed"
to be at work while attending a G.S.B. hearing but is merely
entitled not to lose a day's pay if the hearing is held on a day
when the employee is scheduled to work. While the clause referred
to is the equivalent of the current Article 27.6.2 rather than
Article 27.6.1, the key phrase "with no loss of pay and with no
loss of credits" is identical.
In Berlinghoff and Eaton and M.O.T.G.S.B. 1878/87, the
Board denied a grievance claiming travel and meal expenses related
to attending a Stage Two grievance meeting. The Board (Vice-Chair
Barrett) stated:
The management team is paid to attend these
meetings because that is part of their regular
duties. Similarly grievors are not ~ocked pay to
attend these meetings in regular working hours
because the loss of pay could well be prohibitive
to some employees with legitimate grievances.
(p.7). Article 27.6.2 is quite clear in specifying
that the employees shall suffer no loss of pay or
credits to attend grievance meetings but, framed
negatively as the clause is, we can find no
intention or wording that would impose a positive
onus on the employer to pay expenses as well.
(p.8).
Again, the employee is not treated as being at work but is merely
entitled not to be "docked" a day's pay.
This limited wording of Articles 27.6.1 and 27.6.2 is to
be contrasted with the more expansive wording found in provisions
such as section 8(12) of the Occupational Health and Safety Act
R.S.O. 1980, c.321, which states that time spent by a committee
member attending meetings:
...shall be deemed to be work time for which he
shall be paid by his employer at his regular or
premium rate as may be proper.
This provision was considered in Eaton and MTC G.S.B. 646/83, where
the majority of the panel concluded that the meetings of the
committee are simply to be treated as part of the employee's work
so that travel time would have to be paid. However, under the
Collective Agreement applicable here, the employee is not deemed
to be working (or travelling) but is simply entitled not to lose
a day's pay when unable to work because of a requirement to attend
grievance proceedings. Where the employee is subject to Schedule
A, the most logical "day" for that purpose is an average day. In
the case of this Grievor, that is 7 1/4 hours.
In some respects, this result is not fair to the Grievor.
In effect, he has lost travel.time to which he would be'entitled
if he had been working on the day in question. However, in view
of the decisions of this Board interpreting Article 27.6.1 of the
Collective Agreement, that is a matter which will have to be
resolved at the bargaining table.
The Employer took the position that a "pre-hearing" meeting
is not a proceeding which falls within the purview of Article
27.6.1 at all. The argument was made that since the proceeding is
voluntary and a grievor may choose not to attend, the grievor does
not meet the criterion of being "required to be in attendance".
Counsel for the Employer stated that extending the application of
Article 27.6.1 to cover the situation of a pre-hearing was not a
legal obligation but simply a policy decision on the part of the
Employer. While there are sound reasons why the Employer should
-- 5 --
be obligated to take the position which the Ministry states it has
taken voluntarily in this case, it is not necessary for us to
decide this issue in light of our interpretation of Article 27.6.1.
Finally, the Grievor testified that on this occasion other
employees who had attended the same meeting had told him that they
had received credit for extended time and the Grievor, himself, had
received credit for travel and pay beyond 7 1/4 hours in the past.
The Ministry called as witnesses the persons responsible for
authorizing these claims. In each case, the testimony established
that these decisions were made in ignorance of Ministry policy.
The Supervisor of Labour Relations in the Personnel Branch of the
Ministry testified that it clearly was not Ministry policy to pay
such claims and that they were not properly paid. On the whole,
the evidence in this respect is not sufficient %o establish a "past
practice". See Berlinghoff (p.6).
Accordingly, the grievance is dismissed.
DATED at Ottawa this 19t~ day of July 1990.
__~/"~ y %- ~-~,{ ( Addendum attached )
J.Ro Scott, Member
ADDENDUM
while I concUr with the award in general, I would not
characterize the result for the'grievor as "unfair".
The Grievor was paid an average day's pay for attending a
Pre-hearing meeting, the duration of which was not
determined or controlled by the Employer. The Grievor,
on the other hand, has a large measure of control over
the number of hours he attended at the hearing.
In these circumstances, the denial of pay for travel time
was not unfair.
J. R. Scott