HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-0462.Croghan et al.92-09-15 ONTAR/O EMPL 0 YES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTA RIO
GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
;~80 DUNDAS STREET WEST, SUITE 2'100, TORONTO, ONTARIO, M5G 1Z8 TELEPt'~ONE/TELEPHoNE. (4 16) 326~ 1388
~80, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, BUREAU 2 TOO, TORONTO (ONTARIOJ. M5G '1Z8 FACSI~'.,.flLE/TLSL~COPlE : (4 16) 326-1396
462/91, 463/91, 464/91,
465/91, 466/91
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEV~NC~ SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OLBEU (Croghan et al)
Grievor
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
Employer
BEFORE: M. Gorsky Vice-Chairperson
E. Seymour Member
M. O'Toole Member
FOR THE E. Mitchell
GRIEVOR Counsel
Koskie & Minsky
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE S. Gleave
EMPLOYER Counsel
Hicks, Morley, Hamilton, Stewart, Storie
Barristers & Solicitors
HEARING September 3, 1991
March 6, 1992
June 12, 1992
1
DECISION
The Grievors, Linda Croghan, Corinne Jolliffe and Michael
Pigeau, were at all material times employed by the Employer in
stores located in District 24 of the Northern Region (#1) of the
Liquor Control Board of Ontario, which covers an area between
Huntsville in the south and Temagami in the north, and between
Verner in the west and Mattawa in the east; the District
headquarters being located in North Bay. The Employer operates 20
stores within District 24 and the District Manager is Robert Sasso,
who is responsible, along with his other duties, for the
appointment of Acting Store Managers and Summer Store Managers.
In 1991, in the cas~ of the stores with which the grievances
before us are concerned, when appointing employees to temporary
vacancies as Acting Store Managers or Summer Store Managers, the
Employer appointed the most senior qualified employee who worked in
the store where the vacancy existed. The Employer did not offer the
positions to regular part-time or fUll-time employees, wherever
they might be working within the District, before offering such
positions to the most senior casual employee working in the stores
with which we are concerned. In the cases with which we are
concerned, there were only casual employees employed in the stores
when the appointments complained of were made.
2
The Grievor, Linda Croghan, was at all material times a
permanent full-time employee and worked in Store ~ 363 located in
North Bay. Her seniority dates from July 3, 19~4, when she became
a permanent employee.
The Grievor, Michael Pigeau, was at all material t~mes
employed as a permanent full-time employee at St.o~e ~ 54 in North
Bay. His ~eniority dates from May 5, 1980, when he became a
permanent employee.
The Grievor, Corinne Jolliffe, was at all material times
employed as a casual employee at Store no. 159 in South River,
Ontario. Ms. Jolliffe was Shown to have accumulated 6,844 hours of
seniority as a casual employee on Exhibit 8, which is entitled
"Liquor Control Board of Ontario Casual Seniority Report from
January 1, 1980 to Present." The "run date" shown on Exhibit 8 is
February 28, i991.
There are five grievances before us:
1. Ms. Croghan filed a grievance (Exhibit 1) dated March 19,
1991, where the "Statement of Grievance" provides:
Letter of agreement. (Re) Tempi replacement of Store
Manager. Page 129. Sec.21.5(c) & any other provisions
that may apply.
Under "Settlement Desired" the Grievor stated:
For the collective agreement 'to be adher~d to ax written.
It was acknowledged that the above grievance arose as a result
of a temporary vacancy created when George Wilson, the Store
Manager at Store ~ 235, Powassan, Ontario, was promoted to the
position of "C" Store Manager, Store % 464, Schreiber, OntarJ. o,
effective January 14, 1991 (Exhibit 3). As a result of Mr.
Witsom's promotion, a position posting (Exhibit 4) took place on
January 3, 1991 in order to fill the position which was that of
Store Manager, classified as Liquor Store Manage~ 1. The
successful candidate, Tom O'Connor, was appointed to the posit~on
effective February 25, 1991. This grievance concerns Ms. Croghan's
claim that she was entitled to fill the position of Manager' on an
acting basis for the approximate five week period during which no
permanent appointment had been made. Instead, the Employer
appointed a casual employee, Ms. Latour, to fill the posit~on.
Store # 235 has a normal complement of one permanent full-time
employee (the Manager) and two casual employees, who were Ms.
Latour and a Ms. Williams, with MS. Latour having greater
seniority.
2. Ms. Croghan also filed a grievance (Exhibit 6) on April 15,
1991, the "Statement of Grievance" being the same as in the above
grievance with the "Settlement Desired" also being the same except
for the addition of the words "monetary~ settlement."
4
It was agreed that this grievance conceraed the Employer's
alleged violation of the collective agreement in failing to appoint
Ms. Croghan to the position of Summer Store Manager for the period
April 9, 1991 to December 31, 1991 at Store # 613, Sundridge,
Ontario. Summer stores operates on a seasonal basis, and it is
within the discretion of the Employer to decide whether a store
will be opened. When the Sundridge store is opened on a seasonal
basis it operates with one employee as Acting Manager along with
two employees from the casual classification. In 1991, the
Employer appointed as Acting Manager a casual employee, Rhoda
McCabe, who was present and participated in the hearing, after
receiving notification of her right to do so. Ms. McCabe was the
most senior casual employee assigned to Store ~ 613 and had been
employed there for many years. Three casual employees were
assigned to work at Store ~ 613, there being no permanent full- or
part-time employees so assigned, with one of them serving as
Manager. The seniority list filed with respect to casual employees
(Exhibit 8) indicated that Ms. Jolliffe had approximately 2,000
more credited hours than did Ms. McCabe.
The appointment of Ms. McCabe was announced on March 27~ 1991
in a circular to all store managers and staff (Exhibit 9). The
notice states that the duration of the appointment as Acting
Manager at Store # 613, Sundridge, would be from April 9, 1991 to
December 31, 1991.
5
3. Mr. Pigeau, also grieved the appointment of Ms. ?lcCabe, his
grievance (Exhibit 10) being filed on April i5, 199!, w~th the
"Statement of Grievance" and "Settlement Desired" being in
essentially the same form as that in Ms. Croghan's grievance.
4. Ms. Jolliffe, also filed a grievance with respect to her not
being given the temporary appointment as Summer Store Manager in
Store i 613, Sundridge, her gr£evance (Exhibit 12) being dated
April 8, 1991, which grievance is essentially in the same form as
those of Ms. Croghan and Mr. Pigeau. Ms. Jolliffe's grievance is
based on her having greater seniority than Ms. McCabe. It was
acknowledged that there was one other casual employee who had
greater seniority than Ms. Jolliffe, Who did not grieve. In the
case of Ms. Jolliffe, the Union's position was that if the E~ployer
could award the position to a casual employee, which right the
Union did not accept, then it had to do so by first offering the
position to the most senior qualified and available casual employee
in the District, who was Ms. Jolliffe.
5. On April 15, 1991, Ms. Croghan als° filed a grievance (Exhibit
15) similar to that filed by her with respect to the temporary
a~pointment of the Summer S~ore Manager in Store i 613, Sundridge,
Ontario. The grievance related to the S~nmer Store Manager position .
at Store ~ 595, Dunchurch, Ontario, where the appointment ~as for
the period May 6, 1991 to November 16, 1991. The staffing at the
Dunchurch store was the same as that of the Sundridge store. The
6
person appointed as Acting Manager for the period in dispute was a
casual employee, Donna Arthurs, who was present at and participated
in the hearing upon notice having been given to her of her right to
do so. Ms. Arthurs' seniority was shown as being 9,200 hours at
the time the seniority list with respect to casuals was made up
(Exhibit 14). Ms. Arthurs had worked as a casual employee in the
Dunchureh store in previous years and had also served in the
capacity as Acting Manager.
Mr. Pigeau had more seniority than Ms. Croghan. The Union's
position was that Mr. Pigeau, being more senior to Ms. Croghan, was
entitled to appointment to the Sundridge store and Ms. Croghan was
entitled, if the position of Mr. Pegeau was accepted, to
appointment to the Dunchurch store.
At the relevant times there was no requirement to post
temporary vacancies and there was no formal application procedure
applicable where such pos. itions were to be filled.
It was also acknowledged that casual employees work in the
capacity of Acting Store Managers for as little as three hours in
the absence of the Store Manager.
Counsel for the Union relied upon the provisions of art.
21.5(c) of the collective agreement:
(c) In filing temporary vacancies (includin9 summer
stores) which will last five {5) working days or
more, the Employer shall appoint the most senior
employee in the department or section involved,
provided the employee is qualified and available to
perform the work. However, the minimum
requirements of five (5) days shall not apply in
the case of stores.
It was her position: (1) that the only employees to whom art.
21.5(c) applied were members of the permanent staff, tk. at is,
permanent full- time and permanent part-time employees, which
limitation would preclude the Employer from appointing casual
employees to fill temporary vacancies without first offering the
position to permanent employees in order of seniority. (2') That
"department or section" referred to in art. 21,5(c) encompassed all
of District 24.
It was the further position of counsel for the Union that
rights of casual employees under the collective agreement were
limited, and that in the absence of a specific reference in a
provision that,it applied to casual employees, it did not do so.
Counsel for the Union referred to the three categories of
employees recognized in the collective agreement;
Permanent full-time, whose seniority under art.4.1{a) is
calculated "from his first day of work of his most recent
appointment to the permanent full-time staff of the
Employers."
8
2. Permanent part-time, who, pursuant to art. 36.1(a) of the
collective agreement, accumulate seniority upon completion of
a probationary period calculated from "his first day of work
of his most recent appointment to the permanent part-time
staff of the Employers." Pursuant to art. 36.1(b) "seniority
based rights under the Collective Agreement ... for Permanent
Part-Time employees will be calculated'on hours worked .... "
3. Casuals, who accumulate seniority, pursuant to art.
31.5(a): "on the basis of total hours worked." Seniority is
"calculated from his first day of work of his most recent date
of hire."
Counsel for ~the Onion argued that the collective .agreement did
not afford any seniority rights to casual employees under art.
21.5(e). This was said to be because the collective agreement is
specific about the application of seniority in the case of casus1
employees, how it is accumulated and for what purposes.
Counsel for the Union also relied upon the provisions of art.
29.1 of the collective agreement.
29.1 The EmpLoyers agree not to utilize permanent part-
time employees or casuals to replace permanent
full-time employees. Nor will the Employers
utilize casuals to replace permanent part-time
employees. Any utilization as referred to in this
article will not adversely affect job training
opportunities for permanent full-time or permanent
part-time employees.
9
Counsel for the union argued thlt this article prohibited the use
of casual employees to replace permanent employees and to interfere
with the job training opportunities. It was argued that the
opportunity for a permanent employee to act as a manager
represented a training opportunity for advancement to a more
responsible position.
Counsel for the Union also relied on a letter of agreement
found at p.129 of the collective agreement entitled, "Temporary
Replacement of Store Manager" which is as follows:
Where it is decided that it is necessary to make a
temporary appointment to replace the absent Store
Manager, it is the policy of the Employer to appoint the
most senior person in the next lowest classification who
is qualified and available to perform the Store Manager's
job.
Counsel for the Employer regarded the language of art. 21.5(c)
as being clear and as indicating that: "A store is just another
department." He regarded the last sentence of art. 21.5(c):
"However, the minimum requirements of five (5) days shall not apply
in the case of stores" as indicating that the article assumed that
a single store represented a department.
Counsel for the Union undertook a :painstaking and meticulous
review of the collective agreement in an attempt to demonstrate how~
it limited the application of seniority rights in the case of
casual employees with a view to supporting her position that art.
i0
21.5(c) did not apply to casual employees. Some of the articles
referred to by her were: art. 1, art. 2, art. 3, arts.
4-18, art. 21, art. 31.
Counsel for the Union made extensive reference to art. 31 of
the collective agreement dealing with "casuals." That article has
a form of preamble:
The provisions of this Collective Agreement shall apply
to casuals except with respect to the following
modifications and exceptions listed in Article 31.3.
Article 31.3 of the collective agreement provides:
The following Articles shall not apply to casuals:
Articles 4 to 18 inclusive, 20, 22, 24, 26, 30, and 33 to
48 inclusive. The application of Article 21, Assignments
& Job Postings is limited by the provisions of Article
31.4, below.
Article 31.4, which limits the application of art. 21 in the
case of casuals, provides:
(a) Casuals shall have the right to apply for certain
permanent part-time positions in accordance with
the provisions of Article 21, Assignments & Job
Postings. However, except as noted in Article
21.5(b) (special merit promotion), they shall only
be eligible to apply for vacancies within their
geographic areas if there is no permanent part-time
employee promoted in accordance with Article
21.5(a).
(b) The Employer agrees to give consideration to the
qualifications and ability of Casuals for Permanent
Full-Time vacancies at the entry level in their
geographic area, provided that no Permanent Part-
time employees have applied. Where qualifications
and ability are relatively equal, seniority shal!
be the determining factor.
Art~ 31.5(a) of the collective agreement provides:
For the purpose of Articles 3t.4, 31.7 and 21.5(b),
the seniority of a casual employee shall be
calculated from his first day of work of ~sis most
recent date of hire on the basis of total hours
worked, but no seniority shall accumulate, in any
calendar year in which a casual works less than 400
hours. A seniority list of the casual employees
assigned to work unit or department shall he posted
twice a year.
Art. 1.1(b) states:
(b) Solely for the matters dealt with in Article 31,
Casuals, the Employers recognize the Union as the
exclusive bargaining agent for employees employed
as casuals.
Counsel for the Union argued that the latter article
reinforced the intention in the agreement to restrict the rights of
casual employees to those instances where rights were specifically
granted, and was consistent with the provisions of many of the
other articles relied ugo~ hy her which did not recognize the
seniority rights of casuals. We would observe that art. 31. states
that the provisions of the collective agreement apply to casual
employees "except with respect to the,following modifications and
exceptions listed in art. 31.3." We are therefore left to conclude
that the parties meant all of the provisions of the agreement to
apply to casuals unless there was some specific indication to the
contrary. Although art. 31 makes the application of th~ collective
agreement to casuals subject to the "modifications and exceptions"
listed in Article 31.3, we can examine the other articles of the
collective agreement to see if they have also made the application
of the agreement to casuals subject ~o them. In the absence of
clear language to the contrary, we must follow the requirement of
art. 31 to which we are directed by aft t.1 (b).
Article 21 is, by art. 31.3, made subject to the limitations
set out in the provisions of art. 31.4. Article 31.4, while it
limits the application of art. 21 in certain respects, does not do
so with respect to the application of art. 21.5(c). Art. 31.3 does
not say that the application of art. 21 is limited to certain
rights spelled out in art. 31.4. Rather, it provides that the
application of art. 21 is limited by the provisions of art. 3t.4.
Accordingly, art. 21.5(c) must be found to apply to casuals unless
there is some other clear indication, elsewhere in the collective
agreement, that this is not the case.
As noted above, counsel for the Union made a very detailed
argument based on a careful analysis of many of the provisions of
the collective agreement, with a view to establishing that casual
employees only have seniority rights where such rights are
specifically granted. For the reasons given above, we find that
art. 21.5(c) also 'applies to casual employees. Where the
application to a particular group of employees is unclear from a
reading of an article, it may be necessary to rely on various rules
of interpretation for the purpose of finding the existence of an
inference supporting a particular meaning. Notwithstanding counsel
for the Union's most impressive a~gument: (1} as the provisions of
art. 21.5{c) have been specifically made applicable to casual
13
employees by art. 31; (2) as art. 21 was not made inapplicable by
art. 31.3; and (3) as the limited application of art. 21, provided
for in art. 31.3, did not include art. 21.5(c), we are unable to
accept her conclusion.
Counsel for the Union relied upon Re Hotel Dieu of St.
Joseph's Hospitals Windsor and Service Employees' Union, Local 210
(1990), 11 L.A.C. (4d) 151 (Rose). In the Hotel Dieu case, the
union claimed that the employer violated a provision of the
collective agreement when it awarded the position in dispute to &
part-time employee outside of the bargaining unit. The union
argued that the employer was required 'to consider barqaini~g unit
members first when filling job vacancies and only if a suitable
candidate was not available could it cOnsider employees outside the
unit. The majority of the board concluded, at p.t57, that in the
absence of an express provision they were unable to agree that it
was implicit in the article dealing with promotions that e~ployees
outside the bargaining unit, whether union employees in another
bargaining unit or non-union employees,'"have been given equivalent
job rights to the employees in the bargaining unit covered by the
... collective agreement .... " For the reasons above given, we
cannot regard the casual employees as being similarly situated to
the employees referred to in the Hotel Dieu case for the reasons
above given.
14
Counsel for the Employer referred to the Reference Index in
the document containing the collective agreement, which Index is
found at pp.i48-9. In the Reference Index the articles of the
collective agreement are listed followed by a statement of the
subject. On the right hand side of the page are the words "full-
time," "part-time," and "casual." X's are placed opposite a
particular article under either "full-time," "part-time" or
"casual" when the parties intend that article to apply to the class
of employee, whether full-time, part-time or casual. In the case
of art. 21, X's are placed in the space provided for "full-time",
"part-time" and "casual" employees. While the Reference Index
cannot alter the meaning of the language agreed to by the parties,
where the IanguaBe is equivocal, or unclear, the Index furnishes
some indication that the parties, in placing an X under "casual"
opposite art. 21, intended to clarify any ambiguity or lack of
clarity that might exist in interpreting any part of that article
and its application to casuals.
There was no dispute between the parties that art. 21.5(c) was
the relevant article affecting all of the grievances, and that its
application was not limited merely to temporary vacancies in summer
stores. It was also agreed that the vacancies with which we were
concerned were temporary vacancies and therefore covered by that
article.
15
AS we have found that casual employees are not excluded from
the provisions of art. 21.5(c), the next question to be decided is
what is the meaning of the words, "the department or section
involved."
Because the Board is required to substitute words for the
reality of the day-to-day operations of the Employer, ~here is a
danger that in using words we will lose sight of reality.
Accordingly, we must endeavor, throughout our decision, to test the
words chosen by us to reflect reality against that reality. When
the parties negotiated the collective' agreement, they must have
been aware that there are districts, such as District 24, which
cover a large geographic area where !the distance between some
stores can be.considerable. This realitY must have been in their
minds when they drafted art, 21.5(c). ! in the absence of a clear
indication within that article as to the meaning of "department or
section," we can examine the purpose behind the article. It was to
enable the Employer to fill temporary vacancies, sometimes for very
short periods of time. Any interpretation that would, in many
cases, make the realisation of that purpose unlikely ought to be
rejected unless the language of the agreement makes it clear that
the parties had agreed to it. We note that "the minimum requirement
of five days [does] not apply in the case of stores," and it was
acknowledged by the parties that article 21.5(c) could apply, for
example, to a store where there was a temporary vacancy of as
little as three hours. This would mean, if the Un~on's
16
interpretation was accepted, that the Employer would have 'to offer
the temporary vacancy in a store to the "most senior [permanent]
employee" in District 24 who was qualified and who might be
available. This would place .the burden on the Employer to conduct
a search for the most senior employee in the District,
communicating with that employee and then, if she was not
interested in accepting the temporary appointment, going to the
next qualified and possibly available employee within the District,
and so on.
There was nothing to stop the parties from agreeing to such a
provision, and they can still do so. However, to accept the
interpretation of the Union would create a situation that would
border on the unworkable. It might work in some cases, but it is
evident that it could create chaos in others.
There is also some support for the Employer's position found
in the collective agreement. In art. 21.5(c) there is some
indication that a store is a department. This is seen from the
last line of art. 21.5(c) which states: "However, the minimum
requirements of five (5) days shall not apply in the case of
stores." It is difficult to interpret a store as being a
department or section and, at the same time, interpret the district
where the store is located as also being a department or section.
It would appear that a department might encompass other
establishments operated by the Employer within a district, but it
17
is inconsistent, having employed the language found in the article,
to then argue that department also means district.
Article 3.7 of the collective agreement provides:
The Union shall supply to the Employer a list ccntaining
the names of Zone Representatives, Stewards, and Employee
Representatives, their store or department numbers and
the numbers and locations of the stores or departments
for which they are responsible. Changes to this list
shall be in writing as they occur.
In this article the parties have used the term department in such
a way as to make it inconsistent with its being regarded as
encompassing the entire district.
Art. 6.2(a) provides:
(a) The Employers shall prescribe the number of hours
in each working day not exceeding eight (8) hours
for the various departments or establishments of
the Employers. Normal hours of work will be as
follows:
(i) Stores:
9:00 a.m. to 6:001p.m. (day shift)
2:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
(second shift - 9, p.m. closing)
3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
(second shift - 10:00 p.m. to closing)
+5:30 p.m. to 12 midnight
(second shift-midnight closing)
+No fifteen (15) minute rest periods
(ii) Warehouses:
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. (day shift)
No fifteen (15) minute rest periods during the
afternoon
4:00 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. (night shift)
No fifteen (15) minute rest periods
(iii) LCBO/LLBO Head Office and Warehouse Offices
(Monday through Fjiday, inclusive):
Between 7:30 a.m. ~and 9:30 a,m. to between
3:30 p,m. and 5:30 p.m.
18
(iv) Toronto Airport Stores:
6:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p,m.
1:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
2':00 p.m, to 9:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m. to ii:00 p.m.
The use of the word "departments" in that article is inconsistent
with equating it with all of a district. The use of the word
"dEpartments" is restricted to various places ("establishments")
where the Employer carries on business within a district.
Art. 31.7 provides:
Casual hours of work shall be allocated according to the
seniority of the casual employees assigned to the
applicable work unit or department.
It appears from the above article that department, being equated
with a work unit, would cover such work units as stores,
warehouses, head office and warehouse offices.
We do not regard the letter of agreement, above quoted from
p.129 of the collective agreement, as affecting our interpretation
of art. 21.5(c). The letter must be read in the light of art.
21.5{c) and its restriction to the "department or section
involved."
We also believe that art. 29.1 can be harmonized with our
interpretation of the provisions of art. 21.5(c). We regard art.
29.1 as representing a general provision, whereas art. 21.5(c) is
concerned with the rights of employees within a particular store or
19
other establishment or work unit. There is room for art. 29.1 to
apply where the Grievors and the casual employees selected, work
within the same "department or section."
The parties may have employed both too many and too few words
to clearly express their intentions, but those chosen by them can
be interpreted so as to include an individual store with a
"department or section." An attempt to interpret "department or
section" to mean district is not supported by any provision of the
collective agreement. A store is one of a number of establishments
or units of the Employer within a district, and the context points
toward the intention of the parties to restrictthe operation of
art. 21.5(c) to the particular store, warehouse or office in the
District where the vacancy had to be filled. I~ it was intended to
have the article apply to every store,,,, etc. in the Distr:~ct, it
.i
would have been a very simple matter to say so.
By our decision we do not intend to ignore or devalue the
importance of seniority or to alter' the relationship between
regular and casual employees. If we had a serious doubt as ~o the
application of article 21.5 (c), in a context where the seniority
of casual employees counted for less or, did not count at ali, this
might tip the balance in favour of interpreting the article as we
were requested to do by counsel for the Union. However, where, as
in the case before us, the provision indicates that in its
operation it applies to casual employees and that its operation is
20
to be restricted to individual operations within a district, such
a~ a store, we must interpret the provision as it is written. To
the extent that the provision can be regarded as ambiguous, a
purposive and contextual reading supports the position of the
Employer.
If the Union wishes to enlarge the operation of art. 21.5(c)
in favour of permanent employees, wherever they may work within a
district, the collective agreement will have'tob~hanF, ed-to more
clearly reflect this intention.
Accordingly, for the above reasons, the grievance is denied.
Dated at Toronto this 2~th day of October,1992.
M. Gorsky - vice Chairperson
"i Dissent" (disse~t attached)
E. Seymour - Member
ONTARIO LIQUOR 80ARD EMPLOYEES' UNION
L. CROGHAN et al -Griever
- and -
CROWN IN RIGHT OF ONTARIO (LIQUOR CONTROL 80ARD OF ONTARIO)
DISSENT
Edward E. Seymour
I have read the Majority Award and I find that I must, with
respect, dissent from the conclusions Contained therein.
I cannot accept the Majority's conclusion that "ART. 21.5(e) must
be found to apply to Casuais unless there is some .other clear
indication elsewhere in the Collective 'Agreement .... "
Admittedly, Article 31.3 sets out a number of other articles ~hich,
in their entirety, do not apply 5o Casuals; however, ArLicie 21 is
aiso limited by the provisions of Article 31.4, which state that
"Casuals shall have the right to apply for certain permanent part-
time positions in accordance with Article 21 .... "
There are only two places where Casuals.are expressly mentioned in
Article 21; they are in Article 21.4 (b') (iv) and 21.5 (b).
Article 21.4 (b)(iv) says that the assignment of a permanent part-
time employee must De in accorda~.ce with the provisions of 31.4,
which limit the Casuals~ fights to apply:for vacancies within their
geographical areas only if no permanent part-time employee applies.
Article 2t.5 (b) refers to situations w'hich must be deemed merit
promo%ions to be a~arded to bargaining unit employees only, and the
~mployer , in fiilin9 these positions, mus~ give consideration to
~n,~ quaiif[cat~.on:_~ and ao'~l.'~t~es of permanent pa~-z-r~lme empL::/ee:,~
an~:J Casuals.
Aruicle 31.4 A speoif~ca%ly states %hat ,~ith, the e×cepUio~ ?,o%ed in
2t.5 (~], Casl~ais ~4i~' o¢~lF c.e permi5%ec to apply for vacancies
'~itbin %i~e~r ,~eogrsDh~cai areas if no permanen% pars-time Der. sot: ~s
~romoLed~: .~, acco?~auce ~i%n ~rt~.'-1~ .... '3~,_~.5 .,r ~- ~ . ~ur~her~ , ~rL~,cLe
31.4 B ~ermits the Employer to give considera%io~ 50 c_.?:e
~ualifications ot Casuals for permanent fuil-time vacancies -
Droviced no ~ermanent Dart-time employees apply.
In their Award, %ne Majority state that they are "....left to con-
clude that the parties meant all of the provisions of the Agreement5
to apply to Casuals unless there was some specific indication to
the contrary." I agree, that is what the parties did in Article
31.3, where there is a list of several articles which do not apply
to Casuals. In the same Article, limitations were placed on Article
21, .which i take to mean that Article 21 does not aDDi¥ to Casuai~
except in those situations ~hich are expressly ~entioneO. if t. his
were not so, there ~ouio be absolutely no reason to mention Article
21 in Article 31.3 and subsequently in ~rticle 31.4.
My interpretation of Article 31.3 is that these situations do not
aD~ly to Casuals, and neither does Dart of Article 21; therefore,
what Article 21 must do is refer to those situations which speclfi-
cally do address Casuals, i.e. 21.4 (b) (iv) and 21.5 (b). Those
are the only situations to which Casuals have any rights ~ith~;~
Article 21. In every other situation referred to within that
Article, they are excluded. ~ather than beimg mentioned to be
excluded fro~ bavin~ a particular rigbt~ tbe~ must be mentioneo to
be included to attain that right.
The Majority justify their argument to some extent by addressin9
their attention to the Reference index, which lists the Articles o1:
the Collective Agreement, follo~ed by the sta%ememt of subject.
The Majo:-£ty accurately assert, that on the r~ght-han~] side .c,f
page *~here are the words, "fui~-ti~'~e," '~ar~-Zime' and
8eca{_se ~here is an "x" under "Casuals" for Article 2~, the
~alority make the assumption tha~ the entire ~rticle applies
Casuals and that ~he para,es "~ngended to c~ariFy any ambisuity er
lack of clarity that might ex~st in interpretin~ any part oF the
Articie eno i}_s application to Casuals.':
I disagree. The Index is not so precise as to break the ~rticle
down into clauses and sub-clauses. It refers to the Article
broadest sense; therefore, it isn't necessary for all sections to
refer Lo Casuals, one reference is ample.
In Article 21, there are ten sections, and ~ithin those sections
are several sub-sections; throughout it all, Casuals are mentioned
only twice.
To have Casuals recorded in the Reference Index, there needs to be
only one reference to them.
~ith regard to the meaning o~ the words, "department'or section,"
the Majority mistakenly, I believe, interpreted the Union's argu-
ment to mean that "department" could only refer to the entire
district. That is not ho~ t interpret' the Union's argument.. The
Union merely argued that for it to be successful, the term
"department" needed to mean something more than a single store~
therefore, it does not require this panel to find that the Employer
has %o offer the temporary vacancy to the most senior employee in
the entire district, it oniy requires that the term "department" or
"section" be regarded as something more than a single store.
In conclusion, this ruling places a. severe limitation ,an the
abiii%y of permanent part-time and permanent full-time employees to
advance. There is no question that these summer store and temporary
vacancy jobs provide employees ~ith an excellent opportunity to
display %he managerial skills learned at these ~ork locations. I%
is, as the Union emphasized, ludicrous to exmect that Casuals Houid
have ~he' fi~ ~ y y ~..~ 'n ~
,s,. oppo tunib ~'~ aCca~ these posit£ons. Et ~:s
especially so ~hen one conm~de~s zna~ Casual employees are excluded
from c~a. uses coverfn9 seniority rights, job security and overtime,
among others.
For ~hese reasons, I find thaC CasuaZs ~ere no% eZ~gible to f~Zi
these posLt£ons until it ~as determined that no peTmanenb or para-
time employees ~ere £nberested.
Dated at Hamilton this :St( day o¢ d~/4~ , 19e2
opei u: 343