HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-1215.Stotesbury et al.92-05-29 ONTARIO EMPLOYES BE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEE$ DE L 'ONTA RIO
GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT Ri[GLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNOA$ STREET WEST, SUITE 2100, TORONTO~ ONTARIO. MEG 1Z8 TELEPHONE"TELEPHONE.
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, BLIREAU 2100, TORONTO {ONTARIO). tv15G 1Z8 ~CSIt,/IfLE/TELECOPiE :
1215/91, 1524/91, 1543/91, 2081/91
IN THE ~TTER OF AN ~ITI~TION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Stotesbury et al)
Grievor
- and-
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of ,Community & Social Services)
E,mplo][er
BEFORE: P. Knopf Vice-Chairperso'.n
M. Lyons Member
F. Collict Member
FOR THE P. Lukasiewicz
GRIEVOR Counsel
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE C. Samaras
EMPLOYER Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Ministry of Community & Social Services
HEARING April 13, 1992
DECISION
This is a classification grievance involving six
people presently classified as Motor Vehicle Operators 1.
They work at and out of the Edgar Adult Occupational Centre
(the Centre) operated by the Ministry. The Union has filed a
number of other grievances dealing with Motor Vehicle
Operator l's at other Centres across the Province. The
parties have agreed to group those grievances together with
these. However, the will of the parties is to have this
panel proceed ~o hear the evidence of one representative
grievor from the Edgar Centre to determine the situation at
that Centre. Thereafter, this panel shall remain seized with
the issue of the Motor Vehicle Operators at other Centres to
deal with any other cases that need to be resolved which the
parties cannot resolve on their own after having received
this Award.
There is little dispute over the facts of this
case. Edgar is a residential site serving approximately 150
trainable developmentally handicapped adults. Some other
clients live off the site and attend daily.
The duties and t%e responsibilities of the Motor
Vehicle Operators can best be described by re~erence to their
rotating monthly assignments to a number of vehicles operated
at the Centre.
(a) Vehicle No. 2 - This is a 15-passenger mini
bus. It runs mail in and'out of Battle, on
its first and last runs of the day. On the
early mail runs, ther~ are usually no
passengers. However, an Odd exception may
involve taking a client in for an early
medical appointment or dropping a client off
at the bus station. After 9:00 a.m., the m~ni
bus is used for transporting clients to dental
or medical appointments, intercity bus
drop-offs and pickups, banking, picking up
prescription drugs and purchasing. Clients
are accompanied by.residential staff for
scheduled medical appointments. Drivers
assist the staff when clients are groggy or
upset from such appointments. Clients being
picked up from unaccompanied intercity bus
trips are returned to the Centre, often
unescorted by residential staff.
(b) Vehicle 3 - This is a large van with t~o rear
seats removed and-is known as the "maintenance
van". It is used to move maintenance men,
tools and materials to jobs on site at the
Edgar facility and to operate three internal
mail runs within the centre daily. The
vehicle has a two-way radio and remains on
site at all times. If a client has a seizure
or a serious behavioural problem requiring
removal from the site, this vehicle is
summoned to transport the client on an
emergency basis. In such a situation, two
residential staff will accompany the client,
in addition to the driver. Often this is a
volatile situation and drivers have been
kicked or hurt in the process of getting
clients into the van or while driving off
site. Probably because of th~s, drivers are
required to attend intervention technique or
restraint courses when they assume the job.
However, the representative grievor,
Mr. Tomkins, has never, nor does he know of
any situation where motor vehicle operators
have filed' incident reports to record their
intervention in such behaviour. Mr. Tomkins
believes that this is usually left to be done
by the rosidential staff when they consider it
appropriate.
(c) Vehicle 5 - This is a five-ton truck. Its
main duty is to take the products produced by
the Centre from its sho? to Toronto and then
bring the materials from Toront~ back to the
Centre for assembly. The drivers usually work
on this truck on their own. However, when and
~f a driver wants the help of a client for
loading or unloading purposes, he can choose
if he wants to bring along an unaccompanied
client for assistance.
(d) Float Position - This could involve Vehicle
No. 6 which is a 40-passenger school bus used
to take client groups for recreational or
vocational field trips. On all these trips
clients are accompanied by. residential staff.
However, the driver may be called upon to
assist such staff if the need arises.
This bus is also used every morning to drive
the clients from their residences up to the
dining area. This is an approximately three
to five-minute drive and 90% of the time the
clients are not accompanied by residential
staff. This bus is also used to carry groups
of patients into Barrie accompanied by
residential staff for a series of dental
appointments.
The floater rotation also involves Vehicle
No. 1 which is a seven-passenger mini van used
for long trips to London or Woodstock for
specialized treatment for clients, such as sex
therapy. Clients on these trips are always
accompanied by residential staff. However, on
these occasions, drivers are frequently called
upon to assist in situations where female
staff simply cannot help male clients in
washroom situations or where the driver needed
to help staff with upset clients.
(e) Vehicle 15 - This is a 15-passenger van used
to drive clients to work placements in Battle.
Job coaches accompany the clients on these
trips. These trips also involve purchase
pickups from the Vocational Department in
Battle.
(f) Vehicle 7 - This is an eight-passenger window
van used to move supplies and prescription
drugs around the Centre from stores to
residences. Like Vehicle 3¥ it is also used
to be on call for emergency situations. It is
also used to dri.velclients unaccompanied from
residence to work sites on the Centre.
It is also used to drive in the afternoon to
take mail, lab specimens and bio-hazardous
materials to. Orillia and to the Huronia
Regional Centre. On occasions it is used for
accompanied clients to be taken for medical
appointments.
It is also the laundry pick-up and delivery
vehicle used for all ~esidences on the site.
The driver accomplishes this with the aid of
one unaccompanied client whose job is to
assist the driver with the laundry.
For Vehicles No. 3 and No.7, the policy is that
drivers pick up clients on site whenever the weather is bad
or they require assistance to get from one spot on sit~ to
another. This would typically involve a three to five-minute
drive along with the client. However, when the weather is
very bad and the roads are icy, this could involve as much as
30 minutes to get from one end of the Centre to the other.
Many of the clients require assistance getting in and out of
the vehicle because of their special physical needs.
The grievors believe at the time of the grievanc~
they were required to have taken the following courses and/or
obtained the following licences as part of their job:
(a) Intervention or "restraint" technique courses
(b) First Aid
(c) Defensive Driving
(d) Transportation of hazardous goods
(e) CPR
(f) Propane P3 Iicence
(g) Air break licence or endorsement
However, they admit that the Employer only expected one of
the group to have CPR training and that propane use was being
eliminated at all relevant times. Further, no vehicles
listed above used air breaks at the time of the grievance.
The grievors also referred to their work involving
searching ~or missing clients. This involves driving
vehicles under the direction of a search master and with at
least one residential staff on board to be on the lookout for
the client and to take responsibility for the client when
s/he %;as found. This also involves picking up or reporting
the presence of a dislocated client in Battle. The grievors
are not expected to pick up a client alone in Barrie or even
on site if they have concerns of behavioural problems.
However, the drivers expressed genuine concern over their
ability to assess a volatile situation, given that they
possess no direct knowledge or background of each of the
clients' history. The drivers are forced to rely on their
own instincts and the cumulative picture they gain through
the "rumour mill" and their experience at the Centre
developed with ~he clients over the number of years.
The drivers also expressed concern'over their
duties through their representative grievor. He explained
that they realize that quite a lot of the clients appgar to
have sexual problems judging from the number of trips taken
to a special facility in London designed to treat this kind
of problem. The drivers also feel it ks quite common for
female clients to call police to allege abuse or sexual
impropriety.
It is clear from the,evidence that these grievors
do much more than drive the vehicles. They often assist
staff in difficult situations with clients. Also, they
simply talk and interact with clients whether.they are
accompanied or not. As Mr. Tomkins explained on behalf of
his colleagues, when he is called uDon to assist a client he
does so. "If someone is upset, I try 'to calm them down. I
look on counselling as assistance." As he later explained,
"we understand clients in the Ministry do have violent
tendencies. It's part of our job and we accept that
counselling is part of our job - we'd like some more
remuneration or ~irection on it .... You can't do the job
effectively if you don't communicate with them. You pick
them up so much." Mr. Tomkins says, "Quite a lot of the day
is spent with you alone with the clients" and this calls upon
the drivers to communicate 9;ith the client ia such a way as
he believes it amounts to counselling. This time alone with
clients and counselling is what the. Union says takes the job
outside of its present classification. The job specification
for this position is annexed hereto as Appendix "A".
Class Standard for Motor Vehicle Operator l is annexed hereto
as Appendix "B".
The Argument
The Union is seeking a Berry order, arguing ,that
the Motor Vehicle Operator 1 classification does not properly
reflect the duties and responsibilities of the job and that
no other Class Standard presently exists that recognizes the
degree of contact with clients that these drivers have at
Edgar. It was said that the evidence established that "most
of the time" the grievors are alone with clients and working
one-on-one with them. Because of this, it was said that the
drivers are called upon to be both safe drivers and also
counsellers by ensuring that the client acts in an
appropriate way for their surroundings and ensuring the
client's safety. In these instances, the grievors have the
care, custody and control of the client's mental and physical
wellbeing. Further, the grievors work with other staff
members and take on a counselling function assisting with
difficult or physically incapacitated clients in the
situation of dental or medical appointments. The Union
stresses the amount of interaction these grievors have with
the clients. It was argued that the ~otor Vehicle Operator 1
Class Standard is inappropriate in that it deals with
carrying passengers "who are usually accompanied by
attendants." It was said that the evidence does not support
such a conclusion in this case. It was said that the
Standard does not address the obligation to pick up clients
in bad weather or in town who are unaccompanied. It was
argued that the client contact in this case makes up a
significant portion of the job. Thus, we are asked to
declare that the grievers are improperly classified and that
a ~erry order be granted.
Counsel for the Ministry argued that the evidence
does not support a finding that there is a substantial
difference between the grievers' duties and responsibilities
and the Job Standard. It was agreed that the representative
griever had said that the drivers were "usually alone" with
clients. But it was stressed that this must be viewed in the'
light of all his evidence which dealt with the many
assignments to vehicles where contact with unaccompanied
clients was the exception rather than the rule. I~ was said
that the evidence, taken as a whole, does not support a
conclusion that the drivers are usually alone with
unaccompanied clients. Further, the Board was asked to make
a distinction between the conversation and communication that
these drivers have with the clients as opposed to any
counselling and intervention that trained staff may be
required to have with clients. The fact that the drivers
were required to take a physical intervention course was said
to be indicative of the nature of work and the clients
involved in this case. Further, it was stressed that the
drivers are never forced to be alone with clients and can
request assistance whenever they want. It was said that the
Class Standard contemplates that the drivers may somet.imes be
alone with clients and thus remains appropriate for this
situation.
The Decision
The grievers rely upon two 'aspects of their work
which they say take them beyond the language of the Class
Standard for Motor Vehicle Operator 1. The grievers rely on
%'lhat they consider to be their counselling work with clients
and the fact that they perceive themselves to be driving
clients who are usually unaccompanied by attendants. We
shall deal first with the counselling aspect of the posit~ono
Mr. Tomkins presented himself to the Board as the
representative griever. He recounted incidents when he has
talked to clients, assisted residential staff and played a
significant role in resolving a difficult situation. He also
talked about the day-to-day and routine contact he has with
the clients whom he drives. He exhibited a care, concern and
sensitivity to the needs of these clients. As a
representative, he is someone of whom the Ministry should be
proud. However, the Board cannot conclude that this kind of
contact with clients amounts to counselling. It is true that
his interaction with the clients and his experience as well
as the role model he presents may be of great value to the
clients' progress and stability. However, counselling
involves the use of professional techniques and regular
contact that ~s quite distinct from the kind of work that the
griever described. What the griever described to us must be
recognized as humane, sensitive and professional dealing in
difficult situations. However, it cannot be considered as
counselling.
This leaves the question of whether or not these
drivers are dealing with clients who are usually accompanied
by attendants or not. The Class Standard contemplates the
drivers carrying passengers who are "usually accompanied by
attendants". Thus, the real crux of this case is the degree
of contact these drive'rs have with accompanied and
unaccompanied athendants. Despite the able and appropriate
presentation of the evidence by both parties, this Board was
left without any clear indication of the amount of time
actually spent with accompanied or unaccompanied clients.
The evidence was given as it is outlined above. While the
griever did say that he is usually alone with clients, and
this was uncontradicted by any evidence presented by the
Employer, that statement must be taken in context of all the
evidence presented.
The evidence presented shows that the drivers
rotate monthly on six types of vehicles. Most of the
vehicles involved mixed duties when the drivers may be
transporting materials, equipment, clients and staff
personnel alone or in various combinations.
However, we shall focu's on the evidence which
reveals the instances when the drivers are alone with
unaccompanied clients, When driving Vehicle No. 2, drivers
may take unescorted clients Erom or to the local intercity
bus station. Presumably, these are clients who are capable
of taking public transportation on their own. There is no
evidence as to the frequency of such trips. On Vehicle
No. 5, the drivers have the choice oE taking an unaccompanied
client with them for deliveries to. and from Toronto of their
products. Given that the choice of whether or not a client
will be taken along is solely within the hands of the
driver~, this cannot be considered as a job duty or
responsibility. On Vehicle No. 6, the drivers will fill the
bus with clients to take them from'their, residences to
breakfast. Ninety percent of the time the clients are
unaccompanied; however this amounts to a three-minute drive
for .the meal. On Vehicles 3 and 7, the drivers will pick
clients UP and take them from their residence to the work
site or whenever it apDears that the client needs assistance
in travelling around the site. In these cases, the clients
are unaccompanied. On Vehicle No. 7, the driver does the
laundry duty with the assistance of an unaccompanied client
daily.
Reviewing all these instances or situations where
the drivers are unaccompanied with clients ~reveals that loc
Vehicles ~os. 3 and 7, the drivers will be taking clients who
are usually unaccompanied by attendants for very short runs,
usually 3 - 5 minutes around the site. For Vehicle No. 6, it
amounts to one very short part of the day as a ~;hole. For
Vehicle No. 2 there is ~o evidence of the frequency. Ail
this evidence must then be viewed in the context of the.other
duties and responsibilities of the drivers. Given the number
of other vehicles for which they are responsible and the fact
that their daily duty on those vehicles involves situations
where they are driving clients who are usually accompanied by
attendants, the evidence leads to the inescapable conclusion
that these drivers are transporting clients who are usually
accompanied by attendants except when they are assigned to
Vehicles No. 3 and No. 7.
In order for the Union to succeed, it must satisfy
us that there is a substantial difference between the duties
they perform and the duties re~erred to in the Class
Standard. We do not have evidence of the percentage of time
spent on each vehicle or what percentage of that time would
amount to time spent with unaccompanied clients. But given
the mix of duties assumed by these drivers with regard to all
the vehicles on the site, the evidence, taken as a whole,
convinces us that they are usually driving clients who are
accompanied by residential attendants. For this reason, the
grievance must fail.
However, we feel compelled to make some further
comments. The Class Standard which applies to these grievors
covers all motor vehicle operators in the government service
whose "prime function" is the operation of a motor vehicle.
The Class Standard is typically broad a~d covers
transportation of goods such as mail, office equipment and
furniture or passengers. The passengers are stated to
include residents or inmates from instit~]tion'al facilities to
be taken to hospitals or to other institutional or
recreational outings. It is not difficult for this panel to
see why the grievors perceive an enormous difference between
the delivery of goods and equipment and the driving of
clients from facilities such as Edgar. T,he physical dangers
facing the drivers, the humanity and sensitivity they need to
maintain to do their job professionally and well, and the
emotional strains created by su'ch situations make 'this Board
wonder why a job classification system w0u'ld group drivers
such as these together with those ~ho transport inert
material. The government service has the benefits of the
assistance these drivers offer residential staff, especially
in crisis situatior~s. While we recognize that we have no
jurisdiction to cause a distinction to be made within the
classification, we suggest that the parties give serious
consideration to our remarks.
However, in the result, the grievance must be
dismissed.
DATED at Toronto, Ontario, this29th day of May,
1992.
Paula Kn~pe rson
,.yons - Me,_er
' '.~¢t -
¢
· Po.ltlon gpecJflcatlon ~ Clasa Al~ocauon. CSC 615o
" ~o~[ ~o ~c~ ol to~m for ~pta~n
I
I
flee~ o~ IS
tranS~ort4ng staff a~ ct4~ tO var4~ Statf~ t~1~f~ aarrte, Gr<~14s, t~ Toronto, ~ ,
p~cX~g up e~d deTt~rla~ e~ ~ freight,
Othe~ I~els,
loading a~d u~Toadtflg ~argo ~h4~Jes is ~4red% .... · '"' '
· .. / ~ttnu~ on reveree
se see
. ve~{cla Ope~at6~ 1 '/ 1?201 / ~-03A / .01
P~sft{on requtres the perfor~a~a of rout~M maintenance and the keep4ng of
records relative :a maintenance, costs, pick-ups Bnd del{verteL
inetructtone for completing form CSC-6150
Out4e~ and rela~ed tasks (con ~d) ~.. .,
3) C5~) Per~orm= etheP ~eleted aut(e~ such
knowledge oF and o~ePmting gf t~-H~y radio,
responsible fO~ the p~oper, uIeef ~ eover~ant.~ed(~'_~ar~;
Skills and knowledge r,quJred to pe~foPm~tJ6 ~ ~'1 '~{n~ ~e~elTM
record. Oood wrt~tan t~d Comnuntcat-ton sktlls. ~phyatca31y eapab3e ~ loadt~ and
vn?eadtng treks .ft~ MB~ cargo,' ~tltW 'n~d'Nt!'llngnass' to 'Stte~ Ftrst At~,
appl!ce=te. Kn~?edg~ of Crtsts Nsn~ment/Z~te~ent~ve Technique procedures and re'laced
~o~4c~es, Ab{l~ty to ~ork ~tth and/or aroun~ a populat4on of ~evelopmenta~ly delayed
adu I t~.
APPENDIX
SERIF-~: Motor Ven~,¢J.e ~racor' .
CLAS~ STANDARD: CLASS COOE: 17201
Charac=eris=ic Duties.: .:
~lanCs and cons~.ruc~on ~at~r/Als, stock an~ autx~ot, tv~ par=s,.~ab .sgec/mens
v~c!e( ~~ ~he s~e~ of v~tcles, ~s~g~s ~
A m~ of a C~ass "Go ~o Drip's ~c~ce as ~s~
E or F ~cences ~y be r~~. A w~k~q ~iedge of ~e
NOT~: ~cc.Lucle~ frc~ ~his group are _Dosi~-ion~ lnvclving the operation of
heavy duty vehicles, such as highway ~ai~Ce~ance and
equipment. Su.c..h positions are covered by other classification series.
November 1,'1981