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· CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ON TARIO
GRIEVANCE C,OMMISSlON DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
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1606/91 ·
IN THE MATTER OF ;tN ARBITRATION
Under
THE 'CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (McColl) -'
Grievor
--. - and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Environment)
Employer '
BEFORE H. Finley Vice-Chairperson
E. Seymour ) Member
D. Montrose. Member
FOR THE C. Dassios
GRIEVOR Counsel
Gowling, Strathy & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE S. Patterson
RESPONDENT Counsel
Legal Services Branch
Management Board of Cabinet
HE~RING FebruarY 12, 1993
G S B 1606/91
DECISION
The Grievor, Mr. Ken McColl grieves that he was improperly.
paid for trips taken as a passenger outside his regular working
hours, on April 4, 1991 (2 hours) and May 3, 1991 (1 hour and 5
hburs). It is his position that he should have received overtime
rather than travel time for the eight hours in question because
(a) these hours Were outside his regular working hours
(b) travel is an inherent part of his job and ~
(c) his responsibility to his Employer continued during
these times.
Overtime is addressed in Article 13 of the Collective Agreement:
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
author ize d p e r iod 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.
Article 23 addresses 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.
23.6 All travelling time shall be paid
at the employee's basic hourly rate
or., where mutually agreed, by
compensating leave.
Mr. McColl has been with the Sault Ste. Marie District
Office of the Ministry of the Environment since 1974. He
occupies the position of an Environmental Officer 4. In this
capacity he reports, investigates and develops clean-up plans for
spills with other agencies if necessary, investigates and
mediates complaints, enforces provincial statutes in his capacity
as a~Provincial Offences Officer, carries out inspections and
audits from the environmental perspective and fulfills a public
relations role. At the time of the grievance he was asSigned to
the northern and eastern ends of the~Algoma District.
Mr. McColl frequently travels either as driver or as
passenger to sites and meetings, both within and outside of his
normal working hours of 0815 and 1630 hours. Due to the nature
of his work, it is accepted that his working hours can be
irregular. He testified that as either driver or passenger, he
would, while en route, deal with any situation requiring his
response, have contact with the Ontario Provincial Police if
necessary and fill in for the supervisor if that person were
unable to respond. It is mandatory that all spills be reported
and Mr. McColl has been instructed that he should respond to
spills which are.both inside and outside his designated area. As
a passenger during a trip, he might prepare and label sample
bottles, load cameras, participate in work-related discussions,
observe the landscaPe for spills, listen for radio calls
requesting response to spills or, he could sleep. Mr. McColl
testified that the need to respond to a situation while in
transit has happened infrequently when he has been travelling
with someone, but on numerous occasions when he has been
travelling alone.
The tools of his trade are a supply of sample bottles, a
camera and a list of industries and their telephone numbers in
his District. Because his responsibility to respond to spills
continues outside of his regular working hours, he normally has
these at hand.
When the Ministry vehicle, a van equipped with a CB radio,
is required for a trip, certain procedures must be followed and
Mr. McColl testified that he, as passenger would carry out the
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following pre-departure procedures:
- The day.journal must be signed to reserve the vehicle;'
~ The gas tank must be filled;
- The destination log m~st be filled in'dicating
destination and estimated time of arrival;
- The. in-out board at reception must be filled in
indicating destination, estimated time of return,
and contact point.
On April 4, 1991, Mr. McColl and Mr. Vic Huggard, a District
Supervisor add a third Mlnistry employee, Mr. G.H.. Lahaye, the
District Officer, travelled from Sault Ste. Marie to Elliot Lake
returning th~ same day. They travelled to the site during
work'ing hours, but their return trip of 2 hours and 10 minutes
did not begin until between 16.15 and 16:30 hours. On the return
journey, they.dropped Mr. Lahaye at the east end of Sault Sfe.
Marie and Vic Huggard and Ken McColl proceeded to the Districf
Office~ and after leaving the Ministry van there, made their way
home. It was not clear from the evidence whether or not Mr.
McColl drove Mr. Huggard to his home. Throughout this trip~ Mr.
Huggard was the driver, and the Grievor was one of two
passengers. ~During this trip, neither' Mr. Huggard, Mr. McColl,
nor Mr. Lahaye was contacted or involved in any activities which
could be classified as "active duties of an Environmental Officer
4" nor, according to the evidence, was there any work-related
disc.ussi'on, other, than "office gossip"
The second trip, the initial purpose,of which was to attend
a meeting and which later included the inspection, of a spill site
and the investigation of an alleged illegal dump, took place on
May 2 and May 3, 1991. There .were some discrepancies in dates
and time between the testimony of the two witness;. Mr. McColl and
Mr. Huggard. Mr. McColl referred to May 2nd and 3rd, and Mr.
Huggard to May 4th and 5th. Since May 4th and 5th fell on
Saturday and Sunday in 1991, and no mention had been made of
3
weekend assignments or travel, the Board has preferred the
evidence of Mr. McC°ll in this regard. ~
Mr. Huggard and Mr. McColl worked at the office until 14:00
hours on May 2nd and set out to investigate the spill and to
drive as far as Wawa where they wou~d spend the night. Mr.
Huggard testified that it was Mr. McColl's suggestion that they
organize the time this way in order to.maximize their time in the
office. They went to the site, viebed the tank and checked for
oil spillage, and discussed remedial action and prevention. This
was dealt with entirely by Mr. Huggard as the only thing required
following the check was a discussion with the owner. Mr. Huggard
does not recall discussing the spill during the drive from the
site to Wawa. However, according to Mr. Huggard, Mr. McColl
would have completed the form generated by the report to the
Spills Action Centre on his return to the District Office.
On May 3rd, Mr. McColl and Mr. Huggard left Wawa at 0715
hours and went to investigate the complaint aorth west of
Chapleau. According to Mr. Huggard's testimony, they did so.
However, t~eir .vehicle became stuck and they arrived at the
meeting only at 15:00 hours, and departed between 16:15 and 16:30
hours. During the 5-hour trip back to Sault Ste. Marie,
according to Mr. Huggard, they "saw no spills" undertook no
environmental investigations and did nothing which would fall
under the EnVironmental Officer 4 job specification'.
At the end of May 1991, Mr. McColl submitted an Averaging
Hours/Overtime Approval form indicating that from January 17,
1991 'to May 23, 1991, he had worked a total of 21.5 hours over
and above his regular working hours on 7 different occasions.
This submission was approved by Mr. Huggard and sent on to the
~Regional Office in Sudbury where three of the overtime
submissions were disallowed on the grounds that the Ministry of
the Environment does not pay overtime to passengers. Mr. McColl
was told to amend his submission to reflect the fact that these
three occasions were travel time. He did so.reluctantly, Mr.
Huggard re-signed and Mr. McColl grieved.
4
In cross-examination, Mr. Huggard testified that it is not
~unusuai for the Grievor to travel both during and after working
hours. He agreed that, under the current Ministry policy, if the
Grievor had travelled during working hours and worked in the
office afterwards that 'he would have received overtime for the
~ffice work but that i.f he were to do the opposite, he would not
have received overtime under this policy.
Argument
The Board was referred to the following cases which provided
the arbitral context for its decision:
OPSEU (Anwyll) and The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Government Services), GSB 406/83
OPSEU (clements) and The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Trans~0rtation), GSB 370/84
OPSEU (Wright) and The Crown in Right of~ Ontario
(Ministry of Labour), GSB 1249/89
OPSEU (Rutherford) and The Crown in The Right of ~
Ontario (Ministry of Transportation), GsB 0045/90
OPSEU (Wang et al) and The Crown in Right Of Ontario
(Ministry of Consumer & Commercial Relations), GSB
1888/90,1889/90,1890/90, 1898/90
Mr. Chris Dassios for.the Union, argued that everyone who is an
Environmental Officer or a .Supervisor.must look for spills and
that this is true whether there is one person or two in the
vehicle. He submitted as well, that Mr. McColl, as a passenger,
has a number of potential duties depending on the specific
circumstances. The fact that Mr. McColl happened t° be a
passenger on the occasions in question was simply fortuitous and
one cannot, Mr. Dassios submitted, have a decision respecting
overtime based on fortuitous events. Rather, the Employer's
having someone ready to act, he maintained, is the appropriate
basis for 'determining overtime. Mr. Dassios argued that an
affirmative answer to either' the question of travelling as an
inherent part of the job or of responsibility to the Employer was
5
sufficient to trigger the overtime as opposed to the travel time
response.
Mr. 'Stephen Patterson, Counsel' for the Employer,- submitted
that there is no dispute over the evidence of the activity during
the two days in guestion~ and that the evidence demonstrates
that the supervisor was doing all the driving and that the
Grievor was merely a passenger. Mr..Patterson submitted that an
affirmative answer was required to b6th questions to trigger the
overtime as opposed to the travel time'response and that
consideration of the situation should take place in retrospect
when the facts are~ known. He conceded' that driving is an
inherent part of the Grievor's job but maintained that the
Grievor was not fulfilling a responsibility to 'the Employer
during the course of travel and based on that, the time should be
credited as travel time as opposed to overtime.
Decision
It is agreed that driving is an inherent part of Mr.
McColl's job. The issue of whether or not he was responsible to
his Employer during the 8 hours he was a passenger in the
Ministry vehicle driven by the District Supervisor Mr. Huggard,
is in dispute. The question respecting responsibility that the
Board must answer is threefold:
1. Whether the fact that the Grievor signed o. ut the vehicle and
filled it with fuel means that he is responsible for its
safe return and therefore responsible to his Employer during
that time;
2. Whether or not Mr. McColl's readiness to respond to a spill
during the period of travel can be said to constitute
responsibility to his Employer;
3. Whether or not the fact that the District Supervisor, Mr.
Huggard, or the District Officer, Mr. G. J. Lahaye was
present would relieve him of any responsibility he might
have.
Responsibility for the Vehicle
In the opinion of the Board, the fact that an employee fuels
a vehicle creates no .ongoing responsibility for that vehicle.
Nor does the fact that an employe~ uses the vehicle radio.
However, when he or she u~es the radio for Ministry business, as
the Grievor did when the vehicle became stuck at Chapleau, a
responsibility to the Employer is demonstrated. The signing out
of a vehicle means that should the Vehicle not return, it is to
the individual who signed the vehicle out, that the Employer will
turn for an explanation. Mr. Hugga~d indicated that he preferr,ed
to drive but there was no evidence that the driver' and passenger
could not have switched roles en route. Nor was there any
evidence that there was a procedure which required the driver to
be the person who sign~ out the vehicle or that a particular
individual must be designated as the driver for the duration .of
the trip. For these reasons, the Board finds that the signing
out of the Ministry vehicle, created a responsibility in the
employee for that vehicle, and therefore a responsibility to the
Employer. That. does not, of course, relieve the driver of
responsibility which he or she might hav~ in that role.
Readingss to Respond
There is, according to Mr. Huggard, a continuing responsibility
for both himself and the Grievor, to report, enforce and keep in
touch with the Employer. Mr. McColl was also in possession of
the tools of his trade during the times in question, an indicator
of his readiness to respond should he be called upon by his
Employer via radio or other means, or by th? sighting of a spill
to do so. The Ministry takes the position that Mr. McColl was
"sitting there as a passenger.., just travelling". In other
words, that he had no responsibility to the Employer during the
period of travel. The evidence, in the opinion of this Board,
demonstrates otherwise and the Board finds that Mr. McColl did
have a responsibility to the Employer over and above the
responsibility for the vehicle. ~.
7
Relief from Responsibility
Mr.' Huggard also testified that should they be required to
respond to a spill or complaint while en route, both would
respond in the normal way but that-it would be Mr. McColl who.
would record the incident on.return. Mr. McColl testified that
both he and Mr. Huggard would respond to any spill if one.had
occurred but' that he, Mr. McColl, would carry out those duties
more efficientlY. There was no evidence as to the role which
the District Officer might play in responding to a spill. Based
on the evidence presented, the Board finds that the presence of
the District Supervisor and the District OffiCer, did not relieve
Mr. McColl of his. responsibilities to his Employer.
In the result, the Board finds that travel is an inherent
part of the Grievor's job and that during the time in question he
had a continuing responsibility to the Employer. Therefore, the
eight hours he spent in travel outside ~f regular working hours
on April 4, and. May 3, 1991, attract payment at the overtime
rate.
The Board orders the Employer to compensate the Grievor for
the eight hours, according to the overtime schedule, with
interest, and remains seized in the event that there is
difficulty with its implementation.
Dated at Kingston
this 12th day of July, 1993. '~.-
Helen S. Finley, Vice ~Chair
Edward Seymour', Member
Douglas C.Montrose, Member
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