HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992-1290.Chamaillard.95-10-24
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ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPL DYEES DE L'ONTARIO
1111 GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE Q, v
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, W\" ' \~
, ; SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
, - BOARD DES GRIEFS 1}s
ft1<L.Ql;ND""'U1~'U"". 'DRD"'D. ON"''''. MSG 'Z8 >E<EPkONo""'PHONo ,.." '2<;-''''
ClIo. A!eEN ~UR AU2100 TORONTO (ONTARIO) MSG lZ8 FACSIMILEITtLl~COPIE (416) 325-7396
~' GSB I 1290/92
, OPSEU # 92E707
. 1 OCT 2. 1995
: ..."..". IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
CROWN EMPLOYEES
GRrEVANCE SETTLEME:NT Under
BOARD
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
OPSEU (Chamaillard)
Grievor
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The Crown in Right of ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General)
Employer
BEFORE M Watters Vice-Chairperson
M. Lyons Member
F. Collict Member
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FOR THE R Blair/K. Whitaker
GRIEVOR Counsel
Ryder, Wright, Blair & Doyle
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE M Fleishman
EMPLOYER Counsel
Crown Law Office - civil
Ministry of the Attorney General
HEARING February 17, 1995
June 14, 1995
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By decision dated September 21~ 1993~ another panel of the Grievance
Settlement Board f oLmd that it possessed the requisite jurisdiction to
determine whether the grievor~ a freelance Court Monitor~ was an employee
within the meaning of sec:tion 1( 1) (f) (vi) of the Crown Employees
Collective Barqaininq Ac:t The Board, in that instance, stated:
"Having decided to ta~: e jurisdiction with respect to
this case, it is appropriate to set out the procedLlre
to be followed. Having carefully considered the
employer s request, and the Lln i on s submissions on
point~ we are satisfied that this is an appropriate
case to bi fl.\rcate the proceedings and hear evidence
and argument first on the status issue, or, pLlt
another way, whether the grievance is arbitrable.
Having heard and decided that matter, we may then~
depending on the oLltcome, hear the merits of the
matter in di spLlte. Given the discharge letter, and
the reasons set out therein, we are of the view that
this case can be c:onveniently split in the manner just
described, and that there is no prejudic:e to the union
or grievor in doing so. n
(page 16)
Section 1( 1) (f) (vi) of the Crown Employees Collective Barqaininq
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Act, as it read at the ti me material to this proceeding, provides the
following definition of employee:
(f) "employee" means a Crown employee as defined in the Pub li c
Service Act but does not include,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . II: .
(vi) a person not ordinarily required to work more than one-third of
the normal period for persons performing similar work except
where the person works on a regular and cont i nLli ng basis,
. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .
In this statutory conte)t, the initial issue is whether the grievor worked
more or less "than one-third of the normal period for persons performing
similar work" If the amount of work performed e:.: ceeded the
aforementioned threshold, then the grievor must be considered as an
employee for purposes of the legislation. If, on the other hand, the work
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did not reach the threshold~ this Board must stlll determine whether thel
e::ception to the e::clusion is appli.cable Fut another way, we must deCidej
whether the gr-i evor wor-ked as a fl~eel ance COLlrt Moni tor- "on a r-egul ar and
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continuing basis" If this qLlestion is answered in the affirmative, thE,
gr-ievor- will be captur-ed by the definition of employee notwithstanding she
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may not ordinar-ily have worked mOI~ Ethan one-third of the nOI~mal per-iod
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for persons performing 51 mi 1 ar wOl~k. i
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Before turning to the evidence, t h er e is one (1) award of the Ontarich
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Public Servi ce LaboLlr Relations Tribunal that merits some comment.
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OOPS, Ontari 0 Union Of Court Reporters and Ministry of the At torne\~
unreported T/0064/84, T/0018/86 II
General ( 1988) , (F' c. Picher) the Tribunal
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had to determine the employment status of f reel ancs c:oLlrt reporters.
Ir!
that instance, the parties agreed that sLlC:h reporters could be divideb
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into the following three c:) groLlps
1 Freelance reporters that do work e: elusively for the Ministry; !
..., Freelance reporters that, with the permission of the Ministry, - I
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ma~: e thei r services available to clients other than the Mi n i stry,~
and !"
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- Freelance reporters that freely make their services available to
other clients. I
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The Tr"ibunal. on the evidence presented, concluded generally that all df
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the three (3) groups of freelance court reporters were employees and nJt
independent contractors. In so doing. it utilized the several tests whiJh
are routinely employed to disti~9UiSh employees from independeJt
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contractors The TribLlnal reserved on the question I
as to whether specific
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freelance repol~ters mi ght fall outside the definition of employee aSia
consequence of section 1(1) (f) (vi> In this regard, the award states
"It may be that some of the individuals will be excluded from
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employee status under C E C.B A by virtue 0+ the application of
section l(l)(f)(vi} of the Act which stipulates that an employee
Lln del'" the Act does not include "a person not ordinarily required
to wor~ more than one third of the normal period fOI~ persons
performing similar work e}:cept where the person wor~s on a
regular and continuing basis " As noted above, however, the
parties have agreed to PLlt aside the issue of potential
e cl LISi on based on the applicc\tion of section 1 (1) (f) (vi.) for
the purposes of the instant determination of employee status
which has been therefore based on the premise that they work
"somewhat less than full time" Issues of how mLlch less than
f LIll time in any i nd i vi dLlal situation and the applicability of
section l(1)(f}(vi) may be subsequently addressed by the parties
on a case by ~ase basis. II
(page 17)
For purposes of this interim Award, the Board does not distinguish
between Court Monitors and Court Reporters. We recognize, however, that
these two (2) groups of employees record the evidence through the use of
different technology and that there is a variance in the respective wage
I~at.es. These differences are not material to the resolution of this
dispute
The grievor was the sole witness to give evidence on behalf of - the
Union. She commenced her employment as a freelance, or fee for sel~vi ce,
COLlrt Moni tor in the Provincial Court, General Division, in Kingston,
Ontario in ALlgLISt 1990. By letter of June 15, 1992, the grievor was
advised that her court repor.ti ng services would no longer be reqLli red
The material part of the letter of Mr F\ Beaudoin, Regional Director,
East Regi. on, Courts Administration, reads
"This letter is to advise you that effective today, YOUI"" court
repoJ""ti ng services are no longer required by the Ministry of the Attorney'
General in the county of Frontenac
Due to other commitments resulting f I~om a I~ecent dispute settlement,
r-eguIar COL\I~t repol~t i ng work is no 1 anger available to you
Notwithstanding this and more significantly, in the Breen et al
hearing on June 10th, 1992, YOLI testi f i ed under oath that YOLl I~emo\led
documents f '~om cOLlrt files and pr-ovi ded them to a third party for LIse
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unrelated to your business or to the business of the Mlnistry As YOll
YOLlrself acknowledged~ this is highly i mpl~opeJ~. Had you been a civil
servant, you would be facing severe disclplinary sanctions not e cluding
dismissal for what must be consj, dered a serioLls breach of office secl~ecy
and the unauthorized removal of court documents."
(e:, hi bit 1 )
A gl~ i evance dated June 30, 1992 was subsequently filed The grievor
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alleged therein that she had been dismissed wi thOLlt just caLIse Shel
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asked, inter alia, to be reinstated to the full duties of her former ,i
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position and to be reimbursed for any and all losses occasioned by thel
Employer's actions.
for the Employer Dianne Aziz, I
Evidence was presented through Ms. the'
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Services Manager respect of Frontenac County. I
Court in Ms. Aziz hasll
occupied this position since November 1990. As Court Servi ces Manager ~ ~.
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she was ultimately responsible for the administration of court II
reportingr
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services in the Courts within her area II
Broa.dly spea.king, the grievor had two (2) core responsibilities as ail
Monitor Fil~stly, she attended - I
Court in COLlrt, or at e~.: ami nat ions for':
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discovery~ for purposes of recording and monitoring the proceedings I'
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Appro: imately two-thirds of her time was spent in Court with the balanc~
being devoted to discoveries Secondly, the grievor was required t~
prepare transcripts at the request of a Judge, the Ministry of th~
Attorney General or a private litigant. A considerable amount of eVidencJ
was led in respect of each of these tas~s
The grievor testified that she mainly worked wi th JLldge Campbell . I
1n
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the Provincial Court, General Division, on non-jury cases in respect of
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bott-I civil and criminal matters. It was the thrust of her evidence that
she was expected to give top priority to the work generated by that COLlrt
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The gl~ievor indic:ated that, on oc:c:asion, she WOLll d worl: in other COLlrts in
. i ngston and in the surrounding ar'ea if her servic:es were not needed in
the General Division. She stated that, before ac:c:epting ot h er
assignments, she would c:hec:k to ensure she was not required in the Genel~al
Division
At the time material to this proc:eeding, there were no full.-tirne
c:lassified Court Monitors or Court Reporters working in the F'rovi nci a1
Court, General Division. Instead, court repol~ting services were provided
by freelance, or fee for service, Court Monitors. This was contrasted
with the C,""i mi nal and Family Divisions which each had one (1) full-time
Court Reporter on complement. Ms Aziz and her staff had a list of
appro). i matel y twelve ( 12) Court Monitors, including the grievor and a Ms
Sylvia Smith, who would be called in as required for court repol~ting. The
evidence of the grievor and Ms Aziz did not differ materially with
respect to the frequency of court reporting assignments in the Provincial
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Court, General Division. Both, Lll ti matel y, agreed that Ms. Smith was the
first person to be c;:alled in. Apparently, Ms Smith was senior to the
other reporters whose names were on the li st. Further, both agreed that
the grievor was called in with the ne>:t greatest frequency Ms Aziz!,
however' , asserted that Ms Donna Knapp was "close to" the grievor in terms
of the number of assignments. This assertion was contested by the
grievor.
The grievor testified she generally received between one (1) and
three ( :::; ) weel: s notice that her services were required She claimed that
she always made herself available to the Provinc:ial COLlrt, Genel~al
Division It was her evidence that she "always" had work in that Court
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Similarly~ she stated that she could "always depend" on the Ministry ofl
the Attorney General for "regula.... wor~" In the g....ievo.... s wOt-ds ~ it wasl
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he.... "main of income and work" This 1 at te.... claim was disputed I
source bY)
Ms. Aziz. The Cou....t Se....vices Manage.... maintained that the g....ievo.... could
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not be assured of ....egLll a.... wo.... ~ with the Ministry in the period ....elevant td
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this case.
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As stated, the grievor was responsible for the preparation Oil
t....anscripts when requested by a Judge, a representative of the Mi ni stry o-fi'
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the Attorney General, or by a private litigant. In the first two (:2 )~
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instances, the cost of the transcript was borne by the Employer on a cosii:.
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per page basis pursLlant to a fee schedule established by the MinistryJ
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Where the transc....ipt was requested by a private litigant, the cost of I
same
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was borne by that pa....ty acco....ding to the same fee schedule.
e grlevol
estimated that a transcript o....dered in 5i tv-five percent
was (65;') of hef
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She broke this. down further by indicating that sixty percent I
cases. ( 611~~ ;
of the requests were from private litigants with the balance coming ~ ~ II
from
Sh!
Judges or rep....esentatives of the Crown The grievor testified that
Msl
could not refuse to prepare a transcript if one was sought Indeed.
Aziz ac~nowledged that "preparing transcripts is necessary to satisf~ th!
job requirements" Ms Aziz added that the requirement to produce ~
transc....ipt went with the job of being a Court Reporter regardless of Wh~
ordered the transcript The g....ievo.... advised that she p....epared all
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t....ansc....ipts at home on he.... own time She noted that Ministry eqLli pmenti
and in pa....ti CLll a.... a transcriber, was Llsed for this pu....pose
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Two (2) othe.... aspects of the grievor s work need to be mentioned.
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Firstly, if her wor~: assignment was cancelled without forty-eight (481)
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hours p I~ i or notice~ she was entitled to charge a cancellation fee o.f
appro:. i matel y fort y dollars ($40 ClU) The grievor ad nowl edged that she
did not engage in COLlrt work on a cancelled day. She maintained~ however~
that sLlch a day would have been committed to the Employer in the sense she
would have been ready and available to work but for the cancellation.
Secondly~ the grievor was permitted to charge "a mi ni mLlm" of three (3 )
hours at the hOLlrly rate if she arrived at Court and the schedLII ed case,
did not go ah ead or if less than three ( 3) h O~lIr" S alternate work was
provided
The grievor was required to complete a Daily Attendance Register to
docLlment her daily charges The fdrm shows, inter alia, Total Attendance
Time, Total Billable Time, and Cancellation Charge Where 48 HOLlrs Notice
Not Given The data shown on the Daily Attendance Register was
subseqLlentl y transfel~red onto an Invoice For Personal Sel~vi ce This form I
1 i sts the work performed, ti me e:.:pended, and amount claimed over a longer
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period of time such as two (2) weeks or one ( 1 ) month. Both of the
aforementioned documents were signed by both the claimant and a
sLlpervi sor. This Board was provided with most of the Invoices For
Personal Service, and some of the Daily Attendance Registers, for the
period her'e in question. These wel~e filed with LIS as e: hibit 5
A considerable amount of statistical data was filed by the parties
pertaining to the grievor s work pattern over the Al..lgl..lst 199u to June 1992
period This evidence may be summarized as follows
(i) A SLlmmary of HOLlrs Worked was prepared by Ms Aziz. This
docLlment, which was filed as e hibit 6, was premised on the i. nfor'mc\ti on
contained in the Daily Attendance F\egisters and the InVOlces For Fel~SDnal
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Service completed in respect of the gl~ievor s wor ~ The summary provides
a breakdown of hOLlrs under the following headings: (i) hours billed/paid
per invoice; (i i> grievor s record of hOLlrs bi 11 ed; and (Ui> hOLlrs I
CalCL\lations~1
billed/paid for cancellation charges. Ms A.:iz, in her
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isolated the nLlmber of months in which the grievor worked in e cess ofl
fifty-two (52) hOLlJ~s. She determined that the grievor e::ceeded thatl
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threshold in only si ( 6) of twenty-two (22) months over her period of!
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employment. Counsel for the Employer noted that the ratio increased tol
seven (7) of twenty-two (22) months if the grievor's figures wer~'
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utilized. He indicated that he was content to LIse her record of hoursl
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billed in view of the minimal difference involved. Both the grievor"s and
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the Employer"s record of hours _bi 11 ed incorporated billings for cancelleq
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days I
In preparing this sL\mmary~ the Employer relied I
on the approach ta~en
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by the Ontario Public Service Labour Relations Tribunal in OPSEU <81 ythe)j
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and Manaqement Boal~d Of Cabinet~ T/5/83 (Shime). In that instance, thJ
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Tribunal noted that for the purposes of collective bargaining,
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following persons were considered to be employees within the conte:: t of
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section l(i)(f)(vi) of the Crown Employees Collective Baraainina Act: I
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(a) persons who wor~ more than thirteen (1:-) hours per week;; and
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(b) persons who work a regular and continuing basis for thirteen I.
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( 13) hOLlrs per week or less I
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The Tribunal described this approach as "the rule of thumb by wt-,i ch the
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parties have operated";
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E hibit 9 was prepared by the grievor It provides a record of I I
(i i) heil
billings for reporting, cancellations and minimums over the period of he~ I
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employment with the Ministry Of The Attorney General. It appears that th~
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Emp 1 oyer- utili.::ed the figures contained therein in determining the
Grievor s Record of Hours Billed for pLlrposes of e:. hi bit 6 A review of
e:.( hi bit 9 discloses that the gl""ievol"" I"" ecol"" ded two hundl""ed and nineteen
(219) days of COLll""t reporti ng and thirty-si (36) cancellations in the
period material to this dispute It is likely that the days I""ecorded as
"reporting" included days for which the thl""ee (3) houl"" minimum was paid
The data contained i ne:.:hi bi t 9 is substantially similal"" to the figures
found in the Daily Attendance Registers and Invoices FOI"" Personal Sel""vice
as collected in e:.:hi bi t 5;
(iii) ENhibit 10 was prepared by the grievor. It provides her recol""d of
the days on which she engaged in court reporting The dates shown on the
face of the e hibit total two hundred and forty-eight (248) days It is
apparent that this figure includes cancellation dates. In discussing the
number of days wOl""ked, the grievor stated that there were fewer sittings
of Court between mid-June to mid-August. She also advised that the COUl""t
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did not sit over the Christmas to New Years period Additionally, the
grievor isolated the blocks of time which she used for vacation Her
vacation time totalled thirteen ( 13) weeks over the twenty-two <:12) month
per-iod She fLll""ther identified time in which she was unavailable for
COLIr-t reporting given that such time was required for the preparation of
transcripts;
(i v) E:.: hi bit 11, which was also prepared by the grievor, lists
transcripts produced for private litigants The grievor testified that if
tl~anscript preparation was included as time worked, she would have worked
appro: imately si ty (60) hours per week ovel"" the period here in issue.
As noted above, section l(1)(f)(vi) of the Crown Employees Collective
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Barqaininq Act e cludes from emp 1 oyee .status "a person not ordinari~y
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l~eqLli red to work mor-e than one-thir-d of the nor-mal per-iad for- I
per-sors
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per-forming similar- wor- k . " The language descr-ibing this e~. c 1 Llsi on II
. r-aises
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the issue as to which gr OLlp of employees should be consider-ed as
thlt
r-elevant comparator. In this r-egar-d, both par-ties seemed to agr-ee
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the comparison should be made to full-time COLlr-t Monitors who are pal~t
s.f
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classified complement. The Union opening ar-gument
the in its r-efer-enced
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appr-opr-iate comparator. COLtnsel for the Union
this gr-oup as the entel~ed
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the position specification for COLlr- t Monitor And Office Cler-k into
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evidence a s e~.: h i bit 7 dur-ing the cr-oss-examination of Ms. Aziz. E~hibitl7
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is, in substance, a generic job description for the classified COLlit
thlt
Monitors. Similar-Iy, the Employer- in its opening argument submitted
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full-time Court Reporter-s wer-e the proper- comparator gr-oup Ms Aziz
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testified that, sLlbject to cel~tai n limited e:.:cepti ons, the
gr-ievlDr-
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gener-ally per-for-med the same duties as the classified COLlr-t Reporters I
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The Position Specification and Class Allocation f or- m in r-espect
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the Court Monitor- And Office Clerk (e>:hi bi t 7) is appended to this
Awar-tl
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The form sets out two (2) major- groups of duties and related tasks in
paragraph three (3) thereof. These are, firstl" the provision of cou~t
repor-ting ser-vices in assigned courts and, secondly, the per-formance bf
clerical and typing ser-vices related to the operation of the Court OffiCl
These primary duties 'occupy seventy percent (70'l) and thirty perce~t
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(::;01.), respectively, of the time of the classified staff The Boar-r'
after comparing the grievor s job to the position specification, mafes tte
following findings:
1. We are satisfied, on the evidence, that the grievor per-for-med
the duties r-elating to the provision of COLlr-t r-epor-ting ser-vice~
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The only task which the grievor denied performing was that
described ne)t to the seventh bullet point as "arr-anging for
services of free-l ance COUl"'t reporter (5) when required because
of two courts sitting C\t the same time;" and
~ We are also satisfied that from ear'ly 1991 onwards~ the grievor
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did not engage in clerical and typing services in respect of the
Court Office. The grievor did perform these tasks briefly in
late 1990. Ms. Aziz testified that Ms Chamaillard was not
assigned SLICh dLlties after early 1991 The grievor did not
dispute/this assertion Indeed, she acknowledged that subsequent
to early 1991, she would be sent home and paid the three (3) hOLlr
mi, ni mum if reporting-monitoring wor~ was not available at the
Court. Pri or to that point, she WOLll d perform clerical duties
to fill in the three ( 3) hour period
The Union submitted that the grievor exceeded the one-third threshold
established by section 1(1)(f)(vU of the Crown Employees Collective
Barqaininq Act. We were asked to focus on the \lover all pi ctLlre" of the
grievor s employment. In this regard, counsel argued that Ms. Chamaillard
"provided court reporting services, week-in and week-oLlt, for twenty-two
months less holidays and occasional weeks when work was not pl~ovi ded II
Counsel asked further that we review the grievor s employment on a weekly
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basis He stated that~ e>:cl LISi ve of vacation pel~i ods, there were eighty
(eO) weeks of employment in the period AugLISt 1990 to June 1992. On his
eal eLII ati ons, the grievor worked more than thirteen ( 13) hours in forty-
two (42) of those weeks. Put another way, cOLlnsel argued that the grievor
met the statutory test in a majol""ity of the wee~: s wor~ed Similarly, he
submitted that the grievor wor~ed on a majority of the days on which the
COLII~t could sit He noted, on the basis of e:,:hi bi t 10, that she worked on
two hundred and forty-seven (247) of a possible fOLlr hundred and eight
(4uB) days Counsel acknowledged that both the weekly and daily
calculations included cancelled days It was the position of the Union
that cancelled days; days for which the minimum amount was paid; and time
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spent in the preparation of transcripts ShOlll d all be considered inl
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determining whether the gr-ievor met the statutory thr-eshold II
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In response, the Employer- claim~d that the grievor was caught by thd
exclusion contained in section 1(1) (f) (vi) of th~ Crown EmPloveeJ
Collective Baroainino Act. More specifically, cOLlnsel sLlbmi tted that thJ
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grievor was "a person not ordinarily required to work more than one-thin:
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of the normal period for persons performing similar work. II In thi~
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regard, he relied on the data contained in e}.: h i bit 6. Counsel
emphasIzed
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that, even if the grievor s figures were used, there w~re only seven (7:
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out of twenty-two (22) months in which she e>:ceeded the fifty-two (52)
mark in terms of hours wor~~ed in a month. II
hour We were asked to conclude
that this ratio would be further reduced if cancelled days and days fO~
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which the minimum was paid were factored out of the calculation. Indeed~
it was the Employer s position that such days, and time taken tb ,I
prepare
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transcripts, should not be considered in the overall assessment as tb
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whether the grievor was an employee for purposes of the statute.
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The Board is prepared to accept and utilize the thirteen (13) hour
thJ!t
threshold provided for by the award in Blythe We think it material
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parties structured their submissions on the basis of I
both this threshold.
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The Union did not sLlggest that the thirteen (13) hour I eve 1 ShOLll d lje
th 1 . f' lid
reduced given the fact that fLlll-time Court Moni tors in
e c aSSl Ie
t" d . ~
ser-vice spend only seventy percent <701.) of their
lme engage In W01k
related to court l~epol~ti ng As noted earl i el~,
appr-o>imately thir~y
percent <301.) of thei r job involves clerical duti es. I
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The Board is satisfied that days in respect of which the mi ni mtllm
amOLlnt paid should be part of the assessment required in this II
was case
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Clearly, the grievor committed those days to the Ministry of the Attorney
General More importantly~ and unlike the situation vis .a vi s cancel I ed
days~ the grievor actually reported for worh and may have~ in fact~
engaged in some work once there Indeed, she would ordinarily have been
e~.: pected to work for a longer period bLlt for a "folded list" , an
adjoLlrnment, a plea, or some similar reason As we were not provided with
a firm record of the time actually worked on these days, the Boal'-d is
prepared to accept the three (3) hour period, for which the minimum
payment was provided, as an appropriate measure for purposes of the
calculation required in this instance. Conversely, we do not think that
cancellations should be treated as time worked. While the grievor may
initially have committed herself to the Employer in respect of those days,
she did not, Lll ti matel y, have to attend at court. In her evidence, the
gl~ i evor acknowledged that she did not engage in court work on a cancelled
day. In the final analysis, the Board considers that it would be wrong to
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equate cancelled days with time worked in the context of section
l(1)(f)(vi>. To repeat, unlike days for which the minimum was paid, the
gri evor- did not attend at work. The cancellation fee was paid on the
basis of the absence of at least forty-eight (48) hours notice and was not
premised on her attendance at court.
The comparison process, which we are reqLli red to engage inhere, is
rendel~ed difficult by virtue of the fact that full-time Court Monitors in
the classified service are not entitled to either a cancellation fee or a
minimum payment if repol~ting work is unavailable In that scenario, they
perform the clerical duties referenced in the position specification. It
is clear that the aforementioned entitlements apply e:.:clusively to the
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freelance COLll~ t Repol~ters and Court Monitors
I
The position specification ( e~: h i bit 7) states that classified Couri:
'd I
Monitors must transcl~i pts "on incumbents own time". It
prepare provl es.
'I
howeveJ~ , that "i n ceptional circumstances, with cOLlrt and ' , t I
e mlnlS r)'
1
proceeding dLlri ng f. I
approval, incumbent may type transcripts of court of lce
II
hOLlrs" . grievor's that the direction to
It was the evidence type
Sh!
transcripts at home was not adhered to by other Court Reporters.
11
stated that Ms Aziz compelled to reiterate to full-time
was reporters
!I
that transcripts were to be prepared at h orne. The gri.evor indicated that
II
Ms so doing, was trying to eliminate the practice of
Aziz, in "dsuble
thl
billing". She acknowledged that a memo had been forwarded -from
t' il
Ministry to Court Reporters and Moni tors to remind them that SLICh
pl~ac 1 ce
7 to thl
should not OCCLlr. Given the clear direction contained in e::hibit
thl
effect that transcripts are to be prepared on the Monitor sown time,
thb
Board is not inclined to factor this aspect of the work into
- - [
comparison. We note, in this regard, that there is no evidence before us
transcripts I
as to the time spent by full-time staff in the preparation of
I
As previ OLISl y stated, e~,: h i bit 6 pl~ovi des a "Summary Of
Hours Wor~ edi"
cal CLll ated monthly basis. utilizing the grievor s record, she II
on a wor ke.d
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I
mOI~e than fifty-two (52) hours in only seven (7 ) of twenty-two (22) montHs
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I
of employment The Board has little difficultly in concluding that, on ia
I
monthly comparison, the grievor was not ol~di nari 1 y requi I~ed to wor~ mo~e
than one-third of the normal period for persons performing similal~ il
work:.
The Union, as noted, also referenced the weekly pat tel~n o'f the grievor' s
employment. On its calculation, the gl~ i evor ceeded the I
e statutolY
threshold in forty-two (42) of eighty (811) wee~s. The Board has carefull1y
I
- 15 -
reviewed the contents of e hi.bit 9 We conclude~ from an e amination of
same~ that if payment for cancelled days was factored out of the
calculation there would be at least nine (9 ) fewer wee~s in which the
gr' i evor met the threshold. The removal of the cancelled days 1 ead s
directly to the concl LISi on that the grievor e ceeded thirteen ( 13) hours
of work per wee~ in less than one-half of the weeks WOI~ ked Viewed fl~om
this perspective, we are not satisfied that she "ordinarily" attained the
1 evel contemplated by section 1(1) (f) (vi> of the Crown Employees
~ective BarClaininCl Act Finally, the Board has been persuaded that
little tLlrns on the record of days worked, vis a vis this branch of the
test, as it does not provide much indication of the amount of time
actually spent in court monitoring. For all of these reasons, we find
that the grievor was a person not ordinarily required to work more than
one-third of the normal period for fLlll-ti me COLlr t Monitors in the
classified service
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The Union sLlbmi tted, as a secondary position, that the grievor fell
within the e ceptic;m to the statutory exclusion as she worked on a
"regular and continuing basis" for purposes of section 1 (1)(f) (vi> .
Counsel argued that the e>: cepti on contemplates employees who may work less
than one-third of "regLllar hOLlrs" and that it recognizes a more marginal
ne::LlS between the employee and the employer Counsel maintained that Ms
Chamaillard satisfied this alternate test as she was called in to wor~,
weel. -i n and week-out, over a period of some twenty-two (22) months subject
to vacations and times when the court did not sit. He noted that this
connection to the Employer was enhanced by the time the grievor spent in
the preparation o.f tr- anscr i pts Counsel further sLlbmi tted that it was
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irrelevant that the gr i evol~ was called into work on an as required basi s.1
1
He suggested that this employment pattern did not precl Llde a finding of.
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1
employee status as evidenced by the Tribunal decision cited on page twe.
il
(2) of this Award. Simply put, it the Union assertion that
was s c;\
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pattern of call-i n employment could be consistent with regLll ar employment 1
I
Lastly, counsel argued that the gl~i evor worked continuous basis I,
on a ove1i
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the period in issue He argued that this pattern would have continued bLI':
I
for the Employer s decision to sever the employment relationship.
In response, the Employer sLlbmi tted that the grievor did not work 011
1
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a regular and continuing basis for purposes of section l(1)(f)(vi)~
f . d. il
Reference was made to the following awards for
purposes 0 provl ln~
meaning to the words "regular" and "continuing": F.e United steelworkerst
,I
Local 5141 And F.avbestos-Manhatten (Canada) Ltd. ( 1965) , 16 L.A.C. 17~
II
I
(Anderson) ; Abrahams And The Attorney General Of Canada, ( 1 983 ) 1 S C. F.l.
I,
..,. Re Salvation Army Grace Hospital And Ontario Public Service
-, Emp 1 oyee,s
- -II
Union. Local 142 ( 1 987) , 31 L.A.C. (3d) 1 (Brandt>; Standard Commerci alii.
I
Tobacco Co. And Canadian Union Of OperatinCl EnClineers And General Worker!s
et-El. ( 1988) , 31 O.A.C. 74 (ant. Div. Ct. ) ; Re Brown And Social Assi stanciL
i
F.eview Board ( 1978) , 18 o R. (2d) 405 (ant Div Ct ) . In I
sLlmmary:,
counsel argLled that the grievor~s employment not regular 1
was and
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conti nUOLlS because: i
I
(i) the hours of wor~ were i rregL\1 ar in the sense that her hours o.f
work did not recur uniformly according to a predictable time
and manner It was noted that even in busy periods, there were
some wee~s in respect of which the gl~i evor wor~ed very few houl~s;
(i i) the hours of wor~ lac~ed regularity given the fact the grievol~ was
called in as r,eeded Counsel described her work as "casual" and
"intermittent";
(iii> the period here in i SSLle did not represent a state of uninterrupte~
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employment Rather, the grievor was in a position to, and did in
.f act, take time off as and when she desired
In addressing this aspect of the case, the Board has had I~egard to
the monthly and weekly pattern of employment discussed above. We have
al so r-evi ewed and compared the data found in e hibits 5 and 9. This data
may be summarized in chart form as follows
Days Worked (IncludinQ Minimums) Days Cancelled
E}.~5 E>:9 E:.5 E:.:9
1990
Al.lg LIS t 1 1 - -
September 5 5 6 5
October 14 14 2 2
November 19 19 1 1
December 9 9 4 4
1991
January 10 10 1 1
February 8 8 1 1
March Missing Complete Record 12 - 1
April 11 11 1 1
May 2 2 - -
June 6 6 "') 2 -
....
July 9 9 - -
ALlgust 10 10 2 ..,
....
September 12 12 ..,. 3
..;.
October 13 1'" 5 5
,.,;.
November 15 15 1 1
December 8 8 1 1
1992
January 6 6 1 1
Febl~Llary 18 20 "') ..,
.... ....
March 9 9 - -
April 6 6 1 1
May 12 12 - -
June 2 2 .., 2
....
Totals 2n5 219 36 36
. J .
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Average Days Wor~ed Per
Month Ovel~ 22 Month Feriod 9. ::::~ ~"95
Average Days Worked Fer
Mont.h Over' :21 Months
E cluding August 1990 and
June 1992 9.76 10.43
The above record of days worked includes the days for which the
mi ni mLtm payment was received. It e>:clLtdes, and separately tracks,
cancelled days It is apparent to the Board that, SLtbj ect to vacations
and times when the Court did not sit, the grievor regularly worked a
significant number of days each month. E>:cluding the first and last:
i
months of her employment, the grievor worked at Court appro>imately ten!
I
( 10) days per month on average across the period here being considered I
,
,
We thin~ that this record reflects a regular and recurring pattern of wor~ I
rather than casLlal, intermittent or sporadic employment The Board I
is,
I
inclined to accept the Union s submission that this history is evidence of1
I
a substantial attachment between the grievor and the Employer. I n our:
- I
judgment, it does not matter that the grievor received her hours on an as)
needed basis. F-ather, what is more important is the pattern of emPloymentl
which emerged from the call-ins. Further, the Board is satisfied that thel
I
grievor acted as a Court Monitor on a continuing basis from August 1990 to
I
June 1992 Any interruptions in her work pattern were primarily ~
I
function of vacations and periods when the Court was not in operation. Iri
II
summary, the Board has been persLladed that Ms Chamaillard worked as
c,
,
i
freelance Court Monitor on both a regular and a continuing basi s. W~
I
think thel~e is some merit to the Union sLlggesti on that I
s the statutor~
I
e ception should not be accorded an e::cessi vel y restri cti ve i nterpretati o~
in view of the fact it contemplates persons who may work less thaJ
II
I /
II
&' ...
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thirteen ( 13) hour's per week
The grievor, in cross-e: ami nation, acknowledged that she was the sole
proprietor of G r. A heporting in the period material to this dispute
Her business had an office in I<ingston and I"eporti ng services were offered
from that location. The grievor had other persons on staff at that si. te
The grievor testified that her business did not provide ser'vi ces to the
Ministry Of The Attorney General in the form of her work in the General
Division Ultimately, it is that work and the conditions under which it
was pe,"formed that is relevant to the i SSLle before this Board. This
assessment is consistent with the reasoning of the Tribunal as f OLlnd
between pages fourteen (14) and seventeen ( 17) of the previously cited
decision
Prior to commencing employment with the Ministry, the grievor worked
as a full-time COI"recti onal Officer at the Vingston Penitentiary. She
earned in e::cess of $40,000.00 per year at that job. The grievor asser"ted
-
that she was assured she would have continuous and on-going work as a
COLlrt F.eporter. It was her evidence that wi thOL\t such an assurance, she
would not have left her former position. She acknowl~dged that her
hL\sband also wor~ed at the same Penitentiary and that she preferred not to
wor~ along side with him at that location In OLlr judgment, this case
cannot be decided on the somewhat vague assurances alleged Instead, it
must be resolved on more reliable evidence, particularly that reI cEt.t i ng to
the natLlre of the grievor s work as a COLlrt Moni tor in the General
Division.
There were a number of discrepancies between the evidence of the
grievor and that presented by Ms Aziz. After considering all of the
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. .
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evidence, we conclude that the conflicts are neither substantial norl
material to the point in issue The Board is satisfied that this aspect
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I
of the dispute is not resolvable on ~he basis of these eVidentiar~
I
differences nor on considerations of credibility I
For all of the above reasons. the Board finds that the grievor worked
. I
as a freelance Court Monitor on a regular and continuing basis over thJ
I
period of her employment in the General Division. It follows that she1
therefore, falls within the definition of "employee" as fOLlnd in sectior
I
I
1(1) (f) of the Crown Employees Collective BarQaininQ Act and, thereby, has
the status to grieve the Employer~s actions as contained in Mr Beaudoin~J
letter of June 15, 1992.
Dated at Windsor, Ontario this 24th day of October, 1995.
fy{) J LJ:r:rt;; ~
M.V.
~
"I Dissent" (dissent
F Collict, Member
I
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~
..~ ~
I
J) ISSENT
Re G S B # 124()!Y2 (CHAMAILLARD)
Thl'\ Member IS In agreement with the Board to the effel:t that" the gnevor wa:-. a per:-.on not
ordlllunly required to work more than one-thrrd of the normal penod for full-tIme Court MOnItors
III the dassIfied servll:e" (p 15 of award), and that on thIS basIs the gnevor was not found to be
an "employee" withIn the meaning of Sel:tIon I (I) (f) (VI) of CECBA.
However, this Member does not support the findIng of the Board that the grievor was found to be
an "employee" within the language of SectIOn I (I) (f) (v,i) of CECBA on the basis that" the
gnevor worked as a freelance Court Monitor on a regular and contInuIng basIs over the penod of
I her employment." (p 20 of award.)
I In the opimon of this Member, the grievor could not be found to have worked on a regular and
I contmmng basIs for the followmg reasons.
I 1 The gnevor worked for the Mmlstry from August 1490 to June 1992, a penod of -
I
approxunately 22 months.
(a) Dunng this penod the gnevor took a total of 13 weeks of vacation. At best. a
regular employee trught have had somethIng less than one half this amount of
vacatIon over the same penod.
(b) In l:ross exammatlOn, the grievor agreed that she llked freelance reportIng because
she could take time off as she pleased. In tills respect she took off a penod of five
weeks when she was mamed. It is certainly questionable as to whether an
"employee" of the Ministry with approximately only one year of service would
have been entItled to the time off taken by the gnevor
-
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. . ~ ,
')
(c) The te:-.tllllony of the gnevor wa:-. that ...he told the "cheduler when "he d not be
avaliJble. For example ...he "tated that SylVIJ Smith (another freelance Court
MonItor) would be reL:Orded as bemg "down east" (pre~umably on vacatIon) and
that she (the grIevor) would tell the "cheduler when she would take holiday....
2. With reference to her availabIlity, the gnevor stated that,
(a) her hours of work vaned greatly;
(b) she agreed that she was called in to work on an "as reqUIred" baSIS,
(c) she stated that on one occasIOn she was not aVaIlable to work for the MinIstry
because she took off a penod of two weeks for the purpose of prepanng seven to
eIght volumes of transcnpts for a crown attorney m Toronto
3 As per the testimony of Ms. ChamaIllard, she operated "G-K Reportmg ServIces", her
-
own mdependent busmess, for approxImately 18 months pnor to her tenmnatlOn in June
of 1992. In that sense, she was an "mdependent contractor", and, therefore, dId not fall
into anyone of the three groups IdentIfied m the M. PicheI' award (see page 2 of this
award) Clearly the grievor dId not fall into group I as IdentIfied by M. Plcher Sllrularly,
she dId not fall mto group 2, because It excluded court reporters who were" carrymg I
on mdependent bUSinesses of therr own. "
il
Also, the gnevor does not fall mto group 3 because Ms. Chama1l1ard was llQj requrred - i
I
certamly for the penod of Jan. '91 to June '':)2 (approximately 18 out of 22 months of
employment), - " to do the clencal duties of other employees to fill m tIme If the need
for court reportmg servIces IS cancelled wIthout suffiCIent notice" (p 16 of PICHER
award.) i
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II
.
:o- r
1
4 FinJlly thl" Member I" not 111 Jgreement with tlm Board" finclll1g that M..... ChJmaJllard L"
an employee" wlthll1 the meal1lng of CECBA becJu"e she worked "... on u regular and
contll1111n~ ba....I....". bel-au....e,
(a) As stated earlIer the gnevor agreed 111 testImony that she was only called 111 on an
"as reqUlrecl baSIS, and that her hours vaned greatly
(b) The chart on page 17 of the award may indicate that the gnevor had a pattern of
employment that averaged work at the court of approxunately 10 days per month
However It should be noted that thiS average" of days worked mduded days
for whIch the nunimum payment was rece~ved" (p 18 of award) That IS, for a
total of three hours. Also, It must be recogmzed that dunng 10 of these months
the gnevor worked less than 10 days per month, rangmg from two to mne days per
month. Although these data may IndIcate that thIs" is evidence of a substanual
attachment between the grIevor and the employer" (p 18 of award), tlus Member
would condude that thIS eVidence falls short of meetmg the standard of "regular
and contInuous" work as reqUlred In CECBA.
-
5 The JUrIsprudence concermng the Interpretation of the words regular and contInUOUS are
somewhat helpful 111 reaclung a final posIuon concermng the above.
(a) In USW and Raybestos Manhatten (Canada) Ltd, (L.A.c., vol. 16 P 132) It was
stated that,
"Regular" has a meanmg whIch in some circumstances means reCUrrIng umformly
acwrdmg to a predIctable tIme and manner "
(undersconng added)
(b) Surularly, m Denms Abrahams (l9X3 S C.R.) at page 8, regularity IS charactenzed
('
~ .. ~ I
I
-+
<1:-' J tl xed p,lttern I or a rq;ulanty of the \\ ork :->I...hedule."
I
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(L.) In Vanl...ouver General HO'ipltal (31 L.A.c. (3d.) at page 10 regulJr I.., detll1ed J.., ,
i
"reLUlTlI1g ul1Jformly accordlllg to a predictable tllne and manner
(d) ContJl1uou:-" 111 Brown and SOCIal A'islstance Review Board (I X 0 R. 2d) p -+ 15 I~
I
referred to as "contlllUIty wIthout tnterruptlOn" I
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(e) In consIderatIOn of the above junsprudence In relatIOn to the work pattern of the I
gnevor as set out at pages 17 and 1 g of the award, thIS Member would conclude
that the gnevor did not work a regular. fixed pattern of days or hours In !
accordance WIth a predIctable tlIne and manner. Moreover, although the "
,I
assIgnment of work was contmuous 111 the sense that Ms. Chammllard ~ be
called 111 for work, It IS abundantly clear that she was called only on an lI1tennlttent
basIs or, as she herself testified, on an as requITed basIs
"
-
In VIew of all of the above, thIS Member yrould have upheld the employer's posInon to the effect
that the gnevor does not meet the defimtlOn of employee as set out 1I1 sectIOn 1 (1) (D (vI) of
CECBA
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gq~
F T Collict
tte,.112/.9~-
,
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