HomeMy WebLinkAbout1998-0789.McGann.01-01-18 Decision
o NTARl 0 EMPLOYES DE LA cm.'RONNE
CROWN EAIPLOYEES DE L 'ONTARIO
-- GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST SUITE 600 TORONTO ON M5G 128 TELEPHONElTELEPHONE, (416) 326-1388
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GSB #0789/98 1080/98 1252/98 1253/98 1620/98 2005/98 1440/00
OPSEU#98B397 98B506 98B612, 98B613 99B049 99B325 OlB028
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontano Pubhc ServIce Employees Umon
(McGann)
Gnevor
- and -
The Crown m RIght of Ontano
(Mimsm of the Attome, General)
Employer
BEFORE Darnel A. HarrIs Vice Chalf
FOR THE Andrew Pmto Counsel
GRIEVOR Bamster and SohcItor
FOR THE Len HatzIs, Counsel
EMPLOYER Legal ServIces Branch
Management Board Secretanat
HEARING September 10 1998 June 16 1999 December 15 1999
Februan 1 2000 Felruan 15 2000 Februan 23 2000
Februan 25 2000 Ma, 30 2000 June 16 2000 August 29
2000 September 13 2000 October 5 2000
2
The Proceedm2:s.
ThIs decIsIOn deals wIth a number of gnevances, filed by OPSEU on behalf of
Dag McGann, whIch relate to schedulmg and work assIgnments Mr McGann IS a
cIvIl court regIstrar (hereafter CCR), bemg an unclassIfied posItIOn WIth the
MmIstry of the Attorney General CCR's are assIgned to assIst a Judge whIle
court IS m seSSIOn. At the commencement of these proceedmgs the gnevor had 19
gnevances The gnevances before the Board for declSlon here are as follows
# DATE ARTICLE ISSUE
6) June 25, 1998 OADl wIthdrawn
7) July 15, 1998 32, antI- umon dIscnmmatIOn
8) August 12, 1998 45 1 leave credIt reports
OAD 2 1 7 1J4 hours per day
31 7 1 "Clapperton" Issue
9) August 12, 1998 32 antI- umon dIscnmmatIOn m lay-
off (Summer 1998)
10) August 14, 1998 32 Withdrawn
11 ) September 25, 1998 32 antI- umon dISCrImmatIOn
2261 attendance
22 6.2 attendance at GSB step meetmgs
12) October 31, 1998 31 8 attendance credIts and sIck leave
32 antI- umon dIscnmmatIOn
OAD 10 stand- by time
13) November 12, 1998 3 1/3.2 stand- by time
OADI0
3
14) November 19, 1998 32 antI-umon dISCnmInatIOn
226.3 attendance at step meetIngs
314 attendance at GSB
15) December 18, 1998 32 employer changed time sheets
16) December 29, 1998 21 letter of dIscIplIne
17) December 29, 1998 32 same as #16
GrIevance 6 was wIthdrawn. Gnevance 10 was wIthdrawn as duplIcatIng 9, and
the umon abandoned any allegatIOns of a breach of artIcle 3 1, beIng the general
anti -dISCnmInatIOn provISIOn.
The Facts and SubmissIOns of the Parties.
In large measure the parties are agreed on the factual context wIthIn whIch these
gnevances anse It IS most helpful to sImply sketch out the matenal facts relevant
to each gnevance wIth attnbutIOn to partIcular wItnesses as needed.
CCR's are assIgned to specIfic courtrooms to assIst the presIdIng Judge Other
personne I assIgned to the court are the court serVIce officer and court reporters It
IS the CCR that acts as assIstant to the Judge They escort the Judge to and from
court, assIst WIth the carryIng of books and the lIke and generally provIde such
serVIces as the Judge may reqUIre IncludIng duties In the courtroom.
4
The CCR IS generally expected to report for work at 9 30 am, subject to a dIrectIOn
from the CCR's supervIsor, on hIS or her own behalf or on behalf of a Judge, that a
dIfferent tIme IS reqUIred. There IS no questIOn that the vaganes of the court
schedule leads to uneven and somewhat unpredIctable reqUIrements for CCR's
Attached as they are to servIng partIcular Judges and partIcular courtrooms, theIr
servIces may not be reqUIred every day or all day That IS the nub of the vanous
dIsputes between the partIes In these matters
The MInIStry of the Attorney General has Interpreted the collectIve agreement as
permIttIng It to have the CCR's report for work at 9 30 am. At that tIme each
receIves hIS or her assIgnment to a Judge and courtroom. They attend before the
Judge and assIst so long as there IS work to be done Generally, on the close of
that Judge's court dutIes for the day, the CCR's dutIes are complete They are
gIven an extra lIz hour to complete any admInIstratIve tasks That sItuatIOn may
result In the CCR beIng provIded wIth less than seven and one-quarter hours of
work per day The MInIStry only pays the CCR for the tIme actually worked. The
Umon says that once a CCR attends at work they should thereby be consIdered to
be "scheduled" for the day and entItled to 7 1J4 hours pay, IrrespectIve of the tIme
actually worked. The gnevances dealt wIth In thIS decIsIOn may be dIvIded for
convemence Into process and content Issues I wIll fIrst deal wIth the process
gnevances, beIng those matters that arose secondanly from the dIfference between
5
the partIes as to the nght of the CCR's to 7 1J4 hours pay no matter how long they
actually work.
The Stand-by Grievances
Matters scheduled for hearIng may settle and leave a CCR wIth no assIgnment for
the day when they report for work at 9 30 am. The supervIsor then may ask the
CCR to "stand- by" m the event that theIr serVIces are needed elsewhere The CCR
IS then kept for up to two hours If they were not needed, they would be paid two
hours wages and released for the day
In gnevances 12 and 13 ObjectIOn IS raised to the charactenzatIOn of thIS sItuatIOn
as "stand-by" tIme OAD 10m the collectIve agreement defines stand- by tIme as
"a penod of tIme that IS not a regular workmg penod." Dunng that tIme the
employee IS out of the workplace, but reqUIred to be aVailable to receIve a call to
return to work The employee IS paid "stand by" premIUm for that mconvemence
The umon's ObjectIOn IS that the gnevor's supervIsor IS usmg the phrase "stand-
by" m ItS vernacular sense rather than as the phrase IS meant m the collectIve
agreement. There IS no ment to these gnevances The request that someone
"stand-by" dunng a regular wOrklll:); penod IS a reasonable and conventIOnal use
of the EnglIsh language and does not amount to a vIOlatIOn of the collectIve
agreement. It should be noted that the umon IS not makmg a claim for stand-by
6
pay, smce the employee IS bemg paid for at least two- hours whIle waItmg to be
gIven a work assIgnment The ObjectIOn IS that the employer uses the words
"stand- by" when askmg the CCR to Wait for a work assIgnment. Although there IS
some potential for confusIOn, It IS not a vIOlatIOn of the collective agreement The
claim for relIef set out on the face of the gnevances IS that the manager be
dIscIplmed and apologIze for askmg the gnevor to "stand-by" Between them the
gnevances claim $1,550,00000 m damages Those gnevances are dIsmIssed.
Grievances AnSlll!! from the Gnevor FillIn!! out his Attendance Sheets
The heart of the umon's case IS that when a CCR reports for a day's work they
ought to be consIdered as scheduled to work 7 1J4 hours that day They should be
paid for the full day rather than the time actually worked If less than 7 1J4 hours
The gnevor made that understandmg known to the employer and has filed
gnevances claImmg the unpaid hours Those gnevances are dealt wIth below as
"content" gnevances He also began fillIng out hIS time sheets to show 7 1J4 hours,
even on days that he actually worked fewer than 7 1J4 hours The gnevor says that
he was harassed by the employer for assertmg hIS nght to be paid for 7 1J4 hours on
every day he reported to work. He also says that the emp loyer exhIbIted an antI-
umon ammus m ItS dealmgs WIth hIm on these Issues GrIevances 7, 15, 16 and 17
deal wIth these allegatIOns
7
GrIevance 7 alleges that the gnevor's supervIsor at the time, Bev Eldndge,
exhIbIted an anh-umon ammus at a meetmg held July 14, 1998 to dISCUSS the
gnevor's practice of fillIng m 7 1J4 hours on hIS tImesheet rather than hIS actual
hours worked. The gnevor testified that m the course of that meetmg he was told
to fill m hIS actual hours worked. He was also told that he would be repnmanded
If he contmued to tell hIS co- workers to fill m 7 1J4 hours rather than the actual
number of hours they had worked. The umon said that the gnevor, as a steward,
was entitled to advIse bargammg umt members of theIr nghts and It was a
vIOlatIOn of artIcle 3 2 to prevent hIm from domg so ArtIcle 3 2 reads as follows
3.2 There shall be no dIscnmmatlOn or harassment practIced b, reason of an
employee s membershIp or actIvI~ m the Dmon.
There can be no doubt that a umon steward IS entitled to advIse bargammg umt
members of theIr nghts Further, where nghts are thought to be mfnnged, It IS
appropnate to file a gnevance However, m these cIrcumstances, the eVIdence IS
clear that the employer knew of the gnevor's VIew regardmg payment for hours
not worked, dIsagreed wIth that VIew and mstructed the gnevor as to how he was
to fill out hIS attendance sheets Further, the gnevor was counseled to stop tellIng
hIS fellow workers to fill out theIr attendance sheets contrary to the employer's
mstructIOns In my VIew It was not a breach of artIcle 3 2 for the employer to tell
the gnevor to cease and desIst from that conduct. It was appropnate for the
8
employer to fairly put the gnevor on notice that he mIght be repnmanded If he dId
not stop It IS tnte that an employee IS to follow the employer's lawful orders, that
IS, "act now, gneve later" The umon does not complam that the dIrectIOn gIven to
the gnevor to mark down only hIS actual hours of work was a vIOlatIOn of the
agreement He was reqUIred to comply wIth the employer's dIrectIOns until the
Issue was resolved wIth or wIthout arbItratIOn. The same approach was reqUIred
of all employees and the employer sImply further reqUIred that the gnevor not gIve
contrary mstructIOns to hIS fellow employees It was not a vIOlatIOn of the
agreement for the employer to tell the gnevor to stop encouragmg hIS co-worker's
to dIsobey the employer's orders regardmg the way they were to fill out the
attendance sheets GrIevance 7 IS dIsmIssed.
GrIevances 15, 16 and 17 also mvolve the dIspute as to how to fill out the
attendance sheets These gnevances flow dIrectly from a letter to the gnevor
dated December 18, 1998 That letter provIded a chart that compared the gnevor's
hours as set out m the attendance sheet to the hours actually worked. The number
of hours worked was calculated on the basIs of the number of hours that the courts
to whIch the gnevor was assIgned actually operated. Gnevance 15 complams that
It was a breach of artIcle 3 2 for the employer to have altered hIS hours on hIS
attendance sheet wIthout pnor consultatIOn wIth hIm. GrIevance 16 complams
that the letter Itself IS unjust dIscIplme GrIevance 17 complamed of the manner
by whIch the letter was delIvered to hIm.
9
The hIstOry of thIS aspect of the matter mcludes a letter to the gnevor dated
January 6, 1997 from the Court ServIces Manager, Huguette G Malyon. The
gnevor had prevIOusly complamed that a start tIme had been changed on hIS sIgn-
m sheet wIthout hIS authonzatIOn or notIficatIOn. The Court ServIces Manager
agreed that such a practIce was unacceptable and vanous supervIsors were so
advIsed. The umon relIed on that letter as requmng the gnevor's authonzatIOn and
pnor notIficatIOn before changes could be made to hIS tIme sheets m December
1998, some two year's later On that basIs, It was argued that gnevance 15 should
be allowed. I dIsagree The mtervenmg background IS set out m the first
paragraph of the December 18, 1998 letter as follows
On Juh 14th 1998 Chervl McCalmont, the pnor Actmg Manager of Court OperatIOns,
dIscussed WIth vou her concern that the hours of work vou had been recordmg m the
daih attendance records for regIstrars were maccurate On August 4th 1998 Ms.
McCalmont wrote to vou and agam mformed vou that vou had been mcorrecth recordmg
vours [SIC] hours worked as 7.25 and asked vou to report onh the hours that vou have
actualh work m the courtroom (Attachment #1) I have recenth revIewed the hours that
vou recorded m the daily attendance records for regIstrars and the, agam do not
correspond WIth the daih courtroom utihzatIOn sheet. You have contmued to
maccurateh record vou hours worked as 7.25 despIte Ms McCalmont s requests that
vou cease domg so
It may well be that the employer's umlateral changes mIght result m some
maccuraCIes As the gnevor testIfied, calculatmg hIS wages based on hIS tIme m
court may not capture other, valId W)rk assIgnments that took place after court
closed. I also agree that as a general rule an employer ought not to make umlateral
10
changes to an employee's tImesheet Rather, any concern ought to be brought to
the employee's attentIOn for clanficatIOn pnor to the employer takmg actIOn.
However, m the CIrcumstances of thIS case It IS clear that the gnevor had receIved
explIcIt mstructIOns that hIS time sheet was to be filled out showmg hIS actual
hours worked. He was not to put down hours he had not worked. In VIew of hIS
contumacIOus dIsregard of the employer's dIrectIOn, It was not unreasonable for
the employer to estimate hIS hours
GrIevance 16 alleges that the letter IS unJust. The text of the gnevance sets out the
umon's posItIOn as follow;
The employer has vIOlated m, nghts under artlcle 21 and/or an, other clause m the
collectIve agreement whIch ma, be apphcable There IS no Just cause for thIS letter of
dIscIphne The employer s past practIce IS to record m, hours accordmg to Im
utihzatIon sheet. It has alread, been dIscussed at length at stage 2 meetmgs wh, thIS IS
bemg done Also there has been no final ruhng upon Mr McGann s past gnevance about
thIS Issue No warmng of dIscIphne was gIven to Mr McGann verbalh or m wntmg.
There was no loss to the employer
At least part of the reasonmg behmd the claim that the letter of repnmand IS unjust
IS the assertIOn that the gnevor's contmued practice of puttmg 7 1J4 hours on hIS
attendance sheet IS Justified because the employer would change It, and the
content, or substantive, Issue had not yet been resolved. That IS, the gnevance
seems to be saymg that he was Justified m what he was domg In hIS eVIdence the
gnevor said he was told at the second step meetmg m July that If he contmued to
11
put 7 1J4 hours they would change It. He took that as lIcense to contInue puttIng
down 7 1J4 hours The gnevor said that the letter of December 18, 1998 came as a
surpnse to hIm because he had been told at the July 14, 1998 meetIng he would be
repnmanded If he told others to mark theIr tIme sheets wIth 7 1J4 hours He had not
told others to do so, although he contInued to mark hIS own tIme sheets
Incorrectly
There can be no doubt that he had been told on July 14 to put hIS actual hours of
work on hIS tIme sheets He was told agaIn, by correspondence dated August 4, to
do so because he persIsted In markIng them as 7 1J4 hours Through to December
he contInued to mark them Incorrectly He dId not stop puttIng 7 1J4 hours until he
receIved the letter of December 18 He said the letter was gIven to hIm to show
hIm "the power of the employer" and that the letter "forced" hIm to change hIS
ways On the eVIdence, the letter of repnmand had the desIred effect and was a
measured response to the gnevor's contInued and repeated dIsobedIence I cannot
find that the wntten repnmand was Inappropnate or unjust
GrIevance 17 IS agaInst the manner In whIch the letter of December 18, 1998 was
delIvered to hIm. That gnevance IS also wIthout ment. The eVIdence IS that the
gnevor's supervIsor attended at the courtroom where the gnevor was assIgned.
She caused the gnevor to be made aware that she would lIke to see hIm after court
closed. She dId so by sendIng hIm a note through the deputy regIstrar There IS no
12
eVIdence that that process was mdIscrete m any way Seemmgly, the court sat
late, so the supervIsor left the letter, m a sealed envelope addressed to hIm, m the
area where the CCR's fill out theIr attendance sheets He was certam to find It
there and he dId. The envelope was marked eIther "personal" or "confidential"
The umon argued that placmg the letter m an open area, accessIble by a number of
staff, was a form of chastIzement agamst the gnevor as a member of the Umon
contrary to artIcle 3 2
It IS dIfficult to see any cIrcumstances where leavmg a pnvate, sealed letter,
marked personal or confidential, m an mternal area of the workplace where the
gnevor was sure to receIve It could amount to dIscnmmatIOn contrary to s 3 2
Certamly here, on the eVIdence, leavmg the letter as It was left for the gnevor was
bemgn and not a breach of the collective agreement
The Content of Substantive Grievances.
As set out above, the mam contentIOus Issue between the partIes IS whether the
collective agreement provIdes that CCR's only be paid for time actually worked.
GrIevance 8 raises thIS Issue
As an unclassIfied employee, the gnevor's employment IS establIshed by
mdIvIdual contracts that are renewed from time to time Those mdIvIdual
contracts are, of course, governed by the collective agreement. The mdIvIdual
13
contract mdIcates that the gnevor IS covered by a collective agreement, and he IS
on schedule 3- 7 The back of the contract provIdes the followmg explanatIOn of
schedule 3- 7
SCHEDULE CODE The schedule code must be completed on all contracts. Schedule
codes relate to hours of work and overtIme condItIons.
Schedule DefillItIon
3-7 * the normal hours of work are 36 V4 hours per week
4-7 * the normal hours of work are 40 hours per week
6 * the normal hours of work van ill accordance WIth the
reqUIrements of the posItIon but are a millImum of 36 V4 hours
per week
At the heart of the umon's case IS the meamng of schedule 3-7 m the context of
paragraph 7 of the mdIvIdual contract, whIch mcludes the followmg remarks
Irregular hours as reqUIred up to 36.25 hours per week.
The umon concedes that paragraph 7 IS on ItS face a valId exerCIse of the
employer's nght to prescnbe hours of work pursuant to the regulatIOns under the
PublIc ServIce ActR.S 0 1990 c P 47, as amended [see Part V s 29 (1)(1)]
However, paragraph 7 IS Said to be mvalId as contrary to the collective agreement
That IS, the collective agreement trumps that regulatory authonty
The provIsIOns of the collective agreement, whIch the Umon relIed upon, start
wIth the Salary Schedule of the Office AdmmIstratIOn Bargammg Umt, of whIch
14
the gnevor IS a member He IS classIfied as an OAG 6, and by that Salary
Schedule IS Said to be placed on "Hours of Work Schedule" 3- 7 ArtIcle OAD 2 1
defines the schedule as follows
OAD21 SCHEDULE 3 and 3 7
The normal hours of work for employees on these schedules shall be
thIm-sIx and one-quarter (36 V4) hours per week and seven and one-
quarter (7 V4) hours per da,
It IS concede by the Umon that OAD 2 1 techmcally does not apply to unclassIfied
employees Articles 30 1 and 31 16 of the central agreement say whIch provIsIOns
of the collective agreement do apply to unclassIfied employees and OAD 2 1 IS not
one of the lIsted artIcles The Umon says that there IS no other defimtIOn of
schedule 3-7 m the collective agreement. Accordmgly, the allocatIOn of
unclassIfied OAG employees to schedule 3- 7 m the Salary Schedule must rely on
OAD 2 1 for ItS defimtIOn. There IS no other defimtIOn, and Identical words must
be gIven Identical meanmg Therefore, the umon says that the gnevor's normal
hours of work must be 36 1J4 hours per week and 7 1J4 hours per day
The Umon argued that the Issue here IS what hours per day the employer may
schedule, not the hours per week. It IS open to the employer to schedule Irregular
hours per week, but not per day Vanous provIsIOns of the collective agreement
were said to be consIstent WIth, and thereby SupportIve of, that proposItIOn.
15
Article 31 3 1 (d), the overtIme provIsIOn, talks of regularly schedule work days,
not work hours ArtIcle 31 4 the reportmg pay provlSlon, permIts bemg scheduled
for less than two hours and provIdes for two hours reportmg pay If not prevIOusly
scheduled for less than two hours Here, the CCR's are not scheduled for some
number of hours They are not scheduled for any hours at all Other provIsIOns,
such as stand-by pay and on-call pay apply to unclassIfied staff such as the CCR's
Those provIsIOns would permIt the employer to staff the courts wIthout
umlaterally restnctmg theIr daily hours
The Umon also said that the employer may vary the schedule of 7 1J4 hours m
lImIted cIrcumstances Here the employer was said to have Imposed a new set of
"normal hours" whIch IS no schedule at all Further, the Umon relIed on two
polIcy documents, dIstnbuted to employees, dated December 1994 and Apnl 1997
respectively, the latter of whIch mcludes the followmg
Staff Work Hours
Workmg hours of staff are from 8 30 a.ill. to 4 45 p.m. unless
?? specIficalh arranged WIth manager and 7 V4 hours per da, of 36 Vz hours per
week IS adhered to
?'1 staff IS unclassIfied Court Support Staff (Court Reporters, Court RegIstrars &
Court ServIces Officers) - startIng tIme ma, van from 8.30 a.m. to 9'30 a.m.
EmphasIs must be placed on provIdmg adequate servIce to the pubhc at all tImes durmg
regular office hours.
16
The Umon submItted that the employer's polIcy document was consIstent WIth the
Umon's mterpretatIOn of the collective agreement that 7 1J4 hours per day are
"normal workmg hours"
In summary, the Umon said that the gnevor has been gIven a schedule, bemg
schedule 3- 7 That schedule states that the normal hours of work are 7 1J4 hours
per day The gnevor's mdIvIdual contract IS consIstent WIth the collective
agreement but IS bemg Implemented by the employer contrary to the collective
agreement. That IS, the collective agreement permIts Irregular hours per week but
not per day Although a normal schedule IS not a guarantee of hours, where a
normal schedule IS provIded, the employer IS not allowed to Impose a new
schedule or no schedule at all There are collective agreement provIsIOns that
permIt fleXIbIlIty for the employer, whIch have not been adhered to F mally, the
present arrangements Impose unfairness and unpredIctabIlIty on the unclasSIfied
CCR's
The employer argued that the gnevor was appomted to the unclasSIfied servIce
under s 8 of the PublIc ServIce Act. The eVIdence was said to clearly establIsh
that the gnevor IS a member of group 1 of the unclasSIfied servIce pursuant to
regulatIOn 977, s 6, smce he IS employed to work on an Irregular basIs due to the
unpredIctabIlIty of the court system. The need for CCR's IS a functIOn of how
busy the courts are on any gIven day Staffing IS sImply not predIctable
17
As to the collective agreement, the Employer submItted that artIcle 31 16 2 sets
out the lIst of artIcles m the collective agreement that apply to unclassIfied staff,
and OAD 2 1 IS not on that lIst. It would sImply be mcompatIble wIth the
collective agreement to gIve the gnevor the benefit of OAD 2 1 when It IS
specIfically not applIcable to the unclassIfied staff Accordmgly, nothmg m the
collective agreement gIves the gnevor "normal hours of work." Further, the
contract sIgned by the gnevor on hmng, and renewed from time to time, also
eVIdences the shared understandmg that the hours of work were to be Irregular It
mdIcates that he IS a part-time, group-one employee m the bargammg umt The
mdIvIdual contract also mdIcates that "the rate of pay IS m accordance wIth the
scheduled hours of work", whIch IS a reference to the salary schedule That
parallels artIcle 31 2 1, whIch provIdes that unclassIfied employees are paid the
same rate as the equivalent cIvIl servIce classIficatIOn. That IS, there IS only one
salary schedule, whIch the gnevor accesses by reference The collective
agreeme nt therefore provIdes that the gnevor's rate of pay IS that of the eqUIvalent
cIvIl servIce classIficatIOn, bemg schedule 3-7 The gnevor's access to the
benefits of schedule 3-7 IS lImIted to salary eqUIvalence That IS, the rate of pay,
and when and how overtIme IS calculated.
ThIs Board's JunsdIctIOn IS to arbItrate all dIfferences between the partIes ansmg
from the collective agreement. The Umon emphasIzed that pursuant to artIcle
18
22 146 the Board has no JunsdIctIOn to alter, change, amend or enlarge any
provIsIOn of the collective agreement" In my VIew, to allow thIS gnevance would
be contrary to article 22 14 6
For the Umon to be successful, the Board must find that the gnevor IS covered by
OAD 2 1, notwIthstandmg that artIcle 31 162 does not mclude OAD 21m the lIst
of articles applIcable to unclassIfied employees To make OAD 2 1 applIcable the
Board would m effect be addmg It to artIcle 31 16 2, contrary to artIcle 22 14 6 In
the Umon's submIssIOn, the combmed effect of the mdIvIdual contract of
employment and the collective agreement have already mdIrectly added OAD 2 1
to the artIcle 31 16 2 lIst by puttmg the gnevor on schedule 3- 7, whIch IS defined
only by OAD 2 1 The Umon says that If the Board IS to understand the Import of
schedule 3- 7, It must have reference to the only place It IS defined, bemg OAD 2 1
In ItS careful and thoughtful submIssIOn the Umon urges that It would be an
alteratIOn of the collective agreement to deny the gnevor access to that defimtIOn
of schedule 3 - 7
In effect, the U mon IS attemptmg to do mdIrectly what the lIst m 31 16 2 expressly
demes It
The better mterpretatIOn of the collective agreement harmomzes the clanty of the
lIst m article 31 162 and the seemmgly contradIctory mclusIOn of the gnevor on
19
schedule 3- 7 The bargam set out on the mdIvIdual, unclassIfied agreement sIgned
by the gnevor IS clearly for a job wIth "Irregular hours as reqUIred up to 3625
hours per week." That IS, the gnevor understood at hmng that hIS was a part-time
job wIth Irregular hours Nonetheless, If the collective agreement were to gIve
hIm a better benefit, It would prevail However, It does not.
Under artIcle 31 2 1, the wage rate IS that of the "eqUIvalent cIvIl servIce
classIficatIOn." That applIcable to the gnevor IS OAG 6 That classIficatIOn has
an establIshed wage gnd and IS on schedule 3-7 By vIrtue of artIcle 31 16 2, the
gnevor IS not entitled to the normal hours of work set out m OAD 2 1 However,
by vIrtue of artIcle 31 1, vanous wage-related provIsIOns are applIcable to the
gnevor, mcludmg overtIme, reportmg pay, holIdays etc In the case of overtIme, It
IS necessary to determme when overtIme IS payable, for example after 7 1J4 hours
or 8 hours per day F or the classIfied staff, that IS determmed by the schedule they
are on. For schedule 3-7 employees It IS 7 1J4 hours For unclassIfied staff, they
are m a category eqUIvalent to schedule 3- 7 for purposes of wage calculatIOn.
However, that does not put them on schedule 3- 7 for purposes of "normal hours of
work", whIch IS expressly excluded by 31 162 Although Identical words m a
collective agreement should be gIven the same meanmg (1 e schedule 3-7 m the
salary schedule and m OAD 2-1), there IS a clear mdIcatIOn m the artIcle 31 16 2
lIst that the partIes mtended otherwIse Effect must be gIven to that clear
mtentIOn. Nor does the polIcy document alter the clear mtentIOn of the collective
20
agreement Even on Its face, that document contemplates the unclassIfied staff
routmely workmg less than 7 1J4 hours because of theIr adjustable start time
Accordmgly, the gnevor's allocatIOn to the eqUIvalent of schedule 3-7 can be seen
to have utilIty and applIcabIlIty as a category for determmmg wages, overtime etc
whIle mamtammg the mtegnty of the lIst m artIcle 31 16 2 Further, such a
readmg IS consIstent WIth the gnevor's understandmg when he was hIred that hIS
Job was part-time wIth Irregular hours up to 36 1J4 hours per week. Therefore,
gnevance 8 IS demed as regards ItS claim that OAD 2 1 applIes to unclassIfied
staff There IS nothmg m the collective agreement that overndes the clear mtentIOn
of artIcle 31 16 2 to exclude the applIcatIOn of OAD 2 1 from unclassIfied
emp loyees
GrIevance 8 also makes a claim pursuant to artIcle 41 7 1 for payment of
percentage m lIeu of benefits It IS agreed between the partIes that thIS claim IS
covered by the decIsIOn m OPSEU (Clapperton et al) and MmIstry of the SolIcItor
General and CorrectIOnal ServIces GSB 0410/97 et al (99-03-16, Petryshen)
The Employer said that the gnevor had been paid pursuant to the decIsIOn m
Clapperton and undertook to make any adjustments should there have been an
error m ItS calculatIOns I wIll remam seIzed m the event of any outstandmg
dIspute regardmg compensatIOn m that regard.
21
GrIevance 8 also alleged a breach of artIcle 45 1, whIch reads as follows
45 1 As soon as practIcable followmg the end of each quarter even employee shall be
adVIsed of the number of vacatIOn and attendance credIts to whIch he or she IS
entItled.
The Umon submItted that artIcle 45 1 IS clear and applIes to unclassIfied staff by
vIrtue of the lIst m artIcle 31 16 1
The Employer submItted that the gnevor IS rot a full time employee and would not
have accumulated any leave credIts to report.
The partIes admItted mto eVIdence exhIbIt 30, a report of the gnevor's hours
prepared by the employer That, coupled wIth the gnevor's more general
eVIdence, confirms that there were weeks m whIch the gnevor worked 36 1J4 hours
Article 31 8 1 provIdes that employees who work full-time weeks m a calendar
month earn the attendance credIt. If the gnevor dId so, he IS entitled to the credIt,
and, even on the employer's submIssIOn, If he has accumulated credIts he IS
entitled to a leave credIt report.
ArtIcles 45 and 31 8 1 are raised as part of gnevance 8 and as part of gnevance 12
In VIew of the partIes' consent to the late admIsSIOn of exhIbIt 30, and the Umons
22
reservatIOn of the nght to reVIew the gnevor's hours for accuracy, I wIll remam
seIzed of these aspects of gnevances 8 and 12
Grievance 9
ThIs gnevance deals wIth the gnevor's lay-off on August 18, 1998 Histoncally,
the courts have been less active m the summer months Accordmgly, the
employer would ask the employees If they wanted to work for the summer or be
laid off That IS, employees would volunteer to take lay-off Those who dId not
want to be laid off for the whole summer would be asked to take eIther July or
August off and would be kept on for the other month to share the aVailable work.
Smce that lay- off was due to a shortage of work, a Record of Employment was
Issued and those laid-off could apply for Employment Insurance benefits In 1998
the gnevor met wIth three managers and the local presIdent m an effort to clanfy
the lay-off procedure The gnevor was of the VIew that lay- off ought to be by
semonty Mr KISko was a group leader at the time and was among those who met
wIth the gnevor IndIcatIOns were that the summer of 1998 would be partIcularly
slow He said the purpose of the meetmg was to decIde who would work whIch
month of the summer He wanted to follow the past practice of askmg the
employees whIch month they wanted off The gnevor wanted to allot It by
semonty Mr KISko dIsagreed wIth usmg semonty because the pattern throughout
the year was to dIvIde the work. Also, semor people were the ones who preferred
23
to take the summer off They decIded to put the names m a hat and draw the names
to assIgn people to each month.
The gnevor also noted m hIS eVIdence that a number of new hIres started m the
summer of 1998 Mr KISko and Mr Myers, the Local Umon VIce PresIdent,
testified that there were newly hIred employees who were tramed by way of Job
shadowmg That IS, none of the new hIres took work from the pool of work
aVailable to the regular employees
Seemmgly, the matter of summer lay-off became an Issue m 1998 because ofa
change proposed by the employer Paul Myers summanzed the status of the
matter m hIS memo to Michael Cash, Court ServIces Manager dated May 29,
1998, m part as follows
ThIS memo IS bemg wntten to respond to the meetmg held between Ms. Michelme
Segum, Manager of CIvil Staffing and RegIstrars and C SO son Ma, 28 1998
At the meetmg, the workers were mformed that the, ma, be called mto work thIS
summer even If It was for one da, a week. I find thIS comment creates a great deal of
anX1e~ among workers The Umon has alread, gIven Management a cop, of a 1995
agreement, whereb, management recognIzed the courts have a precIpItous decrease m
work volume dunng the summer Layoffs of staff are m the best mterest of both the
workers and management. The memo states the workers should receIve theIr records of
employment when there IS a lack of work.
ThIs gnevance agamst the summer 1998 lay-off alleges that there was an antI-
umon ammus m the arbItrary method of choosmg names out of a hat. The antI-
24
umon ammus was Said to have ansen because the result of that process was the
umon steward, bemg the gnevor, was laid-off and was thereby unavailable to hIS
fellow employees
The Umon IS not attackmg the lay-off per se, rather the attack IS agamst a process
whIch resulted m the lay- off of the steward.
GIven that the process was arbItrary, It cannot be said that there was an antI-umon
ammus As to the arbItrary procedure, It seems to have resulted from the gnevor's
obJectIOn to the work shanng approach used m the past Further, there IS no super-
semonty provIsIOn to protect stewards from lay- off It IS not suggested that the
Employer was reqUIred by the collective agreement to use semonty m laymg- off
due to the summer shortage, and It was unwIllIng to do so for the reasons gIven by
Mr KISko
In all of the cIrcumstances, there was no anttumon ammus m the summer 1998
lay- off GrIevance 9 IS demed
Grievances 11 and 14
These gnevances allege that the gnevor was not paid for hIS attendance at vanous
step meetmgs to dISCUSS gnevances nor for attendance at the GSB The Umon
25
concedes that he was subsequently paid for hIS actual time spent at the meetmgs
However, on some occaSIOns the meetmgs were scheduled on days he was on lay-
off The Umon said that he ought to have been paid 7 1J4 hours for those days for
the same reasons advanced above regardmg "normal hours of work."
It IS not necessary for me to deal wIth these matters, as they are moot as far as
lIabIlIty IS concerned. The Employer has conceded the pomt by vIrtue of ItS
payment There IS no mdIcatIOn that It takes any posItIOn other than that the
gnevor IS entitled to be paid for the time claimed. I wIll remam seIzed of
compensatIOn Issues m the event that the re IS a dIspute regardmg the amounts paid
or owmg
As to the claim for 7 1J4 hours for some of those days, that IS demed for the reasons
set out above Fmally, although the gnevances allege antI-umon dIscnmmatIOn,
those claims were abandoned.
Summary
As set out at the begmnmg of the declSlon, the gnevor has 19 gnevances before
the Board. It was agreed that gnevances one through five, eIghteen and nmeteen
be adJourned to be dealt wIth subsequent to the release of thIS decIsIOn. For the
reasons set out above, the remammg gnevances have eIther been settled by way of
payment, wIthdrawn or dIsmIssed, wIth the exceptIOn of aspects of gnevance 8
26
and gnevance 12 relatmg to leave credIt reports and attendance/sIck leave
respectively I rem am seIzed of those matters pendmg clanficatIOn of the
gnevor's past hours of work. I also remam seIzed of any compensatIOn Issues
ansmg from the gnevances settled by way of the Employer concedmg the matters
through payment of momes claimed.
Dated at Toronto, thIS 18th day of January 2001
_.~
Damel A. Hams, V Ice- ChaIr