Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-0306.McNally.03.10.16 Decision Crown Employees Commission de ~~ Grievance Settlement reglement des griefs Board des employes de la Couronne ~-,... Suite 600 Bureau 600 Ontario 180 Dundas Sl. West 180 rue Dundas Ouest Toronto Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8 Tel. (416) 326-1388 Tel. (416) 326-1388 Fax (416) 326-1396 Telec. (416) 326-1396 GSB# 2000-0306 2000-1542 UNION# 00A382, 01C036 IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD BETWEEN Ontano PublIc ServIce Employees Umon (McNally) Grievor - and - The Crown In RIght of Ontano (Mimstry of TransportatIOn) Employer BEFORE Richard Brown Vice-Chair FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes Ryder Wnght Blair & Doyle Bamsters and SOlICItorS FOR THE EMPLOYER Chnstopher Jodhan Counsel Management Board Secretanat HEARING March 24 May 20 July 22 & 31 and September 24 2003 2 These two gnevances were prompted by the Mimstry of TransportatIOn's decIsIOn to convert Theresa McNally's status from regular full-tIme to regular part-tIme, WIth a consequent loss of vacatIOn credIts and pay for statutory holIdays and a consequent reductIOn In the employer's contributIOn to the cost of penSIOn and health and welfare benefits I Ms McNally began workIng for the mlmstry at the Kenora Avenue office In HamIlton In 1976 and contInues to be employed there She has held the classIficatIOn of semor lIcensIng clerk OAGI0 SInce 1989 or 1990 Ms McNally Injured her nght knee at work In 1991 and was off work from tIme to tIme because of thIS Injury She suffered a recurrence In December of 1994 mIssed some tIme between December and the folloWIng February and was unable to work at all from February to September In September she returned to the Job wIth a modIfied schedule Her hours Increased gradually untIl she was workIng eIghteen hours per week-three days of SIX hours each. Ms McNally Injured the same knee agaIn In September of 1996 and was off the J ob untIl February of 1997 She fell when her knee gave out In September of 1997 and dId not work agaIn untIl February of 1999 A medIcal certIficate completed by the gnevor's doctor dated January 5 1999 charactenzed her medIcal restnctIOns as "permanent" She receIved worker's compensatIOn benefits for each Injury or recurrence A letter from the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board to the employer dated June 11 1999 records the gnevor' s entItlement to a "Future EconomIc Loss award" Whenever Ms McNally worked between her first Injury and her fall In September of 1997 she contInued to perform the dutIes of semor lIcensIng clerk. Upon returmng to work on February 17 1999 she was gIven a temporary placement as an ISSUIng clerk. ThIS posItIOn IS classIfied as OAG8 but the gnevor contInued to receIve the OAG 10 rate of pay The duratIOn of her placement as ISSUIng clerk was Imtlally specIfied to be SIX months, but turned out to be almost mne The gnevor resumed the dutIes of semor lIcensIng clerk on November 8 1999 3 Ms McNally has never worked more than eIghteen hours weekly SInce returmng to work In September of 1995 DespIte her reduced hours, she was treated untIl 1999 as a full-tIme employee for the purpose of vacatIOn, statutory holIdays, penSIOn and health and welfare benefits In November of 1999 her status was converted to that of a regular part- tIme employee, and she was told her entItlements would be reduced accordIngly ThIS announcement prompted the gnevance dated January 11 2000 A second gnevance was filed on October 11 2000 shortly after the employer Implemented the changes In dIspute II The first questIOn to be addressed IS whether the settlement of an earlIer gnevance, filed In the fall of 1999 resolved the Issues raised by the two gnevances at hand. The umon contends the settlement establIshes the gnevor' s entItlement to all of the benefits assocIated wIth full-tIme employment, whereas the employer claims the settlement confirms her converSIOn to regular part-tIme status The earlIer gnevance was prompted by the extensIOn ofMs McNally's temporary placement as ISSUIng clerk. The gnevor set out her obJectIOns to workIng In that posItIOn In a letter dated September 20 1999 and addressed to LInda Jackson, then central regIOn manager for dnvers and vehIcles In thIS letter the gnevor noted that her work statIOn as semor lIcensIng clerk had been "ergonomIcally redesIgned" to SUIt her lImItatIOns and that the dutIes of that posItIOn allowed her to allevIate the secondary symptoms of her InJury by ICIng her knee and mOVIng around. She went on to note such accommodatIOns were not avaIlable when workIng as ISSUIng clerk. The letter closes wIth the gnevor askIng to return to her prevIOUS Job "wIth the same arrangements that were approved for me 2 years ago" Read In the context of the entIre letter the word "arrangements" IS a clear reference back to ergonomIc desIgn, ICIng and mOVIng around. When her letter of September 20 faIled to produce results, Ms McNally filed a gnevance, dated October 12, 1999 IndIcatIng the settlement desIred was "that the employer return me to my posItIOn as OAG 10 semor lIcensIng clerk (supervIsor) for the hours of work agreed upon due to my workplace InJury" The gnevor met wIth Ms Jackson on October 29 1999 to dISCUSS the gnevance Also In attendance were Sue Jurashtchuk, then actIng office manager and Gary Bucullen, umon steward. It was 4 agreed the gnevor would resume her former dutIes on November 8 There was no dIscussIOn at thIS meetIng about the gnevor's status or her entItlement to the benefits now In dIspute There IS conflIctIng eVIdence as to whether Ms Jackson provIded any assurances to Ms McNally relatIng to matters other than her Job dutIes The gnevor testIfied she sought and receIved an assurance that the arrangements prevIOusly In place would be maIntaIned, but her testImony on thIS pOInt was contradIcted not only by Ms Jackson but also by Ms Jurashtchuk. The deal struck on October 29 was recorded In the folloWIng memorandum of agreement, sIgned on November 1 wIthout further dIscussIOn Without precedent and wIthout preJudIce the partIes to the gnevance agree to the folloWIng as a full and final settlement of the gnevor's gnevance dated October 12, 1999 1 The gnevor wIll work In the posItIOn of Semor LICenSIng Clerk (OAG 10) on a Regular Part Time basIs (18 hours/week) effectIve November 8 1999 2 The employee agrees to wIthdraw her gnevance dated October 12, 1999 Based upon the alleged assurance by Ms Jackson that past "arrangements" would be maIntaIned, the umon contends the settlement precludes the employer from changIng the gnevor's status to regular part-tIme and reducIng her benefit entItlements accordIngly I am not persuaded by thIS argument. The memorandum of settlement makes no reference to arrangements Even If the gnevor dId receIve an assurance about past "arrangements" thIS word IS hIghly ambIguous and could be a reference to ergonomIc desIgn, ICIng and mOVIng around rather than a reference to benefit entItlement. The gnevor's recent letter used the word "arrangements" to mean the former rather than the latter If "arrangements" were dIscussed on October 29 It would have been perfectly reasonable for Ms Jackson to assume the same meamng applIed. The employer contends the words "Regular Part Time" In the settlement, capItalIzed as they are, acknowledge the gnevor's change In status The problem wIth thIS argument IS that It lIfts these words out of context, Ignonng the rest of the settlement and the events precedIng ItS negotiatIOn. The settlement states "The gnevor wIll work In the posItIOn of Semor LICenSIng Clerk (OAGI0) on a Regular Part Time basIs (18 hours/week) " The posItIOn of semor clerk and hours of work are mentIOned but not 5 status per se or benefits NeIther status nor benefits were dIscussed when the settlement was negotIated and neIther were mentIOned In the gnevance or the letter precedIng It. When the settlement was negotIated, the gnevor was gIven no reason to thInk It would depnve her of the full-tIme benefits that she had enJoyed for the past four years whIle workIng eIghteen hours weekly In my VIew both partIes have over-reached In theIr InterpretatIOn of the memorandum of settlement. It calls for no more than returmng Ms McNally to her former dutIes as requested In her gnevance The settlement dId not In any way affect her status or her resultIng entItlement to benefits The employer dId not undertake to preserve her status as a full-tIme employee and the gnevor dId not consent to havIng her status changed to that of a part-tIme employee III Counsel for the umon contends the employer IS contractually oblIged to contInue provIdIng health and welfare benefits to Ms McNally because she has been granted a Future EconomIc Loss (FEL) award by the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board. In thIS regard, counsel relIes upon artIcle 41 4 of the collectIve agreement Where an employee receIves an award under the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act and the award applIes for longer than the penod set out In ArtIcle 41 2 (i e three (3) months), the Employer wIll contInue SubsIdIes for BaSIC LIfe, Long Term Income ProtectIOn, Supplementary Health and HospItal and Dental Plans for the penod dunng WhICh the employee IS reCeIVIng the award. Employer counsel argues the FEL payments beIng receIved by the gnevor are not paid pursuant to an "award" wIthIn the meamng of artIcle 41 4 AccordIng to thIS argument, the word "award" In thIS sectIOn refers to Loss of EarnIngs (LOE) benefits but not FEL benefits I see no ment In thIS argument. FEL benefits are awarded as compensatIOn for a permanent loss of earnIng capacIty resultIng from a workplace InJury LOE benefits are paid as compensatIOn for eIther a temporary or permanent loss of earmng capacIty floWIng from an InJury suffered at work. As these types of benefits are two dIfferent ways of compensatIng for a permanent loss, there IS no reason to thInk artIcle 41 4 was negotIated wIth the IntentIOn of treatIng an employee In receIpt of a FEL award dIfferently than one In receIpt of an LOE award. 6 In comIng to thIS conclUSIOn, I have not overlooked the arguments advanced by employer counsel about the wordIng of the collectIve agreement. One argument relatIng to artIcle 41 4 Itself IS based upon the possIbIlIty of a FEL award beIng commuted to a lump sum payment. ThIS argument does not dIStIngUISh a FEL award from an LOE award because the latter may also be commuted In certaIn CIrcumstances (As to the commutatIOn of an LOE award, see WSIB OperatIOnal Manual, Document Number 18- 03-05 ) Counsel also suggested the word "award" appeanng In other paragraphs of artIcle 41 could not sensIbly be construed to mean a FEL award. ThIS argument does not assIst the employer because all of these references to an award make perfect sense If read to mean any type ofWSIB award for loss of earnIng capacIty ThIS IS the meamng I attnbute to "award" In artIcle 41 4 The foregoIng analysIs leads me to conclude the gnevor IS entItled to the protectIOn afforded by artIcle 41 4 HavIng come to thIS concluSIOn, I need not address the umon's alternatIve argument about artIcle 42 3 because umon counsel concedes the latter artIcle does not apply to an employee entItled to the benefit of the former IV As artIcle 41 4 does not preclude the employer from reducIng some of the gnevor's benefits below the level prevIOusly enJoyed by her-I e penSIOn, sIck leave statutory holIdays and vacatIOn-I turn to consIder whether such a reductIOn IS prohIbIted by artIcle 3 of the collectIve agreement, or by the Human Rights Code as dISCnmInatIOn based upon dIsabIlIty I begIn my analysIs by notIng the gnevor' s complaInt IS about benefits formIng part of the compensatIOn package She does not complaIn about beIng demed access to employment In general or to a partIcular Job In other words, thIS case IS about compensatIOn not partIcIpatIOn In the world of work. In Ontario Public Service Employees Union andMinistlY of Transportation GSB FIle No 0725/95 I revIewed the Ontano Court of Appeal's treatment of compensatIOn for dIsabled employees In Ontario Nurses Association v Orillia Soldiers Memorial Hospital (1999) 169 D.L.R. (4th) 489 The employer In that case paid the full premIUm for health and welfare benefits provIded to actIve employees For the first thIrty months that dIsabled nurses were absent from work and In receIpt oflong term dIsabIlIty benefits, the hospItal 7 contInued to pay the full cost of provIdIng such benefits, thereafter the employer made no contnbutIOn to health and welfare premIUms The Ontano Nurses' AssocIatIOn (ONA) argued thIS dIfferentIal treatment contravened the Code HoldIng there was no dIrect dISCnmInatIOn, Mr JustIce Rosenberg wrote on behalf of the Court DIsabled nurses do not receIve compensatIOn because they are not provIdIng servIces to theIr employer It IS not prohIbIted dISCnmInatIOn to dIStIngUISh for purposes of compensatIOn between employees who are provIdIng servIces and those who are not. In the case presently before the court, the purpose of the employer contnbutIOns to benefit plans IS to provIde an addItIOnal form of compensatIOn In exchange for work. HavIng chosen to provIde thIS form of compensatIOn, the employer could not dISCnmInate on a prohIbIted basIs However the employer could distinguish based on the reason for providing the compensation lJ, ork. On its face discrimination lJ, ould exist if the employer provided different levels of compensation for lJ,ork because of handicap LikelJ, ise it lJ, ould constitute discrimination if the employer provided different levels of compensation for not lJ, orking because of handicap But, in this context it makes no sense to compare lJ,orking employees lJ,ith those not lJ,orking I also do not find It helpful to attempt to Isolate dIfferent elements of the compensatIOn package such as employer contnbutIOns to premIUms, vacatIOn pay and wages and ascnbe dIfferent purposes to each so as to create a dISCnmInatIOn argument. They are all part of the compensatIOn package negotIated by the partIes In exchange for work by the employees When the employee IS not workIng, dIfferent consIderatIOns and dIfferent forms of payment may apply For Instance, employees may receIve workers' compensatIOn or long-term dIsabIlIty payments LeavIng aSIde the dIfference between employees on workers' compensatIOn and those on long-term dIsabIlIty WhICh IS not properly before thIS court, the benefits provIded to handIcapped employees not provIdIng work are more generous than to other employees not provIdIng work. Therefore, there IS no dISCnmInatIOn on a prohIbIted basIs wIthIn the meamng ofs 5(1) of the Code (pages 502 to 504) TurnIng to IndIrect or constructIve dISCnmInatIOn, governed by sectIOn 11(1) of the Code Mr JustIce Rosenberg wrote In my VIew It IS possIble to find that a neutral rule In thIS case has a dISCnmInatory effect wIthIn the meamng of s 11(1) To repeat, the neutral rule may be stated as follows the employer contnbutes toward premIUm coverage of partIcIpatIng elIgIble nurses In the actIve employ of the hospItal ThIS rule has the effect of requlflng the group of employees IdentIfied by the prohIbIted ground of dISCnmInatIOn to assume the burden of paYIng the entIre contnbutIOns for these benefits If they wIsh to 8 maIntaIn coverage Admittedly these employees are treated no differently than other employees on unpaid leave of absence the difference is that these employees are adversely effected by the rule because of their disability The issue then is yt,hether the employers are entitled to the BFOQ [i. e bona fide occupational requirement} justification in s. 11 (J)(b) [actually s. 11 (J)(a)) In my vieyt, they are I reach thIS concluSIOn not because of the dIstInctIOn drawn In Versa Services between compensatIOn and partIcIpatIOn, but rather by havIng regard to the nature of the accommodatIOn reqUIred for thIS kInd of constructIve dISCnmInatIOn. An example may assIst In understandIng the problem. Assume that an employer changes from paYIng ItS employees wages based on hours worked to paYIng on the basIs of the number of pIeces produced. Assume further that the dIsabled employees are sImply unable to produce as many pIeces as able-bodIed employees and as a result theIr wages are reduced. Arguably thIS constItutes constructIve dISCnmInatIOn. The facIally neutral standard of paYIng by the number of pIeces produced results In a restnctIOn on the abIlIty of the dIsabled employees to earn the same wages as able-bodIed employees In accordance wIth s 1I(l)(a) the employer could JustIfy the dIfferent result by shoWIng that thIS standard was reasonable and bonafide In the CIrcumstances However In accordance wIth s 11(2), the board of InqUIry or a court IS only entItled to find that the standard IS reasonable and bona fide If It IS satIsfied the needs of the group cannot be accommodated wIthout undue hardshIp consldenng the "cost, outsIde sources of fundIng, If any and health and safety reqUIrements, If any" Nevertheless, I do not read s 11(2) as ImpOSIng upon the employer the burden of sImply tOppIng up the wages of the dIsabled employees That, In my VIew IS not the type of accommodatIOn contemplated by s 11(2) and IS In fact Immlcal to the pnnclples underlYIng the Code SImply tOppIng up the wages of the dIsabled employees and paYIng them as If they are not dIsabled IS nothIng more than reverse stereotypIng Rather It would seem to me that the employer In thIS hypothetIcal must attempt to accommodate the group For example, the employer may provIde devIces and Instruments that would allow the dIsabled employees to perform at the same level as the able bodIed employees The duty IS on the employer to take all steps short of undue hardshIp to accommodate the need of the person dlscnmInated agaInst so that they can compete equally wIth the other employees It IS by attemptIng to accommodate theIr actual charactenstlcs so as to bnng them wIthIn the workplace envIronment that the employer complIes wIth the Code It may be that thIS goal cannot be fully accomplIshed and that short of undue hardshIp the employer for example, can provIde techmcal aids that wIll only partly bnng the dIsabled employees to the same level as the able-bodIed employees However In my VIew that IS all the Code reqUIres the employer to do The employer IS not reqUIred to abandon the standard (assumIng It to be a BFOQ) and pay the dIsabled employees accordIng to 9 some dIfferent standard. ObvIOusly It may do so voluntanly but thIS IS not what the Code reqUIres The appellant In thIS case does not seek any reasonable accommodatIOn or modIficatIOn of the rule for the actual charactenstlcs of ItS dIsabled members AssumIng the rule respectIng employer contnbutIOns to benefit plans constItutes constructIve dISCnmInatIOn, I am satIsfied that the JustIficatIOn In s ll(I)(b) [actually s ll(1)(a)] applIes Requiringrwrk in exchange for compensation is a reasonable and bona fide requirement (page 512 and 515 emphasIs added) Counsel for the umon relIes upon the folloWIng passage from the Supreme Court of Canada's decIsIOn In British Columbia Government and Service Employees Union V Public Service Employee Relations Commission (1999) 176 D.L.R. (4th) 1 HavIng consIdered the vanous alternatIves, I propose the folloWIng three-step test for determInIng whether aprimafacie dISCnmInatory standard IS a BFOR [bona fide occupatIOnal reqUIrement] An employer may JustIfy the Impugned standard by establIshIng on the balance of probabIlItIes (1) that the employer adopted the standard for a purpose ratIOnally connected to the performance of the Job (2) that the employer adopted the partIcular standard In an honest and good faith belIef that It was necessary to the fulfilment of that legItImate work-related purpose and (3) that the standard IS reasonably necessary to the accomplIshment of that legItImate work-related purpose To show that the standard IS reasonably necessary It must be demonstrated that It IS Impossible to accommodate IndIVIdual employees shanng the charactenstlcs of the claimant wIthout ImpOSIng undue hardshIp upon the employer (pages 24 and 25) In that case, the gnevor was dIsmIssed from her employment because she faIled a runmng test, and she contended her dIsmIssal was dISCnmInatIOn on the grounds of sex, because the percentage of men paSSIng the test was larger than the percentage of women. As the case was about access to employment not about wages or benefits, the Court said nothIng specIfically about how It'S three-fold test applIes to compensatIOn. In my VIew the Supreme Court's decIsIOn In British Columbia Government and Service Employees Union does not put In doubt the basIc pOInt made In Orillia Soldiers Memorial Hospital-there IS nothIng dISCnmInatory about reqUInng work In exchange for compensatIOn. FolloWIng the Court of Appeal's lead, I conclude requInng full-tIme 10 work In exchange for some of the benefits normally offered only to full-tIme employees IS "a reasonable and bonafide reqUIrement." I note artIcle 41 4 entItles the gnevor to other benefits not avaIlable to employees workIng part-tIme for reasons other than dIsabIlIty To thIS extent, as a dIsabled employee, she IS treated more favourably than others AccordIngly the facts at hand do not constItute unlawful dISCnmInatIOn on the ground of dIsabIlIty I remaIn seIzed to address any Issues ansIng In the ImplementatIOn of thIS award. Dated at Toronto thIS 16th day of October 2003 & ,e/~~..~ ~~__.~ &ch~dBrown Vice-Chair