HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-2239.Barker.03-12-01 Decision
Crown Employees Commission de ~~
Grievance Settlement reglement des griefs
Board des employes de la
Couronne
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GSB#2002-2239
UNION# 2002-0634-0002
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontano PublIc ServIce Employees Umon
(Barker) Grievor
- and -
The Crown In RIght of Ontano
(Mimstry of TransportatIOn) Employer
BEFORE Nimal DIssanayake Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Ed Holmes
Ryder Wnght Blair & Doyle
BarrIsters and SOlICItorS
FOR THE EMPLOYER Andrew Baker
Counsel
Management Board Secretanat
HEARING November 25 2003
2
PRELIMINARY AWARD
Following a job competition, the grievor Mr Dale Barker
was appointed to a position of Real Estate Officer 2 effective
November 14, 2001 The employer, by letter dated September 27,
2002, informed the grlevor that pursuant to S 22 of the Public
Service Act, he was released from his position effective the
same date In the grlevance dated October 2, 2002 which lS
before me, the grlevor has grieved that he was dismissed without
just cause In contravention of article 18 1 of the collective
agreement The lssue lS whether or not the employer was
entitled to resort to a probationary release of the grlevor at
the particular time
Article 18 of the collective agreement reads
ARTICLE 18 - SENIORITY (LENGTH OF CONTINUOUS
SERVICE)
18 1 An employee's length of continuous serVlce will
accumulate upon completion of a probationary
period of not more than nlne ( 9) months and shall
commence
(a) from the date of appointment to the
Classified Service for those employees with no
prlor serVlce In the Ontario Public Service,
or
(b) from the date established by adding the actual
number of full-time weeks worked by a full-
3
time unclassified employee during his or her
full-time employment back to the first break
In employment which lS greater than thirteen
130 weeks, or
(c) for a regular part-time civil servant, from
January 1, 1984 or from the date on which he
or she commenced a period of unbroken, part-
time employment In the public serVlce,
immediately prlor to appointment to a regular
part-time position In the civil serVlce,
whichever lS later, or
(d) effective January 1, 1984, from the date
established by adding the actual number of
full-time weeks worked by a full-time seasonal
employee during his or her full-time
employment back to the first break In
employment which is greater than thirteen (13 )
weeks
The employer did not dispute the union's contention that
Slnce the grlevor had no prlor serVlce In the OPS, under article
18 1 (a) his probation period would have been a fixed period of 9
calendar months from November 14, 2001 - his date of appointment
to the classified position of Real Estate Officer 2 Therefore,
In the normal course, his probation would have ended no later
than August 14, 2002 Thus on the face of these facts, the
employer would not normally have been entitled to resort to a
probationary release of the grievor after August 14, 2002
However, the employer submitted that the foregoing normal
scenarlO resulting from an application of the collective
4
agreement provlslons was altered as a result of the "Return to
Work Protocol" (Protocol) entered into between the employer and
the unlon on May 2, 2002 following a strike In the OPS The
relevant portion of that protocol lS as follows
RETURN TO WORK PROTOCOL
The parties agree that any lssue arlslng out of the
enforcement of this Protocol may be resolved under the
grlevance and arbitration provisions of the Collective
Agreement
The following applies to employees In the OPSEU
bargaining units including seasonal employees on
hiatus and for greater certainty also includes
essential and emergency workers
"Time" During the Strike
1 o CONT IUOUS SERVICE
1 1 Time spent on strike shall not interrupt
continuous serVlce of an employee for the
purpose of
(i) Coverage for Basic Life, Supplementary and
Dependent Life, Long Term Income
Protection and Supplementary Health and
Hospital benefits (Article 32/36/37/38/39/
42/64/65/66/70)
(ii) Coverage for dental benefits (Articles
32/40/68)
(iii) Percent in lieu of benefits (Article 31 )
(iv) Qualifying period for pregnancy leave
(Articles 31/32/50/76)
(v) Qualifying period for parental leave
(Articles 31/32/51/77)
5
(vi) Calculation of termination payments
(Articles 53/78)
(vii) Calculation of probation periods and
appointment to classified serVlce
(Articles 18/31/32) for essential and
emergency services workers
(viii) Calculation of entitlement on death
benefits (Article 52)
The unlon relied on Re Hiram Walker & Sons Ltd (1975) 9
LAC (2d) 357 (Weiler) and more particularly Re Sparks 2408/95
(Mi kus ) In the former case it was held that where the
collective agreement stated that "New employees shall be
considered to be on probation until they have been employed for
sixty (60) calendar days " the period of time when employees
were absent from work due to a strike counted towards the
calculation of the 60 day probation period In Re Sparks, the
Board was called upon to apply the very same article 18 1 which
lS before me There the employer had purported to extend the
grievor's probation period by 3 months because the grlevor had
been absent from work due to sickness for a period of 3 months
during his original probation period The Board held that the
employer was not entitled to do that In effect the Board
concluded that the period of absence counted towards the
grievor's probation period
The employer In the present case did not challenge the
proposition the unlon extracted from that case law to the effect
6
that absences from work do not disrupt the runnlng of the
probation period for an employee who had been appointed to a
classified position In the OPS However, the employer pointed
out that none of the cases relied upon by the unlon involved an
agreement between the unlon and employer to specifically alter
the rights under the collective agreement In the employer's
view the Return to Work protocol was such an agreement
Employer counsel pointed out that the preamble to the
protocol makes it applicable "to employees In the OPSEU
bargaining units" Thus it captures the whole bargaining unit
including classified employees S 1 1 of the protocol provides
that time spent on strike shall not interrupt continuous serVlce
of an employee for certain specific purposes described In sub-
sections (i) to (viii) He submitted that the effect of sub-
section (vii) was to limit the non-interruption of continuous
serVlce to "essential and emergency serVlces workers" It
therefore follows that for all employees who are not essential
or emergency workers, time spent on strike does interrupt
continuous serVlce In this regard counsel pointed out that ss
(vii) explicitly sets out article 18 as one of the articles
affected by its terms
Employer counsel conceded that, but for the protocol, the
collective agreement would dictate, as interpreted In Re Sparks,
7
that the period of the strike would count towards the grievor's
probation period However, he took the position that In the
protocol the unlon "negotiated away" that advantage for all
employees except essential and emergency workers Counsel
submitted that when the parties specifically provided that a
certain class of employees, l e essential and emergency
workers, will recelve protection of continuous serVlce during
the strike, they must have intended that all other employees
would not enJoy that protection Counsel for the unlon
submitted that there lS nothing In the protocol which explicitly
or implicitly takes away the provlslon In article 18 1 (a) that
those appointed to the classified serVlce have a fixed probation
period of not more than 9 calendar months
Having carefully considered the submissions of the
parties, I conclude that the protocol does not have the effect
of amending or suspending the protection granted to classified
employees by article 18 1 (a)
There lS no real dispute that article 18 1 (a) , as
interpreted by the Board In Re Sparks, means that a person
appointed to the classified serVlce, such as the grlevor, has a
fixed period of probation That probation period continues to
run without interruption during the employee's absences from
work, including absences during a strike That lS a negotiated
8
right accorded to classified appointees, which lS not accorded
to appointees to the unclassified serVlce or to seasonal
employees Unclassified employees and seasonal employees can
only count actual full time "weeks worked" (Art 18 1 (b) and
Art 18 1 (d) respectively) Therefore, the onus lS on the
employer to establish on a balance of probabilities that the
unlon had agreed to glve up (or as counsel put it "negotiated
away" ) a right or benefit In the collective agreement That
onus has not been met
It lS clear that the protocol contains varlOUS provlslons
that apply to different classes of employees, including
classified employees Some of its terms are made applicable to
all employees, while other terms are restricted to specific
classes In that sense, the protocol covers all employees In
the bargaining unit That lS not helpful in determining how, if
at all, a particular prOVlSlon such as s 1 1 (vii) affects a
certain class of employee
The provlslon In question here reads "Time spent on
strike shall not interrupt continuous serVlce of an employee for
the purposes of calculation of probation periods and
appointment to classified serVlce (articles 18/31/32) for
essential and emergency serVlces workers" Does this prOVlSlon
constitute an agreement to take away the rights under article
9
18 1 (a) afforded to classified employees In my Vlew, the
answer clearly must be In the negative It lS to be noted that
as a whole, the thrust of S 1 1 of the protocol lS to confer
certain benefits on employees, benefits those employees may
otherwise not have If ss (vii) has the intent and effect of
taking away from employees a benefit which they would otherwise
have, that goes against that general thrust There lS no doubt
that In ss (vii) the parties turn their minds to probation
periods However, the language indicates that the intent,
consistent with the general intent of S 1 1, lS to provide some
relief or benefit with regard to probation periods to employees,
who otherwise may be detrimentally affected with regard to their
probation periods as a result of their absence from work during
the strike
In support of his position counsel for the employer relied
on the fact that ss (vii) specifically refers to article 18
However, that reference does not buttress the employer's
position Subsection (vii) refers to articles 18, 31 and 32
It lS to be noted that article 31 deals with unclassified
employees and article 32 with seasonal employees As noted
earlier unclassified employees (article 18 1 (b) ) and seasonal
employees (article 18 1 (d) ) can only count time actually worked
towards their probation periods In other words, but for the
protocol, their probation periods would have been interrupted
10
for the duration of the period of the strike Subsection (vii)
relieves these employees from that result
The reference In ss (vii) to article 18 has the same
purpose Article 18 has the effect that unclassified employees
(art 18 1 (b) ) and seasonal employees (art 18 1 (d) ) may only
count full time weeks actually worked towards The effect of
ss (vii) lS to extend to those employees who otherwise do not
enJoy that benefit, uninterrupted continuous serVlce during the
strike period It does not take away any existing rights
Where a prOVlSlon may reasonably interpreted to the effect
that it does not take away existing collective agreement rights,
that interpretation ought to be adopted The initial
presumption should be that negotiated employee rights are not
glven up or forfeited This presumption should only be deemed
rebutted where the language clearly dictates such result If
the parties intended to take away the rights accorded to
classified employees under article 18 1 (a) , they should, and
would, have done so explicitly Here the language used In S
1 1 only indicates an intention to extend rights to employees,
who may otherwise not enJoy such rights The language does not
suggest explicitly or implicitly an intention to reduce or take
away existing collective agreement rights
11
For the foregoing reason it lS my finding that at the time
of his purported release, l e September 27, 2002, the grlevor
was no longer on probation His period of absence due to the
strike did not interrupt the runnlng of his probation period
It had ended upon completion of 9 calendar months from the date
of his appointment to the classified service
Dated this 1 t day of December 2003 at Toronto, Ontario
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