HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-1230.Martin.19-01-18 Decision
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396
Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB #2018-1230
Union #G-002-18-CC
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers,
District Lodge 78
(Martin)
Union
- and –
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Metrolinx) Employer
BEFORE Brian McLean Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Ryan Newell
Goldblatt Partners LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Bonnea Channe
Filion Wakely Thorup Angeletti LLP
Counsel
HEARING January 10, 2019
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Decision
[1] This is an individual grievance regarding the employer’s decision not to offer
overtime opportunities to a particular classification of employees - the Customer
Services Co-ordinator (CSCs or Tier 3s), the classification in which the grievor
worked. The parties made opening statements and made submissions regarding
a preliminary issue advanced by the Union. That issue was whether the
grievance had been allowed by the Employer in part at the first stage of the
grievance procedure when it acknowledged it had made an error in not offering
the overtime. This award determines the preliminary issue.
[2] The employer operates the GO Transit commuter train system in the Greater
Toronto Area. The Union represents a bargaining unit of customer service
employees who work out of offices in Toronto and Oakville. There are three
“Tiers” of employees: Tier 1 employees (Customer Contact Representatives
(CCRs), the lowest paid; Tier 2 Customer Service Representatives (CSRs) being
the next highest paid and Tier 3 being the highest paid. In general, Tier 1 and 2
employees deal directly with customers answering inquiries about the Go
system. Tier 3 employees deal indirectly with customers by, for example, making
announcements on social media about issues and features of the system.
[3] In December of 2017, the Employer realized that it would be short Tier 1
employees on December 30 and 31 of that year. Accordingly, it asked Tier 1
employees whether they would like to work overtime. The response was
insufficient to cover the need and the Employer sought volunteers from the Tier 2
group, but not from the Tier 3 group. The Union asserted that this was a violation
of the collective agreement’s overtime provisions (Article 22) and was contrary to
the Employer’s long standing practice of offering Tier 1 overtime opportunities to
both Tier 2 and 3 employees.
[4] The Employer acknowledged that it once had a practice of offering overtime as
the Union asserts. It is the Employer’s position that this is not a requirement of
the Collective Agreement. The Employer takes the position that it is no longer
appropriate to offer Tier 1 overtime opportunities to Tier 3 employees in large
measure because, for a variety of reasons, they no longer have the skills to
effectively perform the Tier 1 function. That assertion is disputed by the Union.
[5] The Grievor filed this grievance alleging that she should have been offered the
opportunity to work on December 30 and 31, 2017. The grievance states:
[the employer] has violated the Collective Agreement including but
not limited to Article 21. On December 30 & 31 CCR hours were
offered to only the CSR’s by way of an email. This did not follow
the practice of CCR hours offered to all CSC’s & CSR’s on the
same roster. The Union request[s]? 6 hours OT [about $600] be
payed [sic] on both of the above dates.
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[6] Derek Taylor provided the Employer’s step 1 response to the grievance. There is
no issue as to his authority to respond to the grievance on the Employer’s behalf.
The step 1 response states:
The business acknowledges the error and commits to posting
overtime for both CSR/CSC classifications if the need arises in
future. The business declines the request to pay for the 6 hours
requested for each day for the following reasons:
1. We do not believe it appropriate to pay for overtime not
worked
2. In 2015 a new VOIP telephone system was implemented.
CSCs have not handled CCR calls since prior to that
implementation. It is not feasible for CSCs to take CCR calls
without training on use of the system and the establishment
of agent IDs.
3. Additionally, refresher training would be required for
new/updated processes and applications.
[7] The Union was not satisfied with the Employer’s decision to acknowledge that it
had made a mistake, in the absence of payment to the grievor. Accordingly, it
advanced the grievance to step 2. The employer’s response at step 2, again
made by Mr. Taylor, was the following:
Metrolinx has not had a practice of offering CCR OT hours to CSCs
and CSRs since at least 2014. In 2015 processes changed which
made it unfeasible for CSCs to perform this work as they do not
have the training to do so. As a result the grievance is denied.
[8] The Union argues that when the Employer responded at Step 1 to the grievance
that it had made an error and would in the future offer overtime opportunities to
both Tier 2 and 3 employees if the need arose, that was an admission and a
remedy which is binding on the Employer. Therefore, in the Union’s submission,
the issue of liability has been resolved and the only remaining issue is whether
the grievor is entitled to a remedy and, if so, which remedy.
[9] The Union argues that the reasons given by the employer in both step 1 and step
2 responses all relate to the remedy issue.
[10] The Union relies on Ottawa Humane Society v. Ottawa-Carlton Public
Employees Union (Wheatley Grievance) [2005] 137 L.A.C. (4th) 337 (M.G.
Picher) where, during the grievance procedure, the employer withdrew its
assertion that the grievor was a probationary employee. Despite that, at
arbitration the employer took the position that just cause did not apply when
evaluating the termination of the grievor’s employment because the grievor was
probationary. The Union objected to the ability of the employer to make that
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argument, asserting that the employer’s stance during the grievance procedure
was binding.
[11] The arbitrator found in favour of the Union, ruling as follows:
(8) After a careful review of the authorities and the facts presented
the arbitrator cannot sustain the position of the Employer. It is true
that during the course of the grievance procedure parties do
engage in “without prejudice” communication, in the sense that
either or both of them may make tentative offers of settlement in the
knowledge that such offers are not to be disclosed at arbitration
should the matter not be resolved. There is, however, a second
dimension to the communications between the parties during the
course of the grievance procedure. Either or both of them may
withdraw positions taken, by giving the other side notice that a
particular issue is no longer to be dealt with at arbitration. For
example, if a union makes three separate wage claims on behalf of
an employee and, during the course of the grievance procedure, it
communicates to the employer that it is withdrawing one of these
three claims, the grievance is deemed to be withdrawn to that
extent. The union cannot thereafter purport to re-file or reopen that
part of the grievance which it has dropped. (cases cited omitted)
…
(10) As the jurisprudence reflects, the parties must conduct
themselves during the course of the grievance procedure in such a
way as to respect the process. That process is intended to narrow
and define the issues which will ultimately proceed before a board
of arbitration if full settlement is not achieved. During the course of
that process they are bound by those partial settlements which may
be made, and so should not lightly make such partial settlements
unless they are willing to be bound by them. If a party which
withdraws a position or makes a partial settlement is allowed
thereafter to resile from its position, the integrity of the grievance
process is substantially undermined. Additionally, the scope and
course of the arbitration hearing itself is made substantially less
certain, with resulting inefficiencies and potential prejudice to the
parties themselves.
In the instant case the Employer, clearly and without reservation or
condition, communicated to the Union that it was withdrawing its
position with respect to the grievor’s alleged status as a
probationary employee. It did that in the face of a prior exchange of
correspondence which plainly raised the issue between the
parties... For the reasons well articulated in the jurisprudence, to
allow the Employer to resile from the position which it
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communicated to the Union would visit serious mischief on the
grievance and arbitration process. The Employer cannot be
allowed to resile from its position in these circumstances and more
than a union can be allowed to resile from the withdrawal of a
grievance.
[12] To similar effect was Re Air Canada v. C.A.L.E.A. (1980) 27 LAC (2d) 405
(Weatherill) where, during the grievance procedure, the employer formally replied
to the grievance by acknowledging that there had been a “violation” of the
collective agreement. At arbitration the employer sought to contest whether the
collective agreement had in fact been violated and the Union objected.
[13] In finding for the Union the arbitrator noted that concessions formally made by a
party during the grievance procedure were not “settlements” but may have the
same effect, writing at paragraph as follows:
The chairman of the third level meeting is not a disinterested
neutral, whose decision either party may “appeal” to arbitration.
Rather, he is an officer of the company at the level of corporate
management and of his decision is to allow the grievance then
clearly, under the provisions of the collective agreement, the
company is bound by such decision...It is not contemplated that the
company, if later not satisfied with its own decision, may reconsider
what it has decided by taking the matter to a higher level, or to
arbitration.
[14] Later, he commented on situations, arguably like the one before me, where the
employer concedes liability, but not remedy:
Of course, the decision at the third level is not, a “settlement”
except in an extended use of the term. It does, however, have the
effect of a settlement, and it is binding. The issue to be decided in
the instant case, then, is whether or not the fact there was a “split
decision”- that the union was successful on the issue on “liability”
but not on the issue of compensation - means that when the union
proceeds to arbitration on the compensation issue - as it certainly
may-the liability issue is thereby revived? In my view it does not.
Just as, as the cases cited above have shown, parties may settle
some of the issues in a grievance leaving others to be determined
at arbitration, so too, in the grievance procedure set out in this
collective agreement, some issues in a grievance may be decided
leaving others to be arbitrated. The arbitration of the latter does not
put the former back into question. The revival of all issues by the
arbitration of some would be contrary to the scheme and the
purpose of the grievance procedure....
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[15] The Employer argues that Mr. Taylor’s response was not clear and unequivocal
and, therefore, it cannot constitute a binding decision on the issue of liability.
The Employer submits that it is not clear what the “error” in the first sentence of
the step 1 response refers to. Moreover, the Employer argues, the list of reasons
written by Mr. Taylor explaining why the grievance was not allowed, go to the
issue of liability and not remedy. This, it is argued, is reinforced by the step 2
response which sets out why the employer was not required to ask Tier 3s if they
wished to work the overtime shifts. Therefore, in the Employer’s submission, the
issue of liability remains a live issue which I need to adjudicate. The employer
relies on Laurentian Hospital v. ONA 67 L.A.C. (4th) 289 (Pineau) where the
arbitrator allowed the admission of the employer’s third step reply where it raised
new grounds for the discharge of the grievor.
DECISION
For the following reasons I find in favour of the Union on this preliminary issue.
[16] I accept and adopt the reasoning in the cases relied on by the Union to the effect
that formal concessions made by parties during the grievance procedure (as
distinct from offers to settle made in an effort to resolve a matter which are not
accepted) are binding. In my view that is what occurred here. Mr. Taylor
accepted that the Employer made an error by not offering the overtime shifts to
Tier 3 and agreed to do that in the future. For the reasons stated he did not,
however, agree that the result of the error was that compensation should be paid
to the grievor.
[17] I am unable to accept the Employer’s submission that the concession was not
clear and unequivocal. Perhaps the first part of the sentence “the business
acknowledges the error” might on its own be subject to doubt, however that
statement was made in a particular context. That context has two significant
aspects. The first is the grievances itself which makes clear what the grievance
is about: the fact that overtime hours were not offered to Tier 3 employees. The
second clarifying aspect of the context is the remedy provided: the company
committed to posting overtime shifts to both groups of employees. As well, in my
view, the term “error” is not uncertain in this context. It is equivalent to
specifically admitting a breach of the Collective Agreement.
[18] While the step 2 response, considered in isolation, could certainly apply to the
liability issue and is arguably unclear, its meaning is abundantly clear in context.
By the time of step 2 response, the Employer had already conceded the error
and expressed its future intentions. Those were clear and binding statements.
To view them otherwise would be to undermine the integrity of the grievance
process. Given the position taken by the Employer at step 1, the only issue left at
step 2 was the Union’s claim for compensation for the grievor. Indeed, had the
Union not sought compensation by moving the grievance to step 2 the
Employer’s concession and remedy at step 1 would be obviously binding and I
see no reason why the Union’s decision to seek compensation should change
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that particularly since the employer did not state that it was changing its mind
about liability (assuming that it could have). In that context the step 2 response
was clearly a response about why the employer took the position that no
compensation was owing. It related only to the matter of remedy, the only
outstanding issue at that point.
[19] In the Laurentian case, on the facts before the arbitrator, the third step grievance
reply was accepted into evidence without any finding as to its legal effect. I find it
of no assistance in determining the matter before me.
[20] For all these reasons the Union’s preliminary argument succeeds. The case will
proceed if the parties are unable to resolve the issue of liability, as the only issue
to be determined is whether the grievor is entitled to compensation for the
employer’s failure to ask her whether she wished to work the overtime shifts in
question. As noted at the hearing, this decision does not preclude the Employer
from arguing that the grievor is not entitled to compensation because she was
not trained, in addition to any other arguments that it wishes to advance in
relation to remedy.
[21] The parties should contact the Board in order to schedule more hearing dates if
there is no settlement.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 18th day of January, 2019.
“Brian McLean”
Brian McLean, Arbitrator