HomeMy WebLinkAbout2007-0277.Ritchie.08-03-06 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
règlement des griefs
Board
des employés de la
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388 Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396 Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB# 2007-0277
UNION# 2007-0551-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Ritchie)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Daniel A. Harris
FOR THE UNION Kirsten Agrel
Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
FOR THE EMPLOYER Ryan Conacher
Counsel
Ministry of Government and Consumer
Services
HEARING
March 4, 2008.
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Decision
The Proceedings
This is a claim for travel and meal expenses for the period during which the grievor, Dawn
Ritchie, was on temporary assignment to the Burlington probation and parole office. She was
there from June 2004 until December 11, 2006. Her home position was at the Parkdale office.
On December 11, 2006 she was assigned to the Mississauga office. On January 25, 2007, the
grievor asked her supervisor whether she was eligible for those expenses. On February 5, 2007
she was told that she was not. She grieved on February 8, 2007. The employer brings this
preliminary application to dismiss the grievance because it is out of time.
The Facts
The parties filed the following agreed statement of facts:
OPSEU (Ritchie) and MCSCS
GSB #: 2007-0277
AGREED STATEMENT OF FACTS FOR THE
EMPLOYER?S TIMELINESS MOTION
1. The Grievor became a classified Probation and Parole Officer on April 8, 2004.
2. The Grievor?s home position is at Parkdale Probation and Parole (?P & P?) Office.
3. The grievor moved to Burlington P & P in June 2004.
4. The grievor moved to Mississauga P & P on or about December 11, 2006.
5. The Grievor is claiming entitlement to Article 13, 14 and COR 12 benefits for the
period of time from June 2004 to December 11, 2006 (the ?relevant period?) while
she was working at Burlington P & P.
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6. On or about January 25, 2007, the grievor advised Dona Sverdrup that she ?may be
eligible for meal/travel allowances due to the temporary assignment [she] was placed
on at Burlington.? She asked for a response.
7. On or about February 5, 2007, Ms. Sverdrup responded to the grievor?s email
indicating that she was not so entitled.
The Submissions of the Parties
The Employer submitted that the grievance was of a continuing nature. In that regard, it said that
each instance when travel or meal expenses was claimable ought to have been pursued as they
were incurred. Article 22.2.1 allows 30 days to discuss concerns with a supervisor and no such
discussions ensued from June 2004 until January 25, 2007. This latter date was itself more than
30 days after the grievor stopped traveling to Burlington. Accordingly, it was submitted that
none of her travel/expense claims were discussed with her supervisor within the time frames
required. Article 22.2.1 reads as follows:
22.2.1 It is the mutual desire of the parties that complaints of employees be adjusted as
quickly as possible and it is understood that if an employee has a complaint, the
employee shall meet, where practical, and discuss it with the employee?s
immediate supervisor within thirty (30) days after the circumstances giving rise to
the complaint have occurred or have come or ought reasonably to have come to
the attention of the employee in order to give the immediate supervisor an
opportunity of adjusting the complaint.
The Employer also submitted that the time for filing a grievance may be extended by the Board
where there are reasonable grounds for the extension and there is no substantial prejudice to the
opposite party. Section 48(16) of the Ontario Labour Relations Act, 1995, governs such
extensions. It reads as follows:
Extension of time
(16) Except where a collective agreement states that this subsection does not apply, an
arbitrator or arbitration board may extend the time for the taking of any step in the
grievance procedure under a collective agreement, despite the expiration o time, where
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the arbitrator or arbitration board is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for the
extension and that the opposite party will not be substantially prejudiced by the
extension. 1995, c.1, Sched. A, s.48 (16).
The Employer submitted that there were no reasonable grounds for the extension. It also claimed
that it would be substantially prejudiced by any extension. The Employer relied upon the
following authorities: OPSEU (St. Jean et al.) and Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services (2004), GSB #2001-1122; OPSEU (Gangasingh) and Metropolitan
Toronto Housing Authority (1995) GSB #1386/94; OPSEU (Upshaw) and Ministry of Health
(1999), GSB #2163/97; OPSEU (Narine-Singh) and Ministry of Education and Training (1999),
GSB #0035/98; OLBEU and Liquor Control Board of Ontario (1998), 1635/96.
The Union submitted that the time does not begin to run for filing a grievance until after a
difference between the parties arises. Here, it was not until February 5, 2007 that the grievor
knew that the Employer was denying her travel and meal expenses. It was on that date that the
dispute arose and she promptly filed her grievance. In any event, article 22.2.1 does not address
the time for filing expense claims. It is articles 13 and 14 that deal with travel expense claims
and COR 12 that deals with meal allowances. Those provisions do not contain any restrictions
as to when expense claims must be submitted. The only temporal reference is in article 13.2,
which reads as follows:
13.2 Kilometers are accumulated on the basis of a fiscal year (April 1 to March 31,
inclusive).
Accordingly, the Union submitted that expense claims were not continuing matters arising as
they were incurred. That is, the obligation to file for expenses is an annual obligation. The
Union also referred to the Employer?s Policy Directive, ?Travel, Meal and Hospitality Expenses
Directive.? Paragraph 5 sets out the following time limit for claims:
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Time Limit for Claims
5. All claims must be submitted on a timely basis, and no later than the end of the first
quarter of the fiscal year following the fiscal year in which the expense was incurred.
Managers may extend this time limit using the principles to guide exceptions set out in
this Directive.
The Union said that by the Employer?s own policy, the grievor?s request to have her travel and
meal expenses paid were not out of time. The Union said that there was no time limit in the
collective agreement for filing these claims, so the entire amount may be claimed in the
grievance. In the alternative, the only time reference is to the last fiscal year.
In the further alternative, if an extension of time is necessary, the Union submitted that there was
no excessive delay from December 11, 2006 to January 25, 2007 and no real prejudice to the
Employer if the time were to be extended pursuant to s.48(16). The Union relied on: OPSEU
(Hanson) and Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services (2005) 81 C.L.A.S. 107
(Briggs).
In reply, the Employer said that the grievor never put in an actual expense form, so paragraph 5
of the directive has no application. As to the Hanson case, there the Employer did not raise any
timeliness objection.
Reasons for Decision
The submission of travel and meal expenses is governed by the collective agreement and the
Directive. The reasonableness or otherwise of the employer?s policy directive has not been
placed before me. In my view, in these circumstances, the directive is the standard that
determines when expense claims are to be submitted. I note that it is consistent with article
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13.02 in expressing the fiscal year as the reference time period. On its face the directive permits
the submission of expense claims up until the end of June for claims arising from the prior fiscal
year. In the context of this matter, the grievor, at the latest, would have been permitted to submit
her 2004 claims in June 2005, her 2005 claims in June 2006 and her 2006 claims in June 2007.
She first raised these matters with her supervisor in January 2007. Accordingly, her 2004 claims
were some nineteen months late. Her 2005 claims where some seven months late and the
maximum time for submitting her 2006 claim had not yet expired.
There is no explanation on the record for the delay in submitting her 2004 and 2005 claims. The
Employer correctly submitted that the test is an objective one. Based on the submissions made
before me, there are no grounds to extend the time for the submission of those claims.
The language of the directive is that the claims must be ?submitted.? The Employer?s
submission that the grievor did not submit the final expense claims before June 30, 2007 is not
helpful in these circumstances. The grievor clearly raised her concerns with her supervisor on
January 25, 2007. She was told she was not eligible to be reimbursed and promptly filed her
grievance. To require that she actually file a form prior to grieving, presumably in order to have
it rejected, would be overly technical in these circumstances. The parties knew of the dispute in
February 2007 and a grievance was filed in a timely manner.
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The Decision
In the circumstances of this matter, the grievance as it relates to fiscal 2006 expenses is not out
of time and may proceed to a hearing on the merits. The claim as it relates to 2004 and 2005
expenses is dismissed as untimely.
th
Dated at Toronto this 6 day of March, 2008.
Daniel A. Harris, Vice-Chair