HomeMy WebLinkAbout2020-1968.Mcgaughey-Connolly.21-04-28 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance
Settlement Board
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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# 2020-1968
UNION# 2020-0228-0029
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Mcgaughey-Connolly) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General) Employer
BEFORE
Marilyn A. Nairn
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Emily Cumbaa
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE
EMPLOYER
Katie Spizarsky
Treasury Board Secretariat
Employee Relations Advisor
HEARING April 27, 2021
-2-
DECISION
[1] This grievance proceeded before the Board pursuant to Article 22.16 of the collective
agreement and, in accordance with Article 22.16.7, this decision has no precedential value.
The grievance claims call-back pay pursuant to Article UN 9.2 of the collective agreement.
[2] The Grievor is permanently employed as a full-time Client Services Representative at
the Brampton Courthouse. At the relevant time, and because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the
grievor was working on a rotational schedule. Some days she would work from home and
other days she would attend at the courthouse to work.
[3] On June 1, 2020 a memo issued indicating Monday, July 6, 2020 as the start date for
the gradual reopening of the courts. On June 25, 2020 another memo outlined the anticipated
reopening. That memo attached the latest “Guidebook, Covid-19: Recommended
Precautionary Measures for Resuming Court Operations” and it was recommended that staff
also review prepared video footage of the precautionary measures put in place.
[4] On Friday, July 3, 2020 at 11:59am an email, marked high priority, was sent to court
staff using their work email. It provided a summary of key activities in relation to the
anticipated opening of the courts. A revised Guidebook, an Employee Handbook, and a
description and links to a court Entrance Screening Tool were included. The grievor was on
vacation on July 3, 2020 and would not normally be expected to review work emails while on
vacation. Her next scheduled shift was Monday, July 6, 2020.
[5] Another email, marked high priority, was sent that day at 6:10pm to court staff via their
work emails. It gave notice of a mandatory staff meeting by teleconference scheduled for
Monday July 6, 2020. The Employee Handbook was attached. The email stated, “we will be
going over the attached handbook”. Staff working from home were given the option of
attending the meeting at either 8:30am or 11:15am and were advised that they could adjust
their timelines provided they attended one of those meetings.
[6] At 7:07pm on July 3, 2020, the grievor was sent a group text on her personal phone,
from her supervisor, further confirming the mandatory meeting on Monday and noting that the
information necessary to access the teleconference could be found in the earlier email. This
text was the first indication to the grievor of the Monday meeting and it caused her to access
her work email to review the earlier emails. That text again noted that staff must attend one
of two scheduled meetings, either at 8:30am or at 11:15am.
[7] At 11:12pm on July 3, 2020 an email marked high priority was sent to the personal
email addresses of court staff, including the grievor. (Any disclosure of personal email
addresses and/or phone numbers is not relevant to the issue of call back.) The subject line of
that email was “Screening to enter the workplace – keep this email” and it drew staff’s attention
to page 24 of the handbook “sent to you for discussion in our meeting”.
[8] The Employee Handbook was first distributed on July 3, 2020 in the morning email.
Although very like the Guidebook, one would have to review both in order to appreciate their
-3-
similarity. Whereas others likely had the opportunity to review that email (and perhaps the
attachments) during work hours on July 3, the grievor did not.
[9] The grievor reviewed the attached materials on Saturday, July 4, 2020. On Monday,
July 6, 2020 she attended work from home during her regular working hours, including
attending the 8:30am staff meeting.
[10] The grievor felt that reviewing the materials prior to the meeting was required and/or
expected of her by the Employer, given the urgency and content of the emails and text. She
felt obligated to perform that work prior to the meeting, as she had been advised that it would
be discussed at the meeting. The Employer indicated that, other than being apprised of the
meeting, the communications required nothing of staff, and that there was no requirement that
work be performed. However, given the content and distribution of the emails, the grievor’s
conclusion that she was expected to review the handbook prior to any discussion at a meeting
was not unreasonable.
[11] The Union claimed that the receipt and review of the emails on July 3, 2020 constituted
work and amounted to a call back. Further, the Union claimed a second call back for the work
that was performed on the Saturday prior to the grievor’s next scheduled shift. It claimed a
total of 8 hours pay at time and one-half the grievor’s regular hourly rate. The Employer
argued that there had been no requirement or direction to perform work prior to the next
scheduled shift, noting too that the screening information was not imminently necessary as
the grievor was not attending at the workplace on July 6. The grievor would not have been
expected to check work emails on July 3, 2020 as she was on vacation, and simply contacting
an employee to advise them of a scheduled meeting on the next working day cannot be
considered as requiring work, argued the Employer.
[12] The call back provision requires that an employee be contacted outside the workplace
prior to the start time of their next scheduled shift. Those criteria have been met here.
However, that contact must also be considered to be a call back “to work” in circumstances
where the employee is not being required to attend at the workplace. Call-back is payable,
not for the actual amount of work performed, but for the inconvenience of having one’s time
off from work disrupted.
[13] The term “work” is generally given a broad meaning and would certainly include review
of the materials attached to the emails sent to the grievor. However, even assuming that a
review of the handbook was expected or required by the Employer prior to the meeting, there
was no requirement that it be done outside of regular working hours. It could have been
completed during work time on the Monday, had the grievor attended the 11:15am meeting
rather than the 8:30am meeting, an option made available to her by the Employer. There was
no suggestion that she could not reasonably have constructed her work day accordingly.
[14] I am not persuaded that contact that simply informs an employee of a meeting on their
next scheduled work day amounts to a call back “to work”, prior to their next scheduled shift.
The employee is simply receiving limited information, and it would be unreasonable to
characterize that as work being performed, giving rise to the inconvenience triggering call
back pay.
-4-
[15] However, the text sent to the grievor’s personal phone advises of the email sent to her
work address by another supervisor about the meeting. It would be reasonable to assume
that, having received the text, the grievor would also review the 6:10pm email to obtain the
full meeting information. The grievor would, of necessity, open her work email account, where
she would see, for the first time, both the 11:59am and the 6:10pm emails concerning the
reopening of the courts (and perhaps other emails received at work that day). She was also
sent the 11:12pm email to her personal email account. Communications sent to a personal
account, whether by phone or email, give rise to an expectation that they will be received and
reviewed on one’s personal time. Taken together, it was not unreasonable for the grievor to
have concluded that the Employer expected her to review those related communications in
order to determine what, if any, further action was required of her prior to her next scheduled
shift. That review, however limited, constitutes work.
[16] There was no suggestion that the actual receipt and review of the emails on July 3,
2020 occurred over a period greater than four hours.
[17] In the result, I find that the grievor is entitled to be paid call back pay as a result of
being called back to work on July 3, 2020 in order to receive and review those communications
from the Employer. That is an amount of four hours pay at time and one-half the grievor’s
regular hourly rate. The review of materials on July 4, 2020 could have been done during
working hours, and I decline to find that it constitutes a call back in the circumstances here.
[18] Having regard to the above, I hereby direct the Employer to pay to the grievor an
amount of four hours pay at time and one-half her July 2020 hourly rate. I will remain seized
should there be any issues arising from the implementation of this decision.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 28th day of April, 2021.
“Marilyn A. Nairn”
_____________________
Marilyn A. Nairn, Arbitrator