HomeMy WebLinkAbout2019-1594.Mills et al.21-06-08 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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GSB# 2019-1594; 2019-2155
UNION# 2019-0234-0215; 2019-0999-0027
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Mills et al) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE
Kevin Banks
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Jane Letton
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Joohyung Lee
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING May 6, 2021
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DECISION
Introduction
[1] This decision resolves a difference between the parties, raised in a policy
grievance filed by the Union, as to whether the term “regular salary” in Article
41.3 of the Collective Agreement includes the Across the Board (ATB) salary
increases and Special Adjustments in an interest arbitration award by Arbitrator
William Kaplan dated April 1, 2019.
Evidence
[2] The parties presented an Agreed Statement of Facts and Joint Book of
Documents prior to the hearing on May 6, 2021. At the hearing, additional
documents were admitted into evidence and additional facts were stipulated on
consent. I will briefly summarize the relevant facts, which are not in dispute.
[3] Where a bargaining unit member will be absent from work by reason of an
occupational injury or disease for which an award is made under the Workplace
Safety and Health Insurance Act (WSIA) for a period greater than three
consecutive months, or 65 working days where absences are intermittent, the
Employer sends an election letter and election form to the employee. The letter
explains two options with respect to receipt of income after the period in question
elapses. The form records the employee’s choice between the two options.
[4] The letter and form received by Mr. Doug Mills were presented in evidence. The
Parties agreed that these documents are standard form and typical of those
received by other bargaining unit members. The two options offered to the
employee on these documents are: (1) to continue to receive regular salary while
drawing down on accumulated time credits, pursuant to Article 41.3 of the
Collective Agreement; or (2) to receive only benefits paid by the Workplace
Safety and Insurance Board, pursuant to the award made under the WSIA. The
letter states that under the first option “you will remain on active payroll and
receive your regular pay, part of which is considered WSIB benefit of 85% of your
net pay.” The letter then adds that “You will be required to “top up” the WSIB
benefit portion using your accumulated credits at a rate of 0.321 per day.” It then
explains that if the employee’s absence continues beyond the date when
accumulated credits expire, the employee will be removed from active payroll. It
notes however that when the employee qualifies for new credits on January 1 of
the following year, the employee will be returned to active payroll. The form
allows the employee to choose the order in which various types of accumulated
time credit will be used up under Option 1, or to exclude particular types of credit
from being drawn down. The sources of time credit include overtime, vacation,
and travel time, among others.
[5] The parties presented the following agreed facts regarding the bargaining history
for the 2018-2021 Corrections Collective Agreement:
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1. For the 2018 – 2021 round of bargaining, the Parties agreed that the
corrections bargaining unit would no longer be captured under the
Central Agreement. Instead, the corrections bargaining unit would
bargain a stand‐alone Corrections Collective Agreement.
2. The Parties were able to resolve all issues except for a number of
outstanding issues which were referred to Arbitrator Kaplan in an
interest arbitration.
3. Arbitrator Kaplan rendered his award on the outstanding issues on April
1, 2019. He found the following:
Wage/ATB – all employees
January 1, 2018: 1.5%
January 1, 2019: 1%
July 1, 2019: 1%
January 1, 2020: 1%
July 1, 2020: 1%
January 1, 2021: 1%
July 1, 2021: 1%
Special Adjustment – Correction Officers/Youth Workers
Classifications
January 1, 2018: 1.75%
January 1, 2019: 1.75%
January 1, 2020: 1.75%
January 1, 2021: 1.75%
4. The above‐noted across the board increases for the correctional
bargaining unit are set out at Article COR 17 of the collective
agreement.
5. The above‐noted special wage adjustments for the correctional
bargaining unit are set out at Appendix COR 39 of the collective
agreement.
Arguments
Union Arguments
[6] The Union submits that in Article 41.3 the term “regular salary” must include
wage adjustments made to the salary scale following the date of an award under
the WSIA. The Union directs attention to the following features of the Collective
Agreement.
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[7] First, the Union points to Article 41.6 which, effective January 1, 2016, capped
the amount of benefits payable under Article 41.2 so that an employee’s net
earnings would equal no more than 100% of their net earnings prior to the
commencement of their absence by reason of injury or illness for which a WSIA
award is made. The Union notes that this cap applies only to article 41.2
benefits, that the parties are sophisticated, and that had they intended to similarly
cap Article 41.3 benefits they could have included them within the scope of the
Article 41.6 cap. The Union says that Article 41.3 has been in the collective
agreement since 1989, and that the only way to give meaning to the parties’
decision to limit Article 41.2 benefits but not Article 41.3 benefits through the
operation of Article 41.6 is to treat the regular salary and accumulated credits
referred to in Article 41.3 as including salary increases negotiated at the
bargaining table or provided through interest arbitration awards, such as the
Kaplan award.
[8] Second, the Union notes that the parties used the term “regular salary” in Article
41.3, a term which it submits includes wage adjustments. The Union maintains
that the parties could have used the term “benefit” or similar language if they had
intended to provide for an income replacement benefit the value of which was
fixed at a point in time.
[9] Third, the Union directs attention to Article 42, which provides long term income
protection as a fixed percentage of gross salary at the time of disability, and then
provides for negotiated increases to benefits taking effect at subsequent times.
The Union submits that had the parties intended the amounts provided under
Article 43.1 to be fixed at a point in time, they would have used language similar
to that of Article 42 to tie the value of the benefit to a particular point in time. The
Union also contends that the parties would have negotiated for specific increases
from time to time, as they did with respect to Long Term Income Protection
(LTIP) benefits under Article 42.
[10] Fourth, the Union points out that an employee’s decision to opt for benefits under
Article 41.3 lasts for the life of a claim, which in some cases can be many years.
It would not make sense, in the Union’s submission, for the value of the benefit to
be eroded over that period by failing to include salary increases. The Union
submits, pointing to Article 42, that the parties know what they are doing when
they are bargaining and have consistently made agreements which see
employees receiving increases in the value of benefits.
[11] The Union concludes that “regular salary” in Article 41.3 can only mean the
salary that flows along the Collective Agreement and includes regular increases.
Employer arguments
[12] The Employer’s position is that Article 41.3 provides employees with an ability to
use any existing accumulated credits to top up their salary at a point in time,
based on the salary that they were earning when they go on WSIB benefits.
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[13] The Employer maintains that to confer a monetary benefit the Collective
Agreement must use clear and unequivocal language: Ontario Public Service
Employees’ Union (Union grievance) and the Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry
of Government Services), February 8, 2012, GSB# 2010-0405 (Abramsky). It
submits that the language of Article 41.3 is not clear in that it does not expressly
provide for negotiated increases to be factored into the amounts payable. The
Employer points to other language in the Collective Agreement, in Articles 50.3.2
and 51.5.2, that expressly ensures that employees do get negotiated increases
including progression on the wage grid. The Employer says that the parties
know how to use this kind of language when they intend to include the value of
wage increases in the value of benefit payments.
[14] The Employer submits that Article 41.2 benefits are payable only for a short
period of time, and are therefore not relevant beyond the first few months of an
employee’s leave due to occupational injury or disease. It is unlikely that there
would be a significant increase in salary during that short period of time. The
impact of Article 41.6 is therefore, in the Employer’s submission, not on salary
increases but rather on net salary, ensuring that the value of payments does not
exceed 100 per cent the net salary that the employee is receiving at the time.
Therefore, the Employer contends, the fact that Article 41.6 does not refer to
Article 41.3 does not indicate anything about the meaning of “regular salary” in
Article 41.3.
[15] The Employer argues that Article 41 should be interpreted in the context of the
WSIA, and that under the WSIA the calculation of benefits is clearly tied to a
point in time. The Employer concludes that in this context the regular salary
referenced in Article 41.3 should be understood to refer to a point in time as well,
given that it does not specifically provide for an increase.
Union Reply
[16] The Union responds that Articles 50 and 51 does not speak to salary, but rather
to payments that are equivalent to a certain percentage of salary. The Union
says that a “payment” is not the same thing as a salary. The Union submits that
fact that the parties negotiated wage increases for those payments does not
mean that this is clear and explicit language that is absent in Article 41.3. The
Union maintains that article 50 and 51 payments are different from Article 41.3
payments. The latter are a salary, and the former are payments while on leave.
[17] The Union submits further that the WSIA scheme is not relevant. It maintains
that in Article 41 the parties have negotiated an additional benefit on top of WSIA
benefits, one that improves the benefits available to employees. There is no
implication, the Union argues, that the parties adopted the principles of how
compensation should be calculated under the WSIA. In any event, the Union
adds, if there were any relationship to the calculation of WSIA benefits, it would
apply only to benefits under Article 41.2 because the parties stipulated net
benefits in Article 41.6 and chose not to do this for Article 41.3.
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Decision
[18] Having carefully considered the arguments of the parties, I have concluded that
the grievance must be allowed.
[19] Article 41.3 provides that:
Where an award is made under the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act to an
employee that is less than the regular salary of the employee and the award
applies for longer than the period set out in Article 41.2 and the employee has
accumulated credits, their regular salary may be paid and the difference between
the regular salary paid after the period set out in Article 41.2 and the
compensation awarded shall be converted to its equivalent time and deducted
from their accumulated credits.
Article 35.1 labels the provisions of Part 1B of the Collective Agreement, in which
Article 41.3 is found, “Employee Benefits for Full Time Regular Employees”. The
benefit provided by Article 41.3 might be described as the continuation of
payment of regular salary by topping up amounts that would have been paid as
WSIA benefits using the employee’s accumulated credits.
[20] The only issue before me is whether “regular salary” in Article 43.1 includes the
ATB increases and Special Adjustments provided under the Kaplan award. The
ATB increases are reflected in Article COR 17.1 of the Collective Agreement,
which reads as follows:
All salary rates to be increased across the board as follows:
January 1, 2018 – 1.5%
January 1, 2019 – 1%
July 1, 2019 – 1%
January 1, 2020 – 1%
July 1, 2020 – 1%
January 1, 2021 – 1%
July 1, 2021 – 1%
The salary rates in effect are contained in the Salary Schedule attached.
The Special Adjustments are reflected in Appendix COR 39, which provides that:
Special adjustments shall be as follows:
The following are special wage adjustments. These increases will be
applied to existing rates following any across the board increases, and a
special wage adjustment on the same date will be compounded on the
across the board increase…
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Appendix COR 39 then goes on to list in detail the Special Adjustments to be
made to the salary rates of different groups of employees.
[21] The Salary Schedule attached to the Collective Agreement and referenced in
Article COR 17 sets out salary rates applicable to each classification of employee
in the bargaining unit. Like that of most collective agreements, it provides that
employee salary rates will change by specific amounts at specific times over the
duration of the Agreement. In this context, the ordinary meaning of the “regular
salary” of an employee would be the salary rate associated at a given time with
the employee’s classification and position on the salary grid set out in the Salary
Schedule. On this ordinary meaning, since Article COR 17 and Appendix COR
39 increase rates in the Salary Schedule, those increases would also be
reflected in the regular salary of employees for the purposes of Article 41.3. The
parties’ evident intent is that salary rates will generally change over the course of
the Agreement in accordance with the Salary Schedule, Article COR 17 and
Appendix COR 39.
[22] I can see no basis in the Agreement’s express terms for departing from this
general intent by fixing indefinitely the value of an employee’s regular salary for
the purposes of Article 41.3, whether at the date of an award under the WSIA or
at any other point in time. There is no language in or applying to Article 41.3 that
does so, directly or indirectly. By contrast, where the parties have chosen to fix
or ascertain at a particular point in time the value of “gross salary” (in Article 42),
“weekly rate of pay” (in Articles 50 and 51) or “net earnings” (in Article 41.6) for
the purposes of calculating the value of a benefit, they have used specific
Agreement terms to do so. (See the Collective Agreement excerpts annexed to
this decision.) I also note that in Articles 42, 50 and 51 the parties have then
provided for adjustments to the fixed salary or rate of pay amount, indicating that
they turn their minds to the consequences of fixing such amounts for more than
brief periods. In this context, I do not think that the silence of Article 43.1 both
with respect to fixing “regular salary” at a point in time and with respect to
subsequent adjustments reflects an intent that it should stay the same indefinitely
for the purposes of determining payments under Article 43.1. Rather, it confirms
an intent that the term “regular salary” should carry its ordinary meaning,
discussed above.
[23] The Employer submits that Article 41.3 should be interpreted in light of the
approach to benefits adopted in the WSIA, under which benefits are calculated
as a percentage of salary at a particular point in time. However, as the Union
points out, the intent of the parties in Article 41.3 was to supplement WSIA
benefits, and the parties were free to do so as they saw fit. There is nothing
about supplementing WSIA benefits that requires that the method of benefit
determination used in the Act be mirrored in the Collective Agreement. In any
event, the Employer’s appeal to the WSIA context is somewhat selective. Unlike
WSIA benefits, which increase in line with a price index, the construction
proposed by the Employer would leave Article 41.3 benefits fixed for potentially
long periods of time, and thus exposed to erosion by inflation. On the whole, I
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find the context of the WSIA’s scheme for determining the value of benefits to be
of little assistance in understanding the meaning of the term “regular salary” in
Article 41.3.
[24] I therefore conclude that the term “regular salary” in Article 41.3 includes the
wage adjustments made by the ATB increases in Article COR 17.1 and the
Special Adjustments in Appendix COR 39.
Disposition
[25] The grievance is allowed. I remain seized with respect to the implementation of
this award.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 8th day of June, 2021.
“Kevin Banks”
______________________
Kevin Banks, Arbitrator
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Annex
Collective Agreement Excerpts
41.6
Effective January 1, 2016, salary payments under Article 41.2 shall be reduced to the
extent necessary to provide that an employee’s net earnings equals one hundred
percent (100%) of their net earnings prior to the commencement of their absence.
42.2.1
(a) Effective January 1, 1992 and until December 31, 2009, the L.T.I.P benefit is sixty-six
and two-thirds percent (66 2/3%) of an employee’s gross salary at the date of
disability, including any retroactive salary adjustment to which the employee is
entitled.
Effective January 1, 2010, the L.T.I.P. benefit is sixty-six and two thirds percent (66
2/3%) of the employee’s gross salary at the first date of eligibility to receive L.T.I.P.
benefits, including any retroactive salary adjustment to which the employee is
entitled.
[Article 42 then goes on to list a series of negotiated adjustments to the LTIP benefit.]
50.3.2
In respect of the period of pregnancy leave, payments made according to the
Supplementary Unemployment Benefit Plan will consist of the following:
(a) for the first two (2) weeks, payments equivalent to ninety-three percent (93%) of
the actual weekly rate of pay for their classification, which the employee was
receiving on the last day worked prior to the commencement of the pregnancy
leave, but which shall also include their progression on the wage grid and any
negotiated or amended wage rates for their classification as they are
implemented, and
(b) up to a maximum of fifteen (15) additional weeks, payments equivalent to the
difference between the sum of the weekly EI benefits the employee is eligible to
receive and any other earnings received by the employee, and ninety-three
percent (93%) of the actual weekly rate of pay for their classification, which they
were receiving on the last day worked prior to the commencement of the
pregnancy leave, but which shall also include their progression on the wage grid
and any negotiated or amended wage rates for their classification as they are
implemented.
51.5.2
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In respect of the period of parental leave, payments made according to the
Supplementary Unemployment Benefit Plan will consist of the following:
(a) where an employee elects to serve the two (2) week waiting period under the
Employment Insurance Act, (Canada) before receiving benefits under that Act,
for the first two (2) weeks, payments equivalent to ninety-three percent (93%) of
the actual weekly rate of pay for their classification, which they were receiving on
the last day worked prior to the commencement of the leave, which shall also
include their progression on the wage grid and any negotiated or amended wage
rates for their classification as they are implemented.
(b) up to a maximum of fifteen (15) additional weeks, payments equivalent to the
difference between the sum of the weekly EI benefits the employee is eligible to
receive and any other earnings received by the employee, and ninety-three
percent (93%) of the actual weekly rate of pay for their classification, which they
were receiving on the last day worked prior to the commencement of the leave,
which shall also include their progression on the wage grid and any negotiated or
amended wage rates for their classification as they are implemented.
[Emphases added]