HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-2477.Lake.21-07-05 Decision
Crown Employees Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB# 2018-2477
UNION# 2018-0584-0005
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Lake) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ontario Clean Water Agency) Employer
BEFORE Diane Gee Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Anjana Kashyap
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Julia Evans
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
SUBMISSIONS
HEARING
May 18, June 11 and 25, 2021
Hearing conducted in writing
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Decision
[1] This decision concerns an allegation that the Employer is in violation of Minutes of
Settlement (MOS) signed on April 23, 2019. The grievor alleges that the MOS was
violated in or around June 28 to July 8, 2019. The grievor retired in September 2020.
The wages lost by the grievor as a result of the Employer’s conduct that is alleged to
have been in violation of the MOS is $160.00. The grievor seeks $40,000.00 in
damages for failure to abide by the terms of the MOS.
[2] The parties each made fulsome written submissions inclusive of documents and
case law.
[3] The grievance that led to the MOS, filed on August 30, 2018, arose when the grievor
upgraded his Distribution and Supply Certificate to Level 3 which, pursuant to the
terms of Regulation 128/04 under the Safe Drinking Water Act, qualified him to
replace a Class IV Overall Responsibility Operator (ORO) within the subsystem when
such ORO was unavailable. According to the Union’s submissions, the grievance
was filed when the grievor requested that management assign him acting ORO and
received no response.
[4] The alleged violation hinges on the interpretation of paragraph 3 of the MOS. It
reads as follows:
3. The parties agree that the Grievor is eligible to be designated as the ORO
for the subsystem in which he works, under subsection 23(1), (4) and (6), and
may be contacted by the Employer when the designated Class IV [Overall
Responsibility] Operator within the subsystem is unavailable.
[5] After the MOS was signed, the designated Class IV ORO in the subsystem in which
the grievor worked was not available from June 28 to July 2, 2019, and the grievor
was not contacted. The assignment was given to a Class IV ORO working outside of
the subsystem. The Union asserts paragraph 3 of the MOS required the Employer to
contact the grievor and offer him the acting assignment. The Employer argues that
paragraph 3 is permissive, and it was not required to offer the assignment to the
grievor. The Employer states that its established practice is to offer the assignment
to Class IV OROs system-wide before contacting Class III OROs and it acted in
accordance with such practice. In reply, the Union disputes the Employer had an
established practice to offer the assignment to Class IV OROs before offering it to a
Class III ORO and states that, at the time the MOS was entered into, there was a
Class III ORO assigned for Lorne Park and no Class IV OROs had been contacted.
[6] In order to resolve the factual dispute between the parties it would be necessary to
set this matter down for hearing. I expect the matter would take at least two days in
order to complete the evidence and argument. In my view, however, the process for
resolving disputes should be proportionate to the interests at stake. In this case, the
grievor is now retired and, as such, my determination as to whether the MOS was
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violated will have no import or relevance to the grievor or the parties beyond the one
assignment that took place June 28 to July 8, 2019. The wages lost as a result of
the assignment that is alleged to have violated the MOS are not substantial; the
grievor suffered a loss of $160.00 at most. The $40,000.00 damage award sought
by the grievor is completely out of proportion to the allegation being advanced. Even
if I were to find the facts to be as stated by the Union, I would not order the Employer
to pay damages in excess of the grievor’s lost wages. There is simply no call for
such an award in this case. Thus, there is no continuing interest at stake in this
matter; it is a matter of lost wages amounting to $160.00. I do not believe that labour
relations would be served by putting the parties, their advisors and witnesses to the
expense of preparing for and attending a two-day hearing.
[7] Article 22.16 of the Collective Agreement indicates that the parties are interested in
quality adjudication that allows each party an opportunity to state their case but also
in a process that is timely, efficient and proportionate the interests at stake. Article
22.16.1 indicates that this matter is to be resolved “in an expeditious and informal
manner” and article 22.16.2 provides that the arbitrator can limit the nature and
extent of the evidence.
[8] Accordingly, I have determined that I will not direct that this matter be listed for
hearing to resolve the factual dispute between the parties. Rather, I will make my
determination, pursuant to Article 22.16, based on the submissions before me.
[9] Having regard to the content of all of the submissions, I find that the grievance arose
when the grievor, as a Class III ORO, wanted to be recognized as qualified to
replace the designated Class IV ORO in his own subsystem. The MOS recognizes
in paragraph 1 that the grievor is so qualified. In paragraph 2 the MOS provides that
the Employer will comply with the Safe Drinking Water Act when making
assignments. The Safe Drinking Water Act permits a Class III ORO to fill in for a
Class IV ORO. In paragraph 3, where it says, “the Parties agree that the Grievor is
eligible to be designated as the ORO for the subsystem in which he works” I take this
to mean that the parties agree that, as a Class III ORO, the grievor can legally fill in
for a Class IV ORO. The paragraph concludes with the agreement that the grievor
“may be contacted by the Employer when the designated Class IV Operator within
the subsystem is unavailable.” The word “may” is not always permissive. It can be
mandatory depending upon the context.
[10] The Union does not assert that the Grievor should have been the first person offered
the position. The Union takes no issue with the fact that the Employer first offered
the position to two Class IV OROs within the subsystem. The Union’s argument is
that the violation did not occur until it was offered to someone who was a Class IV
ORO in another subsystem. Thus, even according to the Union’s own interpretation
of the MOS, the Employer was not “required” to contact the Grievor. The Union
would have the words “where no Class IV ORO within the subsystem accepts the
assignment” inserted before “the grievor may be contacted.” I am not persuaded that
words that do not exist should be read into the MOS, or that words, such as “may,”
that have a commonly understood meaning, should be interpreted otherwise unless
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the context strongly suggests such is appropriate. I do not see such a context in this
case. Accordingly, I find that the word “may” should be interpreted as giving the
Employer the right, but not the obligation, to contact the grievor.
[11] For the reasons set out above, I find there to have been no violation of the MOS.
The matter is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 5th day of July 2021.
“Diane Gee”
________________________
Diane Gee, Arbitrator