HomeMy WebLinkAbout2007-0298.Timperley.09-09-25 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#2007-0298, 2007-0471, 2007-0655, 2007-0656, 2007-0821, 2007-0822, 2007-1810, 2007-1811,
2007-2303, 2007-2304
UNION#2007-0108-0010, 2007-0108-0019, 2007-0108-0021, 2007-0108-0022, 2007-0108-0026,
2007-0108-0027, 2007-0108-0055, 2007-0108-0063, 2007-0108-0068, 2007-0108-0069
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Timperley et al )
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Barry Stephens
FOR THE UNION
Greg McVeigh
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Sean Milloy
Ministry of Community Safety and
Correctional Services
Staff Relations Officer
HEARING
February 18, 2009.
SUBMISSIONS
June 22, 2009.
- 2 -
Decision
[1]The parties have agreed to an Expedited Mediation-Arbitration Protocol. It is not
necessary to reproduce the entire Protocol here. Suffice it to say that the parties have
agreed to a ?True Mediation-Arbitration? process, wherein each provides the Vice-Chair
with submissions, which include the facts and authorities each relies upon. This decision
is issued in accordance with the Protocol and with Article 22.16 of the collective
agreement, and is without prejudice or precedent.
[2]The grievances in this case relate to the introduction of a Compressed Work Week
Agreement (CWWA) in Unit 10 effective February 20, 2007. The agreement was signed
by both parties, and it reads as follows:
Minute of Understanding
As a result of the collective work of the Scheduling Committee, the following local
agreement has been reached between
The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services
&
OPSEU Local 108
It is without prejudice and precedence and is subject to a ratification vote by the
membership of OPSEU Local 108 prior to April 1, 2007.
1. It is understood that the following attached schedules are established as
temporary until the completion of the aforementioned ratification vote.
2. By October 1, 2007, those people who wish to remain in Schedule ?E? of the
attached schedules must self identify or return to their original schedule.
3. The employer and the Union (OPSEU Local 108) will work cooperatively to
minimize the impact of vacation conflicts of the 2007 vacation draw.
4. Schedules A, B, C, E 8/20, Female Unit and Admit and Male Admit and Front
Door will remain filled except the RPM. It is understood that the Resource
Management Position schedule (RPM) is primarily utilized for backfill
purposes.
5. The employer and the Union (OPSEU Local 108) will undertake to review the
male admit schedule with the intention of improving this schedule.
- 3 -
6. Either party may, on written notice of 90 days to the other party, terminate this
agreement.
[3]The ratification vote mentioned in the agreement was held early in April 2007 but the
CWWA agreement was rejected. Subsequent votes were held, and the agreement was
eventually ratified in mid-July.
[4]The grievances claim that the employer breached the collective agreement by continuing
to use the rejected CWWA for Unit 10 between the initial rejection vote in April, and the
eventual approval of the CWWA in mid-July. The grievors claim that the employer is
required to pay overtime for the period in question for hours worked by employees in
Unit 10 beyond eight hours per day, which is stipulated by the collective agreement as the
normal daily hours of work. Further, the union asserts that, although all such hours were
worked by employees in Unit 10, the collective agreement requires an equal distribution
of overtime opportunities, and, as a result, compensation should be paid to all employees.
[5]The employer responds that the agreement reached by the parties contained a termination
notice provision in paragraph 6, and that, when the agreement was rejected, such notice
was required in order to terminate the temporary arrangements contemplated by the
collective agreement. The employer also points out that the grievances were filed by
employees who do not work in Unit 10, and that the union did not file a policy grievance
with respect to the alleged breach.
[6]After reviewing the submissions of the parties and the collective agreement, it is my
conclusion that the grievances should be dismissed.
- 4 -
[7]The grievances are based on the assumption that the February 20, 2007 agreement
required that the temporary CWW arrangements in Unit 10 were to be terminated
immediately upon the rejection of the agreement. Such an outcome is not stipulated in
the agreement, nor does it conform to common sense. There would be significant
inconvenience and disruption in forcing an abrupt change to the schedule, both for the
employer and the affected employees. Moreover, it does not seem likely, to say the least,
that the employer would have agreed to an arrangement whereby it would incur a
financial penalty, through the payment of overtime, in the event that the membership
decided to reject the agreement. Although the interim scheduling arrangement was
intended to be temporary, it is my view that the termination of the temporary arrangement
was intended to be subject to reasonable notice in order to permit a smooth and business-
like resumption of prior scheduling arrangements.
[8]There is no special notice period for the termination of the temporary arrangement. As a
result, I agree with the employer that the mechanism available to the union was to advise
the employer that the agreement was to be terminated on 90-days notice, as set out in
paragraph 6. It is not clear that the union served the employer with such a notice, and I
do not take the filing of individual grievances as an unambiguous statement on the part of
the union on the subject. Regardless, the CWWA was ratified prior to the expiry of the
90-day period.
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[9]Given all of the above, the grievances are dismissed.
th
day of September 2009.
Dated at Toronto this 25
Barry Stephens, Vice-Chair