HomeMy WebLinkAbout2020-1933.Jackson.22-01-27 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
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180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
GSB# 2020-1933
UNION# 2020-0623-0005
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Jackson) Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and
Forestry) Employer
BEFORE Dale Hewat Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Alex Zamfir
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Erika Montisano
Treasury Board Secretariat
Counsel
HEARING January 20, 2022 (by video conference)
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DECISION
[1] This case involves a grievance about whether certain duties performed by the
Grievor, after the end of his scheduled shifts during the 2020 active fire season
accrued compensating time off or overtime in accordance with Articles UN 8.7.1
and UN 8.75 of the Collective Agreement. Article 22.16 of the Collective
Agreement governs this proceeding. That article reads as follows:
22.16 MEDIATION/ARBITRATION PROCEDURE
22.16.1 Except for grievances concerning dismissal, sexual harassment,
and/or human rights, and Union grievances with corporate policy
implications, all grievances shall proceed through the GSB to a
single mediator/arbitrator for the purpose of resolving the
grievance in an expeditious and informal manner.
22.16.2 The mediator/arbitrator shall endeavour to assist the parties to
settle the grievance by mediation. If the parties are unable to
settle the grievance by mediation, the mediator/arbitrator shall
determine the grievance by arbitration. When determining the
grievance by arbitration, the mediator/arbitrator may limit the
nature and extent of the evidence and may impose such
conditions as he or she considers appropriate. The
mediator/arbitrator shall give a succinct decision within five (five)
days after completing proceedings unless the parties agree
otherwise.
22.16.7 Decisions reached through the mediation/arbitration process shall
have no precedential value unless the parties agree otherwise.
[2] The Grievor is employed in a Schedule 6 position, in the Classification of Resource
Technician, Senior 4, and holds the permanent position of Fire Response
Specialist. During the active fire season, the Grievor fulfills the function of the
Regional Duty Officer. His grievance was filed on October 8, 2020 and was
received by the Employer on October 26, 2020. The particulars of his grievance
challenge compensation classified as overtime pay instead of compensating time
off for a number of hours worked between August 3 and October 12, 2020. There
was no suggestion that it was the Grievor who caused the delay in the Employer
not receiving the grievance until October 26, 2020.
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[3] The Employer has raised two preliminary motions asking for the grievance to be
dismissed. The first motion is that the grievance does not meet the time-limits
under Article 22.2 of the Collective Agreement and that there are no reasonable
grounds that would cause me to exercise my discretion to extend the time-limits
under Section 48.16 of the Labour Relations Act. The Employer notes that a Group
grievance on the exact issue was filed on October 20, 2019 and was withdrawn on
August 25, 2020. From the Employer’s perspective the Grievor knew about the
issue in 2019, 14 months prior, and as a result this grievance should be dismissed
as untimely. The second motion is that the grievance is a Union grievance dealing
with an interpretation of the Collective Agreement and therefore cannot be brought
under the guise of an individual grievance, as the Grievor has done.
[4] The Union submits that the 2019 Group grievance should not be considered in
assessing delay. The Union argues that while the Grievor would have known in
August of 2019 about the Employer’s position that all work after a scheduled shift
is fire related, the alleged breaches of the Collective Agreement crystallized for
him on August 3, 2020, when he saw that his Manager had changed his time
sheets to reflect fire related work attracting overtime pay. While acknowledging
that the October 8, 2020, grievance was filed beyond the 30-day time limit under
Article 22.2 of the Collective Agreement, the Union maintains there are reasonable
grounds to extend the time-limits in this case. The Union also asserts that the
grievance is an individual grievance for which I retain jurisdiction. Alternatively, the
Union submits that the Employer, by only notifying the Union on January 14, 2022,
of this motion, has waived its right to raise the preliminary objection questioning
the type of grievance before me.
The Facts
[5] For the purpose of these motions, the Parties agreed that no testimony was
required and that the facts presented would form the basis of this decision.
[6] The interpretation of how hours worked after an individual’s scheduled shift , by
Schedule 6 Staff in the Eastern Ontario Fire Region, are classified was the subject
of a Memorandum of Agreement dated May 27, 2004, that set out a list of
circumstances where work would be considered “ fire related”. If work is
considered fire related, then overtime is paid. If work is not considered fire related
than compensating time off is given in lieu of additional hours worked.
[7] On August 19, 2019, an email was distributed by Management that confirmed staff
are not entitled to be paid for compensating time off for response role work beyond
a normal scheduled day during the fire season. Later that day, there were further
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emails from staff indicating that they disagreed with Management’s interpretation
of overtime earned. Management responded that response roles were fire related
and therefore compensated by overtime pay and that the Union was free to grieve
Management’s decision.
[8] On September 10, 2019, Len Sedore, the Union President, sent an email to the
Grievor and Lyle Lacarte advising them that he would be asking OPSEU head
office to look into the matter regarding compensation for hours worked beyond a
scheduled workday and would get back to them with the Union’s response and
asked them to share his email with others. On October 21, 2019, Mr. Sedore filed
a “Group Grievance” which read: “Overtime in the REOC statement: I am not
allowed to accrue compensating time while working in the REOC; management
feels all work in the REOC is considered “fire related”. Therefore, any and all
overtime accumulated while working in the REOC must be paid. I do not agree
with their interpretation. We should have the option for accruing comp time to be
taken off later or paid a future date. Settlement Desired: Ruling on how fire-related
and non-fire related over-time is recorded and to be made Whole”.
[9] The Group grievance was scheduled for arbitration on September 2, 2020. On
August 25, 2020, the Union notified the Employer that the grievance was being
withdrawn on a without prejudice basis, and the arbitration was cancelled.
[10] After that grievance was withdrawn the Grievor filed his grievance on October 8,
2020, which contains similar language to the Group grievance. In addition, his
grievance refers to the fact that he submitted time sheets for compensating time
off that had been approved by his direct Manager that were subsequently changed
by the business Manager to overtime pay for fire related work. The Grievor seeks
to have the time sheets reversed to reflect non-fire related work and to be made
whole.
[11] Prior to filing his grievance, the Grievor was asked by the Fire Operations Clerk to
review and approve time sheets for various pay periods starting July 27, 2020.
Between April and July 2020, approval had been given for non-fire related work
and the Grievor had received compensating time off. In each of the time sheets
post July 27, 2020, that were sent to the Grievor, time that he had entered as non-
fire related had been changed to fire related by his new Manager resulting in a
notation that the Grievor would be receiving overtime pay for his work. The Fire
Operations Clerk sent emails to the Grievor asking for his approval to submit his
timesheets on August 15, 25, 29, September 27 and October 19, 2020. The
Grievor advised the Fire Operations Clerk not to submit his timesheets and
responded to all of her emails by stating: “Please hold this timesheet until such
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time the grievance I submitted in the fall of 2019 regarding these Time Reporting
Codes changes has been settled.”
Decision
[12] Having considered the facts presented and all of Counsels’ submissions, I have
decided that the grievance filed on October 8, 2020 is an individual grievance. I do
not agree with the Employer’s motion that this grievance is untimely due to delay
stemming from August 2019. I am also prepared to extend the time-limits back to
August 3, 2020, for the October 8, 2020, grievance. Having made this decision, I
will not deal with the Union’s argument that the Employer waived its right to bring
the motion that this matter is a Union grievance.
[13] While the Grievor was aware of the October 2019 Group grievance and was
waiting for the matter to dealt with at arbitration, the particulars of his case show
that the alleged breaches, for which the Grievor is seeking a remedy, became
known in August 2020 when his time sheets were changed from non-fire related to
fire related. Up until that point, the facts submitted reveal that at least between
April and July 2020, the Grievor’s claims for non-fire related overtime had been
approved by his Manager as compensating time-off. These circumstances are
analogous to situations where an employer provides notification of how it intends
to proceed on a matter but does not act upon it. For example, in Unifor, Local 506
and Bell Canada, Re 2018 CarswellNat 5213, 137 C.L.A.S. 226, 296 L.A.C. (4th)
119, the arbitrator found that an announcement by the employer that union
representation would no longer be permitted for insurance claims matters was not
sufficient to start the clock ticking on when a grievance arose. Instead, the
arbitrator concluded that the Union does not need to anticipate a breach of the
collective agreement and it does not have to act before the employer acts.
[14] Alternatively, this grievance can be viewed as a continuing grievance, because
each of the alterations to the Grievor’s time sheets starting in August 2020 can be
seen as a series of separately identifiable breaches. Support for this conclusion is
drawn from Arbitrator Burkett’s decision, at paragraph 10, in Religious Hospitallers
of St. Joseph of Hotel Dieu of Kingston v. O.P.S.E.U., Local 452 1992 CarswellOnt
1251, 28 C.L.A.S. 215, 29 L.A.C. (4th) 326 where he notes that, in considering
what constitutes a continuing grievance, the question is whether or not the conduct
complained of gives rise to a series of identifiable breaches, each capable of
supporting its own cause of action. Furthermore, where a grievance is found to be
a continuing grievance the timing for filing runs from the latest breach. In this case,
each time the Grievor’s time sheets were changed, a fresh step was taken by
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Management giving rise to the Grievor’s belief that he was entitled to
compensating time off and not overtime pay.
[15] In determining that this grievance has been filed properly as an individual
grievance, I have considered the caselaw submitted by the Employer in OPSEU
(Taylor-Baptiste) and Ontario (Ministry of Correctional Services) GSB No. 1988-
0469, OPSEU(Haynes) and Ontario (Ministry of Correctional Services) GSB No.
1989-1246 and OPSEU (O’Flaherty) and Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety
and Correctional Services) GSB No. 2017-0441 et al. Based on the caselaw, it is
clear that an individual cannot bring a grievance on behalf of others in the
bargaining unit and that individual grievances give rise to individual recourse
limited in scope to the individual. In this case, while the determination of the
grievance on the merits may have a broader implication on the Collective
Agreement interpretation, it is clear on the face of the grievance that the Grievor is
specifically asking for a remedy that only applies to him . As noted in OPSEU
(O’Flaherty), supra, at page 21:
“The key to a proper individual grievance is that there must be a claim
that the grievor’s rights have been affected. Whether this infringement
of the right has resulted from some individual action taken against the
grievor specifically or by some general action taken by the employer is
not relevant as long as the result is that the grievor’s rights have been
affected.”
[16] In terms of the timeliness of the October 8, 2020, grievance, my understanding is
that there may be different time frames for determining which alleged breaches
should be included as part of the evidence in this case. There were not any facts
attributing responsibility to the Grievor for the grievance being received by the
Employer on October 26, 2020. Looking back to August 3, 2020, it is clear that the
grievance was not filed within the 30-day time limit required under Section 22.2 of
the Collective Agreement. In considering whether there are reasonable grounds for
extension and whether there is prejudice to the employer under Section 48.16 of
the Labour Relations Act, I have applied the usual factors considered by arbitrators
noted in Haynes OPSEU, supra, at paragraph 66, including the nature of the
grievance, whether the delay occurred in initially launching the grievance or at
some later stage, whether the grievor was responsible for the delay, and whether
the Employer could reasonably have assumed the grievance had been
abandoned.
[17] In this case, the length of the delay between August 3 and October 8, 2020, is not
so significant. Although the Grievor had sent emails asking that his timesheets not
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be submitted, he was under the impression that the Group grievance was going
forward. Based on the facts before me, it is reasonable to infer that once he found
out that the Group grievance had been withdrawn that he needed to submit a
grievance relating to his objection to the changes made to his timesheets. The
timesheets and particulars of what work the Grievor performed are documented
and occurred within a brief period before the grievance was filed, so it should not
be difficult for the Employer to adduce evidence regarding the Grievor’s
allegations. While the nature of the grievance is not as significant as other more
serious issues such as discipline or harassment, the allegations still deserve an
analysis of whether the work in dispute was fire related. As a result, I will extend
the time limit for filing this grievance and will hear evidence on the merits regarding
the timesheets submitted by the Grievor in this case dating back to August 3,
2020.
[18] The case will continue on the merits on February 2, 2022.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 27th day of January 2022.
“Dale Hewat”
__________________
Dale Hewat, Arbitrator