HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-3633.Union.22-10-26 Decision
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
Suite 600
180 Dundas St. West
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388
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# 2021-3633; 2021-4288
UNION# 2022-0999-0005; 2022-0999-0004
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Union) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Solicitor General) Employer
BEFORE Brian McLean Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION David Wright
Ryder Wright Holmes Bryden Nam LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING July 5, 2022
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Decision
[1] These are grievances in which the union claims pay for employees’ time spent
complying with the employer’s requirement of certain employees to take a rapid
antigen covid test (“test”) and record the results of the test in an employer supplied
phone application, prior to attending at work. The parties made argument based on
largely agreed facts. This award determines the merits of the grievances.
The Facts
[2] The COVID-19 pandemic, which commenced in earnest in or about March 2020,
had a profound impact on the provision of government services and the way in
which government employees performed their jobs. Of import to this case,
government services which were provided in congregate settings, such as
correctional institutions of all kinds and hospitals, were hard hit by the pandemic
with numerous employees and residents/inmates/patients becoming ill.
[3] Initially, the hope was that the effects of COVID-19 could be significantly mitigated
by vaccines and that was true for some time. However, in the Fall of 2021 the
Omicron variant of COVID-19 took hold; it appears that vaccines were much less
effective at preventing the transmission of this variant than with predecessor
variants. The government was concerned that this would have a renewed impact
on congregate settings. Since inmates and patients in congregate institutions
have a limited ability to protect themselves against becoming infected by the virus,
the government determined that further action was required in congregate settings
under its control, in addition to the various measures that were in place in Ontario
generally in January 2022.
[4] One of the measures the government took was to require that employees take
covid-19 tests on a regular basis. In January 2022 a new policy requiring the
taking of regular tests was decided on. In February 2022 affected institutions
advised employees of how the regular testing scheme would be implemented.
[5] Under the plan, the employer supplied test kits to employees who would then be
required to self-administer tests, often away from the workplace (generally at
home, but it could be anywhere). Instructions were provided on how to administer
the test. The test had to be taken 48 hours before the end of the employee’s next
scheduled shift. In other words, if an employee worked a 12-hour shift, the
employee had to administer the test 36 hours before the start of their shift.
However, within that 36-hour period the employee was free to choose when to
take the test and report the results.
[6] It is notable that all, or virtually all, of the employees who were subject to the
regular testing regime were twice vaccinated.
[7] Prior to attending at work, employees were required to report a negative test
result. They did this through an employer supplied mobile phone application
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(which I assume is also available in a PC form) called the Ontario Rapid Screening
Solution (the ORSS). Once the ORSS application is installed on the employee’s
phone (or PC) the employee must then register in the application through a
process of connecting with the OPS system and inputting passwords etc.
[8] The rapid tests involve a process which is familiar to many of us. Essentially, the
employee swabs their nose/mouth, swishes the swab around a tube of solution,
waits a few minutes, then drips the solution into a plastic test receptacle and then
waits for either one or two lines to show on the receptacle, which can take as long
as 15 minutes. In fact, the instructions were for employees to allow the tests
receptacle a 15-minute period to assess the sample to get the most accurate
result. In the materials provided to employees was a link to a video which
explained how to administer a test. The video showed the entire testing process
and was four minutes long but did not include the 15- minute waiting period or the
steps necessary to report results.
[9] After completing the test, the employee was then required to open the ORSS
application and completes the process of registering the test result. This need not
be done at the time the test was taken but must be completed before the
employee attends the workplace.
[10] The employee must follow several steps on the phone application to submit their
test to the employer. In the case of a corrections employee, for example, after the
employee opens the application, they must then:
1) Select “Correctional Services” from a drop-down menu
2) Click the “Home Screening” button
3) Click the worksite field and type the institutions address until it appears
as an auto complete
4) Select “OPS Supplied Test” from a drop box
5) Complete a screening survey. I understand that the employee must
answer a few of the typical questions related to symptoms.
6) Take a photo of the plastic test receptacle which shows one line or two
(negative or positive). Prior to doing this the employee must write the
date on the test receptacle.
7) Enter the test result from a drop box.
8) Upload the photo
9) Confirm the submission by reviewing the information and then clicking
“next”
10) After confirmation, the system sends an email to the employee’s email
account. The employee then forwards this email to the institution at
which they will be working.
[11] The union raised a number of issues with this process. This award does not deal
with issues, raised in the grievances, arising out of the allegation that the employer
may remove an employee from the workplace due to “glitches” in the rapid test
reporting. However, I remain seized with respect to those issues, and any other
issue raised in the grievances which are not specifically addressed in this decision,
if the parties are unable to resolve them.
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[12] The union also noted that some employees do not have access to high speed wifi
and, as a result, they have to pay for data usage on “pay as you go plans”. The
union seeks reimbursement of those employee incurred costs in these grievances.
[13] The union asserts that the process of testing and then submitting the test results
takes about one-half hour. The employer disagrees with the Union’s estimate and
notes that some of the time (especially waiting for the line(s) on the receptacle to
appear, which takes 15 minutes) is down time during which the employee is free to
do as they please. Neither party called evidence about how long the process
actually takes.
[14] In the absence of evidence, I assess the length of time it would take to take the
test based on the video, my own experience and the agreed description, set out
above, about the steps required to report results to the employer. I am satisfied
that the time it takes to actually administer the test from the point of opening the
test kit package to dropping the drops of liquid into the well on the test receptacle
is approximately three to four minutes, especially for an experienced test
administrator. The initial steps include taking the tube out of its packaging, putting
the contents of test liquid into the tube, removing the swab from its packaging,
swabbing the nostrils and throat, placing the swab into the testing liquid and
swishing it around in the required manner. All of those steps should take two
minutes. At that point the swab should be left in the testing liquid, after which a
nozzle is placed in the tube and a few drops are placed into the well of the testing
receptacle. That should take a further two minutes at most.
[15] The instructions to employees are then to wait 15 minutes for the results to show
on the test receptacle (one or two lines). The employee then has a choice. Their
first option is to, while waiting for the 15 minutes for the lines to appear, start the
process of submitting the test result by opening the application and completing the
initial steps, up to taking a picture of the test receptacle. After waiting the required
15 minutes the employee can then download the picture of the test receptacle,
submit it and then forward the system’s confirmation email, to their institution.
Choosing that option would mean that the entire process would take 20-25
minutes.
[16] The employee’s second option would be, after placing the drops in the test
receptacle, to go about their daily activities and return to the test after 15 minutes.
At that point the employee could then engage the reporting process. In my view,
this option would take about ten minutes of testing/reporting time. I recognize that
there is some disruption to home life in that period but in the 15 minutes it would
be possible for the employee to do something like get ready for bed, make
breakfast etc.
Is the Rapid Test Process “Work” for Which the Employee Should be Paid?
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[17] The union argues that both the testing process and the reporting of the results are
work which attracts the right to compensation. The rapid test and the reporting of
the test results are activities the employer requires the employees do on their own
time. The employee often cannot do it on work time because they are not
permitted to attend work until they have submitted a negative test through the
application. Corrections employees are not supposed to have cell phones in the
secure area of an institution. Moreover, the rapid tests are an intrusive,
sometimes painful procedure; the employer is forcing employees to undergo an
uncomfortable procedure on their own time. This interferes with an employee’s
right to enjoy their time off from work.
[18] The employer argues that the rapid testing and the reporting are not work but are
processes which an employee must go through to be ready to attend work in much
the same way as getting dressed in a work uniform is. The employer notes that,
for example, correctional officers must shave for work in such a way, so as to
permit a tight seal on a firefighting mask. Nobody would ever suggest that getting
dressed in a uniform or shaving in order to bring oneself in compliance with work
requirements is to be compensated. As for the idea that shaving is not
compensable because it takes such a little amount of time, the employer notes that
if an employee goes on vacation and grows a beard, the time taken to shave prior
to work on the first day back is not so little.
In Ontario Power Generation and Power Workers Union (Murray), a case relied on
by the employer, the Arbitrator held in discussing a similar union claim:
With respect to self-administered rapid antigen testing, there are benefits to having
this performed by employees on their own time. The employer will know before the
employee reports to work if there is a positive test result. This fact favours self-
administered testing because a positive result can lead to immediate employer
action to isolate the employee prior to entry into the workplace. It is also more
efficient. The time involved in rapid antigen testing process is minimal. Results can
be obtained in 15 minutes by employees who are not in the workplace. In contrast it
takes approximately 30 to 45 minutes on average for an employee to leave their
post, take the test, and return. Additionally, to compensate employees for the time
involved in self-administered tests (outside the workplace) may act as a disincentive
for such employees to get vaccinated. This would not be consistent with OPG’s
rational objective to have as many employees vaccinated as is possible.
In sum, the legitimate interests of both parties are balanced by granting the PWU an
order that the tests for the unvaccinated shall be paid for by the employer and by
refusing an order that OPG compensate employees for the time spent outside
normal working hours in self-administering the rapid antigen test.
[19] Similarly, Arbitrator Stout in Hydro One. Inc. and Power Workers’ Union (Re.:
Grievance No: : HO-P-136) unreported dated November 22, 2021 stated with
respect to this issue:
I. Testing Costs
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[6] I find that the award of Arbitrator Murray in Ontario Power Generation
and Power Workers Union (OPG-P-185) dated November 12, 2021,
provides guidance and is eminently reasonable. There are some
individual considerations that must be taken into consideration based
on Hydro One’s operations. Therefore, I order as follows:
• Employees who have not confirmed that they are fully vaccinated are
required to self-administer the rapid antigen test, and the cost of
providing such tests is to be borne by Hydro One. This order is
without prejudice to Hydro One being able to bring this issue back
before me on 30-days’ notice.
• Employees are required to self-administer rapid antigen tests on their
own time, prior to reporting to work, and are not entitled to
compensation for the time spent in the administration of the test or in
the reporting of the results Hydro One will consider reasonable
compensation, on a case by case basis, for those granted a medical
or religious exemption for administering the rapid antigen tests. In
addition, Hydro One will consider reasonable compensation, on a
base-by-case basis, for those employees who are required to travel to
obtain a PCR test. Any individual situation where the parties cannot
agree on the reasonableness of how Hydro One has treated an
individual employee may be brought before me at the monthly
arbitration hearing.
[20] The employer also relies on Finning (Canada), a division of Finning International
Inc. and IAM Vancouver Lodge (Southern), 2022 CanLII 25773 (BC LA) [2022].
That case involved a grievance challenging as unreasonable, the employer’s covid
policy, including whether the requirement that unvaccinated employees take the
test on their own time without pay. After finding that mandatory covid testing was
a required safety item and it was not reasonable to require employees to bear the
costs of providing the tests, the arbitrator discussed whether it was reasonable to
require employees to take the test on their own time without compensation:
57. However, I do not agree with the Union that the Employer must pay for the
time it takes the employee to take the test as “time worked.” Although there is
reference to the Rapid Test taking 40 to 60 minutes, it was clarified that refers to
the time it takes the service provider to administer the Rapid Test, and the
employee is not actively engaged in that process for most of that time. With
respect to “time,” I find the time required of the employee to take the test is de
minimus. They are able to take the test in the comfort and privacy of their home. I
do not find it unreasonable, in all the circumstances, including factoring in that this
is a choice they are making when another choice (being vaccinated and disclosing
that) is also available them. I find that the time required of the employee for taking
a Rapid Test is not significant enough to be considered a demand on an
employee’s personal time that would warrant compensation.
[21] A similar result was reached in Algoma Steel Inc. v USW, Local 2724, 2022 CanLII
22896 (ON LA) (Kaplan) and Unifor Local 973 v. Coca-Cola Canada Bottling
Limited, 2022 CanLII 20322 (ON LA) (Wright) where policies requiring that
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employees conduct rapid testing on their own time without compensation were
found to be reasonable.
[22] The union relies on cases which have determined that an employer requirement to
perform tasks outside of normal working hours constitutes a requirement to work.
In Insurance Corp. of British Columbia v. O.P.E.I.U., Local 378 2002 CarswellBC
3320, [2002] B.C.C.A.A.A. No. 109, 106 L.A.C. (4th) 97, 68 C.L.A.S. (Hall) the
arbitrator determined a grievance regarding the employer’s requirement for
employees to complete, as part of training, a written assignment at home. The
arbitrator referred to a number of well-established authorities in determining that
the written assignments constituted work:
27 The authorities advanced by the Union present an obstacle to relying on
evidence of past practice. Arbitrators have generally accepted the proposition
that, where an employer makes a claim on an employee’s time, the employee is
entitled to compensation in the absence of some specific collective agreement
provision to the contrary: Allied Chemical Canada Ltd. v. U.A.W., Local 89
(1973), 3 L.A.C. (2d) 267 (Ont. Arb.) (O’Shea).
29 The Dominion Stores case and numerous other authorities were reviewed in
Steinberg Inc. v. U.F.C.W., Local 486 (1985), 20 L.A.C. (3d) 289 (Ont. Arb.)
(Foisy). The arbitrator summarized his view of the jurisprudence:
...”time worked” depending on the circumstances may include activities
other than those included in an employee’s job description and those
which he usually performs every day. ... Unless very specific language is
found in a collective agreement, the preferred interpretation is one which
will offer the parties the flexibility to meet with the factual situations as
they arise. ... (p. 296)
30 Another training case is British Columbia Government v. B.C.N.U. (April 5,
1993), Doc. A-109/93 (B.C. Arb.), unreported (Kinzie). The grievor had been
required to take a first aid course and submitted a claim for time spent at the
course and on home study. A clause in the collective agreement entitled
employees to leave “without loss of basic pay” for courses taken at the
employer’s request. The employer paid the grievor for the hours of classroom
study during the day, but refused to pay for time spent on home study in the
evening. The union claimed overtime compensation. Arbitrator Kinzie held
Dominion Stores and Steinberg Inc. stand for the following proposition:
... if an employer requires an employee to take a training course or
engage in a similar activity, even if it is outside regular working hours, the
time put in by the employee is work for which he is entitled to be
compensated at the “appropriate rate” under the collective agreement.
(QL p. 6; emphasis added)
31 On the facts, Arbitrator Kinzie found the first aid course conflicted with the
collective agreement clause entitling the grievor to leave “without loss of basic
pay”. The course required home study outside the grievor’s regular hours, while
the clause did not contemplate her having to perform such work. Arbitrator Kinzie
believed he did not have jurisdiction to award the requested remedy of overtime
pay because that would have conflicted with the collective agreement. The
Labour Relations Board held otherwise on review, and set aside that aspect of
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the award: see British Columbia Government v. B.C.N.U. (October 21, 1993),
Doc. B344/93.C. Arb.)
32 Thus, as the Union argues, arbitrators have given a flexible interpretation to
the types of activities which constitute “work” under a collective agreement.
Generally speaking, where an employer makes a claim on an employee’s
time, the employee is entitled to compensation. Such claims on an
employee’s time include training and similar activities taken at the
employer’s direction outside of normal working hours. In the absence of a
specific provision to the contrary, the employee is entitled to compensation
at “the appropriate rate”. (Emphasis added)
[23] The union also relies on cases that came to a similar conclusion in different circumstances
for essentially identical reasons. In Oxford (County) v. C.U.P.E., Local Sub-Unit 1146,
2003 CarswellOnt 9592, [2003] O.L.A.A. No. 368, 117 L.A.C. (4th) 215, 73 C.L.A.S. 315
(Devlin) the arbitrator held that travel time to attend a mandatory computer course outside
of the workplace was work. In Health Sciences Assn. of Alberta and Alberta Health, 2022
Carswell Alta 233 (Abells) the arbitrator found that attendance at layoff meetings held
outside normal working hours was compensable working time.
Decision on Compensation Issue
[24] The applicable test for determining whether a required activity constitutes work is
set out in the cases referred to by the union which are cited above: “Generally
speaking, where an employer makes a claim on an employee’s time, the employee
is entitled to compensation”. There is no question that the employer has made
such a claim on the employees’ time in these circumstances where the employer
insists that an employee must self-administer a medical test and fill out an
electronic form within a specified timeframe and there is often no practical way for
that test to be completed during working hours.
[25] While the employer’s cases are, in a sense, “on point”, in that they find
compensation not owing for covid testing, they are distinguishable by the fact that
in each case the requirement to rapid test involved employees who had chosen
not to be fully vaccinated. In other words, those cases all involve circumstances
where employees had a choice of whether to vaccinate or to test. If the employee
became fully vaccinated, then there was no requirement to spend personal time
engaged in regular covid testing. The employees therefore had a choice, and it
was reasonable for the employers not to have to pay for the time associated with
that choice. Indeed, in the Finning and Ontario Power Generation cases there was
specific reference to the idea that the employee’s choice to take the tests, rather
than get vaccinated meant that the employer was not responsible for paying for the
time spent because of that choice. For example, in Finning the arbitrator stated: “I
do not find it unreasonable, in all the circumstances, including factoring in that
this is a choice they are making when another choice (being vaccinated and
disclosing that) is also available to them”. On the facts before me, there is no such
choice; the employees are vaccinated, and they must do regular testing.
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[26] I observe that two of the cases relied on by the employer actually provide support
for the idea that a requirement to take a covid test is work. In this regard, in the
Finning case the arbitrator found that “the time required of the employee to take
the test is de minimus”. In other words, the arbitrator did not find that taking the
test was not “work” but only that the time doing the test was of insufficient duration
to attract compensation. In Arbitrator Stout’s Hydro One award he directed the
employer to “consider reasonable compensation, on a case-by-case basis, for
those granted a medical or religious exemption for administering the rapid antigen
tests.” This suggests that part of the underlying rationale for denying pay for the
tests for regular unvaccinated employees was in recognition that, in contrast to
non-exempt employees, medically/religiously exempt employees had not made a
choice and could therefore be compensated for the time spent administering the
test. Employees who did not make a choice, such as those medically exempt from
vaccination, were possibly entitled to be paid reasonable compensation for the
time spent taking tests.
[27] In addition, the cases relied on by the employer are further distinguishable by the
fact that, it appears, there was not the sort of reporting requirement that exists on
the facts before me. It is obvious that the employer had many alternatives when it
came to employees reporting the results of the tests. It could have simply trusted
employees without any reporting at all. It could have had the employee send an
email to their supervisor to certify that they tested negative, and they had no
symptoms. It could have had the employee show up at work with a photo of the
test strip and present that photo to their supervisor.
[28] Instead, the employer chose a reporting system that was quite detailed and,
perhaps, cumbersome. The ORSS application requires some amount of data
entry. While the time necessary for completing the report will be less over time as
the employees become more efficient, at using it, there is a limit to how fast the
reporting can be completed, likely about two to five minutes. This, added to the
time for taking the test is not insignificant, and must be accomplished three times
per week. I do not mean to criticize the employer’s choice of reporting
mechanism. One can imagine all sorts of good reasons the employer chose the
application it did. However, the effect of that choice was to impose a burden on
employees during off work time.
[29] Moreover, the time involved here is not de minimus. I agree that there are
circumstances where working in off work hours is de minimus and does not attract
compensation. For example, if an employee randomly met her manager in the
supermarket and the manager asked, “how is that report coming along?” and the
employee answered: “almost done” that is almost certainly de minimus. However,
in my view whether work is de minimus has both a time and a frequency
component. Here the time is, perhaps, not so significant (10 minutes if the
employee does the test and reporting in the most efficient way possible).
However, the requirement to do that work was not a one off; it was a regular
obligation two to three times a week. Had the employer asked employees to
respond to emails for 10 minutes (at a minimum) on their off-work time three times
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per week, there could be no serious argument that was not enough to attract
compensation.
[30] Moreover, there are two differences between testing/reporting and shaving/getting
dressed. The first is that shaving and getting dressed, like the time spent traveling
to get to work, have never been considered “work”. Testing/reporting are a new
requirement for employees and, in my view, must be considered on their own
merits. The second difference is that shaving and getting dressed are nothing like
any work performed by government employees. On the other hand, filling out
forms or similar paper work is a routine part of many government employees
including employees who work in corrections.
[31] Finally, as for the employer’s not shaving while on vacation analogy, that again
involves an employee choice; had the employee chosen to shave while on
vacation they would not have to engage in a lengthy shaving process on their first
day of work following vacation.
[32] I appreciate and am sympathetic to the fact that the employer is trying its best to
deal with the pandemic and that it implemented these measures for the benefit of
persons living in congregate settings and its employees. However, the fact that
there was/is a health crisis does not alter the definition of work or negate collective
agreement rights (except where specifically mandated by legislation).
[33] For these reasons, I find that what was required of the employees is work and
attracts compensation. Although there was not agreement on the amount of time it
took for employees to complete the test and submit results, I find that the total
disruption to the employees’ day amounts to approximately 10 to 15 minutes if
done efficiently.
Is this a “Call Back” for which Call Back Pay is due?
[34] Having found that the testing and reporting constitutes work, I must determine
whether employees are entitled to Call Back pay under the collective agreement.
The Union claims that the testing and reporting constitutes a “call back” within the
meaning of Article COR9 of their collective agreement. If it does, employees are
entitled to be paid 4.5 hours pay at overtime rates each time they test/report on
non-work hours. The relevant articles state:
ARTICLE COR9 - CALL BACK
(RPT)
COR9.1 An employee who leaves their place of work and is subsequently called back to
work prior to the starting time of their next scheduled shift shall be paid a minimum of four
(4) hours’ pay at one and one-half (1½) times their basic hourly rate.
COR9.2 Where an employee is contacted by the Employer outside the workplace prior to
the starting time of their next scheduled shift, in circumstances where such contact is
considered to be a “call back to work” but the employee is not required to physically attend
at the workplace, the employee shall be paid a minimum of four (4) hours’ of pay at one
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and one-half (1½) times their basic hourly rate. The initial call and any subsequent calls
during that same four hour period, will be treated as a single “call back to work” for pay
purposes.
[35] In asserting that these Articles apply to the testing/reporting requirement, the union
relies on the purposes of such “call back” provisions and argues that, despite the
words “call back”, employees are not required to physically re-attend at the
workplace to earn call back pay. In Markham Stouffville Hospital v. C.U.P.E.,
Local 3651, 2007 CarswellOnt 8024, 167 L.A.C. (4th) 425, 91 C.L.A.S. 334 the
board of arbitration was faced with a claim for call back pay from mechanics who
were called at home in order to resolve technical issues with equipment. The
clause at issue was a “reporting pay” provision and stated:
15.05 — Reporting Pay
Employees who report for any scheduled shift will be guaranteed at least four (4)
hours of work, or if no work is available will be paid at least four (4) hours except
where work is not available due to conditions beyond the control of the Hospital.
The reporting allowance outlined as herein shall not apply whenever an
employee has received prior notice not to report for work. Part-time employees
scheduled to work less than seven and one-half (7 1/2) hours per day will receive
a pro-rated amount of reporting pay
[36] The arbitration board found that reporting pay was earned and stated:
22 We see from this that the key difference between the overtime and the call-
back provisions is the guarantee of four hours pay for the call-back work. Why is
there the guarantee? The rationale for having a call-back premium has been
explained as compensation for the significant disruption of being required to work
during one’s off hours, and to discourage employers from making unnecessary
and too frequent use of its employees when they are not scheduled to work.
23 The approach, originated in Webster Manufacturing, which included reference
to the disruption of leaving home and physically coming into work, has been
steadily modified in subsequent arbitral jurisprudence. As stated in O.P.S.E.U. v.
Northeast Mental Health Centre,[2004] O.L.A.A. No. 673 (Ont. Arb.) (Whitaker),
the approach has come to centre on compensation for the disruption of one’s
personal life:
49 Most of the authorities provided to us by the parties dispose of this
issue on the basis of an analysis of the purpose of call back pay with little
reference to the wording of the specific collective agreement provisions
that are being construed. In considering these as a whole, one must
conclude that there has been a steady march away from the early
Webster Manufacturing (London) Ltd. analysis. The vast majority of
arbitrators now understand the general purpose behind call back to be
compensation for disruption to one’s personal life and nothing more.
24. The board of arbitration in University of Alberta, above, distinguished the
circumstances when arbitrators have treated call-back as requiring physical
attendance at the employer’s premises and when they have treated call-back as
applying whenever an employee is performing the employer’s work outside of
their regular working hours. If the language provides, as stated in University of
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Alberta, that “it is the act of returning to duty that matters, not the physical
location of where the duty is performed”, then call-back is payable even if the
work is done at the employee’s home.
25 University of Alberta is instructive in its discussion of the relevant provision in
that case:
In the current case, the relevant provision of the collective agreement is
art. 9.04(a). It contains three sentences. The first sentence specifies that
entitlement to three hours of call-back pay occurs “[f]or each occasion
that an Employee is called back to duty during the Employee’s on-call
period”. It contains no reference to physical location. If this was sole
sentence in art. 9.04(a), the Board would have little difficulty concluding
that physically returning to the hospital was not a requirement for call-
back pay — simply being called back to duty, which telephone
consultation entails, would be sufficient to substantiate a call-back claim.
26 We find this case instructive because our case is much like what was
contained in the first sentence there: “an employee is called back to duty”. This
phrase is a lot like our “called back to work”. In University of Alberta, different
from our case, the provision had two further sentences which led the board of
arbitration to conclude that the call-back was qualified by the requirement to
attend at the employer’s premises. Those sentences contained the words, leave”
and “leaving”, which made sense only if the employee were actually returning to
the workplace. From the addition of these sentences, the board concluded that
the call-back provision was not invoked by the work done off site. In our case
there is no such qualifying language.
27 This approach can be found also in the Northeast Mental Health Centre
decision:
50 There is no doubt that the primary task before this or any board of
arbitration is to interpret the particular provisions of this collective
agreement as they apply to the facts put before us. Certainly, we must do
this in the context of an understanding as to the commonly accepted
underlying purposes behind call back pay. Having reviewed the
authorities, we find that in the absence of language which indicates
something else, call back entitlement should turn on whether an
employee is obliged to perform “work” for the employer where she would
otherwise be entitled to private pursuits. In the absence of language in the
collective agreement that would require attendance at work, call back pay
should be understood as compensation for the disruption to one’s own
time and nothing else. ...
28 The question then is whether there is language in the collective agreement
which indicates that the call-back entitlement requires the conclusion that it is
payable only upon physically returning to the workplace to perform the work as,
on the language, was the case in Northeast Mental Health Centre.
29 As in Manitoba, and Greater Vancouver (Regional District), above, and in
Queen’s Park Hospital v. B.C.N.U., [1996] B.C.C.A.A.A. No. 337 (B.C. Arb.)
(Larson), the call-back provision in Article 15.06 is based in time, not place. The
notion described in the provision does not expressly require physical recall to the
workplace to perform work there. Rather, it concerns the time period during which
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the recall to work occurs. If during the period between the employee’s regular
shifts they are required to work, they are then treated as being recalled to work,
or called back, and so are entitled to the premium described in Article 15.06.
30 Here the reference is to employees being “called back to work” (Article 15.06),
and “called into work” (Article 15.07). This can mean being physically called back
and into the work location, but, we find, it includes being called back temporally,
being required to get back “into work”, to resume work for the Employer. The
notion of being called back to work, to do one’s job for the Employer, can mean
having to do it at home as much as at the usual workplace. Its purpose is to
compensate the employee for the intrusion into their private repose.
31 In light of the above, as Union counsel argues, if the call-back provision does
not contain clear reference to the physical premises of the Employer’s workplace,
then the call-back can be either temporal or physical: time spent away from the
Employer’s premises in response to a call to perform work, as in this case, or
actually working at the Employer’s premises.
32 We are fortified in this view by Article 15.05 — Reporting Pay. The explicit
reference to reporting pay and to reporting for any scheduled shift in this
provision suggests that if the parties had wanted Article 15.06 to be restricted to
occasions of return to the workplace, then the words, reporting for duty, or
reporting to work, could easily have been included.
Decision
[37] The determination of whether an employee is entitled to “Call Back” pay under
Article COR9 must be made primarily on the language of the Articles. In addition,
the types of issues raised in these grievances have been the subject of
considerable jurisprudence over many years. While that jurisprudence is probably
not so clear as the cases cited by the union might suggest, I assume, without
finding, that the issue before me is whether, to quote the Markham Stouffville
Hospital award: “whether there is language in the collective agreement which
indicates that the call-back entitlement requires the conclusion that it is payable
only upon physically returning to the workplace to perform the work…”.
[38] Article COR9.1 provides for call back pay for an employee who “leaves their place
of work and is subsequently called back to work prior to the starting time of their
next scheduled shift”. Despite what it appears on the face of the provision, there is
no doubt that this is the kind of provision which, standing alone, arbitrators have
routinely found do not require the employee to physically return to the workplace in
order to be entitled to call back pay. In other words, if the employee is called on
non-working time at home and is told to do some work at home, generally
speaking, that employee will be entitled to call back pay. I agree with that
interpretation as a general proposition. The question is whether there is language
in the collective agreement before me which indicates that the entitlement to call
back pay only arises on a physical return to the workplace.
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[39] There is no such language in Article COR9.1. However, in these collective
agreements there are two Call Back provisions. The second provision, Article
COR9.2 applies when “an employee is contacted by the Employer outside the
workplace prior to the starting time of their next scheduled shift, in circumstances
where such contact is considered to be a “call back to work” but the employee is
not required to physically attend at the workplace, …The initial call and any
subsequent calls during that same four hour period, will be treated as a single “call
back to work” for pay purposes”.
[40] Article COR9.2 deals with circumstances which constitute a call back where the
employee “is not required to physically attend at the workplace”. This strongly
suggests that Article COR9.1 deals with circumstances where the employee is
required to physically attend the workplace. Were it otherwise, then both Articles
would apply to a circumstance where an employee was required to work at home
in between shifts. That would be an absurd result and I ought not to interpret the
collective agreement in a way that creates an absurd result, particularly when a
non-absurd interpretation result is clearly available.
[41] Accordingly, I am satisfied that Article COR9.1 only applies when an employee is
required to physically attend the workplace. That is not the circumstance before
me. That leaves the question of whether Article COR9.2 applies. In my view it
does not. I come to that conclusion because Article COR9.2 requires employer
contact as a triggering event. That conclusion is made clear by the phrase “Where
an employee is contacted by the employer outside the workplace” and reinforced
by the fact that “the initial call and any subsequent calls during that same four-hour
period, will be treated as a single “call back to work” for pay purposes. The clause
is meant to apply when the employer contacts the employee in between shifts to
do work.
[42] That is not what occurred here. Here the testing and reporting requirements were
much more akin to scheduled work, rather than call back work. While there was
no set time at which testing and reporting had to be done, they had to be
completed in a 36-hour window. Moreover, to the extent that call back pay is
meant to compensate for an intrusion into an employee’s personal life, that
intrusion is minimized by the ability of the employee to control when within the 36-
hour window to test/report.
[43] For all these reasons, I find that the testing/reporting does not attract call back pay.
The Claim for Data Reimbursement Costs
[44] The union’s claim for reimbursement of “pay as you go” data costs is based on the
simple proposition that since the employer forced the employee to incur those
costs in order to submit their test results, the employer is responsible for paying for
them. I agree with that proposition and this testing and reporting policy is
unreasonable to the extent that it financially punishes employees for fulfilling the
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employer’s reporting requirement. In my view, therefore, this claim must be
allowed in principle.
[45] However, I anticipate that such claims will be owing in very limited circumstances.
Free wifi is ubiquitous in the province. It is available at any Tim Hortons or
McDonalds restaurants, to identify two notable examples. It is also possible for
employees to tether their cell phone (or computer) to someone else’s phone who
may have a data plan; the amount of data under discussion here is surely minimal.
In my view, therefore, compensation will be owing to employees who had to pay
for data in order to complete their test reporting and for whom there was no
reasonable way to report using free wifi. The maximum owing will be no more
than the smallest data plan that does not involve entering a contract for data.
***
[46] For the foregoing reasons the grievances are allowed. As noted, I remain seized
of various issues not determined by this decision including the determination of
any damages owing.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 26th day of October 2022.
“Brian McLean”
____________________
Brian McLean, Arbitrator