HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-0791.Union.23-03-10 DecisionCrown 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# 2021-0791
UNION# 2021-0271-0001
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
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Adam Veenendaal
Morrison Watts
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Julia Evans
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Senior Counsel
HEARING February 24, 2023
- 2 -
Decision
[1] At the commencement of the hearing of the instant policy grievance dated 2021,
the employer moved that the grievance be dismissed on the grounds that the
facts relied upon by the union do not make out a prima facie case to support the
violations alleged. This decision deals with that motion.
[2] The alleged violations, and the facts the union relied on are set out in the
following document submitted by the union. The motion was argued on the basis
of the facts asserted therein.
1. The grievance form states, in part:
The Union asserts that the Employer, Ministry of the Attorney General, has
violated the collective agreement including but not limited to: Article 2
Management Rights (designation of headquarters), Article 11
Headquarters, Article 13 Kilometric Rates, Article 14 Travel Time, and UN
12 Meal Allowance, and further violating any other applicable policy or
legislation. The Ministry by disclosure notification is directing
OPSEU/SEFPO represented employees to report involuntarily, effective
May 31st, 2021 to at least three (3) different temporary work locations in
the City of Burlington. All of the captured employees are currently and at
all material times were designated by the employer to 491 Steeles Ave. E.
Milton, Ontario L9T 1Y7 as their designated and recognized headquarters.
The Employer is circumventing the collective agreement as a result.
2. With respect to remedy, the grievance form seeks that the Employer
appropriately compensate Employees for any incurred time, travel, or
related expenses associated with the temporary relocation to the City of
Burlington, full redress, full disclosure, and any other remedy deemed
appropriate by the Vice Chair/Arbitrator.
Union’s Particulars
3. In or around October 2020, suspected mould growth was discovered in
the courthouse located at 491 Steeles Avenue East in Milton, Ontario the
“Milton Courthouse”
4. A subsequent investigation ordered by the Employer concluded that
remediation work was required due to the health risks posed by mould
discovered in two secure vaults and associated ductwork.
5. On April 26, 2021, the Employer directed all Milton Courthouse staff and
stakeholders to vacate the premises for the duration of the remediation
work, effective May 31, 2021.
- 3 -
6. On May 21, 2021, Employer provided a revised date of June 14, 2021
by which employees would be required to vacate the Milton Courthouse.
7. Fourteen (14) OPSEU-represented employees of the Halton Crown
Attorney’s office, Criminal Law Division, were affected by the Employer’s
order to relocate: Phyllis Rismay, Nickisha Lee, Yohne Yogeswaran,
Anwuli Chinaka, Joan Patterson, Shea Thomas-Malcolm, Eva Anderson,
Dianne Cormier, Marisol Avalos, Ekta Sharma, Debra Paglia, Anand Shah,
Heather Roberts, and Asad Medjdov.
8. These employees were directed to work at the Burlington Convention
Centre and Courtyard Marriot hotel located at 1120 / 1110 Burloak Drive in
Burlington, Ontario (the “Alternate Work Site”).
9. The Alternate Work Site is located approximately 22 kilometres from the
Milton Courthouse, which is the designated headquarters of the affected
OPSEU employees.
10. The affected OPSEU employees were not compensated under Articles
13 or 14 of the collective agreement for the additional travel required to
work from the Alternate Work Site, nor did they receive a Meal Allowance
under Article 12.
11. The remediation work on the Milton Courthouse was scheduled to be
completed in September 2021.
12. On June 15, 2021, OPSEU Local 271 filed grievance # 2021-0271-
0001 in response to the Employer’s direction to work from the Alternate
Work Site.
13. The affected OPSEU employees worked from the Alternate Work Sites
from approximately July 22, 2021 to March 31, 2022.
[3] The legal principles that govern no prima facie motions are well established in
the Board’s jurisprudence. See, Re Martin et al, 2013-3579 (Anderson), 2015
CanLII 60449; Re Couture et al, 2008-3329 (Dissanayake), 2011 CanLII 100922.
In summary, the moving party must establish that the facts asserted in support of
the grievance, if accepted as true, are not capable of establishing the elements
necessary to substantiate the violation alleged, and that opinions, arguments, or
conclusions do not constitute assertions of facts for this purpose. Also for
purposes of these motions alleged facts that are “patently ridiculous or incapable
of proof”, are not accepted as true. Nash v. Ontario (1995). 27 O.R. (3d) 1
Ont.CA), cited in Re Martin (supra) at para. 5.
- 4 -
[4] Based on the facts asserted by the union, from May 2021 the Milton Court house,
where the employees regularly worked and was their headquarters, was shut
down due to a health and safety issue, and the employees were directed to work
temporarily at two locations in Burlington, a distance of 22 kilometres from the
Milton Court House. They worked in Burlington from July 22, 2021 to March 31,
2022, before returning to the court house, after the mould issue had been
remedied.
[5] The employer’s position was that the asserted facts, if accepted as true, cannot
support a violation of any of the provisions relied on by the union. Counsel
submitted that for the Board to find a violation of article 2, the management rights
clause, the union must establish that some substantive right of the employees
under one or more of the articles relied upon were denied or infringed. Counsel
addressed each of the provisions alleged to have been violated.
[6] Article 11. 1 reads:
This article applies to employees who do not attend at or work from any
permanent ministry facility in the course of their duties, but for whom a
permanent ministry facility or other place is designated as an employee’s
“headquarters” for the purposes of the provisions of this Central Collective
Agreement and of various allowances which require a headquarters to be
specified.
Counsel submitted that it is clear that this article applies only to employees who
do not work from any permanent ministry facility. There is also no assertion that
any other place was designated as their headquarters. Therefore, it does not
apply to these employees who worked at a permanent facility, the Milton Court
House. The claim under article 11, therefore, must fail.
[7] Article 13, 14 and UN 12
Counsel submitted that the kilometre rates under article 13, travel time under
article 14 and meal allowance under article UN 12 also do not apply. Article 11.4
provides that an employee’s headquarters may be changed if the employee is
assigned to a work location which is at least 40 kilometres by road from his or her
- 5 -
existing headquarters. The distance, from these employees’ existing
headquarters in Milton to Burlington where they worked temporarily was only 22
kilometers. Travel time under article 14, in any event is payable when an
employee uses his or her own vehicle to perform work. These employees did not
do that. Therefore, their headquarters did not change at all, and they were not
entitled to additional compensation under any of the provisions the union relies
on. Re OPSEU and the Ministry of Solicitor General and Correctional Services
1154/98, (Leighton) and Re Beaton 1392/88 (Samuels) were cited by the
employer.
Union Submissions
[8] The union’s primary position was that, although not documented, once the
employees were moved and commenced to work from Burlington, the Milton
Court House ceased to be their headquarters. The Burlington locations, the
Convention Center and the Marriott Hotel, became their designated headquarters
until they returned to work at the Milton Court House. Therefore, article 11.1
applied for that period.
[9] Union counsel submitted in the alternative, that the circumstances in this case
were unique, and therefore, the Board should follow the approach taken by the
Board in Re Nickel, 1539/97 (Watters).
[10] In Re Nickel, two employees grieved that by directing them to work at different
locations, the employer had changed their headquarters, and did so without
complying with article 11 of the collective agreement. Both parties agreed that
the grievors were not covered by article 11, since it applied only to employees
who do not work at a permanent ministry facility, and that the Ontario Clean
Water Agency where they worked was a permanent ministry facility. They
therefore agreed that their headquarter did not change.
[11] Vice-Chair Watters accepted the union’s submission that given that agreement,
“the real issue in this case was what, if any, benefits accrue to the grievors when
the employer directed them to report to a workplace other than their
headquarters.”
- 6 -
[12] The Board in Re Nickle received detailed evidence about the inconvenience and
additional expenses the grievors experienced as a result of not working at their
headquarters, having organized their lives expecting that they will be working in
Milton. Detailed evidence was also led by the union that the employer did not
consider the impact on the grievors, when it decided to change their work
location, and that the employer had other options which would have avoided the
adverse impact on the grievors, and in fact would have made the work more
efficient and less costly.
DECISION
[13] The fundamental issue is whether or not there was a change in the grievors’
headquarters, accepting the asserted facts as true. The union submits that the
Burlington locations became their designated headquarters under article 11.1
during the period they worked at the Burlington sites. I cannot agree. If the
union is correct, it would mean that anytime an employee who works at a
permanent Ministry facility as his/her headquarters is temporarily required to
work at some other location, that other location becomes his/her new designated
headquarters for the duration of that temporary period. This would trigger all of
the consequences that flow from a change of headquarters. That would be
completely inconsistent with the language of article 11, which clearly states that it
only applies to employees who do not work at a permanent ministry facility. The
grievors did work at a permanent ministry facility. Therefore, article 11 had no
application and the employer could not have violated article 11.
[14] In Re Nickel, unlike here, the parties had agreed that the grievors’ headquarters
was in Kingston, Ontario; that they worked at a permanent ministry facility; and
that their headquarters did not change when they were directed to work at other
locations on a rotational basis. At p. 31, the Board acknowledged that the
employer was entitled to reorganize staffing in that manner for business reasons
in the exercise of its management rights under article 2. However, it went on to
state that, “such exercise was subject to other applicable provisions of the
collective agreement, article 13, 14 and Appendix 3”, and that “such exercise
- 7 -
also demanded that the employer consider the impact of the grievors’
headquarters being located in Kingston”.
[15] In justifying its actions, the employer in Re Nickel led evidence through a Human
Resources Advisor, Ms. Anne Thornton, that in not extending the benefits
claimed by the grievors the employer had followed an unwritten practice to the
effect that travel time and meal allowances are payable only if the employee’s
new work location is more than 40 kilometers from his/her headquarters. At p.
26, the Board wrote:
I have not been persuaded that the grievors' claim for kilometers
and time can be determined on the basis of the Employer's "Forty (40)
Kilometer Rule", as described by Ms. Thornton. Firstly, I note that it is an
unwritten practice. During the course of the hearing, the Employer did not
seek to explain how or why it was developed, nor how such practice
meshed with other provisions found in the collective agreement. Equally
as significant, I note that it has been applied in an inconsistent fashion as
Mr. Nickel, himself, was permitted to travel to and from Odessa in the
period February to May, 1997 in a company vehicle and on company time.
The difficulty with the practice is that it forces an employee to shoulder all
of the extra mileage costs and travel time when the work location is moved
less than forty (40) kilometers away from headquarters at the Employer's
initiative. This result would seem inconsistent with the basic concept of
headquarters, as canvassed above, and creates a threshold for
entitlement under articles 13 and 14 which is not contained within the
articles themselves.
[16] The Board reviewed the evidence and ordered that the employer pay travel time
and meal allowances to the grievors, where those claims otherwise met the
requirements of the collective agreement. It was held that those benefits could
not be denied on the basis of an unwritten rule or practice the employer had
established.
[17] I find that the crux of Board’s decision was to the effect that the employer was not
entitled to establish a practice or a rule of its own establishing a distance
threshold as a condition for eligibility for benefits. Thus the Board noted that
such a threshold was not contained in the collective agreement in force at the
time.
- 8 -
[18] Vice-Chair Watters cited with approval, Re Mascatello. 762/83 (Brent), as the
authority with the closest resemblance to the evidence before it, and wrote: “It is
clear from a review of the award that in reaching the above decision the Board
considered that the employer had assumed an obligation to treat employees
fairly and equitably in the administration of travel expense claims”. The Board
reviewed the evidence of the inconvenience and adverse impact the employer’s
decision had on the grievors, and at p. 32 the noted the steps the employer could
have taken “without prejudicial effect on its operation”.
[19] It is clear from the awards in Re Mascatello, as well as Re Nickel, that the Board
ordered payment of travel time and meal allowances in those cases because the
Board determined that having unilaterally established an unwritten 40 kilometre
threshold which is not part of the collective agreement, the employer had a duty
to be fair and reasonable in applying it to individual employees.
[20] The circumstances before the Board in the instant matter is vastly different. The
40 kilometre threshold is no longer a mere practice. It is part of the collective
agreement, not an exercise of discretion. Article 11.4 provides that an
employee’s headquarters may be changed by the employer only where he/she is
assigned to work in a work location “at Least forty (40) kilometers by road form
his or her existing headquarters”. These employees did not meet that threshold
stipulated in the collective agreement. The basis for the decisions made in Re
Mascatello and Re Nickel no longer exists. Therefore it follows, that they are not
entitled to travel time pay under article 14 or meal allowance or travel expenses
under article UN 12, when travelling to work between their headquarters and
residence. Nor are they entitled to kilometre rates under article 13.1.
[21] For purposes of the motion the board accepts that the affected employees
experienced inconvenience and incurred additional expenses in managing their
personal/family affairs, during the period they were not working at Milton.
However, that does not provide the Board with jurisdiction to disregard the
provisions of the collective agreement on fairness and reasonableness grounds.
- 9 -
[22] Therefore, the Board must agree with the employer that the asserted facts
cannot support a violation of any of the provisions of the collective agreement.
[23] The employer’s motion is, therefore, upheld. The grievances are hereby
dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 10th day of March 2023.
“Nimal Dissanayake”
Nimal Dissanayake, Arbitrator