HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-0654.Huitema.11-02-02 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance
UqJOHPHQWGHVJULHIV
Settlement Board
GHVHPSOR\pVGHOD
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 7pO
Fax (416) 326-1396 7pOpF
GSB#2008-0654, 2008-3116, 2008-3510
UNION#2008-0221-0005, 2008-0221-0022, 2009-0221-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Huitema)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Government Services)
Employer
BEFOREBarry Stephens Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONMichael Fenrick
Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYERCathy Phan
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING
September 27, 2010.
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Decision
3?
This case deals with three different grievances.
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Union Submissions
2?
The grievor challenges the practice of providing printouts from the Polaris system, which
include the name of the employee who has worked on the file.
1?
Polaris is a computer system used to store and access records related to the certification
of title to property. The employees in the office where the grievor works are responsible for
accessing the Polaris system in order to enter and verify the accuracy of the information. The
grievor has been using the Polaris system since approximately 1999 or 2000. During that time
she has accessed the system through an account that, she alleges, is identified with her name. As
a result of this, when abstracts are printed for customers, her name is printed on the abstract,
which is, the grievance states, a breach of management rights.
0?
The grievor testified that she did not file a grievance about the issue until after a
convention she attended in 2008, where she spoke to another employee from a different registry
office and was told that the employees in the other office accessed the Polaris system through a
³JHQHUDODFFRXQW´DQGWKHLUQDPHVGLGQRWDSSHDUon printed extracts. The grievor asserted the
system used in her office was a breach of her privacy. She also testified that, prior to filing the
grievance, she raised the issue with the employeUDQGZDVWROGWKDWWKHHPSOR\HU¶VSROLF\ZDVWR
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have employee names attached to accounts. She said there was no response from the employer
when she raised the issue of the practice at the other office.
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The union acknowledged that the circumstances appear to have changed since the filing
of the grievance, but seeks declaratory relief wiWKUHVSHFWWRWKHHPSOR\HU¶VSUHYLRXVSUDFWLFH
Employer Submissions
.?
The employer argued the grievance regarding the Polaris issue should be dismissed on
the basis of two preliminary objections. First, the employer submitted the grievance alleged a
violation of the management rights clause, and GSB jurisprudence holds that no grievance can be
founded on Article 2 alone. Second, the employer argues the grievor is untimely, since the
grievor started using the Polaris system in 1999 but did not file a grievance until 2008.
-?
With respect to the merits of the grievance, the Registrar, Cathy Bufalino, testified that
employees were required to log in to the database using their full name as a result of an order
from the Director of Land Registration. She tesWLILHGWKDWVKHZDV³UHPLQGHGRIWHQ´RIWKLV
requirement, which was intended to protect the integrity of the land registry system by ensuring
the ability to track changes. She could not say whether other offices followed the directive. Ms.
Bufalino confirmed that the grLHYRU¶VDFFRXQWZDVFUeated some time in 1999, but that she only
raised a concern about the matter in 2008. She further testified that, currently, clients print off
documentation from a kiosk, and that such documents do not identify who certified or amended
the information.
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Decision
,?
,DJUHHZLWKWKHHPSOR\HU¶VVXEPLVVLRQWKDWWKis grievance is improper on the basis that it
is founded solely on the management rights clause, and does not rely on any other article in the
collective agreement. Furthermore, I am not peUVXDGHGWKDWKDYLQJRQH¶Vname attached to an
official government document is a breach of the collective agreement or the rights of employees.
As a result, the grievance is dismissed.
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Union Submissions
+?
The grievor alleges that the employer improperly denied her leave on December 24, 2008
to attend to her duties as local union president, contrary to a Memorandum of Settlement (MOS)
signed on May 31, 2005 with respect to union president leave under Art. 23.9 of the collective
agreement.
34?
The MOS sets out an agreement with respect to the dates the grievor would be permitted
to take off for her union duties, stipulating that she would be released for this purpose every
second Thursday. By mutual agreement, this understanding was amended in January 2008, such
that the grievor took every second Wednesday, instead of Thursday. This understanding was
reached by email exchange between the grievor and Ms. Bufalino, and in the confirming email
Ms. Bufalino requested that the grievor continue WRVKRZ³IOH[LELOLW\´WRZDUGVVFKHGXOLQJLVVXHV
For the first six months there were no issues. In June, the grievor provided Ms. Bufalino with
the list of Wednesdays for the remainder of the calendar year. Within five minutes of giving her
agreement to these dates, Ms. Bufalino, wrote back to the grievor noting that one of the
:HGQHVGD\¶VLQTXHVWLRQZDV&KULVWPDV(YHDQGVKe asked the grievor to pick another day that
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week. There followed an exchange about whether there was an employer policy governing
vacation priority and, if so, whether it would give the grievor priority to take Christmas Eve as a
vacation day. The grievor argued that the 026VKRXOGWDNHSUHFHGHQFHRYHUWKHHPSOR\HU¶V
policy. The grievor was offered December 22 or 23 asDOWHUQDWLYHGD\VIRUKHUSUHVLGHQW¶VGXWLHV
and, as far as she could recall, she used one of those two days, or possibly December 31, instead
of December 24.
Employer Submissions
33?
0V%XIDOLQRWHVWLILHGWKDWVKHDJUHHGWRPRYHWKHSUHVLGHQW¶VGD\IURP7KXUVGD\WR
Wednesday, on the understanding that the grievor would be flexible. She noted that, according
WRWKHHPSOR\HU¶VYDFDWLRQSROLF\WKHJULHYRUZould not be eligible to book December 24 as a
vacation day, since this day was offered to staff on a rotational basis, and the grievor was not the
next employee in the rotation. Moreover, given the staffing, there was only one other employee
available to work December 24 and Ms. Bufalino did not want to run the office with only one
person. She conceded that, although this does happen from time to time, it is not the preferred
staffing level. Ms. Bufalino offered the grievor days before and after December 24 as an
alternative, and the grievor took December 31.
Decision
32?
The parties agreed that the grievor would take her time off as local union president every
other Thursday, and then agreed to change that to Wednesdays. At the same time, they agreed
that the leave would continue to be governed by Art. 23.9. The article stipulates that the
VFKHGXOHIRUWKHORFDOSUHVLGHQWZLOOEHKRQRXUHG³WRWKHH[WHQWSRVVLEOH´,QP\YLHZWKLVFDOOV
for a balancing of the needs of both parties. The language is broad enough to capture
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circumstances when the schedule becomes problematic for either side, and calls for flexibility on
the other side. The question ofZKHWKHULWLV³SRVVLEOH´IRUWKe schedule to be followed or
amended should be assessed in the context of competing pressures on both parties. There was no
evidence that there was any particular urgency for the president to hold her office hours on
December 24. The employer was faced with a situation in which there was only one other
employee available to work on December 24. I note that Ms. Bufalino flagged the problem with
the date at the earliest opportunity. I do not think it was necessary for the employer to operate
with one employee or to take any extraordinary measures in order to accommodate the
SUHVLGHQW¶VVFKHGXOH,QP\YLHZWKHHPSOoyer reasonably concluded it was not possible to
DGKHUHWRWKHSUHVLGHQW¶VVFKHGXOHRQ'HFHPber 24, and the employer acted reasonably in
offering alternate dates in the same time period.
31?
For the above reasons, the grievance is dismissed.
3 - Time off for Union Voting
Union Submissions
30?
The grievor alleges that she was improperly denied union leave to participate in union
voting on January 30, 2009. At the time, the grievor was local union president, and also had past
experience in central bargaining. She requested time off to assist and be present at the voting
process, including the count that took place in Hamilton on December 30, 2009. She alleges that
she received no response to the request, and was simply not permitted to attend the voting
process. She stated she was not aware of any reason why she could not attend the vote, and
thought it was important that, as union president, she attend the event. She also stated that she
had previous issues with respect to the granting of time off for union activities.
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3/?
The union relied on the memorandum from David Logan, the Assistant Deputy Minister,
dated January 16, 2009, in which employer was directed to assist the voting process by providing
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Employer Submissions
3.?
Ms. Bufalino testified that, initially, the grievor had requested union leave on January 27,
28, and 29 to attend the voting. Later, the grievor requested January 30 as well. By that time,
another employee had already been granted time off. For this reason, the request was denied.
6KHVWDWHGVKHRIIHUHGWRFKDQJHWKHJULHYRU¶Vreporting time so that she could attend the voting
on January 30 for at least half of the day, but that the grievor declined this offer. The grievor
testified that such an arrangement was not feasible because the vote in question involved a lock
down, and those who participated had to be present at the beginning and remain in the room
throughout the counting process.Ms. Bufalino stated she did not remember the grievor advising
her of this.
Decision
3-?
In my view, the employer took reasonable steps to allow the grievor time off to
participate in the voting. The grievor was granted three of the four days off she requested. With
respect to the fourth day, the employer did not have sufficient coverage due to the absence of
other another employee. Even so, the employer offered to make arrangements to permit the
grievor to take off part of the day. As it turned out, this was not a workable option for the
grievor. However, in the circumstances, I do not DJUHHWKDWWKHHPSOR\HU¶VDFWLRQVZHUHDEUHDFK
of the collective agreement, or any other understanding between the parties. On the contrary, it
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is my conclusion that the employer acted reasonably and showed appropriate flexibility in
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3,?
As a result, this grievance is also dismissed.
nd
Dated at Toronto this 2 day of February 2011.
Barry Stephens, Vice-Chair