HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-2593.McGann.23.09.12 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# 2021-2593
UNION# 2021-0526-0033
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(McGann) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(The Ministry of the Attorney General) Employer
BEFORE Ian Anderson Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION Erin Buchner
Morrison Watts
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Katherine Ayers
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING
August 10, 2023
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Decision
[1] This is a referral of a grievance under Article 22.16.1 of the Central Collective
Agreement between the parties. Article 22.16.1 provides for the resolution of
grievances “in an expeditious and informal manner”. The mediator/arbitrator is to
assist the parties in attempting to settle the matter. Should efforts be
unsuccessful, the mediator/arbitrator is to determine the grievance by arbitration.
In doing so, Article 22.16.1 provides the mediator/arbitrator may “limit the nature
and extent of the evidence and may impose such conditions as he or she
considers appropriate”. Decisions reached are without precedent unless the
parties agree otherwise. Decisions are to be succinct and to be issued within five
days of the completion of the proceedings unless the parties agree otherwise.
Attempts to resolve these matters through mediation were unsuccessful. The
parties agreed to waive the 5 day time limit.
[2] The grievance concerns conduct of a workplace inspection by the Grievor in his
role as a member of the health and safety committee for the workplace, and more
particularly payment for time to write a report after the inspection. The Employer
authorized the Grievor to spend two hours writing the report during his regularly
scheduled work time and paid him for those hours. The Grievor claims he is
entitled to be paid for the full 5 hours which he asserts he required to write the
report. The Grievor also claims half an hour for preparation time in advance of the
inspection. The Employer notes that the Grievor only raised the issue of
preparation of time after the inspection. In any event, the Employer asserts the
Grievor is not entitled to be paid for the preparation time.
[3] The grievance arises from an inspection conducted on June 15, 2021. I
understand there are other inspections for which the Grievor claims he is entitled
to five hours to write the report and for which the Employer authorized him to
spend only two hours of his regularly scheduled work time to do so. There is a
dispute between the parties as to whether or not those other inspection reports are
subsumed by this grievance or in any event whether a remedy can be granted
pursuant to this grievance in relation to the writing of those reports. The parties
have agreed to bifurcate that issue pending this decision in relation to the June 15,
2021 inspection. There is, however, no question that this is a longstanding dispute
between the Grievor and the Employer.
[4] The longstanding nature of this dispute is reflected in a December 15, 2020
unilateral recommendation by the worker committee members of the joint health
and safety committee and the Employer’s written response to it. The worker
committee members recommended:
Worker committee members of the Health and Safety Committee requires [sic]
time (at least 5 hours, not including breaks) during the day (between 8:30 a.m.
and 4:45 p.m.) to do the physical inspection of at least one floor per day and to
complete the report as per the Occupational Health and Safety Act [“OHSA”],
sections 9(34) and 9(35) of the Act.
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[5] The Employer’s response was as follows:
Consistent with longstanding past practice, as discussed at several H&S
committee meetings, and as confirmed in many communications between
the worker and management representatives of the H&S committee, H&S
inspections will be completed as follows: jointly (to be clear this requires the
presence of at least one worker member and at least one manager rep) at a
mutually agreeable and pre-arranged time; for the purpose of inspecting
one floor per month. If for any reason, an inspection cannot proceed in one
month, two floors should be completed the following month. Up to 2 hours
will be set aside for each inspection, with the worker and manager
representative able to jointly agree to additional time as and when required.
Following the completion of the inspection, at a mutually agreeable time, the
worker member(s) will be provided up to 2 hours per inspection for the
written report to be completed.
The recommendation proposed by the worker member provides worker
committee members with an amount of time to complete each inspection
that is inconsistent with past practice and with the experience of
management committee members. Management remains willing to grant
additional time for an inspection, should circumstances require it. The
alleged hardship the worker member speaks of with regards to completing
inspections after the conclusion of assigned duties on his work day is
inaccurate, as management has often offered time for inspections where
inspection would begin in the morning, prior to the beginning of assigned
duties on that day. It is not accurate for the member to state that a
minimum of 5 hours is needed to inspect a floor for a day.
For the above noted reasons, the Employer does not accept the
recommendations.
[6] The worker members of the committee, of which as noted the Grievor is one, did
not file a complaint with the Ministry of Labour seeking an order that the
Employer’s response was not in compliance with the OHSA. Rather, the Grievor
has simply continued to assert that he is entitled to 5 hours to write a report
notwithstanding the Employer’s clear direction that only 2 hours are provided for
that purpose, subject to the caveat that: “Management remains willing to grant
additional time for an inspection, should circumstances require it.”
[7] The issue in this case is whether s. 9(34) and (35) of the OHSA require the
Employer to pay the Grievor for the time which he asserts he spent writing the
report in relation to a workplace inspection conducted pursuant to s. 9(27).
Those provisions read as follows:
(27) If it is not practical to inspect the workplace at least once a month, the
member designated under subsection (23) shall inspect the physical condition
of the workplace at least once a year, inspecting at least a part of the
workplace in each month.
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….
(34) A member of a committee is entitled to,
(a) one hour or such longer period of time as the committee determines
is necessary to prepare for each committee meeting;
(b) such time as is necessary to attend meetings of the committee; and
(c) such time as is necessary to carry out the member’s duties under
subsections (26), (27) and (31).
(35) A member of a committee shall be deemed to be at work during the times
described in subsection (34) and the member’s employer shall pay the
member for those times at the member’s regular or premium rate as may be
proper.
[8] The Employer argues that nothing in the OHSA requires an employer to pay for
preparation time or the writing of a report in relation to the inspection. In this case,
however, the joint health and safety committee agreed that two hours would be
provided for the writing of the report. The Employer argues that agreement falls
within the ambit of s. 9(34)(a) of the OHSA. That is, the Employer argues writing
of the report constitutes preparation for a health and safety committee meeting,
and the two hours allocated for that purpose constitutes “such longer period of
time as the committee determines is necessary to prepare for each committee
meeting”.
[9] Apart from anything else, a difficulty with the Employer's argument is that it is quite
clear, as set out above, that the committee has not agreed on the amount of time
required to write the report. In any event, I do not agree with the restrictive
interpretation of the OHSA which underlies the Employer’s argument.
[10] I begin with the observation that it is trite law that the provisions of the OHSA are
to be given a broad, liberal interpretation consistent with its purposes.
[11] Pursuant to s. 9(34) a worker member is entitled to such time as “is necessary” to
“inspect the physical condition of the workplace” under s. 9(26) or (27), and
pursuant to s. 9(35) the worker member is entitled to be paid for such time.
[12] A key question is, of course, what “is necessary”. In my view, the determination of
how much time “is necessary” is an objective one. It is not simply a question of
how much time a member of the committee considers is required for the
performance of duties under subsections (26), (27) or (31), but how much time
would be reasonably necessary in the circumstances to perform those duties.
[13] A number of factors might go into a determination of what is objectively necessary.
Without in any way meaning to be exhaustive, in my view they include the nature
and size of the workplace being inspected and the nature of the hazards which
might be encountered. I would note that the workplace in question here is one
floor of the court house located at 330 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. This
would not appear to be an inherently hazardous workplace and in any event there
is no evidence to suggest that it was.
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[14] If preparation is reasonably necessary in order to conduct the inspection, then in
my view that preparation is part of the inspection. For example, if it is necessary
for a worker member to don a Haz-Mat suit prior to entering the workplace to
conduct the inspection, the time spent doing so forms part of the time spent
conducting the inspection.
[15] It is also important to note that the purpose of an inspection of the physical
condition of the workplace pursuant to s. 9(26) or (27), is so that the worker
member can inform the members of the committee of what is observed. The
worker member is acting as the eyes and ears of the committee. Section 9(23)
and (30) provide:
(23) Subject to subsection (24), the members of a committee who represent
workers shall designate a member representing workers to inspect the
physical condition of the workplace.
(30) The member shall inform the committee of situations that may be a
source of danger or hazard to workers and the committee shall consider such
information within a reasonable period of time.
In my view, in order for the worker member to fulfill this purpose, the worker
member may create record as an aide memoire. The creation of a report of this
nature is, therefore, part of the inspection.
[16] The OHSA, however, assigns the task of making recommendations not to the
worker member conducting the inspection but to the committee as a whole.
Section 9(18) provides:
(18) It is the function of a committee and it has power to,
(a) identify situations that may be a source of danger or hazard to workers;
(b) make recommendations to the constructor or employer and the
workers for the improvement of the health and safety of workers;
(c) recommend to the constructor or employer and the workers the
establishment, maintenance and monitoring of programs, measures and
procedures respecting the health or safety of workers;
(d) obtain information from the constructor or employer respecting,
(i) the identification of potential or existing hazards of materials,
processes or equipment, and
(ii) health and safety experience and work practices and standards in
similar or other industries of which the constructor or employer has
knowledge;
(e) obtain information from the constructor or employer concerning the
conducting or taking of tests of any equipment, machine, device, article,
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thing, material or biological, chemical or physical agent in or about a
workplace for the purpose of occupational health and safety; and
(f) be consulted about, and have a designated member representing
workers be present at the beginning of, testing referred to in clause (e)
conducted in or about the workplace if the designated member believes
his or her presence is required to ensure that valid testing procedures are
used or to ensure that the test results are valid.
[17] In sum, under the OHSA, the role of a worker member conducting an inspection of
the physical condition of the workplace is to identify situations that may be a
source of danger or hazard to workers and to inform the committee of the same. It
is then the role of the committee, not the worker member acting alone, to make
recommendations to the employer in relation to those hazards.
[18] An employer or a collective agreement may, of course, assign other duties to a
worker member in relation to the conduct of an inspection, for example the
preparation of recommendations. That is not, however, the case here. No
provision of the collective agreement was identified which did so. It is true that the
Employer did authorize worker members conducting an inspection to spend 2
hours writing a report and, while I do not decide the matter, it may have been
contemplated that such a report might include the making of recommendations.
The Grievor, however, seeks as of right time beyond the 2 hours allotted by the
Employer without satisfying the Employer’s condition that circumstances must
require it. The Grievor’s claim for more time to write the report can only succeed,
therefore, if it arises from the OHSA, that is if it “is necessary” as an aide memoire
in fulfillment of his duty to identify and inform the committee of sources of danger
or hazards to workers.
[19] The Grievor’s claim for more time to write the report is not consistent with this
limited function of a worker member conducting an inspection. In response to the
Grievor’s request for more time, his supervisor asked him to “outline the reason(s)
for requiring more than two hours to complete the report.” The Grievor responded:
I’m adding to my complaint that I ’m being requested to provide an outline to be
granted time beyond 2 hours to write an inspection report.
In the spirit of co-operation, as an outline, I will need to :
a. Continue to review and analyze the previous inspection reports of the 7th
floor:
b. Continue to organize the information from the previous report and from
June 15 inspection information, into the inspection report for June 15/21:
c. Continue to review and analyze the actions taken by the Employer in the
previous report(s) and to research what further recommendations can be
provided to address the Potential hazards and/or hazard that will be
identified by the inspection report of the 7th floor for June/21:
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d. Continue to contemplate and prepare recommendations for the potential
Hazards and/or Hazards that will be identified by the inspection report of the
7th floor for June/21:
e. Continue to try and condense the wording for each potential hazards and
hazards that will be in the report and email.
[20] The Grievor’s “complaint” with respect to the request is not being pursued in these
proceedings, accordingly I will not comment on it. The outline he offers, however,
makes it clear that his vision of a report goes beyond that contemplated under the
OHSA for a worker member conducting and inspection: the Grievor’s view usurps
the role of the committee as a whole. Accordingly, I am not persuaded that the
Union has established that more than two hours was necessary for the Grievor to
write the type of report which may form part of an inspection under s. 9(27).
[21] There is a further dispute between the parties with respect to the amount of time
which the Grievor actually had to write the report in relation to June 15, 2021. The
inspection was completed at 9:30 AM. The Grievor was authorized to start writing
the report immediately afterwards. The Grievor was scheduled to be in a court
room at 12 noon to perform his regular duties as a Registrar/Clerk. There is no
dispute that prior to attending in a court room, a Registrar/Clerk is required to
perform certain pre-court duties. The Grievor claims he requires one hour to
perform those duties, with the result that he only was given one and one-half hours
to write the report, not two. The Employer claims only half an hour is required to
perform the pre-court duties, with the result that the Grievor was given a full two
hours to write the report.
[22] I do not find it necessary to resolve this dispute. The Employer authorized the
Grievor to spend half an hour on pre-court duties. It is not for the Grievor to
unilaterally decide he required more time to perform his pre-court duties and
abandon other assigned duties, in this case the writing of the report, for that
purpose.
[23] The Grievor asserts that in order to prepare for the inspection he needed to review
the report from the previous inspection (conducted 5 months previously) and also
assemble the following equipment:
a. Paper
b. Pen
c. Cell phone to take picture(s)
d. Water to drink
e. Comfortable shoes
f. Clip board
g. Mask
h. Face Shield
i. Backpack to carry some of the equipment.
[24] Given the nature of the workplace and the limited role of a worker member under
the OHSA in conducting an inspection, I am not persuaded that a review of the
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previous report was necessary preparation for the inspection. The previous report
could simply have been taken along as a check list to be consulted in the course of
the inspection. Nor am I persuaded that any time should be allocated to the
Grievor to assemble the equipment he lists. Assuming, that the Grievor did not
already have these largely personal items with him and required time to gather
them, and assuming, without deciding, that such time could be considered work,
the amount of time is negligible and the principle of de minimus applies.
[25] The Union points to the fact that on one occasion the Employer directed
employees scheduled for a work related training session which was to commence
at 8:30 AM to come into work at 8:00 AM. The Union argues this demonstrates
the Employer is aware that a certain amount of preparation time is required. The
Union argues that in not granting preparation time in relation to workplace
inspections, the Employer has engaged in discrimination contrary to Article 3 of the
collective agreement. I am not persuaded by this argument. Article 3 prohibits
discrimination on the basis of grounds enumerated under the Ontario Human
Rights Code or union membership and also records the parties commitment to a
workplace free of harassment. It is simply not engaged.
[26] For all of the foregoing reasons, the grievance is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 12th day of September 2023.
“Ian Anderson”
Ian Anderson, Arbitrator