HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009-0969.Kellar.11-06-13 DecisionCommission de
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
UqJOHPHQt des griefs
Board
dHVHPSOR\pVGHOD
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388 7pl. : (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396 7pOpF
GSB#2009-0969
UNION#2009-0449-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Sployees Union ervice Em
(Kellar)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Richard L. Jackson
FOR THE UNION
Jodi Martin
Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Kylie Humphries
Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care
Employee Relations Advisor
HEARING
November 4, 2010.
DECISION
[1]This decision arises out of a dispute as to the proper interpretation of a Memorandum of
Agreement that resulted from a day of mediated negotiation between the Ministry of Health and
Long Term Care and OPSEU, on November 4, 2010. This was the third day of mediation
between the parties concerning the grievances of Ms. Brenda Kellar. Given that the issue in
GLVSXWH±ZKHWKHURUQRWWKHJULHYRU¶VVLFNEDQNVKRXOGKDYHEHHQUHFKDUJHGRQ-DQXDU\±
is not explicitly mentioned in the memorandum of agreement, it is necessary to revert to the
extrinsic evidence of what actually transpired during the mediation.
Background
[2]0V.HOODU¶VJULHYDQFHVFRQFHUned certain alleged circumstances at the work location of
her home position, as a result of which she had spent some considerable time off on sick leave.
As a result of a mediated negotiation on February 17, 2010, the grievor was placed in a
temporary assignment elsewhere at her regular level of pay, an assignment that would end on
October 15, 2010. In a second day of mediation, April 22, 2010, the parties agreed to write to
WKHJULHYRU¶VSK\VLFLDQLQRUGHUWRGHWHUPLQHif, and under what conditions, the grievor might
return to her home position. Unfortunately, however, the answers did not provide sufficient
clarity, thus necessitating a third day of mediation on November 4 to deal with this problem.
Early in the process on this day, the parties agreed to an independent medical examination
(I.M.E.). Certain other issues arose during this mediation, however.
[3]7KHJULHYRU¶VKRPHSRVLWLRQLVRQHthat requires certification inWKHIRUPRIDQ³(QWU\WR
3UDFWLFH´FRXUVHDQGWKHJULHYRUKDGEHHQDZD\from her home position long enough that, before
she could return to her regular duties, she would first have to be recertified through this program.
The parties agreed that the grievor would be sent on the next Entry-to-Practice course, which was
starting on November 15 and continuing through to the end of January; they also agreed that she
would be paid her full salary during that time. That meant, however, that between October 15,
the end of her temporary assignment, and November 15, the start of the course, she would be
back on sick leave.
[4]The Union requested that the Employer tRSXSWKHJULHYRU¶V
- 2 -
break --- to be decided by me. The Employer would not agree and, after some more discussion,
then put what amounted to a final offer to the Union: (1) the parties would proceed with an
independent medical examination; (2) the grievor would go on the recertification course at full
pay and expenses; (3) the grievor would receive no top-up of sick leave used during the October
15-November 15 period, and would be put back on sick leave during the Christmas break period.
This was agreed in principle, with a written Memorandum of Settlement to be sent by the
Employer representative to Counsel for the Union the next day, November 5. With two small
changes, the agreement was signed.
[7]7KHJULHYRU¶VVLFNEDQNZDVQRWUHORDGHGDVRI the beginning of the new year, and that is
the issue before me.
Arguments
[8]The Employer takes the position that, because she was on sick leave on December 31 and
January 3, under Articles 44.3 and 44.4 of the collective agreement, she was not entitled to have
her sick bank topped up.
[9]The Union argues that, under the particular circumstances of this case, those articles do not
apply but, even if they did, the Employer should be estopped from relying on the strict terms of
Article 44 because of the statement of the EmSOR\HU¶VUHSUHVHQWDWLYHGXULQJWKHPHGLDWLRQRQ
ZKLFKWKH8QLRQUHOLHGLQDJUHHLQJWRWKH(PSOR\HU¶VRIIHU
Decision
[10]In the particular circumstances of this case, the strict terms of Article 44 should not apply.
The only reason the grievor was on sick leave on both December 31 and January 3 is because the
Entry-to-Practice training course that she was taking took a two-week break over the Christmas
period that happened to include those two dates. Had it not done so, or had the course break
HQGHGEHIRUH'HFHPEHURUHYHQEHIRUH-DQXDU\WKHQVKHZRXOGKDYHEHHQ³DWZRUN´DQG
thus, entitled to the reloading of her sick-leave bank. In the particular context of this situation,
being on sick leave during the two-week break inWKHFRXUVH±DQGWKHUHIRUHRQ'HFHPEHU
DQG-DQXDU\±ZDVDVRUWRIFRQWULYDQFHDPHDQVWRDQHQG±DFRQYHQLHQWGHILQLWLRQRIWKH
JULHYRU¶VVWDWXVWKDWZRXOGHQDEOHher to have some compensation over the Christmas break,
JLYHQWKH(PSOR\HU¶VUHIXVDOWRFRQWLQXHKHUUHJXODr salary. It was, in effect, the logical and
natural default position for both parties in face of WKH(PSOR\HU¶VUHIXVDOWRFRQWLQXHWRSD\KHUDW
her regular rate over the break. For purposes of the Entry-to-Practice course, she was not sick;
she was available, willing, and able to work. Had it not been for the enforced break, there would
have been no issue to discuss.
[11]These parties have worked extremely diligently, constructively, and in good faith through
three days of mediation (and well beyond that on their own) in order to resolve these grievances
in a creative, sensible, and helpful way for both the grievor and the Employer. To deny the
grievor a replenishment of her sick-leave bank because the Entry-to-Practice course took a two-
week break that happened to include these crucial dates is to take a much narrower and more
legalistic interpretation of the situation than the discussion on November 4 reflects and than what
- 3 -
I am convinced these parties ever intended. Had such an outcome been recognized at the time,
the parties would have devised anRWKHUDSSURDFK±LIQHFHVVDU\by the simple expedient of the
JULHYRU¶VJRLQJRQOHDYHZLWKRXWpay during all or part of the break. Given the nature and
uncertainties of this case, it was entirely obvious and predictable that the grievor might well need
to continue on sick leave for some, possibly considerable, time in 2011, as the parties worked to
deal with the results of the I.M.E, whatever they turned out to be. Indeed, that seems to have
been exactly what has happened.
[12]For all practical purposes, and in the particular context of the facts of this case, I consider
WKHJULHYRUWRKDYHEHHQ³DWZRUN´IURP1RYHmber 15 though the end of January, and I am
convinced that that was also the paUWLHV¶VHQVHRIWKHVLWXDWLRQDVUHIOHFWHGLQWKHVWDWHPHQWRIWKH
(PSOR\HU¶VUHSUHVHQWDWLYHWRWKDW effect. Accordingly, then, the grievor is entitled to have her
sick leave bank replenished, and it is so ordered.
[13]In view of the foregoing, it is unnecessary for me to dealZLWKWKH8QLRQ¶VHVWRSSHO
argument.
th
Dated at Toronto this 13 day of June 2011.
Richard L. Jackson, Vice-Chair