HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009-2440.Union.11-06-15 DecisionCommission de
Crown Employees
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GSB#2009-2440
UNION#2009-0999-0086
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 Community Safety and Correctional Services)
Employer
BEFOREFelicity D. Briggs Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNIONDon Eady
Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYERBrian Loewen
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING
February 4, 2011.
- 2 -
Decision
[1]On October 7, 2009, Barry Thomas, then Labour Management Liaison, sent a
memorandum to all Adult Institutions that stated:
This memorandum will clarify that the Provincial Overtime Protocol
guidelines need to be followed whenever overtime opportunities are being
offered to Fixed-Term employees.
Please be advised that until directed otherwise by the Assistant Deputy
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entertained during a local mediation/arbitration process. Furthermore, such
grievances should not be settled at Stage 1 and/or 2 of the grievance process.
[2]2Q1RYHPEHUWKH8QLRQILOHGDJULHYDQFHWKDWDOOHJHG³WKH(PSOR\HUKDV
violated specifically but not exclusively, Articles 2, 3 and 31 of the Collective
Agreement as well as MERC agreements, in regards to the refusing to properly
compensate staff for demonstrated viRODWLRQVRIWKH+3526\VWHP´
[3]At our first day of hearing, the Union asserted that the Employer has violated the
terms of the HPRO Protocol by failing to compensate Fixed-Term employees in
instances when the Protocol has been violated. Further, the Employer is estopped
from failing to pay remedial compensation to Fixed-Term employees for such
breaches of the protocol. It was conceded by Mr. Eady, for the Union, that it was
possible that not every correctional institution had been paying for protocol
breaches to Fixed-Term employees. However, the past practice was sufficient to
establish an estoppel.
[4]Mr. Loewen, for the Employer contended that according to the clear terms of the
Collective Agreement, Fixed-Term employees are not entitled to be paid for a
breach of the overtime protocol. While it might be true that some institutions had
improperly paid for breaches of the overtime protocol to Fixed-Term employees,
those few past errors should not be sufficient for a finding of estoppel.
[5]For obvious reasons neither party was eager to undertake calling evidence from
across the Province regarding this matter. Accordingly, a process for collecting
data regarding the past practice of payment for breaches of HPRO for Fixed-Term
employees was agreed upon. The hearing was adjourned on that basis.
[6]The collected data was not as immediately helpful as was hoped by the parties.
For that reason, the parties agreed to bifurcate the hearing and ask this Board to
determine whether the Employer is obliged to pay Fixed-Term employees for
breaches of the HPRO based on the language of the Collective Agreement and
various other documents.
[7]To be clear, the Union will only present its estoppel evidence and argument only
in the event it becomes necessary to do so.
- 3 -
[8]A number of documents were put before the Board on consent.
[9]On July 27, 2006, the first Provincial Overtime Protocol was agreed upon. It is
useful to set out portions of that agreement. It stated, in part:
INTRODUCTION
At the present time, there are a variety of practices amongst institutions with
respect to the distribution of overtime. In order to streamline the assortment of
existing practices, the Ministry and the Union have developed this set of
principles, which must be applied in the development of a local overtime
distribution system.
As per the Collective Agreement (COR8), a local overtime distribution system
must distribute overtime fairly and equitably after having ensured that all
operational requirements are met.
PURPOSE
The overtime Protocol has been developed with the intent to:
distribute overtime opportunities in a fair, equitable and consistent manner
ensure the process is administratively and operationally feasible, and
ensure the process is open and transparent.
GUIDING PRINCPLES
must b
The local worksite overtime protocol e founded in the following
principles:
A Fair and Equitable System
The underlying principle of a fair and equitable system is to attempt to equalize
the opportunity for overtime hours over a specific and reasonable period of
time. The goal is to distribute the overtime opportunities amongst all eligible
employees fairly. The goal is not to ensure that all employees work the same
number of hours, given that individual choice and circumstance may restrict
actual overtime hours worked.
««
Decision to Hire Overtime
Once a decision is made to hire overtime, the following overtime procedures
shall be followed:
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1.Classified correctional staff may opt in or out of voluntary overtime
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and will input their availability by day and by shift by the 15 of the
previous month.
2.A daily overtime list will be used by shift managers who hire
overtime. Staff may remove themselves from the availability list for a
given shift no later than 48 hours prior to the commencement of that
shift. Staff may add themselves to the availability list for a given shift
no later than 24 hours prior to the commencement of that shift,
however they will be placed at the bottom of the availability list for
possible overtime opportunities for that shift.
3.It is the responsibility of each employee to provide the employer with
a single current phone number where he/she can be contacted.
4.Overtime calls will be made on a sequential basis. The first person
called will be the most senior person on the overtime list having the
least number of overtime opportunity hours.
««
Unclassified Employees
1.Unclassified employees shall only be offered overtime opportunities
after all classified employees who have signed the overtime roster
have been exhausted.
2.When an unclassified employee, who has been prescheduled for forty
hours in a week, is offered an overtime opportunity as per (1) above,
this will not result in the cancellation of a subsequent prescheduled
shift.
st
[10]7KHSDUWLHVVHQWRXWD³(GLWLRQ´RI³4XHVWLRQVDQG$QVZHUVZLWKUHVSHFWWRWKH
3URYLQFLDO2YHUWLPH3URWRFRO´GDWHG2Ftober 6, 2006. The second question was
³:KRGRHVWKLVSURWRFRODSSO\WR"´DQGWKHDQVZHUZDV³FODVVLILHGDQG
XQFODVVLILHGFRUUHFWLRQDORIILFHUV´4XHVWLRQRIWKLVGRFXPHQWDVNHG³,VWKHUH
DGLVSXWHPHFKDQLVP"´7KHDQVZHUZDVLQSDUW
The content of the Provincial Overtime Protocol in no way changes or
GLPLQLVKHVDQHPSOR\HH¶VLQGLYLGXDOrights under Article 22 of the current
Collective Agreement. However, any issues related to the interpretation
and/or clarification of the actual signed Provincial Overtime Protocol
Agreement should be placed in writing and forwarded to the Provincial
Overtime Protocol Committee for review.
[11]The parties negotiated an update of the Overtime Protocol and it was signed on
June 5, 2009. There were a number of adjustments made to new protocol.
However, the Introduction, Purpose and Guiding Principles as set out above were
identical except the provision regarding ³'HFLVLRQWR+LUH2YHUWLPH´,WZDV
amended as follows:
To the extent possible, overtime opportunities will only be offered once
the non-overtime Regular (classified) and non-overtime Fixed-Term
(unclassified) resources have been exhausted, even if part of the shift
becomes overtime.
- 5 -
[12]The provision regarding Unclassified Employees was also the same except that
the parties had agreed to change the titleRI³8QFODVVLILHG(PSOR\HHV´WR³)L[HG
7HUP(PSOR\HHV´
[13]Following this Agreement the parties again published a Questions and Answers
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the previous Provincial Overtime ProtocRO4 $¶V´7KHILUVWTXHVWLRQDJDLQ
PDGHFOHDUWKDW³5HJXODUFODVVLILHG
and Fixed-Term (unclassified) correctional
RIILFHUV´ZHUHFRYHUHGE\WKH$JUHHPHQWIt also stated in answer to the question
UHJDUGLQJGLVSXWHPHFKDQLVP³WKHFRQWHQt of the Provincial Overtime Protocol in
no way changes or diminishes an employHH¶VLQGLYLGXDOULJKWVXQGHU$UWLFOHRI
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[14]On October 29, 2009 the parties signed an amended Protocol. Again, the
Introduction, Purpose and Guiding Principles (including the section regarding the
³'HFLVLRQWR+LUH2YHUWLPH´GLGQRWFKDQge. There was also no amendment to
WKHSRUWLRQRIWKH$JUHHPHQWHQWLWOHG³)L[HG7HUP(PSOR\HHV´DVVHWRXWDERYH
[15]7KHILQDO³4XHVWLRQVDQG$QVZHUV´SURYLded to this Board was dated September
2008 and was the tenth edition. There was no caveat stating that the tenth edition
replaced earlier editions. The first answer stated, in part:
To further the point on hiring practices, there is no limitation on how far in
advance Unclassified Correctional officers can be hired. As such, it is
appropriate to utilize an Unclassified Correctional Officer for statutory
hiring if the hiring does not breach the Overtime Protocol.
[16]$UWLFOH&25±2YHUWLPHRIWKH&ROOHFWLYH$JUHHPHQWVWDWHVLQSDUWWKH
following:
8.1 The overtime rate for the purposes of this Agreement shall be one and
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8.2.1 In the assignment of overtime, the Employer agrees to develop
methods of distributing overtime at the local workplace that are fair and
equitable after having ensured that all its operational requirements are met.
«
8.3.1 Employees in Schedules 3.7 and 4.7, who perform authorized work
LQH[FHVVRIVHYHQDQGRQHTXDUWHU
- 6 -
(a)in excess of seven and one-quarter (7ó
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applicable, where employees work a regular thirty-six and one quarter
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(b)in excess of the scheduled hours for employees who work on a
regularly scheduled work day exceeding eight (8) hours, or
(c)LQH[FHVVRIWKHHPSOR\HHV¶UHJXlarly scheduled work week, or
(d)in excess of thirty-six and one-quaUWó
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week where employees do not have regularly scheduled work days.
[19],QWKHOLVWRI³RWKHUDSSOLFDEOHDUWLFOHV´WKDWDSSO\WR)L[HG7HUPHPSOR\HHV
COR8 is not noted.
UNION SUBMISSIONS
[20]The Union contended that the clear provisions of the various overtime protocols
negotiated by the parties have consistently included Fixed-Term employees. If
there was any doubt about this issue, the Question and Answer sheets that were
DOVRQHJRWLDWHGE\WKHSDUWLHVXQGHUVFRUHVWKH8QLRQ¶VYLHZ
[21]Mr. Eady stated that the Union is not asserting that Article COR8 of the
Collective Agreement applies to Fixed-Term employees. Articles 31A16.1 and
31A.16.2 set out those provisions of the Collective Agreement that apply and
COR8 is not listed. However, it is the UnLRQ¶VDVVHUWLRQWKDWWKH3URWRFROLWVHOI
provides the remedy at issue in this dispute.
[22]The various Overtime Protocols negotiated by the parties provide a somewhat
complicated process for the assignment of overtime for both Regular and Fixed-
Term employees. It is absurd to suggest that a protocol that is rife with references
to Fixed-Term Employees does not apply to them and that is what the Employer
would have this Board find. Each protocol has provided that:
Once all of the employees who indicated availability for a given shift have
been called, the employer may offer the overtime to any employee in order
to meet the operational requirements of the institution. The overtime
protocol would then resume with the next available shift.
[23]The Union submitted that this is not a complex issue. The parties negotiated a
process for the assignment of overtime. In that system it is agreed that both
Fixed-Term employees and Regular employees are covered. Finally it was agreed
that no rights to file grievances are abridged by the Protocol.
[24]The Union drew attention to some of the specific questions addressed by the
parties in their publications. In some instances, there was no distinction made
between Fixed-Term employees and Regular employees. For example, in the
³VHFRQGHGLWLRQ´LWZDVVWDWHGWKDW³DQ\FRUUHFWLRQRIILFHUVFODVVLILHGRU
unclassified new to the facility (new hires, transfers in, lateral transfers, job
trades, etc) will enter the local overtime protocol with a starting balance that is
equal to the average accepted overtime hours atWKDWSDUWLFXODUSRLQWLQWLPH´7KDW
- 7 -
lack of distinction is telling and ultimately reveals that the parties intended that all
Correctional Officers would have virtually identical terms and conditions
regarding overtime, including access to a remedy in the event of a breach of the
protocol.
[25]The parties considered a number of situations where the rights of Fixed-Term
employees and Regular employees might be at odds. Generally speaking, Regular
employees have been given preference. However, that does not diminish the
clearly stated rights of Fixed-Term employees to overtime.
Re Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Correctional
[26]Mr. Eady reviewed
6HUYLFHV
DQG236(8±8QLRQ*ULHYDQFH
(May 8, 2001), GSB#0236/92 (Lee);
Re The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community Safety and
and
Correctional Services) & OPSEU (Union Grievance)
(February 18, 2009),
GSB#2004-3577 (Briggs). It was asserted that while both of these decisions
contemplated appropriate remedy for breaches of the some version of the
Provincial Overtime Protocol, neither distinguished in any way between the
remedial rights of Regular employees and Fixed-Term employees.
[27]Finally, the Union posed the question that if there was to be no remedy for Fixed-
Term employees in the event of a breach of the protocol, why would the parties
bother to establish a specific order for calling Correctional Officers in the first
instance if there is not remedy for a breach. In the absence of a penalty for a
breach, the Employer could assign overtime work to any Fixed-Term Correctional
Officer and not take the time to follow a somewhat complicated procedure.
EMPLOYER SUBMISSIONS
[28]The Employer did not take issue with the 8QLRQ¶VUHYLHZRIWKHYDULRXVYHUVLRQV
of the Overtime Protocols or the Question and Answer publications. However,
those documents do not provide the language necessary for the Union to prevail in
this matter. To be clear, there is nothing in these agreements that address a
remedy for a breach.
[29]The language of the Collective Agreement has been consistent and without
revision for years. If the Union were right that Fixed-Term employees were
entitled to a remedy in the event of a breach of the Protocol, the parties would
have changed the language of Article 31. They have not.
[30]The Employer asserted that all it has agreed to in the Protocol is that there is a
specific order to follow in the distribution of overtime and that it will be followed.
However, there is nothing to say that in the event of a breach there will be a
remedy for Fixed-Term employees. There is a reference to a dispute mechanism
in the Protocol but nothing therein provides them with a remedy that there are not
otherwise entitled to under the Collective Agreement.
- 8 -
[31]0U/RHZHQFRQFHGHGWKDWWKH%RDUG¶VMXULsprudence is clear that the appropriate
remedy for a breach of the Overtime Protocol is compensatory and not in-kind.
However, that remedy does not extend to Fixed-Term employees.
[32],QWKHLQWURGXFWLRQRIHDFKYHUVLRQRIWKH3URWRFROLWLVVWDWHGWKDW³DVSHUWKH
Collective Agreement (Article COR8), a local overtime distribution system must
distribute overtime fairly and equitably after having ensured that all operational
UHTXLUHPHQWVDUHPHW´$UWLFOH&25GRHs not apply to Fixed-Term employees.
The Collective Agreement must supersede all other rights and it provides no
remedy for Fixed-Term employees with respect to overtime.
Re The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of
[33]The Employer relied upon
Correctional Services) and OPSEU (Carter et al)
(July 25, 1988),
GSB#2291/86 & 2292/86 (Knopf).
UNION REPLY
[34]By way of reply the Union noted that there is no provision in any version of the
Overtime Protocol that sets out the remedy for a breach for any employee be they
Regular or Fixed-Term. There is no remedial section. However, there is a very
specific and global system for distribution and it must be equitable.
[35]The Union urged that Article COR8 of the Collective Agreement merely provides
for the right to a fair and equitable overtime system. It is not where the remedy is
to be found for Fixed-Term employees. The Union contends that it is the
Overtime Protocol that has been breached and if there was to be no remedy for a
violation the parties could have and should have made that clear. They did not.
Indeed, had the parties wanted to distinguish between the remedy for Fixed-Term
employees and Regular employees that distinction would have been clearly
articulated. It is not.
[36]Finally, it was said that the Union did not negotiate a change to Article COR8 or
Article 31of the Collective Agreement because it felt that the rights of Fixed-
Term employees were more than adequately protected by the Overtime Protocol.
DECISION
[37]After consideration, I find that the UniRQ¶VYLHZRIWKLVPDWWHUPXVWSUHYDLO
[38]As suggested by the Employer, Regular and Fixed-Term employees are treated
differently in the Provincial Overtime Protocol. Generally speaking, preference is
given to Regular employees in the distribution of overtime. For example, Fixed-
Term employees are only offered overtime once all of the eligible Regular
employees have been considered. Notwithstanding that preferential treatment,
there is nothing in the Protocol that distinguishes between Regular employees and
Fixed-Term employees in the event of a violation.
- 9 -
[39],DJUHHZLWKWKH8QLRQ¶VREVHUYDWLRQWKDWZKLOHWKHUHLVQRWKLQJWKDWVSHFLILFDOO\
provides for the appropriate remedy in the event of a breach of the Protocol for
Fixed-Term employees, neither is there a provision for Regular employees. The
only reference regarding how disputes are dealt with can be found in the Question
and Answer documents wherein it is made clear that the 3URWRFRO³LQQRZD\
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changes or diminishes individual rights under Article 22 of the
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[40]I am of the view that this statement underscores that any Correctional Officer,
Regular and Fixed-Term alike, are entitled to have an alleged dispute under the
Protocol heard and determined on its merits. Further, I can find nothing in the
Protocol or the Collective Agreement that would fetter my right to order a remedy
for only Fixed-Term employees if a violation occurred. It seems to me to be a
simple yet fundamental labour relations concept that if groups of employees are to
be treated differently, the differential treatment should be expressly specified.
[41]The Employer urged this Board to find that while the Protocol contemplates a
system of distributing overtime for both Regular and Fixed-Term employees; only
Regular employees can seek enforcement of its terms. In large measure it relied
XSRQWKHVWDWHPHQWLQWKH³,QWURGXFWLRQ´RIthe Protocol which stDWHVWKDW³DVSHU
the Collective Agreement (Article COR8), a local overtime distribution system
must distribute overtime fairly and equitably after having ensured that all
RSHUDWLRQDOUHTXLUHPHQWVDUHPHW´,WZDVargued that because this section of the
Collective Agreement does not apply to Fixed-Term employees they are not
entitled to remedial enforcement of the Protocol.
[42]I must disagree. I am of the view that the reference to the Article COR8 of the
Collective Agreement in the Introduction section is merely to inform the reader
that any local overtime distribution syVWHPVPXVW±OLNH&25±SURYLGHIRU
overtime distribution on a fair and equitable basis after having ensured that
operational requirements are met. Such an oblique reference to a provision in the
Collective Agreement in the Introduction section cannot then override very
specific and clear terms of the Protocol.
[43]The Employer submitted that the Question and Answer documents do not give the
Fixed-Term employees more status than they otherwise have under the Collective
Agreement and Protocol. I understand that view although it is interesting that the
Question and Answer sheets were agreed upon by the parties. In any event, I am
at a loss as to why the Employer would agree time and time again in these
communications that the Overtime Protocol applies to Fixed-Term employees if it
ZDVRIWKHYLHZWKDWDOOLWHYHUKDGWRGRZDV³WU\LWVEHVW´WRIROORZWKH3URWRFRO
without any penalty for failure to comply.
[44]It is interesting to review the history of this protocol by way of the documentary
evidence provided. In doing so I must notHWKDW,GLVDJUHHZLWKWKH8QLRQ¶V
characterization of the decision of Vice Chair Lee between these parties. The
original protocol was a local overtime agreement at the Guelph Correctional
Centre. According to the decision of Vice Chair Lee the Union filed a policy
- 10 -
grievance that alleged a violation of COR8.02 and the Employer took the position
that it had not violated any provision of the Collective Agreement or the overtime
protocol. While not all of the protocol was reproduced in that decision, the
preamble has a familiar ring. It stated, according to page 5 of that decision:
The parties agree that the overtime policy is to ensure a fair and equitable
distribution of overtime at the Guelph Correctional Centre, and is in
keeping with Article COR8 of the Correctional Bargaining Unit Collective
Agreement.
[45]According to the first paragraph of Vice &KDLU/HH¶VGHFLVLRQWKHSDUWLHVDJUHHG
at the time that the overtime protocol covered only Regular (then referred to as
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This case concerns a policy grievance date April 1, 1998, alleging that the
employer was violating article Cor8.02 of the collective agreement at the
Guelph Correctional Centre (GCC). In a med/arb. session that took place
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on January 30 2001, a significant number of issues were resolved with
respect to the local agreement for Classified Correctional Officers.
(emphasis mine)
[46]A full reading of that decision makes apparent that the litigation was regarding
only Classified Correctional Officers.
[47]As noted above, the first Provincial Overtime Protocol was negotiated five years
after the issuance of the Lee decision. While the reference to COR8 is still in the
preamble, by all accounts the first Provincial Agreement covered Classified and
Unclassified Correctional Officers. The COR8 reference is continued in every
subsequent agreement. The fact that the reference is in every agreement,
irrespective of the scope of the agreement buttresses my view that it is a general
reference made regarding fairness and equity in the distribution of overtime and
not a limitation as to who is entitled to a remedy in the event of a breach.
[48]There may well be instances when parties agree to a system of overtime
distribution that expressly disallows a remedy for a group of employees in
instances of a breach. That is not the case before me and I am of the view that I
cannot infer from the Collective Agreement or the Protocol that such a limitation
exists. This is particularly true in this instance where there is one single
Agreement for both Regular and Fixed-Term employees. Here, in the absence of
any specific language regarding remedy, the Employer concedes that Regular
employees are entitled to remedial relief. I simply cannot find there is none for
Fixed-Term employees.
- 11 -
[49]I understand from counsel that there is at least one further issue that is raised with
this grievance for the Board to determine. Counsel should contact the Board to
schedule a hearing date for a continuation in this matter.
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Date at Toronto this 15 day of June 2011.
Felicity D. Briggs, Vice-Chair