HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-01192.Robak et al.24-03-21 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# 2023-01192
UNION# 2023-0154-0017
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Robak et al) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ontario Clean Water Agency) Employer
BEFORE
Kathleen G. O’Neil
Arbitrator
FOR THE UNION
Breshna Duranni
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Maria-Kristina Ascenzi
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING
March 19, 2024
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Decision
[1] This decision deals with a group grievance claiming that members of management
improperly performed bargaining unit work, and were not following regulations.
The matter was dealt with in accordance with Article 22.16 of the collective
agreement, and the following are my succinct reasons for the resolution of the
matter.
[2] With the agreement of the parties, I discussed the matter with each party to
develop a good understanding of the facts. Counsel provided me with useful
documents and pictures, including the union’s particulars, supporting emails and
logs, and made submissions as to the applicable law and collective agreement. In
determining this matter, I have considered the facts asserted by each side, about
which there was no major dispute, and the helpful submissions of counsel.
[3] The work site in question is a water treatment site in Belle River Ontario, which
houses a machine known as the Rotating Biological Contactor [RBC], which was
due for replacement. On June 13, 2023, two managers accompanied an outside
contractor to the site, for the purpose of doing a site survey, so that the contractor
could determine the best way to remove the machine prior to its replacement, for
the purposes of preparing a bid on the work. The managers in question knew in
advance that the contractor wished to take measurements, but thought that this
would be confined to the exterior. On the morning of the site visit, the contractor
asked to take measurements of the shaft of the RBC as well, which necessitated
the shut-down of the machine. There were no bargaining unit members working
on site at the time, and arranging to have someone come from another work
location would have involved at least 20 minutes of travel time.
[4] The managers proceeded to shut-down and lock-out the RBC, and then start it up
again once the measurements were taken, involving about 15 minutes in total.
This is the work that the union claims should have been done by members of the
bargaining unit.
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[5] The employer agrees that in the ordinary course, members of the bargaining unit
do this type of work, for example for monthly maintenance. However, the
employer’s position is that the work is not exclusively bargaining unit work, and
that in any event, the work was so minimal that it should not be considered a
breach of the collective agreement, referred to in some of the relevant case law as
the de minimis principle.
[6] Further, the employer argues that there was no safety issue here, or breach of
regulations, as the managers assessed the situation, and determined that there
was no need for extra safety measures, such as a confined space protocol, given
the particular facts of this situation. For instance, the contractor was always
behind the safety rail which circles the machine, and did not need to engage with
the machine or the surrounding area in any dangerous way to measure the shaft.
[7] The union disagrees, arguing that if the shut-down had been done properly, in
accordance with all regulations and safety procedures, as well as with proper
documentation, the work would have taken significantly longer than 15 minutes.
Further, the union maintains that the work was significant enough that the de
minimis principle should not apply. In any event, even small amounts of
bargaining work done by managers can end up eroding the bargaining unit over
time, and should not be allowed, in the union’s view.
[8] Employer counsel relied on Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Butters) v
Ontario (Liquor Control Board), 2018 CanLII 77319 (ON GSB) [Carrier] and
Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Spicer/Union) v Ontario (Labour), 2012
CanLII 29899 (ON GSB) [Herlich], while union counsel relied on portions of Re
Carling O'Keefe Breweries of Canada Ltd. and Western Union of Brewery,
Beverage, Winery & Distillery Workers, Local 287, 1987 CanLII 8783 (AB GAA)
[Beattie].
[9] I start with the observation that the cases all turn on their own facts and the
language of the collective agreement, such as whether there is a prohibition on
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managers doing any and all work that is usually done by members of the
bargaining unit. Further, there is no over-arching definition of what is an allowable
minimal performance of bargaining unit work; it must be seen in the context of the
actual facts in each case.
[10] Having carefully considered everything before me, I have concluded that there was
no violation of the collective agreement on the facts of this case. I find that the
work here was brief, incidental and spontaneous, given the fact that the managers
did not anticipate that the contractor would need the machine to be shut down to
take measurements. I appreciate that the union is concerned both that this should
have been anticipated as part of outlining the work with the contractor in advance,
and that it is not an isolated incident, but I do not have evidence that would lead
me to doubt the good faith of the managers in this particular incident or to find that
this was part of a pattern of small but frequent incursions on bargaining unit work.
In the end, I do not find that the facts of this case rise to the level of threatening the
integrity of the bargaining unit or its work. As well, this issue needs to be seen in
the context of the fact that the language of the applicable collective agreement
does not contain a strict prohibition of management from doing work that would
normally be done by bargaining unit members, as in some of the case law on the
subject.
[11] Although the main focus of the parties was on the performance of bargaining unit
work, there was also reference in the grievance to not following regulations. The
union was of the view that there were further safety precautions that should have
been taken, and that the managers did not properly document what occurred.
Nonetheless, both parties agreed that licensed individuals are permitted to make
assessments of the situation and decide whether additional precautions such as a
rescue plan are needed. There is nothing about the facts of which I was made
aware that convinces me that the safety assessment of a licensed manager in the
facts of this case was unreasonable or dangerous, or in breach of any pertinent
regulation. If there was insufficient documentation, I am not persuaded that this
amounts to a breach of the collective agreement on the facts before me, although
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it may be something that management would wish to ensure is accomplished more
thoroughly in the future.
[12] For the above-noted reasons, the grievance is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 21st day of March 2024.
“Kathleen G. O’Neil”
_________________________________
Kathleen G. O'Neil, Arbitrator