HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-0003.Policy.77-01-073/x
CROWN &4i’LOYEES 416/964 6426 Suite 405,
GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT 77 Bloor Street Vest
GOARD TOi7ONT0, Cntizrio.
MS.5 IM2
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under The
CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Policy Grievance (Stand-by & Hours of Work) (Grievor)
And
Ontario Housing Corporation (Employer)
D. M. Beatty - Chairman
Mary Gibb - Member
Dan Anderson - Member
For the Grievor
Mr. G. 0. McPhee - Canadian Union of Public Employees
For the Employer
Hearing
Mr. A. P. Tarasuk - Central Ontario Industrial
Relations Institute
Suite 405, 77 Bloor Street W., Toronto, November 15th, 1976
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8y the grievance~which has been placed before this Board,
we must determine the rather narrow issue of what compensation should
be paid to employees who are required to serve on a stand-by
basis on their regular days off and on the statutory holidays
that are described in Article 20 of the Collective Agreement.
That is to say, the issue before this Board is not to determine
whether such persons may be required to serve on a stand-by basis
during such periods, or whether the concept of stand-by duty conflicts
with and undermines the purpose of a scheduled day off and a
statutory holiday. Rather the issue before us as put by the union,
is simply to settle the amount of compensation that should be paid
to persons who are obliged to serve in that capacity on those days.
For its part, the employer directed our attention to
Articles 17 and 18 of the Collective Agreement as expressly providing
the answer to that question. Those sections of the Agreement
stipulate:
ARTICLE 17 - CALL-OUT AND REPORTING ALLOWANCE
17.01 Each employee coming &thin the bargaining unit
who has completed his regular day’s work (but not
including on-site Building Custodians who have
completed their reguZar shift and on-site time) and
is ea22ed out and reports for overtime or who is ca22ed
out and reports for work on other than his regular
work day shall be paid as a m-inirmun the equivalent of
three 13) hours at time and one ha2f whether such
employee works or not, for each time such employee
is called out and reports for overtime work or work
as the case may be.
17.02 Each on-site BuiZding Custodian coming within the
bargaining unit who has comp2eted his regular shift
and on-site time and is called out and reports for
overtime work or who is cal2ed out and reports for
work on other than his regular work day shall be paid
as a minimLrm the equivalent of three (3) hours at
time and one half whether s;tch emp2oyee works or not
for’each time such employee is called out and reports
for overtime work or work as the case may be, provided,
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ARTICLE.17':'CALL-OUT'AND'RBPORTIRG'ALLOWANCE
17.02 however, such employee shall not be entitled
to more than one call out and report aZZowance
unless such second caZ1 out occurs more than
aJa hours after the time of the first call out.
ARTICLE 18 - STAIVD-BY ALLOWANCE
18.01 Where an employee is required to stand-by and
be available for recall to work for a period
of time that is not a regu2ar working period,
the employee shall be paid a premium of 2Oc
per hour for that period. Stand-by time
must be approved in advance by the appropriate Supervisor.
The provisions of this clause wi21 not apply
to Building Custodians during periods of time
for which they are in receipt of on-site
premitrm, nor will it apply to Security Tenants.
Reading those two provisions together it was the employer's
position that all employees who were required to serve on a
stand-by basis on their regular days off and on a statutory holiday
should be compensated at the rate of twenty cents per hour for
such service, and in addiction should receive three hours pay
at the rate of time and one half for each call out to which they
were obliged to respond during the period they were on such
stand-by duty.
By way of contrast, and in support of the grievance, the
union argued that the stand-by allowance described in Article 18.01
only applies to the periods of time immediately following the
conclusion of an employee's regular shift and does not apply
to an employee's regular day off nor to days on which a
statutory holiday fell due. In those latter instances, it was the
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union's position that Article 16, providi,ng for premium overtime
rates of time and one half would be applicable. Moreover, it
was the union's position that in discussions preceeding and
following the filing of their grievance, the employer had
conceded the union's interpretation of Article 18.01 and has,
except for the issue of the retroactivity of the compensation
due and owing to the employees, settled this grievance with the
union on that basis.
With regard to the latter contention we do not believe,
on the evidence before us, that it can reasonably be said that
the employer had settled this grievance and conceded the union's
interpretation of Article 18.01. Rather in our view, on the
evidence presented, it would appear that while the employer did
agree to cease its practice of assigning employees on a stand-by
basis on their regular days off and on statutory holidays as of
January 31, 1976, at no time did it concede that Article 18.01
was inapplicable to either an employee's days off or to statutory
holidays. To the contrary, on Mr. F. Harrison's evidence, and
from documents filed with this Board, it is apparent that
throughout the period this matter was under discussion, the
employer consistently claimed that, for the period from June 23,
1975 when this agreement became effective, until January 31,
1976 when it ceased its practice, employees who served on a
stand-by basis on their regular days off and on statutory holidays,
would only be entitled to be paid at the rate of twenty cents for
each hour so served and in addition at the rate of time and one
half for at least three hours for each occasion that the employees
were called out to perform work during that period.
.? c.
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Indeed, Mr. Roach in his evidence, conceded that as late
as December 1975 when he was meeting with Mr. Rose, the latter
had confirmed that the employer's interpretation of Article 18
was as it his described above. As well, in agreeing to the
contents of an internal memorandum of the Corporation describing
a meeting which occurred in February 1976, Mr. Roach can be
taken as confirming the employer's contention that it had,
throughout the period in question, maintained its interpretation
of Article 18. In the result, and so characterized, we do not
believe that in agreeing to eliminate its practice of assigning
employees to stand-by duty on their regular days off and on
statutory holidays as of January 31, 1976, that the employer can
be taken to have abandoned the merits or propriety of its
interpretation of Article 18.01. Nor do we believe~that by
agreeing with the union in January 1976 to meet and discuss
"possible retroactive compensation" with respect to its past
interpretation and application of Article 18.01 that the employer
was in any way conceding or deferring to the union's interpretation
of Article 18.01. Rather as both Mr. Harrison's testimony and
the documents filed attest, the issue of retroactivity so far as
the employer was concerned, raised the question of whether the
employees who had served on a stand-by basis in the past had
actually been paid in accordance with the Corporation's interpretation
of Articles 17 and 18. In short then, on the evidence before this
Board, we are simply unable to draw the conclusion that the employer
conceded, or reasonably could be perceived as having conceded the
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union's interpretation of Article 18.01 as it related to.employees
who had served on a stand-by basis since June 23, 1975 on their
regular days off and on the statutory holidays that are described
in the agreement.
As well, and with regard to the proper interpretation
to be placed on Article 18.01, we would agree with the employer
that reasonably construed, Article 18.01 cannot be limited to
those periods of time which follow an employee's regular shift.
To the contrary, Article 18.01 is absolute on its face and admits
of no such qualification. Thus, to accede to the union's
interpretation would require this Board to add words to Article 18.01
which the parties themselves have failed to do. Very simply and
had the parties intended that the stand-by premium was only to
apply to hours immediately following an employee's regular working
hours, they could have so drafted Article 18.01. Indeed in
Articles 15.02 and 17.01 providing for the payment of an "on-site"
premium and a reporting allowance respectively, the parties have
shown they are able, where they so intended, to expressly refer
specifically and distinctly to an employee's scheduled off-duty
days and to the period of time which follows an employee's regular
shift. Thus, for example, in Article 15.02, the parties have
expressly excluded an employee's scheduled days off from the
provisions of the on-site premium. ,By way of contrast however,
in Article 18.01 the parties have anticipated that an employee
may be required to stand-by "for a period of time that is not a
regular working period". Drawn in such general, unequivocal and
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sweeping terms, such a period would, in our view, embrace both
that period of time which follows an employee's regular work day,
and, as well, those days which do.not form part of his regular
working schedule. Very simply then, and in the absence of any
indication that the parties intended the phrase, "not a regular
working period", only to refer to the period of time following an
employee's regular hours, we would hold that Article 18.01 does
apply both to that period and.as, well to an employee's off-duty
days and to the statutory holidays that are delineated in Article 20.
Such an interpretation only confirms to what we perceive
to be the plain language of Article 18.01 but, as well, it gives
effectto a distinction that has ~been, and is generally drawn
between stand-by duty and work actually performed outside of an
employee's regular tour of duty. That distinction, which may be
seen for example in s.13(2), of the Regulations, promulgated
under s.65 of the Employment Standards Act S.O. 1974 C112, and
which we believe is reflected in Articles 15.02 and 18.01 of the
Agreement before us, recognizes that stand-by service cannot be
strictly equated with the performance of work, but rather refers
only to the period an employee is waiting or holding himself
available and ready~for work. So defined, the premium payable for
such services is independent of any wage paid for work performed
and is intended to compensate the employee for his holding
himself available for duty and for the concomitant restriction on
his ability to dispose of and utilize what would otherwise be
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his free time as he pleases. Accordingly and while we would express
no opinion on the appropriateness of the rate that was negotiated
for such stand-by service, one would expect, given the purpose
of the allowance, for that rate to be something less than that
paid for work actually performed outside of an employee's
normal hours of work. Thus, and as reflected in Article 15.02,
an on-site building custodian who is required to keep himself
available from the completion of his regular shift until 1:00 a.m.
is paid a similar premium of twenty-four cents "as remuneration
for availability". Given that the purpose implicit in a stand-by
allowance, which would apply to all employees of the Corporation,
including on-site building custodians, would be similar if not
identical to that underlying the on-site premium, it would require
very clear language for this Board to conclude that the method and
amount of compensation for each of them would differ as dramatically
as the union suggests. Very simply and in the absence of any
language suggesting such a result, it does not strike this Board
as being logical or reasonable to assume for example, that an
on-site building custodian should be paid a premium of twenty-four
cents an hour for holding himself available from the conclusion
of his shift on a Friday until 1:00 a.m. on a Saturday, but should
receive time and one half of his regular rate if he should be
required to again hold himself available on the next day, if that
day were, for him, a scheduled day off. To the.contrary, given the
similarity in purpose and function of these two premiums, one
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would expect as the language~of Articles 15.02 and 18.01 reveals,
a close proximity in the remuneration paid under each of them.
In the result, it follows both from its clear language
and its implicit purpose, that Article 18.01 in referring to
periods of time which are not "regular working periods" would
apply to both scheduled days off and to statutory holidays.
Accordingly and during those periods when an employee is required
to serve on a stand-by basis he is entitled to be paid at the
rate of twenty cents an hour for each hour served and this,
regardless of whether any work is performed. Moreover, during
such a period and in contrast to certain other premium rates
such as, for example, the premium paid for work performed by
lead hands (Article 14.02) or for work performed on a Sunday
(Article 16.03), the stand-by premium would be the sole
remuneration to which the employee would be entitled if he were
not called upon to perform any work during that period. However,
by virtue of Article 17.01 of the Agreement, and in addition to
that twenty cent premium, such employees would also be entitled
to the reporting allowance when, during a stand-by period, they
were required to respond to a call out. In short, and in the
latter circumstance, the'employee would be entitled to both the
twenty cent stand-by premium and, at a minimum, to the three
hour guarantee at time and one half that is paid for each call out.
In the result, the union's claim that employees who,
during the period from June 23, 1975 until January 31, 1976, had
been required to serve on a stand-by basis on their days off or
on a statutory holiday, be paid at the rate of time and one
half for the hours served m&t, for the reasons given, be denied.
Dated at Toronto this 7th day of January, 1977
D. M. Beatty
Chairman
I COnCur
Mary Gibb
Member
r concur
Dan Anderson
Member