HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-0147.Appelle.79-03-14147173
iN THE MATTER OF X4 ARBITRATION
\ Under The
CROXN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
, if
~Between: Mr. W. Appelle
And
Ministry of the Environment
Before:
Far the Gyievw
Forthe Employer
Professor &. S3m Vice-Chairman
Mr. P. Coupey Member
Mr. B. Switzman Member
Mrs. L. Stevens, Grievance Officer
3ctario Public Service Employees union
1901 Yonge Street, Torcnto, Cn%rio
Mr. W. Gorchinsky~
Senior Staff Relations Officer
Staff Relations Branch
Civil Service Conrnission
2nd Floor Frost.S., Queen's Park
Hearing:
September 2?th, 1978
Suite 2100
XC Dundas St. W.
Toronto, Ontario
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This case was 'heard on the same day as, and in conjunction with,
Re O.P.S.E.V. (ClOutier et al.) and'xinistry of Transportation and
Communicati&, 128/x'. As we noted in that case, those grievances,
although distinct from the present, also dealt with the provisions
of the collective agreement relating to "call-back", "stand-by time",
and "on-call~duty". The applicable provisions in force at the time
of the present grievance (the 1978 Working Conditions Agreement),
and materially identical to those in force for the cloutier et al.
grievances, are as'follows:
ARTICLB 14 - CALL BACK
14.1 An employee who leaves his place of work
and is subsequently called back to work
prior to the starting tim? of his next scheduled
shift shall be paid a minimum of four (4) hours
pay at one and one-half, (1;4) times his basic
hourly rate.
ARTICLE 15 - STAND-BY TIME
15;1 "Stand-by time" means a period of time
that is not a regular -workJng period
during which a. employee keeps himself available
for immediate recall to work.
32.2 stad-by time shall be approved in
writing and such approval shall be
given prior to the time the employee is
required to stand-by except in circmstances
beyond the Employer's control.
15.3 Where an employee is required to stand-by
for not more than the number of hours in
his normal work day, he shall receive four (4)
hours pay ar his basic hourly rate.
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15:4 Where an employee is required to stand-by
for mre than the number of hours in his
normal work day, he shall receive payment of one-
third (l/3) of the stand-by hours at one and one-
half (1%) times his basic hourly rate.
ARTI&C 16 -ON-CAL&DUTY
16.1 "On-call duty" means a period of.time that
is not a regular working period, overtime
period, stand-by period, or call back period,
during which an employee is required to be reasonably
available for recall t6 work.
16.2 On-call duty shall be approved prior to the
time the employee is required to be cn call.
16.3 Where an employee is req&ed to be on call
he shall receive twenty-five cents (2%)
per hour for all hours such employee is assigned to
on call duty.
In the Cloutier award this panel of the Board indicated its con-
currence with the principles expressed in previous decisions of other,
panels of the Board, and particularly the observation in ne 0.P.S.E.U
(Jamieson et al.) and Ministry of Community and Social Services,
that each such case must be considered on its own facts, and
that a decision in one workplace context may not be readilytransferable
to another. We therefore turn to the evidence before us.
The grievor was at the material time a Maintenance Mechanic at
the Sudbury Water Pollution Control Plant. Only four persons are
employed in this classification, and consequently the grievor was
placed~on a station which the Employee asserts to be "on-call"
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within the meaning of Article 16 for one week out of every four. In~
addition, of course, the grievor works regular day-shift hours Monday
to'Friday.
The grievor, when "on-call"? is issued a pager provided by Bell
Canada. The Water Pollution Control Plant is left unmanned during
off-shift hours, but an alarm system monitors all critical functions. ,
In the event of a breakdown, an alarm is transmitted to the Wahnapitae
Water Pumping Plant, which is manned on a twenty-four hour basis, or
If to a commercial answering service.
These agencies are responsible for contacting the "on-call"
mechanic, and he is responsible for clearing the alarm and'performing
the required maintenance operations. ,The question before us is whether
the instructions given to the grievor constituted an order to be
"available for imnediate recall to work", and thus on "stand-by time"
(Article 15), or "reasonably available for recall to work", and thus
on "on-call duty" (Article 16). In’the present case we have literally
no evidence of oral consnunication to the grievor of what was expected
of him in.respect of response to calls.~ The grievor says no one has
told him what he must do to meet the requirements of his on-call status.
The superintendent of the Plant gave evidence of the flexibility
available to employees'"on-call", but was unable to confirm whether
anyone had ever. discussed this flexibility with the grievor. Without
more, this would be a case of a managerial vacuum, like the Cloutier
et al. decision, in which individual.employees were simply left to
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make their own interpretations of the collective agreement. In that
situation, as this panel pointed out in the cloutier decision, the
Employer bears a considerable risk of the consequences of damage and
may well forfeit the right to rely on any but the loosest interpretation
of "reasonable" in any disciplinary case which might arise.
In the present case, however, there were also instructions in
writing. Exhibit 1, a typewritten instruction sheet obviously intended
for maintenance mechanics on call (and so identified by the grievor),~
includes the following description of the responsibility of the on-call
mechanic wheri paged and informed of an alarm:
The person 'on call* will have no acknowledgement
to make except to get to the plant as quickly
as possible and clear the alarm condition.'...
(emphasis added)
On the evidence before us. we are satisfied that the grievor
had ample grounds to conclude that the instructions given to him
required him to report to the plant "as quickly as possible", an
expresiion which more closely fits the "immediate" test of Article 75.
Faced with such a conflict between his instructions and his pay for
alerted status, he quite properly filed a grfevance. The day after
his grievance was filed, he received a reply (Exhibit 4) which,
afthough not particular]y satisfactory, at least clearly ~set out the
"reasonable" test as applicable to his alerted status. There was not,
therefore, a long period during which the grievor had asserted his
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grievance‘rights but had not been placed in a position of knowing that,
like the grievors in the craftier et al. case, he was to rely on his
own interpretation of the collective agreement.
We find, however, that the Employer was $t least technically in
breach of Article 15 and 16 of the collective agreement for the week
of June 9-15, 1978, when the grievance was filed~and when the grievor
was in fact on alerted status, had been given equivocal instructions
more appropriate to "stand-by" than to "on-call" duty, and had
recognized that his contractual rights were violated.
In the circumtances, therefore, the grievor is entitled to be
paid for the week of June 9-15, 1978 under Article 15 of the collective
agreement for all hours during which he was expected to report to
work "as quickly as possible" upon ,receipt of an alarm. We remain
seized of-jurisdiction to calculate the amount, payable should the
parties be unable to agree.
Dated at Toronto this 14th day of March 1979.
K. P. Swan Vice-Chairman
I dissent (See attached)
P. Coupey Member
I 'concur
B. Switzman Member
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DISSENT
147170
Mr. W; Appelle and
Ministry of the Environment
With respect, I am unable to agree with the majority Board Report.
The issue in dispute, in its simplest form was whether the grievor
was on "stand-by time" or "on-call duty" for the. period June 9 - 15, 1978.
Apart from the form and amount of payment, the primary differentiation
between stand-by and on-calllis that under Article 15 - Stand-by Time,
an employee must make himself available for "immediate recall" (emphasis
added) to work, whereas under Article 16 - On-Call Duty, an employee is
required to be Veasonably available" (emphasis added) for recall to work.
The testimony of the grievor indicated that when he was hired, he
would be subject to being "on-call" one week per month; he would be
contacted at home by telephone first and if he was not reached, that he
would then be paged on the Bell Canada Pager; he was never told the
response time, and.that there were no restrictions on the distance he
could be from the plant while on-call duty.~
While the grievor had.been employed at the Sudbury Water Pollution.
Control Plant since October 4, 1976, the on-call system had been in
effect since 1964 without any complaint from the employees.
It is interesting to note that Exhibit #1 is headed "On-Call Schedule- .~..
(emphasis added) for Sudbury W.P.C.P." and covers the period starting
May-12, 1978 and for the next six months, which clearly indicated the
periods of time that the grievor would be "on call"! *.
Evidence was also provided that on two occasions the grievor had not
responded30 calls, and that another mechanic took the calls. It is
apparent that ~the grievor was not "immediately available" for recall to
-a-
work,.and this would lead us to believe that he left himself only ,
"reasonably available".for recall to work.
The grievor claims in his grievance as follows: "I grieve the
payment of on-call duty, Article 16, Section 16.bl of the Working
Conditions Agreement in that I must answer to a pager and must be
readily available in the event of an emergency". I would submit that
the griever's phrase "readily available".is closerto "reasonably
available" than it is to "inmediately available"!
Although the,instructions in Exhibit 1 state "The person 'on-call' ,/'
will have no acknowledgment except to get to the plant as quickly as '
possible and clear the'~alarm condition....", I cannot accept the
conclusion that the requirement to report to the plant "as quickly as
possible" is an expression which more closely fits the "immediate" test
of Article 15 in view of the evidence and testimony provided at the
hearing.
It is apparent to me that the grievor,understood that he was "on-
call" and had demonstrated the requirement to respond on a "reasonably
available"'basis.as.cglled for under Article'16 and that he wasp, therefore,
;c. appropriately compensated.
For the foregoing reasons, I cannot accept that the employer was "at
least technically in breach of Articles 15 and 16" of the Collective Agree-
ment, and therefore would have dismissed the grievance.
Respectfully submitted,
(Signed)
P. H. Coupey ',-