HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-0019.Petrucella et al.82-11-12IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
Before:
OLBEU (J. Petrucella, J. Robinson
& P. Blotsky)
and
Crievors
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario) ’
Employer
P. Draper Vice Chairman
H. Simon Member
A.C. Stapleton LMember
For the Grievor: E. Beaulieu, Counsel
Union Consulting Services
For the Employer: R.J. Drmaj, Counsel
Hicks, IMorley, Hamilton, Stewart & Storie
Hearing: September 23, 1982
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The respective Grievors, G. Petrucella; J. Robinson and
P. Blotsky, grieve that they have been appraised contrary to the governing
principles and standards and that the appraisals conducted by the Employer
should have led to the re-classification of their jobs. The grievances have
apparently been treated throughout by the parties as classification cases
and were argued as such before the Board. Accordingly, we conclude that
the issue submitted to us for determination is whether or not the Grievers’
jobs are improperly classified Warehouseperson Grade 2 (“W2”) and should
be re-classified Warehouseperson Grade 3 elW39.
J. Robinson has been employed by the LCBO as a W2 at its
Head Office Warehouse premises in Toronto since April 1974. When first
employed he performed general manual cleaning duties but for some six or
seven years he has worked full time operating a power sweeper-scrubber in
the warehouse. Apart from annual negotiated increases, he received one
salary increase in 1976 when he was transferred from probationary to
permanent status. At each annual salary/promotion appraisal interview
with his general foreman since 1976 he has been told that he is at the
maximum salary for his classification.
P. Blotsky has been employed by the LCBO since September
1969 as a W2. He performs general manual cleaning duties, washing floors,
sweeping, dusting and disposing of waste in offices, locker rooms, lunch
rooms and public areas of the Head Office Warehouse premises. His
experience at annual salary/promotion appraisal interviews has been the
same as that of Robinson.
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G. Petruceila has been employed by the LCBO as a W2 since
October 1975. He performs general manual cleaning duties in offices,
lunch rooms and public areas of the Head Office Warehouse premises
similar to those performed by Blotsky. His experience at annual
salary/promotion appraisal interviews. has bean the same as that of
Robinson and Blotrky.
R. Iacobucci, subpoenaed to testify for the Grievofs, has been
employed by the LCBO for about six years. He started at Bellefield
Warehouse as a W2 doing general manual cleaning duties and later operated
a power sweeper-scrubber first at Bellefield and then at Kipling Warehouse
where he was transferred when Bellefield was closed about four years ago.
His job was re-classified to W3, whether shortly before or after his
transfer is not clear from the evidence. After having operated a power
sweeper-scrubber at Kipling for about four years his job was re-classified
as a W4 in July 1982 and now operates a fork-lift truck.
B. Merry, subpoenaed to testify for the Grievors, has been
employed by the LCBO for about four years at its London Warehouse,
beginning as a W2. His present classification is W3 and as such he operates
a power sweeper-scrubber for a majority of his time but also drives a
delivery truck and assembles cases on skids. In early 1982 he agreed to
take on general manual cleaning duties that had bean performed by an
employee who retired.
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G. Dube, subpoenaed to testify for the Grievors, started in 1965
as a temporary employee serving customers at a LCBO store m Cornwall
and continued in that capacity until 1970. In that year he was transferred
to, the Ottawa Warehouse, given permanent status and classified as a W3,
the classification he now holds. He performs general manual cleaning
&ties in washrooms, locker rooms, lunch rooms and offices of the
warehouse premises.
G. Chapman is Senior lob Analyst with the LCBO. The
Classification Guides for W2 and W3 (appended to this decision) are dated
February 1, 1978, and were prepared by her, working in conjunction with a
firm of consultants. They are derived from individual job descriptions for
employees in W2 and W3 classifications. In her opinion the job descriptions
for the Grievors (which are not available to us) confirm that their proper
classification is W2. She concedes that the job descriptions of two of the
Grievers, Blotsky and Petrucella, appear to be almost identical to that of
Dube and that the job description of the third Grievor, Robinson, appears
to be almost identical to that of Iacobucci when he was a W3. Since the
adoption of the Classification Guides, jobs that are “over-classified” are
not re-classified until a change of incumbents takes place.
We accept that, as stated in McCourt, 198178, “the essence of
the Board’s enquiry is to determine whether the Employer conformed to its
own classification standard”. We take from the numerous Board decisions
in classification cases that the Employer modifies (or fails to conform to)
its classification standards by either:
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1. Not placing a job in the proper class, or
2. Permanently assigning an employee to
perform work substantiaIIy similar to that
beiog performed in a higher class.
In either case, the employee is improperly classified.
The family of duties encompassed in both the W2 and W3
classifications may be said to be of an unskilled or, at most, a semi-skilled
nature and the responsibilities to be minimal. It is therefore to be
expected that the duties and responsibilities as described in the
Classification Guides for the two classes are not mutually exclusive or
even substantially different; that there is no single, distinctive duty, or
core function, that may be said to differentiate one class from the other;
and that the Classification Guides are couched in general terms. In such
circumstances documented standards afford little assistance to Grievors
attempting to show that they are improperly included ln one class and
should be re-classified to another, specified class. In the present case we
are not satisfied, on the evidence of the work performed by the Grievors
measured against the Employer% class standards, that they are improperly
classified W2 and would properly be classified W3. At this point the
Grievers have shown that the W3 classification is potentially proper, but
not that the W2 classification is improper.
We then proceed to the second branch of the Board’s inquiry.
To deal first with the grievances of Petrucella and Blotsky, the
case put for them is that the work they have been performing for 13 and
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seven years respectively is identical to that Dube has been performing for
12 years. That claim is fully supported by the evidence. The question is
whether or not, in the circumstances, the comparison is valid.
As stated in Dalrymple, 79177, ” . ..evidence of others in a higher
classification doing substantially the same work as the grievor is only
important when it is seen to reflect the actual practice of the employer”.
The Board has also expressed in Charbameau and Skomorowskl, 435/80, and
Garrard, 521181, views to the effect that Employer practices unrelated to
class standards cannot subvert those standards. That argument is one that
cuts both ways. We believe that it is not an unreasonable extension of
those views to conclude that in the resolution of classification issues the
Employer’s practices are relevant only to the extent that they derive from
class standards.
The entry of Dube directly from a temporary appointment that
had provided no related experience into the Warehouseperson series at the
Grade 3 level rather than at the normal entry level, Grade 2 (there is no
Grade 1) was, on its face, patently irregular. In effect, we are asked to
sanction promotions within a classification series taking as our precedent a
single, aberrant appointment to that series. In light of the circumstances
of Dube’s appointment we are of the opinion that the evidence of the work
he performs cannot be regarded as of sufficient evidential value to support
the re-classification sought by the two Grievors. Accordingly, we find that
the Grievers, Petrucella and Blotsky, have failed to discharge the onus of
proving that their jobs are improperly classified. Their grievances are
dismissed.
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Turning to the grievance of Robinson, it must first be noted
that his job has remained classified as a W2 despite a significant change in
his duties. In addition, the Employer re-classified Iacobucci’s job from W2
to W3 while both he and Robinson were performing the identical type of
work: the full-time operation of a power sweeper-scrubber in a warehouse.
The re-classification of Iacobucci’s job from W2 to W3, taken
together with the failure or refusal to re-classify Robinson’s job similarly,
clearly represents a modification, in practice, of the Employer’s
classification standards. That is, the standards were applied differently to
one job than to the other. Further, there is no evidence to suggest that the
decision to re-classify Iacobuccl’s job was not taken in the normal course
or does not represent an application of the Employer’s classification
standards. We would not be prepared, in any and all circumstances, to act
on evidence of a single modification of the Employer’s classification
standards. However, we consider that the evidence of the modification
here, the re-classification of the job of one employee but not that of
another doing identical work, is of sufficient evidential value to support
the re-classification sought by the Grievor.
We find that the Grievor, Robinson, having established that the
work he performs is identical to that performed by an employee whose job
has been classified W3, is improperly classified.
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It is therefore ordered that the Grievor, Robinson, be
re-classified Warehouseperson Grade 3 with effect from December 5, 1980.
We remain seized of the case in order to deal with the matter of
compensation should the parties fail to agree on that question.
DATED at Toronto, Ontario this 12th day of November, 1982.
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P. Draper Vice Chairman \
H. Simon Member
A.G. Stapleton Member
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5:2410
APPENDICES
APPENDIX I
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L.C.B.O. dr, L.L.B.O. CLASSIFICATION GUIDE
EVALUATION
CRITERIA
SUMMARY OF
RESPONS-
IBILITY
LEVEL
TYPICAL
DUTIES
DECISION
[MAKING/
COMPLEXITY
CONTACTS
SUPERVISION
GIVEN
SUPERVISION
RECEIVED
ENTRANCE
QUALIFICA-
TIONS
February 1, 1978
CLASSIFICATION
WAREHOUSEPERSON GRADE 2
This covers positions at the entrance and training
level involved with straightforward assignments
pertaining to the operations, maintenance, and
appearance of a Warehouse bottling and blending
premises.
Generally these positions are not required to
operate rideable equipment.
Duties may include: assisting with the assembly of
store orders in case loads on pallets and delivering to
appropriate checker; loading and unloading liquor box
cars and placing the cases on pallets; and other straight-
forward duties pertaining to warehouse operations.
Other duties may include: cleaning designated locations
with the use of a machine for sweeping, vacuuming and
scrubbing; performing the regular duties of an operator
on the bottling line; performing,maintenance tasks under
supervision; and performing duties of a security guard/
night watchperson or other similar functions such as
working the enquiry desk; operating a freight elevator.
No decisions called for, tasks will be of routine
nature with ample precedent or clearly defined
procedures as guidance.
Contacts are limited to members of the work unit.
Requests for specific information or assistance are
referred to the appropriate person.
None. May provide general information to other junior
staff performing similar tasks.
Work is performed under close supervision. Assignments
are scheduled over a short time frame. Detailed
instructions are provided and ongoing guidance and
direction is readily available.
Completion of eight years of elementary schooling or
equivalent. For designated positions requires a
mechanical aptitude. Previous work experience is not
required.
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L.C.B.O. & L.L.B.O. CLASSIFICATION GUIDE
EVALUATION
CRITERIA
SUMMARY OF
RESPONS-
IBILITY
LEVEL
TYPICAL
DUTIES
DECISION
MAKING/
COMPLEXITY
CONTACTS
SUPERVISION
GIVEN
SUPERVISION
RECEIVED
ENTRANCE
QUALIFICA-
TIONS
AF’PERDIX II
February 1, 1978
CLASSIFICATION
WAREHOUSEPERSON GRADE 3
This covers positions at the working level involved with
straightforward assignments pertaining to the operations,
support services, maintenance, and appearance of a Ware-
house or bottling and blendiig premises. Generally
required to operate rideable equipment. These duties
may extend to the Head Office premises.
Duties may include: checking, transporting pallet loads
using a fork truck or assembling store orders and
delivering to appropriate checker; loading and unloading
liquor box cars and placing the cases on pallets; and
other duties pertaining to warehouse operations.
Other duties may ‘include: performing the regular duties
of an operator for the bottling line or blending tanks.
Providing general labour in the laboratories or offices;
maintaining and repairing equipment under supervision;
examining and repacking of damaged cases; and perform-
ing all the duties of a chauffeur or driver.
Few decisions called for and these will be of routine
nature with ample precedent or clearly defined pro-
cedures as guidance.
Contacts are generally limited to members of the work
unit; contacts with other work units may be for informa-
tion or assistance. May be required to provide service
to the public management of other departments.
None. May be required to assist with the training of
junior employees.
Work is performed under supervision. Established
procedures and instructions cover most aspects of the
work. Guidance and classification is readily available,
but each assignment is generally completed independently
due to familiarity with operations gained through
repetitive experience.
Completion of eight years of elementary schooling or
equivalent. For designated positions requires a
mechanical aptitude. A minimum of one year’s
experience as a Warehouseperson Grade 2 or equivalent
related experience.