HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-0070.Pelletier.83-07-28IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
Before:
For the Grievor:
For the Employer:
Hearing:
OLBEU (R. Pelletier)
Grievor
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
Employer
J. F. W. Weatheril
H. L. Rof;inson
A. G. Stapleton
1 Chairman
Member
Member
E. J. Shilton Lennon
Counsel
Cavalluzzo, Hayes & Lennon
Barristers & Solicitors
R. J. Drmaj
Counsel
Hicks Morley Hamilton Stewart StOrie
Barristers L SOliCitOrS
May 6, 1983
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In this grievance, dated January 11, 1982,
the grievor alleges, in effect, that he was improperly
threatened with suspension for violation of the employer's
dress code, in that he wore blue jeans to work.
This matter came before a panel of this Board
(somewhat differently constituted) on June 22, 1982. In
a decision issued on July 21, 1982, it was held that,
notwithstanding the employer's decision to withdraw any
warning, there remained a grievance to be adjudicated
although the relief claimed need no longer include a
withdrawal of the warning. The issue of whether or not a
disciplinary warning had in fact been issued was not dealt
with, nor were the merits of the case dealt with.
At the hearing on the merits held before the
present panel of the Board, the question of whether or
not a disciplinaryWarning had in fact been issued was
not raised. The hearing, it may be said, proceeded on
the tacit assumption that disciplinary action had been
taken, and the issue is simply whether or not there was
justcause for any disciplinary action. In more concrete
terms, the issue is whether or not it was proper for
the grievor to report for work dressed in blue jeans.
There is no dispute as to the facts. The employer's
operating manual includes the following provisions under
"deportment":
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01. All employees shall be neat, clean
and presentable at all times.
02. Criteria for male employees:
Hair - off the collar and controlled
Sideburns - to lobe of ear
Beards - reasonable and controlled
Moustache - reasonable and controlled
03. Dress :
Shirts and ties - at all times
Shoes - clean and presentable
Trousers - cleaned and pressed
Females employed in stores will wear
issued smocks.
All employees at Duty Free Stores Will
wear issued uniforms.
The propriety of those regulations and in
particular of section .03, the "dress code", is not
in dispute. The regulations have been in effect for
a number of years, and would appear to be appropriate
for employees of the L.C.B.O.
The grievor is a Clerk 4, employed at an
L.C.B.O. store in Windsor. His duties include the
following: unloading trucks; running cash; performing
office work; walking the floor to prevent shopliftFng;
washing, scrubbing and waxing floors: cleaning windows
and general housekeeping. About one-half of his time
is spent on stock handling and maintenance.
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On January 11, 1982, the grievor came to work
wearing blue jeans. His dress was correct in other
respects, and his shirt and tie were, it would seem,
those issued by the employer as required by article 17
of the collective agreement. It was considered by the
employer that the grievor was in breach of the dress
code and he was (or so we assume; we make no finding
inthis respect), warned in that regard. As we have
noted, any such warning appears to have been withdrawn
later. The issue is whether or not there was just cause
for the imposition of discipline, and in particular,
whether or not the wearing of blue jeans constituted a
violation of the dress code.
The code, set out above, requires male employees
to wear "trousers - clean and pressed" to work. Reasonable
compliance with this quite proper rule is to be determined
having regard to the general requirement that employees
be "neat, clean and presentable at all times", and to the
workingenvironment in which the rule is to be applied. In
the instant case, the grievor worked in a retail self-
serve liquor store, performing retailing, stockroom and
maintentance jobs. On the evidence, he was "neat, clean
and presentable" on the occasion in question - except
that he was wearing blue jeans. There is also evidence,
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it may be said, that a fairly wide variety of attire
is accepted by the employer as meeting the requirements
of the dress code. This includes, with respect to
female employees, blue denim smocks (including blue
smocks issued by the employer) and "Levi" skirts, and
with respect to male employees, sweat pants, jogging
suits and "rugby pants".
Blue jeans are, in a general sense, "trousers",
although the latter term may at times be used in a more
restrictive sense which might exclude jeans (to say
nothing of sweat pants or rugby pants). In stating that
jeans may be considered trousers, we draw on everyday
usage, and not on the dictionary definition to which we
were referred. The definition of trousers as garments
'-- covering the body from the waist to the ankles and
divided so as to make a separate covering for each leg"
(Funk L Wagnall's), is surely inadequate as it would include
therein garments (such as pantyhose and tights), which
are not trousers,while excluding therefrom others (as
arguably,Bermuda shorts), which are. This only goes to
show that dictionaries should be used with great care.
In our view; an employee may be in compliance
with the dress code, and in particular may be said to
be wearing "trousers - clean and pressed" when he is
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wearing blue jeans. This is not to say that one is
always in compliance with the code when wearing jeans.
In an interesting article to which we were referred,
it is said of blue jeans that:
II-- instead of being at their best when
clean and new, they are most prized
when faded, frayed, patched, and
perhaps spotted with grass stains, oil,
and paint." (J. Brooks, "A.Friendly
Product": The New Yorker, November 12,
1979, p. 58).
The blue jeans worn by the grievor on the day
in question had not achieved that sort of quality. They
were (and they were shown at the hearing) apparently
new, and certainly clean and even pressed. In our view,
the grievor satisfied the dress requirements on the day
in question.
In the circumstances of the instant case, then,
there was no ground for the imposition of any discipline
on the grievor. It should perhaps be added that this is
not to say that wearing blue jeans is always appropriate:
that depends, of course, on their condition on any
particular day. But then, the same thing may be said about
gray flannels., \
For the foregoing reasons, the grievance is
allowed. Since any discipline which may have been imposed
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has been withdrawn, no specific relief is granted,
beyond our declaration that the grievor was in
compliance with the dress code on the day in question,
and was not subject to discipline.
DATED AT TORONTO, this 28th day of July, 1983.
Chairman
"I concur" A. Stapleton
Member
"I concur" H.L. Robinson
Member
4: 1500
7: 3000
1: 3624