HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-0275.Fawcett.84-05-01180 Dundas STREET
ONTARIO
CROWN EMPLOYEES
GRIEVANCE
SETTLEMENT BOARD
WEST. TORONTO. ONTARIO. M5G lZ8 -SUITE 2100 TELEPHONE 416/598- 0688
275/82
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
Before:
OPSEU (James H. Fawcett) Grievor
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportatation and
Com municat ions ) Employer
P.M. Draper Vice Chairman
R. Russell Member
E.R. O'Kelly Member
For the Grievor: P. Sheppard
Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
For the Employer: J. Zarudny Counsel, Crown Law Office Civil
Ministry of the Attorney General
Hearings: January 18, 1984
January 24, 1984
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DECISION
The Grievor, James Fawcett, grieves that he has been denied
credits for time spent in travelling in contravention of Article 23(1) of the
collective agreement, and requests that he be given credits in accordance
with that article for time so spent. The grievance was filed on
April 14, 1982, so that the matter comes before us under the collective
agreement in force on that date. The issue to be determined has not
previously been considered by the Board.
The relevant articles of the collective agreement are the
following:
ARTICLE 7 - HOURS OF WORK
7.1
7 .2
7.3
7.4
SCHEDULE 3 and 3.7
The normal hours of work for employees on these
schedules shall be thirty-six and one-quarter
(36- 1/4) hours per week and seven and one-quarte
(7 1/4) hours per day.
SCHEDULE 4 and 4.7
The normal hours of work for employees on these
schedules shall be forty (40) hours per week and
eight (8) hours per day.
SCHEDULE 6
The normal hours of work for employees on this
schedule shall be a minimum of thirty-six and one-
quarter (36-%) hours per week.
SCHEDULE A
Averaging Hours of Work - see Appendix 3
attached.
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7.5
7 -6
7.7
Where the Employer adjusts the number of hours
per week, on a schedule, the employee’s weekly
salary based on his basic hourly rate shall be
adjusted accordingly. The adjustment will be
discussed with the Union prior to such adjust-
ment being made.
It is understood that other arrangements regard-
ing hours of work and overtime may be entered
into between the parries on a local or ministry
level with respect KO variable work days or
variable work week. The model agreement with
respect to compressed work week arrangements
is attached as Appendix 4.
Where the Employer intends to transfer employees
or an employee from one schedule to another
schedule, the Employer will discuss the transfer
with the Union prior lo such transfer. When the
transfer occurs, the employee’s weekly salary
based on his basic hourly rate shall be adjusted
acccordingly
.
ARTICLE 8 - DAYS OFF
8.1 There shall be two (2) consecutive days off which
shall be referred to as scheduled days off, except
that days off may be non-consecutive if agreed
upon between the employee and the ministry.
ARTICLE 13 - OVERTIME
13.1 The overtime rate for the purposes of this Agree-
ment shall be one and one-halE(1-1/2) times the
employee’s basic hourly rate.
13.2 In this Article, *‘overrtime” means an authorized
period of work calculated to the nearest half-
hour and performed on a scheduled working day
in addition to the regular working period, or
performed on a scheduled days off.
13.3.1 Employees in schedules 3.7 and 4.7 who perform
authorized work in excess of seven and one-
quarter (7-%) hours or eight (8) hours as applic-
able, shall be paid at the overtime rate.
Overtime shall be paid within two (2) months
of the pay period within which the overtime was
actually worked.
13.3.2
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13.4 Employees in Schedules 3 and 4 who perform authorized work in excess of seven and one-
quarter (7-%) hours or eight (8) hours as applic-
able, shall receive compensating leave of one and
one-half (I-½) hours for each hour of overtime
worked, at a time mutually agreed upon. Failing
agreement, the ministry shall reasonably deter-
mine the time of the compensating leave.
13.5 Where there is mutual agreement, employees may
receive compensating leave in lieu of pay at
the overtime rate or may receive pay at the
overtime
rate in lieu of compensating leave.
13.6 Compensating leave accumulated in a calendar
year which
is not used before March 31 of the
following year, shall be paid at the rate it was
earned. Effective March 1, 1978, the March 31
date may be extended by agreement at the local
or ministry level.
13.7.1 Employees who are in clasifications assigned
to Schedule 6 and who are required to work on a
day off, shall receive equivalent time off.
13.7.2 Notwithstanding 13.7.1 and Article 19.6
(Holiday Payment), employees who are in classi-
fications assigned to schedule 6 and who are
assigned to forest fire fighting or related
duties, shall be paid one and orre-half (1-½)
times the employee'., basic hourly rate, to be
calculated on the basis of thirty-six and one-
quarter (36-¼) hours per week, for all such
work after eight (8) hours in a 24-hour period.
ARTICLE 19 - HOLIDAY PAYMENT
19.1 Where an employee work or? a holiday included
under Article 47 (Holidays), he shall be paid
at the rate of two (2) times his basic hourly
rate for all hours worked with a minimum
credit of seven and one-quarter (7-¼), eight
(S), or the number of regularly scheduled hours,
as applicable.
19.2 In addition to the payment provided by section
19.1, an employee shall receive either seven
and one-quarter (7-¼) or eight (8) hours pay
as applicable at his basic hourly rate or com-
pensating leave of seven and one-quarter (7-¼)
or eight (8) hours as applicable, provided the
employee opts for Compensating leave prior to
the holiday.
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19.3
19.4
19.5
19.6
When a holiday included under Article 47
(Holidays) coincides with an employees sched-
uled day off and he does not work on that day,
the employee shall be entitled to receive
another day off.
Any compensating leave accumulated under
sections 19.2 and 19.3 may be taken off at a
time mutually agreed upon Failing agreement,
such time off may be taken in conjunction
with the employee's vacation
leave or regular
day(s)
off.
Any compensating leave accumulated under
sections 19.2 and 19.3 in a calendar year
which
is not used before March 31 of the
following year shall be paid at: the rate
it was earned. Effective March 1, 1978,
the March 31 date mag be extended by agree-
ment at the local or ministry level.
Notwithstanding anything in Article 19,
employees who are in classifications
assigned to Schedule 6 and who are required
to work on
a holiday included in Article 47
(Holidays) shall receive equivalent time off.
ARTICLE 23 - TIME CREDITS WHILE TRAVELLING
23.1 Employees shall be credited with all time
spent in travelling ourside of working
hours when authorized by the ministry.
23.2 When travel is by public carrier, time will
be credited from me (1) hour before the
scheduled time
of departure of the carrier
until one (1) hour after the actual arrival
of the carrier at rhe destination.
23.3 When travel is by automobile and the employee
travels directly from his home or place of
employment, time will be credited from the
assigned hour of departure until he reaches
his destination and from the assigned hour of
departure from the destination until he
reaches his home or place of employment.
23.4 When sleeping accommodation is provided, the
hours between eleven (11:00) p.m. and the
regular starting time of the employee shall
not be credited.
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23.5
23.6
The
When an employee is required to travel on his
regular day off or a holiday Listed in Article
47 (Holidays), he shall be credited with a
minimum of four (4) hours.
All travelling time shall be paid at the
employee’s basic hourly rate or, where
mutually agreed, by compensating
leave.
Grievor has been employed by the ministry since
May, 1956. Prior to 1980 he was classified Highway Construction Inspector
and was on Schedule 4. He then worked an 8 hour day and a 40 hour week
and received overtime pay
or compensating leave for work, and credits for
time spent in travelling, outside those hours. In September,
1980, he was
reclassified Quality Assurance Officer, was transferred to Schedule 6, and
received
a salary increase. No change in his job duties occurred as a result
of this reclassification and transfer. The schedules mentioned, among
others, have been established by the Employer for wage and salary
administration purposes.
The Grievor is attached to the Northern Region of the ministry,
whose headquarters is at North Bay. His territory runs north for 500 miles,
east
for 100 miles, south for 100 miles and west for 150 miles. He
formerly drove himself
to construction sites in a ministry car, but for the
past year has been driving in his own car and receiving a mileage
allowance. His duties have to do with concrete inspection. He visits
ready -mix plants to check on aggregates and mix design, and construction
sites to ensure that field inspectors are taking the necessary quality
assurance tests and to take some of his own. The required testing
equipment is kept at the sites. A concrete pour could take place at any
time
of the day or night and pouring could continue for several hours.
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Construction continues year-round but at a lower level in the period
November
to March. Thirty percent of his time is spent in the field during
those months and 98 percent during the remainder of the year. When he is
not in the field he works at the region's headquarters, where his daily
working hours
are 8:15 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. He normally works
a 5-day week,
Monday to Friday. He is entitled to 2 consecutive days off, currently
Saturday and Sunday, under Article 8, and to the holidays listed in Article
47. Under Articles 13.7.1 and 19.6 he is entitled to equivalent time off for
work performed on days off and on holidays. He is not paid by the hour but
receives an annual salary which is calculated as a weekly amount and is
paid bi-weekly. A form maintained by the ministry as part of its personnel
records shows the Grievor as a Schedule 6 employee, his base salary as a
weekly amount and his hours of work per week as 36¼.
The Grievor first raised the matter of credits for time spent in
travelling with the ministry about one year after his reclassification and
subsequently broached the
subject several times. He was told that he was
not eligible for such credits but did not file a grievance under Article 23
until the present one. For performance budgeting purposes the ministry
records separately time spent by employees in travelling between
8:15 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m., and in travelling outside those hours, on normal working
days, The purpose is to monitor work distribution by showing the
relationship
of time spent in travelling to time spent in performing job
duties. The Grievor has been recording his travelling time at the ministry's
request since his reclassification, but knew that he would not receive
credits for it because of ministry policy.
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Counsel to the Grievor submits that working time, overtime and
travelling time are all treated separately in the collective agreement; that,
in practice, the Grievor has normal and regular hours of work per day and
per week; that travel is not part of the Grievor4 job duties; and that a
method of calculating a basic hourly rate for the Grievor is already
recognized by the Employer.
Counsel to the Employer submits that in the circumstances
present here, travel is not distinguisable from work; that while the
Grievor's travel is authorized, it is not compensable; that, having no
maximum number
of hours of work per week, the Grievor spends no time in
travelling "outside of working hours" as required by Article 23.1; and that,
being paid
a weekly salary, the Grievor has no "basic hourly rate" by which
an entitlement to travel credits may be calculated under Article 23.6.
Article 13 - Overtime, makes specific provision for the
eligibility
of employees on certain schedules other than Schedule 6 for
overtime pay or compensating leave for work performed "on a scheduled
working day in addition to the regular working period" or on a scheduled
day off. Separate provision is made for the eligibility of employees on
Schedule 6 for equivalent (not compensating) time off for work performed
on
a day off.
Article 19 - Holiday Payment, makes specific provision for the
eligibility of employees who work "regularly scheduled hours for holiday
pay, as defined, for work performed on a holiday. Separate provision is
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made for the eligibility of employees on Schedule 6 for equivalent (not
compensating) time off for work performed on a holiday.
Article 23 - Time Credits While Travelling, is addressed to all
employees. It makes
no distinctions amongst employees on the basis of
schedules or regularly scheduled hours. It contains no "in lieu" provision
for employees on Schedule 6. It does not define time spent in travelling as
a period of work. It provides credits for time spent in travelling outside of
working hours.
It is important to note that this is not a case in which the issue
is whether an employee, who is eligible for both, is entitled to pay at the
overtime rate or compensating leave under Article 13, or to credits for
time spent in travelling under Article 23. Here they are not available as
alternatives; under Article 13 the Grievor is not eligible for overtime pay
or compensating leave in any circumstances, and is eligible for equivalent
time off only, for work performed on a day off. We see no authority in the
collective agreement
for the characterization of time spent by the Grievor
in travelling
as overtime work.
A 1981 ministry memorandum addressed to employees holding
the same position as the Grievor but in another region states, in part:
We consider your duties can most effectively be
performed by working a minimum of 7¼ hours per
day;
and further:
"Travel time" outside normal hours on normal
working days is considered as overtime and
therefore no compensation.
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The Employer's reply to the grievance after the second stage
meeting was the following:
I have thoroughly reviewed the information
placed before me at the Second Stage Grievance
Hearing and
must unfortunately advise you that
your grievance is denied. Very briefly, it is my
interpretation that the parties intended Schedule
6 employees to receive all-inclusive compensation
when they negotiated the Collective Agreement.
Because of this, there are no maximum hours of
work and Article 23 does not apply.
There is however, Article 19.6, which refers to
time worked on a holiday or day off, and I have
decided that the time you spent travelling to
the contract sites is eligible for equivalent
time off as it was '"work" on your days off. You
are therefore entitled to:
July
I, 1982
September 19, 1982 8 hours
October
30,1982 1 hour
16 hours total
By copy of this letter, I am requesting the
Payroll Section to make the appropriate
corrections to your pay.
It appears that reference should have been made
to both Article 13.7.1 and
Article 19.6 since both days off and holidays were involved. Apparently,
the Employer originally recognized hours spent by the Grievor in
performing his job duties on the days in question for compensation
purposes, and later,
in answer to the grievance, recognized hours spent by
him in travelling as "work" for which additional compensation was due.
It is undoubtedly true that the Grievor does not have a basic
hourly rate of pay as that term is commonly understood. However, where
remuneration relates
to a time period other than one hour, it does not
strain reason to suggest that a basic hourly rate may be determined by
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dividing the remuneration by the number of normal hours of work in which
it is earned. For example, the Grievor’s weekly salary at the time of his
transfer to Schedule 6 was presumably adjusted "based on his basic hourly
rate" under Article 7.7. Similarly, if the minimum "normal hours of work
per week under Article
7.3 were to be adjusted, the Grievor’s weekly salary
would presumably be adjusted "based on his basic hourly rate" under
Article 7.5.
The intention of the parties embodied in Article 7.3 is to be
gathered, in the first instance, from the language in which it is expressed.
As well, the article must be examined in its relationship to the whole
collective agreement, and
in the context of the particular circumstances in
which the Grievor performs his job duties.
The definition of "normal hours of work" as a minimum might
be seen to imply that there is no maximum. But if it is open to the
Employer to contend that there is no upper limit to the number of hours
that the Grievor may be required to work per week, it is equally open to
the Grievor
to contend that there is no lower limit to the number of hours
per day or the number of days per week he may choose to work, so long as
he works at least 36¼ hours per week. These, of course, are possibilities
that do not accord with the realities of working life, not least because they
are administratively impracticable; and, in
fact, the Employer and the
Grievor have recognized that practical considerations preclude
so literal an
interpretation of the article.
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In Re Canadian General Electric Co. Ltd., 4 L.A.C. 1541
(Laskin, 1953) the arbitrator expresses the view that the practice followed
under a collective agreement is an acceptable guide to interpretation
unless it is inconsistent with the terms of the collective agreement; and
further, that it is sensible construction to find concordance between the
terms of a collective agreement and the feasibility of their administration,
again unless those terms do not permit of that course.
In Re Kysor of Ridgetown Ltd., 18 L.A.C. 382 (Weiler, 1967) the
arbitrator suggests that the language, structure and purpose of collective
agreement terms should be examined in order
to determine their
application to a grievor's circumstances and that such terms should be
interpreted
so as to exclude situations that are unworkable for
administrative reasons.
Applying those criteria to the interpretation of Article 7.3 as it
affects the Grievor, we find that its purpose and effect is to ensure that
the Grievor is available and is obligated to carry out his job duties as the
number and status of construction projects under way in the region requires
from time to time. We are also of the opinion that the Grievors working
hours are unlimited only in the sense that the demands of construction
projects dictate when and how long he works, and that the Employer has
tacitly accepted that the Grievors normal hours of work are 7¼ per day
and
36¼ per week.
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To address another aspect of the issue, we are not persuaded
that because Article 7.3 applies to the Grievor, Article 23 does not; we
do
not consider that those two articles are incompatible. If the intention of
the parties to the collective agreement was that Article 23 would not apply
to Schedule 6 employees, the article itself is the logical vehicle for that
purpose. If such was the intention, we would expect to see in the article
language that would either affirm its inapplicability to such employees or
make alternative provisions applicable
to them as in Article 13 and Article
19. In short, we would require that intention to be conveyed in unequivocal
and definitive language rather than having
to be inferred by reference to
Article 7.3.
In the result, we find that Article 23(1) applies to the Grievor
and that, for the purposes of the article, his working hours are a minimum
of 7¼ per day.
Under present practice the Grievor
is already paid for time
spent in travelling on days off and on holidays, since the Employer
classifies it as work The practical effect of this decision, therefore, is
that the Grievor is also eligible for credits for time spent daily during his
normal work week in travelling outside the greater of 7¼ hours or the
number of hours actually spent in performing his job duties, when
authorized by the ministry.
We retain jurisdiction in the matter in order to determine, if
requested, the amount of the credits in respect of travelling time, in pay or
leave, to which the Grievor is entitled pursuant to this decision.
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DATED at Comecon, Ontario this 1st day of May, 1984.
P.M. Draper Vice Chairman
R. Russell Member R. Russell Member
"I dissent" (see attached)
E.R. O'Kelly Member
/lbw
DISSENT
The grievor was reclassified and transferred to Schedule 6 as of
September 2, 1980. As a result of this move, he received a substantial
increase in pay and at the same time received an annual salary rather
than
an hourly rate. Furthermore, under the provision of Art. 7.3 of the
collective agreement, his normal hours of work became a minimum of 36 1/4
hours
per week - with no maximum. As a Schedule 6 employee, the grievor
is largely free to make his own decisions about travel time and working
hours because Schedule
6 employees are not eligible for extra compensation
for these hours. This
is also an administrative convenience for the
employer because
it is not necessary to set up procedures to authorize and
verify these hours
for such employment.
The grievor
was well aware of the fact that he was not entitled
to overtime or travel time and he confirmed this in cross-examination. He
worked under Schedule 6 conditions from September 2, 1980 and only filed
this grievance on April 14, 1982.
In Canadian General Electric Company Ltd. 4th L.A.C. (Laskin 1953)
the arbitrator states "it is sensible construction to find concordance
between the terms of a collective agreement and the feasibility of their
administration." Also, in Kysor of Ridgetown Ltd. L.A.C. 382 (Weiler 1967)
the arbitrator suggests that the language structure and purpose of
collective agreement terms should be examined in order to determine their
application to the grievor's circumstances and that such terms should be
interpreted so as to exclude situations that are unworkable for
administrative reasons.
Certainly, in this case the nature of the job is such that the
grievor decides when he will leave for and return from work in the field
and not being entitled to either overtime or travel time on normal working
days,
it has not been necessary to set up administrative procedures to
verify these hours.
Art. 23.1 does not exclude Schedule 6 employees but on the other
hand it does not specifically include them.
excluded them and in my view it should be a matter for negotiation if the
parties wish to change this.
Past practice has always
Art. 23.3 calls for an assigned hour of departure (when starting
The employer out) and an assigned hour of departure from the destination.
could not do this and these decisions are therefore left to the grievor.
Art. 23.6 states all travelling time shall be paid at the
employee's basic hourly rate, or where mutually agreed, by compensating
leave.
hourly rate if it is calculated by dividing the grievor's weekly pay by
his minimum hours
of work.
In this case
it would in my view provide an excessively high
In view of all these circumstances, I would have dismissed the
grievance.