HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-0069.Johnston.83-12-28.Between: OPSEU (David Stewart Johnston), Grievor
Before:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
For the Grievor:
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation and
Communications) Employer
J.F.W. Weatherill
M. Perrin
K. Preston
Chairman
Member Member
R. Anand, Counsel Laskin, Jack & Harris
For the Employer: J.F. Braithwaite Manager, Staff Relations
Ministry of Transportation and
Communications
Hearing: September 8, :983
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DECISION
In this grievance, dated December 30, 1982,
the grievor alleges that he was unjustly demoted from
the position of Equipment Operator 3 to that of Manual
Worker, premium, and that there is a violation of the
collective agreement in that an employee with less
seniority than the grievor is filling his previous
job.
The facts, insofar as we find them to be
material to the issue we must decide, are not in dispute.
The grievor has been employed by the Ministry for some
considerable time, and has been classified as an
Equipment Operator for some years. Sometime in February,
1980, he was involved in what was said to be a minor
accident while operating one of the employer's vehicles.
Because of the reported circumstances (the grievor is
siad to have lost consciousness while operating the
vehicle), the matter was investigated by the Drivers
and Vehicles Branch of the Ministry. As a result of
that investigation the grievor's licence, then a Class "A"
driver's licence, was suspended. Notice of SUSpenSion
was issued by the Registrar of Motor Vehicles in the
following form:
I
:
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This is to inform you that under the
provisions of section 27(l) of The
Highway Traffic Act, your driver licence
is suspended.
Effective - 23 June 1980.
Reason - Evidence of a medical condition
that would affect your ability to operate
a motor vehicle safely.
This suspension will be withdrawn when
you file medical evidence satisfactory
to the Ministry, of your fitness to
drive safely.
The grievor had not been:.permitted to drive
by the employer following the accident, although no
action was taken with respect to the grievor's'classi-
fication until some time after the suspension was in
effect. On August 28, 1980,.the District Engineer,
responsible for!the section in which the grievor worked,
wrote.to him as follows:
Following the hearing at which you were
present, I have completed my review. As you will recall it had been reported to me’
that your driver's licence had been sus- pended due to health reasons. The
evidence presented at the hearing showed
that the Deputy Registrar of Motor Vehicles had sent you a letter which stated that
your licence should be suspended but which
did not actually suspend it. After some
delay I have now received a copy of the
notice of suspension which was sent to you. It states that your driver's licence is suspended effective June 23, 1980, due to
a medical condition that affects your ability to operate a motor vehicle safely, and that
the suspension will be withdrawn when you
file medical evidence satisfactory to the
Ministry of your fitness to drive safely.
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As you know, Circular 76-043 outlines the policy as it affects the operation of
vehicles by employees, particularly when
such employees become ineligible to.operate.
At the hearing you were also advised and
understood that it is possible that you
could be removed from employment. It
could happen that with the loss of a
licence that an employee can be rendered
immediately and almost completely unable
to perform the duties of his position.
It so happens, in your instance, that we
can make alternative arrangements.
As you are not permitted to operate licenced
Ministry equipment becuase of a licence
suspension due to medical reasons this means
demotion to a non-operating classification
with salary protection for a period of six
months.
You will be reclassified from a Highway
Equipment Operator 3 to a Manual Worker
Premium effective June 23, 1980, at a
salary rate of $6.87 per hour (H.L.0.3)
under salary protection.
At the termination of the six month period,
if you are unable to perform the duties
of a Highway Equipment Operator 3, the salary protection will be removed and your rate
of pay will be $6.22 per hour, which is
the maximum rate of pay of a Manual Worker
Premium as of January 1, 1979. The salary
revision for 1980 has not yet been established.
Please acknowledge that you understand this
procedure by signing the statement below on the attached copy and return it to my office.
You should keep the original for your records.
If you have any questions regarding this ;:
matter please contact me.
Itwasa requirement of the&grievor's classifi-
cation that he hold the appropriate driver's licence.
When that licence was suspended, he was then no longer
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able legally to perform his work. The loss of the
licence does not appear to have been due to improper
or'illegal conduct on the griever's part. The employer,
however,, was not under any obligation to retain the
grievor in a classification whose work he could no
longer perform. Demotion, in such circumstances, was
not improper. These were not, it should be said,
circumstances in which the remarks made by the arbitrator
in the Thompson Logging case (L977), quoted in Sooke -
Forest Products 3 L.A.C. (3d) 252'at p. 253, are
pertinent. There is no suggestion that.the grievor
lacks skills or is not competent. His demotion would
not "brand him for his working life". It would, and
did, have a serious effect upon his earnings and on
the nature of 'his work, but the reason for that was
simply that his licence had been suspended on grounds
relating to his health, and that he could not then be
allowed to perform his work. There is no suggestion
that when the grievor was demoted there was any other
job to which he would have been entitled. The demotion
- was, we find, proper.
The griever, with the aid of his solicitor,
engaged in a protracted effort to p:ove to the author-
ities that his condition was such as to support the
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renewal of his licence. These efforts, which included'
an appearance before the Licence Suspension Appeal
Board, were eventually successful. On November 17,
1982, the grievor's solicitor advised the employer
that the grievor's licence had been reinstated (it
would appear that the grievor now holds a Class "D"
licence, the classification system having changed.
In any event, it seems that he now holds a licence
which would allow him to perform the work of Equip-
ment Operator). The grievor then sought to be
reassigned to his old classification. The employer
would not accede to that request, taking the position
that there was then no vacancy in the classification. '
The grievor's job was not filled after his demotion,
and the employer's evidence was that it was not intended
to be filled, as there was not sufficient work. It
may be, as the grievance asserts, that there is an
employee junior to the grievor working in the classi-
fication, although there is no evidence on that point.
In advising the. grievor of his demotion, and
of the protection of his salary for a six-month
period, the employer was in fact (although without
reference thereto), applying article 5.6 of the
collective agreement to the grievo>'s circumstances.
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That article is as follows:
5.6 Where, for reasons of health, an
employee is assigned to a position
in ~a classification having a lower
maximum salary, he shall not receive
any salary progression or decrease for a perrod of six (6) months after his
assignment, and if at the end of that
period, he is unable to accept employement in his former classif~ication, he shall be
assigned to a classification consistent
with his condition.
While it may be thought that the grievor's
demotion was not, strictly speaking, "for reasons of
health" but was rather because the grievor, his
licence being suspended;'could no longer legally
perform his work, we consider that it was nevertheless
appropriate for the employer'to apply article 5.6
(which was to the grievor's advantage) in the circum-
stances. The fact of the matter was that the grievor's
licence was suspended on grounds relating to the
grievor's health. This was not, of course, a situation
in which either the employer or the grievor himself had
_ concluded that "for reasons of health" the grievor
would have to change his job. The employer here was
not relying on any such assertion, and was not under
any onus of showing that there was in fact anything
wrong with the grievor's health which would prevent
his doing his job. The 10~s~ of licence prevented that.
. . i ,,
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Were it not for the application of article 5.6, however,
the grievor would not have been entitled to the salary
protection he was afforded. He would simply have gone
to some other classification directly, if one were
available, or indeed some even less desirable conse-
quence may have occurred.
The grievor was, we conclude, properly assigned
to "a classification consistent with his condition". The
collective agreement does not provide for such employees
subsequently to revert to their former classification
except where they assert the same rights as any other
employee to apply where a vacancy occurs. It is
acknowledged that the grievor now appears to be qualified
to be an Equipment Operator. There is, however, no
vacancy in that position, and the collective agreement
does not provide for the exercise of seniority except
in cases of vacancy, or cases of layoff (to put the matter
broadly).
It was argued that the employer - that is
the management of the branch or section in which the
griever worked - ought to have intervened in some way
in the reinstatement of the grievor's licence. Those
procedures were conducted by a sepa?ate branch of the
same Ministry. In our view, it would have been improper
si, ~
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for the yr-ievor's superiors to have sought to influence
the determinations made by the Drivers and Vehicles
Branch or by the Licence Suspension Appeal Board, even
although those agencies may be administratively under
thesame "employer" or Ministry. There is no evidence
that the grievor's superiors made efforts to intervene
against the griever's interest (which would of course
have been improper), and in our view it would have
been improper to intervene at all.
For all of the foregoing reasons, it is
our conclusion that there has been no violation of
the collective agreement. The grievance is accordingly
dismissed.
DATED AT TORONTO, this 28th day of December, 1983.
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"I concur" (Addendum to follow)
M. Perrin Member
K. Preston Member