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GRIEVANCE
SETTLEMENT
BOARD
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROW3 EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between: OPSEU (Eric Birse) Griever
- And -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Correctional
SerViCeS) Employer
Before: J.W. SamUels
F.D. Collom
J. Morrow
Vice Chairman
Member
Member
For the Griever: S.T. Goudge, Q.C.
Gowling & Henderson
For the Employer: J.F. Benedict
Manager, Staff Relations
Ministry of Correctional Services
Hearing: December.1, 1983
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The issue in this case is whether or not the Ministry can order a correc-
tional officer, who is scheduled to work on a statutory holiday, to take the day
off and thus receive only eight hours' pay at straight time, rather than the triple
time pay he would have received had he worked as scheduled -and to order this
change in work schedule on 24 or 48-hours' notice.
The grievor is a CO2 at the Guelph Correctional Centre. Like all the
officers, in late 1982, he received a computer-prepared work schedule for all of
1983. On this schedule he was shown as working the "A" shift (from 6 AM to 2 PM)
on April 1, 2, 3 and 4. April 1 was Good Friday, and April 4 was Easter Monday.
The grievor was off sick for several weeks in March, but on March 31 he received
his doctor's permission to return to work. At 5 PM on that day, he Let his
supervisor, Mr. 3. Braun, know that he would be on duty on April 1, 2, 3 and 4 as
scheduled. It is the policy at this centre that staff returning from sick leave
must notify the institution of the intent to return to work at least four hours
prior to the commencement of the shift. Thus, the grievor was well within the
established policy. Mr. Braun relayed to the grievor the message he had received
from his superiors that the grievor should simply take April 1 off as a statutory
holiday. Apparently, his services weren't needed on April 1. The grievor then
worked on April 2 and 3, but sometime during these two days he was told to take
off April 4 as a statutory holiday. Again, his services weren't needed. It appears
that a number ofofficers scheduled to work on these two days were told not to
work, but all the others received several weeks' notice of this change in their
scheduled workload.
It is not disputed that management has the right to determine work
complement and assignment. Section 18(l) of the Crown Employees Collective
Bargaining Act provides:
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Every collective agreement shall be deemed to provide that
it is the exclusive function of the employer to manage,
which function, without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, includes the right to determine,
(a) . . . . . . complement, organization, assignment . . . . . .
and such matters will not be the subject of collective bargaining
nor come within the jurisdiction of a board.
Indeed, the Act makes it clear that these matters are not even negotiable and
therefore the collective agreement cannot impose limitations on these management
rights.
However, the collective agreement may provide for the financial conse-
quences of certain work assignments, eg. overtime.
The Union argues that the griever's scheduled workload was changed without
justification, and that as a result the grievor lost the premium pay he would have
received for working on the statutory holidays, and was unable to enjoy the weekend
because of the short notice given to him of the changes. The grievor should be
entitled to a premium as if he had worked on April 1 and April 4.
The Ministry’s position is that the collective agreement provides for
premium pay under Article 19.1 and 19.2 only if the employee actually works on
the statutory holiday. The provisions read:
19.1 Where an employee works ona 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-X), eight (a), 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-S) or eight (8) hours pay as applicable at his basic
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hourly rate or compensating leave of seven and one-
quarter (7-s) or eight (8) hours as applicable,
provided the employee opts for compensating leave
prior to the holiday.
Furthermore, management has the right to order the grievor not to work on the
holiday, though scheduled to work, and to pay the grievor only eight hours at
straight time for the holiday.
Articles 19.1 and 19.2 have been considered on a number of occasions by
this Board. In Cooper, 145177, the grievor reported for work on a statutory -
holiday, but had to return home after 2 3/4 hours because of illness. It was held
that the grievor was not entitled to the premium pay for those hours he did not
work. The Board followed the reasoning in Re Kysor Industrial of Canada Ltd. and
United Automobile Workers, Local 347 (1976), 11 L.A.C. (2d) 284 (Brandt), that
Article 19.1 "must be understood to be subject to the employee's continuing availa-
bility for work" (at page 7 in Cooper). The critical problem for the grievor was
not that he did not work, but that he was unavailable for work. For the same
reason, the grievor failed in Martin, 434181.
In McCormick, 386/81, a case similar to our own, the grievor received a
weeks' notice that he would not work as scheduled on a statutory holiday. The
Board denied his claim for premium pay. In that award, the Board referred to the
notice "required by Article 10.1". This Article provides:
Shift schedules shall be posted not less than fifteen (15)
days in advance and there shall be no change in the schedule
after it has been posted unless notice is given to the employee
one hundred and twenty (120) hours in advance of the starting
time of the shift as originally scheduled. If the employee
concerned is not notified one hundred and twenty (120) hours in
advance he shall be paid time and one-half (l-5) for the first
eight (8) hours worked on the changed shift provided that no
premium shall be paid where the change of schedule is caused by
events beyond the ministry's control.
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At our hearing, both parties agreed that Article 10.1 was not applicable bet use
the griever's shift schedule was not changed. He was not asked to work a dii'ferent
shift from what was originally scheduled. It is simply a case of being ordered
not to work a scheduled shift. With the greatest respect to the Board which
decided the McCormick case, we are of the view that the parties before us are correct -
this is not a change in shift schedules, there is no "changed shift" as provided
for in Article 10.1.
In Ferguson, 78/82, again the grievors were scheduled to work on a
statutory holiday, but were ordered to take the day off. They were given two
weeks' notice and the Board refers to this as "adequate notice....as required by
Article 10.1" (at page 5). The grievances were denied.
In Bell, 116/78, the Board considered the purpose of Article 19.1. It
was said that (on page 5):
Premium payments for holiday work are designed to achieve
the same purposes - to compensate the employee at a bonus
rate for work performed on a holiday to which he is entitled
by the collective agreement or by statute and to discourage
the employer from demanding such work unless necessary or
important. The importance of the entitlement to statutory
holidays is well described in Re Sealed Power Corp. of.Canada
Ltd. (1971), 22 L.A.C. 371 at 373 (Shime) as follows:
Whatever the original social or religious reasons,
certain statutory holidays are now a basic part of
the Canadian industrial fabric and employees expect
to receive the statutory holiday with payment or
added compensation to their usual wage rate if they
work on that day, while employers anticipate granting
the statutory holiday or paying compensation in addition
to the usual wage rate if they require their employees
to work on those days...... In most cases certain
statutory holidays have become so entrenched that an
employee will consider the day off with pay as a
right rather than a privilege. The holiday is as an
opportunity to engage in social or religious activity
without loss of income, but it is also viewed as an
opportunity for relief from the normal work pattern and
its attendant pressures.
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In the griever's case, he neither worked on the two statutory holidays
(and thereby attracted premium pay), nor did he have an "adequate opportunity for
relief from the normal work pattern and its attendant pressures" (as it is put
in Sealed Power), because of the very short notice he was given that his services
would not be required on April 1 and April 4. Nonetheless, and with great reluctance,
we have concluded that the grievor is not entitled to anything more than the holiday
pay he has already received. Article 19.1 is clear that the premium pay is for
hours worked. We find that there is no provision in the collective agreement
which prohibit:; management from ordering the grievor to take the day off on a
statutory holiday, even though he was scheduled to work. While this Board has
referred in the past to Article 10.1 and the 120 hours' notice mentioned there,
this appears to be the first case where less than 120 hours' notice has been
given and therefore the first time that we must actually determine whether or
not it is applicable in a case like this. We have already said that the parties
before us agreed Article 10.1 is inapplicable, and we agree with this. There was
no change in shift schedules here.
In sum, the grievance is denied. But it is necessary to express our
feeling that the Ministry has violated the spirit of Article 19.1, though not
its letter. The griever's long weekend was ruined by the short notice that his
services were not needed on April 1 and April 4. And there appears to be no
reason whatsoever for this short notice. The grievor could not plan to do anything
on April 1 until March 31, when he was told not to work the next day. And then,
management waited until April 2 or 3 to tell the grievor not to work on April 4.
Unfortunately, the collective agreement cannot prevent this sort of last minute
assignment, nor is it adequate to provide for premium COmpenSatiOn to SOiIEOne
in the griever's situation.
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Done at London, Ontario, this 19th day of January, 1984.
Samw?!ice Chairman
- ..-.- -.-~~--- ----_ _..~..~._ .~..~.~__G
F.D. Collom, Member
____
J. Morrow, Member
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EXHIBITS
1. Grievance Form, 338/83
2. Idem, 339183
3. Griever's schedule
4. Letter to grievor, March 25, 1983
5. Medical certificate
6. Idem
7. "Notice of Return from Sick Leave", October 7, 1981