HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-0684.Vig.85-01-22Between:
Before:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (Shamin Viq)
Grievor
- and '-
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Energy)
Employer
J. W. Samuels Vice Chairman
G. A. Nabi Member
L. D. Foreman Member
For the Grievor: A. Millard
Barrister & Solicitor
For the Employer: R.B. Itenson
Senior Staff Relations Officer
Staff Relations Branch
Civil Service Commission
Hearing: November 27, 1984
The grievor was on maternity leave from January 17 to May 13, 1983.
During that period she received an a1 lowance under the Supplementary Unemployment
Benefit Plan, pursuant to Article 49.3.2 of the Collective Agreement with respect
to Working Conditions and Employee Benefits. She claims that she did not receive
all the monies to which she was entitled under this Plan.
Article 49.3.2 reads:
In respect of the period of maternity leave, payments made
according to the Supplementary Unemployment Benefit Plan
will consist of the following:
(a) for the first two (2) weeks, payments equivalent
to ninety-three percent (93%) of the actual
weekly rate of pay for her classification, which
she was receiving on the last day worked prior
to the commencement of the maternity leave,
and
(b) up to a maximum of fifteen (15) weeks, payments
equivalent to the difference between the sum of
the weekly UIC benefits the employee is eligible
to receive and any other earnings received by the
employee, and ninety-three percent (93%) of the
actual weekly rate of pay for her classification,
which she was receiving on the last day worked
prior to the commencement of the maternity leave.
In short, the Plan enables an employee to have 93% "of the actual weekly rate of
pay for her classification, which she was receiving on the last day worked prior
to the commencement of the maternity leave" for up to 17 weeks of maternity leave.
This money
will come either from UIC or from the Employer.
The problem arises because, when the grievor left for her leave, the 1983
agreement between the parties (the Union and the Management Board of Cabinet) for
wages and benefits had not yet been signed, and her allowance was based on her rate
of pay for 1982. The new agreement (which is separate from the one dealing with
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working conditions and employee benefits) was reached on March 18, 1983, and provided
for a wage increase retroactive to January 1, 1983. She received pay at the 1983
rate for the first few weeks in January when she was at work, but her allowance
under Article 49.3.2 remained as calculated on her 1982 rate of pay.
Is Article 49.3.2 to be read so as to provide for calculation of the
allowance under the Supplementary Unemployment Benefit Plan on the basis of the
retroactive 1983 rates of pay?
This Board has already decided the matter in favour of the Employer in
Jensen, 613/83. The Board said (at pages 3-4):
In Re Salvation Army Grace General Hospital, Ottawa, 25 L.A.C.
(2d) 235 (Carter, IWO) the arbitrator notes the trend of
arbitral interpretation'to consider retroactive duration clauses
to apply to the collective agreement as a whole except where to
do so would lead to absurd, impractical or unintended results,
and goes on to state: "This assumption of retroactivity, however,
is not all-embracing. Obviously, it does not apply in the
presence of clear and specific language in the collective agree-
ment to the contrary." This seems to us to be an eminently
sensible rule of construction. A collective agreement provision
can be made to apply retroactively for one purpose but not for
another; its application can be excluded by the use of appropriate
language.
It would be difficult to choose language that would more clearly
and specifically bar the application of a retroactive wage in-
crease to the calculation of a maternity leave allowance than does
that found in Article 49.3.2. That language, we conclude, ex-
presses the intention of the parties to the collective agreement
that a maternity leave allowance will be based on the wage or
salary being paid to the employee ("which she was receiving”) at
a particular point in time ("on the last day worked prior to the
commencement of the .maternity leave").
We are satisfied that the effect of the words of Article 49.3.2,
given their plain and ordinary meaning, is that the retroactive
wage increase to which the Grievor became entitled cannot be
taken into account in the calculation of her maternity leave
allowance.
f
-2-
.
The griever was on maternity leave from January 17 to May 13, 1983.
During that period she received an allowance under the Supplementary Unemployment
Benefit Plan, pursuant to Article 49.3.2 of the Collective Agreement with respect
to Working Conditions and Employee Benefits. She claims that she did not receive
all the monies to which she was entitled under this Plan.
Article 49.3.2 reads:
In respect of the period of maternity leave, payments made
according to the Supplementary Unemployment Benefit Plan
will consist of the following:
(a) for the first two (2) weeks, payments equivalent
to ninety-three percent (93%) of the actual
weekly rate of pay for her classification, which
she was receiving on the last day worked prior
to the commencement of the maternity leave,
and
(b) up to a maximum of fifteen (15) weeks, payments
equivalent to the difference between the sum of
the weekly UIC benefits the employee is eligible
to receive and any other earnings received by the
employee, and ninety-three percent (93%) of the
actual weekly rate of pay for her classification,
which she was receiving on the last day worked
prior to the commencement of the maternity leave.
In short, the Plan enables an employee to have 93% "of the actual weekly rate of
pay for her classification, which she was receiving on the last day worked prior
to the commencement of the maternity leave" for up to 17 weeks~of maternity leave.
This money will come either from UIC or from the Employer.
The problem arises because, when the grievor left for her leave, the 1983
agreement between the parties (the Union and the Management Board of Cabinet) for
wages and benefits had not yet been signed, and her aliowance was based on her rate
of pay for 1982. The new agreement (which is separate from the one dealing with
I
5
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In the view we take of the case, it becomes unnecessary to
make reference to the Unemployment Insurance Act and Regu-
lations for purposes of interpretation of Article 49.3.2.
At our hearing, the Employer argued that the matter was res judicata, -
because we were faced with the same question, between the same parties, and the
previous decision was final and binding. This is similar to the estoppel which
operated in Battams, 545/81 (see pages 4-6), and in Tkach, 479/82, 64/83, 65/83,
299/83, and 300/83 (see pages 7-8). If the Union was unhappy with Jensen, it could
have applied for judicial review.
The Union argued that we had the power to overturn Jensen if we found
the decision to be "manifestly wrong". We agree.
But is the decision manifestly wrong? We think not.
The interpretation placed on the language by the Board in Jensen is one
which the language can bear. There is no doubt that, on her last day worked prior
to the commencement of her maternity leave, the grievor was receiving pay at the
1982 rate of pay... This was her "actual weekly rate of pay for her classification"
at that time. It was not until later that the parties changed the rates retto-
actively. Furthermore, the Board in Jensen considered the matter in light of a
proper view of the law. At our hearing, counsel for the Union reviewed extensively
and ably the jurisprudence concerning retroactivity. It can be neatly summed up as
it was in the Salvation Army Grace Hospital case, cited and applied by the Board in
Jensen. The Union's case before us was that the previous Board wrongly applied
the principles, and as we have said we think that the Board's conclusion is one
which the language can bear.
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:
It is interesting to note that the parties have provided elsewhere in their
Collective Agreement with respect to Working Conditions and Employee Benefits for
the application of retroactivity and non-application of retroactivity. For example,
Article 39.3 makes it clear that retroactivity will not apply: -
"The amount of basic life insurance will be adjusted with
changes in the employee's salary from the date of approval
of the increase or the effective date,.whichever is later."
(emphasis added)
Whereas, Article 41.2.1(a) makes it clear that retroactjvity will apply:
"The Long Term Income Protection benefit is sixty-six
and two-thirds percent (66-Z/3%) of the employee's gross
salary at the date of disability, including any retro-
active salary adjustment to which the employee 1s entitled."
Iemphasis added)
.In sum, we find that there is no manifest error in the Board's decision
in Jensen, and the grievance is dismissed.
Done at London, Ontario, this 22nd day of January , 1985 .
_,’
(I --‘~ ‘3
,_,.” 1 ,’ 3-W. Samuels, Vice Chairman
G.A. Nabi, Member
L.D. Foreman, Member