HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-1261.Harvey et al.89-02-10i
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CROWNEMPLOYEES DE L ‘ON,#l*,O
B
GRIEVANCE CQMMISSION DE
!Z.l”‘.MENT REGLEMENT
DES GRIEFS
Between. ---:
1261/84, 1269/84, 1270/84
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
under
'THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (;. Harvey, M. Dzieczic & E. Molnar)
Grievors
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Transportation & Communications)
Before:
For the Grievors:
For the Employer:
Hearing:
Employer
K.P. Swan Vice-Chairperson
I.J. Thomson Member
W.A. Lobraico Member
P.A. Sheppard
Counsel
R. Field
President
OPSEU (Local 510)
O.W. Brown Q.C.,
Counsel . .
Ministry of the Attorney General
M.B. Furanna
Staff Relations Officer
Ministry of Transportation & Communications
November 4, 1985
DECISION
This arbitration concerns three separate grievances,
all on the same issue and consolidated for the purpose of
hearing. All three employees were at all material times in the
classification Technician 3 Surveys in the Surveys and Plans
Section, Central Region, Ministry of Transportation and Com-
munications.
All three employees came into this classification in
this office in the course of an open competition No. TC (M) El-
115 CR, with a closing date of December 31, 1981. Their appoint-
ments came about in somewhat different ways, which are not really
here relevant. The were all directed to report, in their letters
of appointment, to Mr. Z.J. Byblow, Head, Surveys and Plans, at
3501 Dufferin Street in Metropolitan Toronto. They began work in
these positions in mid-February or early March 1982.
The job entails working as a member of a survey party
engaged in engineering and legal surveys, largely relating to
highway construction. As a consequence, the actual work site to
which the employees are assigned changes from time to time, and
the employees are entitled, as will be seen, to payment for
travel time and/or to mileage allowance, depending on the . .
circumstances prevailing at the time. These payments are based
upon the identification of a "Headquarters", which was in every
case identified for these employees as 3501 Dufferin Street. All
three were resident at various locations in the Municipality of
Metropolitan Toronto.
The grievers claim that the identification of this
,i
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headquarters is inequitable, and in particular that it is
contrary to the collective agreement and also to the terms of a
consent award in a union grievance, 145/82, 147/82 et al., dated
September 17, 1984, which dealt with the various issues relating
to the establishment of headquarters. Indeed, it is common
ground that there had been no dispute by these grievors about the
location of their headquarters until the 145/82, 147/82 et al.
decision came to the grievors' attention.
Fje begin, therefore, by setting out the terms of the
Memorandum of Agreement which was incorporated into the Board's
award upon consent in the 145/82, 147182 et al. case:
This Agreement is in resolution of the following grievances; Nos. 145/82, 147/82,
355/82, 356/82, 359/82, 360/82, 108/84, 109/84,~110/84, 111/84 and 266/84, 267/84,
268184, 269184, 27Of84, 271184 and further to
the direction agreed upon between the parties
as at May 9, 1984, made under GSB Nos. 92/84
and 93184.
1. ~11 field staff where they have been
adversely affected under the provisions of
Articles 17, 22 and 23 of the Collective
Agreement as a result of a change in head-
quarters outside of the Ministry policy
(i.e., similar but not limited to that which
occurred in Central Region) will be reas-
signed to their headquarters as they were on
May 1, 1982, or as at a later dated effected,
save and except where headquarters were
change by mtitual consent, or were employee
initiated. Further, for the identified
Northwestern Region grievors the date will be
November 1, 1981. Such situations must be
identified by the employee so affected, in
writing to the Regional Director by October
31, 1984.
2. Retroactive entitlements for mileage and
meal allowance will be calculated from May I,
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1982, to July 31, 1984, and paid at the rate
applicable at the time it was earned.
Retroactive entitlement for travel time from
May 1, 1982, to July 31, 1984, will be taken
pursuant to the provisions of the Collective
Agreement.
The above paragraphs will apply to the
identified Northwestern Region grievances
retroactive to November 1, 1981.
3. Ministry initiated changes in head-
quarters since May, 1982, and in the future
will be considered/made only where a change
in an employee's employment location occurs
(i.e., contract assignment or job site). It
is the intent of the Ministry that such a
change would be of a meaningful distance in
order to necessitate a review of headquarters
consistent. with the provisions of the
Ministry's Travel and Expense Accounts
Manual.
4. The Ministry agrees that pending and
future changes in headquarters will be dealt
with in accordance with the Ministry's stated
policy. It is agreed that because individual
circumstances can vary significantly, the
question of equitability should be determined
in a fair and impartial consultation with the
employee so affected. Such employee will be
identified using the following considera-
tions:
qualifications
availability
current location (home,
closest facility,and work
location)
seniority --
Where qualifications, availability and
location are relatively equal, length of
continuous service shall be a consideration.
5. Employees affected by a change' in
headquarters as a result of a change in job site will be entitled to the provisions
available to, and normally afforded, civil
servants.
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None of the foregoing abridges an employee's
rights under the Collective Agreement nor
management's rights per Section 18 of the
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act.
Reference is also made, '-both in this grievance and in
the consent'award, to Article l?, 22 and 23 of the Working
Conditions.and Employee Benefits Collective Agreement. The
applicable provisions, to the extent that they relate to the
location of the employee's headquarters, are as follows:
ARTICL% 17 - MBAL ALLOWkNCE
. . .
17.2.1 Cost of meals may be allowed only;
17.2.2 If during normal mea~l period the
employee is travellinq on government business
other than:
(al on patrol duties, except as
provided under subsection 17.2.3,
or
(b) within twenty-four (24) kilometres
of his assigned headquarters, or
(cl within the metropolitan are in
which he is normally working:
. . .
ARTICLE 22 - MILEAGE RATES EXPRESSED IN
KILOMETRES -s
22.1 If an ,employee is required to use
his own automobile on the Employer's business
the following rates shall be paid effective
April 1, 1982:
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all time spent in travelling outside of
working hours when authorized by the
ministry.
23.2 when travel is by public carrier,
time will be credited from one 11) hour
before the scheduled time of departure of the
carrier until one (1) hour after the actual
arrival of the carrier at the destination.
23.3 When travel is by automobile and 3 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.
. . .
Finally, the consent award refers to the Ministry's
Travel and Expense Account Manual. That document refers to the
identification of a headquarters in some detail, as follows:
HEADQUARTERS
1.09 Eligibility for Expenses
To establish the authority for reimbursement
of an employee for expenses incurred by him
on Ministry business the appropriate District
Engineer or Branch Head must designate for
that employee a stated headquarters as the
point of departure for his operations. The
employee must be officially notified of the
location of this headquarters. (See para-
graph 1.07) .s
1.10 Location and Permanence of Headquarters
The headquarters of an employee shall be at
the place considered most convenient for the
efficient conduct of the Ministry's business. The location of an employee's headquarters
shall be periodically reviewed by his
District Engineer or Branch Head to determine
whether or not the original arrangement
continues to be equitable to both the
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employee and the Ministry. Subject to the
periodic review, an employee's headquarters
shall be moved only when he is officially
transferred.to another District or Branch, or
to a job site at which it is anticipated that
he will work for at least two years.
1.11 Headquarters - Home Located Outside of
Regional or District Boundaries
Should management choose to make an
employee's home his headquarters, and that
home is located outside the Region or
District in which he is employed, a location
on a Provincial Highway where it crosses the
Regional or District Boundary on the most
direct route between the employee's home and
the Regional or District Headquarters, shall
be designated as his headquarters.
1.2 Claims for Distance Travelled
An employee's headquarters shall be the
determining factor in calculating his claim
for distance costs. If an employee's home is
closer to his job site than is his head-
quarters, he shall be allowed compensation
only between his home and the job site. If,
however, an employee is required to report to
his headquarters either on going to the job
site or on returning from it, he may claim
the distance between those two points.
Incidents of this type must be noted on the
expense account.
within the limits prescribed by these
Instructions, and subject to the approval of
the District Engineer or Branch Head, when
assigned to a job located at a distance from
his headquarters, an employee-may,
(i) commute from his. headquarters (or
residence) to the job site (see
Living Expenses, paragraph 3.061,
or
(ii) reside in the vicinity of the job
site.
In the latter case, (ii), the employee shall
be entitled to claim lilrinq expenses (Section 3) pro::ided he continues to maintai.n the
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ly prior resident at which he lived immediate
to his assignment.
1.13 Transfer of Headquarters
If it appears that work in a specific area
will continue for a period of at least two
years, and if an employee who resides some
distance from the area is assigned to work in
that area for the duration, a permanent
transfer should be considered,
Rased on these provisions, we now turn to the facts as
they apply to each individual grievor. In every case, the
evidence comes from the grievor himself: there was no dispute in
the evidence whatsoever as to the facts personal to each grievor.
Mr. Dziedzic.had been employed in the same classifica-
tion in another section prior to his successful application for
this job. In that other section, his headquarters was at 1201
Wilson, usually called the Downsview Site.. Despite the change in
headquarters to 3501 Dufferin Street, he still reported about 90%
of the time to 1201 Wilson, from where he would travel by
Ministry vehicle to the work site. Downsview was only a meeting
point, however: he had no office, locker or equipment store
there. On the other hand, he had absolutely no contact with 3501
Dufferin, except that it was the office for the section in which
~.m he worked. He never went there, and had no office, locker or
equipment store there.
On the other 10% of his occasions of reporting to work,
he would be assigned to work in the eastern part of the region.
Since he lives in East pork, he would either drive .his car
directly to the job or drive to a pick up point to he taken to
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work either in a pooled private car or a Ministry vehicle. There
is no dispute that he was paid entirely in accordance with the
collective agreement and the Manual, but always on the basis of
his headquarters being 3501 Dufferin.
When he worked west of Dufferin; he would be compen-
sated for mileage and time from the Dufferin location to the
Vilson location, even though he would report directly to the
Wilson location, and then for the time taken to continue on to
the job site. When the job site was cl~oser to his home than to
Dufferin, he would be compensated for travel from his home. He
claims that the most equitable headquarters for him would be his
home, or alternatively the nearest Ministry Patrol Area Office to
his home, which is at Kennedy Avenue and 401 Highway.
Mr. Harvey was hired into the job here at issue from
the outside; although he had been in a similar position before,
he had resigned in 1981 and was being rehired. He also has no
contact with 3501 Dufferin, and reports about 60% of the time to
the Wilson Avenue site, where once again he ,has no contact except
for ‘meeting the vehicle which is to take him to the work
location.
The rest of the time, he either drives his own car to
the job site, or.meets another vehicle at a pick-up point closer
to his home. ?Je is also paid strictly in accordance with the
Manual, but he claims that the most equitable headquarters for
him would either be his home in Sea-borouqh, or the Patrol Area
Office at Kennedy Avenue and F:ighwalr 401. Prior to hi.s resi,q::a-
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tion, his headquarters had been his home.
Mr. Molnar transferred from another section in March
1982. He also has no contact with 3501 Dufferin, and goes to the
Downsview location less than 10% of the time. The rest of the
time he either drives to a pick-up location and is driven to the
job site, or drives his own car there. About 20% of the time,
the location is such that he is paid mileage from his home.
About 70% of his time, his mileage is calculated from Dufferin to
Downsview, and then on to the job site. !?e also claims that a
headquarters at his home, which is in Etobicoke, would be the
most equitable location. In the alternative, the nearest Patrol
Area .is either at Mimico or at Highway IO.
The evidence also discloses that a review of employees
in the Surveys and Plans section indicates that 22 employees had
their headquarters designated at their personal residences, while
15 were assigned to 3501 Dufferin as a headquarters. There
appears to be no special reason to distinguish between the two
groups on the basis either of the work assigned, their qualifica-
.' tions for that work, the sites at which they perform that work,
or the location of their personal residences. From the consent
award in the 145/82, 147/82 et al. case, however, it can be
presumed that the location of employees on staff prior to May 1,
1982 would have been affected by the provisions of paragraph 1 of
the consent award, which might have caused some of the otherwise
unexplained discrepancies.
The question of the assignment o f headquarters has been
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a problem between the parties for some years, and has occupied a
great deal of time of the Grievance Settlement Board on occasion.
The difficulty for employees in the position of these grievors is
I that there is really no rational Ministry office which can be
identified as one to which they report, since their actual work
locations are spread across the region, wherever circumstances
and priorities require them to be assigned. The Board has
commented adversely, from time to time, on the artificiality of
the assignment of employees to certain headquarters, as for
example in Howes, 356182, November 25, 1982.
On the other hand, from the point of view of the
performance of work, an employee's home is an equally artificial
headquarters, since the employee performs no work there, and the
Ministry has absolutely no connection with it whatsoever. From
the employee's point of view, of course, locating his or her
headquarters at his or her residence means that he or she will be
paid for every kilometre and every minute spent travelling to a
distant work site, As soon as the headquarters is moved away
from the employee's residence, the employee's compensation for
both travelling time and travelling distance, as well as his or
her entitlement to meal allowance, will--be diminished.
Almost all of the Board's jurisprudence in relation to
headquarters deals with alterations of headquarters from one
location to another. 1n many of these cases, the Board has
expressed the suspicion that the change in headquarters has been
designed simply to save expense to the Yinistry, and has 20 ether
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valid purpose whatsoever~. The present grievances do not raise
.any such issue.
The grievors were hired to work for a section which is
located at 3501 Dufferin. The address is included on the job
competition posting, although it is not specifically referred to
as *the headquarters", and each of the employees was notified
shortly after employment that travel claims should be based upon
a 3501 Dufferin Street headquarters location. In no case did any
qrievor complain about that, until the consent award was issued.
In fact, the consent award arose from a wholesale change of
headquarters made across the Ministry, and its terms and condi-
tions should be understood in the context of a change of existinq
headquarters, rather than of the propriety of an initial assign-
ment of headquarters specified at the time of appointment.
In our view, therefore, the consent award simply does
not apply to the case of these grievors. In strict terms, they
are still at the same headquarters as that to which they were
assigned on May 1, 1982, so nothing in paragraph 1 applies to
them; They have not been the subject of any changes, so para-
graph 3 cannot yet apply to them either. Paragraph 3, 4 and 5
may apply at some time in the future, but have no relevance to
the matter presently before us.
The Union argues that the consent award incorporates by
reference the provisions of the Manual. .?ssllming that to he the
case, the only provision which could aP~;l.:: here is cl,ause l.ln.
That clause pro,Jides that the headquarters of ?n employee "shall
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he at the place considered most convenient for the efficient
conduct of the Ministry's business". In the absence of any
evidence to the contrary, there seems to be no reason why the
office of the branch under which the grievors are employed does
not fit that definition, particularly since no one was able to
offer another location that was not at least as artificial as
3501 Dufferin.
The location of the employee's headquarters is then to
be periodically reviewed to determine whether or not "the
original arrangement continues.to be equitable to both the
employee and the Ministry". It is to be observed that this is
mutual equitability, and the employee cannot insist on a head-
quarters which maximizes his or her travel claims, completely to
the detriment of the Ministry. The Ministry's interests, which
are essentially financial, are also entitled to consideration in
this exercise. In Ross, 145/82, Vice-Chairman Joliffe, following
a careful analysis of this issue, concluded:
There is no evidence on which this Board
could devise a formula that would be equi-
table to both the Yinistry and the employees.
We do not think that it has been shown that
the system in vogue before October, 1978, was
fair to both parties. _.
We might observe that there is no evidence before us
either on which we could produce a formula of complete equi-
tability, but we must go on to say that it has not been shown
hefo.re us that the designation of headquarters in ear!\, lqP.7 'or
thesr? three employees was either j~nequitahle at the time, Or !iad
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become inequitable at the time that the grievances were filed.
While the headquarters designation may not maximize the grievers'
travel compensation, that does not make it inequitable.
Should an inequitable situation arise after the date of
the grievances, of course, there is provision in the Manual For
periodic review. Should such a review not produce an equitable
outcome, the grievance procedure remains available to resolve the
matter.
In the result, therefore, the grievances are dismissed.