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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-0103.Lee.86-06-02IN THE HATTER OF AN ARBITRATION - Under - THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD . OPSEU (Lee) - and - The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Health) Before For the Grievor: J.W. Samuels J. M&anus P.ti. Camp .I. Roland Counsel Cowling 6 Henderson Barristers h Solicitors For the Employer: Hearing Grievor Employer Vice-Chairman Member Member H.H. Fleishman Counsel Ninfitry of Attorney General November.25, 1985, and agreed facts in writ,ipg : ~” PAY RESEARCH FILE COPY DO NOT~RENIOVE . .~... ln!mductbm 2 This case involves a neat Point with respect to the calculation of the grievor’s salary. The grievor’was employed by the Ministry of Community and Social Services as a Residential Counsellor 2 at the Pineridge Regional Centre in Aurora. Then the faclllty was Closed, and Ule grleVOr was a SUrplUS employee available for reassignment pursuant to Article 24 of the collective agreement As of June 27, 1984, she was reasslgned to the employ of the Ministry of Health at the Queen Street Mental Health Centre as a Clerk 2 General. while at Pineridge. the grievor worked 40 hours per Week In her new positfon, she works 36 l/4 hours per week This difference arises from the provisions governing the hours of work in Reguiation 881 under the pubtc .%‘fWG~ Act. Article 5.5.1 .of the collective agreement provides for red-circling of an employee’s salary when an employee is assigned to a new position under _ Article 24 Article 5.5.1 reads: Where. because 01 the abolitii ol a posit!!. M employee b assigned: (a) tim one psitii in a ministry to another poli- tim h the same ministy. ci (b) hmtt * positin in one minisby to a position h another ministry. The parties disagree on how the red-circled salary is to be calculated. Is the grievor entitled to retain the same weekly salary as she had whenshe worked 40 hours per week? Or, Is she entitled only to the same hourly rate? The Ministry has been paying the,grievor the same hourly rate, but Only for 36 114 hours per week. The grievor says that she is entitled to the same weekly salary as she had when she worked 40 hours per week. 3 e Preliminary Ob!ection: Timeliness At the outset, the Hlnistry argues that the grfevance is untimely, and therefore not arbi.tfable. The parties agree that Article 27.2.1 of the coliectlve agreement establishes a mandatory tlme llmlt for the rakfng of complafnts or differences (see, for example, /saac and#ksaaC, GSB 742/83and28/84, at page 4, and the earlier cases cited therein). It must be done within twenty days of first becoming aware of the problem. And it Is agreed that the Board cannot’exiend th’is limit (see the ‘two classic decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada on the point-- &/on C&We CanadaL Cd y: Weiler et aI ( 19$8>, D.L.R (2d) 333; and Genera/ ?@CiiDr/VerS Mlfon, Local 938 et ar! K Hoar ~~NPCF~ Co. Ltd (1969). 4 D.L.R (3d) 449, at pages 450- I). In our case, there is no doubt that the grievance was filed in March 1985, some seven or eight months after-the grievor began receiving the payagainst which she now complains. The lssue IS whet& or not this IS a ‘COntlnUing’ grieVanCe, or an isolated matter. if it is a ‘continuing’ grievance, then each time the problem arises, the 20-day iimitation begins to run anew, and the grievance in this case would not be untimely. (I The distinction between a ‘continuing’ grievance and an isol&d matter has been dkcussed in many cases, and it is not an understatement to say Jhat the law is not entirely, clear. The general notions are fairly straight-forward. A ‘continuing. grievance involves repetitive breaches of the collective agreement, or, as some have put it, a ‘recurring breach of duty’ (this formulation is found in all three of the leading Canadian works on the matter--Palm&, Co//eccive AgmenthMY-athm /n Cm& (2nd edition, 19831, at pages I91 -5; BrOWn and Betitty, C&Wan L &Ow An%~tion (2nd edltkm, 19841, at pages 95-6; and Gorsky, fv/dnce ?nd P@cedWe in Cmadiian LaboWAQW@m (198 I), at ,page 351. The breach of a recurring duty is to be distinguished from an isolated breach of the , i. : , 4 I collective agreement which causes recurring damage. The latter is not the basis of a ‘continuing’ grievance. The difficulty comes in the application of these concepts. One recent arbltratfon decision has characterised the jurisprudence well as ‘brangled.....a fruitless search through a thicket of precedents’ ( Re Provfnce of b?jU& Colmbk? aml&Wt~~ Cohmbia htrses’ Vim (1982&S LAC. (3d) 404 (Getz), at 4) 4 2/3). In cases involving the allegation of deficient wage payments, some authorities suggest that this fs a ‘continuing’ grievance (see Palmer, at page 192 3/4. and the cases cited in footnote 113). However, ln Re ProvznCe of&itikh Colwnbia (cited above), it was decided that the real breach is the original calculation of the wages, which is an isolated event, and the character of the breach does not change though the calculation governs an c ‘,. on-going series of wage payments (at page Sl~Sl. In our view, the better opinion is that each wage payment is an, isolated event. if the payment is not in accordance with the collective agreement, then the employer has breached the agreement. Each time a wage payment is not in accordance with the agreement, the breach recurs. Thus, this is a case involving a ‘continuing’ grievance. The grievor did not file her grievance until March I, 1985. Therefore, ’ c if her grievance Is sound In substance, she is entitled to a remedy only in respect of any wage payment in the Wenty days preceding her claim, and I ’ thereafter. On the Calculatfon of the Red-Circled Salaw . As a Residentfal Counsellor, the grievor’s weekly pay was calculated by multiplying the hourly rate agreed between the parties by 40 (the number of hours she worked in a w.eek). .ln the Appendix to the collective agreement which relates to the institutional Care Services Category, the compensation rate for the Residential Counsellor is shown in terms of hourly rates. There are Other classifications feg. Occupational instructor) for which the . compensation rate is shown in terms of weekly rates. . .-. , \ c 5 The Ministry argues that this shows that the grievor’s ‘salary’ under Article 5.5.1 is an hourly rate, and it is this hourly rate which must be red- circled Counsel referred us to only one case which raised a point llke the one before us. In the days before the parties had a collective agreement, the Public Service Grievance Board considered the claim of Mr. R G. Allen (No. BO5/74), whose weekly hours had been reduced from 40 to 36 I /4. Both the CSAO and the Employer agreed that the nanc/a/ofAab?in&Ya~ion governed the situation (the same provision is still in the Manva//). It provides that, wh.e? an employee’s p@tion IS abolished and the employee is reassigned, the employee ‘will retain his existing rate of pay’ and ‘shall continue to be entitled to salary progression, based on merit, to the maximum salary of the higher classification, k’tcluding any revision of the maXlmUm salary of the higher classification that takes effect during the salary cycle in which the assignment takes place’. The Board decided that it was the hourly rate which was red-circled, not the weekly earnings. It was not argued that, when the collective agreement was negotiated, the parties intended in Article 55.1 to codify the prOVlSlOn in the /iZwm/ofA~~his~at/m and the interpretation it had MeNed in the A//en case. It is signif icant that the Manua speaks specifically of the ‘existing @&of pay’ (emphasis added), whereas Article 5.5. I does not. We heard no evidence on the negotiations. We, must decide the case by reference soleiy to the language of Article 5.51. In our view, Article 5.5.1 mu&t be read together with Article 24. The two provisions together provide a measure of job and monetary security to the surplus employee. Article 24 deals with the reassignment of an * employee, as follows: ..___ ~~ .._...._ .~~ ..~.. .-~ . . .~ ..- -... ..-...-. .- ....~ ..- ..-....-..-..--.--..--....._._.._..- ..-..__. . I . . . 6 24.2.1 Where m rmgloye.~ b Mentllbd 44 ,urplUs h4 sh4ll b. l rripned on the basis 01 hb 8~nlorlty to 4 vaun~y In hb ministry within l lofty (40) kllomrtr~ radius 01 hb head- qurrtrn pmided h b qwmisd lo wfloml VII work and lhe salary maximum 01 (he vaCsnCy b not greater Ihan three psmm (3%) abiw II(y hvmny pernN mb) bebw lhe m&mum salary 01 hb Cbssitkalbn, 4s tOttOWSz - I vacmcy tikh kin Ihb urn4 CbsI OI pOstIion as the l PIOYW’S cI~ 01 PWtlon; - rvacmyin~cbssofposnknlnwhkhths employee has utrwd durhg hb Cumnl Mrm Of comlnuousMNlce;w * - mo1hervacaPey. ed lo a wancy In hb mlnbby bepnd a IMY NOI kilometre ndius ot hb headquanem provided he b quaIltied to pwfoml the m)fk and the Mlaly maxlrnurn 01 the “sCanCy b not greater than three pehent 0%) above mf twenty percenl (20%) blow the maxhum salary of his dassifiiion. Rekalkn ~xPWSES chall be .,. paid in accordance with the prOviSions 0t the Employer’s wcl. 24.23 Where m employee has not been assIgned h 8cxofd- me tilh subse~tii 242.1 or 2422 he shalt be assigned on the bash of his 8AOrity to B V in another ministry withtn a forty (40) kitometre radius 0t hls headquarters provtded he b quatitied to pertOrm the workmdthesalatymaximumc4thavacawbml greats, than three perCent (3%) above l!of tww per- cant (20%) bekw the maximum salary 01 hii da&f- tien. as tdlova: - avacancywhkhblnthesameclassarposttiin as the employee’s class ol positkm: - avamcyhackssorposltknktikh~ emphyee has saved during hi sunent teml ol continUous service: or - another vaC8nCy. 24.3.1 Where an employee b ats@Ied to 4 Va- h -rd. mce with wbseclbru 24.21.24.2.2 ~242.3. SectiOn 5.5 of Allick 5 (ckssifaion PrCcedure) shan wp+. As this Board commented in palangia, G!GYZ7/3, the purpose of these provisions is ‘to provide employment stability and salary stability on the basis of seniority’ (the pages in the award appear to be unnumbered, but the relevant passage appears ‘at the bottom of the 7th page of the award to the top of the next page). In our view, one Ought to read Articles 5.51 and.24 llteI?Ny. What Is being preserved is the employee’s ‘salary’, not the ‘rate of salw. The parties have demonstrated their acknowledgement of the difference between these two terms, by using the words ‘hourly rate’ elsewhere in the . .’ . i 7 i agreement--for instance, Articles 3.2.1,3.3, 3.4 I and 7.7. This latter provision is important for us: Where the Employer Inlands to tranrkr rmpkywt o( . an empkyee ltom one s3~4uk ta another schedule. Ihe Employer will discuss Ihe Iranrler with Ihe Unkn prkf ,o such lrmsler. when the trmster OCCUR. Iha empkyw’r weekly salary based on his beak hcwly rale shaii be adjusted accordingly. Here the parties speak of the ‘weekly salary based on his basic hourly rate’. ,ln Articles 5.5.1 and 24, the part& speak simply of ‘salary’. ‘Salary’ means ‘fixed payment made by employer at regular intervals’ ( 7i3e Cant/s OxfimfDkhmy (New Edition 1982)). .c We conclude that, under Article 55.1 of the collective agreement, the grievor was entitled to have her ‘payment made by employer at regular intervals’ red-circled It is the payment itself which is protected, not the c hourly rate used to calculate that payment. At the end of our first day of hearing, the parties asked the Board to withhold its award until the partles decided whether or not they would introduce evidence concerning past practice in this matter. Some months later, the parties asked the Board to schedule another day of hearing We were to meet on April 21. However, two days before this date, the partles informed the Board that they had agreed on the.past practice and would submit the evidence in writing. The hearing was cancelled In the agreed written statement of facts, the parties referred to 38 employees who changed positions in various Ministries in 1984 and’ I985 and whose salaries were red-CirCled In 16 cases, the employees moved from 40-hours-per-week jobs to 36.25-hours-per-week jobs, and their In 15 weeklv salaries were red-circled, Just as the Union requests here. cases, employees making the same move had their Bo!lfJy rates red-circled, (1 as the Ministry argues should be the case here. As well, it would appear that, when employees moved from 36.25-hours-per-week jobs to 40-hours- per-week ]obs,‘their weekly salaries were red-circled In our view, the 8 past practice on moves llke the one wlth which we are deallng is obvlously lnconslstent and offers no support for an estoppel in favour of elther party. In thls situation, we are left wlth lnterprettlng the language of the collective agreement Itself. For these reasons, the grievance Is allowed The grlevor shall be compensated for lost salary In respect of any payment made in the twenty days before the date of her grievance, and therealter. This Board will remain seized of this matter to determine the predse amount of compensation if the partles are unable to agree on thls themselves. Done at London, Ontario, this 2nd day Of June, 1986. J. McNanus, Member . “I dissent” (Dissent to follow) I P. 0. Camp, Member