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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-1292.Majury.88-11-17Between: 1292/87 IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD OPSEU (Terry A. Majury) The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Community and Social Services) Before: T.H. Wilson Vice Chairperson J. Solberg Member D. Montrose Member For the.Grievor: C. Dassios COlJ"Sel Gowling & Henderson ./ Barristers and Solicitors For the Employer: W. Emerson Employee Relations Officer Ministry of Community and Social Services Hearing: February 12, 1988 Grievor Employer W88-67-06 DECISION The grievor was injured while at work on January 23, 1987. As a result the grievor was off work and received Workers' Compensation in accordance with Article 53.1 of the Collective Agreement from January 23, 1987 to February 27, 1987 inclusive. From February 11, 1987 to February 27, 1987, the grievor worked half shifts and received Workers ' Compensation for the other half of his shift. He was paid his shift premium under Article 11 of the Collective Agreement for the half shifts he worked. For the two years before the date of this grievance, the grievor continuously worked the 5:OO p.m. to 1:30 a.m. shift and was paid shift premium under Article 11 of the Collective Agreement. While the grievor was on Workers' Compensation, the employer paid him at straight time rate without shift premium. It is this .absence of shift premium that the grievor grieves. The relevant provision is Article 54.1: ARTICLE 54 54.1 Where an employee is absent by reason of an injury or an industrial disease for which a claim is made under the Workers' Compensation Act, his salary shall continue to be paid for a period not exceeding thirty (30) days. If an award is not made, any -payments made under the foregoing provisions in excess of that to which he is entitled under sections 52.1 and 52.6 of Article 52 (Short Term Sickness Plan) shall be an amount owing to the Employer. The Union raised two arguments: (1) relying on the words "his - 2 - salary shall continue to be paid" in section 54.1, it submitted that the shift premium is a part of the grievor's "salary"; and (2) Article 54.7 determines the right of the employee to his regular salary. Article 19 determines the amount and it is to be calculated on the basis of what he would have received had he actually worked the days in question. This approach was argued inter alia in O.P.S.E.U. (Campbell McDermid) and Ministry of Correctional Services (G.S.B. File #366/83) and was based on an approach adopted in the dissent by Board Member H.L. Robinson in O.P.S.E.U. (Lyle John Martin) and Ministry of Correctional Services (G.S.B. File #434/81). However, the Board in McDermid allowed the grievance before it on grounds other than the theory described above. To understand the union's argument before me it is necessary to examine the McDermid case carefully. In the McDermid case, the grievor was off work on Workers' Compensation from the period March 14 to April 19, 1983 during which period there were two holidays which he had been scheduled to work. The employer paid the grievor as if he had taken~ the holidays which meant the grievor was not entitled to compensating leave for the two days or to additional pay in lieu. The issue involved an examination of Article 19: ARTICLE 19 19.1 Where an employee works on a holiday included under Article 47 (now Article 481 (Holidays), he shall be paid at the rate of two (2) times his basic hourly rate of two (2) times his basic hourly rate for all hours worked with a minimum credit of seven and one-quarter (7 l/4), eight (81, or - 3 - 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 l/4) or eight (8) hours, as applicable at his basic hourly rate or compensating leave of seven and one- quarter (7 l/4) or eight (8) hours as applicable, provided the employee opts for compensating leave prior to the holiday. ARTICLE 47 [now 481 An employee shall be entitled to the following holidays each year: [list of days] After analyzing the cases to date, Vice-Chairman Springate stated that there were four possible approaches: 1. .Article 53.2 (now 54.2) creates an entitlement to payment for the two holidays the grievor did not work, but reference must be had to Article 19 to determine the amount of payment. Because the grievor did not work on the days in question, Article 19.1 had no application. Article 19.2, however, applies both to employees who work and those who do not work a holiday, and accordingly is applicable. Pursuant to Article 19.2, the grievor is entitled to payment for both days at straight time or time off. This approach is consistent with the reasoning in the Martin award. 2. Article 53.2 entitles the grievor to his regular salary for the. two days in question the amount of payment being deter- mined by reference to Article ,19. However, it is to be calculated on the basis of what the grievor would have received had he actually worked the day in question. Had he worked the two holidays, he would have been entitled to eight hours' pay at double time under Article 19.1 as well as an additional eight hours' pay under Article 19.2, or compensating leave with pay. The approach of Robinson in his dissent in the Martin case. - 4 - 3. Only Article 53.2 applies and the employee isentitled to be paid for the holiday in the same basis as if he had actually taken the holiday in the day it occurred. This was in line with member Middleton's dissent in Charbonneau and Ministry of Services (G.S.B. File #544/81). 4. The grievor is entitled to his regular salary under Article 53.2. He is also entitled to eight hours pay or compen- sating leave under Article 19.2. In that Art. 19.1 applies only to an employee who works a holiday, it has no application. This was the reasoning adopted by the majority in Charbonneau. Vice-Chairman Springate concluded that none of these four positions was unreasonable given the lack of clarity in the language. The same he wrote was true of the role of the anti- pyramiding provision of Article 21: There shall be no duplication or pyramiding of any premium payments or compensating leave provided by this Agreement. In the interests of a uniform approach to the issue before it, the Board decided to follow the reasoning of the majority in the Charbonneau case. It left open the question of whether the reasoning in Charbonneau applied to employees. off work due to a non-compensable illness. Counsel for the union submitted that there was an important distinction between the situation in Charbonneau and the present grievance, namely that a shift premium is a component of the wage since the grievor regularly works a shift for which a - 5 - premium is paid. In contrast, a lieu day such as was claimed in Charbonneau and Mctlermid is more like a bonus and this may explain why those Boards rejected the approach favoured.by Member Robinson - that is that the employee should be paid exactly as he would have been had he worked in fact on .the day(s) in question. Finally, the union counsel drew the board's attention to a decision of Arbitrator M.G. Picher in American Can of Canada Ltd~. and International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Local Lodge 1909 (1980), 26 L.A.C. (2d) 189 but I find it of little assistance in determining the question before us especially in light of the numerous Grievance Settlement Board decisions in the area. In summing up the union counsel submitted that the source to be looked at is Article 54 itself rather than Article 11 (shift premium provision) and it means that the injured employee continues to be paid as he was on the day of injury which in this case includes the shift premium. Alterna- tively, Article 54 means the employee continues to be paid as if he had worked which in this case means worked on a shift paying a premium. Article 11 provides: 11.1.1 Effective March 1'6; 1987, an employee shall receive a shift premium of forty-five cents (45 c ) per hour for all hours worked between 5:00 p.m. and midnight. Where more than fifty percent (50%) of the hours worked fall within this period, the forty-five cents (45c ) per hour premium shall be paid for all hours worked. 11.1.2 [midnight to 7:00 a.m. rate] - 6 - 11.2 [7:00 a.m. to 5:OO p.m. rate] 11.3 Shift premiums shall not be considered as part of an employee's basic hourly rate. The Ministry counsel argued that Article 11.1 is similar in function to Article 19.1 which this Board has inter- preted as requiring the actual performance of the work to qualify. In this regard, he relied on Cooper and the Ministry of Community and Social Services (G.S.B. File #145/77). In that case, the grievor reported to work on a statutory holiday but part way into the day became ill and on medical advice ceased to work for the balance of the day having put in only 2 3/4 hours of work. Vice-Chairman Swan held that he was entitled to 1 l/2 times pay for the 2 3/4 hours he actua.lly worked, but~only straight time (holiday pay) for the balance of the shift during which he was unable to work. The guarantee in Section 19.1 is subject to the employee's continuing availability for work. Article 51.1 was apparently not raised in argument in that case. The Ministry urged the Board to interpret Article 11.1 on the same principles as 19.1 in Cooper. There were no Board decisions directly on that point presented to this panel. The employer did cite a number-of decisions interpret- ing the word, salary: in O.P.S.E.U. (Union Grievance and The Ministry of Community and Social Services (G.S.B. File #1383/85), in interpreting the words "salary maximum of the vacancy" in Article 24.2.1, Vice-Chairman Verity decided that the words there bore their ordinary meaning of salary as a fixed payment made by - 7 - the employer at regular intervals - be they weekly, monthly,~ quarterly or annually. Basic hourly rate is a component of salary as are hours of work which combine to establish a salary over a regular pay period. In a somewhat similar case Lee and the Ministry of Health (G.S.B. File #103/85), the Board had to interpret section 5.5.1 (now 5.4.1). Here also it interpreted salary as meaning fixed payment made by an employer at regular intervals and as such different from the hourly rate. The same approach was followed in Haley and Ministry of Correctional Services (G.S.B. File #438/85). Applying that reasoning to the current issue, the employer argues that "salary" in section 54.1 means a fixed payment at regular intervals and does not therefore include the shift premium which depends on the ac~tual hours (or shifts) worked. Furthermore, the shifts worked are within the manage- ment's discretion under section 18 of the Crown Employees Bargaining Act. The employer urged a purposeful interpretation on the Board arguing that the function of an overtime premium is to discourage overtime. In fact of course, Article 11.1 is a "shift premium", not an overtime premium. The-overtime rate is set by ' Article 13. In my view, the function of the shift premium is to compensate the employee for the inconvenience of the hours worked. Be that as it may, the principal issue is whether the words themselves lead to a specific conclusion. The employer's counsel referred the board to a list of provisions in the - 8 - Collective Agreement using various expressions among others ranging from "salary" (Section 4.2), "no loss of pay" (Section 28.1) "gross salary" (Section 42.2.1) to "actual weekly rate of pay" (Section 50.3.2.). Candidly he stated it would be an exercise in semantics to try to piece them together. It is no doubt clear that the Collective Agreement is not a seamless robe. However, it is our duty to find as much consistency as is possible while trying to identify the purpose or intent of -the parties. Clearly there are parallels between Article 52 and Article 54. The parallels between Articles 11 and 19 are also noticeable. If we applied the reasoning in Charbonneau and Cooper to this case, clearly the shift premium would not be included inasmuch as Section 11.1 like 19.1 requires that the hours must have actually been worked. The union contended that the purpose of Article 54 is to maintain the de facto income of the injured employee. I .do -- not see the interrelationship of Article 54 and Article 11 as doing that. Article 54 maintains the salary which the job itself pays.- Under Article 11.1 the employee is paid a "premium" when he actually works during the hours specified therein. That is completely parallel to Article 19.1. In $y view the reasoning in Charbonneau is correct and applies equally here. Furthermore, the cases actually cited by the employer defining salary and discussed above are I believe consistent with that approach. The basic hourly rate is one of the components of salary and it -- according to Section 11.3 does not include the shift premium. - 9 - That the parties sought to maintain the basi c salary of the employee appears to be the intention as refle cted by both the language and structure of the relevant provisions and as appears from the reasoning in the Board decisions. The grievance is dismissed. DATED AT TORONTO, Ontario this 17th day of November, 1988. I I Dissent (Dv~ttach~.d J. SOLBERG, Member D. MONTROSB, member DISSENT I disagree with this award on two accounts. Number one. This Board was asked to interpret article 54.1. That seems to me most easily done by looking at' the purpose of the article. And the purpose of the article is quita clear; It is an income maintenance clause designed to protect the current income level of an employee who is injured on the job. If that is the starting point of the Board's deliberations (as I think it ought to be), then the Board has only to decide whether there is anything in the cdllective agreement which conflicts with the explicit purposeā€˜of the clause in question. There is certainly no such conflict in any initial interpretation of the two clauses. Article 54.1 speaks about continuing the salary of an employee on workers' compensation. It is clear from the collective agreement that the parties have agreed- a shift premium,can not be a component of the hourly rate nor. of the weekly rate (for example; as used in the paid maternity clause). But, there is no such exclusion or suggestion of exclusion, with respect to salary. And I submit that distinction ought not to be ignored. The Board has then had to turn to the purpose.of the shift premium clause to find a conflict with article 54.1. The Board argues that since the purpose of a shift premium is to compensate an employee for the inconvenience of working non- regular hours, such a premium ought not to be paid when an employee is off work because of a compensable injury. That reasoning leads into the second point. Number two. The Board accepts a lack of consistency in the use of the word salary in the collective agreement. Surely the Board ought then t'o engage in a balancing of interests. In my opinion, such a balancing could reasonably lead to a conclusion that an employee ought not to receive a decrease in his livelihood because he has been injured on the job. Surely, that's not only a reasonable conclusion but the reasonable expectation raised in the clause itself when it speaks to the continuance of an employee's salary. On both these grounds, that is a purposive meaning of the clause in dispute before the Board and a reasonable balancing of the interests of the parties, I would have allowed the grievance. J. Solberg