Date: 20101126
Docket: T-2046-09
Citation: 2010 FC 1192
Ottawa, Ontario, November 26,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Applicant
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and
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DALE GARRAH
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicant challenges the legality of the decision (2009 PSLRB 148) made by Mr. Renaud
Paquette (the adjudicator), on November 6, 2009, an adjudicator designated
pursuant to section 209 of the Public Service Labour Relations Act,
R.S.C. 2003 c. 22, allowing the grievance made by the respondent against
Correctional Services of Canada (the employer).
[2]
The
respondent is a correctional officer. At the time of the incident, he worked on
a shift schedule (8.5 hours for six days in a seven-consecutive-day schedule),
and also on a modified schedule due to his extended hours of work (9 hours on
Tuesdays). He was scheduled to work an 8.5 hour shift on Christmas Day,
December 25, 2006, a designated paid holiday. He requested leave, which was
approved; however, the employer considered the time value of the designated
paid holiday to be 8 hours of leave rather than 8.5 hours. As a result, the
employer asked the respondent to pay back one half-hour of time for leave taken
on Christmas Day. The respondent grieved.
[3]
The
respondent’s grievance raised a fairly simple question about the time value of
a designated paid holiday taken by an employee working on a modified schedule
under the collective agreement signed on June 26, 2009 between the Treasury
Board and the Union of Canada Correctional Officers – Syndicat des agents
correctionnels du Canada – CSN for the Correctional Services Group (the
collective agreement).
[4]
Conflicting
positions were taken before the adjudicator with respect to the interpretation
and effect of various clauses of the collective agreement. Simply stated, the
employer’s position is that the pay allowed to an employee working on a
modified schedule and who takes leave for a designated paid holiday is 8 hours remunerated
at straight time (clause 26.05(b)), while the respondent holds that such an
employee is entitled to a time value equal to the daily hours specified in
clause 21.02 of the collective agreement for shift workers, namely, 8.5 hours a
day (article 34).
[5]
The
adjudicator found that the employer violated the collective agreement.
[6]
The
applicant now submits that the adjudicator’s refusal to apply clause 26.05(b)
of the collective agreement to the facts of the case is not supported by the
provisions of the collective agreement and the applicable case law. Clause
26.05(b) now makes it clear that employees, whether they work on a regular
basis or on a rotating or irregular basis, are only entitled to receive 8 hours
of leave if they are not working on a designated paid holiday. Contrary to what
the adjudicator has suggested in the impugned decision, article 34 does not
establish a parallel regime in the treatment of employees working a regular
schedule and employees working a modified schedule. Furthermore, the applicant
argues that nothing in article 34 suggests that a provision of general
application such as clause 26.05(b) should not apply to employees working a
modified schedule.
[7]
The
respondent, on the other hand, holds that the adjudicator’s decision is
reasonable and that there are no grounds for judicial review. The respondent
argues that if the parties did not change the designated paid holiday clause at
article 34, knowing the interpretation it had been given in past case law, they
did not intend to change its meaning. The evidence that was before the
adjudicator confirms the parties’ common intention. Furthermore, if the parties
had intended to have clause 26.05(b) apply to employees working a modified
schedule, they would have simply removed the designated paid holiday clause at
article 34. Had the parties intended for one sole regime for employees on
modified hours of work and employees who do not work modified hours, they would
not have set up two parallel articles dealing with the value of a statutory
holiday.
[8]
With
respect to the standard of review, both parties recognize that the Public
Service Labour Relations Board and its adjudicators enjoy a high level of
expertise in the area of labour and employment law which is the central focus
of their governing statute. In the past, the courts have accorded a high degree
of deference to the decision of an adjudicator when interpreting provisions of
a collective agreement, as in the present case. All of this calls for a
standard of reasonableness. See Currie v. Canada (Attorney
General),
2009 FC 1314 at paragraph 24; Canada (Attorney General) v. Pepper, 2010 FC 226
at paragraph 20; Attorney General of Canada v. Bearss, 2010 FC 299
at paragraph 23; Chan v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 FC 708 at
paragraph 17.
[9]
The
Court finds no reason to interfere with the adjudicator’s decision.
[10]
As
explained hereunder, the adjudicator’s general conclusion is supported by the
provisions of the collective agreement. The adjudicator’s reasoning for ruling
that clause 26.05(b) of the collective agreement does not apply to employees
working on a modified schedule is defensible and is not arbitrary or capricious,
considering the particular wording of article 34 and clause 21.02(a) of the
collective agreement and the interpretation and effect given to these
provisions in the case law. Indeed, the adjudicator’s decision “falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law”: Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at paragraph 47.
[11]
Since
the respondent worked a modified work schedule, the provisions of article 34 of
the collective agreement applied:
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ARTICLE 34
MODIFIED HOURS OF WORK
The Employer and the Union agree that
the following conditions shall apply to employees for whom modified hours of
work schedules are agreed upon pursuant to the relevant provisions of this
collective agreement. The agreement is modified by these provisions to the
extent specified herein.
…
3.
Specific Application
For
greater certainty, the following provisions shall be administered as provided
herein :
…
Designated
Paid Holidays
(a)
A designated paid holiday shall account for the normal daily hours
specified by this agreement.
(b) When an
employee works on a Designated Paid Holiday, the employee shall be
compensated, in addition to the normal daily hours of pay specified by this
agreement, time and one-half (1 1/2) up to his or her regular scheduled hours
worked and double (2) time for all hours worked in excess of his or her
regular scheduled hours.
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ARTICLE 34
HORAIRE DE TRAVAIL MODIFIÉ
L’Employer et le Syndicat conviennent que les conditions
suivantes s’appliquent aux
employé-e-s à l’intention desquels des horaires de travail
modifiés ont été convenus conformément aux dispositions pertinentes de la
présente convention collective. La convention est modifiée par les
présentes dispositions dans la mesure indiquée.
…
3. Champ d’application particulier
Pour plus de précision, les dispositions suivantes sont
appliquées comme suit :
…
Jours fériés désignés payés
(a) Un jour férié désigné payé correspond au nombre
d’heures journalières normales prévues dans la présente convention.
(b)
Lorsque l’employé-e travaille un jour férié désigné payé, il est rémunéré, en
plus de sa rémunération horaire journalière normale prévue dans la convention
particulière du groupe concerné, à tarif et demi (1 1/2) jusqu’à concurrence
des heures normales prévues à son horaire effectuées et à tarif double (2)
pour toutes les heures effectuées en sus des heures normales prévues à son
horaire.
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(My
underlining)
[12]
According
to paragraph (a) of the designated paid holiday clause of article 34 of the
collective agreement, a designated paid holiday shall account for the “normal
daily hours” specified in the collective agreement. The interpretation and
effect of this expression was examined in a number of cases: White v.
Treasury Board (Solicitor-General-Correctional Service), 2003 PSSRB 40,
affirmed in 2004 FC 1017 (White); Diotte v. Treasury Board (Solicitor
General-Correctional Service), 2003 PSSRB 74 (Diotte); Wallis v.
Treasury Board (Correctional Service of Canada), 2004 PSSRB
180 (Wallis). The “normal daily hours” are those specified in clause
21.02 of the collective agreement for shift workers.
[13]
Clause
21.02 of the collective agreement reads as follows:
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Shift Work
21.02 When hours of work are scheduled
for employees on a rotating or irregular basis:
(a)
they shall be scheduled so that employees on a weekly basis, work an average
of forty (40) hours, and on a daily basis, work eight decimal five (8.5)
hours per day.
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Travail par quart
21.02 Lorsque les heures de travail des employé-e-s sont
établies suivant un horaire irrégulier ou par roulement :
(a)
elles doivent être établies de façon à ce que les employé-e-s : travaillent
une moyenne de quarante (40) heures par semaine, travaillent huit virgule
cinq (8,5) heures par jour.
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(My
underlining)
[14]
In
White, above, the grievor, who worked shifts and on a modified schedule
just like the respondent, argued that the designated holiday accounted for 12
hours, the number of hours he was requested to work by the employer. The
adjudicator dismissed the grievance and determined that the “normal daily hours”
as referred to in article 34 were the number of hours specified at clause
21.02(a), which was at the time 8 hours (now 8.5 hours pursuant to clause
21.02(b)). The Federal Court refused to set aside the adjudicator’s decision,
holding that the adjudicator “[had] considered the appropriate provisions of
the collective agreement and interpreted those in accord with normal principles
of interpretation”. In this respect, it was held that the “interpretation [of
the adjudicator could not] be said to be without reason…” (2004 FC 1017 at
paragraph 13). The decisions rendered in Diotte and Wallis,
above, are to the same effect.
[15]
But
it is submitted by the applicant that the reference to clause 21.02(b) is no longer
necessary in view of the incorporation of clause 26.05(b) which did not exist
at the time that the decisions in White, Diotte and Wallis, above, were
made:
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ARTICLE 26
DESIGNATED PAID HOLIDAY
…
26.05
(a) When an employee works on a
holiday, he or she shall be paid time and one-half (1 1/2) for all hours
worked up to the regular daily scheduled hours of work as specified in
Article 21 of this collective agreement and double (2) time thereafter, in
addition to the pay that the employee would have been granted had he or she
not worked on the holiday.
(b)
The pay that the employee would have been granted had he or she not worked
on a designated paid holiday is eight (8) hours remunerated at straight-time.
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ARTICLE 26
JOURS FÉRIÉS DÉSIGNÉS PAYÉS
…
26.05
(a) Lorsqu’un-e employé-e travaille pendant un jour férié,
il est rémunéré à tarif et demi (1 1/2) pour toutes les heures effectuées
jusqu’à concurrence du nombre d’heures journalières normales prévues à son
horaire tel qu’indiqué à l’article 21 de la présente convention collective,
et à tarif double (2) par la suite, en plus de la rémunération qu’il aurait
reçue s’il n’avait pas travaillé ce jour-là.
(b) La rémunération que
l’employé-e aurait reçue s’il n’avait
pas travaillé ce jour-là est huit (8) heures à tarif normal.
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(My
underlining)
[16]
The
adjudicator specifically considered the impact of clause 26.05 in his decision
and found that this does not affect the time value of a designated paid holiday
in the case of employees who work on modified schedules. For the reasons given
in his decision, the adjudicator rules that clause 26.05(b), under the general
designated paid holidays provision, cannot apply to employees who work on
modified schedules. If the intent of the parties to the collective agreement
was to have clause 26.05(b) apply to employees working on modified work
schedules, they would have deleted paragraph (a) of the designated paid holiday
clause of article 34, but they did not. In this respect, as already decided by
other adjudicators, the “normal daily hours” for employees working on a
modified work schedule are equal to the daily hours specified in clause 21.02
of the collective agreement (formerly clause 21.01 of the old collective
agreement) for shift workers. Thus, the adjudicator concludes that the
respondent was entitled to 8.5 hours of paid leave on Christmas Day and the
claw-back of one half-hour by the employer violated the collective agreement.
[17]
His
reasoning is expressed in the following manner:
Even though clause 26.05(a) and paragraph
(b) of the designated paid holiday clause of article 34 of the collective
agreement are worded differently, they apply the same logic in determining an
employee’s pay when he or she works on a designated paid holiday. Clause
26.05(b) clarifies the last line of clause 26.05(a) in establishing eight hours
as the time value of a designated paid holiday. In the designated paid holiday
clause of article 34, the order is reversed, and the time value of a designated
paid holiday is covered in paragraph (1) rather than in paragraph (b).
If the intent of the parties to the collective
agreement was to have clause 25.06(b) applied to employees on modified work
schedules, they would have deleted paragraph (a) of the designated paid holiday
clause of article 34, but they did not. Considering that the provisions of
article 34 modify specific parts of the collective agreement and that article
34 covers the time value of a designated paid holiday, I conclude that clause
26.05(b) cannot apply to employees who work modified schedules.
…
I agree with [the White, Diotte and
Wallis, above] decisions, which have established that a designated paid
holiday has a time value equal to the daily hours specified in clause 21.01 of
the collective agreement for shift workers, namely, 8.5 hours a day.
The employer is right in reminding me
that the cited decisions interpreted the old collective agreement. However, the
collective agreement in question here does not differ from the old collective
agreement concerning the clauses relevant to establishing the time value of a
designated paid holiday for employees working a modified shift schedule. The
employer argued that clause 26.05(b) was added and that it changed the rules. I
have already ruled that that clause does not apply to employees working
modified hours. Therefore, the rules remained unchanged when the parties signed
the collective agreement in 2006.
[18]
As
can be seen, the adjudicator clearly adopted a contextual approach in the
interpretation of the collective agreement looking at relevant provisions,
including clause 26.05(b), to support the conclusion reached, which is one of
the possible and acceptable outcomes on the facts and the law in this case. The
applicant is simply reasserting arguments already considered and dismissed by
the adjudicator. Indeed, the adjudicator specifically addressed the applicant’s
argument that if the grievance were allowed, it would create an inequity
between employees and concluded that the collective agreement creates several
differences in work rules between employees working regular hours and those
working modified hours, and that unequal treatment is not inequity.
Furthermore, the parties had made this decision and the adjudicator is bound to
respect the will of the parties.
[19]
While
the adjudicator’s interpretation of the jurisprudence and the structure of the
collective agreement may not correspond with that of the applicant, this does
not render the adjudicator’s decision unreasonable. The Court should refrain
itself from reinterpreting the collective agreement and substituting its own
views for those of the adjudicator. While another result was perhaps possible –
another adjudicator may have accepted the employer’s arguments – this is not
the applicable test in this judicial review proceeding.
[20]
In
conclusion, the adjudicator clearly undertook a thorough analysis of the
jurisprudence and the structure of the collective agreement, including the
changes made to the old collective agreement, and made a decision that is
justifiable in light of the facts and the law. Accordingly, the Court dismisses
the present judicial review application. In view of the result, costs are in
favour of the respondent.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that the judicial
review application made by the applicant is dismissed with costs in favour of
the respondent.
“Luc
Martineau”