ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE [AI] IS NOT USED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN PREPARING NYPPL SUMMARIES OF JUDICIAL AND QUASI-JUDICIAL DECISIONS

April 19, 2011

Negotiating paid religious holidays

Negotiating paid religious holidays
Port Washington UFSD v Port Washington TA, App. Div., 268 AD2d 523; motion to appeal dismissed, 95 NY2d 761, motion to appeal on Constitutional grounds dismissed 95 NY2d 790

According to the Appellate Division, Second Department’s ruling in the Port Washington Union Free School District case, a Taylor Law contract provision allowing an individual to be absent on a religious holiday with pay without charging his or her absence to leave credits violates the First Amendment.

In the course of collective bargaining under the Taylor Law, Port Washington agreed to include a “Religious Holiday” provision in the agreement.*

The contract clause allowed a teacher to be absent with pay on “any of the religious holidays designated by the New York State Commissioner of Education” without charging his or her absence to leave credits. To receive this benefit the teacher had to submit a written request to absent himself or herself for the holiday.

In September 1997, however, the district advised teachers who had requested paid days off for religious observance that the district would not implement the Religious Holidays provision in the contract “because it was unconstitutional.”

The district said that if a teacher wished to be absent for a religious observance, he or she would be required to charge the absence to his or her appropriate leave credits or request to be placed on a leave without pay for the duration of the absence.

Six teachers and the Port Washington Teachers Association filed a grievance and demanded that the district’s alleged violation of the agreement be submitted to arbitration in accordance with the Taylor Law contract’s grievance procedure.

The district objected and asked a State Supreme Court judge to stay the arbitration proceeding pursuant to Section 7503 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules. The district’s argument: the enforcement of the provision pursuant to an arbitration award would be unconstitutional.

The judge agreed with the district’s rational for refusing to implement the Religious Holidays provision -- the provision was unconstitutional -- and issued an order staying the arbitration. The teachers and the Association appealed.

The Appellate Division said that the first issue to be resolved in cases involving the granting of a stay of arbitration in a public sector dispute arising under a Taylor Law is whether the provision in question is, in fact, subject to arbitration. The court, referring to the Court of Appeals ruling in Matter of Blackburne, 87 NY2d 660, said:

If a statute, decisional law or public policy precludes the governmental employer and employee from referring the dispute to arbitration, then the answer to this inquiry is no and the claim is not arbitrable.

Citing Griffin v Coughlin, 88 NY2d 674, the Appellate Division pointed out that “[t]here is no firmer or more settled principle of Establishment Clause jurisprudence than that prohibiting the use of the State’s power to force one to profess a religious belief.” It affirmed the lower court’s order staying the arbitration on the grounds that the contract provision violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the Federal Constitution.

The Appellate Division’s rationale:

The Religious Holidays provision in the Taylor Law agreement between the district and the association “rewarded members of the Association who claimed to be religiously observant with more paid days off than those afforded to agnostics, atheists, and members who were less observant.”

In contrast to the type of provision included in the Port Washington contract, many Taylor Law collective bargaining agreements provide for absences with pay charged to “personal leave.”

Typically, such leave may be used for any “personal business” including the observation of religious holidays. Presumably such provisions would pass the Second Department’s Constitutional test as they neither favor the “religiously observant” nor penalize “agnostics, atheists, and members who were less observant.”

* The New York State Public Employment Relations Board [PERB] has held that negotiating days off for religious observances was not a mandatory subject of collective bargaining [CSEA v Eastchester UFSD, 29 PERB 3041].
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Disclosure of a public agency’s "policies, procedures, rules and regulations”

Disclosure of a public agency’s "policies, procedures, rules and regulations”
Sabilia v State of New York, 14 Misc.3d 1228(A)

Peter Sabilia and his wife, Stephanie, sued the State of New York after Peter was injured as a result of his being run over by a State motor vehicle sunbathing on the beach at Jones Beach State Park. The vehicle, a pick-up truck, was being driven by John J. Fitzwilliam, an employee of the New York State Park Police. Fitzwilliam allegedly drove over Sabilia while, according to Fitzwilliam, he was attempting to avoid a "large hole" during a routine beach patrol.

In the course of this litigation before Court of Claims Judge Milano, the Sabilias asked for copies of “policies, procedures, rules, regulations, and training manuals" concerning driving a vehicle on the beach that were applicable at the time. Judge Milano noted that:

“Importantly, the claimants' demand specifically stated that they did not seek "any police strategies regarding pursuit techniques/strategies of any kind whatsoever and is limited to those rules . . . dealing with driving on the beach (when not in pursuit)."

The State’s response:

"We will not be providing any training manuals, regulations, policies, procedures or other internal memorandums that pertain to driving a vehicle on the beach." The reasons for this advanced by the State: “its own policies and procedures have ‘little relevance to the legal standard of care’ and that the ‘standard of care in the operation of a police vehicle is controlled by the reckless disregard standard as defined in [Vehicle and Traffic Law] §1104(e) and relevant case law’"

The State also argued that materials requested by the Sailias are "privileged and confidential" and might have "a detrimental impact on the safety and security of the various officers, as well as the general public" and that the “disclosure of its policy as to non-emergency, routine operation of a pick-up truck on the beach will "limit the ability [of the officers] to successfully perform their duties and self evaluation and analysis."

Noting that the disclosure provisions of the Civil Practice Law and Rules are to be liberally construed the court said that "The party seeking to prevent disclosure has a heavy burden, especially where the materials sought are relevant” and that “It is the party opposing discovery who has the burden to prove that the particular items sought are exempt or immune from disclosure.”

Concluding that the State’s internally adopted standard of care, if any, for the routine, non-emergency operation of a motor vehicle on the beach, is relevant, Judge Milano said that a "failure to abide by its own rule is some evidence of negligence."*

As the State’s reliance on “the recklessness standard of care” set forth in Vehicle and Traffic Law §1104 (e), Judge Milano said that the Sailias “correctly state that the record is devoid of any evidence that Fitzwilliam was ‘involved in an emergency operation,’ which is a prerequisite for the statute to apply.”

Holding that “The conclusory assertions of privilege and confidentiality regarding [State’s] policy as to non-emergency, routine operation of a pick-up truck on the beach, set forth in the affirmation of [State’s] attorney, are unpersuasive and that the State failed to sustain its burden of showing that the disclosure of the requested materials would pose any danger to park police officers or the public,” Judge Milano ordered the State to provide the requested "policies, procedures, rules, regulations and/or training manuals regarding driving a vehicle on the beach which were applicable at the time" to the Court for an in camera** inspection by the court.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

  
*  Citing Sherman v Robinson, 80 NY2d 483, Judge Milano said that the "[v]iolation of a company's internal rules is not negligence in and of itself, and where such rules require a standard that transcends reasonable care, breach cannot be considered evidence of negligence."

**  From the Latin “in chambers.” A review conducted by a judge in a court closed to the public or in the judge’s chambers rather than in open court.
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Joint employers

Joint employers
Putnam County Sheriff’s OMA v Putnam County, 33 PERB 3001

Who is the employer of the personnel serving with the Putnam County Sheriff’s Department? Putnam County contended that the county is the sole employer of Sheriff’s Department personnel while the Sheriff argued that he and the county were “joint employers” of these employees.

The issue arose when the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office Managers Association [OMA] filed a petition seeking certification as the exclusive bargaining agent for a unit consisting of lieutenants, captains and a chief criminal investigator employed by the “Office of the Sheriff.”

The county filed a response claiming that it was the sole employer of these employees and that they were managerial employees and thus not entitled to representation rights under the Taylor Law.

The sheriff also filed an answer in which he said that he and the county were “joint employers” of these employees and that he believed that certifying OMA to represent a negotiating unit consisting of these employees was appropriate.

Reversing a determination by its administrative law judge [ALJ], PERB ruled that the sheriff and the county were “joint employers” for the purposes of the Taylor Law.

PERB’s rationale: holding that the county was the sole employer would “relieve elected sheriffs of their right and duty to negotiate under the Act and it could elicit petitions to consolidate some or all of the titles in existing sheriffs department units with county-wide units, often the very units from which they were fragmented in the first place.”

This is not a new concept: in County of Ulster v Ulster County Sheriff, 3 PERB 3032, a case decided in 1970, PERB ruled that the county and the sheriff were joint employers and separate bargaining units for the sheriff’s department were appropriate.

What distinguishes the Putnam County sheriffs from other Putnam county governmental unit heads? The sheriff is an elected official and can only be removed by the Governor while other county unit heads serve at the pleasure of the county executive.

In contrast to the status of an elective sheriff, whom PERB characterized as an “executive officer,” PERB said that an “appointed sheriff” is “essentially a department head.

Accordingly, the elected sheriff has independent status as a joint employer. PERB had addressed this difference in Nassau County v Nassau County Sheriff, 25 PERB 3036. This is consistent with the general rule that an appointing authority’s power to appoint implies the power to remove, while the elective sheriff is a Constitutional office and subject to different removal procedures.

Turning to the ALJ’s ruling that “the at-issue employees” are not managerial, PERB said that the employees are “high-level supervisors akin to the clerks of the Court of Appeals and the Appellate Divisions, First and Second Departments. PERB concluded that despite their role in personnel and policymaking determinations, the clerks were neither managerial nor confidential employees.

April 18, 2011

Out of title work and position classification determinations

Out of title work and position classification determinations
Curtiss v Angello, 269 AD2d 675

The Appellate Division recently considered a number of issues involving the classification and allocation of positions in the public service.

In Curtiss, the Appellate Division, Third Department addressed a rather unusual situation: an administrator’s reliance on new, but not yet official, job specifications rather than official but obsolete job descriptions in resolving an “out-of-title” work grievance.

John F. Curtiss, a Fish and Wildlife Technician II employed by the State Department of Environmental Conservation, filed a grievance claiming that he was working “out of title.”

Although Environmental Conservation sustained the grievance, the then State Director of the Governor’s Office Employee Relations [OER], Linda Angello, reversed the agency’s determination and denied Curtiss’ grievance. Curtiss sued, challenging Angello’s decision on the grounds that it was arbitrary and capricious.

Essentially, Curtiss wanted to be reclassified to Fish and Wildlife Technician III. Angello, in rejecting the grievance, determined that the duties of a Fish and Wildlife Technician III included region-wide coordination of programs and direct supervision of subordinate staff, duties that Curtiss did not perform.” Angello’s findings, however, were based on new, “tentative specifications” for the two positions rather than the then current “official” job descriptions for the two titles.

The Appellate Division sustained Angello’s determination, noting that the “relevant standard of review is whether the record as a whole provides a rational basis for the determination denying [Curtiss’] grievance.

Curtiss argued that Angello’s determination was arbitrary because it was not based exclusively on the “official” job classification specifications promulgated by the State’s Division of Classification and Compensation in effect when his grievance was actually filed.

Classification and Compensation’s “official” specifications referred to by Curtiss had been issued in 1970. Angello unquestionably had considered new and “tentative” job descriptions for the Fish and Wildlife Technician II and Fish and Wildlife Technician III titles in making her determination.

These “tentative” job descriptions for the two titles had been prepared by the State Department of Civil Service following its review of the duties being performed by incumbents of a number of positions in Environmental Conservation.

Civil Service found that the duties of the incumbents of the various titles in Environmental Conservation that it had reviewed “had changed over time, rendering the 1970 specifications obsolete.” In March 1998, after Curtiss had filed his grievance, new job descriptions for the Fish and Wildlife Technician II and III titles were promulgated and the positions were reallocated to higher salary grades.

The court held that it was neither arbitrary nor irrational for Angello to consider the results of the job audits prepared by Civil Service as they “disclosed the actual duties being performed by incumbents.”

As to title held by Curtiss in particular, the Appellate Division said that “in the 1970 specifications the principal distinction between the two titles was the greater supervisory and administrative responsibility of the higher grade title.” The audits, said the court, revealed that “although the duties of the incumbents had changed, the principal distinction continued to be the greater supervisory and administrative responsibility of the higher grade title.”

Curtiss had cited Rausch v Pellegrini, 237 AD2d 771, in support of his “out of title” work argument. The Appellate Division said that Rausch was not relevant in this case, noting that unlike Rausch, Curtiss “was not obligated to perform the duties of his supervisor.”

Further, said the court, the fact that there is some overlap of the duties performed by Curtiss and those performed by a Fish and Wildlife Technician III does not justify sustaining his grievance.

Finding that the record as a whole provides a rational basis for Angello’s conclusion that Curtiss was not performing out-of-title work, the Appellate Division sustained the lower courts dismissal of his petition.

Readers may have noted another interesting aspect of this case -- Curtiss had “won” his grievance at the departmental level. As the “employer” makes the determination in pre-arbitration steps of the grievance procedure, typically any appeal is filed by the grievant or his or her representative.
May the employer, in effect, “appeal” a grievance determination by an official at an earlier step in the grievance procedure and then reverse the earlier “lower level” grievance ruling favorable to the employee made by management?

This was the significant issue addressed in Weed v Orange County, a case decided by the Appellate Division in the early 1990’s.

Weed was injured on the job. The Orange County Commissioner of Personnel rejected Weed’s application for a one-year leave of absence with full pay. Weed claimed he was entitled to such leave under the terms of “Article 20” of the then controlling Taylor Law agreement.

After the Commissioner disapproved his application, Weed filed a “Step One” grievance with his immediate supervisor in accordance with the terms of the grievance procedure set out in the collective bargaining agreement. The supervisor sustained the grievance. The Commissioner of Personnel, however, refused to implement the supervisor’s ruling.

Weed sued, only to have the Appellate Division dismiss his complaint. The court said that under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement, “the Commissioner of Personnel is given sole discretion in granting paid leave.” According to the opinion, there was no evidence that the parties to the agreement “intended to limit the discretion of the Commissioner of Personnel.”

The Appellate Division said that in the absence of any such evidence, there was no rational basis for the supervisor’s “construing Article 20 as a mandatory requirement [to grant paid leave to Weed] on the part of the County.”

The bottom line: the County was not required to comply with the determination by Weed’s supervisor, who had initially sustained Weed’s grievance.

Finally, the decision reports that the two titles in question were “reallocated to a higher grade and, presumably, the incumbents were entitled to have their salaries adjusted accordingly. What happens if the titles are reallocated to a lower grade?

Typically, the permanent incumbents serving in the positions reallocated to a lower salary grade would be “grand fathered” to protect their salaries.* Any future salary increases would be subject to the maximum of the lower salary grade to which the titles were reallocated. The grand fathering of salaries to protect the income of incumbents of positions that have been reallocated to a lower salary grade is illustrated by the decision in the New York State Court Clerks Association case.

The Office of Court Administration [OCA] had decided that the salary grade of existing trial court clerk titles should remain unchanged, based upon “an extensive review of the trial and appellate-level court clerk titles for the purpose of establishing joint salary scales.” OCA also decided that some court clerk positions should be reallocated to a lower salary grade.

OCA protected the salaries of the permanent employees serving in appellate court clerk titles whose positions had been reallocated to a lower salary grade by “grand fathering” their salaries. The Appellate Division said that “grand fathering permanent incumbents in the context of a downward reclassification of their titles is an accepted practice that effectuates the mandate of Civil Service Law Section 121(2)(a)....”

Section 121(2)(a) provides that “the annual salary of any position ..., which is classified or reclassified, or which is allocated or reallocated to a salary grade pursuant to the provisions of this article shall not be reduced for the then permanent incumbent by reason of any provision of this article so long as such position is held by the then permanent incumbent”

The court said that “contrary to petitioner’s contention,” although grand fathering, results in some “transitional salary inequities,” it constitutes “a rationally justifiable means of facilitating the orderly implementation of [OCA’s] Classification Plan”. Accordingly, the Appellate Division, citing the Court of Appeals ruling in Tolub v Evans, 58 NY2d 1, held that OCA’s action “does not offend due process,” because in matters concerning the State’s budget, “equal protection does not require that all classifications be made with mathematical precision.”

Finally, the court said that “[a]dministrative determinations concerning position classifications ... will not be disturbed in the absence of a showing that they are wholly arbitrary or without any rational basis”, citing Cove v Sise, 71 NY2d 910, 912.

* In such cases the position is typically “red-lined” or “earmarked” for allocation upon its becoming vacant.
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E-mails between government workers are public documents

E-mails between government workers are public documents
Cowles Publishing Co. v Kootenai County Board of Supervisors, 2007 Opinion No. 74

The Idaho Supreme Court ruled that e-mail correspondence between government employees is public record. The e-mail correspondence at issue was between a supervisor and a subordinate, both of whom were employees of the county.

Essentially, the court held that “The emails exchanged by public employees are public records and are not exempt from disclosure under either [Idaho] statutory exemptions or constitutional law.”

The full text of the ruling is posted at:

CAUTION

Subsequent court and administrative rulings, or changes to laws, rules and regulations may have modified or clarified or vacated or reversed the information and, or, decisions summarized in NYPPL. For example, New York State Department of Civil Service's Advisory Memorandum 24-08 reflects changes required as the result of certain amendments to §72 of the New York State Civil Service Law to take effect January 1, 2025 [See Chapter 306 of the Laws of 2024]. Advisory Memorandum 24-08 in PDF format is posted on the Internet at https://www.cs.ny.gov/ssd/pdf/AM24-08Combined.pdf. Accordingly, the information and case summaries should be Shepardized® or otherwise checked to make certain that the most recent information is being considered by the reader.
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NYPPL Blogger Harvey Randall served as Principal Attorney, New York State Department of Civil Service; Director of Personnel, SUNY Central Administration; Director of Research, Governor’s Office of Employee Relations; and Staff Judge Advocate General, New York Guard. Consistent with the Declaration of Principles jointly adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations, the material posted to this blog is presented with the understanding that neither the publisher nor NYPPL and, or, its staff and contributors are providing legal advice to the reader and in the event legal or other expert assistance is needed, the reader is urged to seek such advice from a knowledgeable professional.
New York Public Personnel Law. Email: publications@nycap.rr.com