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June 10, 2011

Policy limits on vacation travel during FMLA leave


Policy limits on vacation travel during FMLA leave
Copyright © 2011. All rights reserved by Carl C. Bosland, Esq. Reproduced with permission. Mr. Bosland is the author of A Federal Sector Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act & Related Litigation.

A federal district court recently upheld an employer's policy requiring an employee to remain in the immediate vicinity of their home as a condition of receiving paid sick leave, including during periods when the employee is on FMLA leave.  In limited circumstances, the policy allowed an employee to travel outside of the immediate vicinity of their home for medial treatment, family needs, and with the prior consent of the employer.  Violation of the policy could result in termination of paid leave, as well as discipline. 

Denise Pellegrino was employed by the Communications Workers of AMerica (CWA) in a clerical capacity.  Pursuant to the CWA FMLA-Sick Leave Policy, Pellegrino notified the CWA that she needed leave for surgery.  The CWA approved Pellegrino's request for FMLA leave, and notified her that she would be required to substitute paid sick leave for the absence.  While on approved leave, Pellegrino traveled to Cancun, Mexico, where she stayed for a week.  There was no medical or family reason for the trip, nor had she secured the CWA's prior consent to travel outside of the immediate vicinity of her home during leave. The CWA terminated Pellegrino for violation of the CWA's leave policies. 

Pellegrino filed suit alleging that her termination violated the FMLA.  CWA moved for summary judgment alleging that the FMLA did not protect Pellegrino from termination for a reason unrelated to her FMLA leave- namely, violation of the CWA policy restricting unapproved travel for someone receiving paid sick leave benefits.  CWA argued that it would have terminated her irrespective of her status under the FMLA as it had the right to enforce its policies restricting unapproved travel where an employee is on paid sick leave.   The Court agreed with the CWA.

The Court confirmed that the FMLA does not shield an employee from termination if the employee was allegedly involved in misconduct related to the use of FMLA leave.  So long as employer policies do not conflict with or diminish an employee's FMLA rights, the FMLA, the Court found, "in no way prevent an employer from instituting policies to prevent the abuse of FMLA leave."  Here, CWA terminated Pellegrino because she violated CWA's Sickness and Absenteeism policy by leaving the immediate vicinity of her home without prior approval, or for any other permissible reason.  The Court reasoned that the policy served the legitimate purpose of ensuring that the privilege of paid sick leave is not abused. The Court also found that the policy does not discourage or prevent CWA employees from taking FMLA leave. 

The Court awarded summary judgment to the CWA for violation of the CWA travel restriction policy, a legitimate reason independent of her use of FMLA leave.

Mr. Bosland Comments: The FMLA does not prohibit an employer from enacting and enforcing leave and attendance policies to control leave abuse even where, as here, those policies may apply to FMLA leave.  Remember, under federal law, FMLA leave is always unpaid.  The only way an employee can get paid while on FMLA leave is pursuant to an employer's paid leave policy.  Employers are not required to offer paid sick or personal leave, but many do.  An employer's paid leave policy may not single out FMLA leave for special treatment.  Rather, as in Pellegrino, the paid leave policy should generally apply to all absences due to sickness or disability, which may also encompass FMLA leave.

In a fascinating footnote, the Court in dictum opined that, even if an employer did not have a formal policy restricting travel during FMLA leave, "no reasonable jury could find that an employer acts illegitimately or interferes with FMLA entitlements when that employer terminates an employee for taking a week-long vacation to Mexico without at least notifying the employer that her doctor had approved the travel or that she would be out of the country."  

I note that the FMLA generally does not require an employee on approved FMLA leave to notify an employer of their whereabouts during leave.  The Court's dictum would appear to impose such a requirement where none exists.  Absent a policy, I would not counsel employers to take adverse actions against employees for failure to provide notice of their intent to leave the vicinity of their homes during FMLA leave.    

The decision is consistent with a long line of cases allowing employers to impose and enforce neutral leave and attendance policies to curb leave abuse, even where the leave is covered by the FMLA.  
   
Pellegrino v. Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO, Civil Action No. 10-0098 (W.D. Pa. May 18, 2011) http://op.bna.com/dlrcases.nsf/id/jaca-8h2m25/$File/Pellegrino.pdf

Former employee entitled to a name clearing hearing upon satisfying the “stigma plus” test


Former employee entitled to a name clearing hearing upon satisfying the “stigma plus” test
Knox v New York City Dept. of Educ., 2011 NY Slip Op 04735, Appellate Division, First Department

State Supreme Court, New York County rejected the New York City Department of Education’s motion to dismiss the petition filed by Dr. Tulsa Knox challenging the Department’s decisions that Dr. Knox was ineligible for re-employment, and granting Dr. Knox’s petition to the extent of remanding the matter for a name-clearing hearing.*

The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed the Supreme Court’s ruling.

The court said that Dr. Knox had demonstrated "stigma plus," i.e., defamation by the government, coupled with a likelihood of dissemination of the stigmatizing material that could significantly impair her ability to gain employment as a school psychologist in the future.

The Appellate Division said that the placement of Dr. Knox’s name on the Department’s  "Ineligible/Inquiry List" and certain adverse information concerning Dr. Know had been  disseminated “not only within the Department of Education, but also to the Bronx County District Attorney's Office and the State Department of Education.” This, said the court, satisfied Dr. Knox’s burden of showing “stigma plus”.

* N.B. Absent a violation of a constitutional or statutory provision, reinstatement is not an available remedy to an individual even if vindicated at a name clearing hearing.

The decision is posted on the Internet at: 
http://www.courts.state.ny.us/reporter/3dseries/2011/2011_04735.htm

Refusal to answer questions during an administrative disciplinary investigation

Refusal to answer questions during an administrative disciplinary investigation
Matter of Eck v County of Delaware, 36 AD3d 1180

There were many issues considered by the Appellate Division in deciding Eck’s appeal of an adverse Section 75 Civil Service Law disciplinary determination.

One issue involved the law regarding compelling an employee to answer questions concerning his performance against his will in the course of a pre-disciplinary investigation that could result in administrative disciplinary action and, or, criminal action being taken against the individual.

Kenneth R. Eck, Jr., a deputy sheriff with the Delaware County Sheriff’s Department, was served with Section 75 disciplinary charges.

Charges filed against Eck included the allegation that he had conducted an unauthorized investigation of two Delaware County employees, one of whom was Eck’s former wife, because of Eck’s suspicion that the two were involved in a romantic relationship.

Among the several charges leveled against Eck was one that alleged that he refused to answer questions regarding his activities during the Sheriff’s investigation of incident.

The Section 75 Hearing Officer found Eck guilty of the charges filed against him. After reviewing Eck’s personnel file, the Hearing Officer recommended Eck be dismissed from his position. The County adopted the Hearing Officer’s findings and recommendation and terminated Eck.

In rejecting Eck’s appeal seeking reinstatement to his former position, the Appellate Divisions considered a number of elements raised by Eck in an effort to have the disciplinary decision vacated. One element concerned Eck’s argument that the disciplinary action was unlawful because it compromised his Fifth Amendment constitutional right against self-incrimination.

In response to Eck’s claim that he could not be disciplined for invoking his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination when he refused to answer certain questions posed by the attorney representing the County during the investigation of his “activities during off-duty hours,” the Appellate Division pointed out that:

1. It is understood that the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination protects an individual not only in the context of a criminal trial, “but also privileges him not to answer official questions put to him in any other proceeding, civil or criminal, formal or informal, where the answers might incriminate him in future criminal proceedings.”

2. An individual’s “[a]nswers may be compelled regardless of the privilege if there is immunity from federal and state use of the compelled testimony or its fruits in connection with a criminal prosecution against the person testifying”.

3. In a situation where a public employee is compelled to answer questions or face dismissal, the individual’s responses are automatically cloaked with immunity.

Accordingly, said the court, “where a public servant . . . refuses ‘to answer questions specifically, directly, and narrowly relating to the performance of his official duties, without being required to waive his immunity, . . . the privilege against self-incrimination would not [be] a bar to his dismissal’”

In this instance the court found that “the questions were narrowly tailored to the matters under investigation and [Eck] was compelled to answer them on pain of termination, his answers would have been automatically cloaked by immunity.”* In view of this, the Appellate Division concluded that Eck’s “assertion of his Fifth Amendment privilege did not bar disciplinary action against him.”

This, together with the Hearing Officer’s finding that Eck (1) used his position to obtain information about a co-workers whereabouts in furtherance of his own unauthorized investigation; (2) his surveillance endangered the co-worker, who often worked undercover; (3) he disparaged the Sheriff and the Sheriff’s Department in the presence of other officers and civilians; and (4) he disclosed information about his disciplinary hearing after being instructed not to discuss it, persuaded the Appellate Division that under the circumstances, “the penalty of termination is not disproportionate to these offenses.”

* This is often referred to as “use immunity.”

June 09, 2011

Employee organization may, through collective bargaining, negotiate away an employee’s statutory right to a disciplinary procedure provided an alternate procedure providing for administrative due process is available to the individual

Employee organization may, through collective bargaining, negotiate away an employee’s statutory right to a disciplinary procedure provided an alternate procedure providing for administrative due process is available to the individual
Matter of Hickey v New York City Dept. of Education, 2011 NY Slip Op 04541, Court of Appeals

Helen Hickey and Rachael Cohn, tenured teachers in the New York City School system, commenced Article 78 proceedings against the Board of Education seeking court orders compelling the Board to expunge "letters of reprimand" from their respective personnel files, contending that the Board’s actions failed follow Education Law §3020-a disciplinary procedures. Both letters had been placed in their respective personnel files and indicated that the matter "may lead to further disciplinary action."*

The Board contended that the letters were properly placed in the teachers’ files because, pursuant to the controlling Collective Bargaining Agreement, their union had negotiated a waiver of the §3020-a procedures with respect to the placement of letters of reprimand in tenured teacher's files and it had been replaced with a different procedure.

Education Law §3020(1) provides: "No person enjoying the benefits of tenure shall be disciplined or removed during a term of employment except for just cause and in accordance with the procedures specified in section [3020]-a of this article or in accordance with alternate disciplinary procedures contained in a collective bargaining agreement."

Noting that §3020-a does not define "discipline," the Court of Appeals said that §3020-a authorizes a hearing officer to impose as a penalty "a written reprimand, a fine, suspension . . . without pay, or dismissal." Section 3020(4)(a), said the Court, further provides that "Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the procedures set forth in section [3020]-a of this article . . . may be modified by agreements negotiated between the city school district of the city of New York and any employee organization representing employees or titles that are or were covered by any memorandum of agreement executed by such city school district and the united federation of teachers on or after [June, 10, 2002]."

The Court of Appeals, assuming, but not deciding, that the letters complain of constituted "discipline" for purposes of §3020-a, decided “there is ample basis to conclude that the union knowingly waived the procedural rights granted in Education Law §3020-a in this limited arena.”

As the letters at issue were held as not being subject to §3020-a procedures, the Court ruled that neither Hickey nor Cohen was not entitled to have them expunged from their respective personnel files.

This not the first time that the Court of Appeals has addressed the issue of alternatives to a statutory disciplinary procedure. In Antinore v State [40 NY2d 6] the Court said that a union could bargain away the employee’s statutory disciplinary rights in favor of an alternative disciplinary procedure so long as the alternate procedure provided constitutional due process protections equivalent to those available under the statutary proceedure that it replaced.

The collective bargaining agreement** controlling in Antinore provided that an individual served with administrative disciplinary charges could elect either a disciplinary proceeding set out in a collective bargaining agreement or, in the alternative, elect to have the matter considered pursuant to a statutory disciplinary procedure, in this instance Civil Service Law §75.

Antinore elected to have the charges filed against him adjudicated pursuant to the procedure set out in the collective bargaining agreement. After the arbitrator found him guilty, Antinore sued, contending that he was entitled to a §75 disciplinary hearing as a matter of law. The Court of Appeal rejected his claim, holding that where an individual has elected to have disciplinary charges filed against him or her adjudicated pursuant to a process that provided administrative due process, he or she may not later claim the right to relitigate the charges under a statutory due process proceeding.

Significantly, the Court of Appeals said that a union could bargain away the employee’s statutory disciplinary rights in favor of an alternative disciplinary procedure if the alternate procedure provided constitutional due process protections equivalent to those available under the statute it replaced.

* See http://publicpersonnellaw.blogspot.com/2011/01/constructive-criticism-or-discipline.html setting out the differences between letters constituting “constructive criticism” and letters constituting “reprimand.”

** This option was set out in the initial collective bargaining agreement negotiated between the State as an employer and the Civil Service Employees Association with respect to employees in negotiating units represented by CSEA.

The Hickey decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.courts.state.ny.us/reporter/3dseries/2011/2011_04541.htm

Rules of the New York State Civil Service Commission typically do not control with respect to employees of a political subdivision of the State.


Rules of the New York State Civil Service Commission typically do not control with respect to employees of a political subdivision of the State.
Matter of Civil Serv. Employees Assn., Inc. v Baldwin Union Free School Dist., 2011 NY Slip Op 04461, Appellate Division, Second Department

Francesco Pignataro, an employee of the Baldwin Union Free School District, filed a grievance and a demand for arbitration alleging that the District wrongly removed him from the payroll. Ultimately a proposed settlement of the matter was negotiated pursuant to which, among other things, it was agreed that Pignataro would receive the sum of $50,000 as compensation for his leave accruals in exchange for his resignation and the withdrawal of his grievance.

The Appellate Division subsequently ruled that Pignataro's letter of resignation was not "delivered" to the Board so as to preclude Pignataro from unilaterally withdrawing his letter of resignation without the Board's consent "under the pertinent Civil Service Law regulation (see 4 NYCRR 5.3[c])."*

However, 4 NYCRR 1.1, Application of rules, provides that

“Except as otherwise specified in any particular rule, these rules shall apply to positions and employments in the classified service of the State and public authorities, public benefit corporations and other agencies for which the Civil Service Law is administered by the State Department of Civil Service.”

Accordingly, 4 NYCRR 5.3[c] controls only with respect to employees of the State of New York as an employer and those entities for which the Civil Service Law is administered by the New York State Department of Civil Service. The Baldwin Union Free School District is not such an entity.

A number of local civil service commissions have adopted a rule similar to 4 NYCRR 5.3[c].** For example, Westchester County Civil Service Rule 17 addresses resignations and provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

“17.3 Withdrawal or amendment [of a resignation]. A resignation may not be withdrawn, cancelled or amended after it is delivered to the appointing authority, without the consent of the appointing authority.”

In the event the Nassau County Civil Service Commission has adopted a rule addressing the ability of an individual to withdraw his or her resignation, presumably the Appellate Division would apply that rule in resolving the matter.

* 4 NYCRR 5.3(c) provides that a resignation of a civil service employee, which must be in writing, "may not be withdrawn, cancelled or amended after it is delivered to the appointing authority, without the consent of the appointing authority." However, this rule applies only to employees in the classified service of the State and public authorities, public benefit corporations and other agencies for which the Civil Service Law is administered by the State Department of Civil Service. Many local civil service commissions have adopted a similar rule.:

** Section 20 of the Civil Service Law sets out the procedures to be followed by a local civil service commission or personnel officer wishing to amend its “personnel rules.” It provides that such rules may be amended only after a public hearing and requires the approval of the State Civil Service Commission. Finally, to have the “force and effect of law,” the amendment must be filed with the Secretary of State to complete the process.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.courts.state.ny.us/reporter/3dseries/2011/2011_04461.htm

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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.
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