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

May 12, 2013

Selected reports and information published by New York State's Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli


Selected reports and information published by New York State's Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli
Issued during the week ending May 12, 2013 [Click on text highlighted in bold to access the full report] 


DiNapoli: IDA Performance Improves, But Concerns Remain

New York’s Industrial Development Agencies (IDAs) supported nearly 4,500 projects and provided $560 million in net tax exemptions in 2011, increasing estimated job gains by almost 36,000 from the previous year, according to a reportissued Tuesday by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. DiNapoli’s sixth annual report examining the performance of the state’s IDAs found improved reporting of data but recommended that IDAs do more to objectively weigh incentives against economic benefits to communities and evaluate projects receiving tax and other breaks.


State Pension Fund Invests $568,000 In Fieldlens

New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli announced a $568,000 investment in FieldLens, creator of a mobile and web application designed for the construction industry. The investment was made through High Peaks Venture Partners, SoftBank Capital and Contour Venture Partners. The New York State Common Retirement Fund is an investor in these funds through its In–State Private Equity Program.


DiNapoli: Empire Continuing to Overpay for Special Medical Items

New York State health insurance provider Empire BlueCross BlueShield overpaid hospitals by nearly $490,000 for special medical items such as implants, drugs and blood, including more than $77,000 to just one hospital, over a six month period, according to an auditof the New York State Health Insurance Program released Thursday by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.


Comptroller DiNapoli Releases Municipal Audits

New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli Wednesday announced his office completed the following audits:









May 11, 2013

Decision of the Week - Applying the provisions of Civil Service Law §§71, 72 and 73


NYPPL's Decision of the Week for the Week ending May 11, 2013

Applying the provisions of Civil Service Law §§71, 72 and 73
Allen v City of New York, 2013 NY Slip Op 50717(U), Supreme Court, New York County [Not selected for publication in the Official Reports]

This decision could serve as a model explanation of the critical elements to be considered and addressed in applying the provisions of Civil Service Law §§71, 72 and 73. It is set out in its entirety below.

Supreme Court, New York County


In the Matter of the Application of Lionel Allen, Petitioner,

against

The City of New York and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, Respondents.



102624/12

ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF :
Firm: MARY J. O'CONNELL [General Counsel, DC-37]

ATTORNEY FOR THE RESPONDENTS
Firm: CORPORATION COUNSEL – City of New York

Alexander W. Hunter Jr., J.

The application by petitioner for an order pursuant to Article 78 of the CPLR, declaring that respondents improperly terminated petitioner pursuant to Civil Service Law §73 and failed to satisfy due process requirements for termination pursuant to Civil Service Law §71, and in the alternative, failed to satisfy due process requirements for termination pursuant to Civil Service Law §73, is granted.

As a preliminary matter, it must be noted that the Workmen's Compensation Law was enacted in 1914 as such, but the title was changed to the Workers' Compensation Law in 1978 to acknowledge the significant presence of women in the work force.

Petitioner was employed by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP") from on or about May 13, 1989 until his termination on January 6, 2012. Petitioner worked for the DEP in the Bureau of Water Supply with the title of Watershed Maintainer. Petitioner was originally terminated under Civil Service Law §73, which was addressed in the first motion sequence of the instant proceeding. However, after the commencement of the instant proceeding, the DEP rescinded its termination of petitioner pursuant to Civil Service Law §73 and terminated him pursuant to Civil Service Law §71 by letter dated December 14, 2012. The effective date of petitioner's termination remained January 6, 2012. Thereafter, motion sequence one was withdrawn and this court so ordered a stipulation allowing the instant amended petition to be filed in order to address petitioner's termination under Civil Service Law §71.

On February 3, 2010, petitioner slipped and fell while working to deice the grounds outside the Kensico Reservoir laboratory, which resulted in injuries to his right shoulder and knees. Petitioner promptly informed his supervisor at the DEP of the accident and submitted a workers' compensation claim. Petitioner consulted his primary care physician within several days of the accident and then in March 2010 he went to see Dr. Adam Soyer ("Dr. Soyer"), an orthopedic surgeon. Although petitioner initially returned to work, he took off numerous days between March 2010 and August 2010 due to a delay in the processing of his workers' compensation authorizations for diagnostic tests and treatment. Petitioner communicated to his supervisors that the cause of his increased use of leave time was attributed to his occupational injuries. Petitioner ultimately received authorizations for an MRI and a shoulder surgery with postoperative physical therapy in September 2010 and October 2010, respectively. A second shoulder surgery was later authorized and performed on or about August 3, 2012.

By letter dated September 29, 2010, petitioner informed the DEP that he was unable to return to work due to his shoulder injury and requested workers' compensation leave as he had exhausted his sick and annual leave by that time. Petitioner attached a note from Dr. Soyer, dated September 22, 2010, recommending that petitioner remain out of work from September 27, 2010 through November 1, 2010. An undated addendum to the September 29 letter stated that petitioner's request for workers' compensation leave had been changed in accordance with a second note from Dr. Soyer, dated October 25, 2010, which recommended that petitioner remain out of work pending authorization of the shoulder surgery.

The DEP granted petitioner leave for various periods of times from September 30, 2010 through November 1, 2010. However, as a matter of policy, the DEP does not accept doctors' notes indicating an indefinite period of leave. The DEP subsequently marked petitioner "absent without leave" for every work week from November 29, 2010 through December 30, 2011. By letter dated April 18, 2011, the DEP informed petitioner that he was required to provide continued proof of disability on a monthly basis. In addition, the DEP informed petitioner that he was required to provide information regarding his medical condition and when he would be able to return to work by April 29, 2011, or the DEP would consider petitioner absent without leave and take appropriate action.

By letter dated July 27, 2011, the DEP preferred charges against petitioner in accordance with Civil Service Law §75 and scheduled an informal conference. Civil Service Law §75 provides for removal for incompetency or misconduct shown after a hearing. Petitioner did not appear at the informal conference. The DEP did not pursue this method of termination and the charges preferred against petitioner were never filed with the Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings.

By letter dated December 5, 2011, the DEP gave petitioner a notice of intended action under Civil Service Law §73. Civil Service Law §73 provides that an employee may be terminated when he is continuously absent from his position for one year or more due to a disability, "other than a disability resulting from occupational injury or disease as defined in the workmen's compensation law...."* Petitioner did not respond to this letter.

By letter dated January 6, 2012, the DEP gave petitioner a notice of termination pursuant to Civil Service Law §73, which stated that petitioner's employment with the DEP was thereby terminated because of his absence from work since November 8, 2010 due to a non-work related disability.

In January 2012, petitioner's attorney contacted the DEP to demand that it rescind petitioner's termination pursuant to Civil Service Law §73 because petitioner's absences from work were caused by an occupational injury. Petitioner would have been more properly terminated under Civil Service Law §71, which provides for reinstatement after an employee has been separated from service due to a disability caused by an occupational injury as defined in the workmen's compensation law and further entitles the employee to a leave of absence for at least one year.

In an email sent from the DEP's counsel to petitioner's counsel dated January 18, 2012, the DEP explained that it had proceeded with a non-disciplinary termination under Civil Service Law §73 in order to give petitioner the ability to be reinstated to his position after presenting medical documentation showing his fitness to return to work, which would not have been an option if petitioner was terminated under Civil Service Law §75 based on abandonment of his job. In addition, petitioner retained the same rights to reinstatement under Civil Service Law §71 and Civil Service Law §73.

After a lengthy appeal, the Workers' Compensation Board issued a notice of decision on April 12, 2012, directing petitioner's employer or insurance carrier to pay workers' compensation benefits for various past periods from December 2010 and to continue payments.

A non-probationary public employee possesses a constitutional property interest in his employment. See, Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 US 532 (1985); Faillace v. Port Auth. of NY & N.J., 130 AD2d 34 (1st Dept 1987). "In the context of termination from civil service employment under Civil Service Law §73, due process requires notice and some opportunity to respond.'" Matter of Hurwitz v. Perales, 81 NY2d 182, 185 (1993), citing Matter of Prue v. Hunt, 78 NY2d 364, 369 (1991). The due process requirements under Civil Service Law §71 should be at least as strict as those provided under Civil Service Law §73 as the former "affords greater procedural protections and opportunities for reinstatement." Matter of Allen v. Howe, 84 NY2d 665, 673 (1994).

This court finds that due process requires notice and some opportunity to respond before an employee is terminated from civil service employment under Civil Service Law §71.
There is no dispute that petitioner was improperly terminated under Civil Service Law §73 because his absences were due to a disability resulting from an occupational injury as defined in the workmen's compensation law. The DEP was admittedly aware all along that petitioner's injuries were occupational. The DEP belatedly realized its error and retroactively terminated petitioner under Civil Service Law §71. The DEP should not be rewarded for confusing an employee by continually changing its basis for termination from one section to another. Regardless, petitioner was improperly terminated because the DEP did not provide petitioner with a notice of intended action under Civil Service Law §71. Petitioner had no opportunity to respond to the specific charges leveled against him, which led to his termination.

The parties remaining contentions are without merit.

Accordingly, it is hereby,

ADJUDGED that the application by petitioner for an order, pursuant to Article 78 of the CPLR, declaring that respondents improperly terminated petitioner pursuant to Civil Service Law §73 and failed to satisfy due process requirements for termination pursuant to Civil Service Law §71, is granted with costs and disbursements to petitioner; and it is further

ADJUDGED and DECLARED that respondents' termination of petitioner was in violation of its duties under New York City Rules and Regulations, New York State Civil Service Law, and the New York State and United States Constitutions; and it is further

ADJUDGED that the final determination of respondent DEP, dated January 6, 2012, terminating petitioner as a Watershed Maintainer, is vacated and annulled and petitioner is reinstated to said position with any and all benefits to which he was lawfully entitled from January 6, 2012, the date of termination.

Dated: May 2, 2013

ENTER:
________________________
J.S.C.

* NYPPL Comment: Although the employee must be absent on leave pursuant to §72 continuously for period of one year or longer to trigger the appointing authority’s ability to elect to terminate the individual pursuant to §73, the appointing authority may, as an exercise of discretion, terminate an employee absent on §71 Worker’s Compensation Leave after he or she has been absent on such leave due to the same injury or disease for an “accumulative period” of one year or longer. However, neither §71 nor §72 requires the termination of the employee after he or she has been absent for the requisite minimum period of such a leave.

May 10, 2013

Educator disciplined after posting comments on an Internet social media website


Educator disciplined after posting comments on an Internet social media website

Supreme Court granted an educator’s petition to set aside the hearing officer's determination that led to the termination of her employment with the New York City Department of Education following a disciplinary hearing “to the extent of remanding the matter for the imposition of a lesser penalty.” The Appellate Division affirmed the lower court’s ruling.

According to the decision, the educator had posted comments on a social media website on the Internet alluding to a tragedy involving an unknown student at a different school. Although the court said that the comments “were clearly inappropriate,” it explained that the educator’s purpose was to “vent her frustration only to her online friends after a difficult day with her own students.”

Initially the educator denied the incident but she subsequently admitted to making the comments at the disciplinary hearing. She also acknowledged that the comments were inappropriate and offensive and repeatedly expressed remorse at having posted them.

The Hearing Officer found that the educator had engaged in a plan with her friend to mislead investigators right after the allegations surfaced. However, the Appellate Division said that Supreme Court “reasonably concluded that the educator’s actions were taken out of fear of losing her livelihood rather than as part of a premeditated plan.”

Under the circumstances, and in consideration of the educator’s not having ever before been the subject of a disciplinary action during her 15-year career and her avowing that she would never engage in a similar act again, the Appellate Division agreed with the Supreme Court’s finding that the penalty of termination was “shocking to one's sense of fairness.”

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/3dseries/2013/2013_03272.htm

Educator disciplined after posting comments on an Internet social media website

Supreme Court granted an educator’s petition to set aside the hearing officer's determination that led to the termination of her employment with the New York City Department of Education following a disciplinary hearing “to the extent of remanding the matter for the imposition of a lesser penalty.” The Appellate Division affirmed the lower court’s ruling.

According to the decision, the educator had posted comments on a social media website on the Internet alluding to a tragedy involving an unknown student at a different school. Although the court said that the comments “were clearly inappropriate,” it explained that the educator’s purpose was to “vent her frustration only to her online friends after a difficult day with her own students.”

Initially the educator denied the incident but she subsequently admitted to making the comments at the disciplinary hearing. She also acknowledged that the comments were inappropriate and offensive and repeatedly expressed remorse at having posted them.

The Hearing Officer found that the educator had engaged in a plan with her friend to mislead investigators right after the allegations surfaced. However, the Appellate Division said that Supreme Court “reasonably concluded that the educator’s actions were taken out of fear of losing her livelihood rather than as part of a premeditated plan.”

Under the circumstances, and in consideration of the educator’s not having ever before been the subject of a disciplinary action during her 15-year career and her avowing that she would never engage in a similar act again, the Appellate Division agreed with the Supreme Court’s finding that the penalty of termination was “shocking to one's sense of fairness.”

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/3dseries/2013/2013_03272.htm

May 09, 2013

Application seeking the removal of the school superintendent found fatally defective because it failed to contain the language required by the Commissioner’s regulations


Application seeking the removal of the school superintendent found fatally defective because it failed to contain the language required by the Commissioner’s regulations*
Decisions of the Commissioner of Education, Decision No. 16,479

Linda Wallace, alleging that school superintendent Randy Richards made “inaccurate, misleading and designed to intimidate voters” in connection with the adoption of a school budget, asked the Commissioner to remove Dr. Richards from his position.

The Commissioner dismissed Wallace’s application for technical reasons, explaining that Wallace's application for Dr. Richards’ removal must be denied because the notice of petition was defective.

Here the Commissioner’s regulations require that the notice accompanying a removal application specifically advise the school officer that an application is being made for his or her removal from office (see 8 NYCRR §277.1 [b]). Here, however, Wallace failed to give such notice and, instead, used the notice prescribed under §275.11(a) for appeals brought pursuant to Education Law §310.

The Commissioner said that “A notice of petition which fails to contain the language required by the Commissioner’s regulation is fatally defective and does not secure jurisdiction over the intended respondent.

Notwithstanding the dismissal of Wallace’s application on procedural grounds the Commissioner noted that had Wallace’s the application not been denied on procedural grounds, it would be denied on the merits.

A member of the board of education or a school officer may be removed from office pursuant to Education Law §306 when it is proven to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the board member or school officer has engaged in a willful violation or neglect of duty under the Education Law or has willfully disobeyed a decision, order, rule or regulation of the Board of Regents or Commissioner of Education.

Further, in an appeal to the Commissioner, a petitioner has the burden of demonstrating a clear legal right to the relief requested and the burden of establishing the facts upon which petitioner seeks relief.

The record indicates that Dr. Richards “adequately explained the basis for his statements regarding the impact of a contingency budget in relation to current levels of district funding. Although Wallace may disagree with Dr. Richard’s approach, she has not demonstrated that [Dr. Richard’s] action was motivated by a wrongful purpose."

To the extent that Wallace sought a determination as to whether Dr. Richards’ actions were in the best interest of the district, the Commissioner said this aspect of the appeal must be dismissed as it is well established that the Commissioner “does not issue advisory opinions or declaratory rulings in an appeal pursuant to Education Law §310.”

Turning to a “final” administrative matter, the Commissioner noted that Dr. Richards had requested that the Commissioner issue a certificate of good faith pursuant to Education Law §3811(1) to him. Such certification is solely for the purpose of authorizing the board to indemnify Dr. Richards for legal fees and expenses incurred in defending a proceeding arising out of the exercise of his powers or performance of duties as a school district officer.

It is appropriate to issue such certification unless it is established on the record that the requesting officer acted in bad faith. In view of the fact that Wallace’s application was dismissed on procedural grounds and there was no finding that Dr. Richards acted in bad faith, the Commissioner certified that “solely for the purpose of Education Law §3811 [Dr. Richard] appears to have acted in good faith.”

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.counsel.nysed.gov/Decisions/volume52/documents/d16479.pdf


* See, also, Application of Stacia Kroniser, Decisions of the Commissioner of Education, Decision No. 16,469, posted on the Internet at http://www.counsel.nysed.gov/Decisions/volume52/documents/d16469.pdfand the Appeal of Stacia Kroniser, Decisions of the Commissioner of Education, Decision No. 16,470, posted on the Internet at:  
http://www.counsel.nysed.gov/Decisions/volume52/documents/d16470.pdf


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.
THE MATERIAL ON THIS WEBSITE IS FOR INFORMATION ONLY. AGAIN, CHANGES IN LAWS, RULES, REGULATIONS AND NEW COURT AND ADMINISTRATIVE DECISIONS MAY AFFECT THE ACCURACY OF THE INFORMATION PROVIDED IN THIS LAWBLOG. THE MATERIAL PRESENTED IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE AND THE USE OF ANY MATERIAL POSTED ON THIS WEBSITE, OR CORRESPONDENCE CONCERNING SUCH MATERIAL, DOES NOT CREATE AN ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP.
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