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August 10, 2016

Employee alleges termination for planning to testify against the employer in an age discrimination case constituted a violation of the First Amendment


Employee alleges termination for planning to testify against the employer in an age discrimination case constituted a violation of the First Amendment
Stilwell v City of Williams, USCA, 9th Circuit, Case #14-15540
Source: FindLaw, part of Thomson Reuters

FindLaw reports that “In a suit brought by a City employee who alleged that he was fired for planning to testify against the City in a lawsuit relating to age discrimination, the District Court's grant of summary judgment to defendant is vacated and remanded where: 1) plaintiff was engaged in speech as a citizen for First Amendment purposes because his sworn statements and imminent testimony about the City's retaliatory conduct were outside the scope of his ordinary job duties and were on a matter of public concern; and 2) he retaliation provision of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), did not preclude plaintiff’s 42 U.S.C. section 1983 First Amendment retaliation claim.”

In Connick v Myers, 461 US 138, the U.S. Supreme Court said that federal courts will consider retaliation allegations based on an employee's claim of free speech where the speech concerns matters of public concern in contrast to speech involving “only matters of a personal interest” to the employee.*

A second test that must be met by a public employee claiming that his or her employer's action violates his or her right to free speech: Did the employee's statement outweigh the employer's interest in terminating or otherwise disciplining an employee whose conduct “hinder effective and efficient fulfillment of its responsibilities to the public?”

In Santer v Board of Educ. of E. Meadow Union Free Sch. Dist., 23 NY3d 251, the Court of Appeals held that  public employer may impose restraints on First Amendment activities of its employees that are job-related that would be unconstitutional if applied to the public at large, explaining “that viewing the record evidence in light of established federal precedent … the teachers' interests in engaging in constitutionally protected speech in the particular manner that was employed on the day in question were outweighed by the District's interests in safeguarding students and maintaining effective operations,” at a school.**

Other decisions in which a public employee's right to free speech was considered include Tytor v Laramie County School District, CA10 [unpublished]; Jeffries v Harleston, CA2, 52 F3d 9; and Barnard v Jackson County, CA8, 43 F3d 1218. 

* In evaluating the validity of a restraint on government employee speech, courts must “arrive at a balance between the interests of the [employee], as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees” [see Matter of Pickering, 391 US at 568]. However, the Pickering’s balancing test applies only when the employee speaks “as a citizen upon matters of public concern” rather than “as an employee upon matters only of personal interest.


The text of the Stilwell decision is posted on the Internet at:

August 08, 2016

State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli forwards auditor’s findings for review by the Public Officers Law violations to the State’s Joint Commission on Public Ethics


State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli forwards auditor’s findings for review by the Public Officers Law violations to the State’s Joint Commission on Public Ethics
Source: Office of the State Comptroller

SUNY Downstate Medical Center (Downstate) consultant, Pitts Management Associates, Inc. (PMA), charged Downstate $83,156 in questionable travel and lodging expenses, exceeding the conditions of the contract, including pricey rooms at the Carlyle Hotel and a “team dinner” that included cocktails, according to a report released on August 8, 2016,  by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.

Comptroller DiNapoli said “My auditors exposed questionable expenses and ethical lapses that have no place in state government. Auditors found “tens of thousands in monthly hotel costs and expensive dinners on the public’s dime at a time when Downstate was supposed to be getting its fiscal house in order.”

Indicating that Downstate “failed to protect the public’s money,” the Comptroller urged the Joint Commission on Public Ethics “to review this questionable behavior.”

Downstate hired PMA to provide organizational restructuring and consulting to identify solutions to fiscal difficulties as reported in a 2013 Comptroller audit that revealed Downstate was facing potential insolvency. PMA had two subsequent contracts with Downstate worth $35.8 million.

DiNapoli’s report found several instances in which Downstate’s then administration failed to act in the state’s best interest by eliminating certain cost controls over PMA travel expenses, including a prohibition on reimbursement for alcohol. In addition, the then president charged his
Bermuda airfare and some of his lodging at the Fairmont Hamilton Princess hotel to his state-issued credit card for a six-day birthday bash for PMA’s chair, prompting a referral by the Comptroller to the state Joint Commission on Public Ethics.

According to the report, PMA’s questionable expenses included:

1. Lodging costs of $17,688, including $14,193 in weekend hotel expenses for a consultant who had traveled home and did not require overnight accommodations, and a $1,419 charge for a single night’s stay at the Carlyle for the PMA Chairman;

2. Inappropriate meal expenses of $13,629, including free meals for Downstate staff, which is prohibited for state employees;

3. A non-itemized $2,039 “team dinner” at Manhattan’s Docks Oyster Bar and Seafood Grill with nearly $400 for alcohol. The total far exceeded the allowable U.S. General Services Administration and
New York state dinner rates;

4. An alleged ‘travel expense’ of $32,500 for a management software license; and
 
5. Transportation expenses totaling $33,203, nearly half of which lacked proper documentation and included $537 for limousine drivers to wait outside restaurants for hours for PMA consultants to finish dinner.

DiNapoli recommended that Downstate:

1. Recover $41,512, including $32,500 for software license fees;

2. Review the then president’s actions and ensure time cards and expenses are properly documented and business-related;

3. Develop a policy for consulting contracts that includes reimbursement for meals, transportation and lodging that conforms to the GSA Rates and/or the New York State Travel Manual; and

4. Perform an independent examination of all travel-related expenses – that PMA charged and Downstate approved – for reasonableness, and recover as appropriate.

In response, Downstate acknowledged that improvements are needed in the procurement and payment areas and agreed to recover the $41,512 in miscellaneous expenses including the software license fees.

The Comptroller’s report and Downstate’s full response is posted on the Internet at: http://www.osc.state.ny.us/audits/allaudits/bseaudits/bse20160808.pdf

August 05, 2016

Payment for time involved in donning and doffing of uniforms


Payment for time involved in donning and doffing of uniforms
Perez v The City of New York, USCA, Second Circuit, Docket #15-315 [Source: Justia Daily Opinion Summaries]

Justia reports that “[s]everal active and former Assistant Urban Park Rangers (AUPRs) employed by the [New York] City's Parks Department alleged that they, and others similarly situated, were not paid in accordance with the requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. 201 et seq. The district court granted partial summary judgment for defendants and closed the case without further proceedings.

“On the current record, the [Circuit] court could not conclude as a matter of law that plaintiffsʹ donning and doffing of uniforms were not integral and indispensable to their principal activities as AUPRs - the sole ground on which the district court granted partial summary judgment. Therefore, the [Circuit] court remanded to allow the district court to decide, in the first instance, whether plaintiffsʹ donning and doffing are nevertheless noncompensable as a matter of law under the de minimisdoctrine or the terms of a collective bargaining agreement.” 

The Perez decision is posted on the Internet at:

August 04, 2016

Members of the public are deemed to have knowledge of an agency’s administrative action that has been posted on the Internet


Members of the public are deemed to have knowledge of an agency’s administrative action that has been posted on the Internet 
Eskridge v Nassau County BOCES, Decisions of the Commissioner Education, Decision No. 16,932

Meredith Eskridge appealed the decision of the Board of Cooperative Educational Services of Nassau County [BOCES] denial of her request to be placed on the preferred eligibility list for a position as a teacher of deaf and hard of hearing. 

Earlier BOCES had advised Eskridge that the Bethpage Union Free School District was “taking back” the program of hearing impaired services and that “her seniority, tenure and sick days would move with her.” Bethpage appointed Eskridge with tenure in the special subject tenure area of Education of Deaf Children effective October 12, 2011.  On August 25, 2011, Bethpageappointed Eskridge as a teacher in the general special education tenure area, subject to the satisfactory completion of a two year probationary period.

On January 3, 2012, BOCES appointed Amanda Pirolo to the position of Teacher-Deaf and Hard of Hearing - Hearing and Vision Services-Special Education Program.

Bethpage terminated Eskridge’s .4 probationary appointment in the special education tenure area effective February 28, 2012, thereby reducing her employment with the district to a .6 tenured part time position in the special subject tenure area of education of deaf children. 

Eskridge challenged BOCES decision not to placing her name the preferred list by initiating an Article 78 proceeding in Nassau County Supreme Court. She contended that BOCES had violated Education Law §3014-b by failing to place her on the preferred eligibility list and failing recall her to a position as teacher of the deaf in its “Deaf  and Hard of Hearing-Hearing and Vision Services-Special Education” Program.  The court dismissed her petition on jurisdictional grounds and referred the matter petition to the Commissioner of Education for determination. The Commissioner assumed jurisdiction.

In response to Eskridge’s allegations Bethpageargued that:

  1. Eskridge failed to properly serve Amanda Pirolo with a copy of her petition; 
  2. Pirolo’s name should be removed from the petition because she has not been employed by BOCES as a teacher of the deaf since 2012;
  3. Eskridge failed to name the current holder of the position, Paula Hastings, in the caption of her appeal and therefore she has failed to join necessary parties;
  4. Eskridge’s appeal was untimely; and
  5. Eskridge “failed to state a claim.”
Addressing the issue to timeliness, the Commissioner ruled Eskridge’s petition was timely, explaining that “[a]n unsuccessful attempt to litigate a dispute in court which does not result in a final determination on the merits may be accepted as an excuse for failing to file a timely appeal to the Commissioner, when the appeal is commenced within 30 days of receipt of the [court’s] determination.”

Ultimately many of the technical defects in Eskridge's appeal were cured consistent with the advisory given to Eskridge by the Commissioner’s Office of Counsel that “if the corrected version was served and filed within two weeks of July 3, 2012, the appeal would be deemed to have been initiated on the day a copy of the returned petition was personally served upon respondents.” Eskridge complied and as the original petition was served on the BOCE respondents within 30 days of the Supreme Court’s decision, the Commissioner deemed the appeal timely.

Pirolo’s answer stated that she has not been employed by BOCES as a teacher of the deaf since June 2012 and that Paula Hastings was appointed by BOCES to such a position on or about October 23, 2012. Accordingly, the Commissioner ruled that with respect to Pirolo was moot.

However, said the Commissioner, Eskridge’s appeal with respect to BOCES’s refusal to add her name to the preferred list was not moot but Eskridge’s appeal was dismissed “for failure to join a necessary party.”*

In response to a request from the Commissioner’s Office of Counsel, BOCES had provided a copy of the minutes from the BOCES October 23, 2012board meeting. The minutes reported that Hastingswas appointed to the position effective October 15, 2012. The Commissioner said that Eskridge’s contention that she was not aware of Hastings’ appointment was unpersuasive as the relevant information was reflected in the Board’s minutes and “publicly available on BOCES’s website.”** 

Dismissing Eskridge’s appeal regarding BOCES appointment of Hastings as untimely, the Commissioner explained that “this appeal was commenced in July 2013, more than eight months after Hastingswas appointed and Pirolo was no longer serving in the position at that time. As Hastingswould be adversely affected by a determination in favor of Eskridge, the Commissioner held that the appeal must be dismissed for failure to join Hastingsas a necessary party. 

Observation: Assuming, but not deciding, that Eskridge accepted a full-time position with the Bethpage Union Free School District, the precedent followed in such situations is that upon acceptance of a full-time position with a School District in compliance with Education Law §3014-b, the individual does not have a right to remain on a preferred eligible list at BOCES. In earlier Decisions of the Commissioner it was held that Education Law §§2510 and 3013 are designed to protect the rights of teachers whose positions are abolished generally. In contrast, Education Law §3014-b is intended to protect the rights of BOCES teachers whose positions are eliminated specifically because of program takebacks. When a teacher is excessed because of a BOCES program takeback, §3014-b(1) provides that " . . . each teacher employed in such a program by such a board of cooperative educational services at the time of such takeover by the school district shall be considered an employee of such school district, with the same tenure status he [or she] maintained in such board of cooperative educational services." 

* A necessary party is a party whose rights would be adversely affected by a determination of an appeal in the petitioner's favor, here Paula Hastings.

**A footnote in the Commissioner’s decision provides a link to the BOCES “Agenda for the Regular Meeting of Tuesday, October 23, 2012” which sets out on page 69 of a “BOCES packet” a reference to a personnel action involving Hastings. See


The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.counsel.nysed.gov/Decisions/volume56/d16932

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The Layoff, Preferred List and Reinstatement Manual - a 645 page e-book reviewing the relevant New York State laws, rules and regulations, and selected court and administrative decisions involving layoff and related matters. For more information click on http://booklocker.com/5216.html
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