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September 09, 2016

There is a presumption that an accident that occurred in the course of employment arose out of that employment


There is a presumption that an accident that occurred in the course of employment arose out of that employment
Oathout v Averill Park Cent. Sch., 2016 NY Slip Op 05892, Appellate Division, Third Department

The Workers' Compensation Board ruled that a claimant for workers’ compensation benefits employed as a custodial worker by the Averill Park Central School District sustained a compensable injury. The Board subsequently denied a request by the School District for reconsideration and/or full Board review.

The Averill Park Central School District, a self-insured employer and its third-party administrator [School District] had controverted the employee's claim for workers' compensation benefits. Following a hearing, the Workers' Compensation Administrative Law Judge found that the employee had sustained a work-related injury and awarded the claimant workers' compensation benefits.

The Appellate Division affirmed the Board’s decision, explaining that "Whether a compensable accident has occurred presents a question of fact for resolution of the Board and its decision will be upheld when supported by substantial evidence." Further, said the court, "absent substantial evidence to the contrary, a presumption exists that an accident that occurs in the course of employment arises out of that employment."

The claimant had testified that she had just finished cleaning the school gymnasium and was walking down a hallway with a coworker when she felt the sharp pain in her foot. This said the Appellate Division, gave rise to the statutory presumption.

Claimant’s treating physician had opined that the injury "maybe partially [due] to her metatarsus adductus"* while the School District’s medical expert who performed an independent examination on claimant, “was unable to draw a direct connection between the claimant's [medical] condition and the [claimant’s] injury.”

The School District argued that the statutory presumption was rebutted by proof that the claimant’s injury had not stemmed from an accident associated with her job duties but was an idiopathic condition, her congenital metatarsus adductus.

However, giving deference to the Board's resolution of any credibility issues involved in making its determination, the Appellate Division held that substantial evidence supported the Board’s determination that the injuries arose out of and in the course of claimant's employment and sustained its decision that the claimant had sustained a work-related injury.  

* Metatarsus adductus, also known as metatarsus varus, is a common foot deformity noted at birth that causes the front half of the foot, or forefoot, to turn inward.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

September 08, 2016

The Town of Clifton Park is seeking administration trustee services and, or, funding of a §457 deferred compensation plan



The Town of Clifton Park is seeking administration trustee services and, or, funding of a §457 deferred compensation plan
Source: New York State Register, September 7, 2016

The Town of Clifton Park is requesting proposals from qualified administrative service agencies and/or financial organizations relating to administration trustee services and/or funding of a 457 deferred compensation plan for employees of the Town of Clifton Park meeting the requirements of §457 of the Internal Revenue Code and §5 of the New York State Finance Law, including all rules and regulations issued pursuant thereto.

A copy of the proposal questionnaire may be obtained from Stephanie Drenchko, Assistant Comptroller, Town of Clifton Park, One Town Hall Plaza, Clifton Park, NY 12065, (518) 371-6651 ext. 234, Fax (518) 371-1136, e-mail: sdrenchko@cliftonpark.org

All proposals must be submitted by 3:00 p.m.not later than 30 days from the date of publication in the New York State Register, September 7, 2016

The Tricky Question of Job Security for Public Employees


The Tricky Question of Job Security for Public Employees
By Richard Clay Wilson, Jr.-

This article was originally posted on the Internet on September 7, 2016, by Governingat http://www.governing.com/columns/smart-mgmt/col-tricky-question-job-security-public-employees.html. Copyrighted© 2016 by Governing; reprinted by NYPPL with permission.

Job security for employees in the public sector. It's not a simple issue, but there are some guiding principles to keep in mind.

From teacher tenure and law enforcement at the local-government level to the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Secret Service at the federal level, the subject of job security for public employees looms large. How should government approach this subject? Are there principles that could be derived from experience and widely applied?

We can only address the subject in terms of the purposes of government agencies.

Government agencies do not exist for the purpose of providing employment, much less the purpose of providing secure employment. Government employs people to accomplish a wide range of objectives. Employment is clearly a means to an end, not an end in itself.

The question insofar as employment security is concerned, then, is how it bears on the attainment of government's larger purposes. It is clearly wrong to see job security as inherently desirable or undesirable. It is neither. Job security is desirable to the extent that it contributes positively to the achievement of government's purposes and undesirable to the extent that it negatively affects those purposes.

We can stipulate that good employees sometimes require protection from bad supervisors and bad management. We can also stipulate that good management and good supervisors are sometimes obliged to discharge bad employees, including bad managers and supervisors. In short, performance at work -- on the part of individuals and groups -- ranges from the exemplary to the unacceptable. There are no monopolies on goodness. It is therefore imperative that government agencies possess the authority to deal with unacceptable performance.

Further, we can stipulate that public-employee unions have a contractual duty to serve all of their members. This duty obliges them to argue against termination as a matter of principle. We can also stipulate that managers who bear broad responsibility for institutional performance desire, also as a matter of principle, to maximize their authority to hire and fire. It is problematic to hold managers responsible for workplace performance when their authority over the workplace is tenuous.

Are we stuck, then, with opposing and irreconcilable responsibilities and principles? In practice, to date, the answer is that we are stuck. But consider that there is widespread agreement that, at the highest levels, agency heads and top executives are at-will employees subject to removal at any time for any reason. There is also agreement in practice that, at the entry level, probationary employees are also at-will employees. Is there no room for agreement about employees in between these levels?

I would argue that job security should vary in degree in accordance with two indicators. The first indicator is authority and responsibility. Because government employers must be able to respond when authority is misused and responsibilities are not met, jobs with high levels of authority and responsibility should enjoy substantially less job security than jobs with low levels of authority and responsibility.

The second indicator is compensation. Less job security should attach to higher-paid jobs than to lower-paid ones. This is so because government agencies are obliged to produce cost-effective outcomes. Accordingly, they must have more authority over their higher-paid employees than over their lesser-paid ones.

It is hard to quarrel with these general principles. The problem comes in practice. Employees and their representatives understandably don't like the idea of giving up job security in exchange for greater responsibilities and compensation, so they quite rightly demand as much job security as they can obtain. For their part, government employers have long grown accustomed to exercising minimal authority over the workplace; this is also a convenient excuse for failing to exercise supervisory and managerial responsibilities.

But agencies of government have a duty, to the public and to the elected officials who bear ultimate responsibility, to continuously improve things, even when they are going right, and to fix things when they are going wrong. This obliges government agencies to be constantly fine-tuning, in the best of circumstances, and overhauling and reforming in other circumstances. In other words, government agencies must continuously attend to their workforces in the interest of obtaining the best possible outcomes.

It used to be that government salaries were low while benefits and job security were high, which was fair enough. But the modern world obliges government to be competitive with the private sector in salaries and benefits. In this new world, it isn't fair to public employers to apply the job-security practices of the past.

It is fine, as a general rule, for lower-level, lower-paid employees to enjoy higher levels of job security than higher-level, higher-paid employees. But no employee, and no level of employment, can be beyond reach. Every agency must have the means of reconstituting and reforming its workplace in pursuit of the purposes for which it exists.

The best approach would be for management and labor to agree on the cost of employee departure rather than to fight about job security. In general, the cost of departure should be less for higher-level, higher-paid employees and more for lower-level, lower-paid employees. It would also be reasonable to factor in length of employment.

It is altogether appropriate that there be economic cost for removing employees. It is sad, but nevertheless true, that all too often it would be a cost worth paying.

About the author



Richard C. Wilson is a Contributor to Governing and has served in local government for 38 years, including 29 years as city manager of Santa Cruz, Calif., retiring in 2010 to write about management in the public sector. He is the author of Rethinking Public Administration: the Case for Management, a revised edition of which was published in January 2016, and The Loma Prieta Earthquake: What One City Learned, published in 1991. Before becoming assistant city manager in Santa Cruzin 1979 and then city manager in 1981, Wilson served as finance director and assistant city manager in El Cerrito, Calif.He received his bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Californiaat Santa Barbaraand his master's degree in public administration from the University of Kansasat Lawrence. You may e-mail Mr. Wilson at rclaywilsonjr@gmail.com .

September 07, 2016

Educator terminated for doing exactly what he was permitted and encouraged to do by his employer

 
Educator terminated for doing exactly what he was permitted and encouraged to do by his employer
2016 NY Slip Op 51252(U), Supreme Court, New York County, Schlesinger, J.

Petitioner, a former tenured New York City high school teacher, commenced an Article 78 proceeding to challenge his termination by the New York City Department of Education of the City of New York following a multi-day hearing for an alleged “inappropriate" relationship with a certain student.

In the words of Supreme Court Justice Alice Schlesinger:

“This is an unfortunate and unique case, in that petitioner was ultimately terminated for doing exactly what he was permitted and encouraged to do by his employer, and for doing exactly what made him such a fine teacher. For the reasons set forth below, the respondents' cross- motion to dismiss is denied, and the [educator’s] petition is granted.

“The penalty of termination, which certainly shocks this court's conscience,* must be vacated. Furthermore, petitioner, upon his reinstatement, hopefully will feel free to continue teaching in the open, caring and dedicated style he succeeded in and was trained in by his employer, and for which he was rightfully commended and promoted. The record shows that petitioner has always been an excellent teacher and mentor. He should be allowed to continue.”

* See Pell v Board of Education, 34 NY2d 222

Attorney for Petitioner: Julia R. Cohen, Esq.; Shebitz Berman Cohen and Delforte PC
Attorney for Employer: Gabriel Gladstone, Esq.; Off. of the New York City Corporation Counsel

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

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