ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IS NOT USED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN THE SUMMARIES OF JUDICIAL AND QUASI-JUDICIAL DECISIONS PREPARED BY NYPPL

October 20, 2016

Employee organization leave


Employee organization leave
§46 of Chapter 283 of the Laws of 1972

Providing employees of the State with Employee Organization Leave to participate in "union activities" as an elected or appointed officer of an employee organization certified or recognized for the purposes of collective bargaining has been an issue since the adoption of the Taylor Law.

In response to demands that State employees elected to a leadership position of an employee organization representing state employees be provided with "paid organization leave," the State agreed to provide for “Employee Organization Leave” and enacted §46 of Chapter 283 of the Laws of 1972 to this end.

This law provides that a State employee organization may obtain approval for paid full or part-time leaves of absence of its representatives provided it agrees to fully reimburse the State for the salary and other compensation paid to the individual and, in addition, reimburse the State for all employer contributions for fringe benefits made by the State on behalf of the individual, while he or she is on Employee Organization Leave. The individual would be continued as a State employee, on the State’s payroll, during this time. 

A "leaves for union activities" article set out in a Taylor Agreement typically provides  that  in the event an employees is  granted a leave of absence with full salary from his or her regular position for certain employee organization purposes, the employee organization shall reimburse the State the employee's salary and the employer's contributions for employee benefits while he or she is on such leave "consistent with provisions promulgated by the Department of Audit and Control and in accordance with the provisions of Section 46 of Chapter 283 of the Laws of 1972."

Another element affecting State employees on Employee Organization Leave: The State Ethics Commission has advised that “State employees on Employee Organization Leave or State employees on leave without pay who serve as employee organization representatives for CSEA … who have terminated their State service and are now employed by CSEA are subject to the "revolving door" provisions of the Public Officers Law and the corresponding restrictions on post-employment activities” [see Advisory Opinion #90-a ]. Presumably this opinion would be applied with respect to State employees on employee organization leave serving with other employee organizations.

Failure to honor a known policy of the employer can constitute disqualifying misconduct for the purpose eligibility for unemployment insurance benefits


Failure to honor a known policy of the employer can constitute disqualifying misconduct for the purpose eligibility for unemployment insurance benefits
New York City Dept. of Citywide Admin. Servs. (Commissioner of Labor), 2016 NY Slip Op 06526, Appellate Division, Third Department

The New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission [TLC] had a “limited-use policy”  permitting its employees limited personal use of TLC's office and technology resources as long as such use does not interfere with official duties and responsibilities.

TLC received an anonymous complaint that an individual [Employee] was using TLC's resources to conduct his campaign for election to the City Council. TLC requested the New York City Department of Investigation [DOI] to investigate Employee’s campaign-related activities during his employment. Employee then advised TLC that he was taking a leave of absence from his position pursuant to a directive requiring him to do so upon, among other things, publicly declaring his intent to seek elected public office.

Upon completing its investigation, DOI concluded that Employee had misused TLC's resources prior to taking a leave of absence and so advised TLC. TLC terminated Employee, prompting him to apply for unemployment insurance benefits.

The Department of Labor subsequently determined that Employee was disqualified from receiving benefits because his employment was terminated for misconduct and found that Employee had made a willful misrepresentation on his application for benefits insofar as he claimed that he had been discharged for lack of work. The Department charged Employee with an overpayment of $4,050 in benefits, reduced his right to receive future benefits by eight effective days and imposed a civil penalty of $607.50.

Ultimately, the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board upheld the Department's initial determination and penalties imposed pursuant to that determination. Employee appealed the Board’s decision.

The Appellate Division affirmed the Appeal Board’s decision, explaining "Whether a claimant has engaged in disqualifying misconduct is a factual question for the Board to resolve and its determination will not be disturbed if supported by substantial evidence," noting that “It is well settled that failure to abide by a known policy of the employer can constitute disqualifying misconduct.”

The court’s decision noted that evidence in the record, including the report detailing the findings of DOI's investigation, established the Employee’s use of TLC's resources, such as his work computer and telephone, to further his political campaign efforts “was extensive” and  telephone calls made from his office telephone were unrelated to Employee's employment.

Although Employee denied that he used his work computer and the telephone at TLC to pursue his campaign efforts, including soliciting contributions for his campaign, at the hearing, the Appellate Division observed that this “presented issues of credibility within the exclusive province of the Board” to resolve and the Board was entitled to credit the competing evidence presented at the hearing and reject Employee's exculpatory claims.

In addition, noted the court, Employee inaccurately represented that he was unemployed due to a lack of work when applying for unemployment insurance benefits although he had previously been made aware of DOI's investigation of him.

Accordingly, the Appellate Division said that it found “no reason to disturb the Board's imposition of a recoverable overpayment or forfeiture penalty based upon the [Employee’s] willful misrepresentations.”

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

October 19, 2016

Medical Marijuana in the workplace: what an employer in New York State needs to know


Medical Marijuana in the workplace: what an employer in New York State needs to know
Source: NYMUNIBlOG, Kyle Sturgess

New York’s Compassionate Care Act, Chapter 90 of the Laws of 2014, provided for the use of medical marijuana in New York State.

Harris Beach, PLLCattorneys Roy Galewski and Jim Beyer will conduct a webinar focusing on “Medical Marijuana in the New York Workplace” and addressing “Common Disability Accommodation Issues” on October 27, 2016 at 8:00 a.m.

Harris Beach invites interested readers to click on https://www.harrisbeach.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/LaborSeriesInvite2016.pdfto register for this webinar.

October 18, 2016

Challenging the termination of a probationary teacher


Challenging the termination of a probationary teacher
Lewandowski v Clyde-Savannah Cent. Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ., 2016 NY Slip Op 06594, Appellate Division, Fourth Department

A probationary teacher [Teacher] commenced an Article 78 proceeding seeking a court order annulling the Clyde-Savannah Central School District Board of Education's [Board] decision to discontinue her probationary appointment on the grounds that the Board’s decision was arbitrary and capricious, and an abuse of discretion. Teacher also asked the court to direct the Board to reinstate her to her probationary teaching position with back pay.

The Board moved to dismiss Teacher’s petition on the ground that she had failed to serve a notice of claim as mandated by §3813.1 of the Education Law. §3813.1 required that Teacher serve the notice of claim within three months after the claim arose. Supreme Court granted the Board’s motion to dismiss and Teacher appealed.

The Appellate Division sustained the lower court’s ruling, explaining that the service of a notice of claim is a "condition precedent to bringing an action against a school district or a board of education" and such service was required here. Further, said the court, Teacher had not commenced a special proceeding in the nature of mandamus seeking to vindicate a judicially enforceable right conferred on her by the law and thus her cause of action “is not exempt from the notice of claim requirement.”

Significantly, Lewandowski, a probationary employee, had not attained tenure in her position.  In contrast, the Appellate Division, in Sephton v Board of Education of the City of New York, 99 AD2d 509, held that “the ‘tenure rights’ of teachers are ... considered a matter in the public interest and therefore Section 3813 is not applicable to cases seeking to enforce such rights.”

Further, New York courts have distinguished between proceedings “which on the one hand seek only enforcement of private rights and duties and those on the other in which it is sought to vindicate a public interest; the provisions of subdivision 1 of section 3813 are applicable as to the former but not as to the latter” (see Union Free School Dist. No. 6 of Towns of Islip and; Smithtown v New York State Div. of Human Rights Appeal Bd., 35 NY2d 371, rearg denied 36 NY2d 807).

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

October 17, 2016

The employer and individual employees of the employer may be named defendants in an action alleging unlawful discrimination under a "condonation theory"


The employer and individual employees of the employer may be named defendants in an action alleging unlawful discrimination under a "condonation theory"
Emengo v State of New York, 2016 NY Slip Op 06734, Appellate Division, First Department

Benedict O. Emengo filed a  CPLR Article 78 petition in Supreme Court alleging that he was adversely treated by his employer, the New York State Insurance Fund and certain NYSIF administrator* [NYSIF] because his color, national origin and that although he was well-qualified for promotion to positions he sought, was refused promotion to these positions.

Supreme Court granted NYSIF’s motion to dismiss Emengo’s petition but the Appellate Division unanimously modified, on the law, certain of Emengo’s causes of action dismissed by the lower court.

The Appellate Division said the Emengo’s allegations that one administrator told him that “he was an ‘immigrant’ who ‘should be content’ with his current job title, ‘since, as an immigrant, he would never be promoted beyond’ his current title” and that another administrator “was previously found to have discriminated against black NYSIF** employees” constitute sufficient evidence of discriminatory animus.

The court also held that Emengo had “sufficiently alleges that each individual defendant was an ‘employer’ for purposes of his claims, broadly asserting that each individual defendant was a high-ranking manager with, at least inferentially, supervisory powers, including the power to promote, discipline and terminate employees.”

The Appellate Division also noted that Emengo had alleged that “there was a long-standing policy of refusing to promote black NYSIF employees above the title of Supervising Insurance Field Investigator, that all of the individual defendants were at least aware of this policy, that all of the individual defendants were aware that [Emengo] was being refused promotions in accordance with this policy, and that none of the defendants took any action in response to this conduct.” Citing State Div. of Human Rights v St. Elizabeth's Hosp., 66 NY2d 684, and Patrowich v Chemical Bank, 63 NY2d 541, the court ruled that Emengo had “adequately pleaded employer liability as to all of the individual defendants, under a condonation theory”***within the meaning of Executive Law §296[1][a].

NYSIF agreed that Emengo’s claims against the State of New York and NYSIF "rise or fall with his claims against the six individual defendants," his claims against the State and NYSIF under the State’s Human Rights Law, including his causes of action for retaliation and for aiding and abetting discrimination, should be reinstated.

Emengo has also asked the Appellate Division to reinstate his claims under the New York City Human Rights Law [City HRL]. Supreme Court had dismissed his City HRL claims on the independent ground of sovereign immunity. Emengo, said the Appellate Division, was required on the independent ground of sovereign immunity, whether or not the failed to address this aspect of the Supreme Court’s decision and deemed him to have abandoned his appeal with respect to Supreme Court’s dismissal of his City HRL claims.

* The NYSIF administrators are denominated “John and Jane Doe” in the caption of the decision.

** The decision notes that Emengo “was a black man of Nigerian national origin.”

*** An essential ingredient of condonation is knowledge of the infraction alleged to have been condoned. In Matter of State Div. of Human Rights v St. Elizabeth's Hosp., 66 NY2d 684, the court held that “An employer will be liable for ‘an employee's discriminatory act [where] the employer became a party to it by encouraging, condoning, or approving it.’” Further, said the court, “the term condonation includes … ‘[a]n employer's calculated inaction in response to discriminatory conduct.’”

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

October 16, 2016

Audits of School Districts posted during the week ending October 15, 2016


Audits of School Districts posted during the week ending October 15, 2016
Source: Office of the State Comptroller

[Internet links highlighted in color]


Bradford Central School District – Financial Management (2016M-253)

Purpose of Audit
The purpose of our audit was to evaluate the District's financial management for the period July 1, 2012 through April 15, 2016.

Background

The Bradford Central School District is located in the Towns of Bath, Bradford, Urbana and Wayne in Steuben County and the Towns of Orange and Tyrone in Schuyler County. The District, which operates one school with approximately 275 students, is governed by an elected five-member Board of Education. Budgeted appropriations for the 2015-16 fiscal year totaled approximately $8.8 million.

Key Findings

The Board and District officials have not adopted realistic budgets or effectively managed fund balance and, despite the significant amount of accumulated fund balance, continued to raise the tax levy by an average of 2 percent each year or a total of $350,000 over the last three years.

When unused appropriated fund balance is added back, unrestricted fund balance exceeded the statutory limit by amounts ranging from $1.4 million to $1.9 million or 12.8 to 17.5 percentage points.

Key Recommendations

Ensure budgets include realistic appropriations based on actual needs and planned use of fund balance to avoid levying taxes at a level greater than needed.

Ensure that unrestricted fund balance is in compliance with the statutory limit and develop a plan to use excess fund balance in a manner that benefits District residents.
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Corning City School District – Procurement (2016M-222)

Purpose of Audit
The purpose of our audit was to review the District's procurement practices for the period July 1, 2014 through April 26, 2016.

Background

The Corning City School District is located in the Towns of Big Flats and Catlin in Chemung County; the Towns of Dix and Orange in Schuyler County; and the City of Corning and the Towns of Bradford, Campbell, Caton, Corning, Erwin, Hornby and Lindley in Steuben County. The District, which operates eight schools with approximately 4,800 students, is governed by an elected nine-member Board of Education. Budgeted appropriations for the 2015-16 fiscal year totaled approximately $102.5 million.

Key Findings

The District's procurement policy does not include procedures for the procurement of professional services.

District officials did not always solicit competition through requests for proposals or obtain or retain quotes or bids.

Key Recommendations

Revise the procurement policy to include clear language addressing the procurement of professional services and require strict adherence to the requirements of the procurement policy.

Solicit competition for professional service contracts and ensure that written or verbal quotes are obtained for purchases that are under bidding thresholds.
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East Moriches Union Free School District – Claims Processing (2016M-273)

Purpose of Audit
The purpose of our audit was to examine claims processing for the period July 1, 2014 through May 31, 2016.

Background

The East Moriches Union Free School District is located in the Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County. The District, which operates two schools with approximately 730 students, is governed by an elected five-member Board of Education. Budgeted appropriations for the 2015-16 fiscal year totaled approximately $25.8 million.

Key Findings

The claims auditor did not properly identify and report all confirming purchase orders to the Board.

The Treasurer did not supervise an account clerk typist's use of her electronic signature to sign the District’s checks.

Key Recommendations

Properly identify and report to the Board all instances of confirming purchase orders.

Discontinue the practice of allowing the Treasurer's electronic signature to be affixed to checks without direct authorization or supervision.
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Merrick Union Free School District – Financial Condition (2016M-240)

Purpose of Audit
The purpose of our audit was to evaluate the District's financial operations and use of fund balance for the period July 1, 2014 through December 31, 2015.

Background

The Merrick Union Free School District is located in the Town of Hempstead, Nassau County. The District, which operates three schools with approximately 1,480 students, is governed by an elected seven-member Board of Education. Budgeted appropriations for the 2015-16 fiscal year totaled approximately $46.9 million.

Key Findings

The Board adopted budgets that overestimated expenditures by a total of $9.3 million and underestimated revenues by a total of $2.8 million from July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2015.

The District's unrestricted fund balance exceeded the statutory maximum for each of the three years reviewed.

Fund balance appropriated by the Board was not used.

The district did not use its reserve funds during the audit period but instead used operating funds to pay for related costs.

Key Recommendations

Adopt budgets that realistically reflect the District’s operating needs based on historical trends or other identified analysis.

Develop a written plan to reduce the level of unrestricted fund balance to legal limits and consider revising the District’s fund balance policy to require compliance.

Discontinue the practice of appropriating unexpended surplus funds that are not needed and not used to fund District operations.

Ensure that reserve funds are used for their intended purpose.
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Local Government and School Accountability Contact Information:
Phone: (518) 474-4037; Email: localgov@osc.state.ny.us
Address: Office of the State Comptroller, Division of Local Government and School Accountability 110 State Street, 12th Floor; Albany, NY 12236

October 15, 2016

New York State Comptroller audit reveals the State’s Health Department overpaid certain Medicaid Managed Care premiums



New York StateComptroller audit reveals the State’s Health Department overpaid certain Medicaid Managed Care premiums
Source: Office of the State Comptroller [Internet links highlighted in color]

The state Department of Health (DOH) overpaid managed care organizations nearly $19 million for the state fiscal year 2014-15, in part, because of a flaw in how it calculated premiums, according to an auditreleased on October 13, 2016 by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. Auditors warned that another $56.8 million was at risk of overpayment over the next three years due to the flaw.

Additionally, DiNapoli’s auditors found DOH, because it had not provided sufficient cost reporting guidance, is missing out on millions in annual savings it is supposed to realize through reforms recommended by the state’s Medicaid Redesign Team. The department also failed to collect $38.6 million in actuarial costs, incurred since 2009, from managed care organizations (MCOs).

For the state fiscal year ended March 31, 2015, New York’s Medicaid program had approximately 7.1 million enrollees and Medicaid claim costs totaled about $53 billion. The federal government funded about 52 percent of New York’s Medicaid claim costs; the state funded about 30 percent; and localities funded the rest.

Most of New York’s Medicaid recipients receive their services through mainstream Medicaid managed care. Medicaid pays MCOs a monthly premium payment for each enrolled Medicaid recipient and the MCOs arrange for the recipients’ health services. Mainstream managed care provides hospital care, physician services, dental services, pharmacy benefits, and many others. Of the $53 billion in Medicaid costs, MCOs received $17.8 billion in mainstream managed care premiums for nearly 5.2 million Medicaid enrollees.

DiNapoli’s auditors found that the approximate $19 million in premium overpayments largely occurred because DOH incorrectly factored in the cost of certain taxes – a franchise tax imposed on insurance corporations and the Metropolitan Transportation Business Tax (MTA surcharge) – levied against for-profit MCOs into DOH’s rate-setting calculations. This resulted in higher premiums for all MCOs, including those MCOs that did not pay these taxes. In response to the audit, DOH officials told auditors they updated the methodology.

Auditors also reviewed the expenses submitted by one MCO to DOH and determined the MCO claimed certain non-allowable administrative expenses, which also contributed to the overpayments.

DOH’s cost reporting instructions failed to provide clear and specific instructions for reporting some expenses, such as fines and penalties and certain legal expenses. DOH also provided poor reporting guidance that allowed MCOs to misreport non-allowable marketing expenses, contrary to the intent of a policy change initiated from a Medicaid Redesign Team (MRT) proposal. As a result, DOH is not fully realizing the MRT’s estimated $45 million in annual savings from the change.

DiNapoli’s auditors also found that since October 2009, DOH has contracted with Mercer Health and Benefits, LLC to provide actuarial services and guidance in setting all managed care premium rates. As of January 2015, the total cost of the contract was $38.6 million. Under state law, DOH is required to charge the MCOs for those services, but had not done so.

DiNapoli recommended DOH:

1. Modify the rate-setting methodology to ensure that franchise taxes and MTA surcharges are properly factored into the methodology;

2. Determine the extent to which the MCOs’ reported expenses include non-allowable marketing expenses, and assess whether planned cost savings can be achieved under current MCO reporting practices;

3. Revise the Medicaid Managed Care Operating Report (MMCOR) instructions to ensure adequate guidance is given for reporting marketing and facilitated enrollment expenses, fines, and legal costs;

4. Recalculate the administrative cost cap and the base administrative premium rate based on the audit’s findings and apply the recalculations to the premiums paid for the state fiscal year 2014-15 and forward;

5. Recover overpayments;

6. Assess the cost of the current actuary contract, and any future contracts and amendments, to MCOs; and

7. Include MCOs in the future selection of the actuary.

Department officials generally concurred with some of the audit recommendations, and indicated that actions have been and will be taken to address them. DOH’s full response is included in the complete audit.

The complete report is posted on the Internet at: report

October 14, 2016

Employee’s misuse of employer’s email results in dismissal


Employee’s misuse of employer’s email results in dismissal
Posted by Employment Law News, WK WorkDay - A service provided by Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory U.S.

[Internet links highlighted in color]

Fire Captain terminated after using Department’s internal email system to transmit religious messages
By Dave Strausfeld, J.D.

A fire department captain who was discharged for sending Christian messages to coworkers via the department’s internal email system was unable to prove that his First Amendment free speech rights were violated, held a Washington Court of Appeals, affirming a lower court’s grant of summary judgment. The email system was a nonpublic forum, and limiting its usage to fire department business was reasonable and viewpoint neutral. Judge Lawrence-Berrey filed a separate concurring opinion.

In dissent, Chief Judge Fearing argued the department had opened the email system to religious messages by forwarding newsletters from its health insurer about solving personal problems and living a healthy lifestyle, because the government may not “prefer secular chatter over religious oration” (Sprague v. Spokane Valley Fire Department).

The text of Mr. Strausfeld summary is posted on the Internet at:


Employee’s termination for sending 900 company emails to personal account did not constitute reverse discrimination

Sending over 900 company emails to his personal or other outside account, including over 100 containing confidential client information, was a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for firing a 59-year-old employee, notwithstanding that he was allowed to work at home on the company’s secure network and that an NLRB law judge found some of the employer’s confidentiality rules overbroad.

Accordingly a federal district court in Michigan granted summary judgment against his federal and state law reverse race and gender discrimination claims as well as his age bias claim under the ADEA. His FLSA claim for unpaid overtime also failed (MacEachern v. Quicken Loans, Inc., September 21, 2016, Steeh, G.).

The text of Ms. Kapusta’s summary is posted on the Internet at:


N.B. No part of the above materials may be copied, photocopied, reproduced, translated, reduced to any electronic medium or machine-readable form, or retransmitted, in whole or in part, without the prior written consent of WK. Any other reproduction in any form without the prior written consent of WK is prohibited. Written consent may be obtained from WK. Please click here for more information.

Other decisions addressing an employee’s alleged misuse of an employer’s electronic equipment include:

Fraser v Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.
USDC, 135 F. Supp. 2d 623
The court held that an employee using his or her employer's computer equipment for personal business does not enjoy any "right to privacy" barring the employer’s reviewing the employee's e-mail that is stored in its computer system. Federal District Court Judge Anita B. Brody decided that an employer may peruse an employee's e-mail files that are stored in the system without violating either federal or Pennsylvania wiretap laws.

On appeal the USCA, Third Circuit, affirmed the District Court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Nationwide on Fraser's wrongful termination claim but vacated and remand the state claims, and his bad-faith claim and forfeiture-for-competition claim for consideration in light of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's decision in Hess v. Gebhard and Co., Inc., 570 Pa. 148.

Leo Gustafson v Town of N. Castle, 
45 A.D.3d 766
The employee, an assistant building inspector with the Town of North Castle, was charged and found guilty of falsifying official records with respect to where he was while on duty. The individual was assigned a town vehicle for the purpose of making field inspections in connection with his employment. The vehicle had a global positioning system installed that transmitted information to the town’s computer reporting the vehicle’s location and movements. Based on this information, the Town charged the employee with falsifying town records as to his whereabouts. This, said the Appellate Division, constituted substantial evidence to support the determination that the employee was guilty of falsifying town records.

Ghita v Department of Education of the City of New York
2008 NY Slip Op 30706(U), Supreme Court, New York County, Docket Number: 0110481/2007 [Not selected for publications in the Official Reports]
The employee challenged an arbitrator’s determination terminating his employment with the New York City Department of Education after finding him guilty of downloading a file of pornographic material from his AOL email account and openly viewed such pornographic material from a school computer. Supreme Court rejected the individual’s claim that [1] the arbitrator exceeded his authority under Education Law §3020-a, and [2] the award terminating Ghita's employment is a violation of public policy and New York State Law.

Perry v Comm. of Labor,
App. Div. 3rd Dept., 283 A.D.2d 754
This unemployment insurance claimant challenged a determination by the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board denying him benefits after finding that his employment was terminated due to his misconduct. The nature of the individual's alleged misconduct: his misuse of his employer's computer equipment. The employee, a human resource specialist, was terminated after his employer discovered that he used his computer terminal to frequently access pornographic websites during working hours.

Fraser v Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.
USDC, 135 F. Supp. 2d 623
The court held that an employee using his or her employer's computer equipment for personal business does not enjoy any "right to privacy" barring the employer’s reviewing the employee's e-mail that is stored in its computer system. Federal District Court Judge Anita B. Brody decided that an employer may peruse an employee's e-mail files that are stored in the system without violating either federal or Pennsylvania wiretap laws.

As to the issue of the expectation of privacy, the appointing authority may wish to periodically advise its officers and employees that they have no right to privacy with respect to any data retrieved from the employer's computers, servers, video tapes, message tapes or other storage devices, electronic or otherwise.


The full text of the Wilkinson - Casey decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://nypublicpersonnellawarchives.blogspot.com/2008/06/searching-employers-computer-for.html

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A Reasonable Penalty Under The Circumstances - a 618-page volume focusing on New York State court and administrative decisions addressing an appropriate disciplinary penalty to be imposed on an employee in the public service found guilty of misconduct or incompetence. For more information click on http://booklocker.com/7401.html

______________


States and political subdivisions of states adopting “Ban the Box” laws prohibiting employers from inquiring into the criminal history of applicants on initial employment applications


States and political subdivisions of states adopting “Ban the Box” laws prohibiting employers from inquiring into the criminal history of applicants on initial employment applications

So-called “Ban the Box” legislation is being enacted by many public jurisdictions to eliminate the possibility of job candidates being disqualified from further consideration based on a criminal history that has been revealed in his or her initial application form.  Instead, legislation is being adopted to require that employers, public and private alike, consider the applicant’s qualifications for the position first and than subsequently make individualized inquiries into any criminal conviction and determine whether any such conviction relevant in making a decision with respect to the individual’s being selected for the job sought or to public safety.*

New York State Attorney General Schneiderman has stated that his office is committed to breaking down barriers that impede rehabilitation, especially those that prevent fair access to employment,” noting that several municipalities across New York State have enacted “Ban the Box” legislation. 

Although there is no statewide "ban the box" law in New York currently in effect,**  Article 23-A of New York State’s Correction Law mandates that both public and private employers be mindful of a number of specific factors when considering criminal history information during the hiring process in making an employment decision. 

The text of Article 23-A is posted on the Internet at:

Consistent with Article 23-A, an employer may not deny employment because of an individual’s criminal history unless [1] it can draw a direct relationship between the applicant’s criminal record and the prospective job or [2] show that employing the applicant “would involve an unreasonable risk to property or to the safety or welfare of specific individuals or the general public.”

In the event the employer determines that such a direct relationship exists, an employer must evaluate the several Article 23-A factors listed below to determine whether the concerns presented by the relationship have been mitigated. If the potential employer determines that the concerns presented by the relationship have not been mitigated, it must then demonstrate how the factors combine to create an unreasonable risk.

The Buffalo “Ban the Box” Ordinance is posted on the Internet at:

New York City’s Local Law to “Ban the Box” is posted on the Internet at:

The Rochester “Ban the Box” Ordinance is posted on the Internet at:


* The New York State Department of Civil Service’s examination application form NYS APP (6-16) includes the following statement and questions:

Certain job titles, including many law enforcement positions (such as Correction Officer, Parole Officer, and Park Patrol Officer) and direct patient care positions (such as Mental Health Therapy Aide and Secure Care Treatment Aide), are also subject to agency criminal history background investigations, as required by law. Applicants should read the official examination announcement for more specific information.

If you answer YES to any of these questions, please provide a detailed explanation in the REMARKS section provided below, including employer information, position, reasons and dates:

1. Yes [ ]  No [ ] Were you ever discharged from any employment except for lack of work, funds, disability or medical condition?

2. Yes [ ]  No [ ] Did you ever resign from any employment rather than face a dismissal?

3. Yes [ ]  No [ ] Did you ever receive a discharge from the Armed Forces of the United States which was not an “Honorable Discharge” or a “General Discharge under Honorable Conditions”?

REMARKS:



** The Article 23-A factors to be considered are:

1. That New York public policy encourages the licensure and employment of people with criminal records;

2. The specific duties and responsibilities of the prospective job;

3. The bearing, if any, of the person’s conviction history on her or his fitness or ability to perform one or more of the job’s duties or responsibilities;

4. The time that has elapsed since the occurrence of the events that led to the applicant’s criminal conviction, not the time since arrest or conviction;

5. The age of the applicant when the events that led to her or his conviction occurred, not the time since arrest or conviction;

6. The seriousness of the applicant’s conviction history; and

7. Any information produced by the applicant, or produced on the applicant’s behalf, regarding her or his rehabilitation or good conduct.

October 12, 2016

Disciplinary charges must be served on the target of the disciplinary action on or before the expiration of the period set by the controlling statute of limitations


Disciplinary charges must be served on the target of the disciplinary action on or before the expiration of the period set by the controlling statute of limitations
Lebron v Village of Spring Valley, 2016 NY Slip Op 06500, Appellate Division, Second Department

Following a disciplinary hearing, the hearing officer found David Lebron, a Village of Spring Valley police officer, guilty of certain charges of misconduct. The hearing officer than recommend that Lebron be terminated from his position with the Spring Valley Police Department. The Spring Valley Village Board of Trustees adopted the recommendation of the hearing officer and dismissed Lebron from his position.

Lebron file a petition pursuant to CPLR Article 78 challenging his termination, contending, among other things, that:

The Board's determination was not supported by substantial evidence.

Addressing the issue of the alleged lack of “substantial evidence,” the Appellate Division simply noted that the in brief submitted to the court Lebron “did not contend that the Board's determination was not supported by substantial evidence.”

The charges served against him were time-barred because they were served more than 60 days after the Department's Chief of Police became aware of the facts upon which the charges were based.

As to the question of the charges being timely served, the Appellate Division explained that the applicable statute of limitations are set out in The Rockland County Police Act, §7 of Chapter 526 of the Law of 1936. This section provides that the disciplinary charges must be served on the target of the disciplinary action within 60 days after the facts upon which the charges are based became known to the Village Board of Trustees. Here, said the court, there was no dispute that the charges were served upon Lebron within 60 days after the facts upon which the charges were based became known to the Board.

Accordingly, the court found that the disciplinary charges served on Lebron were not time-barred.

Lebron also argued that he had suffered “added stigma” as the result of the “circumstances of the disciplinary procedure.”  The Appellate Division, however, decided that this contention was without merit. In the words of the Appellate Division, “[n]othing in the record suggests that, as a result of the termination of his employment as a police officer with the Department, [Lebron] is prohibited from obtaining future law enforcement employment, or that he is subjected to a public registry of any sort.”

Lebron also contended that his due process rights were violated by the hearing officer's declining to reopen the disciplinary hearing to consider “newly discovered evidence.

Citing Russell v Del Castillo, 181 AD2d 680, the Appellate Division concluded that “the hearing officer providently exercised his discretion in denying [Lebron’s] application to reopen the hearing on the basis of newly discovered evidence."

The Russell decision is posted on the Internet at:

The Lebron decision is posted on the Internet at:

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