Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1984 )


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    The Attorney’ General of Texas
    JIM MAlTOX
    Octsaber 3, 1984
    Attorney General
    Supreme Court Budding          Mr. Ed Crisham                                    opinion   No. JM-io4
    P. 0. BOX 12548                Chairman
    Aus:,“. TX. 70711.254a         Texas Employment Ccamission                       Re:    Whether temporary       and
    51214752%
    T.E.C. Building                                   part-time   employees    of    the
    Telex 9101974.1367
    Telecopier 512l475-0295
    15th and Congress, Suite 624                      Texas Employment Commission
    Austin, Texas    78178                            accrue vacation,    sick    leave
    and holiday time
    714 Jackson. Suite 700
    Dallas. TX. 752024508
    Dear Mr. Grisham:
    2141742.8944
    You have aslwd       the folloving          questions regarding   “certain
    4824 Amma    Ave.. Suite 169   temporary and part-.t ime employees” of        the Texas Employment Commission:
    El Paso. TX. 79905’2793
    915153334a4
    1. Art! temporary or part-time     employees of the
    Texas    EP?loyment     Commission   whose   wages   and
    11 Texas. Suite 7M)                   salaries   .are indirectly    paid with federal   monies
    ,iou,ton,  TX. 77W2-3111                 entitled    to accrue      vacation,   sick  leave,   or
    713/2236895                              holiday c::.me credit as other state employees?
    2.  I:! so. are such employees who transfer
    895 Broadway. Suite 312
    Lubbock. TX. 794013479
    employmarc from the Texas Fmployment Commission to
    50617476235                              another state agency entitled    to transfer  their
    accumula,xd vacation and sick leave time credit?
    are Texas Employment Commission
    4309 N. Tenth. Suite 8
    3.   I:! so,
    McAllen. TX. 79501-1685
    5121882.4547                             employee:3 who resign,     are dismissed,   or who are
    separated,    entitled  to be paid for all vacation
    time duly accrued at the time of separation        from
    200 Main Plaza. Suite 400
    state   en.ployment, provided   the employee has had
    San Antonio. TX. 70205-2797
    51212254191
    coutizuw~ 3 employment with       the state    for  six
    mouths?
    An Equal OpportunityI                       4.    xc so. and if      such employees,     under
    Afficmativa Action Employer             establis’i cd administrative     construction,    were
    denied pzly for work time lost       due to illness,
    should those employees be reimbursed         for those
    days thl!:p were sick and unable to work in an
    amount nDt to exceed their duly accrued sick leave
    at the tine they missed work due to illness?
    5.   If   so.    are     such employees vho have become
    separated    from     the      Texas Employment Commission
    p. 908
    Hr. Ed Grisham - Page 2         LIHI-204)
    entitled  to be rrimbursed for days they              did   not
    work that were official  stat. holidaya?
    6. If so, arIb such employace who have become
    separated from the Texan Employment Comisaioa    and
    worked on officir.1, atatc holidays entitled  to any
    form of compensation for ruch labor?
    7. If so, how far back           in   time    should    such
    payments     be    made,   and        which      statute      of
    limitations,    if any, applies?
    In order to facilitatcz         our analysis    of your questions,      you point
    out several     factors     regardl.ng the subject employees which ,you suggest
    might be helpful            in de!:rrmining       the propri.ety     of   the     current
    administrative       constructloo        about   the non-availability       of    certain
    benefits     to such employees.            You note that “]t]here       is no mutual
    commitment for contlnuatior.           of the employment relationship.”           The job
    descriptions     for such emplo:rees limit them to working not “more than
    1,200 hours in any calenda:: year.”                Their “[c]ompensation        is on an
    hourly basis” and they arc “intended                for temporary and intermittent
    duty. . . .” You further ,+ivise that it has been the administrative
    practice    of the Texas Employment Commission [hereinafter               TEC] to deny
    to all     such hourly,        temporary and part-time         employees all of the
    specified     benefits,      i.e..    ,racation,   sick,   and holiday     leave time.
    Consequently,      such emvye,:.,        were not allowed to take vacation with
    pay nor. when such employees were separated from employment at the TEC
    after    six months continuous            state   employment,    were they paid for         l-
    accrued vacation        leave.     Li.k.ewise. they were allowed neither time off           .
    with pay when they missed work due to illness                 nor any paid holidays.
    Similarly,     they were not gtren          compensatory time off for time worked
    on any holidays.
    With regard to your .F:lrst question,           it has been suggested,       in
    support of the existing          administrative     construction    by your agency.
    that the TEC’s “unique relationship”           with the United States department
    of Labor, from which it receives virtually            all of its funding. somehow
    exempts TEC’s hourly          temporary and part-time          employees    from the
    various    state    statutory     provlsions      concerning     employee benufits.
    However, in addition        to rho fact that it has apparently            never been
    suggested that this theory applies to TEC’s monthly, non-temporary and
    full-time     employees,     this   office    ruled unequivocally        and without
    exception almosr. forty years ago that “the Texas Employment Commission
    is a state agency and its employees are State employees.”                    Attorney
    CZneral Opinion V-427 (194;‘:.           Twenty years later this conclusion        was
    reaffirmed    in AttorneyGenc!ral Opinion X-125 (1967). which alao held.
    citing    Attorney    General Opinion C-530 (1965).            that “(i]nasmuch     as
    these federal      funds [recei~red by TEC] are deposited              in the State
    Treasury,    they are state funds.”          indeed,    the Secretary    of Labor is
    expressly prohibited      from exercising      any authority with respect to the
    compeasation of employees DE state employment security                 agencies.    42
    p. 909
    L
    Mr. Ed Crisham - PO@? 3                 (J&204)
    U.S.C. 1503(a)(l).     Hence, in answer to your first     question,  it Is
    clear   beyond   cavil  that   TEC’s hourly,    temporary   rnd part-time
    employees ore entitled   to receive vacation , sick, and holiday leave on
    the same basis as other similarly   situated state employees.
    Because the next           fiw     of   your remslning       six   questions    are
    predicated     on the affirmative          answer we hove given to your initial
    question,     we can now turn 1:c an examination of the relevent               statutory
    provisions     which affect      thl! availability     to state employees generally
    of the benefits      at issue and to a determination            of whether and to what
    extent     temporary      and part-time         employees     are entitled      to such
    benefits.      The state statukry          provisions   affecting    the vide range of
    rights,    privileges,      benefil:t:,   and obligations      of state employees are
    multifnrjous      and scattered.        Not only do we have no n&d to catalogue
    these     statutes     here,    but,     in addition,      most of      the applicable
    statutory provisions         regari,lng the benefits       in question are contained
    within      the riders     in artkle       V. the general provisions        article,    of
    the current General Approllriations               Act.   Acts 1983, 68th Leg..         ch.
    1095. at 6171.       Those riders provide in pertinent part as follows:
    Sec.  1 PROVISIONS RELATING TO THE POSITION
    CLASSIFICATIONPLAN.
    .   .   .       .
    n.    FART-TIME EMPLOYEES. Regular         full-time
    positions    paid out: of funds appropriated    may also
    be filled     by par?-time    employees except for line
    item exempt sala:?!.es not designated as part-time.
    In computing the :;alaries     of these employees, the
    rates bf pay shz.ll be proportional        to the rates
    authorized    for  Fill-time    classified  employment.
    It is further pr&ided that part-time employees as
    described   in this subsection      shall be subject    to
    -all of the proviciions of this section.
    o.    HOURLYEMI’I.OYEES. It ic the intent of the
    Legislature    that hourly employees shall     receive
    per hour rate :.rcreases     proportionate   to those
    provided    in   th,rr Act  for   full-time   salaried
    classified   emplo$es
    --a
    .   .   .       .
    Sec.        2       METHOllOF SALARYPAYMENTS.
    .   .   .       .
    f.   OVERTIME. When  a   regular,  full-tine
    employee is required to work hours in excess of
    the    standard F’Crk week established  for     the
    p. 910
    Mr.   Ed Grisham - Page 4          (JM-:!04)
    position   in accordance with applicable      statutes,
    the employee shall tse entitled    to compensation for
    such overtime eithgr::: (1) by receiving     lqu~vslent
    time off during the twelve-month period following
    the dote on which the overtime was accrued; or (2)
    et the discretion     DE the employing institution      or
    agency, In cases vhere granting compensatory time
    off is imprscticsble,     by receiving   pay at s rate
    equivalent   to one md one-half      times the regular
    rate of pay. . . .
    Sec. 7           RMPLOYEIS
    WORKING
    HOURSANUHOLIDAYS.
    . . . .
    E. Holidays    for     state     employees . . .
    including   hourly  wage workers    for   each year
    covered by this At? shall be those specified      in
    Article 4591, Vernon’s Civil Statutes,   as amended.
    For    institutic~rs      and agencies        of    higher
    education,     a regu:lar employee is defined as one
    who is employed to vork at least 20 hours per week
    for    a period      of    at least     four    and one-half
    months. . . .          $ly      regular       employees      of
    institutions     of hig,ler education      shall be eligible
    for paid holidays.
    Each state agercy and institution        and agencies
    of higher education will . . . have on hand enough
    personnel    to car-r      on the activities      of each
    Institution    or agency so that the public business
    ten be carried on. . . . Those employees who are
    working during that holiday period vi11 be allowed
    compensatory time 7ff at a later time. . . .              The
    following   holidays; vi11 nor be included         in this
    section,    for     th’?:r are  holidays     that    follow
    traditional    national celebrated    holidays:
    . . . .
    Agencies    vho      have   work   schedules     other
    than .~ . . [the n’,rmal office      hours of 8:00 a.m.
    to 5:00 p.m.1     wi:t:.  insure that employees vorkinn
    these schedules     observe the equivaledt      number   0:
    holidays    each ye+      as employees working normal
    office   hours.
    .   .   .   .
    p. 911
    Mr.   Ed Crisham - Psge 5        (.RI-204)
    Sec.    8.   EMPLOYEES VACATIONS ANTI LEAVES.
    a.    Other than faculty      with appointments of less
    than     twelve   montxs at institutions       of higher
    education,      employees of the state shall, ,without
    deduction     in sela,xy be entitled    to s vsution     in
    each fiscal       yeaL.    Such entitlement     shell    be
    eerned in sccordaa:e      with the folloving   schedule:
    .   .   * .
    An employee ,rlll      e*rn vac*tion      entitlement
    beginning on the first      day of employment with the
    state    and  termtnating      on   the   last     day     of
    duty. . . .    Credit for one month’s accrual will
    be given for each month or fraction        of a month of
    employment with :he state        and will be posted to
    each employee’s   l.r!ave record on the first       day of
    employment with the state and on the first of each
    succeeding    month     of     employment      thereafter.
    Vacation with pay may not be granted until               the
    employee has had continuous        employment with the
    state for six (6) months, although credit will be
    accrued during that period.
    .   .   .   .
    A stste employee who resigns,    is dismissed,   or
    separated from sl:i,te employment shall be entitled
    to be paid for all vacation    time duly accrued at
    the time of sellaration     from state    employment,
    provided   the    employee    has   had    continuous
    employment with the state for six (6) months.
    .   .   .   .
    E.   Employees, of    the    state    shall,  without
    deduction  in salary,    be entitled      to sick leave
    subject to the fo~loving     conditions:
    An employee will   earn sick leave entitlement
    beginning on the first   day of employmeut with the
    state and terminating on the last day of duty.
    Sick leave en~::ttlement shall be earned at the
    rate of eight (8) hours for each month or fraction
    of a month employment, and shall accumulate with
    the unused amount of such leave carried      forward
    each month. . . .
    .   .   .   .
    p. 912
    Mr. Ed Crlsham - Page 6                        (Jkk.204)
    d.           . . . .
    For    instituti    21s   end     ogencieo     of    higher
    educstion,      a regular employee is defined as one
    who is smployed tc, work at least 20 hours per week
    for s period of at least four and one-helf months,
    excluding      students     employed in positions         which
    require      student     status     8s    a    condition     for
    employment.          Or.l,y     regular       employees       of
    institutions       and agencies       of higher       education
    shall be eligible        for paid vacation       and leave as
    provided herein.
    .        ,       .       .
    f.  A state   r!nlployee who transfers     directly
    from one State agency to another,      shall be given
    credit  by the rweiving      agency for     the unused
    balance   of this   accumulated   vacation    and sick
    leave, provided that his employment with the State
    is uninterrupted.
    .       .       .       .
    I.   The administrative   head or heads of each
    agency of the state    shall require a record to be
    kept of the vacot ton and sick leave accrual and
    absences   of  each    employee,    and the  reasons
    therefor whether :i::om sickness.   vacation,        or leave
    of  absence withow: pay.        Such records        shall be
    available  for pub:t:tc inspection.
    j.  l’he State Anditor shall provide a uniform
    interpretation    of the provisions     herein contained
    on employee vacat:lons and leaves.      and shall report
    to the governor aid the Legislature       any exceptions
    practiced    by the various    entities    of the state
    government; . . .     (Emphasis added).
    Considered  as a whole,        :hese   riders,     especially      the   language
    emphasized,  not only do net evidence          any intent     to treat    hourly,
    temporary or part-time employees disparately,        but rather they make it
    abundantly clear that such employees are generally              entitled   to the
    same sort of benefits proviitd     for all other employees.
    You have referred    us ‘:o Attorney General Opinion H-684 (1975)
    which held that “[tlemporary     and part-time   state employees accrue sick
    leave,   but part-time   employees accrue such leave on a proportionate
    basis.”     See Acts 
    1983, supra
    .       §§l.n.,   o.    (All further  section
    numbers cited will be Acts 1983. sup,           unless otherwise indicated.)
    That opinion    also   reaffiwed     the vitality     of the conclusion      of
    p. 913
    Mr. Ed Crlsham - Pags 7        (JIG204)
    attorney     General Opihion M-1014 (1971) which held that “hourly and
    part-time     employees are cnj::ltled to the ssme holidays,              with PS!I, 88
    those raceived by employeerl on s regular monthly baris.”                     See 17.~.
    Likewise,     n-1014 also found that the granting of vacation time on a
    percentage       ba6i6   for    the time    vork6d      vss    consirtenr     with    the
    provisions      of the general rFpropristlons         act and further thst regular
    full-time     hourly employee6 ware entitled         to the 6ame benefits       a8 those
    granted to regular full-tine         monthly employees.         We find no reason to
    depart     from the holdings         of   these     two opinions.         The general
    applicability       of all the holiday , vacation and sick leave provisions
    of article        V of the curwnt        appropriations      act to part-time         and
    hourly,      temporary     state   tmployees     is    further     confirmed     by   the
    limitation      of such benefits     at “institutions       and agencies of higher
    education” to “regular” employees, vho are defined as ones working “at
    least 20 hour6 per week for a period of at least four and one-half
    months.”       Sets. 7.c..    8.d.   Similarly.     the exclusion      of faculty with
    less than twelve-month appointment6 from the vacation                   provisions    of
    section    8.a.    compels the inference       that,     in general,      other state
    employees are entitled        to the benefits     of those provisions.         Finally,
    Lbe narrow exception         give1 to the comptroller           to determine “leave
    policies”    for his hourly warkers argues for the same conclusion.
    Moreover, the holding of Attorney         General Opinion M-1252 (1972)
    that “payment for all        duly accrued vacation         time Is payment for
    services rendered . . . [and] such payment constitutes              salaries   wlthln
    the meaning of Article    681311” indicate6      that all the subject benefits
    set out in the provision6       of sections   1. 2, 7, and 8 of article            V of
    the General Appropriations         Act discussed     above are referrable            to
    article 6813b.     V.T.C.S.,      which provide6       that    “all     salaries     of
    all . . . State employees         . . shall be . . . as may be provided for
    by the Legislature   in the biennial Appropriations           Act.   . . .” wherein
    there is contained nothing limiting the definition             of state employees
    to full-tine     or non-tem?,Xary , monthly employee6.                  This    is   in
    contrast,   for example, to .wticle        6252-8a.   V.T.C.S.,      which provides
    payment for accumulated vacztion and sick leave to estates of deceased
    state employees only if thsz subject decedent was “employed on a basis
    or in a position      normally requiring        not less     than 900 hours per
    year. . . .‘I Thus, since we conclude both that the TEC’s employees
    are State employee6 and that State employees generally,                 part-time    as
    veil as full-time,   temporarr as well as otherwise,           and hourly as weli
    ss monthly, are entitled      to all the benefits     of holiday, vacation.         and
    sick leave. we can now read:.ly answer your next five questions.
    Section 8.f.    of the current appropriations           act provides a clear
    affirmative    answer to your second question.             The sixth paragraph of
    section   8.a. provides a comparable affirmative              ansver to your third
    question.     See also V.T.C.S.         arc. 6252-8b.     51.    Similarly,   section
    8.c.. vhose       substantially       identical     predecessor    provision6     were
    applied    to temporary and part-time             employees by Attorney       General
    Opinion H-684 (1975).           r:quires     that   such employees       be provided
    appropriate    sick leave benefits.         With regard to your fifth       question,
    p. 914
    Mr. Ed Crislism - Page 8           (JE-204)
    all    hourly,    temporary and part-time             employ6es are entitled              under
    section 7.~. and the holding of Attorney General Opinion M-1014 to~the
    sama paid holiday6 as all o.:her CmployCCS. Likewise, in answer to your
    sixth question.         under the t:hird paragraph of section                 7.~c., hourly,
    troporary and part-time 6ta’:I! employees. like all others, sre entitled
    to compensatory time off for time worked on holidnys other than the
    “traditioual      national     celebrated     holidays”     listed    in section     7.~.     In
    tha case of employees who ‘a.ive already left their employment at TEC,
    compensatory       time off       is obviously        not available.           See Attorney
    General Opinion H-883 (1976).               However, we beiieve         that the equitable
    treatment by H-883 of the then existing                    limitation      of compensatory
    ti~me off      to the same moat1 (pay period)                  in which it was accrued
    suggest6 a solution.            Hence!, at least for the limited purpose of the
    present opinion request, we read section                 2.f as being in pari msteria
    with section       7.~.     Therefore,     ve conclude that, having denied earned
    holiday     compensatory time to any of the employees in question,                           TEC
    effectively      exercised     its discretion       to choose to pray them at one and
    a half times their existing             rate.     In summation, we agree with both
    the Comptroller        and the Sc,a:e Auditor,        who have respectively           advised
    this office      in response        I:CI this opinion        request    that “[a]      person
    placed     on an agency’s         payroll    is s state employee and, therefore,
    entitled    to all the benefits           accruing    thereto,”     and that “[nlone         of
    the    exceptions       in    the Appropriations           Act    apply     to    Com!lisslon
    employees.”      But before turning to your seventh question,                  we note that
    this opi.nion request was spurred by the recent fiscal                       1983 audit of
    the financial        activities      cf the TEC by the State Auditor,                     at a
    conference which took place on harch 29. 1984.
    A.l.   . . . .
    b.    Finding - None of the temporary employees
    of the Commission are allowed to accrue sick or
    annual leave.       In our opinion      this policy      is in
    conflict    with thr: General Appropriations        Act, art.
    V. at 34 and Attorney           General Opinions M-1014
    dated December 9, 1971, and E-684 dated September
    8.    1975,    which indicate        chat     temporary     and
    part-time     emplo),c:es are entitled          to the same
    benefits      as   full-time      state    employees       with
    part-time      employees     receiving      a    proportional
    amount.
    Recommendation! - Temporary employees          should
    accrue annual ani sick        leave in proportion       to
    hours worked ant. should be required to meet the
    minimum work period       of    six  continuous    months
    before    annual lorve can be taken.        Balances due
    current     tempera:::’ employees   should   be awarded
    retroactively.
    p. 915
    Mr. Ed Crisham - Page 9        (;>I-204)
    ResPylse - The agency has requested an Attorney
    Caneral s   Opinion   on Chi6 6ubject.    TEC will
    comply with wh6r AG rccommnds and we vi11 provide
    a~ copy of thio opinion when received.
    State Auditor Managsment Lo*:ter to Member6 of TEC. June 15. 1984, p.
    5.    In fact,   you have adf:lsed that you have always complied with
    section 8.f. and with the answer we have given to your second question
    by calculating     and transfe,:::ing    accrued vacation  and sick leave time
    credit when employees of the type in question have moved directly              to
    another state agency.      Compliance with our answers to questions        three
    through six as to current employees should in principle            involve only
    similarly    straightforward       calculations.     However, questions    three
    through six are also directed          at reimbursement of employees who have
    been separated      from TEC v,ithout being provided,         at the time of
    separation    or prior theret’, , the benefit6      to which ve hold they were
    entitled.
    ThUS.      we now turn to question seveu to consider what, if any,
    limitations        there are on )‘our obligation          to reimburse such former
    employees        for previously       I,endered services.       See Attorney    General
    Opinion M-1252 (1972).            To the extent that preexisting      law in the form
    of prior appropriation            acts contained comparable benefit        provisions,
    separated former TEC emplayees vho were denied benefits                   to which we
    have held they are entitled             have claims against the state and against
    specific      appropriations      to the TEC for such purposes.       See Tex. Come.
    art. III. 544, and Tex. Cor,rt. art. VIII, 16. However,section                    (a) of
    article      4357, V.T.C.S.,        liaits    the payment even of “certified         and
    audited” claims to those presented                 “to the Comptrollar    for payment
    within two (2) years from 1:he close of the fiscal                year for which such
    appropriations          were made. . . .‘I         Hence. payments to former TEC
    employees mede out of recant appropriation6                 to TEC for salaries      and
    benefits      in order to reimbr.t,se such employees for benefits          to vhich we
    hold they were entitled           in the past are limited to such benefits         which
    accrued within fiscal             years 1983 and 1984, i.e..         September, 1982.
    through August 31, 1984.              l’he miscellaneous    claims process,    provided
    for     by article         4351b.     W.T.C.S..     and the appropriation       to the
    Comptroller         of. special    funds for the payment of small claims,              is
    available       to satisfy    claim:, dating from anytime prior to September 1,
    1982.    Thus, there are no .:i.me limitations            on the payment of claims
    for    the benefits         in question      for hourly,    temporary and part-time
    employee6 of TEC whom we have held were entitled                      to accrue such
    benefits      in the past, which claims are properly established             under the
    applicable        procedure for suc:h payments.
    SUMMARY
    All hourly, temporary and part-time employees
    of   the TeXa6 Ihlployment Covaaission are state
    employees and entitled     to accrue vacation.  sick
    leave,    and holiday  time credit   under the same
    p. 916
    Mr. Ed Crirham    - Pag6 10       (JM-204)
    condition6     es    ot t,er     similarly      situated        state
    employees.     Such enployees who transfer employment
    from the Tl?C to another stats agency are entitled
    to trsosf6r     their     sccumulatcd       vacation      and sick
    leave time credit.         Such l   mploy6es are entitled           at
    th6 time of separation          to be paid for all vacation
    time duly accrued,         if they have had 6ix months
    coutinuoub     emplojoant          with    the     6tate.        Such
    employee6 vho verc! denied pay for work time lost
    due to illness       mtn~t be reimbursed for the time
    thay were sick and unable to work in an amount not
    to exceed their duly accrued sick leave at the
    time they missed work due to illness.                            Such
    employees who have been separated                  from the TEC
    must be reimbursc:i          for days they         did not work
    which were offic:J.al            6tate    holidays        occurring
    during their employment at TEC. Such employees
    who vorked on offilial            state holidays       other than
    the “traditional      national celebrated          holidays” are
    entitled    to “compensatory            time off”         within      a
    reasonable period zlfter issuance of this opinion,
    if they are currently on the TEC payroll;                   however,
    if they have been previously               separated       from TEC
    employment, they nce entitled               to “pay at a rate
    equivalent    to one and one-half            times the regular
    rat6 of pay” at the! time of such labor.                   There i,s
    no time limitation         on payments for the benefits
    earned in the past by the subject employees which
    are properly      established        under articles          4357 or
    4351b. V.T.C.S.
    jIM     MATTCX
    Attorney General of TeXa6
    TOMGREEN
    First Assistant     Attorney     Cereral
    DAVID R. RICHASDS
    Executive A6SiStanC Attorney,          General
    Prepared    by Colin J. Carl
    Assistant    Attorney General
    p. 917
    Mr.   Ed   Grishan   - P~gc 11 (JM-204)
    APPKWED:
    OPINIONCOM!ITTEE
    Pick Gilpin.   Chairman
    Jon Bible
    David Brooks
    Colin Carl
    Susan Garrison
    Jim Hoellinger
    Nancy Sutton
    p. 918
    

Document Info

Docket Number: JM-204

Judges: Jim Mattox

Filed Date: 7/2/1984

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017