Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2000 )


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  •     OFFlCE OF THE ATTORNEY   GENERAL.   STATE OF TEXAS
    JOHN CORNYN
    March 1,200O
    Ms. Karen F. Hale                                           Opinion No. JC-0188
    Commissioner
    Texas Department of Mental Health                           Re: Whether a state agency may require an
    and Mental Retardation                                     employee to exhaust compensatory     leave
    909 West 45th Street                                        before receiving   workers’ compensation
    Austin, Texas 7871 l-2668                                   benefits (RQ-0119-JC)
    Dear Commissioner      Hale:
    You ask whether state agencies have the authority to require an employee to exhaust
    accumulated compensatory leave before receiving weekly income benefits under the workers’
    compensation provisions of Texas law. We conclude that state agencies may not require employees
    to exhaust their compensatory leave before receiving weekly income benefits under the workers’
    compensation law. If state agencies lack such authority, you ask whether state agencies may prohibit
    an employee from using compensatory leave while drawing weekly income benefits under the
    workers’ compensation     law. We conclude that state agencies lack authority to prohibit their
    employees from using compensatory leave while receiving weekly income benefits under the
    workers’ compensation law.
    A state employee who receives a compensable injury is entitled to the compensation provided
    by chapter 501 of the Labor Code, which may include temporary income benefits paid on a weekly
    basis as compensation for lost wages. See TEX. LAB. CODE ANN. 5 501.021 (Vernon 1996); see 
    id. $5 408.081,
    .lOl-,105 (Vernon 1996 & Supp. 2000); see also 
    id. 5 501.002(a)(6)
    (Vernon Supp.
    2000) (incorporating provisions of chapter 408 of the Labor Code into chapter 501, with certain
    exceptions).     If the employee’s disability continues for longer than one week, weekly income
    benefits begin to accrue on the eighth day after the injury, or, if the disability does not begin at once
    after the injury, on the eighth day after it does begin. See 
    id. 5 408.082
    (Vernon 1996). As a general
    rule, income benefits are paid weekly as and when they accrue without an order from the Workers’
    Compensation Commission, see 
    id. 5 408.081
    (Vernon Supp. ZOOO),until the employee has attained
    maximum medical improvement. 
    Id. $4 408.08
    1, ,101. The usual temporary income benefit equals
    seventy percent ofthe employee’s average weekly wage, subject to limits set out in sections 408.061
    and 408.062 ofthe Labor Code. See 
    id. § 408.126;
    see also Tex. Att’y Gen. Gp. No. JC-0040 (1999)
    at 2.
    An employee who takes compensatory leave while receiving workers’ compensation benefits
    will ordinarily receive 170 percent of his usual salary. See Letter t%om Ms. Karen Hale,
    Ms. Karen F. Hale - Page 2                          (X-0188)
    Commissioner,     Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, to Honorable
    John Comyn, Attorney General of Texas, at 1 (Sept. 30, 1999). You suggest that the employee’s
    receipt of this amount “acts as a disincentive to return to work as quickly as possible following a
    work-related illness or injury.” 
    Id. You ask
    whether state agencies may require an employee to
    exhaust accumulated compensatory leave before receiving weekly income benefits under the
    workers’ compensation law. See 
    id. Compensatory leave,
    also known as compensatory time, is paid leave time received by a state
    employee as compensation for overtime work. For example, section 662.007 of the Government
    Code provides that a state employee who is required to work on a national or state holiday is entitled
    to compensatory time off during the next twelve months, See TEX. GOV’TCODEANN. 5 662.007(a)
    (Vernon Supp. 2000). The employee must give reasonable notice of his or her intention to use the
    compensatory time but is not required to say how it will be used. See 
    id. 5 662.007(b).
    Other
    provisions apply to specific agencies. See 
    id. 5 411.016(e)
    (Vernon 1998) (if appropriated funds are
    inadequate for supplemental pay for certain Department of Public Safety officers, director may
    provide compensatory time); 5 443.0054 (Vernon Supp. 2000) (compensatory time for employees
    of State Preservation Board who are not subject to overtime provisions of Fair Labor Standards Act
    of 1938).
    The general provisions governing overtime and compensatory time for state employees,
    formerly found in the biennial Appropriations Act, are now codified as subchapter B, chapter 659
    of the Government Code. See Act of May 11,1999,76th Leg., R.S., ch. 279, $5 12,27,1999 Tex.
    Gen. Laws 1147, 1150-53, 1168. Section 659.016 applies to state employees who are not subject
    to the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and are not legislative employees. See TEX.GOV’TCODE
    ANN. 8 659.017 (Vernon Supp. 2000) (overtime compensation for legislative employees). As arule,
    employees accrue compensatory time at the rate of one hour for each hour worked in excess of forty
    hours a week. See 
    id. $ 659.016(b);
    see also 
    id. 5 659.016(c),
    (d), (h) (exceptions for employee
    exempt as executive, professional, or administrative employee under 29 U.S.C. 5 213(a)(l) (1994
    & Supps. II &III) and for staffmember, appointee, or immediate adviser ofan elected officeholder).
    An employee covered by section 659.016 may not be paid for any unused compensatory time. See
    
    id. 5 659.016(f).
    Section 659.015 of    the Government Code applies “only to a state employee who is subject
    to the overtime provisions     of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938,” and who is not an
    employee of the legislature    or of a legislative agency. 
    Id. 5 659.015(a);
    see also 29 U.S.C. 5 207(o)
    (1994 & Supps. I, II & III)   (provision of FLSA on compensatory time for public employees).’ See
    ‘TheUnitedStatesSupremeCourthas held that the provisionof the Fair LaborStandardsAct purportingto
    authorizeprivate actionsagainststatesin statecourtswithouttheir consentis an unconstitutionalabrogationof state
    sovereignimmunity.SeeAlden v. Maine, 119S. Ct.2240,2246(1999)(actionby stateprobationofficersagainststate
    for violationof overtimeprovisionsof FairLaborStandardsAct). See also Seminole Tribe ofFlu. v. Florida, 5 17US.
    44 (1996)(Congresslacks powerunder Article I of the UnitedStatesConstitutionto abrogatethe states’sovereign
    immunityin federalcourt).
    Ms. Karen F. Hale - Page 3                        (JC-0188)
    generally Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. Nos. JM-680 (1987); JM-491 (1986); JM-475 (1986) (applicationof
    FLSA overtime and compensatory time rules to state employees).            Employees subject to the
    overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act are entitled to compensation for overtime as
    provided by federal law and by section 659.015. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 659.015(b) (Vernon
    Supp. 2000). If an employee within section 659.015 is required to work hours in excess of forty
    hours in a workweek, he or she is entitled to compensation for the excess hours either by “the agency
    allowing or requiring the employee to take compensatory time off at the rate of 1% hours for each
    hour of overtime,” or, “at the discretion of the employing agency, in cases in which granting
    compensatory time off is impractical,” by the employee receiving overtime pay at the rate of one and
    one-half times the employee’s regular rate of pay. 
    Id. 5 659.015(c).
    Employees, with certain
    exceptions, may accumulate no more than 240 hours of overtime credit that may be taken as
    compensatory leave. See 
    id. 5 659.015(e).
    A different rate of compensatory time applies if the
    employee does not work more than forty hours in the workweek but the hours worked plus paid
    leave taken exceed forty hours in the workweek. In this case, the employee is entitled to an hour of
    compensatory leave for each excess hour. See 
    id. $659.015(f). This
    compensatory time will lapse
    unless it is used during the twelve-month period after the week in which it was earned. See 
    id. § 659.015(g).
    Section 659.022 of the Government        Code provides that a state employee whose
    compensatory time is subject to lapsing may submit to the employing agency a written request for
    permission to use the time, and the state agency shall (1) approve the employee’s request; or (2)
    provide the employee with an alternative date on which he or she may use the compensatory time.
    See 
    id. 5 659.022.
    Finally, “[a] state agency shall accommodate to the extent practicable an
    employee’s request to use accrued compensatory         time.”   
    Id. 5 659.023(b).
       In summary,
    compensatory time is compensation earned by a state employee for overtime work in lieu ofpayment
    in money. The employee is entitled to use his or her accrued compensatory leave, subject to
    statutory limits on the amounts that may be accrued and the time period during which the leave may
    be used.
    We find no authority for a state agency to require an employee to exhaust accumulated
    compensatory leave before receiving weekly income benefits under the workers’ compensation law.
    Section 408.082 ofthe Labor Code sets the time at which weekly income benefits begin to accrue -
    on the eighth day after the injury, or, if the disability does not begin at once after the injury, on the
    eighth day after it does begin. See TEX. LAB. CODE ANN. 5 408.082 (Vernon 1996). The legislature
    has enacted exceptions to section 408.082 of the Labor Code that allow postponement of the time
    at which income benefits accrue. If a state employee chooses to use sick leave before receiving
    income benefits, section 501.044 ofthe Labor Code postpones the employee’s entitlement to income
    benefits until he or she has exhausted the accrued sick leave. See 
    id. 5 501.044(a)
    (Vernon Supp.
    2000). If the employee chooses to use all or any number of weeks of accrued annual leave after
    exhausting his or her sick leave, the entitlement to income benefits will be further postponed until
    the elected number of weeks of sick leave have been exhausted. See 
    id. $ 501.044(b);
    see also 
    id. $5 502.041,503.041
    (Vernon 1996) (institutions ofTexas A&M University System and University
    of Texas System may provide that an injured employee may remain on the payroll until the
    Ms. Karen F. Hale - Page 4                       (X-0188)
    employee’s annual and sick leave is exhausted, during which time workers’ compensation benefits
    do not accrue or become payable). No statute, however, provides that the accrual of weekly income
    benefits may be delayed until the injured employee has exhausted his or her compensatory leave.
    If the legislature wishes state employees to exhaust accumulated compensatory leave before
    receiving weekly income benefits under the workers’ compensation provisions, it may enact a
    provision expressing this intent.
    Any state statute affecting compensatory time earned under the FLSA must be consistent
    with the federal law. The United States Supreme Court has granted a petition for writ of certiorari
    to decide whether a public agency governed by the compensatory time provisions ofthe Fair Labor
    Standards Act of 1938, 29 U.S.C. 5 207(o) (1994 & Supps. I, II & III), may, absent a preexisting
    agreement, require its employees to use accrued compensatory time. Christensen Y. Harris County,
    
    120 S. Ct. 320
    (1999). The Fifth Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals has concluded that
    the Fair Labor Standards Act is not violated by a state or county policy requiring public employees
    to use their accrued compensatory time. Moreau v. Harris County, 
    158 F.3d 241
    , 246 (5th Cir.
    1998), cert. granted sub nom. Christensen Y. Harris County, 
    120 S. Ct. 320
    (1999) (county policy
    required employees of sheriffs department to use compensatory time when their balances reached
    a set level); Local 889American Fed’n ofState, County, & Mun. Employees Y. Louisiana, 
    145 F.3d 280
    , 284 (5th Cir. 1998) (state required employee to use compensatory time before using annual
    leave). The Eighth Circuit has, however, held that it violates the FLSA for an employer to force
    employees to take compensatory time. See Heaton v. Moore, 
    43 F.3d 1176
    , 1180 (8th Cir. 1994).
    The decision of the United States Supreme Court in Christensen v. Harris County will
    certainly be relevant to any mture legislation requiring state employees to exhaust accumulated
    FLSA compensatory leave before receiving workers’ compensation income benefits, or authorizing
    state agencies to impose such a requirement.     At present, however, the legislature has neither
    imposed such a requirement on state employees nor authorized state agencies to impose this
    requirement on their employees.    Accordingly, a state agency has no authority to postpone the
    accrual of weekly income benefits until an employee has exhausted his or her compensatory leave
    accrued under the FLSA or under state law.*
    If state agencies cannot require an employee to exhaust accumulated compensatory leave,
    you ask whether they may prohibit the use of compensatory leave while drawing such benefits. The
    Fair Labor Standards Act provides with respect to compensatory time accrued under its provision
    that when a public employee requests to use his or her compensatory time, the employee shall be
    permitted by his or her employer to use the time within a reasonable period after making the request,
    ‘TheStateAuditor’sOfficehasissuedTechnicalUpdate  99-02,whichconcludes,inrelianceona”recentmling
    by the FifthCircuitCourtof Appeals,”that stateagenciesmayrequirestateemployeesto exhaustFLSAcompensatory
    timebalancesbeforeusingannualleave. SAOTECHNICAL       UPDATE99-02(Aug.10,1999).TheTechnicalUpdatewas
    issuedbeforethe UnitedStatesSupremeCourtgrantedcertiorariin Chrirtensenv. Harris Comfy. Moreover,it does
    not considerwhethera stateagencymay requireemployeesto exhaustcompensatmyleavebeforereceivingweekly
    incomebenefitsunder the workers’compensationprovisions.
    Ms. Karen F. Hale - Page 5                        (JC-0188)
    if using the compensatory time “does not unduly disrupt the operations of the public agency.” 29
    U.S.C. 5 207(o)(5) (1994). When a state employee is already on leave because of a work-related
    illness or injury, it is difficult to see how his or her use of FLSA compensatory leave will unduly
    disrupt the operations of the agency.
    No statute authorizes state agencies to prohibit the use of state or FLSA compensatory leave
    while drawing workers’ compensation income benefits. Under Texas law, a state agency or political
    subdivision may not offset workers’ compensation against other benefits or forms of compensation
    unless there is express statutory authority to do so. See El Paso County v. Jeffes, 
    699 S.W.2d 375
    ,
    377 (Tex. App.-El Paso 1985, no writ); City of Corpus Christi Y. Herschbach, 
    536 S.W.2d 653
    (Tex.
    Civ. App.Corpus      Christi 1976, writ refd n.r.e.); Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. Nos. JC-0040 (1999) at 2;
    JM-915 (1988) at 4-7; H-701 (1975) at 2. In Attorney General Opinion H-701, this office concluded
    that an injured employee who was receiving workers’ compensation benefits could receive pay for
    compensatory     time and vacation at the same time. “There is no statutory requirement that
    workmen’s compensation benefits be offset against payments for compensatory time and vacation,
    and therefore no such offset is permitted.” Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. H-701 (1975) at 2.
    State law in fact requires the employing agency to “accommodate to the extent practicable
    an employee’s request to use accrued compensatory time.” TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 659.023
    (Vernon Supp. 2000). Ifcompensatory time is earned by working on a state or national holiday, the
    “state employee must give reasonable notice of the employee’s intention to use the compensatory
    time but is not required to say how the compensatory time will be used.” TEX. GOV’T CODEANN.
    5 662.007(b). Attorney General Opinion MW-414 (1981) stated that this language contemplates a
    shared responsibility between employee and supervisor on the use of compensatory time, so that “the
    employee is enabled to use his time when most convenient for him to do so, and, on the other hand,
    so that the work of the agency is not unduly disturbed by his absence.” Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No.
    MW-414 (1981) at 2. However, when the employee is already absent because of a work-related
    illness or injury, the agency cannot claim that he or she must defer using compensatory time to
    prevent disturbance of its work. Moreover, if the agency has no right to know why an employee
    wants to use compensatory time under this provision, we do not believe it may refuse the request
    because it disapproves of the reason for taking compensatory time-that         is, because the employee
    is on leave due to a work-related illness or injury. If a state employee’s compensatory time is subject
    to lapsing, section 659.022 ofthe Government Code requires the employer to approve an employee’s
    written request to use the time or provide the employee with an alternative date on which he or she
    may use the compensatory time. State agencies not only lack express authority to prohibit
    employees from using state or FLSA compensatory leave while drawing workers’ compensation
    income benefits, but they also are subject to statutes requiring them to cooperate with an employee’s
    request to use accrued compensatory time. We conclude that state agencies may not prohibit their
    employees from using compensatory leave while receiving weekly income benefits under the
    workers’ compensation law.
    Ms. Karen F. Hale - Page 6                      (X-0188)
    SUMMARY
    State agencies lack authority to require employees to exhaust
    compensatory leave accrued under state law or the federal Fair Labor
    Standards Act before receiving weekly income benefits under the
    workers’ compensation law. Nor may state agencies prohibit their
    employees from using compensatory leave during the time they are
    receiving weekly income benefits under the workers’ compensation
    law.
    Attorney General of Texas
    ANDY TAYLOR
    First Assistant Attorney General
    CLARK KENT ERVIN
    Deputy Attorney General - General Counsel
    ELIZABETH ROBINSON
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Susan L. Garrison
    Assistant Attorney General - Opinion Committee