Jan 29, 2007 11:47 AM
Official employee files shall be maintained under the following circumstances:
Effective September, 2002, supervisors may issue counseling memos. Counseling memos are not disciplinary. Counseling memos provide the opportunity for supervisors, in a non-disciplinary setting, to point out to employees areas of work that the supervisor believes need improvement. Counseling memos should include the supervisor’s proposals for how such improvement may be achieved. Any employee who receives a counseling memo may request from the supervisor either suggestions for how to improve or request the supervisor to model such improvement for the employee. Counseling memos are a vehicle for supportive improvement.
1. A counseling memo may only be written to an employee to make him/her aware of a rule, regulation, policy, procedure, practice or expectation. A counseling memo cannot include any disciplinary action or threat of disciplinary action.
a. “Counseling Memo” must appear at the top of the memo in bold print and capital letters.
b. At the conclusion of the memo the following must appear in bold print: “A counseling memo is not disciplinary in any manner and cannot be used in any action against an employee except to prove notice if the employee denies notice.” If the language required in a) and b) is not included in the memo, it must be added.
c. A counseling memo must be presented to an employee within one (1) month of the latest incident recounted in the memo. The memo may only reference similar prior incidents that occurred no more than four (4) months from the date of the latest incident.
2. Counseling memos may not be used in any action or evaluation involving an employee in the bargaining unit (“U” rating, per session job, etc.) except to establish that the employee who denies knowledge of a rule, regulation, policy, procedure, practice or expectation was given prior notice of it, or to impeach factual testimony.
a. Counseling memos may not be used in the rating of an employee in the bargaining unit.
b. Counseling memos may not be referred to in, or attached to, any other letter sent to an employee for their official school file.
3. Counseling memos may not be grieved. Any employee who receives a counseling memo shall have the right to answer within one (1) month of receipt of the counseling memo and the answer shall be attached to the file copy of the counseling memo.
4. All counseling memos will be permanently removed from employee’s official school files three (3) years after the latest incident referred to in the memo.
Regular substitute employees are to be given 10 school days’ notice of discharge, except in cases of emergency.
1. Regular substitutes and psychologists and social workers on probation, except as provided in subparagraph 2 below, shall be entitled to the review procedures before the Chancellor as prescribed in Section 4.3.2 of the by-laws of the Board of Education.
By-law 4.3.2 procedures for the review of a recommendation by a superintendent for discontinuance of probationary service shall be modified to provide for the following:
a. The 4.3.2 committee shall be a tripartite committee of professional educators, one selected by the employee, one by the Board and a third selected by the other two from a list agreed upon by the Board and the Union.
b. The committee will make an advisory recommendation to the community school board or the Chancellor for central programs within 20 days after the hearing.
c. The costs of the employee’s representative shall be paid by the employee. The costs of the Board’s representative shall be paid by the Board. The costs of the mutually selected member of the committee shall be shared by the Board and the employee.
2. Employees on probation who have completed at least three years of service on regular appointment shall be entitled, with respect to the discontinuance of their probationary service, to the same review procedures as are established for the tenured teaching staff under Section 3020-a of the Education Law.
3. Employees who receive doubtful or unsatisfactory ratings may appeal under Section 4.3.1 of the by-laws of the Board.
Any employee who is suspended pending hearing and determination of charges shall receive full compensation pending such determination and imposition of any penalty except as set forth in Article 15G5 and 15G6.
A rating of “Not Applicable (NA)” is to be used only in situations where a pedagogical employee is reassigned out of his/her regular assignment for disciplinary reasons. The “NA” rating will apply only for the period of reassignment, cannot be used in any proceeding as evidence of wrongdoing and will not otherwise affect any other rights afforded in the Agreement where ratings are an issue.
Tenured pedagogues facing disciplinary charges filed, or in the case of Section 1, “Time and Attendance”, discipline pursuant to that Section, will be subject to Section 3020-a as modified by paragraphs 1 to 10 below.
If the Board seeks to discipline a tenured pedagogue regarding absences and/or lateness but seeks a penalty short of termination, the following expedited procedure will apply:
The Board will notify the employee that it intends to bring disciplinary action against the employee pursuant to this section. The Board will include in this notice the employee’s attendance record and any other documentation it intends to introduce at the hearing and a statement that pursuant to this section the arbitrator may award any penalty, or take other action, short of termination.
Within 15 calendar days following this notice, the employee must notify the Board in writing of the nature of his\her defense and submit any documentation s\he intends to submit into evidence as well as a medical release for any medical documents related to such defense.
If either party believes that it requires additional documents, it may request a telephonic conference with the arbitrator.
The expedited hearing will occur within one month of the Board’s notification to the employee mentioned above. The hearing will be informal and the normal rules of trial procedure and evidence shall not apply. The arbitrator will issue an award and short decision within 15 calendar days of the hearing. The arbitrator’s award will be final and binding on all parties. The award may be introduced in a 3020-a hearing and any findings shall be binding on the 3020-a arbitrator.
One arbitrator, agreed upon between the parties, will hear all absence and lateness cases hereunder. The parties may expand the number of arbitrators if necessary. The arbitrator will hear 4 cases per hearing date on a staggered schedule, but in no situation will one case take more than ½ a day. The parties may expand the number of cases heard in a day if they deem it practical.
As discussed and agreed upon, all parties would be served better by the implementation of a permanent arbitration panel. The panel members must be agreeable to both sides. However, if the parties cannot agree to a full complement of 20 panel members, additional impartial arbitrators shall be selected by the parties in accordance with the American Arbitration Association (AAA) procedures (strike and rank method) from list(s) provided by the AAA until the desired number (20) is reached to establish such permanent panel.
Panel members shall serve for a maximum of a one-year term. At the expiration of such term, the parties must agree to have arbitrators continue to serve on the panel, and if not replacement members will be selected by the method outlined above. Removal prior to the end of the one-year term must be for good and sufficient cause upon mutual agreement of the parties.
Any arbitrator who agrees to serve on the rotational panel must agree to the following terms:
a. Each arbitrator selected to serve on this rotational panel must agree to provide five (5) consecutive hearing dates per month for the months of September through June and 2 hearing dates for the months of July and August. Consecutive days may be construed to mean five (5) dates within two (2) weeks unless otherwise agreed.
b. Arbitrators must provide three (3) dates, within ten (10) to fifteen (15) calendar days from the date a case was assigned to him or her, for a pre- hearing conference. One of the dates shall be at 9:00 a.m. Advocates must accept one (1) of the three (3) dates offered or it will be assumed that the date or dates offered at 9:00 a.m. is (or are) acceptable. Said dates must be in compliance with Education Law Section 3020-a (within 10 to 15 days from the date selected to serve).
c. At the pre-hearing conference, arbitrators must provide and parties must accept five (5) consecutive hearing dates within the statutory timeframe as delineated in Education Law Section 3020-a. Consecutive days may be construed to mean five (5) dates within two (2) weeks unless mutually agreed.
d. The parties are committed to having these cases heard in an expeditious manner. For this reason, absent extraordinary circumstances, arbitrators are not to adjourn hearing dates. It should be noted that normally attorney or party scheduling conflicts are not extraordinary circumstances.
e. In all cases, as delineated in Education Law Section 3020-a the final hearing shall be completed no later than 60 days from the pre-hearing conference and the written decision must be rendered within 30 days from the final hearing date.
f. There is a presumption that charges against the same employee will be consolidated unless the arbitrator finds that to do so would deny a fair hearing. Additionally, in routine matters, any motions must be made and responded to orally. Thereafter, a decision shall be rendered on the issue the same date the motion was made. Should the arbitrator find that written motion practice is necessary, either party reserves the right to respond orally but, in no case, shall motion practice take place outside the scope of the timelines as outlined in Education Law, Section 3020-a.
Failure to abide by these rules shall be “good and sufficient” grounds for removal of an arbitrator.
Prior to the pre-hearing conference, the Board shall determine whether the nature of the case would permit offering Respondent expedited arbitration rather than regular arbitration of the case. If the Respondent accepts the offer of expedited arbitration, the hearing shall proceed in accordance with the expedited procedure set forth below and the Board may not seek a penalty to exceed six (6) months or the equivalent monetary penalty. Should the Respondent reject the offer of expedited arbitration, the case shall proceed in accordance with the regular arbitration proceeding and the board may seek any penalty including termination.
Where the offer of expedited arbitration was rejected, the arbitrator (or the arbitration panel) shall not be informed of the offer of expedited arbitration nor that the offer was rejected.
Cases heard under the expedited arbitration procedure shall be completed in three (3) consecutive days. Each advocate shall be provided equal time to present his or her respective case. Cross-examination usually will not go beyond the scope or duration of the direct examination.
During the course of the hearings, should the evidence reveal more serious misconduct than originally charged, the arbitrator, upon his or her initiative, or upon the Board’s motion, is empowered for good cause to end the expedited proceeding and order a new, regular arbitration proceeding before a different arbitrator. At the regular arbitration, the Board may seek any penalty including termination. Upon a showing of unavailability during the regular arbitration, the prior record of a completed witness who testified in the expedited arbitration shall be admissible.
Where the Board conducts an investigation of an employee and the employee has been reassigned to administrative duties pending the outcome of such investigation, the parties agree that the employee will be restored to service no later than 6 months from the date of his or her removal unless 3020-a charges have been preferred against the employee. Should the employee be restored to service, this event does not preclude the Board from subsequently preferring 3020-a charges against the employee. If charges are preferred, the employee shall remain reassigned, at the Board’s discretion, pending the outcome of the disciplinary process. This requirement to restore an employee to service after 6 months does not include investigations conducted by the Special Commissioner of Investigation or investigations that are related to criminal prosecutions.
The parties agree that certain types of alleged misconduct are so serious that the employee should be suspended without pay pending the outcome of the disciplinary process. Serious misconduct shall be defined as actions that would constitute:
a. the felony sale, possession, or use of marijuana, a controlled substance, or a precursor of a controlled substance or drug paraphernalia as defined in Article 220 or 221 of the Penal Law, or
b. any crime involving physical abuse of a minor or student (Crimes involving sexual abuse of a minor or student are addressed in paragraph 6 below.), or
c. any felony committed either on school property or while in the performance of duties, or
d. any felony involving firearms as defined in Article 265 of the Penal Law.
If an employee is accused of committing serious misconduct, the employee shall be removed from payroll for a term not to exceed two (2) months after a finding by the “probable cause arbitrator” that there is probable cause to believe that the actions alleged were committed by the employee and that they constitute “serious misconduct” as defined above. Probable cause exists when evidence or information which appears reliable discloses facts or circumstances making it likely that such conduct occurred and that such person committed the conduct. To establish probable cause, the investigator assigned to the matter must be present and testify under oath before the arbitrator. The Board may also be required to produce signed statements from the victim or witnesses, if any. Thereafter, the respondent shall have an opportunity to respond orally to the offer of proof. The arbitrator may ask relevant questions or may make further inquiry at the request of Respondent. The hearing shall not require testimony of witnesses nor shall cross-examination be permitted.
Said probable cause hearing usually shall not exceed one half of a hearing day.
One arbitrator, agreed to by both parties, shall be assigned to hear all probable cause matters for a period of one year. If the parties cannot agree upon one arbitrator, each party shall select one arbitrator who together will select the probable cause arbitrator.
Should the Board meet its burden of establishing probable cause of serious misconduct, the employee shall remain suspended without pay during the pendency of the disciplinary action, but in no event shall such period exceed two months except as set forth herein.
The parties expect that these cases shall be completed within two (2) months. However, where it is not possible to complete the hearing within the two (2) month period despite the best efforts of all parties, and where the arbitrator believes that the evidence already presented tends to support the charges of serious misconduct, the arbitrator may extend the period of suspension without pay for up to thirty (30) days in order to complete the proceedings.
If the Respondent requests not to have the case proceed for a period of thirty (30) days or more and that request is granted, during the period of this adjournment, the Respondent shall remain in non-paid status. As noted above, however, the parties are committed to having these cases heard in an expeditious manner. For this reason, absent extraordinary circumstances, arbitrators are not to adjourn hearing dates.
While suspended without pay pending the arbitration hearing on serious misconduct charges, the Respondent may continue his or her existing health coverage, except that no event shall the Respondent be entitled to continue his or her existing health coverage for more than six (6) months while on non-paid status except at the absolute discretion of the Chancellor. In the event that the Respondent is exonerated of all serious misconduct charges, the employee shall be restored to his or her position and be entitled to receive back pay and be made whole for the amount of time he/she remained off payroll. In the event that the arbitrator finds the employee guilty of the serious misconduct and imposes a penalty less than termination, the arbitrator shall decide whether and to what extent a reinstated employee shall be entitled to receive any back pay for the time the employee was suspended without pay.
The parties agree that these types of cases shall receive the highest priority, and, upon the Board’s request, hearings may be held on such matters during any days previously committed by a rotational panel to other employees, as set forth above. In other words, hearings for serious misconduct take precedence over other disciplinary matters, and the Board may require adjourning other cases previously scheduled before the assigned arbitrator during that time frame in order for that arbitrator to hear serious misconduct cases within the two-month time frame.
A tenured pedagogue who has been charged under the criminal law or under §3020-a of the New York State Education Law with an act or acts constituting sexual misconduct (defined below) shall be suspended without pay upon a finding by a hearing officer of probable cause that sexual misconduct was committed.
A rebuttable presumption of probable cause shall exist where the Special Commissioner of Investigations (“SCI”) substantiates allegations of sexual misconduct, or a tenured pedagogue has been charged with criminal conduct based on act(s) of sexual misconduct.
A report from the Chancellor’s Office of Special Investigations (“OSI”) substantiating allegations of sexual misconduct is relevant evidence of probable cause but does not create a rebuttable presumption of probable cause.
In §3020-a proceedings, a mandatory penalty of discharge shall apply to any tenured pedagogue a) found by a hearing officer to have engaged in sexual misconduct, or b) who has pleaded guilty to or been found guilty of criminal charges for such conduct.
The 3020-a hearing should be completed within two months, but the suspension without pay shall be extended one additional month if the hearing has not been completed, unless the Board has received an adjournment or otherwise delayed the proceeding. The suspension without pay shall also be extended until a criminal action is resolved and any 3020-a proceeding is also completed.
If the 3020-a hearing results in a dismissal of the charges or if the criminal proceeding ends in an acquittal or dismissal (and the Board has decided not to prefer charges), the pedagogue shall be entitled to back pay with interest for the entire period of the suspension without pay.
For purposes of this section, sexual misconduct shall include the following conduct involving a student or a minor who is not a student: sexual touching, serious or repeated verbal abuse (as defined in Chancellor’s Regulations) of a sexual nature, action that could reasonably be interpreted as soliciting a sexual relationship, possession or use of illegal child pornography, and/or actions that would constitute criminal conduct under Article 130 of the Penal Law against a student or minor who is not a student.
A letter of agreement dated October 2, 2005 regarding sexual misconduct is attached as Appendix D.
Tenured pedagogues who have been convicted of, or who have pled guilty to, any felony not addressed in paragraph 5, above shall be suspended without pay pending the final outcome of the 3020-a disciplinary proceeding. The 3020-a hearing should be completed within two months, but the suspension without pay shall be extended one additional month if the hearing has not been completed, unless the Board has received an adjournment or otherwise delayed the case.
To effectuate the purpose of the statute, the parties agree that Education Law Section 3020-a authorizes the following in advance of the hearing:
Both sides will exchange witness lists, witness statements, and physical evidence (e.g., photographs) at least before the presentation of their direct case and earlier upon motion to the arbitrator.
The Respondent shall receive copies of investigatory statements, notes, other exculpatory evidence, and relevant student records after and subject to in camera review.
The Board shall receive evidence and documents from the respondent upon a showing during the hearing that it is relevant.
Additionally, if the case has stemmed from an investigation conducted by the Special Commissioner of Investigation (SCI), the Board will provide the entire SCI file to Respondent, including exculpatory evidence, during the discovery phase of the 3020-a hearing unless such information is privileged. Failure to do so shall form the basis of such evidence being precluded from introduction in the 3020-a proceedings. This provision remains subject to the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
The parties agree that in the spirit of progressive discipline, rather than necessarily charge an employee with incompetence, an employee, who receives an unsatisfactory rating for the first time, may be offered the opportunity to enroll in the Peer Intervention Program (PIP) for a term of one year. Refusal to enter the PIP program is admissible in any future disciplinary proceedings. The parties further agree that during the first school term of the intervention, no formal observations will be made. During the second school term, although the employee will still be in the PIP, the administration is free to conduct observations and to rate the employee accordingly. Since the end-of-year rating will be based on these observations, a minimum of two (2) observations shall be conducted during the second school term. PIP may not be invoked by the employee once the disciplinary process has commenced.
Each Board attorney will be paired with a Union attorney for four (4) consecutive cases. Should one case settle, another case between the same attorneys shall be substituted for the case settled in an effort to utilize the dates set by the parties with the arbitrator
Knowingly false accusations of misconduct against employees will not be tolerated.
If an accusation of sexual misconduct or physical abuse against an employee is found by the Board or Special Commissioner of Investigation to have been knowingly false when made, the Board will take the following actions to restore the falsely accused employee’s reputation: removing all references to the charges from the employee’s personnel file(s) and adding evidence of the unfounded nature of the charge to any Board files that may have to be maintained to satisfy other legal requirements, if any; and restoring any back pay owed with interest and, at the employee’s request, confirming to any regulatory agency the finding that the employee was falsely accused. In addition, where the knowingly false accusation was made by a student of the employee, absent compelling and extraordinary circumstances the student will be permanently reassigned from the employee’s class.
The Board and the Union recognize that instructional services should be delivered by a highly qualified and motivated staff, accorded the respect and professional treatment to which they are entitled.
Towards that end the Board and the Union have agreed to provide resources and to provide peer assistance on a voluntary confidential basis to staff who have completed probation and who believe that their competence will benefit from that assistance in the manner provided below.
The report of the immediate supervisor requesting examination of an employee pursuant to Education Law Section 2568 shall be made in duplicate. A copy of the report shall be forwarded to the employee.
In order to provide for an expeditious handling of injury in the line of duty claims, the following is provided:
a. Within five school days of a claim of injury in the line of duty requiring an employee to be absent, the superintendent shall make a determination as to whether the accident occurred in the line of duty.
b. Where the employee is in a non-pay status pending a determination by the Medical Bureau of the duration of absence attributable to injury in the line of duty, the Medical Bureau will make its determination within ten days of the employee’s submitting himself for the required physical examination.
a. The report of the Medical Bureau on an employee who was called for medical evaluation shall, upon written request of the employee, be sent to the employee’s physician within 25 days after the evaluation.
b. Upon the employee’s request to the Medical Bureau, his/her physician shall have the right to examine his/her medical file.
c. A regular employee shall have the right to an independent evaluation by a medical arbitrator selected from rotating panels of doctors to be selected by mutual agreement of the Board and the Union if the finding of the Medical Bureau to the Chancellor has resulted in:
(1) Placement of the employee on a leave of absence without pay for more than one month; or
(2) Termination of the employee’s services; or
(3) A recommendation for disability retirement; or
(4) A denial of a leave with or without pay for more than one month.
A request for an independent evaluation of the finding of the Medical Bureau shall be submitted in writing by the employee to the Division of Human Resources within 10 school days of receipt of notice from the Division of Human Resources that he/she has been placed on leave of absence without pay for more than one month, or that his/her services have been terminated, or that he/she has been recommended for disability retirement, or that he/she has been denied a leave with or without pay for more than one month. The Board and the Union may agree on a case by case basis to permit, in special circumstances, an independent medical evaluation to employees who do not otherwise qualify for one under this Agreement.
The medical arbitrator shall examine the employee, and consult with the employee’s physician and the Board’s physician. The arbitrator’s authority shall be limited to determining the medical aspects of the employee’s claim. The arbitrator’s decision shall be rendered within 10 days after he/she has completed the evaluation of the employee, and if made within his/her authority under this agreement shall be accepted as final and binding by the Board and the employee.
The fee of the medical arbitrator shall be shared equally by the Board and the employee.
* The parties disagree as to the applicability of Section 10 of the October 2005 MOA to this Article 15C3.