Title: William Allan Kritsonis, School Law, Ch 4 Termination
1The Employment Relationship
- William Allan Kritsonis, PhD
2CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
- DUE PROCESS
- HOW MUCH PROCESS IS DUE?
3- What Is Due Process?
- An established course for judicial proceedings or
other governmental activities designed to
safeguard the legal rights of the individual. Due
process dictates that everyone is equal in the
eyes of the law, and it also states that the law
must be fair and clearly stated to prevent
arbitrary actions by the state. - Fifth Fourteenth Amendment
- Perry v. Sindermann (1972)
- Contractual employee has a property right in the
job during the term of the contract. Any effort
of the school to terminate the contract prior to
its stated date of expiration is a deprivation of
property. Thus, some amount of due process of
required. Whether the employee is a continuing
contract teacher with twenty years on the job or
a first-year probationary teacher, the
constitutional analysis and the constitutional
right to due process are the same.
4- How Much Process Is Due?
- As for the level of formality of due process in a
typical employee termination case, the essentials
are - Be advised of the cause or causes of the
termination in sufficient detail to fairly enable
him/her to show any error that may exist - Be advised of the names and the nature of the
testimony of witnessed against him/her - At a reasonable time after such advice, be given
a meaningful opportunity to be heard in his or
her own defense and - Be given an opportunity for a hearing before a
tribunal that both possesses some academic
expertise and has an apparent impartiality
5Types of Employment Arrangements
- At-Will Employment
- Non-Chapter 21 Contracts
- Probationary Contracts
- Term Contracts
- Continuing Contracts
- Third-Party Independent Contract Educators
6At-Will
- Simply means that either the employer or employee
is free to end the relationship at any time and
for almost any reason. The employee has no
contractual obligation to work for the employer
for a set period of time. In addition, the
employer does not guarantee the employee
continued employment for a set period of time as
well.
7Probationary
- Given to new employees who are usually first year
teachers who are fully certified. (Ch. 21 TEC) - Educator will serve a probationary period that is
basically the same in all school districts
throughout the state. After designated period,
educators will split into term or continuing
contract employees. - Probationary period can be as long as three
years, except for teachers coming to the district
after having been employed in public education
for five of the eight preceding years. The
teacher will be employed on a contract that
cannot exceed one year in length. Thus, in the
typical situation, the teacher will serve under
three consecutive one-year probationary
contracts. - Probationary teachers can resign without penalty
up to forty-five days before the first day of
instruction.
8Non- Chapter 21
- Certain employees are entitled to a written
contract under the Texas Education Code - According to 21.002 of the TEC, school
districts are required to employ each classroom
teacher, principal, librarian, nurse, or
counselor under a Ch. 21 contract, meaning a
probationary, a term, or a continuing contract.
9Term
- Determined by local school board
- Any non-probationary Ch. 21 contract for a fixed
term - Length of contract can be up to five school
years. - Key factor lays out a beginning and ending date
- Resign forty-five days prior to instruction
10Continuing
- Automatically rolls over from one year to the
next without the necessity of board action - No specific length of time
- Contract remains in effect until the teacher
resigns, retires, is terminated, or is returned
to probationary status
113rd party independent
- Private companies offered to provide teachers for
public school districts - Baby boom generation of teachers nearing
retirement (TRS) - Retire, begin drawing benefits, and then go to
work at a salary equivalent to or better than
what they had been making
12SELECTION OF STAFF Certification and the Role of
SBEC Nondiscrimination Laws The Hiring
Laws Criminal Records The Impact of
NCLB Restrictions on Employment
13State board for Educators Certification
- Power to adopt rules specify the various classes
for educators certification. - The rules for out state educators.
- The disciplinary procedures by which the
certification may be revoked.
- SBEC must appoint an advisory committee with
respect to each class of educators certification. - Rules adopted by SBEC and review by SBOE
- SBOE is limited by the provision of the SBEC.
- SBOE must vote and can only reject by two thirds
vote.
14SBEC Selection of Staff
- 14 members only eleven of them can vote.
- 3 NONVOTING MEMBERS
- TEA employee, Texas higher education
coordinating board member, dean of the college of
education - 4 public school teacher
- 2 public administrators
- 1 public school counselor
- 4 citizens
15NO Child Left Behind
- Requires that all teacher be hired on a high
qualified status. - 2005-2006 schools requirements for NCLB applied
to all school receiving NCLB fund. -
16Restrictions on Employment
- Employees under state law may not hold two
legally incompatible offices. - ex. Being a teacher and a trustee
- Hiring immediate family
- Requiring that employees live with the district
17Nondiscrimination Law
- Laws that prohibit discrimination based on race,
sex, religion, age, national origin, and
disability apply to all major employers,
including Texas public school districts. - First, law apply to all employees, regardless of
contractual status. - Second, the laws that prohibit discrimination
have implications for hiring process itself. - Third, sexual harassment
- Fourth, there is no law that requires school
districts either to advertise vacancies or to
post them internally.
18Hiring Process
- Provision 1
- School board and the Superintendent
- Provision 2
- Campus principal and central office
19Criminal Records
- SBEC now has the duty to obtain criminal history
record information on all holders of and
applicants for educator certification. - The school district are no longer required such
background check. - School districts will still do back ground checks
on noncertified employees and volunteers - When school district will do background checks on
contracts with another entity for transportation.
20ENDING THE RELATIONSHIP
- At-will Employees
- Non-chapter 21 Contracts
- Probationary Contracts
- Term Contracts
- Continuing contracts
- 3rd party independent contractors
- The independent hearing systems
- A few final thoughts on Good Clause
- Constructive Discharge
21AT-WILL EMPLOYEES
- Contract renewal/nonrenewal do not apply
- All federal and state mandates prohibiting
discrimination apply with equal force - Due process does not apply, no property interest
- Can at-will employees be terminated for no
reason at all? - Can be terminated for any legally permissible
reason - Can be terminated at anytime
- No constitutional requirement of predetermination
due process
22AT-WILL EMPLOYEES contd
- May file a grievance or lawsuit asserting
termination impermissibly motivated - If employee does seek legal recourse
- Must show something more than unfair treatment
- Burden on employee to show employers action
illegal
23NON-CHAPTER 21 CONTRACTS
- Termination determined by the school board
- Not subject to the independent hearing system or
statutory nonrenewal process - If contract contains a specific term, employee is
entitled to constitutional due process
24PROBATIONARY CONTRACTS
- Intent to make easy to terminate the relationship
between the teacher and school district - Board simply gives notice to teacher of its
decision to terminate employment - No specific reason is required
- Law does not require district to afford teacher a
hearing, although they could choose to do so - Boards decision is final and may not be appealed
25PROBATIONARY CONTRACTS contd
- Does not prevent teacher from filing suit
alleging a wrongful discharge - Contract can be non-renewed even with the
superintendents recommendation - Immediate termination rather than waiting
- District must provide teacher with formal due
process - Must demonstrate good reason for ending
relationship early
26PROBATIONARY CONTRACTS contd
- State law permits early termination, or
suspension without pay for the rest of the school
year - For good cause as determined by the board of
conduct for the profession as generally
recognized and applied in similarly situated
school districts in this state - Next process would be independent hearing system
- Full blown due process hearing
- Right too present evidence
- Cross examine witnesses
- Be represented by counsel
27TERM CONTRACTS
- School can take one of three actions
- Renew, non-renew, terminate
- Non renewal contract refers to decision of school
district to let term contract expire. - Multiyear term contract
- common practice is to extend the contract each
year - Decision to non-renew can be made only in the
final year of contract
28TERM CONTRACT contd
- Requirements
- Board must give notice of proposed renewal or
nonrenewal by the 45th day before the last day of
instruction in the school year - Board must consider the teachers evaluation
prior to any decision not to renew - Board must consider the most recent evaluations
before making a decision not to renew a teachers
contract if the evaluations are relevant to the
reason for the boards action
29TERM CONTRACTS contd
- Entitled to a closed hearing with board prior to
nonrenewal 15 days to request - Teacher may appeal to commissioner of education
- Superintendents nonrenewal contract
- Entitled to notice no later than the 30th day
before last day of contract - Reasonable notice of the reason for proposed
renewal - Cost of buyout if the payment exceeds one year
of his or her salary, TEA must deduct excess
amount for districts funding for the next school
year
30CONTINUING CONTRACTS
- No such thing as nonrenewal
- May be terminated anytime at any time for good
cause - Reduction in days served has been approved in
more recent cases
31THIRD-PARTY INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS
- School district never employed the teacher
- no contract and no legal requirements for ending
the relationship
32GOOD CAUSE
- Means that convincing evidence has been presented
to indicate the school district is justified in
breaking off it contractual commitment to the
teacher
33CONSTRUCTIVE DISCHARGE
- Employee resigns and then claims that the
resignation was not voluntary - Actions of the employer forced employee into an
involuntary resignation - Focus is twofold
- Were employees working conditions intolerable?
- Was there illegal conduct on the part of the
employer?
34CONSTRUCTIVE DISCHARGE contd
- If a case can be proven, employer is liable for
the illegal conduct leading to the discharge,
just as he/ she would be in the case of formal
discharge - Does not prevent him/her from filing a federal
lawsuit claiming the resignation was forced due
to intolerable conditions created by the employer
35William Allan Kritsonis, PhDProfessorPhD
Program in Educational LeadershipWhitlowe R.
Green College of EducationPrairie View AM
UniversityMember of the Texas AM University
SystemPrairie View, Texas 77446