Title: The Economic Crisis: Furloughs, Layoffs
1The Economic Crisis Furloughs, Layoffs
Demotions of Professional Non-Professional
Employees
- Presented by
- FOX ROTHSCHILD LLP
- Mark W. Fitzgerald, Esquire
2Recent developments
- This past February, the Pennsylvania House
Introduced HB 855 which is intended to relax the
generally stringent process in Furloughing
employees for economic reasons. - The Bill in its current form has been pulled.
3HB 855
- Seeks to add economic furloughs to the reasons
articulated in Section 1124 of the School Code - Significantly modify the process of suspending
and/or demoting based on seniority only. - Reduce the Due Process requirements when
suspending or furloughing staff
4PSBA Testimony
- The position of PSBA, which is identical to that
of PASBO on this subject is available. - The bill in its current form is not likely. We
are anticipating approval of allowing District to
furlough for economic reasons. Seniority will
likely be the challenge.
5Status of Current Legislation
- In all likelihood, the removal of the house and
senate bill at this juncture will set up a
compromised piece of legislation where Districts
will obtain mandate relief in the form of
economic furloughs but still be required to
address seniority provisions under the School
Code.
6In the meantime.
- We are confronted with the current legal
restrictions and an economic/funding crisis. - What are our options when furloughing and/or
demoting? - What legal hurdles are present?
7The Furlough and Demotion Process
- A step by step approach to ensure legal compliance
8The First Step Who are the Employees?
- The first step in dealing with such an issue is
to identify the classification of the employee. - If the employee is a non-professional employee,
the next level of inquiry is whether there is
anything in an applicable collective bargaining
agreement or board policy that determines the
manner upon which an employee would be furloughed
and/or demoted.
9The First Step Who are the Employees?
- In the absence of a collective bargaining
agreement or a board policy, generally, a
non-professional employees position can be
eliminated simply by a board motion eliminating
the position and establishing an effective date
of the elimination of the position.
10More Complications
- If there is a unionized employee (whether
professional or non-professional) and that
employee is furloughed or demoted and the work
that that employee performed goes to a
non-bargaining unit employee or entity,
subcontracting concerns arise. Subcontracting is
extremely difficult under the current state of
Pennsylvania law.
11More ComplicationsWhen Furloughing
Non-Professional Staff
- Seniority lists for non-professional employees
are notoriously outdated and incomplete. - More problematic is defining the class of
employees within a non-professional bargaining
unit. - We do not want a custodian bumping an
instructional aide!
12Demotions of Professional Employees
- Section 1151 of the School Code
13Section 1151 Demotions
- There shall be no demotion of any professional
employee either in salary or in type of position
without the consent of the employee, or, if such
consent is not received, then such demotion shall
be subject to the right to a hearing before the
board of school directors and an appeal in the
same manner provided in the case of the dismissal
of a professional employee.
14Section 1151 Demotions
- Demotions are considered a removal from one
position and an appointment to a lower position
it is a reduction in type of position as compared
with other professional employees having the same
status. Filoon v. Middle Bucks Area Vocational
Technical School, 634 A.2d 726 (1993).
15Power of Demotions
- Demotions can be one of the most powerful tools
available with respect to professional employees.
Courts generally do not interfere with the
rationale of a school board in demoting a
professional employee.
16Section 1151 Grounds for Demotions
- The courts have held that any rational reason is
sufficient to support a demotion and that a
demotion will be overturned only if it is shown
that the demotion was arbitrary or capricious.
17Power of Demotions
- Further, demotions can be for budgetary or
financial reasons, while furloughs of
professional employees cannot. In other words, an
economic justification for demoting an employee
is not arbitrary or capricious.
18Demotion Examples
- Principal or vice principal reassigned as
teacher. - Supervisor reassigned as teacher.
- Autonomous administrator placed under the
supervision of another administrator. - Principal of an elementary school reassigned to a
newly created position Coordinator of Elementary
Programs. - Classroom teacher to an Itinerant Title I teacher
who functioned mainly as an aide.
19Reasons for DemotionsUpheld by the Courts
- School district reorganization
- Enrollment decline
- Abolition of position
- Cost savings/budget
- Job performance
- Refusal of employee to follow directions
- Employee not certified
20Section 1151 Demotions
- The demotion provisions of the School Code are
applicable to professional employees only. - Where a professional employee performs services
for the school district that are not professional
in character, the employee is not protected by
Section 1151 of the School Code.
21Demotion Procedures
- Procedural requirements of the Code must be
strictly adhered to. - Employee is entitled to a notice of demotion and
right to a hearing if not providing consent. - Section 1151 requires a hearing if the employee
does not consent to the demotion. - Only the school board, and not the
administration, can impose a demotion, either
after the hearing or upon consent from the
employee.
22Demotion Procedures
- As the result of Mifflinburg, professional
employees would likely have the right to grieve
the demotion under their Collective Bargaining
Agreement instead of a hearing before the school
board. - While employees may find arbitrators to be a
more sympathetic fact-finder, an actual
arbitration may not occur until months after the
demotion became effective.
23Demotion Procedures Important Question
- Does Seniority play into demotions?
- Is it a pure or realignment demotion?
- What are the reasons for the demotion?
24Demotion Issues
- Employees who are demoted may be eligible for
Unemployment Compensation Benefits.
25Suspending a Professional Employee in Pennsylvania
- The Current laws of Furloughing
26Furlough of Professional Employees
- Considerations under Section 1124 and 1125.1 of
the School Code
27Statutory Grounds for Suspension of Professional
Employees Under the School Code
- Section 1124 states
- Any board of school directors may suspend the
necessary number of professional employees, for
any cause hereinafter enumerated - (1) Substantial decrease in pupil enrollment in
the school district
28Statutory Grounds for Suspension of Professional
Employees Under the School Code
- (2) Curtailment or alteration of the educational
program on recommendation of the Superintendent,
concurred in by the Board of School Directors,
approved by the Department of Education, as a
result of substantial decline in class or course
enrollment or to conform with standards of
organization or educational activities required
by law or recommended by the Department of
Education.
29Statutory Grounds for Suspension of Professional
Employees Under the School Code
- (3) Consolidation of schools, whether within a
single district, through a merger of districts,
or as a result of joint board agreements, when
such consolidation makes it unnecessary to retain
the full staff of professional employees.
30Statutory Grounds for Suspensionof Professional
Employees Underthe School Code
- (4) When new school districts are established as
the result of reorganization of school districts
pursuant to Article II., subdivision (i) of the
Act, and when such reorganization makes it
unnecessary to retain full staff of professional
employees.
31Statutory Grounds for Suspension of Professional
Employees Under the School Code
- The four (4) grounds previously mentioned are the
only grounds upon which a school district may
furlough a professional employee. Attempts to
furlough professional employees beyond those
grounds will not be unsuccessful.
32Furlough for Budgetary Reasons?
- Unfortunately no, if that is your only
justification. - In Warwick Board of School Directors vs. Theros,
430 A.2d 268 (1981), in overturning the Board
decision to furlough a professional employee, the
Court noted the school district eliminated a
non-mandated supervisory positions to reduce
budgetary deficits. None of the enumerated
reasons from Section 1124 were listed in
conjunction with the need to reduce fiscal
deficits.
33Furlough for Budgetary Reasons?
- Although school districts may not suspend
professional employees for reasons not enumerated
in Section 1124, where the reasons do exist,
suspensions are proper even if motivated by
financial considerations.
34Substantial Decrease in Pupil Enrollment
Section 1124(1)
- Most suspensions of school district employees,
until recently, were based on a substantial
decrease in pupil enrollment. - Courts have allowed school districts to determine
what constitutes substantial decrease in
enrollment. - No precise definition of substantial decrease
exists under the School Code or through case law.
35Substantial Decrease in Pupil Enrollment
Section 1124(1)
- In Phillippi v. School District of Springfield
Twp., 367 A.2d 1133 (1977), the Commonwealth
Court said school boards must exercise sound
discretion and board action will not be disturbed
absent a showing that discretion was abused, or
that the action was arbitrary, based on a
misconception of law or ignorance of facts.
36Substantial Decrease in Pupil Enrollment
Section 1124(1)
- Under the Phillippi standard, the following has
been deemed a substantial decrease by the Courts - 114 students over 10 years
- 486 students over 5 years
- 661 students over 6 years
- 250 students over 3 years
- 30 students in one department over 6 years
37Substantial Decrease in Pupil Enrollment
Section 1124(1)
- In Colonial Education Assn v. Colonial School
District, 645 A.2d 336 (1995), the court
described two methods in which a substantial
decrease can be proven - Evidence of a general, cumulative decline over a
reasonable time. - Evidence of a decrease from one year to the next
that is so prominent as to not require the other
years as part of the analysis.
38Substantial Decrease in Pupil Enrollment
Section 1124(1)
- Caution
- In Colonial Education Assn v. Colonial School
District, the court held an 18 year look back
period was too long, absent justification for
such a long period of time.
39Substantial Decrease in Pupil Enrollment
Section 1124(1)
- While most cases are based on actual decreases of
enrollment, school districts may also be able to
consider projections of future pupil enrollment
in order to justify an 1124(1) reason for
furlough. - Relying exclusively on projected enrollment may
be problematic, however, in order to be
successful under this prong of 1124.
40Curtailment or Alteration of Educational
ProgrammingSection 1124(2)
- This is the prong we have seen most often over
the last several years as enrollment has
generally increased making Section 1124(1) less
applicable. - If a school district proceeds to furlough a
professional employee under Section 1124(2),
several criteria must be met in order to
effectuate the furlough. - Probably the most confusing of the Section 1124
options.
41Curtailment or Alteration of Educational
ProgrammingSection 1124(2)
- Section 1124(2) requires the satisfaction of the
following criteria - 1. Recommendation of curtailment or alteration
by District Superintendent. - 2. Concurrence in such action by the Board.
- 3. Approval of such action by the Department of
Education. - 4. Curtailment or alteration of educational
programming as a result of (1) substantial
decline in class or course enrollment or (2) to
conform with standards of organization or
educational activities required by law or
recommended by PDE.
42Curtailment or Alteration of Educational
ProgrammingSection 1124(2)
- If one of the four conditions is not satisfied, a
suspension will not be permitted. Shegelski v.
Mid Valley School District, 677 A.2d 367 (1996).
43Curtailment or Alteration of Educational
ProgrammingSection 1124(2)
- Approval of the Secretary of Education as part of
the process. - No statutory provisions govern the substance or
the procedure by which PDE approves a suspension
under Section 1124(2). - PDE has issued a Basic Education Circular (BEC
1124) on the topic.
44BEC 1124 4 Categories
- Based on the BEC, a curtailment/alteration of
programming will be approved by the Department
under the following 4 categories - 1. Substantial decline in enrollment in a class
or course. - 2. Conform with standards of
organization. - 3. Required by law.
- 4. Recommendations from PDE.
45BEC 1124
- PDE will review requests for curtailment or
alteration of the educational program using the
following criteria - All requests must include board action as
recorded in board minutes as evidence of approval
of the school districts board of school
directors. - Substantial Decline in enrollment (category 1)
- - The Department will approve a request to
curtail or alter an educational program if the
district establishes that such a request is the
result of substantial decline in class or course
enrollment. To establish such a standard, the
school district must submit data evidencing the
following
46BEC 1124 (Category 1)
- a. that enrollment in the class or course has
decreased at least 20 from the school year five
years prior or - b. that enrollment for the class or course is
less than ten students.
47BEC 1124 (Category 1)
- Caution Enrollment is on a per class or per
course basis under this BEC and Section 1124(2)
where a suspension is necessitated by lower
enrollment in a particular program. - Whereas, under Section 1124(1) the analysis was
generally decrease of pupil enrollment across the
District that justified a suspension.
48BEC on 1124(2) (Category 1)
- Caution II
- School boards may not avoid the requirements of
Section 1124(2) for approval by PDE by
characterizing a suspension as necessitated by
declining pupil enrollment when it was actually
precipitated by curriculum reorganization/
decrease in a specific program.
49BEC 1124 (Category 2)
- Category 2
- The Department will approve a school districts
request to curtail or alter an educational
program if it can establish the curtailment or
alteration is necessary to conform with standards
of organization. To establish - The District must submit certified information
from the superintendent demonstrating the
requested curtailment or alteration will effect a
change in the organization or curriculum that
results in a more effective educational program.
50BEC 1124(Categories 3 and 4)
- Categories 3 and 4
- PDE will also approve a curtailment and
alteration of programming if such a request is
either - (a) based on activities recommended by PDE
- (b) required by law
- -In both circumstances, a district
superintendent must identify and certify the
recommendation from PDE or law that drives the
decision to curtail or alter programs.
51BEC 1124
- Nothing precludes a school district from
requesting a curtailment/alteration of programs
based on all 4 categories if applicable. In such
an instance, the district will need to provide
evidence to PDE to justify each category, however.
52Application of Section 1124 for Temporary
Professional Employees
- The reasons that justify furlough of professional
employees appear to be applicable to temporary
professional employees as well. - Though the case law is a bit messy
- Generally, what is a furlough of a tenured
employee, is a contractual non-renewal of a TPE
53Application of Section 1124 for Temporary
Professional Employees
- A good case study and cautionary tale on the
likely applicability of Section 1124 of the Code
and TPEs can be found in the arbitration of the
North Penn School District and the North Penn
Education Association. (2010) (Buchheit)
54North Penn v. NPEA
- The Association grieved the non-renewal of three
TPEs even though the Association stipulated the
Board had justifiable reasons under the school
code - It was the Associations position, however that
regardless of the substantive justifications, the
Board failed to procedurally adhere to the Code.
( the Association cites Cigarski, a 1980
Commonwealth Court decision)
55North Penn v. NPEA
- The Board argued that the Code provisions
applicable to PEs is not applicable to TPEs.
(rely on the Phillipi holding which states
clearly the Code is not applicable to TPEs), thus
the procedural requirements did not apply as well
56North Penn v. NPEA
- Scott Buchheit, a seasoned arbitrator, agreed
with the Association. - Regardless of whether the Board has the reasons
or not, the procedural requirements of Section
1124 and the BEC
57You Have the Authority to Suspend, Now What?
- The grounds for suspension is half the battle.
The next question that must be asked is whether
the proper employee or employees have been
selected? - Section 1125.1 sets forth the following rules
pertaining to the selection of employees to be
suspended
58Section 1125.1 Persons to be Suspended
- (a) professional employees shall be suspended
under Section 1124 in inverse order of seniority
within the school entity of school employment.
Approved leaves of absences shall not constitute
a break in service for purposes of computing
seniority for suspension purposes. Seniority
shall continue to accrue during suspension.
59Section 1125.1 Persons to be Suspended
- (b) where there has been a consolidation of
schools, departments or programs, all
professional employees shall retain the seniority
rights they had prior to the reorganization or
consolidation.
60Section 1125.1 Persons to be Suspended
- (c) A school entity shall realign its
professional staff so as to insure that more
senior employees are provided with opportunity to
fill positions for which they are certificated
and which are being filled by less senior
employees.
61Section 1125.1 Persons to be Suspended
- (d)(1) no suspended professional employee shall
be prevented from engaging in another occupation
during suspension. - (d)(2) suspended or demoted employees shall be
reinstated on the basis of seniority within the
school entity. No new appointments shall be made
while there are suspended or demoted employees
available who are properly certified. - (d)(3) to be considered available, a suspended
employee must annually report in writing his
current address and his intent on accepting the
same or similar position offered.
62Section 1125.1 Persons to be Suspended
- Nothing in Section 1125.1 shall be construed to
supersede or preempt any provisions of a
collective bargaining agreement negotiated by a
school entity and the exclusive bargaining
representative of the employee in accordance with
the Public Employe Relations Act.
63Persons to be Suspended Some Considerations
Ongoing Disagreement
- Staff Realignment straight line versus
checkerboard realignment. Employer argument for
straight line versus employee argument for
checkerboard realignment. - Courts have been consistent in not requiring
checkerboard realignment. Godfrey v. Penns
Valley Area School District, 449 A.2d 765 (1982).
64Persons to be Suspended Some Considerations and
Ongoing Disagreement
- Overall, the issue of who is to be suspended
under Section 1125.1 is fact intensive.
Moreover, the rights and responsibilities of the
suspended under the Act leaves many question to
be answered, many of which have not been
completely addressed by the courts.
65Noteworthy
- School Boards can bargain the issue of Seniority
as it pertains to furloughs with professional
bargaining units. - Most do not have such provisions within their
contracts. - If the law does not change, possibly something to
consider.
66TPEs and applicability of Section 1125.1
- While Section 1124 is likely applicable in the
non-renewal of TPEs, Section 1125.1 is not. - In other words, seniority is not part of the
analysis when non-renewing a TPE.
67Employee Hearing Rights Under Sections 1124 and
1125.1
- Section 1125.1(f) states a decision to suspend
shall be considered an adjudication within the
meaning of the Local Agency Law. - Therefore, an affected employee has a right to a
hearing should they desire.
68Employee Hearing Rights under Sections 1124 and
1125.1
- An employee is entitled to reasonable notice of
the right to a hearing and the opportunity to be
heard. - A hearing is not mandated, however.
- Should a hearing actually take place, it would
look very similar to that of a employee dismissal
matter.
69Suggested Process in a nutshell
Curtailment/Alteration of Programming
- First, to the extent your district is considering
furloughs, your superintendent must be in the
process of justifying a curtailment of
programming as part of an overall board
resolution - It is suggested the Administration consult with
legal counsel on particular procedural
considerations
70Suggested Process in a nutshell
- Once a resolution is passed, which includes the
recommendations of the superintendent, submit
immediately the request to PDE - Earlier the better, PDE was very slow last year
in responding. - Once PDE has approved, identify the proper
individuals to furlough
71Suggested Process in a nutshell
- Notify the employee of the determination and
their individual right to a hearing. - The employee may chose an arbitration under the
Collective Bargaining Agreement instead of a
Local Agency Hearing before the Board
72Suggested Process in a nutshell
- Generally, pre-deprivation hearings are not
required under this process. - For demotions, pre-deprivation proceedings are
only required when demoting for reasons of
performance.
73Current Position of PDE
- From reports, PDE has liberalized the approval
process this year. - We have sought and received approval from PDE
this year on the curtailment of full day
kindergarten for economic reasons. - It is advisable to contact Steve Fisher at PDE to
discuss your curtailment proposal in advance of
board action in order to assure PDE will approve
the measure
74Contact Information
- Mark W. Fitzgerald, Esq.
- FOX ROTHSCHILD LLP
- 610-397-6500
- mfitzgerald_at_foxrothschild.com