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EMPLOYMENT LAW FOR SOCIAL SERVICES ATTORNEYS

EMPLOYMENT LAW FOR SOCIAL SERVICES ATTORNEYS. Fundamentals of Social Services Law November 16, 2004 Diane M. Juffras Institute of Government. Regular County Employees – appted by County Manager

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EMPLOYMENT LAW FOR SOCIAL SERVICES ATTORNEYS

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  1. EMPLOYMENT LAW FOR SOCIAL SERVICES ATTORNEYS Fundamentals of Social Services Law November 16, 2004 Diane M. Juffras Institute of Government

  2. Regular County Employees – appted by County Manager Sheriff, Register of Deeds “have the exclusive right to hire, discharge and supervise” employees in their offices Commissioners must appoint: Clerk County Attorney Tax Collector Deputy Tax Collector County Assessor Types of County Employees

  3. Regular County Employees – appted by County Manager Sheriff, Register of Deeds appt. own employees Commissioner appointees Competitive Service Employees Dept. of Social Services Health Dept. Mental Health Emergency Management All hired/fired by their directors Types of County Employees

  4. The Hiring and Firing of County Social Services Employees • G.S. 108A-12: County board of social services appoints county DSS director. Dismissal of director governed by SPA (Ch. 126). • G.S. 108A-14: County DSS director has exclusive authority to hire and fire county DSS employees -- SeeIn re Brunswick County, 81 N.C.App. 391 (1986) – but s/he must do so in accordance with the SPA [G.S. 126-5(a)(2)b.].

  5. Personnel Policies County Board of Commissioners has ultimate personnel policy authority • Create & abolish offices, positions, depts. • Determine pay schedules, benefits • May grant property rights in employment • Adopt personnel policies re: leave, holidays, drug-testing Managers and “independent” department head are responsible for administration of compensation programs and personnel rules.

  6. Drug testing is a SEARCH within the meaning of the 4th Amendment.

  7. Balancing Test: Nature and quality of intrusion on individual’s 4th Amendment privacy interests v. Importance of the government’s interest

  8. Discipline and Discharge under the State Personnel Act

  9. Performance Unsatisfactory Job Performance Grossly Inefficient Job Performance Unacceptable Personal Conduct The State Personnel Act: Discipline and Discharge for Just Cause Only

  10. Four Types of Disciplinary Actions • Written Warning • Suspension w/o Pay • Demotion • Dismissal

  11. Procedures: Written Warnings • Explicitly characterize as warning • Specific issues leading to warning • Dates, others involved, consequences of • poor performance/conduct to dept. • Specific improvements required • Time frame for improvements • Consequences of failure to improve • Cannot be appealed

  12. Suspending, Demoting, Dismissing an SPA Employee Requires a Pre-Disciplinary Conference !!! Follow 25 NCAC 1I.2300 to the letter!!!

  13. Four Exceptions to the Employment-at-Will Rule • Statutory Exceptions • First Amendment Exceptions • Public Policy Exception • Property Right Exception (the State Personnel Act)

  14. A Property Right in Employment An employee with a legitimate claim to continuing employment, because of • state statute (e.g., the State Personnel Act) • local ordinance has a “property right” that is protected by the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

  15. If a property right exists, so what? • Fourteenth Amendment guarantees that no state shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” • This means that: • employee gets “notice and an opportunity to be heard” BEFORE any adverse employment action, and • employee entitled to impartial review of any adverse employment action.

  16. Notice NOTICE OF PROPOSED ACTION • In writing • Setting forth specific acts and omissions that form the basis for proposed action • Include specific dates, times, locations • Evidence of employer

  17. PROPOSED TERMINATION FOR UNSATISFACTORY JOB PERFORMANCE • You failed to see the expected number of clients in a day. • You failed to complete your client notes in a timely manner. • You were insubordinate. • You have had excessive absences.

  18. Opportunity to Be Heard PRE-DISMISSAL “HEARING” • Opportunity for employee to respond to charges in notice • Determination of whether there are reasonable grounds to believe charges are true.

  19. Due Process Requirements IMPARTIAL REVIEW (Local Appeal Process) • Prior involvement does not disqualify official. • No disqualifying personal bias.

  20. The Appeals Process • Decision by County DSS Director • Follow agency/county grievance procedure • Exception for charges of discrimination • Appeal to Office of Administrative Hearings Recommended decision by ALJ • ALJ decision reviewed by State Personnel Commission • Must explain disagreement w/ ALJ w/ specificity • SPC decision advisory to County DSS Director • If claim is discrimination, SPC decision binding

  21. Final County DSS Director (or SPC discrimination) decision may be appealed to Superior Court  Ct of Appeals  NC Supreme Ct

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