2. Overview
Chapter V deals with personnel issues that arise
during employment relationships. These
disputes include:
I. Reassignments ,Compensation, & Texas
Teacher Appraisal History
II. Teacher Appraisal
III. Employment Benefits
IV. Wage/Hour Requirements,
Worker’s/Unemployment Compensation, &
Employee Grievances & Organizations
3. Reassignment: J.Hughes
Most Texas teacher and administrator contracts
contain a clause which states that the employee may
be assigned and reassigned at the discretion of the
superintendent.
Complaints concerning an illegal reassignment likely
will not receive a hearing at the Texas Education
Agency, unless the employee has suffered financially.
TEC 7.057 (a)(2) states, “The commissioner’s
jurisdiction is limited to cases involving parties
aggrieved by the school laws of this state or a
provision of a written employment contract between
the school district and a school district employee if a
violation causes or would cause monetary harm to the
employee.”
4. Reassignment: Cont.
Smith v. Nelson (2001): The court held that the
commissioner did not have the jurisdiction to hear the
appeal of a man who was reassigned from head
coach/athletic director to P.E. teacher. There was a
written contract involved, but the man’s salary
remained the same after the reassignment. He tried
to claim that his loss of status would make it harder for
him to find good coaching jobs in the future. The
court disagreed! Allegations of speculative future
losses are not enough to give the commissioner
jurisdiction over such a case.
5. Compensation Disputes:J.Hughes
Educators should be aware of the “penalty-free resignation date”
which varies form district to district and year to year. This is
important if an educator contemplates relocating. The educator
will not be locked into a contract at a school they no longer desire
to teach at if they execute decisions prior to this date. The date is
calculated to be no later than the forty-fifth day before the first
day of instruction of the following school year.
San Elizario Educators Association v. San Elizario I.S.D.: The San
Elizario school board set salaries on July,10th. However, the
teachers were locked into their contracts as of July 1 st. When the
new salary schedule actually lowered the salaries of some
teachers, they took matters to the commissioner. The
commissioner ruled the district was obligated to compensate the
teachers pursuant to the previous year’s salary schedule.
6. Compensation Disputes: Cont.
Can the district get money back from an employee if they
were overpaid?
School district tries to recoup sick leave overpayments
made the previous year.
(Benton v. Wilmer-Hutchins I.S.D.,1983)
The court held that the dispute over the previous year’s
overpayments was unrelated to and could not
generate deductions from teacher paychecks. The
current salaries were amounts lawfully due, reasoned
the court, and were not subject to the proposed
unilateral deductions by the district.
7. Texas Teacher Appraisal History:
J. Hughes
Prior to the passage of the Term Contract Nonrenewal Act (TCNA)
in 1981 there was no state law requiring any kind of teacher
evaluation in Texas.
The TCNA required that all contract teachers be evaluated in
writing at least once a year. All other decisions about evaluation,
including what instrument to use, were left to the local districts.
House Bill 72 in 1984 imposed the Texas Teacher Appraisal
System (TTAS) which tried to adopt a uniform system of teacher
evaluation in Texas.
TTAS was intended to be an instrument that measured the
difference between the average classroom teacher and the
instructional star.
Despite huge state investments in the development of TTAS, in
1993 the legislature dismantled the program and made
significant changes to the appraisal system.
8. Teacher Appraisal: A. Morrison
The current appraisal system is known as PDAS (Professional
Development and Appraisal System) and is based on observable,
job-related behaviors. It involves a single appraisal by a single
appraiser, assessing performance in eight domains which include:
1. Domain I: Active, successful student participation in the learning
process
2. Domain II: Learner-centered instruction
3. Domain III: Student Progress: Evaluation and Feedback
4. Domain IV: Management of discipline, instruction, time, and
materials
5. Domain V: Communication
6. Domain VI: Professional Development
7. Domain VII: Compliance with policies
8. Domain VIII: Academic improvements in student performance
9. Teacher Appraisal: PDAS (Cont.)
Although there are eight Domains on the PDAS, a single failure by the
teacher may impact several.
Miller v. Clyde I.S.D.,2003: In Clyde I.S.D. a teacher admitted that for
two months she had not been teaching phonics as required by the
district. Based on this information, the principal rated the teacher
“below expectations” in four domains. In her appeal to TEA, the teacher
argued that since the law requires each domain to be rated
“independently” it was improper for the principal to rely on a single
factor to reduce her rating in four domains. The commissioner did not
agree with this line of reasoning.
Rules adopted pursuant to PDAS require that a teacher be identified as
“a teacher in need of assistance” if the teacher is evaluated as
unsatisfactory in one or more domains.
If the teacher is so designated, the supervisor and teacher must develop
an intervention plan.
However, the teacher can be nonrenewed without all this taking place
Kinnaird v. Morgan I.S.D., 1999: In this case, the commissioner approved
the non-renewal of a teacher despite the fact that he was not first given
an intervention plan.
10. Teacher Appraisal: PDAS (Cont.)
PDAS is an annual affair, unless the district decides to
appraise some teachers less frequently and the
teacher agrees.
If a teacher’s appraisal reflects a rating of at least
“proficient” with no areas of deficiency, the teacher
can be appraised less than once a year, provided that
it is done at least every five years. The district must
have a written agreement with any such teacher.
Schools now are specifically authorized to send copies
of a teacher’s evaluation (along with any rebuttals) to
a district in which the teacher has applied for
employment.
Teacher appraisals are not accessible to the public.
TEC 21.355 : A document evaluating the performance
of a teacher or administrator is confidential.
11. Teacher Appraisal: PDAS (Cont.)
The confidentiality of a teacher evaluation goes
beyond the general public.
Att’y. Gen. Op. GA-0055, 2003: The attorney general
issued an opinion in 2003 stating that the SBEC (State
Board for Educator Certification), the governmental
entity with authority over teacher certification, has no
right of access to teacher evaluations.
The Texas Administrative Code specifies that the
PDAS is for classroom teachers only.
Fenter v. Quinlan I.S.D. (2002): The commissioner
concluded that a librarian is not a classroom teacher
and is not entitled to the PDAS process. If the district
chooses to evaluate librarians in some other manner,
it may do so.
12. Teacher Appraisal: PDAS (Cont.)
How are administrators evaluated?
For those administrators whose employment requires
educator certification, state law requires a process quite
similar to PDAS.
The local district is to use either its own locally developed
system or the commissioner’s recommended system.
The law specifically prohibits the use of school funds to pay
any administrator who has not been appraised within the
preceding fifteen months.
Principal Appraisals
Their appraisals include consideration of the performance
of the campus with regard to the academic excellence
indicators and campus objectives, which are a part of the
campus improvement plan (CIP).
13. Employment Benefits: Deonta Daniels
Planning and Preparation Period:
Exactly what benefits an employee is entitled to depends to a great extent on the actual
wording of the employment contract and the policies of the school district.
Each classroom teacher must have at least 450 minutes within each two-week period for
instructional preparation, parent-teacher conferences, evaluating student’s work (grading),
and planning.
TEC 22.003(a): During this planning and preparation period, the teacher may not be required
to participate in any other activity.
Duty-Free Lunch:
Classroom teachers and full-time librarians also are entitled to at least a 30 minute lunch
period free from all duties and responsibilities connected with instruction or supervision of
students, unless the district is faced with such dire situations as personnel shortage, extreme
economic conditions, or unavoidable or unforeseen circumstances.
TEC 21.405: In ay event a teacher may not be required to supervise students during the duty-
free lunch more than one time per week.
Teacher Retirement:
Government Code 822.001: Requires every employee of Texas public school districts to belong
to T.R.S. (Teacher Retirement System of Texas).
School districts are not required to participate in the federal Social Security system, and most
do not.
School districts also may provide various insurance programs for their employees paid for out
of local funds.
14. Employment Benefits: Cont.
Personal Leave:
TEC 22.003(a): The law specifically states that the local school board may
not restrict the purposes for which the leave may be used.
There is no limit on the accumulation of personal leave and it moves with
the employee from one district to another.
Unfortunately, accumulated sick leave cannot be converted into
personal leave and will still be governed by prior law (S.S.L.P.,1995),
which limited its use to sickness or death in the immediate family.
Health Insurance:
TEC 22.004: Requires each school district provides its employees health
insurance. The insurance plan must be comparable to the insurance
program the state offers its employees and cost may be shared by
employees and the district.
Under the state’s health insurance program, schools districts must
certify annually to the executive director of the Employees Retirement
System that the district’s coverage meets the requirements of the
statute.
15. Employment Benefits: Cont.
Assault Leave:
This paid leave can continue, if necessary, up to two full years and leave taken as a result of
an assault may not be deducted from accrued sick leave. (This is paid leave on top of the sick
leave the employee already has.)
TEC 22.003: Upon investigation of an assault claim, the district may change the assault leave
status and charge the leave, first against accumulated personal leave, and then, if necessary,
against the employee’s pay.
Penal Code /TEC 22.003 (c)): To be eligible for assault leave, the employee must be physically
assaulted by a person who could be prosecuted for having committed an assault, or who
could not be prosecuted for an assault only because the person’s age or mental capacity
makes the person a nonresponsible person.
Temporary Disability Leave:
TEC 21.409: Provides that each full-time educator employed by a school district is entitled to
a leave of absence for temporary disability without fear of termination.
Request must be made to the superintendent and must include a physician’s statement
confirming the inability to work and indicating the date the employee wishes to begin the
leave and the probable date of return.
During pregnancy, teachers are allowed to take a leave of absence only for the period a
physician certifies they are unable to work.
Temporary leave is unpaid. The primary purpose of the leave is to assure the employee that
he or she will have a job upon returning to good health.
16. Employment Benefits:
Temporary Disability Leave(Cont.)
What happens if a teacher is due back from disability
leave and there are no openings on the campus where
the teacher taught?
The attorney general concluded that the teacher returning from
disability leave must be placed on his or her former campus
unless another principal voluntarily accepts the employee. The
returning employee is to go to the former campus if a position is
available there. However, if no position is available, the school
cannot force some other principal to accept the employee. As of
the beginning of the next school year, however, the school
district has the duty to make sure a position is available.
TEC 21.409(a): The contract or employment of the educator may
not be terminated by the school district while the educator is on
leave of absence for temporary disability.
17. Employment Benefits: Cont.
Family and Medical Leave:
Under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), eligible employees are entitled to up
to twelve weeks of unpaid leave per year:
1. To care for a newborn, adopted, or foster children;
2. To care for a spouse, child, or parent with serious health conditions;
3. Or when serious health conditions prevents the employee from performing the
essential functions of the job.
Miscellaneous Leave Policies:
Other types of leave allowed by the state include military leave and
developmental leave.
TEC 431.005: Provides employees who are members of state militia or the U.S.
reserve forces up to fifteen days per year of leave without loss of salary for
participation in authorized duty.
TEC 21.452:The Board of Trustees may grant certified teachers who have served at
least five consecutive years in the district a developmental leave of absence for
study, research, travel, or other suitable purpose.
While on developmental leave, the teacher is entitled to the same employee
benefits available to other employees of the district.
18. Wage / Hourly Requirements:
Daimon Sweet
In 1985 the U. S. Supreme Court ruled that the minimum-wage and
maximum-hour provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) apply
to local government functions.
The FLSA provisions do not apply to everyone.
Workers are divided into two general categories – “exempt” and “non-
exempt”.
“Exempt” means employees are not covered by the FLSA provisions and
thus are not entitled to extra benefits for work in excess of the forty-
hour week (“overtime”).
“Non-exempt” means that employees are covered by the FLSA
provisions and thus are entitled to extra benefits (“overtime” and “comp
time”) if they work more than forty hours a week.
Exempt employees fall under three broad categories: Executive,
Administrative, and Professional.
Teachers and school administrators who serve as principals, assistant
principals, and other positions related to instruction are specifically
exempt from FLSA coverage.
19. Worker’s/Unemployment
Compensation: Daimon Sweet
Worker’s Compensation: State law provides that school districts
shall extend such benefits to its employees by one of the
following options: (1)Becoming a self-insurer, (2)providing
insurance under worker’s compensation insurance contracts or
policies, or (3)entering into interlocal agreements with other
political subdivisions providing for self-insurance.
Unemployment Compensation: The state’s effort to help people
over the rough spots and is intended to provide compensation for
a specified number of weeks to people who are unemployed
through no fault of their own.
There are two situations where an employee should not receive
unemployment compensation benefits: (1) If the employee
voluntarily quits or (2) if the employee is dismissed for
misconduct.
20. Employees Grievances: Daimon
Sweet Employment Grievances: A Little History
Texas Constitution, Article I,27: Provides that the citizens shall have the
right, in a peaceable manner, to… apply to those invested with the powers of
government for redress of grievances… by petition, address, or
remonstrance (grievance).
Government Code 617.005: Acknowledges the right of public employees to
present grievances concerning their wages, hours of employment or
conditions of work either individually or through a representative that does
not claim the right to strike.
Two significant changes happened during the 1980s to employee grievances
in the public sector: (1) The scope of what was determined “grieveable”
expanded tremendously and (2) the responsibility of school administrators
and board members to hear grievances was spelled out in some detail for the
first time.
Grievances are routinely filed over assignments and reassignments,
appointments to extra duty, salary and extra pay, teacher appraisal, and the
wording of reprimands or other written communications.
If an employee is terminated and has no other means of complaining about
the decision, a grievance can be filed.
21. Hearing Employee Grievances:
Daimon Sweet
Texas Constitution, Article I, 27: Does not require school boards to
negotiate or even respond to grievances and complaints filed by
those being governed, but surely they must “stop, look, and
listen”.
The Texas Constitution simply requires school boards to
“consider” the grievances addressed to them by citizens,
including the district’s employees.
The Texas Constitution only guarantees citizens access to the
government’s ear. According to the court, although a school
board does not have a duty to provide formal procedures for
citizens to vent their complaints, it must “consider” petitions and
grievances.
An open forum at each board meeting suffices to provide the
constitutionally required access to the school board.
22. The Role of Employee
Organizations: Daimon Sweet
Collective Bargaining on the National Scene:
National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) 1935 – Bargaining Rights
The right to organize collectively or to refrain from doing
so.
The right to be represented by a single bargaining agent.
The right to democratic internal union organization.
The right to bilateral negotiations over conditions of
employment.
The right to a binding contract between the employer and
the union (individual employee rights are surrendered to
the bargaining agent).
The right to strike or to negotiate binding arbitration of
both grievance and contract term disputes.
23. The Role of Employee
Organizations: Law in Texas:
The
Cont.
Texas has a “right-to-work” law with regard to public employment.
Government Code 617.004: An individual may not be denied public employment
because of the individual’s membership or nonmembership in a labor
organization.
Government Code 617.002: Texas specifically bans collective bargaining in the
public sector.
Government Code 617.003 and 617.005: Texas prohibits strikes or organized work
stoppages by public employees and allows public employees to present their
grievances only through organizations that do not claim the right to strike.
Texas law does not prohibit unions from existing, nor public employees from
joining them. In fact, Texas law repeats itself in an effort to make sure that
employees are not forced into membership in any particular group.
To facilitate membership in professional organizations, the legislature has added
TEC Code 22.001 requiring school districts to deduct from an employee’s salary an
amount equivalent to membership fees or dues in a professional association if the
employee so request.
24. References and Acknowledgements:
The Educator’s Guide to Texas School Law; Jim Walsh, Frank Kemerer,
and Laurie Maniotis.6th ed.
Jett v. Dallas I.S.D. (1989)
Anderson v. Pasadena I.S.D. (1999)
Finch v. Fort Bend I.S.D. (2003)
Briggs v. Crystal City I.S.D. (1972)
San Elizario Educators Association v. San Elizario I.S.D.
Benton v, Wilmer-Hutchins I.S.D. (1983)
Miller v. Clyde I.S.D. (2003)
Kinnaird v. Morgan I.S.D. (1999)
Fenter v. Quinlan I.S.D. (2002)
Strater v. Houston I.S.D. (1986)