08-006420TTS
Sarasota County School Board vs.
Timothy Gill
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Thursday, June 18, 2009.
Recommended Order on Thursday, June 18, 2009.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8THE SCHOOL BOARD OF SARASOTA )
14COUNTY, FLORIDA, )
17)
18Petitioner, )
20)
21vs. ) Case No. 08-6420
26)
27TIMOTHY GILL, )
30)
31Respondent. )
33________________________________)
34RECOMMENDED ORDER
36Robert E. Meale, Administrative Law Judge of the Division
45of Administrative Hearings, conducted the final hearing in
53Sarasota, Florida, on March 13, 2009.
59APPEARANCES
60For Petitioner: Hunter W. Carroll
65Matthews, Eastmoore, Hardy,
68Crauwels & Garcia, P.A.
721777 Main Street, Suite 500
77Sarasota, Florida 34236
80For Respondent: Lisa J. Kleinberg
85Law Offices of Kleinberg,
89Ingram & Murphy, P.L.
932189 Ringling Boulevard
96Sarasota, Florida 34237
99STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
103The issue is whether Respondent is guilty of insubordination for the use of excess leave and sleeping in his vehicle during working hours.
126PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
128By July 3, 2008, Petitioner's superintendent mailed a
136letter to Respondent informing him that he had recently had two
147separate meetings to discuss employment-related issues. In the
155first meeting, Petitioner's Director of Facilities Services
162spoke with Respondent and his union representative about
170insubordination by using excess leave. In the second meeting,
179Petitioner's Director of Facilities Services spoke with
186Respondent and his union representative about insubordination
193for twice sleeping in his vehicle when he should have been
204working. The letter concludes that the superintendent will
212recommend the termination of Respondent's employment to the
220school board. After completion of a grievance process, the
229superintendent sent Respondent a letter to the same effect,
238dated December 9, 2008.
242At the hearing, Petitioner called four witnesses and
250offered into evidence eight exhibits: Petitioner Exhibits 1-3,
2584-5, 6 (only letter of July 11, 2008), and 9-10. Respondent
269called two witnesses and offered into evidence two exhibits:
278Respondent Exhibits 1-2. All exhibits were admitted, except
286Petitioner Exhibit 6 was not admitted for the truth of its
297contents.
298The court reporter filed the Transcript on March 27, 2009.
308The parties filed proposed recommended orders by April 16, 2009.
318FINDINGS OF FACT
3211. On or about April 21, 2004, Petitioner hired Respondent
331as a school custodian. Starting on December 11, 2007,
340Petitioner transferred Respondent to Toledo Blade Elementary
347School. One year later, Petitioner transferred Respondent to
355the Transportation Department, which is the building housing the
364transportation offices.
3662. As a custodian, Respondent is a "classified" employee.
375He is covered by the Classified Bargaining Unit Collective
384Bargaining Agreement between the Sarasota Classified/Teachers
390Association and Petitioner (the contract).
3953. Twice on the morning of April 25, 2008, during working
406hours and not while on a break, Respondent walked from his
417worksite to his vehicle, climbed into the vehicle, and nodded
427off to sleep. The first nap lasted for about one hour, and the
440second nap lasted about one and one-quarter hours. The second
450nap ended when Respondent's boss and the boss's boss walked out
461to the vehicle where they found Respondent, who had put the
472driver's seat down, laid out in the front driver's seat, with
483the radio on, sound asleep. They woke him and ordered him back
495to work.
4974. Respondent's defenses are: 1) he was not asleep; he
507was unconscious; and 2) he was suffering from extreme drowsiness
517due to medications that he was taking following his recovery
527from a three-month coma into which he had fallen two years
538earlier.
5395. Both of Respondent's defenses are makeshift. According
547to Webster's online dictionary, "sleep" is the "natural periodic
556suspension of consciousness during which the powers of the body
566are restored." (http://www.merriam-
569webster.com/dictionary/sleep, as found on June 17, 2009) If he
578had suddenly lost consciousness at the worksite, no one would
588claim he was sleeping on the job. Instead, without reporting
598any difficulties to anyone, he walked out to his vehicle, made
609himself comfortable, and fell asleep. The problem was that his
619natural period of suspended consciousness coincided with time
627during which Petitioner was paying him. The requisite
635restorative effect is inferred. Nor is there any credence to
645the claim of a medical condition or effect of a medication that
657would leave Respondent unable to resist falling asleep while on
667duty. Although ample opportunity existed, Respondent failed, on
675the day in question, to bring to the attention of his supervisor
687any medical reason for sleeping on the job, which was exactly
698what he was doing.
7026. Article XXI of the contract authorizes discipline for
"711just cause." Sleeping while on duty, for over two hours prior
722to lunch, constitutes insubordination and just cause for
730discipline.
7317. The leave issue is more complicated. Petitioner is on
741a fiscal year starting July 1. For the entire year, classified,
75212-month, hourly employees, such as Respondent, accrue six
760personal days on July 1. For sick days, these employees accrue
771one day at the end of July and three advance days. They then
784accrue a day at the end of each following month through March.
796Unused sick days rollover to the next year, but unused personal
807days do not. Personal days count against the sick days. In
818other words, if an employee has five sick days and six personal
830days and uses a personal day, he will then have four sick days
843and five personal days. Employees also earn vacation days.
8528. As explained by Petitioner's payroll supervisor, the
860payroll system facilitated recharacterizations between sick and
867personal days. However, the system did not incorporate vacation
876days in the same fashion. Thus, if an employee took off one
888day, without claiming sick leave, and lacked one day of personal
899time, the system would dock his pay, even though he might still
911have had sufficient vacation time to absorb the time that he had
923taken off.
9259. For the 2007-08 school year, Respondent used "personal
934leave charged to sick" as follows: September 12--8.0 hours;
943September 24--8.0 hours; December 20--8.0 hours; December 21--
9518.0 hours; January 30--0.5 hours; February 15--8.0 hours; and
960February 27--7.5 hours.
96310. On February 27, Respondent missed the entire day of
973work. Consistent with acceptable practices, on the next day, he
983submitted a form entitled, "Certificate of Absence." In it,
992Respondent requested approval for 8.0 hours of "personal leave
1001charged to sick," rather than one of the other categories, such
1012as sick leave or vacation leave. His supervisor signed the
1022form. When the payroll supervisor checked his balances, she saw
1032that he only had 7.5 hours of personal leave charged to sick,
1044so, on May 2, 2008, Respondent had to sign a form entitled,
"1056Request for Personal/Sick/Vacation Leave in Excess of Earned
1064Leave." This form requested approval for the use of 0.5 hours
1075of personal leave in excess of earned leave. The request was
1086disapproved by the Director of Facilities Services with a
1095signature bearing a date of March 13, 2008.
110311. The payroll department's practice was not to deduct
1112personal leave charged as sick against vacation leave, if an
1122employee consumed all of his personal leave charged as sick.
113212. On March 14, Respondent again requested 2.5 hours of
1142personal leave charged to sick. His supervisor noted on the
1152form that he "cautioned Tim to make sure he has the time
1164available--Tim told me that he does. 3-14-08." By this time,
1174it is unlikely that Respondent had received a new statement of
1185leave balance reflecting the 0.5 hours that he had been short
1196two weeks earlier. On May 2, 2008, Respondent signed another
1206request for permission to use personal leave in excess of earned
1217leave, and the Director of Facilities denied the request with a
1228signature bearing a date of March 27, 2008.
123613. The same process took place again on April 11 for 8.0
1248hours on April 7. Petitioner notes that this request also
1258violated policy regarding custodial leave on the day immediately
1267after spring break, for which leave requests must be submitted
1277well in advance of the leave sought. Article XVII of the
1288contract requires a special procedure for leave on days
1297immediately preceding and following a school holiday, but the
1306emphasis in testimony was on the importance of adequate
1315custodial staff on such days. However, the purpose of this
1325policy is to address the needs of schools with respect to
1336returning students. Because Respondent was not assigned to a
1345school, nor had he been assigned to one temporarily for
1355returning students, he was not undermining this policy by
1364conforming to general policy, which allowed after-the-fact
1371requests.
137214. In any event, as the payroll supervisor testified, it
1382is possible that Respondent still had vacation time each time
1392that Petitioner docked him for requesting personal leave charged
1401as sick when he had already exhausted his personal leave.
141115. On these facts, Petitioner does not have just cause to
1422discipline Respondent on the ground of insubordination or any
1431other ground. There is no doubt that Respondent understood the
1441interplay between personal leave charged to sick and sick leave,
1451but there is considerable doubt as to, on the first two
1462occasions on which he overdrew on his balance of personal leave
1473charged to sick that he knew that he was doing so.
1484Additionally, there is a reasonable possibility that he had
1493available vacation leave, against which all of this time could
1503have been charged; absent proof from Petitioner precluding this
1512possibility, the entire dispute is reduced to the level of
1522finding the proper account to debit these relatively few hours
1532of missed work. This does not rise to insubordination, nor does
1543it constitute just cause for discipline.
154916. Article XXI of the contract requires progressive
1557discipline, which constitutes a verbal reprimand, written
1564reprimand, suspension with or without pay, and dismissal. The
1573next step in progressive discipline for Respondent is suspension
1582with or without pay, not dismissal.
1588CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
159117. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
1598Fla. Stat. (2008).
160118. As an "educational support employee," pursuant to
1609Section 1012.40(1)(a), Florida Statutes, Respondent is subject
1616to termination for the reasons stated in the contract.
1625§ 1012.40(2)(b), Fla. Stat. (2008)..
163019. Petitioner has the burden of proving the material
1639allegations of the charges by a preponderance of the evidence.
1649Dileo v. School Board of Dade County , 569 So. 2d 883 (Fla. 3d
1662DCA 1990).
166420. For the reasons set forth above, Petitioner has proved
1674just cause, in the form of insubordination, to discipline
1683Respondent for sleeping while on duty, but has failed to prove
1694just cause for disciplining Respondent for excessive use of
1703leave. Pursuant to the contract's requirements of progressive
1711discipline, Petitioner may not terminate or dismiss Respondent;
1719the most severe discipline that Petitioner may impose is
1728suspension with or without pay.
1733RECOMMENDATION
1734Based on the foregoing, it is
1740RECOMMENDED that the School Board of Sarasota County,
1748Florida, enter a final order dismissing the charge of excessive
1758use of leave and finding Respondent guilty of the charge of
1769sleeping while on duty and suspending him, without pay, for five
1780working days.
1782DONE AND ENTERED this 18th day of June, 2009, in
1792Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
1796___________________________________
1797ROBERT E. MEALE
1800Administrative Law Judge
1803Division of Administrative Hearings
1807The DeSoto Building
18101230 Apalachee Parkway
1813Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
1816(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
1820Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
1824www.doah.state.fl.us
1825Filed with the Clerk of the
1831Division of Administrative Hearings
1835this 18th day of June, 2009.
1841COPIES FURNISHED:
1843Hunter W. Carroll, Esquire
1847Matthews, Eastmoore, Hardy
1850Crauwels & Garcia, P.A.
18541777 Main Street, Suite 500
1859Sarasota, Florida 34236
1862Lisa J. Kleinberg, Esquire
1866Law Offices of Kleinberg,
1870Ingram & Murphy, P.L.
18742189 Ringling Boulevard
1877Sarasota, Florida 34237
1880Mrs. Lori White, Superintendent
1884Sarasota County School Board
18881960 Landings Boulevard
1891Sarasota, Florida 34231-3365
1894Deborah K. Kearney, General Counsel
1899Department of Education
1902Turlington Building, Suite 1244
1906325 West Gaines Street
1910Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
1913NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
1919All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
192915 days from the date of this recommended order. Any exceptions
1940to this recommended order must be filed with the agency that
1951will issue the final order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 06/18/2009
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- Date: 03/27/2009
- Proceedings: Transcript (Volumes I&II) filed.
- Date: 03/13/2009
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/04/2009
- Proceedings: Order Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for March 13, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Sarasota, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 01/20/2009
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for February 20, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Sarasota, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 12/31/2008
- Proceedings: Order Granting Extension of Time (response to the Initial Order to be filed by January 8, 2009).
Case Information
- Judge:
- ROBERT E. MEALE
- Date Filed:
- 12/29/2008
- Date Assignment:
- 03/06/2009
- Last Docket Entry:
- 07/23/2009
- Location:
- Sarasota, Florida
- District:
- Middle
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO
- Suffix:
- TTS
Counsels
-
Hunter W. Carroll, Esquire
Address of Record -
Lisa J. Kleinberg, Esquire
Address of Record