The California Supreme Court agreed to hear oral arguments on one of Mastagni Holstedt, APC's workers compensation cases. At issue in the case is whether a permanent peace officer is entitled to the maximum temporary disability benefit as a result of an on the job injury.
Officer John Larkin was injured in a motor vehicle accident in November of 2008 while employed as an active police officer with the City of Marysville. He received benefits under Labor code section 4850 which expired. He then received temporary disability benefits. The temporary disability benefits are paid at two thirds the weekly earning rate. Officer Larkin's weekly earnings were $1008 resulting in a $671 weekly temporary disability benefits rate.
However, Labor Code section 4458.2 states temporary disability benefits are paid at the maximum statutory rate for eligible peace officers. The maximum rate in 2008, the time of the case, was $916 per week. Labor Code section 4458.2 makes reference to Labor Code section 3362 which defines who is eligible for the maximum benefit. Labor Code section 3362 states that every person registered as an active police officer shall be considered an employee of the municipality he or she works for.
Labor Code section 3362 has evolved over time. Originally the language included only men and specified the peace officer had to be a volunteer to receive the maximum benefit. However, the California State Legislature in 1989 modernized the statute including both genders and removing the word "volunteer." This evidences the intent of the legislature to provide maximum benefits to all peace officers.
Officer Larkin challenged the lower compensation rate in front of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. He argued he was entitled to the full $916 per week rather than the $671 per week. The Workers' Compensation Appeals Board argued that since Labor Code section 3362 only applied to volunteer peace officers, Officer Larkin was not entitled to the maximum temporary disability benefit. On appeal, the California Court of Appeal for the Third District upheld the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board determination.
Mastagni Holstedt, APC appealed the decision to the California Supreme Court. In its briefs, the firm argues all officers, regardless of status, are entitled to maximum benefits. This is the clear language of the statute which must be followed by the court system. By reading extra terms into the statute, the Court of Appeal created an absurd result which harms peace officers across the state.
Oral argument for the case will be held on September 2, 2015 at 9 AM in San Francisco. The case will be argued by Mastagni Holstedt, APC attorney Brian A. Dixon. Mastagni Holstedt, APC attorney Gregory G. Gomez assisted in drafting the briefing materials for the case.
Friday, August 28, 2015
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
CalPERS Pension Benefits Generate Over $30 Billion in Economic Activity
The California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) released a study today demonstrating retirement benefits paid out by CalPERS generated $30.9 billion in economic activity across the State. For every one dollar of public funds invested in CalPERS, the fund returns $9.64 of economic activity throughout the state. CalPERS benefits paid directly to members have large impacts in the housing, restaurant, and health care industries. CalPERS also invests $25.7 billion dollars in California businesses, supporting millions of jobs across the state. The report breaks down the economic impact by state congressional district so tax payers can see how CalPERS benefits their local economy.
For eight decades, CalPERS has built retirement and health security for State, school, and public agency members who invest their lifework in public service. CalPERS serves more than 1.7 million members and administers benefits for more than 1.4 million members and their families in the health program. CalPERS is the largest defined-benefit public pension in the United States. The current market value of the CalPERS general fund is approximately $304 billion dollars.
For eight decades, CalPERS has built retirement and health security for State, school, and public agency members who invest their lifework in public service. CalPERS serves more than 1.7 million members and administers benefits for more than 1.4 million members and their families in the health program. CalPERS is the largest defined-benefit public pension in the United States. The current market value of the CalPERS general fund is approximately $304 billion dollars.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
California Supreme Court Finds Limited Exception to Employees' Access to Supervisor Notes Under FFBOR
On August 24, 2015, the California Supreme Court issued a decision in Poole v. Orange County Fire Authority. The Court held Government Code section 3255 did not compel the County to provide a firefighter the opportunity to review and respond to a supervisor's personal notes regarding the firefighters work performance if the notes were not used for a personnel purpose. The supervisor did not share the notes or make them available to anyone with authority to take adverse disciplinary action against the firefighter. For these reasons, the Court held the supervisor's notes did not constitute a file "used for any personnel purposes by his or her employer."
Under the Firefighters Procedural Bill of Rights Act ("FFBOR"), a firefighter has the right to review and respond to any negative comment that is "entered in his or her personnel file, or any other file used for any personnel purpose." In Poole, a supervisor maintained raw notes on his subordinates. The notes documented factual occurrences for his reference when writing employees' annual reviews. Some of the occurrences in the supervisor's notes described instances where the employees had failed to complete assigned duties. The supervisor did not make these notes available to anyone with authority to take adverse action against the firefighter and not all of the notes were documented in annual performance reviews. The Court considered the narrow question of whether the FFBOR required the supervisor to provide employees the opportunity to review and respond to negative comments in his notes that were not included in the employees' annual performance evaluations or performance improvement plans.
It is well established that employers must provide firefighters and public safety officers an opportunity to review and respond to negative comments entered into files used for personnel purposes. For example, in Venegas the appellate court concluded that an index card maintained by internal affairs documenting all complaints against an officer constituted a file "used for... personnel purposes," because it would be available to those responsible for disciplinary action. In addition, in County of Riverside, the county was required to disclose to a police officer adverse comments in a file containing the results of a background investigation the county used to determine whether to continue to employ the officer. And in Aguilar, the appellate court held an officer was entitled to review and respond to an uninvestigated citizen's complaint placed in a confidential investigative file. These cases remain authoritative in compelling employers to provide firefighters and public safety officers the opportunity to review and respond to adverse comments placed in files "used for... personnel purposes."
The Court distinguished this case from other cases interpreting similar statutes on the basis that the supervisor's notes were not available to anyone making personnel decisions in the future. Based on a unique set of circumstances, this case clarified FFBOR protections are not triggered by a supervisor's private notes that were not used for any personnel action.
Under the Firefighters Procedural Bill of Rights Act ("FFBOR"), a firefighter has the right to review and respond to any negative comment that is "entered in his or her personnel file, or any other file used for any personnel purpose." In Poole, a supervisor maintained raw notes on his subordinates. The notes documented factual occurrences for his reference when writing employees' annual reviews. Some of the occurrences in the supervisor's notes described instances where the employees had failed to complete assigned duties. The supervisor did not make these notes available to anyone with authority to take adverse action against the firefighter and not all of the notes were documented in annual performance reviews. The Court considered the narrow question of whether the FFBOR required the supervisor to provide employees the opportunity to review and respond to negative comments in his notes that were not included in the employees' annual performance evaluations or performance improvement plans.
It is well established that employers must provide firefighters and public safety officers an opportunity to review and respond to negative comments entered into files used for personnel purposes. For example, in Venegas the appellate court concluded that an index card maintained by internal affairs documenting all complaints against an officer constituted a file "used for... personnel purposes," because it would be available to those responsible for disciplinary action. In addition, in County of Riverside, the county was required to disclose to a police officer adverse comments in a file containing the results of a background investigation the county used to determine whether to continue to employ the officer. And in Aguilar, the appellate court held an officer was entitled to review and respond to an uninvestigated citizen's complaint placed in a confidential investigative file. These cases remain authoritative in compelling employers to provide firefighters and public safety officers the opportunity to review and respond to adverse comments placed in files "used for... personnel purposes."
The Court distinguished this case from other cases interpreting similar statutes on the basis that the supervisor's notes were not available to anyone making personnel decisions in the future. Based on a unique set of circumstances, this case clarified FFBOR protections are not triggered by a supervisor's private notes that were not used for any personnel action.
Monday, August 24, 2015
California Attorney General Releases Title and Summary for Pension Busting Initiative
On August 11, 2015, the Office of the Attorney General
released its title and summary for former San Jose Mayor
Chuck Reed's pension busting initiative. The highly
divisive initiative would strip pensions from public employees and allow voters
to modify compensation packages at will. Fortunately, the Office of the
Attorney General's title and summary highlight the problems with this
initiative.
All ballot initiatives must be submitted to the Office of
the Attorney General prior to being placed on the ballot. The Office of the
Attorney General creates a title and summary of the initiative to appear on the
actual ballot.
The title the Office of the Attorney General gave Reed's initiative is "Public Employees.
Pension and Retiree Healthcare Benefits. Initiative and Constitutional
Amendment." The summary aptly states the initiative, "[e]liminates
constitutional protections for vested pension and retiree healthcare benefits
for current public employees." This language demonstrates how drastic this
reform is and how it will prejudice California's public employees. The summary also
notes the long term effects of the initiative are unknown and "depend
heavily on future decisions made by voters, governmental employers, and the
courts."
Mastagni Holstedt, APC has used the Contracts
Clause in California’s Constitution to protect vested employee benefits in
several high profile court battles: Stockton (fiscal emergency declaration
does not authorize City to renegotiate a closed labor contract), Los Angeles
(fiscal emergency declaration does not permit freezing retiree medical benefits
or imposing furloughs), Pacific Grove (Ballot measure capping PERS pension
contributions unconstitutional). Similar rulings were obtained by the
police and fire unions in San Jose invalidating in substantial measure Reed’s
San Jose pension impairments.
This pension "reform" effort is led by Democrat
Chuck Reed and his lawyers. As we blogged previously, the initiative
amends the California Constitution to allow voters to impair employment
contracts. While Reed claims his measure will not impair
current employees' pensions, even Daniel Borenstein of the Contra Costa Times has acknowledged "the initiative would amend the state Constitution to give voters
the right through an initiative or referendum to reduce the future pension
accrual rate for current employees…Reed and DeMaio should be honest about it,
or abandon the measure."
Additionally, the Constitutional amendment would abolish
pensions for employees hired after January 1, 2019 and replace them with a
"defined-contribution" system unless changes to benefits are approved
in an election. In a defined-contribution system, employees have to pay
in a fixed amount with no guarantee of what their retirement income would be.
As a result, this approach shifts the risk and could prevent thousands
of public employees from retiring.
The proposal is not limited to retirement benefits. It
provides, "Voters have the right to use the power of initiative or
referendum... to determine the amount of and manner in which compensation and
retirement benefits are provided to employees of a government employer."
As a result, the Constitutional Amendment would likely be used to pursue
local voter initiatives to bypass collective bargaining to reduce public safety
compensation or due process rights.
The proposal also seriously jeopardizes death and
disability benefits for public safety employees. The new
proposal states it shall not be “interpreted to modify or limit any disability
benefits provided for government employees or death benefits for families.” But
death and disability benefits are often an integral part of a pension plan. As noted by the Legislative Analyst's Office, death and disability benefits are usually prefunded through a pension plan's normal cost. If voters can modify, or even eliminate, pensions for public employees, this necessarily means the funding for death and disability benefits will be cut. The measure does not provide any means of securing those benefits.
The proposal also seeks to insulate future measures from
legal challenge by eliminating the jurisdiction of the Public Employment
Relations Board to hear unfair practice charges regarding future measures
which impair vested rights or collective bargaining agreements.
Now that the initiative has a summary, the proponents must
furnish the required number of signatures in order to make the November 2016
ballot. You can help stop this initiative by educating your family, friends,
and community members about the drastic and detrimental effects of this
initiative and encourage them not to sign any petition supporting the
initiative. You can help stop future attempts to impair retirement benefits by opposing all candidates who endorse this imitative.
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Mastagni Holstedt, APC Files Amicus Brief at California Supreme Court
Mastagni Holstedt, APC attorneys filed an
amicus brief with the California Supreme Court about the application of the California Public Records Act (“CPRA”). The CPRA defines the
electronic communications of public officials as public documents. Therefore,
any public citizen may acquire the electronic communications of public
officials through an information request.
The California Court of Appeal for the Sixth District held when a public official sends an electronic communication using a personal cell phone or e-mail account, those documents are not public records. In its brief, Mastagni Holstedt argues the ruling is incorrect and explains some of the unintended consequences to labor associations. The ruling allows public officials to do business behind closed doors, circumventing the purpose of the CPRA. Furthermore, it prevents public unions and other entities from holding public officials accountable by limiting their access to information.
Mastagni Holstedt, APC filed the brief to bring important legal arguments to the Court’s attention, ensuring the rights of employee organizations are protected. Mastagni Holstedt attorneys David E. Mastagni, Isaac S. Stevens, and Jeffrey R. A. Edwards represent the amici in the matter.
The California Court of Appeal for the Sixth District held when a public official sends an electronic communication using a personal cell phone or e-mail account, those documents are not public records. In its brief, Mastagni Holstedt argues the ruling is incorrect and explains some of the unintended consequences to labor associations. The ruling allows public officials to do business behind closed doors, circumventing the purpose of the CPRA. Furthermore, it prevents public unions and other entities from holding public officials accountable by limiting their access to information.
Mastagni Holstedt, APC filed the brief to bring important legal arguments to the Court’s attention, ensuring the rights of employee organizations are protected. Mastagni Holstedt attorneys David E. Mastagni, Isaac S. Stevens, and Jeffrey R. A. Edwards represent the amici in the matter.
Monday, August 3, 2015
Mastagni Holstedt, APC Protects Retirement Rights in the Court of Appeal
Mastagni Holstedt, APC
filed an amicus brief with the California Second Appellate District, Division
One. At issue are adjustable retirement health subsidies under the City of Los
Angeles’ retirement system. In 2006, the City of Los Angeles passed an
ordinance which allowed the Board of the Los Angeles Fire and Police Pension
System to provide an adjustable retirement health subsidy. This adjustable rate
would allow the City to increase contributions as costs increased over time.
However, in 2011, the City of Los Angeles passed an ordinance freezing future increases to the subsidy. Los Angeles employee organizations brought suit alleging this violated their vested right to a variable subsidy. The trial court agreed and ordered the City to increase the subsidy pursuant to the 2006 ordinance.
The City appealed the decision arguing it had plenary authority to modify the pension subsidy as it was a type of “employee compensation.” In its brief, Mastagni Holstedt, APC argues a pension subsidy is not salary, but is instead a vested benefit. The California courts have already held on numerous occasions a pension benefit, once vested, cannot be revoked. The California Constitution’s Contracts Clause prohibits such an action. Thus, the City cannot arbitrarily revoke a benefit by reforming it as “employee compensation.”
Mastagni Holstedt, APC thanks the employee organizations who joined the firm in fighting back against the destruction of employee benefits. Mastagni Holstedt attorneys David E. Mastagni, Isaac S. Stevens, and Ian B. Sangster represent the amici in the matter.
However, in 2011, the City of Los Angeles passed an ordinance freezing future increases to the subsidy. Los Angeles employee organizations brought suit alleging this violated their vested right to a variable subsidy. The trial court agreed and ordered the City to increase the subsidy pursuant to the 2006 ordinance.
The City appealed the decision arguing it had plenary authority to modify the pension subsidy as it was a type of “employee compensation.” In its brief, Mastagni Holstedt, APC argues a pension subsidy is not salary, but is instead a vested benefit. The California courts have already held on numerous occasions a pension benefit, once vested, cannot be revoked. The California Constitution’s Contracts Clause prohibits such an action. Thus, the City cannot arbitrarily revoke a benefit by reforming it as “employee compensation.”
Mastagni Holstedt, APC thanks the employee organizations who joined the firm in fighting back against the destruction of employee benefits. Mastagni Holstedt attorneys David E. Mastagni, Isaac S. Stevens, and Ian B. Sangster represent the amici in the matter.