Click
here for page 2 of Management Memorandum of Understanding
Click here
for Appendix B:
Safety Management Salary Schedules
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING
BETWEEN THE COUNTY OF SAN BERNARDINO
AND THE SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY SAFETY
EMPLOYEES’ BENEFIT ASSOCIATION
CONCERNING THE EMPLOYEES IN THE
SAFETY MANAGEMENT AND SUPERVISORY UNIT
PREAMBLE Return
to Menu
This Memorandum of Understanding by and between
all members of the Employee Relations Committee for the Safety
Management and Supervisory Unit contains the complete results of
negotiations concerning wages, hours and other terms and conditions
of employment for employees in the Safety Management and Supervisory
Unit. The parties hereto have met and conferred in good faith exchanging
various proposals in an attempt to reach agreement.
NOW,
THEREFORE, the
members of the Employee Relations Committee for the Safety Management
and Supervisory Unit including authorized
representatives of the County, and the San Bernardino County Safety
Employees’ Benefit Association (hereinafter referred to as
SEBA) hereby agree as follows:
ACCESS TO
WORK LOCATIONS Return
to Menu
The parties recognize and agree that in order to maintain good
employee relations, it is necessary for Field Representatives of
SEBA to confer with County employees during working hours.
Therefore, SEBA Field Representatives will be granted access
to work locations during regular working hours to investigate and
process grievances or appeals. SEBA Field Representatives shall
be granted access upon obtaining authorization from the appointing
authority or designated management representative prior to entering
a work location and after advising of the general nature of the
business. However, the appointing authority or designated management
representative may deny access or terminate access to work locations
if in their judgment, it is deemed that the visit would interfere
with the efficiency, safety, or security of County operations.
The appointing authority shall not unreasonably withhold timely
access to work locations. The appointing authority shall ensure
that there is at all times someone designated who shall have full
authority to approve access. If a request is denied, the appointing
authority or designated management representative shall establish
a mutually agreeable time for access to the employee, and/or facilities.
SEBA Field Representatives granted access to work locations shall
limit such visits to a reasonable period of time, taking into consideration
the nature of the grievance or appeal.
The appointing authority
or designated management representative may mutually establish
with the SEBA Field Representatives reasonable
limits as to the number of visits authorized with the same employee
on the same issue, and reasonable limits as to the number of employees
who may participate in a visit when several employees are affected
by a specific issue. The County shall not unduly interfere with
SEBA’s access right to work locations.
ADMINISTRATIVE
LEAVE Return
to Menu
(a) Effective pay period
1 of each year, an employee in a regular position, except employees
in the classifications of Sheriff’s
Sergeant and Sheriff’s Criminalist III, will be provided
with eighty (80) hours of Administrative Leave time for the employee’s
use. Employees entering this Unit after the beginning of pay period
1 shall be credited with Administrative Leave prorated on a monthly
basis, based upon the annual rate of eighty (80) hours (i.e.,
6.67 hours per month, or any portion thereof). Such Administrative
Leave may be cashed out at the employee’s then current base
rate of pay in increments of one (1) hour one (1) time during
the calendar year to the extent that the hours would have accrued
at a rate of 6.67 hours per month minus any hours used up to that
time. Any Administrative Leave accrual balances in effect at the
end of the last pay period paid in the calendar year will automatically
be paid at the employee’s then current base rate of pay.
Employees may designate that cash outs of Administrative Leave
be allocated to the County’s Section 457 Deferred Compensation
Plan, consistent with the requirements and restrictions of such
Plan. Upon termination of employment, unused Administrative Leave
will be paid at the current rate of pay only by the amount of
hours that would have been accrued at a rate of 6.67 hours per
month that exceeds the total number of hours previously used
and cashed out. Administrative Leave may be used on the same basis
and under the same conditions as vacation leave.
(b) Effective pay period
1 of each year, employees in regular positions in the classifications
of Sheriff’s Sergeant and
Sheriff’s Criminalist III, will be provided with forty (40)
hours of Administrative Leave time for the employee’s use.
Employees entering this Unit after the beginning of pay period
1 shall be credited with Administrative Leave prorated on a monthly
basis, based upon the annual rate of forty (40) hours (i.e., 3.33
hours per month, or any portion thereof). Such Administrative Leave
may be cashed out at the employee’s then current base rate
of pay in increments of one (1) hour one (1) time during the calendar
year to the extent that the hours would have accrued at a rate
of 3.33 hours per month minus any hours used up to that time. Any
Administrative Leave accrual balances in effect at the end of the
last pay period paid in the calendar year will automatically be
paid at the employee’s then current base rate of pay. Employees
may designate that cash outs of Administrative Leave be allocated
to the County’s Section 457 Deferred Compensation Plan, consistent
with the requirements and restrictions of such Plan. Upon termination
of employment, unused Administrative Leave will be paid at the
current rate of pay only by the amount of hours that would have
been accrued at a rate of 3.33 hours per month that exceeds the
total number of hours previously used and cashed out. Administrative
Leave may be used on the same basis and under the same conditions
as vacation leave.
(c) Any Administrative
Leave accumulated and unused in calendar year 1995 and calendar
year 1996 shall be placed in a separate
bank for the employee’s later use as time off. In the event
an employee leaves County service with a balance in that bank,
that balance will be cashed out at the then current rate.
ASSIGNMENT
TO HIGHER POSITION Return
to Menu
Employees directed to continuously perform
duties in a vacant higher level position for which funds have been
appropriated shall be entitled to compensation on the higher level
for the time actually worked in excess of sixty (60) work days in
a one hundred twenty (120) work day corridor, unless specifically
waived by the employee; provided, however:
(a) The appointing authority certifies to the County Administrative
Officer in writing at the time of appointment that the employee
is assigned and held responsible to fully perform all of the duties
normally associated with the higher level classification without
limitation as to difficulty or complexity of assignments or consequence
of action and that the employee shall be required to meet standards
for satisfactory performance normally required at the higher level
classification.
(b) A written request of compensation at the higher level classification
is directed to the County Administrative Officer through the Human
Resources Department for approval. It shall be the responsibility
of the appointing authority to initiate such requests and whenever
possible to anticipate need for reassignment to a higher level classification.
Written requests may also be made by the employee or the exclusive
recognized employee organization in the same manner. A copy of the
written request for compensation at the higher level classification
and the certification of the assignment of duties shall be provided
to the employee. The employee shall be advised of the date compensation
at the higher level is to be effective.
No employee shall be required to accept assignments to continuously
perform the duties of vacant higher level position for which funds
have been appropriated unless directed in writing by the appointing
authority or supervisor with the delegated authority.
Employees may be temporarily assigned higher or lower duties without
a change in pay and such action not be deemed as a basis for transfer,
demotion, promotion, or reclassification. In all cases where periodic
or regular variations in assignments occur because of seasonal needs
or because of the nature of the duties or the work schedule, such
variations shall be considered as incidental to the position.
Appointments to regular positions from an appropriate eligible list
of a lower classification as a Trainee are exempt from provisions
of this Article and are governed by the provisions of the Personnel
Rule on Appointments.
Approval of compensation at the higher level classification shall
not circumvent the principle of the competitive process for appointments
to positions in the classified service. Approval of the higher salary
may not be retroactive unless approved by the Assistant Administrative
Officer for Human Resources and unless a request for compensation
at the higher level classification is made within twenty (20) work
days following the sixty (60) working day period. In no event shall
additional compensation be paid for the first sixty (60) days worked.
Requests approved for compensation at the higher level classification
shall be governed by the Personnel Rule on Provisional Appointments
as to the duration of approval and eligibility requirements for
compensation at the higher level classification and as to continuation
of the appointment.
This article does not apply to a situation in which there is no
vacant higher level position for which funds have been appropriated.
Addition of duties of a higher level classification to an employee's
budgeted position shall be governed by Personnel Rule on Classifications.
It is the responsibility of all parties including department heads
and other supervisory personnel to follow the procedures set forth
in this Article and promptly report unauthorized situations covered
by this Article to the County Administrative Officer.
For purposes of this Article, a vacant position is defined as an
authorized position for which funds have been appropriated and allocated
to an existing job classification based upon the duties and responsibilities
currently assigned to the position and which may be:
(1) An unoccupied position due to
attrition and for which the Civil Service appointment process
has been initiated.
(2) A new position authorization by Board of Supervisors budgetary
action for which the Civil Service appointment process has been
initiated.
(3) A position from which the incumbent is on extended authorized
leave of absence.
BENEFIT
PLAN Return
to Menu
Section 1 – Benefit
Plan Contributions
(a) Employees in a regular position scheduled and paid for a minimum
of forty-one (41) hours per pay period are eligible to receive
the benefits of this Section.
(b) The bi-weekly amount of the County provided Benefit Plan for
eligible employees in this Unit shall be one hundred fifty dollars
and ninety-three cents ($150.93) per pay period.
(c) Under no circumstances will the monetary value of the Benefit
Plan be prorated.
(d) Employees who are on an approved medical leave of absence
and whose paid hours in a pay period are less than forty-one (41)
hours will continue to receive the benefits of this Section for
up to six (6) pay periods per episode of illness or injury. Employees
who are on an approved leave of absence without pay under the Family
Medical Leave Act of 1993 will continue to receive the Benefit
Plan dollars for up to six (6) pay periods. Employees who are on
a leave of absence without pay shall not be eligible to receive
the monetary benefits of this Section unless on a medical leave
or a Family Medical Leave Act eligible leave.
Section
2 – Section
125 Premium Conversion Plan
(a) Eligible employees shall be provided with a Section 125 Premium
Conversion Plan. The purpose of the Plan is to provide employees
a choice between paying premiums with either pre-tax salary reductions
or after-tax payroll deductions for health insurance, dental insurance,
voluntary life (to the IRS specified limit) and accidental death
and dismemberment insurance premiums currently maintained for Unit
employees or any other program(s) mutually agreed upon by the parties.
The amount of the pre-tax salary reduction or after-tax payroll
deduction must be equal to the required insurance premium.
(b) Benefit
Plan elections shall not reduce earnable compensation for purposes
of calculating
benefits from or contributions to the
San Bernardino County Employees’ Retirement Association.
(c) To be eligible for this benefit, an employee must be in a
regular position and be regularly scheduled to work at least forty-one
(41) hours in a pay period or be on an approved leave pursuant
to the Family Medical Leave Act.
(d) Election of pre-tax and after-tax payroll deductions shall
be made within thirty (30) days of the initial eligibility period
in a manner and on such forms designated by the Human Resources
Employee Benefits and Services Division Chief. Failure to timely
submit appropriate paperwork will result in after-tax deductions
for all eligible premiums for the remainder of the Plan year.
(e) Once a
salary reduction has begun, in no event will changes in elections
be permitted
during the Plan year except to the extent
permitted under Internal Revenue Service rulings and regulations
and with the County’s Plan Document. Examples of mid-year
qualifying events include: marriage, divorce, birth, adoption,
death, over age dependent, loss of student status, your or your
spouse’s reduction in work hours, loss of spouse’s
employment, gain or loss of spouse’s insurance, relocation
outside an HMO network service area, entitlement to Medicare for
you or your dependent, significant increase in County insurance
cost during the Plan year, loss of Medi-Cal or Medicaid coverage
and spouse’s or dependent’s open enrollment. The employee
must submit request for a change due to a mid-year qualifying event
within thirty (30) days of the qualifying event. Changes will be
authorized by the Human Resources Employee Benefits and Services
Division Chief, or his/her designee, as long as the change is made
on account of or consistent with an employee’s change in
status.
Section
3 – Health
and Dental Plan Coverage
(a) Except
as provided in (h) and (i) below, all eligible employees scheduled
to work
forty one (41) hours or more per pay period in
a regular position must enroll in a health and dental plan offered
by the County. Employees who fail to elect health plan coverage
will be automatically enrolled in the health and dental plan with
the lowest bi-weekly premium rates available in the geographical
location of the employee’s primary residence.
(b) To be eligible for County health and dental plan coverage,
an employee must be in a regular position and have received pay
for at least forty one (41) hours in a pay period or be on an approved
leave pursuant to the Family Medical Leave Act.
(c) Enrollment elections must remain in effect for the remainder
of the Plan year unless an employee becomes ineligible for an HMO
network service area.
(d) Eligible employees may elect to enroll their dependents upon
initial eligibility for health and dental insurance. Thereafter,
newly eligible dependents may be enrolled within thirty (30) days
of obtaining dependent status, such as birth, adoption or marriage.
(e) Notification
of a mid-year qualifying event must be submitted to the Human
Resources
Employee Benefits and Services Division
in accordance with procedures adopted by the County. Employees
are responsible for notifying the County within thirty (30) days
of dependent’s change in eligibility for the County plans.
(f) Dependent(s)
must be removed mid-Plan year when a dependent(s) becomes ineligible
for coverage under the insurance plan eligibility
rules, for example divorce, over age dependent or gain of coverage
on spouse’s employer provided insurance.
(g) Premiums
for coverage will be automatically deducted from the employee’s
pay warrant. Failure to pay premiums will result in loss of coverage
for the employee and/or the dependents.
(h) Employees eligible for health plan coverage who are also enrolled
in comparable group health plan sponsored by another employer may
elect to discontinue enrollment in their County-sponsored health
plan (Opt-Out).
(i) Effective July 12, 2003, employees eligible for dental plan
coverage who are also enrolled in a comparable group dental plan
sponsored by another employer may elect to discontinue enrollment
in their County-sponsored dental plan.
(j) The rules and procedures for electing to Opt-Out of County-sponsored
health and dental plan coverage are established and administered
by the Human Resources Employee Benefits and Services Division.
(1) Employees may elect to Opt-Out of County health and/or dental
plan(s) within thirty (30) calendar days of becoming eligible for
another employer-sponsored group plan. Verification of coverage
is not initially necessary as it will be required during the next
annual open enrollment period.
(2) Employees may elect to Opt-Out of County health and/or dental
plan(s) during an annual open enrollment period. All employees
electing Opt-Out during an annual open enrollment period, for reasons
other than initial gain of another employer-sponsored group plan,
must provide verification of other group plan coverage.
(3) After initial Opt-Out, employees must re-elect the Opt-Out
benefit and provide verification of continued coverage each year
during subsequent open enrollment periods.
(4) An employee who elects Opt-Out for dental plan coverage may
not re-enroll in a County-sponsored dental plan for a minimum of
two (2) years unless the employee involuntarily loses coverage
from the other employer-sponsored group dental plan. Employees
who elect to enroll in County dental coverage, for reasons other
than involuntary loss of another group sponsored dental plan coverage,
may enroll during open enrollment following completion of the two
(2) year dental Opt-Out restriction. NOTE: a voluntary loss of
other group dental insurance may result in a break in dental coverage
until the two (2) year mandatory Opt-Out period is complete.
(5) Employees who voluntarily or involuntarily lose their other
group health plan coverage must enroll in a County-sponsored health
plan within thirty (30) calendar days. Enrollment in the County-sponsored
plan will be provided in accordance with the requirements of the
applicable plan. If the employee elects not to enroll their eligible
dependents, the dependents may only be added at a subsequent annual
open enrollment period.
(6) There
must be no break in the employee’s health plan
coverage between the termination date of the other employer group
coverage and enrollment in a County health plan. Terms and conditions
of the applicable plan will determine the required retroactive
enrollment period and premiums required to implement coverage.
Failure to notify the County of loss of group coverage within thirty
(30) calendar days will require the employee to pay their insurance
premiums retroactively on an after-tax basis.
(k) An eligible
employee whose spouse is also an eligible County employee may
elect coverage
as a dependent on their spouse’s
or, if the employee is age eighteen (18) or younger, on their parent’s
County health and/or dental insurance plan in lieu of individual
employee coverage. This is called a “waiver” to their
County spouse’s or parent’s County insurance coverage.
Such election must be made within 30 calendar days of the employee’s,
County parent’s or the County spouse’s eligibility
for County health and dental insurance. During the Plan year, an
employee is responsible for notifying the County within thirty
(30) days of ineligibility for the waiver, for example the dependent
child turns nineteen (19) or the spouse leaves County employment.
Changes will become effective on the first day of the pay period
following the receipt and approval of all appropriate documentation.
Loss of the spouse or parent’s County plan coverage will
require the employee to immediately enroll in the County’s
health and dental plans. Waivers may be changed during any subsequent
annual health and dental open enrollment period.
Section
4 – Health
and Dental Plan Subsidies
(a) The County will establish a Dental Subsidy Fund (Fund) in
the amount of $1,250,000. Effective pay period 16/01, employees
who are participating in the lowest-cost dental plan (eligible,
enrolled and paying premiums) will receive a premium subsidy
of $3.34 per pay period. The premium subsidy will continue until
the Fund and any interest earned have been exhausted.
(b) For employees
assigned to work in the Needles, Trona, Baker, and Ridgecrest
work locations,
the County will establish a “Needles
Subsidy.” The Needles Subsidy will be paid by the employee’s
Department and will be equal to the amount of the premium difference
between the indemnity health plan offered in these specific work
locations and the lowest cost health plan provided by the County.
This Subsidy will be established each year when premiums change
for the County-sponsored health plans. The Subsidy will be discontinued
when the lowest cost health plan becomes available to the employees.
(c) Effective
July 12, 2003, the County will establish a Medical Premium Subsidy
(MPS)
Program to reduce the cost of health plan
premiums charged to eligible employees. The MPS shall not be applicable
to dental plan premiums. The MPS amount payable for each eligible
employee shall be based upon the number of persons the employee
enrolls in the County-sponsored health plan. The applicable MPS
amount shall be paid directly to the provider of the County-sponsored
health plan in which the eligible employee has enrolled. The MPS
shall not be considered compensation earnable for purposes of calculating
benefits or contributions for the San Bernardino County Employees’ Retirement
Association; nor shall the MPS be converted to cash.
(1) Effective July 12, 2003, the MPS paid for each eligible employee
electing Employee Only health plan coverage shall be $25.00 per
month ($11.49 per pay period). Effective July 10, 2004, the MPS
for each eligible employee electing Employee Only health plan coverage
shall be increased to $45.00 per month ($20.69 per pay period).
Effective July 9, 2005, the MPS for each eligible employee electing
Employee Only health plan coverage shall be increased to $80.00
per month ($36.78 per pay period).
(2) Effective July 12, 2003, the MPS paid for each eligible employee
electing Employee +1 health plan coverage shall be $170.00 per
month ($78.16 per pay period). Effective July 10, 2004, the MPS
for each eligible employee electing Employee +1 health plan coverage
shall be increased to $235.00 per month ($108.05 per pay period).
Effective July 9, 2005, the MPS for each eligible employee electing
Employee +1 health plan coverage shall be increased to $310.00
per month ($142.53 per pay period).
(3) Effective July 12, 2003, the MPS paid for each eligible employee
electing Employee +2 health plan coverage shall be $315.00 per
month ($144.83 per pay period). Effective July 10, 2004, the MPS
for each eligible employee electing Employee +2 health plan coverage
shall be increased to $405.00 per month ($186.21 per pay period).
Effective July 9, 2005, the MPS for each eligible employee electing
Employee +2 health plan coverage shall be increased to $500.00
per month ($229.89 per pay period).
CLASSIFICATION Return
to Menu
The County will include the classifications of Deputy Sheriff
Criminalist III and Deputy Sheriff Criminalist IV as part of the
current classification study of the Sheriff's Crime Lab.
COUNTY MANAGEMENT
RIGHTS Return
to Menu
All management rights and functions shall remain vested exclusively
with the County except those which are clearly and expressly limited
in this Agreement. It is recognized merely by way of illustration
that such management rights and functions include but are not limited
to:
(a) The right to determine the mission of each of its agencies,
departments, institutions, boards, and commissions.
(b) The right of full and exclusive control of the management
of the County; supervision of all operations; determination of
the methods and means of performing any and all work; and composition,
assignment, direction, location, and determination of the size
and mission of the work force.
(c) The right to determine the work to be done by the employees, including
establishment of levels of service and staffing patterns.
(d) The right to change or introduce new or improved operations,
methods, means or facilities; or, to contract for work to be done.
(e) Subject to the Personnel Rules, where applicable, the right
to prescribe qualifications for employment and determine whether
they are met; to hire, set and enforce performance standards, and
promote employees; to establish, revise and enforce work rules;
to schedule work time and time off; to transfer, reassign, furlough
and lay off employees; to suspend, reduce in step, demote, discharge
or otherwise discipline employees for cause; and to otherwise maintain
orderly, effective, and efficient operations.
DEFINITIONS Return
to Menu
Listed below are definitions of terms commonly used in this Agreement.
Appointing Authority – Refers to the department head of
the employee’s department. It includes any person who is
designated as acting department head, employees acting for the
department head during absence, and/or employees delegated all
authority to act on behalf of the appointing authority on a regular
basis.
Director of Human Resources – Refers to the incumbent in
the Director of Human Resources’ position. It also includes
any person who has been designated as acting Director of Human
Resources, employees acting for the Director during absence, and/or
employees delegated authority approval on a regular basis by the
Director of Human Resources.
Service Hours – Refers to paid hours during an employee’s
regular tour of duty, up to eighty (80) hours per pay period. Time
without pay and overtime hours do not count as service hours.
Working Days – Refers to the days that the
County is normally open to conduct business, i.e., Monday through
Friday, excluding
County holidays.
DEMOTIONS
Return
to Menu
A demotion is the appointment of an employee from an incumbent
position to a position in a different classification for which
the maximum rate of pay is lower. An employee demoted for disciplinary
reasons shall be placed on the step within the base salary range
of the class to which demoted as provided in the Order of Demotion;
provided, however that the employee shall not be placed lower than
two (2) step increments (approximately five percent (5%) below
employee's current step). An employee demoted for disciplinary
reasons cannot be placed higher than the top step in the range
for the class to which the employee is demoted.
An employee
demoted for nondisciplinary reasons shall be retained at the
same salary
rate, provided, that the salary rate does not
exceed the top step of the salary range of the demoted class, except
that such an employee may be placed on an "X" step in
accordance with the provision of the Article on Downgradings, with
the approval of the appointing authority and the Director of Human
Resources.
A promoted employee who is returned to former classification
during the probationary period shall be placed on the same step
within the base salary range for the former classification that
the employee was on at time of promotion. No credit shall be granted
for time spent at the promoted level for next step advance due
date.
DISPUTE RESOLUTION
PROCEDURE Return
to Menu
Section
1 – Purpose
The County and SEBA fully realize the importance of viable procedures
to aid in the resolution of disputes among employees, supervisors,
and management. It is recognized that conditions may arise which
can create employee dissatisfaction, and that to maintain high
employee morale and harmonious relations, an orderly method of
processing disputes is necessary. The Board of Supervisors and
SEBA have pledged that their representatives at all levels will
extend active, aggressive, and continuing efforts to secure prompt
disposition of issues. The initiation of a complaint in good faith
by an employee shall not cause any adverse reflection on the employee's
standing with immediate supervisors or loyalty as a County employee.
Section
2 – Definitions
and Exclusions
There are four (4) types of dispute procedures in this Article:
grievances, disciplinary appeals, unfair labor practices, and equal
employment opportunity complaints.
A grievance is a disagreement between County management and an
employee, group of employees, or SEBA concerning the interpretation,
application, or violation of this Memorandum of Understanding.
SEBA may not independently submit or process a formal grievance,
unless it can show that at least one (1) employee within the Unit
has suffered detriment as a result of the aggrieved contract provision.
An equal employment opportunity complaint is an allegation of
a violation of the County Equal Employment Opportunity Plan.
A disciplinary appeal is an appeal of discipline as defined by
the Personnel Rules.
An unfair labor practice charge is an allegation of a violation
of the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act. This section also applies to unit
modification and unit determination issues.
Any dispute which may arise between parties involving the application,
meaning, or interpretation of the Personnel Rules is excluded from
this Article and shall be settled in accordance with the appropriate
appeal procedure established by the Personnel Rules except as provided
in Section 4 of this Article.
All matters are excluded from this procedure which deal with
the Article County Management Rights, federal or state statutes,
rules or regulations, or are preempted by County Charter. Except
as otherwise provided by this Agreement or state or federal statute,
this grievance procedure shall be the sole and exclusive procedure
for seeking recourse for any grievance, as defined herein.
Section
3 – Grievance
Procedure
(a) Jurisdiction
The Director of Human Resources or designee shall have the sole
authority within the County structure to provide the official management
interpretation or application to any and all provisions of this
Agreement. The arbitrator has the final authority within the County
structure to adjudicate all grievances, as defined or otherwise
provided herein.
b) Representation
Aggrieved employees shall have the right to be represented only
by themselves or by an authorized SEBA employee representative.
This representation may commence at any step in the Grievance Procedure.
A representative of the Human Resources Department may be in attendance
at any step in the Grievance Procedure. The County agrees within
reasonable limits to compensate the aggrieved employee(s) for time
spent during regularly scheduled hours in the handling of real
and prospective grievances.
(c) Consolidation of Grievances
In order to avoid the necessity of processing numerous similar
grievances at one time, similar grievances must be consolidated.
(d) Time Limitations and Notification
Time limitations are established to settle a grievance quickly.
Time limits may be modified only by agreement of the parties. If
at any step of this Grievance Procedure the grievant is dissatisfied
with the decision rendered, it shall be the grievant's responsibility
to initiate the action which submits the grievance to the next
level of review within the time limits specified. Failure to submit
the grievance within the time limits imposed shall terminate the
grievance process and the matter shall be considered resolved.
If a reviewing official does not respond within the time limits
specified, the grievance shall be deemed to have been denied on
the last day upon which the response could have been made.
The grievant shall then proceed to the next step of the Grievance
Procedure within the specified time limits. A formal grievance
may be entertained in or advanced to any step if the parties jointly
so agree, except as limited by Section 2 of this Article. A copy
of such agreement bearing the signatures of the parties shall be
filed with the Employee Relations Division of the Human Resources
Department.
For purposes of this Grievance Procedure, notification to a party
may be given either personally or by mail. When notice is mailed
to an employee, it shall be sent to the employee's current address
of record. For the purpose of this procedure, notice by mail shall
be deemed to have been completed on the third calendar day following
deposit of notice with the United States Postal Service, unless
the party can establish that notice was not actually received as
a result of circumstances beyond the party's control.
e) Steps in the Grievance Procedure
The procedures outlined herein constitute the informal and formal
steps necessary to resolve an employee's grievance. The attempt
of settlement of grievances filed on behalf of an individual employee(s)
in the informal step at the employee?supervisor level is required.
The presentation of the informal grievance is an absolute prerequisite
to the institution of a formal grievance. The grievance must be
submitted within fifteen (15) work days after the employee is aware
of the conditions precipitating the grievance.
Step 1. Initially, the employee having a grievance shall on a
personal face?to?face basis discuss the complaint with the immediate
supervisor informally.
Within three (3) work days the immediate supervisor shall give
the decision to the employee orally.
Step 2. If a mutually
acceptable solution has not been reached in the informal step,
the grievant shall submit the grievance in
writing on appropriate forms prepared and supplied by the Employee
Relations Division which shall provide a detailed statement of
the grievance, including dates, names, and places, applicable MOU
articles, and the specific remedy or action requested. The written
grievance shall be filed in duplicate with the Employee Relations
Division within five (5) work days of oral notification of the
immediate supervisor’s decision.
The Employee Relations Division shall make a determination of
whether the grievance is a matter for which the formal Grievance
Procedure is appropriate. The determination and notification to
the grievant will be made within five (5) work days of receipt
of the grievance. Any affected party may appeal this determination
directly to the arbitrator, in accordance with the provisions of
this procedure, within five (5) work days following notification
by the Employee Relations Division of the Human Resources Department.
Step 3. If the grievance
is accepted, the grievant shall submit the written grievance
to the Division/Section Head within three
(3) work days of receipt of written notification of the Employee
Relations Division’s determination.
The Division/Section Head shall meet with the grievant and thoroughly
discuss the grievance within five (5) work days of receipt of the
written grievance of the employee. Any grieving employee must appeal
personally.
In the Sheriff's Department, it may be necessary to involve intermediate
supervisors in the discussions with the grievant. The time limits
established normally allow for this, but if an extension of time
is needed, it should be mutually agreed upon in writing by both
the appointing authority and the grievant or designated representative.
A copy of the written agreement will be furnished to the Employee
Relations Division of the Human Resources Department.
The Division/Section Head shall give a written decision to the
grievant and the Employee Relations Division within five (5) work
days after discussion with the grievant.
Step 4. If the grievance has not been satisfactorily resolved
at the Division/Section Head level, it may be appealed to the appointing
authority within five (5) work days following notification to the
employee.
The appointing authority shall review the matter and shall render
a decision within five (5) work days after receiving the grievance.
Step 5 – Arbitration.
If the grievance has not been satisfactorily resolved by the
appointing authority, a written appeal for arbitration
must be filed with the Employee Relations Division within five
(5) work days of notification of the decision by the appointing
authority. The appeal must be presented on the aforementioned grievance
form supplied by the Employee Relations Division of the Human Resources
Department along with a copy of any pertinent documents.
In reaching a decision and award the arbitrator shall limit himself
to the allegations contained in the grievance presented in relation
to the express provisions of the MOU alleged to have been violated.
Further, the arbitrator shall have no authority to amend, change,
add to, subtract from, or ignore any provisions of this MOU. Lastly,
the arbitrator shall not substitute his judgment for that of the
County on matters pertaining to the exercise of managerial discretion
except where it can be shown by the grievant/SEBA that the County
abused its discretion.
The decision of the
arbitrator will be in writing and transmitted to the parties
within thirty (30) calendar days after the close
of the hearing. The arbitrator’s decision may require an
appointing authority or a subordinate to cease and desist from
the action which is the subject of the grievance. The arbitrator
may also require the appointing authority to take whatever action
is necessary, within the control of the appointing authority, to
remedy the grievance, or take other action to relieve the loss,
if any, to the employee. Under no conditions can the arbitrator
order relief that exceeds the relief requested by the grievant,
and shall be limited to making the grievant whole. The decision
by the arbitrator shall be final and binding on all parties unless
there is a financial impact in which case it shall be subject to
approval of the Board of Supervisors. If the Board of Supervisors
fails to act within thirty (30) days following receipt of formal
notice of the decision of the arbitrator, the decision shall become
final and binding. A copy of the arbitration decision shall be
filed with the Employee Relations Division of the Human Resources
Department and SEBA.
All grievances shall be treated as confidential, and no publicity
will be given until the final resolution of the grievance.
Section
4 – Disciplinary
Appeals
Disciplinary appeals are governed by the Personnel Rules, except where the
provisions in the MOU differ from those in the Personnel Rules the provisions
of the MOU take precedence.
Except as provided
below, disciplinary appeals shall be heard by a hearing officer.
Except as provided herein, the hearing officer's
findings and recommendation shall be final and binding on both
parties but shall be subject to review by the Civil Service Commission
on its own initiative only as described below. The Civil Service
Commission shall either accept or reject the hearing officer's
findings and recommendations in its entirety within sixty (60)
days of receipt by the Commission. The only basis the Civil Service
Commission can use to reject the hearing officer’s decision
in its entirety, is for one or more of the following reasons:
(a) The recommendation was procured by corruption, fraud, or other
undue means;
(b) There was corruption in the hearing officer;
(c) The rights of a party were substantially prejudiced by the
misconduct of the neutral hearing officer;
(d) The hearing officer exceeded his/her powers on the matter
submitted; or
(e) The rights of a party were substantially prejudiced by the
refusal of the hearing officer to postpone the hearing upon sufficient
cause being shown therefore, or by the refusal of the hearing officer
to properly include or exclude material to the controversy.
Should such be the case, the Commission must state in writing
specific reason(s) for the decision (a, b, c, d, or e) and subsequently
conduct and complete a full and fair evidentiary hearing on the
disciplinary appeal. Such hearing shall commence within thirty
(30) days of rejecting the hearing officer's findings and recommendations
unless the hearing cannot for good cause be commenced within thirty
(30) days. Both the County of San Bernardino and SEBA reserve the
right to seek judicial review of the final administrative decision
pursuant to Section 1094.5 of the California Code of Civil Procedure.
Within five (5) business
days of acceptance of the appeal by the Civil Service Commission
(CSC), the parties shall either mutually
agree to have the appeal heard by the CSC or the appellant’s
representative shall request a list of hearing officers from the
American Arbitration Association (AAA) or the State or Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Service (S/FMCS).
If applicable, the names provided by AAA or the S/FMCS shall
be added to the list established annually by the parties and the
CSC. Within ten (10) business days, the parties shall select from
the list by mutual agreement. Where mutual agreement cannot be
made, the hearing officer in each case shall be determined following
a striking process. The determination as to which party strikes
first shall be based on a coin flip. If the last remaining person
on the list is not available, the previously stricken person(s)
shall be contacted in reverse order until one is available.
The parties shall advise the CSC of the selection of hearing
officer and request that the hearing officer be appointed.
The hearing officer shall conduct the hearing and issue its decision
in accordance with provisions of this MOU and the rules and procedures
of the Civil Service Commission.
The cost of the hearing officer’s services, and court reporter
if applicable, shall be borne equally by the parties. Any cancellation
fee will be paid by
the party responsible for canceling the hearing, or divided between the parties
if both parties are responsible.
Section
5 – Unfair
Labor Practices
Unfair labor practice charges as well as unit modification and
unit determinations shall be heard by a Hearing Officer in accordance
with Section 8 of this Article.
Section 6 – Equal Employment Opportunity Compliance
Process
Employees have the
ability to file complaints involving discriminatory employment
practices as defined in the County’s Equal Employment
Opportunity Plan. Such complaints may be filed with the County’s
Equal Employment Opportunity Office, or the State Department of
Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) or the Federal Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC). In the event the investigative findings
of the County’s Equal Employment Opportunity Office are not
satisfactory to the complainant(s), the complainant or complainants
represented by SEBA may file an appeal as described herein. A complainant
or complainants not represented by SEBA may use the appeal process
described herein, but must assume one-half (1/2) of the costs of
the appeal process, including any arbitrator’s costs.
Any appeal under this
Section must be filed with the County’s
Equal Employment Opportunity Office within ten (10) calendar days
of receipt of the written investigative findings of the County’s
Equal Employment Opportunity Office. The Equal Employment Opportunity
Office and SEBA, or complainant, when not represented by SEBA,
shall contact an arbitrator to establish a hearing date acceptable
to both parties; provided, however, that the arbitrator must have
demonstrated experience in the field of equal employment opportunity
and employment discrimination and that the hearing commence within
ninety (90) calendar days of the date of appeal, unless otherwise
agreed by the parties.. The arbitration shall be conducted in accordance
with Section 8 of this Article, substituting the County’s
Equal Employment Opportunity Office for the Employee Relations
Division where applicable except for the following: The arbitrator
may not order any monetary remedy which exceeds actual losses of
pay and benefits suffered by the complainant. The cost of the arbitrator’s
services shall be split equally between the County Department of
the complainant(s) and SEBA, including any cancellation fee if
both parties are mutually responsible, otherwise the party responsible
shall pay the entire cancellation fee.
Section
7 – Mediation
The parties (Director of Human Resources or designee and SEBA)
may by mutual agreement utilize mediation for any dispute filed
under the provisions of this Article prior to arbitration. The
mediation process described in this section may be invoked only
by the two (2) parties identified herein and is expressly an exception
to the language contained in Section 3(b) of this Article.
The parameters of the mediation process, where mutual resolution
of the grievance or disciplinary appeal is sought, are as follows:
(a) The parties (Director of Human Resources or designee and SEBA)
shall exchange in writing the agreement to refer a specific appeal
to mediation;
(b) The grievant/appellant shall have the right to be present,
represented by SEBA as the sole, exclusive bargaining agent;
(c) The grievant/appellant and the County are each entitled to
one (1) representative;
(d) Any written material submitted to the mediator shall be returned
to the party providing the material at the conclusion of the mediation
meeting.
(e) The mediation process shall be as follows:
(1) The mediation meeting shall be an informal process, limited
to one (1) hour or less, presentation for each side, not restricted
to the rules of evidence, no retention of a proceeding record;
(2) The mediator will meet jointly with the parties and separately,
if necessary;
(3) The mediator has no authority to compel resolution of the
matter mediated;
(4) The oral advisory opinion of the mediator shall be given at
the conclusion of the meeting and the parties may opt to agree
in writing to the opinion, reject the same mutually or singularly
and proceed to the next step of the usual process, or remove the
matter from the process by mutual agreement;
(5) The advisory opinion accepted in writing by the two parties
does not constitute a precedent and is not admissible as evidence
in any future process governed by the Memorandum of Understanding
or Personnel Rules.
(f) Where possible,
the parties shall utilize the mediation services provided by
the California State Mediation and Conciliation Service.
In the event that the mediation process would result in fees for
service rendered by the State, or by the use of a private hearing
officer, such costs shall be equally divided between the employee’s
department and SEBA.
(g) The post mediation process is restricted by the following:
(1) No person serving in the capacity as a mediator may serve
as the hearing officer/arbitrator for the same case should the
same be forwarded to arbitration or a Personnel Rules disciplinary
hearing.
(2) No reference to a matter mediated may be utilized in a subsequent
arbitration or hearing unless both parties agree in writing at
a step prior to the mediation. The penalty for violation of this
understanding shall be forfeiture of the hearing or appeal by the
party violating the same.
Section
8 – Procedures
Governing Appeals Before the Arbitrator/Hearing Officer
(a) Arbitrators/Hearing officers may be selected by mutual agreement
of the Human Resources Department and SEBA. Otherwise, they shall
be selected from a list established by the Human Resources Department
and SEBA from names provided by the State Mediation and Conciliation
Service. The arbitrator/hearing officer in each case shall be determined
following a striking process. The determination as to which party
strikes first shall be based on a coin flip. If the last remaining
person is not available, the previously stricken person(s) shall
be contacted in reverse order until one is available. The list
shall be in effect for one (1) year; names are subject to renewal
only if both the Human Resources Department and SEBA are in agreement;
and where there is not mutual agreement, new name(s) shall be added
to the list in the aforementioned manner.
(b) The cost of the
hearing officer’s/arbitrator’s
services, and court reporter if applicable, shall be split equally
between the County Department of the complainant(s) and SEBA, or
the complainant if not represented by SEBA. Any cancellation fee
will be paid by the party responsible for canceling the hearing,
or divided between the parties if both parties are responsible.
(c) Prehearing conferences are to be mandatory. Within twenty
(20) work days prior to the hearing, both parties are required
to meet in such conference to jointly or individually declare stipulations,
identify witnesses and exchange exhibits that will be carried forward
to the hearing, the intent being full disclosure by both sides
prior to the arbitration process. The prehearing conference may
be conducted by telephone.
(d) The decision of the arbitrator shall be made in writing and
transmitted to the parties within thirty (30) calendar days after
the conclusion of the hearing.
DOWNGRADINGS Return
to Menu
When a position is
downgraded because of decreased responsibility or difficulty,
the Director of Human Resources may authorize continuation
of the same salary rate payment to the incumbent employee that
the employee received prior to the downgrading of the position
by placing the employee on an "X" step, provided that
the employee shall receive no future salary rate increases until
the salary rate of the position held exceeds the "X" step.
DUAL APPOINTMENTS Return
to Menu
The appointment of two
(2) full-time employees to the same budgeted position may be
authorized by the Director of Human Resources to
facilitate training, to make assignments to a position vacant due
to extended authorized leave of absence, or in an emergency.
ELECTRONIC
FUND TRANSFERS Return
to Menu
All employees hired
after July 1, 2000, must make arrangements for the direct deposit
of paychecks into the financial institution
of their choice via electronic fund transfer.
EMPLOYEES
RIGHTS Return
to Menu
All employees shall have the following rights which may be exercised
in accordance with State Law, the County Charter, and applicable
ordinances, rules and regulations.
(a) The right to form, join, and participate in the activities
of employee organizations of their own choosing for the purpose
of representation on all matters of employer?employee relations.
(b) The right to refuse to join or participate in the activities
of employee organizations and the right to represent themselves
individually in their employment relations with the County.
(c) The right to be free from interference, intimidation, restraint,
coercion, discrimination, or reprisal on the part of an appointing
authority, supervisor, other employees, or employee organizations
as a result of their exercise of rights granted in this Article
(a) and (b).
The provisions of Section 3300 et seq. of the Government Code
are hereby incorporated as such provisions may apply to employees
within the Safety Management and Supervisory Unit; provided, however,
that these provisions or alleged violations thereof shall not be
subject to the Grievance Procedure.
EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT Return
to Menu
Section
1 – General
Provisions
The purpose of this Article is to define the policies and procedures
by which employees shall report and be reimbursed for necessary
expenses incurred on behalf of San Bernardino County, except as
may be otherwise provided in this Agreement.
Section
2 – Responsibilities
It shall be the responsibility of each appointing authority or
designee to investigate and approve each request for expense reimbursement.
It shall be the responsibility of each employee to obtain prior
approval from the appropriate appointing authority or designee
to incur a business expense. Prior approval may be in the form
of standing orders issued by the appointing authority.
Section
3 – Travel
Authorization
(a) Travel outside
the State of California must be approved by the County Administrative
Officer or designee except when the trip
outside California is within twenty (20) miles of the California
border or travel through a location anywhere in the adjacent state
as a means of arriving at a location within California. Requests
for such travel shall be submitted to the County Administrative
Office in triplicate on a standard "Travel Request" form,
unless specifically approved in the department's budget.
(b) The appointing authority or designee shall initiate Travel
Requests. The County Administrative Office and Auditor/Controller
shall be notified in writing of all such designees.
(c) The appointing authority or designee is authorized to approve
necessary travel within the State of California and use of transportation
mode consistent with this Article.
Section
4 – Authorization
for Attendance at Meetings
(a) Appointing authorities may authorize attendance at meetings
at County expense when the program material is directly related
to an important phase of County service and holds promise of benefit
to the County as a result of such attendance.
(b) Authorization for attendance at meetings without expense
reimbursement, but on County time, may be granted when the employee
is engaged on the County's behalf, but from which the gain will
inure principally to the benefit of the employee and only incidentally
to the County.
Section
5 – Records
and Reimbursements
(a) Requests for expense reimbursement should be submitted once
each month, except if the amount claimable for any month does not
exceed twenty-five dollars ($25.00), the submission may be deferred
until the amount exceeds twenty-five dollars ($25.00) or until
June 30 during the current fiscal year, whichever occurs first.
At the end of the fiscal year, expense reimbursement claims for
July 1 and beyond, must be on a separate claim from those expenses
claimed for June 30 or earlier.
(b) Receipts or vouchers which verify the claimed expenditures
will be required for all item of expense, except:
(1) Subsistence, except as otherwise provided in this Article.
(2) Private mileage.
(3) Taxi, streetcar, bus, and ferry boat fares; bridge and road
tolls; and parking fees.
(4) Telephone and telegraph charges.
(5) Other authorized expenses of less than one dollar ($1.00).
(c) Claims for expense reimbursement totaling less than one dollar
($1.00) in any fiscal year shall not be paid.
(d) Reimbursement shall not be made for any personal expenses
such as, but not limited to, entertainment, barbering, tips, etc.,
unless such personal expense is a necessary and integral part of
an authorized investigation.
(e) Except as otherwise provided in this Article, expense reimbursements
shall be made on an actual cost basis.
Section
6 – Transportation
Modes
(a) The general rule for selection of a mode of transportation
is that mode which represents the lowest expense to the County.
(b) Travel Via Private Automobile
(1) Reimbursement for
use of privately owned automobiles to conduct County business
shall be at the rate of twenty?nine cents (29¢)
per mile for all miles driven per month. Effective July 5, 1997,
the mileage rate shall be determined annually by the IRS allowance.
Reimbursements at this rate shall be considered as full and complete
payment for actual necessary expenses for the use of the private
automobile, insurance, maintenance, and all other transportation
related costs. The County does not provide any insurance for private
automobiles used on County business. The owner of an automobile
is responsible for the personal liability and property damage insurance
when the vehicle is used on County business.
(2) When employees, traveling on official County business, leave
directly from their principal place of residence rather than from
their assigned work location, mileage allowed to the first work
contact point shall be equal to the actual mileage from the residence
or the mileage computed from the assigned work location, whichever
is less.
Similarly, if the employee departs from the last work contact
point directly to the residence, only such mileage shall be allowed
as the lesser distance between it and the assigned work location.
(c) Travel Via Rental Vehicles
Reimbursement will
be provided for the cost of a rental vehicle for business purposes
if such use is approved by the appointing
authority. Rental vehicles are covered for liability and vehicle
physical damage under the County’s self-insurance program.
Reimbursement will not be provided for the additional costs incurred
if any employee purchases additional insurance or signs a Collision
Damage Waiver (CDW) when renting a vehicle for County business.
(d) Travel Via Air
Commercial Aircraft – Expense
reimbursement for travel via commercial aircraft shall be compensated
only for the cost
of air coach rates, unless air coach or economy space is unavailable
to meet emergency requirements.
Section
7 – Subsistence
for Overnight Travel
(a) Subsistence allowances for lodging and meals while traveling
overnight on County business shall not be allowed without prior
approval of the appointing authority or designee and only as deemed
necessary for the purpose of conducting County business. As provided
in Section 5(e), expense reimbursements shall be made on an actual
cost basis except that where no receipts have been submitted the
allowances listed below shall apply.
(b) The allowance for lodging is sixty-five dollars ($65.00) plus
tax, per night, single.
(c) The allowance for meals is forty-one dollars ($41.00) plus
tax and gratuity, the latter not to exceed fifteen percent (15%),
per full day, or when it is less than a full day or separate meals
are claimed, nine dollars ($9.00) for breakfast; twelve dollars
($12.00) for lunch; and twenty dollars ($20.00) for dinner, all
plus tax and gratuity, as provided above.
Section
8 – Meal
Reimbursement
(a) The parties agree that it is the basic responsibility of
employees to anticipate and make provision for their own meals
eaten during the employee's regularly scheduled tour of duty; however,
reimbursement for meals may be approved by the appointing authority
when an employee is twenty (20) miles or more distant from assigned
work location for more than one?half (1/2) of the scheduled tour
of duty or when an employee is required to work in excess of the
regularly scheduled tour of duty during an unplanned activity.
Reimbursement for meals provided for in this subsection shall be
made on an actual cost basis not to exceed nine dollars ($9.00)
for breakfast; twelve dollars ($12.00) for lunch; and twenty ($20.00)
for dinner, all plus tax and gratuity, as provided above.
(b) Meal allowances for a business meeting/conference including
meals are the actual cost.
(c) Employees may be reimbursed for purchasing meals for prisoners,
while being transported. Said meal expenses are not to exceed five
dollars ($5.00) per meal. Original receipts are mandatory to obtain
reimbursement for meals for prisoners.
Section
9 – Expense
Advances
Advancement of funds for business expenses can be obtained from
the Auditor?Controller's Office through submission of the appropriate
form. Advancements shall not exceed the maximum allowances set
forth herein. The minimum amount to be advanced is fifty dollars
($50.00)
Section
10 – Burial
Expenses
Immediately following proof of the death of an employee resulting
from an accident or injury caused by external violence or physical
force incurred in the performance of duty, the County shall pay
to the employee's designated beneficiary the sum of four thousand
($4,000) for purposes of burial expenses. Any sums for such burial
expenses entitled to the beneficiary under the Worker's Compensation
laws not to exceed four thousand ($4,000) shall be assigned to
and paid directly to the County.
Section
11 – Meal
Reimbursement for Trimester Use of Force Training
All employees attending trimester use of force training may be
eligible for meal reimbursement under this Section even though
they may have traveled less than twenty (20) miles from their normal
work location. Meal reimbursements under this Section shall be
subject to the POST-established amounts and requirements. Employees
attending trimester use of force training are not eligible for
expense reimbursement under Section 8 of this Article. If POST
suspends or eliminates reimbursement for such expenses, operation
of this Section shall be suspended. In the event this Section is
suspended, reimbursement for meals shall be made pursuant to Section
8 of this Article.
FLEXIBLE
SPENDING ACCOUNT Return
to Menu
Effective July 26, 2003,
the County shall establish a Health Expense Flexible Spending
Account (FSA) for employees in regular positions
who are regularly scheduled to work forty (40) or more hours per
pay period. The Health Expense FSA is established in accordance
with provisions of Section 125 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC).
The Human Resources Division Chief, Employee Benefits and Services,
will serve as the Plan’s Administrator. The Health Expense
FSA Plan year will coincide with the County’s Benefit Plan
year. Employees who choose to participate in the Health Expense
FSA must complete and submit enrollment forms in accordance with
procedures developed by the Plan’s Administrator. Eligible
employees will be notified of these procedures at least thirty
(30) days prior to the beginning of each Plan year. Eligible employees
may contribute, on a pre-tax basis, a minimum of five dollars ($5.00)
and a maximum of fifty dollars ($50.00) per biweekly pay period
to a Flexible Spending Account. Upon enrolling in the Plan, employees
may not change their designated biweekly contribution amount or
discontinue making contributions for the remainder of the Plan
year (until on or about June 30) unless they incur an eligible
family status change as defined in Section 125 of the IRC. Section
125 also requires that any amounts remaining in an employee’s
account at the end of the Plan year must be forfeited. The County
will use any forfeited amounts to help defray the Plan’s
administrative expenses. Contributions made to the Health Expense
FSA may be used for receiving non-taxable reimbursements of eligible
medical and dental expenses not covered by insurance. Eligible
reimbursable expenses are those medical and dental expenses that
qualify as medical expenses under the Internal Revenue Code.
FULL UNDERSTANDING,
MODIFICATION, WAIVERS Return
to Menu
(a) It is hereby agreed that certain provisions of the currently
existing County Code and the District Attorney and Sheriff's Department
rules, directives, regulations and preconditions to employment,
except as expressly modified by this Agreement, specifically set
forth existing wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment
of the affected employees within the scope of representation of
SEBA as defined in Section 3504 of the California Government Code.
It is further agreed that all such ordinances, resolutions, written
policies and other documents are hereby incorporated into this
Agreement by this reference to the extent they are within the scope
of bargaining as defined in Section 3504 of the California Government
Code and made a part hereof as though fully set forth and except
as specifically provided in this Agreement shall remain in full
force and effect during the entire term thereof; provided, however,
that the County may make changes, consistent with rights, if any,
SEBA has to meet with the County prior to implementation of such
changes.
(b) The parties acknowledge that during the negotiations which
resulted in this Agreement, each had the unlimited right and opportunity
to make demands and proposals with respect to any subject or matter
within the scope of representation, and that the understandings
arrived at after the exercise of that right are set forth in this
Agreement. The express provisions of this Agreement for its duration
therefore constitute the complete and total contract between the
County of San Bernardino and SEBA with respect to wages, hours
and other terms and conditions of employment. Except as provided
in paragraph (a) of this Article, any other prior or existing understanding
or agreements by the parties, whether formal or informal, regarding
any such matters are hereby superseded or terminated in their entirety.
Therefore, except as provided in paragraph (a) of this Article,
the County and SEBA for the life of this Agreement each voluntarily
waives the right to meet and confer in good faith and waives the
right to compel the other party to meet and confer in good faith
with respect to any subject or matter referred to or covered in
this Agreement, or with respect to any subject or matter not specifically
referred to or covered in this Agreement.
HOURS OF WORK Return
to Menu
Employees in this Unit,
except those in the classifications of Sheriff’s Sergeant and Sheriff’s
Criminalist III, are considered to be salaried executives. As such,
they are subject
to the following working conditions.
Employees shall be required to work during such hours as necessary
to carry out the duties of their position, as designated by the
appointing authority, and such hours may be varied so long as the
work requirements and efficient operations of the County are assured.
Such hours may include short periods away from work for personal
reasons at times the employee judges to be appropriate for his/her
absence.
Employees covered by this Article who are disciplined by a suspension
without pay shall only receive such suspension in increments of
one (1) work week. Alternatively, an appointing authority may discipline
the employee covered by this Article via a deduction of accrued
leave time. The accrued leave time is limited to vacation, holiday
or administrative leave. Deduction of accrued leave time may be
made in increments of less than one (1) work week. Any disciplinary
action imposed under this Article is subject to appeal under the
Personnel Rules of San Bernardino County and the applicable provisions
of the Grievance Procedure Article. Employees shall not be disciplined
by a reduction in step. Employees in regular positions in this
unit are considered to be salaried for purposes of the Fair Labor
Standards Act. If as a result of changes in legislation, federal
regulations or court decisions, employees are considered to be
unsalaried, the County and SEBA will meet and confer concerning
the impact of such changes.
IMPLEMENTATION Return
to Menu
This Memorandum of Understanding constitutes a mutual agreement
by all members of the Employee Relations Committee to be jointly
submitted to the Board of Supervisors for approval. It is agreed
that this Memorandum of Understanding shall not be binding upon
the parties either in whole or in part unless and until approved
by the Board of Supervisors.
Any changes to this
Agreement, which do not have specific effective dates, become
effective on the date of Board of Supervisors’ approval.
LAYOFF Return to Menu
Section
1 – Layoff
Policy
Whenever possible, loss of employment for regular County employees
shall be avoided by transfer, demotion, or temporary work. During
the first year following a layoff, laid off employees shall have
first consideration for any vacancies in a classification for which
qualifications are deemed suitable by the Director of Human Resources.
After one (1) year on the layoff list, the names of employees
shall be transferred to the appropriate open, promotional, or open-promotional
list. The duration of such placement shall not exceed two (2) years.
Section
2 – Definition
of Layoff
Layoff is the involuntary separation or demotion of a regular
employee without fault of the employee.
Section
3 – Notification
Whenever the appointing authority anticipates a surplus of employees
in regular positions, immediate notification to the Director of
Human Resources and SEBA shall be made. The notification shall
include the anticipated number and classifications of employees
to be laid off and a plan for conducting an orderly layoff to reduce
adverse effect on employees to be laid off.
Section
4 – Order
of Layoff
Layoffs shall be by
classifications unless the appointing authority, with the approval
of the Director of Human Resources, deems it
for the best interests of the service to make reductions in classification
first and thereby cause separation from the service only in the
lower ranks. The services of all provisional, temporary, and probationary
employees in the classification affected within the interested
department shall be terminated in that order before any reduction
in the regular force. Layoffs among regular employees shall be
made on the basis of seniority determined by the employee’s
current beginning date of continuous service in a regular position
with the County of San Bernardino. A regular employee who accepts
demotion in lieu of layoff retains layoff rights to his former
classification.
Section
5 – Short-Term
Layoffs
Layoffs for periods not to exceed fifteen (15) consecutive work
days may be made in any order for reasons approved by the Director
of Human Resources.
Section
6 – Exception
to Order of Layoff
Whenever the appointing
authority believes that the best interests of the service require
the retention of employees with special
qualifications, characteristics, and fitness for the work, the
appointing authority may request an exception to the order of layoff.
Such requests must be in writing to the Director of Human Resources
and must be supported by the appointing authority’s reason.
A copy of such request shall be submitted to SEBA at that time.
LEAVE PROVISIONS Return
to Menu
Employees in this Unit shall apply available paid leave time whenever
a leave of absence is approved. However, employees who are on an
approved leave of absence for less than one (1) full day, who do
not have sufficient leave time available to cover the absence,
shall be paid the full salary for their regular work day.
Section
1 – Sick
Leave
(a) Definition – Sick leave with pay is an insurance or
protection provided by the County to be granted in circumstances
of adversity to promote the health of the individual employee.
It is not an earned right to time off from work. Sick leave is
defined to mean the authorized absence from duty of an employee
because of illness, injury, pregnancy, exposure to contagious disease,
attendance upon an ill member of the employee’s immediate
family, or for a medical, optical, or dental appointment. Such
authorized absence may include attendance upon the parent(s) of
an employee, not to exceed a total of eighty (80) hours per calendar
year. In addition, a maximum of forty (40) hours earned sick leave
may be used for bereavement due to the death of persons in the
immediate family, or any relative living with the employee. Immediate
family is defined as spouse, child, mother, father, brother, sister,
mother?in?law, father?in?law, and domestic partner or child of
domestic partner, as defined by California Family Code Section
297.
(b) Accumulation – Employees
in regular positions shall accrue sick leave for each payroll
period completed, prorated on
the basis of eighty?eight (88) hours per year, or 3.39 hours per
pay period. Earned sick leave shall be available for use the first
day following the payroll period in which it is earned. Sick leave
shall be accumulative without limitation. The minimum charge against
accumulated sick leave shall be one?quarter (1/4) hour or multiples
thereof. Employees in regular positions budgeted less than eighty
(80) hours per pay period shall receive sick leave accumulation
on a pro?rata basis.
(c) Compensation – Approved
sick leave with pay shall be compensated at the employee's base
rate of pay (including Incentive
Pay).
(d) Administration
(1) Investigation – It
shall be the responsibility and duty of each appointing authority
to investigate each request for
sick leave and to allow sick leave with pay where the application
is determined to be proper and fitting, subject to approval of
the Director of Human Resources.
(2) Notice of Sickness – The appointing authority or designated
representative must be notified at least one (1) hour prior to
the start of the employee's scheduled tour of duty of a sickness
on the first day of absence. For employees assigned to 24-hour
institutions (e.g., correctional facilities) the appointing authority
or designee should be notified at least two (2) hours prior to
the start of the employee’s scheduled tour of duty of a sickness
on the first day of absence and must be notified at least one (1)
hour prior to the start of the employee’s scheduled tour
of duty. It is the responsibility of the employee to keep the appointing
authority informed as to continued absence beyond the first day
for reasons due to sickness. Failure to make such notification
may result in denial of sick leave with pay.
(3) Review – The
Director of Human Resources may review and determine the justification
of any request for sick leave with
pay and may, in the interest of the County, require a medical report
by a doctor to support a claim for sick leave pay.
(4) Proof – A
doctor's certificate or other adequate proof of illness shall
be provided by the employee in all cases of absence
due to illness when requested by the appointing authority.
(5) Improper Use – Evidence
substantiating the use of sick leave for trivial indispositions,
instances of misrepresentation,
or violation of the rules defined herein shall be construed as
grounds for dismissal or such other action as may be deemed proper
and necessary by the appointing authority and/or the Board of Supervisors.
(6) Misconduct – Sick
leave with pay may be denied if the absence is found to be due
to willful injury, gross negligence,
intemperance, improper conduct or willful absence without leave
on the part of the employee.
(e) Workers' Compensation – As
provided in Section 4850 of the Labor Code, a Safety Management
and Supervisory Unit employee
who is injured in the line of duty is entitled to full salary in
lieu of Workers' Compensation benefits and sick leave for a period
not to exceed one (1) year. After the employee has used one (1)
full year of such 4850 time, said employee may use accumulated
sick leave with pay with the approval of the appointing authority
to augment temporary disability payments if said employee is still
temporarily disabled by order of an accepted physician under the
Workers' Compensation sections or until said employee is retired.
(f) Separation – Unused
sick leave shall not be payable upon separation of the employee,
except as provided in paragraph
(g).
(g) Sick Leave Conversion – Employees
who are employed in regular positions in the County service and
are currently members
of the San Bernardino County Employees' Retirement Association,
shall receive compensation in accordance with the following: After
ten (10) years of continuous service from date of hire in a regular
position and upon retirement, death, or resignation, an employee
or the estate of a deceased employee will be paid for unused sick
leave balances according to the following formula:
Subject to Change as part of Retirement Medical Trust
Sick Leave Balance
as of
Date of Separation |
Cash payment
% of Hrs. of
Sick Leave Balance | |