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Merit System
Protection Board Updates
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MSPB
Allows Electronic Appeals-The
Merit Systems Protection Board published interim
regulations to implement the Government Paperwork Elimination
Act by providing parties to Board proceedings the option of
transacting business electronically, both by filing an appeal
electronically and filing later submissions by e-mail. (Federal
Register)
October 25, 2003 |
-The notice states that an
individual may still initiate a Board appeal by filing a paper
appeal by any of the conventional means, and that no party is
obligated to participate in e-Filing during the course of a
Board proceeding. It then goes on to say that “[o]ur long-term
goal is to conduct all e-Filing through the Internet, including
both the pleadings filed by the parties with the Board, and the
notices, orders, and decisions issued by the Board to the
parties. In the future, e-Filing will include automatic notice
of filing, and parties will be able to view and download
pleadings and Board documents from our Web site. At the present
time, however, the only part of e-Filing that is Web-enabled is
the initiation of an appeal through e-Appeal.” The notice also
provides an overview of the process, and answers to questions
such as the acceptable formats for filing, how filing will occur
when electronic submissions have paper “attachments” to them,
and what the limit on large image files is. The regulations are
effective as of October 20, and comments on them may be
submitted until December 20, 2003. interim regulations to
implement the Government Paperwork Elimination Act by providing
parties to Board proceedings the option of transacting business
electronically, both by filing an appeal electronically and
filing later submissions by e-mail. The notice states that an
individual may still initiate a Board appeal by filing a paper
appeal by any of the conventional means, and that no party is
obligated to participate in e-Filing during the course of a
Board proceeding. It then goes on to say that “[o]ur long-term
goal is to conduct all e-Filing through the Internet, including
both the pleadings filed by the parties with the Board, and the
notices, orders, and decisions issued by the Board to the
parties. In the future, e-Filing will include automatic notice
of filing, and parties will be able to view and download
pleadings and Board documents from our Web site. At the present
time, however, the only part of e-Filing that is Web-enabled is
the initiation of an appeal through e-Appeal.” The notice also
provides an overview of the process, and answers to questions
such as the acceptable formats for filing, how filing will occur
when electronic submissions have paper “attachments” to them,
and what the limit on large image files is. The regulations are
effective as of October 20, and comments on them may be
submitted until December 20, 2003.
Interim Regulatory Changes for
Implementation of e-Appeal and e-Filing
e-Appeal Website
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Proposed MSPB Appeal Forms Package
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The Merit Systems Protection Board is seeking public comments on
its proposed MSPB Appeal Forms Package, which is a comprehensive
revision of the current MSPB Appeal Form. As required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act, on September 4, 2002 the MSPB
published a notice in the Federal Register announcing this
proposed "information collection" and soliciting public comments.
Comments are due to MSPB by November 4, 2002. Link to the
MSPB Appeal Forms
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Good Cause for Untimely Appeal
posted
08/17/02
A letter carrier lost his job with the Postal
Service in August 2000 after being charged with improper conduct and failure
to follow instructions.
The letter carrier appealed his dismissal, but later agreed with postal
officials to withdraw the appeal and instead resolve the issue through
negotiation. A Merit Systems Protection Board administrative judge gave the
letter carrier 45 days to file the paperwork needed to begin the negotiations.
The letter carrier filed the paperwork one day late.
The judge asked
letter carrier
to produce evidence justifying why he had filed late or he
would have to forfeit his right to negotiation. Slate listed several reasons
for his tardiness including a sick wife, loss of his counsel just days before
the filing deadline and no postal service on the deadline date, which he said
fell on a Sunday.
The administrative judge rejected
letter carrier's excuses, noting
that Nov. 20, the deadline, was a Saturday and the
letter carrier could have
mailed his paperwork on time.
In his subsequent appeal, the letter
carrier admitted he was wrong about the dates, that he
thought the deadline was Nov. 21, and said that the “rush to get the re-file
in caused much stress and confusion,” adding to the stress his wife’s illness
was already causing him.
The board decided that because the letter
carrier lost his counsel in the midst of the filing
process, had only missed the deadline by one day and seemed confused about the
process, his paperwork was valid and he could participate in the negotiations
with his agency.
“The agency has given no indication that it was prejudiced in any way by the
one-day delay,” the board concluded. “An appellant should not be denied an
opportunity to have his case heard on the merits where his intention to file a
board appeal has been clear throughout the proceedings, and the appeal was
initially timely filed.”
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posted 5/26/02
Calculation Of Overtime Back
Pay
Summary from FEND
Full Text
When the U.S. Postal Service calculates the back pay award of a
preference-eligible employee, whose entitlement to overtime pay comes under the
Back Pay Act, it may rely on the overtime record of the employee in question or
on similarly situated employees during the relevant time period. But the method
it chooses must be the one that most nearly restores to the employee the pay due
him. In this case, the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) found the agency in
compliance with the Act because there was no indication that the method it used
was unreasonable or unworkable.
The appellant, Charles W. Ball, previously had asked the MSPB to enforce a Board
decision changing his removal by the Postal Service to a five-day suspension. In
April 2001, the Board’s Northeastern Regional Office issued a recommendation
that his petition for enforcement be granted and that he receive overtime back
pay. Initially, the agency contended that Ball was not entitled to overtime back
pay.
Similarly Situated Employees
The MSPB Administrative Judge (AJ) in the case directed the Postal Service to
use three similarly situated employees in computing the amount of back pay due
him. But the agency objected because it maintained the three comparison
employees were not similarly situated because each had different assigned days
off for each workweek than the appellant. The Postal Service’s position was that
in order to be considered similarly situated, all relevant aspects of employment
must be as nearly identical as possible to Ball.
In May 2001, a check for $13,842.66 was issued to Ball in implementing partial
compliance. The gross amount of the check was $20,401. The Postal Service, in
acknowledging that Ball was entitled to full overtime payment in this matter,
requested time to review the precise method for computation. It suggested making
the calculation using another full-time regular employee who had worked similar
overtime hours during Ball’s back pay period.
On May 17, 2001, the Postal Service submitted evidence of payment of $6,995.38
for interest on the $20,401.86 gross overtime back payment. The computed dollar
amount for the 1,318.5 hours of overtime was $34,319.90, and the agency issued a
check in the amount of $9,093.84 on June 19, 2001, after payroll deductions were
made on the payment of the $13,918.04 difference. The agency recalculated the
interest due on the recalculated overtime payment, and in July issued a check to
Ball for the difference of $5,389.40.
The following October, the agency gave notice of an error in its original
submission over whether all three of the other employees were most similarly
situated to Ball. In February of this year, the agency submitted Ball’s
pre-removal overtime work history for the 55 pay periods prior to the back pay
period, since his back pay period was 55 pay periods. During this pre-removal
period he worked 1,260.33 hours of overtime. The agency argued that with its
payment for 1,318.50 hours of overtime, the Board should find it in compliance
with the Back Pay Act.
Problems in Comparison
There was no dispute that Ball had a history of working overtime. In calculating
overtime, the Postal Service’s position was that only the employees with the
same scheduled days off as Ball are similarly situated. Because overtime work is
scheduled when needed and is unforeseen, the agency argued, having different
days off is significant in choosing comparison employees. The agency contended
that, because of their totally different drop days, the work patterns of the
three other employees during the back period did not adequately reflect the
overtime hours Ball would have worked. It presented his prior overtime
assignments (1,260.33 hours) and claimed that with the payment of the greater
amount for 1,318.50 hours of overtime to him, the MSPB should find the agency in
compliance with the Back Pay Act.
In the Board’s opinion, it said that it would not nullify the method of overtime
calculation employed by the agency in calculating a back pay award in the
absence of a finding that the method was invalid.
The Board ruled that the method selected by the agency was reasonable and that
the overtime back pay award based on the one other employee—whose overtime
record was considered to most closely match what Ball would have worked—also was
valid. But the MSPB held that the AJ erred in accepting the three comparison
employees whom Ball had submitted for calculating the amount of his overtime
pay.
The Postal Service submitted evidence to the Board that it has now issued checks
to the appellant for the appropriate amount of overtime pay. Accordingly, since
no overtime back pay is now due, the Board found the agency was in compliance
and it dismissed Ball’s petition for enforcement. (Ball v. Postal Service, MSPB,
No. PH-0752-97-0214-X-1, 4/30/02)
Guzman-Muelling v. SSA
CH-0752-00-0257-I-1
September 10, 2001
Penalty – Prior Record
Full Text
HOLDING: The Board restated the rule in Gregory v. USPS, 212 F.3d 1296, that as a matter of law, in determining a penalty, consideration may not be given to prior disciplinary actions that are the subject of ongoing proceedings challenging their merits; consideration of prior discipline is not improper as inadmissible evidence of bad character; because the appellant’s prior record could not be considered under Gregory, and the record was not complete on issues relevant to the effect of that finding, the appeal was remanded to the agency for reconsideration of the penalty, subject to the Board’s review if the appellant seeks it.
Based on 4 current charges and 2 earlier suspensions, the agency suspended the appellant for 30 days. On appeal, the AJ sustained each of the charges, but not one of the specifications of one of them, and found the agency-assessed penalty reasonable. The appellant filed a PfR, and the agency cross-petitioned.
A majority of the Board, Member Marshall dissenting, found that the portion of the appellant’s PfR in which she challenged the AJ’s findings on the charges and her affirmative defenses failed to meet the review criteria, because its review found no error in the way the AJ adjudicated these issues, nor in the manner in which he conducted the proceedings. It also denied the agency’s cross PfR for failure to meet the criteria. It granted the portion of the appellant’s petition challenging the penalty, however.
It did so in light of Gregory v. USPS, 212 F.3d 1296, in which the Federal Circuit held that as a matter of law, in determining a penalty, consideration may not be given to prior disciplinary actions that are the subject of ongoing proceedings challenging their merits. The appellant had filed grievances as to both of her prior record elements. Thus, consideration was not properly given to these past disciplinary actions because they were ongoing at the time the agency and the AJ made their penalty determinations.
The court also stated that the Board should determine whether, in such circumstances, it should make a new penalty determination or should remand the case to the agency for reconsideration. Because the deciding official did not indicate whether the charges would be sufficient to support a 30-day suspension in the absence of the prior discipline, and because the record does not reflect the current status of the appellant’s grievances, the Board decided that the parties’ interests can best be served by remanding the appeal to the agency for reevaluation of the penalty. The agency’s exercise of its discretion, however, remains subject to the Board’s review if the appellant should seek it.
Finally, the Board rejected the appellant’s claim that allowing consideration of her prior discipline is improper because it constitutes inadmissible evidence of "bad character." Instead, it found that an employee’s past disciplinary record has long been considered a relevant factor for consideration in determining the appropriateness of an agency-imposed penalty.
In her dissent, Member Marshall noted that the agency had asserted in its cross petition that even if no consideration were given to prior record and the one specification is not sustained, it would still impose a 30-day suspension. She therefore would have found remand unnecessary and would have sustained the agency-assessed penalty as reasonable
Marucci v. OPM
PH-844E-00-0066-I-1
September 12, 2001
Retirement
– Disability
Precedential Effect of Authority - OWCP
Full Text
HOLDING: Unlike OWCP compensation claims, where an applicant must establish that an injury was work-related, the cause of the condition is not relevant in determining whether she is eligible for disability retirement; where the actual results of clinical tests on the appellant are not in the record, but nothing suggests that the psychologist was unqualified to interpret them, the Board credited them; while there may be cases where the employee’s psychological impairment is so severe that "finely tuned correlations between particular medical impairments and specific job requirements" are not required, this is not such a case; nonetheless, based on the appellant’s primary psychologist’s comparisons of her PD and her condition, and other evidence, the Board found that the appellant was entitled to a FERS disability annuity based on her stress, anxiety, and depression.
The AJ affirmed OPM’s decision that the appellant was not entitled to a disability retirement based on her stress, anxiety, and depression, which had begun as a result of rumors circulated about her by a co-worker. The Board reversed.
To be eligible for a FERS disability retirement annuity, an employee must have completed at least 18 months of creditable civilian service; must be unable, because of disease or injury, to render useful and efficient service in his or her position; and must not have declined a reasonable offer of reassignment to a vacant position in the employing agency at the same or greater grade or pay level in the employee's commuting area in which he or she is able to render useful and efficient service. OPM's regulations further require that the disabling medical condition be expected to continue for at least one year from the date the application is filed, and that accommodation of the condition in the appellant's position be unreasonable.
The only issue remaining before the Board is whether the appellant met the second of these requirements. In concluding that she did, the Board noted, however, that while there may be cases where the employee’s psychological impairment is so severe that "finely tuned correlations between particular medical impairments and specific job requirements" are not required, this is not such a case.
Nonetheless, the Board found that the appellant met her burden of proof. Unlike OWCP compensation claims, where an applicant must establish that an injury was work-related, the cause of the condition is not relevant in determining whether an employee is eligible for disability retirement. Based on several clinical tests he performed, a psychologist concluded that the appellant had "significant anxiety" as well as an "underlying obsessive/compulsive personality pattern." While the actual results of the tests are not in the record, nothing suggests that the psychologist was unqualified to interpret the tests. Further, he concluded that the appellant was "unable to function in her previous job or at any job requiring significant responsibility or decision making." The Board noted that the appellant’s PD required that she be able to exercise significant responsibility and decision-making capabilities.
Further, the appellant’s primary therapist prepared a psychological evaluation that related the appellant’s symptoms to specific responsibilities of her position. Among those findings, the Board noted particularly that the appellant’s ability to understand complex documents was affected by the symptoms associated with her anxiety and depression; and that her ability to interact with co-workers and peers was affected by the physical symptoms she experienced in social situations. In general, the Board noted, the duties the psychologist delineated were consistent with the duties described by the appellant’s position description and performance evaluations.
Finally, the Board found, based on the medical evidence and the appellant’s testimony, that her condition worsened over time, despite medication and therapy.
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