OPINION
Relator is a teacher at a school within a juvenile-corrections facility. On certiorari appeal, relator argues that the unemployment law judge erred in applying Minn. Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7 (2008), to disallow his claim for unemployment benefits due to a reduction in his summer work hours. We affirm.
FACTS
Since 1997 relator Dean Halvorson has taught math and physical education at Pines School, which is operated as a part of East Central Regional Juvenile Center (RJC). RJC, a maximum-security facility for delinquent juveniles, is a division of the Anoka County Corrections Department. The staff of Pines School is paid by Anoka County.
Pines School is located in its own building on RJC grounds. Students attend Pines School while confined at RJC. Pines School teachers do not teach at other schools. The teachers are licensed by and the school is approved by the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE). Pines School’s students participate in state-standardized tests and earn credit that is transferred to other Minnesota schools.
Pines School has its own administrators and the capacity to serve 170 students. The length of a student’s enrollment and the size of the student body varies based on incarceration at RJC. The school calendar has fall, spring, and summer terms. Class offerings over the summer depend on the number of RJC inmates who require summer remedial classes to maintain age-appropriate grade levels. See Minn. Stat. § 125A.515, subd. 7(1) (2008) (requiring summer courses for remedial students enrolled in correctional schools).
Pines School’s summer enrollment has often been adequate to provide year-round employment to its teachers. During the fall and spring terms, relator typically worked over 37 hours per week. For several years, relator worked seven hours per day, five days per week, for ten weeks during summers. However, about 2005, Pines School stopped offering physical education in the summer, and relator worked as a math tutor. In the summer of 2007, the school only operated four days a week and for less than ten weeks. As a result of decreased enrollment in the summer of 2008, the school only offered relator a tutoring position with reduced hours: four and a half hours per day, four days per week, for six weeks. Relator’s work as a teacher for the 2008-09 fall and spring term was set to resume at full-time levels.
ISSUES
I. As a teacher at Pines School, does relator work “with [an] educational institution” within the meaning of Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7 (2008)?
II. Did relator’s employment situation during the 2008 summer term qualify as being between “successive academic years” pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7?
ANALYSIS
The educational-wage provision of Minnesota’s unemployment law provides:
(a) No wage credits in any amount from any employment with any educational institution or institutions earned in any capacity may be used for unemployment benefit purposes for any week during the period between two successive academic years or terms if:
(1) The applicant had employment for any educational institution ... in the prior academic year or term; and
(2) There is a reasonable assurance that the applicant will have employment for any educational institution ... in the following academic year or term, unless that subsequent employment is substantially less favorable than the employment of the prior academic year or term.
[[Image here]]
(f) This subdivision ... applies to employment with Minnesota or a political subdivision, or a nonprofit organization, if the services are provided to or on behalf of an educational institution or institutions.
[[Image here]]
(1) An “educational institution” is an educational entity operated by Minnesota or a political subdivision or an instrumentality thereof....
Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7. In sum, for employees of an “educational institution,” time off “between successive school years is not severance of the employment relationship warranting reemployment insurance benefits.”
Sparrow v. Indep. Sch. Dist. 272,
Although relator’s job title is
teacher
and he works at a school, whether he is eligible for unemployment compensation benefits hinges on the application of the statutory definitions.
Johnson v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 535,
When reviewing the decision of a ULJ, this court reverses or modifies if “the findings, inferences, conclusion, or decision are ... in excess of the statutory authority or jurisdiction of the department [or] affected by other error of law.” Minn.Stat. § 268.105, subd. 7(d) (2008). The court will “exercise independent judgment” in
I.
The first issue is whether relator’s teaching at Pines School is covered by the phrase “employment with [an] educational institution” in Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7(a). 1 An “educational institution” is defined as an “educational entity operated by Minnesota or a political subdivision or an instrumentality thereof.” Id., subd. 7(1). As a part of Anoka County or RJC, Pines School is undisputedly operated by a state political subdivision or instrumentality thereof. The question, then, is whether relator’s work is “with” an “educational entity.”
Relator argues that he does not work with an “educational entity” because neither Anoka County nor RJC, which is his employer, has a primarily educational purpose. Relator’s test asks (a) who pays the employee and (b) whether that payor’s main purpose is education. This test is too narrow. The statutory provision under consideration does not require that the political or nonprofit entity that pays the employee or operates the school be an organization whose sole or principle purpose is education. It only requires that the worker be employed “with” an “educational entity” under the state’s operational umbrella. Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7(a)(1). Restricting qualifying employees to those paid by traditional school systems would exclude educational workers that may be paid directly by a city, the state, or an outside organization. Such a strict interpretation would be problematic, considering the variety of school forms found in an educationally innovative state such as ours. Relator’s strict reading would also, in effect, create an unfair distinction between school personnel based on the school’s funding source or unique format. For this reason, we do not agree with relator that working with an entity necessarily equates to being paid by it.
We instead read the statute to ask, in essence, whether the organization that manages the employee’s workplace and position is an educational entity. Using this standard, we consider Pines School the entity that relator maintains “employment with.” An
entity
is defined as “something that exists as a discrete unit.”
American Heritage Dictionary
468 (4th ed. 2002).
In addition, we note that yet another paragraph of the statute provides that the educational-wage provision applies “to employment with Minnesota or a political subdivision ... if the services are provided to or on behalf of an educational institution or institutions.” Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7(f). Anoka County is a political subdivision of the state. Credits earned at Pines School are transferrable to other schools. If Pines School did not exist, the public school where RJC is located would be required to provide instruction to RJC residents. Thus, relator’s services and those of Pines School are provided by Ano-ka County “on behalf of’ other educational institutions. This reinforces the conclusion that the educational-wage provision in Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7(a), is applicable to relator.
We affirm the ULJ’s finding that relator is employed with an educational institution.
II.
The second issue raised by relator is whether he was improperly denied benefits on the ground that his period of reduced work was between academic terms. Minnesota law limits benefits when the employment lapse is between successive academic years or terms and the employee has received assurance of reemployment in the upcoming school year. Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7(a). Relator essentially argues that Pines School has an ongoing calendar and erratic enrollment and that his reduced level of employment during the 2008 summer months did not fall “between two successive academic years or terms.” The statute and Minnesota case-law do not define “academic year or term.” 3
We acknowledge that Pines School differs from most schools. Its student body is composed of youth incarcerated at RJC; youth/students are constantly transferring in and out; the school does not award its own diplomas; the state requires the offering of summer credit to remedial students, Minn.Stat. § 125A.515, subd. 7; and the school has often employed teachers through the summer because enrollment demanded it.
Yet, despite Pines School’s unconventional character, relator has not estab
Furthermore, there is no showing that relator individually or that Pines School’s teachers generally have had contracts or such a tradition of summer employment or of uncertain fall employment as to take their situation out of the normal limit on unemployment benefits for teachers. Relator worked a 37-hour-per-week schedule throughout the 2007-08 fall and spring sessions, had his hours cut during summer months in 2008, and was assured that he would return to regular employment in the fall of 2008. By 2006, relator apparently knew summer work as a teacher was problematic. His 2006 and 2007 summer work had been as a tutor. That relator had received near full-time hours during the summer of 2006 or earlier years does mean that he meets the requirement for unemployment benefits for the summer of 2008.
See Swanson v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 625,
We affirm the ULJ’s conclusion that relator’s summer-2008 claim for benefits came between successive academic years.
DECISION
Pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 268.085, subd. 7, relator was employed with an education
Affirmed.
Notes
. Other states have addressed a similar issue. The Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) gives tax credits to employers that pay into a state unemployment-compensation fund. 26 U.S.C. § 3302 (2006). As a condition of receiving the tax credit, federal law mandates that states adopt certain statutory language. 26 U.S.C. § 3304 (2006). Thus, nearly every state has provisions similar to the Minnesota provision at issue.
See, e.g.,
Iowa Code § 96.4(5)(a) (2008); N.Y. Lab. Law § 590(10) (McKinney 2008). Interpreting those provisions, various states have defined employment with, for, or in an educational institution.
See, e.g., Multnomah Educ. Serv. Dist. v. Employment Div.,
. Minnesota law requires correctional schools to report to and be approved by the state education commissioner. Minn.Stat. § 124D.96 (2008). This legislation is an ac-knowledgement by the legislature that schools like Pines School are deemed educational institutions or entities. This adds to Pines School’s status as an educational institution or entity distinct from but connected to RJC and Anoka County.
. We again note other states’ efforts to apply parallel provisions.
Compare Campbell v. Dep’t of Employment Sec.,
. We do not conclude that for every teacher at Pines School the summer session is necessarily “between academic years.” The Michigan case of
Wilkerson v. Jackson Public Schools
illustrates when a summer session could be considered otherwise.
