The Honorable Stanley Russ State Senator P.O. Box 787 Conway, AR 72032
Dear Senator Russ:
This is in response to your request for an opinion as to whether case coordinators, probation officers and clerks of the 20th Judicial District should be considered county employees. You state that the areas of concern are employee benefits, the setting of salaries, payment of overtime or compensation time and record keeping. You have also asked for my review of Faulkner County Quorum Court Proposed Ordinance F-7.
The status of case coordinators and probation officers as either state or county employees is not squarely addressed under state law. It is perhaps most accurate to identify them as court employees. See, e.g., Venhaus v. State,
With regard to clerks, it should be noted that the circuit clerk is an elected county officer. See Ark. Const. art.
With regard, specifically, to employee benefits, the setting of salaries, payment of overtime or compensatory time and record keeping, it is difficult to address these questions without knowing the exact focus of your inquiry. One might, for instance, consider the case coordinators to be county employees to the extent that the county is responsible for their compensation (A.C.A. §
It is my understanding, with regard to adult probation officers, that the Arkansas Adult Probation Commission (A.C.A. §§
It thus seems clear that for purposes of setting salaries and benefits and directing record keeping generally, probation officers are not considered county employees. See alsoVenhaus v. State, supra. The answer with regard to payment of overtime and compensatory time is perhaps somewhat less clear, in the absence of legislative or judicial guidance as to these items. Because the current statutory scheme appears to envision the maintenance of probation services through probation fees and state aid, it may be concluded that these items will also generally be funded through that source. As noted above, however, there is statutory authority for the proposition that probation costs and expenses are to be paid pro rata by the counties. And provision is made for the deposit of probation fees in the county treasury (A.C.A. §
With regard, finally, to clerks, as noted above the office of circuit clerk is considered to be a county office. The clerk's salary is set, within legislatively established ranges, by the quorum court. A.C.A. §
You have also asked for my review of a proposed county ordinance (Faulkner County Quorum Court Proposed Ordinance F-7) that would require the submission of time sheets by persons for whom a county payroll check is issued. This ordinance would, in my opinion, in all likelihood withstand scrutiny. Any questions regarding the merits of the ordinance are, of course, properly addressed to the quorum court. It is my opinion, however, from a legal standpoint, that the ordinance is not contrary to state law and that it generally falls within the quorum court's broad authority over local matters (see Amendment
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Deputy Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:cyh
