124 N.C. App. 542 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1996
Both this case and a companion case, North Carolina Department of Transportation v. Glenn I. Hodge, Jr. (COA95-1329) (opinions filed simultaneously), raise the issue of whether the Governor properly designated certain State employee positions as “policymaking” under N.C. Gen. Stat. section 126-5.
Beginning in August 1989, Betsy Johnson Powell was employed by the N.C. Department of Transportation (“DOT”) as the Director of the Highway Beautification Program (“HBP”). On 3 May 1993, then Secretary of the DOT, Sam Hunt, notified Powell that her position would be designated policymaking exempt effective 17 May 1993. On 21 May 1993, the Secretary of the DOT notified Powell that she was fired from her position effective 28 May 1993.
On 25 May 1993, Powell filed a petition for a contested case hearing in the Office of Administrative Hearings challenging the designation of her position as policymaking exempt. After the hearing, Senior Administrative Law Judge Fred G. Morrison, Jr. recommended that the designation be upheld. On 20 September 1994, the State Personnel Commission (“Commission”) agreed and upheld the designation of Powell’s position as policymaking exempt. Powell petitioned for judicial review. On 6 September 1995, Judge Donald W. Stephens reversed the Commission’s decision. The DOT appeals.
The DOT contends that Judge Stephens erred by reversing the Commission’s decision on the grounds that Powell’s position was properly designated as policymaking exempt. Judge Stephens ruled that there was no competent evidence to support the Commission’s conclusion that her position was vested with the authority to impose the final decision on any department-wide, agency-wide, or division-wide course of action. We agree.
N.C. Gen. Stat. section 126-5(d)(l) of the State Personnel Act permits the Governor to designate as exempt “policymaking positions”
A key issue here is whether, at the time Powell’s position was designated as policymaking, the HBP was a “division” of the DOT, a principal state department under N.C. Gen. Stat. section 143B-6. The term “division” is not defined in the State Personnel Act. However, it is defined in the Executive Organization Act, N.C. Gen. Stat. section 143B-1 et. seq., as “the principal subunit of a principal State department.” G.S. § 143B-3(6) (1993).
The Commission determined that, after February 1993, the HBP was a division of the DOT. After review, we conclude that Powell preserved her objection to this determination and that it is not supported by substantial evidence. Substantial evidence is such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. Henderson v. N.C. Dep’t of Human Resources, 91 N.C. App. 527, 530-31, 372 S.E.2d 887, 889-90 (1988).
Prior to February 1993, the HBP was listed as a “section and unit” of the institution/division headed by the Assistant Secretary for Administration. The record shows that, in March 1993 after a departmental reorganization, the Director of the HBP reported directly to the Deputy Secretary of Highways. However, it does not show that the HBP was a division of the DOT. An organizational chart in effect in March 1993 identifies the “Division of Highways” and the “Division of Motor Vehicles” but does not list the HBP as a “division.” The record evidence also does not show that the HBP functioned as a “principal subunit” of a department as specified in the G.S. section 143B-3(6) definition of “division.” See G.S. § 143B-3(6).
A second key issue is whether there is substantial record evidence to support the Commission’s conclusion that Powell, as Director of the HBP, had the authority to impose the final decision as to a settled course of action to be followed within a department, agency, or division as is required for designation of her position as “policymaking.” We conclude that there is not.
Given our disposition of this issue, we need not address Powell’s First Amendment argument or her cross-assignment of error.
Affirmed.