LaVeme Sullivan, Evelyn DeLange, and Rex Murphy, employees of the Department of Transportation, appealed their annual performance evaluations to the Personnel Appeals Board. The Board dismissed the appeals and the employees appealed to Thurston County Superior Court. The Superior Court affirmed the Board. We also affirm.
State law requires annual performance evaluations of state employees. RCW 41.06.169; WAC 356-30-300(1). The administrative rules state that the evaluation "will be conducted"
Appellants sought to have the untimely evaluations removed from their files. They argued that this was the appropriate remedy for the Department's failure to complete their evaluations within 60 days of the due dates. When the Department refused to remove the evaluations, the employees appealed to the Personnel Appeals Board.
The Board granted the Department's motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim for which relief could be granted. For purposes of that motion, the Department conceded and the Board assumed the evaluations to be untimely under WAC 356-30-300(2). In its written ruling, the Board concluded that WAC 356-30-300(2) was directory rather than mandatory and that removing an untimely evaluation from the employee's file would be inconsistent with the purposes and goals of the evaluation program. On appeal to this cotut, appellants claim an error of law contending that the due date language in WAC 356-30-300(2) is mandatory and that removal of an untimely evaluation is the appropriate remedy. They also contend that the Personnel Appeals Board's order was arbitrary or capricious and materially affected by unlawful procedure.
Standard of Review
Our review of the Personnel Appeals Board's decision is governed by RCW 41.64.130 and .140, not former RCW
When reviewing a claimed error of law, we may "essentially substitute [our] judgment for that of the administrative body, though substantial weight is accorded the agency's view of the law."
Franklin Cy. Sheriff's Office v. Sellers,
Personnel Appeals Board
Citing to
State Liquor Control Bd. v. State Personnel Bd.,
However, the 1985 decision was overruled by more recent Personnel Appeals Board decisions. Furthermore, the
The Personnel Appeals Board succeeded the State Personnel Board as the administrative body hearing civil service appeals and, thus, is the administrative body construing merit system rules (WAC Title 356) in individual cases.
See
RCW 41.06.170(2), 41.64.010, .090, former RCW 41.64.900; WAC 358-01-010, -20-020. It is the successor adjudicative body, exercising the interpretive authority previously exercised by the State Personnel Board. Thus its interpretation of merit system rules is entitled to substantial weight.
See Terhar,
Directory Statutes and Regulations The Personnel Appeals Board 3 held that the 60-day time limit in WAC 356-30-300(2) is directory, not mandatory. The employees contend that this was an error of law.
State agencies are required to use standardized procedures and forms "for the appraisal of employee job performance at least annually". RCW 41.06.169. Under the merit system rules,
(1) Agencies shall evaluate the performance of their employees ... at least once a year ....
(2) The annual evaluation will be conducted during the sixty-day period following the employee's anniversary date, except an agency can establish, on a consistent basis, a due date which better accommodates the agency's particular needs. The evaluation will cover the period ending with the established due date.
(Italics ours.) WAC 356-30-300.
A court interprets administrative regulations by using the ordinary rules of statutory construction.
See State v. Burke,
A statute setting a time within which a public officer is to perform an official act is directory unless the nature of the act or language of the statute makes clear that the designation of time limits the power of the officer.
Niichel,
As in
Niichel,
the regulation here prescribes the procedure to be used in conducting evaluations; it does not purport to limit the power and duty to conduct evaluations. The specified time for performance is not essential to the purpose of the evaluation statute.
See
The time limit set forth in WAC 356-30-300(2) is not designed to protect employee interests, but instead establishes an orderly procedure for the regular evaluation of all state employees, as required by RCW 41.06.169. Thus, the 60-day provision of WAC 356-30-300(2) is directory, not mandatory.
Remedy
The Department's noncompliance with a directory statute does not invalidate the employee evaluations.
See Niichel,
In general, a regulation should "be interpreted consistently with its underlying policy."
Sunnyside v. Fernandez,
The employees further argue that the evaluation procedure is intended to be a communication process, the focus of which is to cooperatively improve performance and correct shortcomings in the future. A late evaluation may serve this goal; deleting a tardy evaluation certainly will not. Further-, more, while appellants may be adversely affected by the contents of their evaluations, they fail to show how they are adversely affected by the untimeliness of the evaluations.
While we agree that performance evaluations should be conducted in a timely manner, we note that the law provides other remedies for tardiness. The Department is required to follow the provisions of the civil service law, RCW 41.06.040, and merit system rules, WAC 356-06-001, -020. The law and the rides require agencies and supervisors to annually evaluate the performance of subordinate employees. RCW 41.06-.169; WAC 356-05-400(4). Supervisors may suffer sanctions for failing to comply. See RCW 41.06.196; WAC 356-34-010(3). A state employee may be demoted, suspended, discharged, or his salary reduced for neglect of duty or willful violation of personnel rules. WAC 356-34-010(1).
We recognize that under some set of circumstances, removal of an untimely evaluation from an employee's file
Other Claimed Errors
Appellants also argue that the Board's decision was materially affected by unlawftd procedure because the Board improperly excluded their evidence. According to the record, the employees offered into evidence only the evaluations in question and their driver's licenses with birthdates to establish untimeliness. The Board, however, assumed untimeliness for the purposes of the Department's motion on the pleadings; the Board granted the motion as a matter of law. The Board's refusal to admit these exhibits was not unlawful procedure.
The employees also argue that the Board acted arbitrarily or capriciously, first, by refusing to admit evidence. However, the Board's refusal to admit the evidence was not willful or unreasonable or in disregard of the facts.
See Terhar,
The Board's earlier decision is not properly before us. In the current case, the Board acted reasonably by relying on its own precedents to dismiss a claim it did not recognize. It did not depart from its usual rules to reach a different and unexplained result in a single case. The Board did not act arbitrarily or capriciously.
Affirmed.
Alexander, C.J., and Green, J. Pro Tern., concur.
Reviéw denied at
Notes
The Department's policy was to use the end of the month of the employee’s birthdate as the due date. Policy Directive D 73-17.
These are the facts as alleged by the appellants. The Personnel Appeals Board did not hear any testimony or enter findings, dismissing the appeals as a matter of law.
Future references to "the Board" in this opinion will mean the Personnel Appeals Board.
