Opinion
A community college district summarily terminated the employment of a basketball coach. The district claimed the coach was not entitled to due process because he was a temporary employee. During the coach’s employment, Education Code section 87482.5, former subdivision (a) defined a temporary employee as one who is employed to teach classes “for not more than 60 percent of the hours per week considered a full-time assignment for regular employees having comparable duties.”
FACTS
The Ventura County Community College District (District) employed Jeff Theiler as a basketball coach from 2004 to 2008. He served as Ventura College’s assistant basketball coach until 2007, and then as head basketball coach at Oxnard College from 2007 until his employment was terminated November 21, 2008.
Each semester Theiler accepted a written “Offer of Temporary Non-Contract Academic Employment.” The offer specified he was to teach a course in basketball for two hours a day, Monday through Friday. A two-hour scheduled class actually lasts only one hour 50 minutes. The offer also specified the percentage of hours that was equivalent to a full-time teaching assignment. None of the offers provided for greater than 0.6 of full-time equivalent (FTE). During Theiler’s employment with the District, he was a member of the Ventura County Federation of Teachers (Union). The Union and the District had a collective bargaining agreement.
The collective bargaining agreement recognized that a basketball coach has ancillary duties that will be performed outside the course hours specified in the contract. Pursuant to the agreement, the District compensated its coaches, including Theiler, for the performance of their ancillary duties with a stipend. The stipend was paid as a flat amount that did not depend on the number of hours actually worked.
In November 2008, the District terminated Theiler’s employment. An investigation revealed that Theiler submitted false transcripts to obtain eligibility for student athletes, granted favors to nonresident athletes, and interfered with the investigation of his wrongdoing.
The District classified Theiler as a temporary employee. A temporary employee is not entitled to due process in the termination of his employment. Theiler claimed, however, that he was employed to teach classes for more than 60 percent of the hours per week considered a full-time assignment. Thus he argued he was a contract employee pursuant to section 87482.5, subdivision (a). Contract employees are entitled to due process.
Theiler’s Declaration
In support of his motion for summary judgment, Theiler declared generally;
Prior to basketball season, the class time was used for physical conditioning of the basketball players. When the season starts, class time functions as a regular team practice.
Although the class was officially scheduled for one hour 50 minutes, Theiler spent at least two to three hours per session coaching. In addition to regularly scheduled classes, he held one extra basketball practice per week for two to three hours. He also was required to supervise students in weight training and “plyometric exercise.” He also spent at least 1.63 hours a week coaching basketball games. He taught athletes a minimum of 17.63 hours per week.
In addition to direct instruction of players, Theiler’s coaching duties required that he attend meetings with coaching staff, plan practices, review films, engage in extensive preparation to competently instruct the class and supervise the men’s basketball program, develop scouting reports on opponents, recruit high school students to play basketball, supervise work-study programs, and engage in fundraising for the basketball program.
Parham’s Declaration
In opposition to the motion, the District submitted the declaration of its vice-chancellor of human resources, Patricia Parham. Parham declared generally:
A full-time faculty member spends 15 hours per week teaching class, 15 hours per week preparing course work, five hours per week holding office hours and five hours per week in committee work. Sixty percent of 15 hours is nine hours. But physical education is considered a laboratory teaching assignment. Under the collective bargaining agreement, laboratory teaching assignments are given two-thirds the value of a lecture teaching assignment.
Basketball coaches are paid a stipend to cover the performance of ancillary duties. Duties covered by the stipend include but are not limited to: “(1) reviewing films; (2) developing scouting reports on conference opponents; (3) compiling calendars of opponents’ schedules; (4) putting together
The time Theiler spent in addition to that spent in his scheduled class hours was on ancillary duties.
Ruling
The trial court stated, “[T]ime spent coaching basketball games, practices and conditioning sessions—all performed in the presence of and in supervision of student athletes—is more akin to ‘teaching’ than ‘ancillary activities.’ ” The court added the 1.63 hours per week that Theiler claimed he spent coaching basketball games to Theiler’s assigned class hours. The court concluded Theiler spent more than the nine hours per week teaching necessary for 60 percent FTE. Thus Theiler qualifies as a contract employee entitled to due process.
DISCUSSION
I
Summary judgment is properly granted only if all papers submitted show there is no triable issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) The court must draw all reasonable inferences from the evidence set forth in the papers except where such references are contradicted by other inferences or evidence that raise a triable issue of fact. (Ibid.) In examining the supporting and opposing papers, the moving party’s affidavits or declarations are strictly construed and those of his opponent liberally construed, and doubts as to the propriety of granting the motion should be resolved in favor of the party opposing the motion. (Szadolci v. Hollywood Park Operating Co. (1993)
The moving party has the initial burden of showing that one or more elements of a cause of action cannot be established. (Saelzler v. Advanced Group 400 (2001)
The Education Code authorizes community college districts to employ three categories of faculty: regular, contract and temporary. (§§ 87602, 87604.) Regular and contract employees are entitled to due process before termination. (§§ 87732 et seq., 87740; Balasubramian v. San Diego Community College Dist. (2000)
During Theiler’s employment, former section 87482.5, subdivision (a) stated: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person who is employed to teach adult or community college classes for not more than 60 percent of the hours per week considered a full-time assignment for regular employees having comparable duties shall be classified as a temporary employee, and shall not become a contract employee under Section 87604.”
The overriding policy consideration is to give the District maximum flexibility in classifying teachers while preventing the exploitation of temporary instructors who carry the equivalent of a full-time teaching load. (McGuire v. Governing Board (1984)
In McGuire v. Governing Board, supra,
The best we can do is compare the number of class hours per week assigned to basketball class with the 15 class hours per week assigned to a full-time instructor. Even that comparison is not exact because it does not account for the 25 additional hours per week the full-time instructor is expected to spend preparing for class, holding office hours and in student support.
Here Theiler’s employment contemplated only two types of duties; teaching the class specified in the offer of temporary employment and ancillary duties. The offer of temporary employment specifies a basketball class lasting two hours, five days a week. Only the 10 hours per week spent teaching that class count in determining the FTE. Any duties in addition to that are ancillary, even if such duties could be broadly classified as teaching. Thus the 1.6 hours Theiler claims, in addition to the 10 hours per week teaching his assigned class, cannot be used in calculating the FTE.
It is undisputed that full-time faculty members are expected to teach 15 hours per week in the classroom. Sixty percent of 15 is nine hours per week. Theiler is assigned to teach a class lasting 10 hours per week. But it is undisputed that under the collective bargaining agreement, those hours are not treated as full hours in calculating the FTE.
The District’s vice-chancellor, Parham, declared basketball is a physical education class, and physical education classes are treated as “laboratory teaching assignments” under the collective bargaining agreement. Such laboratory teaching assignments are treated as only two-thirds of a regular lecture hour. Theiler claims, however, his class is a “lecture-laboratory teaching assignment^.” A lecture-laboratory teaching assignment is treated as three-fourths of a regular lecture hour. Thus there is a material question of fact whether Theiler should be credited with two-thirds of the 10 class hours assigned per week or three-fourths.
It may not be necessary however to determine whether Theiler’s course qualifies as a “laboratory” or a “lecture-laboratory” teaching assignment. That is because even using the three-fourths advocated by Theiler, the 10 hours of class per week assigned to Theiler amounts to only 7.5 hours per week. That is far short of the nine hours per week required for 60 percent of the FTE.
Theiler’s reliance on Stryker v. Antelope Valley Community College Dist. (2002)
Here the District does not contest that as a matter of law a teaching assignment that exceeds 60 percent of the FTE requires reclassification as a contract employee. In addition, Stryker only required the trial court to compare the same type of duties, that is, work experience assignments given to full-time teachers with work experience assignments given to Stryker. Here Theiler asks the court to compare the duties of a classroom teacher with the quite different duties of a basketball coach. Finally, in Stryker, the district did not consider work experience assignments in calculating 60 percent of FTE as a matter of its own practice. Here the District does not consider ancillary duties in calculating the FTE as provided in the collective bargaining agreement.
Coffee, J., and Perren, J., concurred.
On August 24, 2011, the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 16, 2011, S196449.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Education Code unless otherwise stated.
We grant the District’s request for judicial notice of the full agreement.
Effective January 1, 2009, 60 percent was increased to 67 percent. (Stats. 2008, ch. 84, §1.)
