The Honorable Daryl A. Pace State Representative 13470 Saint Andrews Drive Siloam Springs, AR 72761-9610
Dear Representative Pace:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion concerning the retirement of the Director of Finance for the City of Gentry. Your question arises from the following reported facts:
The City of Gentry's Director of Finance is planning to retire. They have been employed by Gentry since 1994. They were originally hired to serve as the City of Gentry's Administrative Assistant. In 1996, the City of Gentry created the position of Director of Finance which the former Administrative Assistant then filled. The Director of Finance serves as the Administrative Assistance for Gentry and performs the "statutory and common law duties of the City Clerk, except the duties of attending Council Meetings and preparing the minutes" per Ordinance 96-427. Beginning on January 1, 1999, the Director of Finance has also served as the City Clerk which is an elected position.
You further note that the Director of Finance participates in the City's employee retirement program.1
Against this factual backdrop, you have posed the following questions:
With their service to the City in a variety of positions, may the Director of Finance/City Clerk retire and draw half of the Director of Finance's salary pursuant to Arkansas Code §
RESPONSE
The answer to your first question is "no," in my opinion. While it appears from the facts *Page 2
provided that this individual might be able to retire from the office of City Clerk pursuant to A.C.A. §
Question 1 — With their service to the City in a variety of positions, may the Director of Finance/City Clerk retire and draw half of the Director of Finance's salary pursuant to Arkansas Code §
This question requires reference to the full text of subsection
*Page 3(a) Any city clerk or clerk-treasurer in a city of the first class who shall have served as city clerk, clerk-treasurer, and city treasurer for a period of not less than ten (10) years, upon reaching the age of sixty (60), or who shall serve twenty (20) years without regard to age, shall be entitled to retire from office for the remainder of his or her life at the retirement pay provided for in this section.
(b)(1) Any city clerk, city treasurer, or any person serving as city clerk or clerk-treasurer who shall retire or be succeeded by another city clerk or clerk-treasurer within the provisions of this section shall be paid monthly a sum equal to one-half (1/2) of the monthly salary received by him or her during the last preceding year of his or her service.
(2) The retirement pay shall be paid by the city from its general fund account.
(c)(1) Any city clerk or clerk-treasurer in a city of the first class who has served in another capacity with the same city, and that capacity of service also provides for a retirement plan, may apply all years served in that previous capacity toward the accrual of the vesting period provided for in subsection (a) of this section, if approved by the city council.
(2) Benefits shall be paid proportionally from the various funds applicable to the respective capacities of service. This shall be based on the length of service in each capacity for the city. A.C.A. §
24-12-121 (Repl. 1998).
This statute entitles a "city clerk, city treasurer, or any person serving as city clerk or clerk-treasurer" to retire at "one-half (1/2) of the monthly salary received by him or her during the last preceding year of his or her service." Id. at (b)(1). If the city clerk or clerk-treasurer has served the city in "another capacity" covered by a retirement plan, the clerk may, subject to city council approval, apply such service "toward the accrual of the vesting period." Id. at (c)(1).2
According to the factual backdrop to your questions, the individual in question began serving as City Clerk on January 1, 1999. You have not stated whether she — I am informed this involves a woman — was elected or appointed as City Clerk, but I assume for purposes of this opinion that she has lawfully served as such since that time. While it thus seems that she has not served as City Clerk for the requisite ten years so as to satisfy the vesting period under A.C.A. §
In response to your specific question, therefore, in my opinion she clearly cannot retire and draw one-half of the Director of Finance's salary pursuant to A.C.A. §
In reaching this conclusion, I am mindful of the reported fact that this person began performing many of the duties of the City Clerk in 1996, pursuant to city ordinance. Specifically, Ordinance No. 96-427 of the City of Gentry, approved January 9, 1996, created the position of Director of Finance, which this person reportedly then filled. The ordinance further provides that "[t]he Director of Finance shall . . . perform all statutory and common law duties of the City Clerk, except the duties of attending Council *Page 4
meetings and preparing the minutes related thereto." Id. at Section 2 (emphasis original). Because this individual has therefore performed many of the City Clerk's duties for more than ten years, and presumably has been paid as Director of Finance to do so, the question apparently has arisen whether she somehow qualifies for a retirement benefit under A.C.A. §
I have considered and rejected this proposition. As noted above, the retirement benefit under subsection
Question 2 — Will they have to choose between drawing half of the City Clerk's salary of $3,600 pursuant to Arkansas Code §
The facts before me suggest that A.C.A. §
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, any employee of a first class city, second class city, or incorporated town, and any elected official of a first class city, second class city, or incorporated town who is entitled by an act of the General Assembly to retirement benefits for service as such employee or elected official and who also participates in another retirement plan established by the city for the same period of service shall be entitled to only one (1) retirement benefit for the same period of service to the municipality, provided that no elected official may withdraw in a lump sum or roll over into a private account any accumulated benefits established by the municipality for which the official was employed and at the same time receive a pension as provided for under an act of the General Assembly, and the employee or elected official may choose whether to receive the retirement benefit provided by law or provided by the plan offered by the municipality.
A.C.A. §
This statute prevents so-called "double dipping," see Robinson v. Taylor,
It is my opinion that the provisions of A.C.A. §
* * *
The purpose of A.C.A. §
Op. Att'y Gen.
I agree with this interpretation of subsection
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
