Dear Mr. Armetta:
You have requested an opinion of this office concerning the interpretation of several statutes dealing with sick leave provisions concerning teachers and other school board employees. Specifically, you ask the following questions:
(1) Is Attorney General Opinion Number 90-188, dated May 4, 1990, still in effect?
(2) Define on approved leave as mentioned in LSA-R.S.
(3) A school bus operator as defined in LSA-R.S.
17:491 becomes injured on the job not as a result of physical contact with a student as defined in LSA-R.S.17:1206.1 (B), draws lost wage worker's compensation benefits and has exhausted all accumulated sick leave from the school board. In reference to LSA-R.S.17:500.2 , what amount may be deducted from the operator's salary while absent for such injury?(4) A member of the teaching staff as defined in LSA-R.S.
17:1200 becomes injured on the job not as a result of physical contact as defined in LSA-R.S.17:1201 C(1)(b), draws lost wage worker's compensation benefits and has exhausted all accumulated sick leave benefits from the school board. In reference to LSA-R.S.17:1202 , what amount may be deducted from said employee's salary while absent for such injury?(5) An employee of a school board who has unused accrued sick leave resigns from employment but retires at a later date upon reaching eligibility at the age of 60. Is the school board obligated to pay for the unused accrued sick leave as mentioned in LSA-R.S.
17:425 and LSA-R.S.17:1201 (B)? If so, when should such payment become an obligation of the board? Reference is made to Attorney General Opinion Number 87-634, February 10, 1988 and Opinion Number 90-486A, April 2, 1991.
In regard to your first inquiry, Attorney General Opinion Number 90-188 has not been withdrawn and, therefore, is still the opinion of this office. Opinion Number 90-188 concerned whether school board "employees", as defined by LSA-R.S.
The writer of that opinion, Mr. Yeager, stated that the restriction on the collection of combined worker's compensation benefits and sick leave benefits, which is imposed on teachers under LSA-R.S.
Your second inquiry requires an interpretation of the phrase "on approved leave" as mentioned in LSA-R.S.
No city or parish school board shall deduct any amount whatsoever from the salary of a school bus operator when such operator is on approved leave unless a substitute school bus operator was employed and actually served during such school bus operator's leave, and only such amount may be deducted as was actually paid to the substitute.
LSA-R.S.
Further, it has been the opinion of this office that because the provisions of LSA-R.S.
In interpreting LSA-R.S.
Applying this analysis to the statutes dealing with school bus operators, "on approved leave" must refer to that additional sick leave authorized by a school board which is over and above the ten days of minimum leave required by LSA-R.S.
In response to your third question, it should be noted that LSA-R.S.
The same result should apply to teachers under LSA-R.S.
(1) A teacher is granted ten days of annual sick leave with full pay, which the school board must honor without any deductions from salary for a substitute teacher or otherwise.
(2) When all current or accumulated leave is exhausted, the teacher is entitled by statute to no further leave and no further compensation. When sick leave is exhausted, the teacher is considered to be absent without leave. It is a violation of La. Const., Art.
VII , Sect.14 (1974) to compensate an employee absent without leave for non-work, it is a prohibited donation of public funds.(3) However, when all current or accumulated leave is exhausted, the school board is empowered by statute to authorize additional sick leave. If the school board does not authorize extended leave under LSA-R.S.
17:1201 A(2), the teacher has no right(3) to continued payment of salary. If the school board in its statutory discretion chooses to grant additional sick leave, that decision entitles the teacher to full compensation for the term of the additional sick leave.
(4) Any additional sick leave granted by the school board is subject to a deduction for the cost of hiring a substitute teacher. This deduction is only pertinent to the sick leave authorized by the school board, but cannot be made from the ten days mandatory sick leave granted by Section 1201A(1).
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Lastly, you inquire about a school board employee who has unused accrued sick leave and resigns but then retires at age 60. Is the school board required to pay for this unused sick leave and, if so, when? It has consistently been the opinion of this office that the employee is entitled to receive payment of accrued unused sick leave in accordance with LSA-R.S.
In conclusion, it is the opinion of this office that Attorney General Opinion Number 90-188 remains in effect. That on approved leave as used in LSA-R.S.
If they do receive extended sick leave benefits, these employees may have their salary reduced by the amount actually paid to substitutes in accordance with LSA-R.S.
I hope that this sufficiently answers your inquiries. If you have any further questions, please feel free to contact this office.
Yours very truly,
RICHARD P. IEYOUB Attorney General
BY: BETH A. CONRAD Assistant Attorney General
RPI/BAC:pab 0002u
