Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn Mr. James Nelson Commissioner of Education Texas Education Agency 1701 North Congress Avenue Austin, Texas 78701-1494
Re: Whether a permanent substitute teacher who has been employed as such for six months prior to the election of his sister to school district board has been continuously employed for the purpose of section
Dear Commissioner Nelson:
On behalf of the La Joya Independent School District (the "District"), your predecessor in office requested our opinion regarding the continuous-employment exception to the antinepotism statute, section
The District's question is premised upon a situation in which the District hired, in August 1996, a teacher who had obtained a two-year probationary certification under the Alternative Certification Program.See Letter from Jose R. Guerrero, Montalvo Ramirez, General Counsel to La Joya Independent School District, to Dr. Mike Moses, Commissioner of Education, Texas Education Agency (July 20, 1999) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter "Request Letter"]. The District employed the teacher under successive one-year contracts through November 2, 1998, when the teacher resigned his term contract "after losing his certification for failing the . . . exam." Id. at 1. When the employee's resignation became effective, he was immediately hired by the District as a "permanent substitute teacher in the same teaching position, at a daily rate of $95.00. The teacher's duties and the responsibilities remain the same." Id.
Meanwhile, in May 1999 the permanent substitute's sister was elected to the District's Board of Trustees. Id. Assuming that the permanent substitute retains his position, the District would like to hire him on a full-time basis if he becomes certified. See id. The District asks whether employment as a permanent substitute may constitute "continuous employment" for the purposes of section
Since the original request was made, the individual employed as a permanent substitute with the District took a position with the city manager's office. Accordingly, whether the District may promote this particular permanent substitute to a certified teaching position is no longer in question. But because the permanent-substitute arrangement "involves a reasonably common employment arrangement for school districts in Texas," you ask that we consider generally whether a permanent substitute may be continuously employed for the purposes of section
By hiring an individual as a "permanent substitute," a school district avoids the statutory requirement that all teachers, teacher interns, or teacher trainees must be certified as such consistently with sections
Under the antinepotism statutes, a school board generally may not appoint an individual to a position that is compensated from public funds if the individual is related within the third degree by consanguinity or within the second degree by affinity. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§
Two exceptions to this general statutory prohibition allow a governing body to hire the close relative of a member of the governing body in certain circumstances. First, section 573.061 excepts the appointment or employment of a substitute teacher by a school district. See id. § 573.061(6) (Vernon Supp. 2000). This exception does not apply to a school district's appointment of a certified teacher. Nor may a school district that wishes to promote a substitute or an uncertified teacher to a certified teaching position avail itself of this exception.
Second, section 573.062 excepts the appointment or employment of an employee who has been continuously employed in a particular position for six months before the election of the public official to whom the individual is related in the prohibited degree. See id. § 573.062(a)(1), (2)(B) (Vernon 1994). An individual who has been continuously employed in that position for the requisite duration may not only retain his or her position but may be the subject of an action affecting the employment, such as a promotion or raise, if "the public official to whom the individual is related in a prohibited degree" does not participate in any discussion or vote regarding the individual's status, unless the decision concerns "a bona fide class or category of employees." Id. § 573.062(b). Thus, if an uncertified teacher may be said to be "continuously employed" for the purposes of section
What is meant by "continuous employment" is not defined in the statute. "Continuous" employment denotes employment "[u]ninterrupted in time . . .; connected; unbroken. III Oxford English Dictionary 830 (2d ed. 1989);see Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
Two previous opinions of this office suggest that intermittent, interrupted periods of employment do not constitute continuous employment. Attorney General Opinion
To the extent Attorney General Opinion
Rather than focusing on the existence of a "continuing contract," section 573.062 focuses on the continuing nature of the employment relationship. Hence, a judge's "repeated appointments" of his uncle "to represent indigent clients in different cases over a six-year period does not constitute continuous employment in one position." Bean v. State,
We conclude that an uncertified teacher who is an at-will employee of a school district may satisfy the continuous-employment exception to the nepotism prohibition. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§
[T]he district characterizes a "permanent" substitute as a non-certified person who is employed to fill a teaching vacancy until such vacancy can be filled with a certified teacher. The permanent substitute teacher, unlike other substitute teachers, is not placed on a substitute list, but rather is given the assignment and is expected to report to work everyday until a certified teacher is employed to fill the position or until he is terminated for any other reason. He has been offered a continuous assignment for an indefinite period of time, so he is like any other at-will employee.
Request Letter, supra, at 3-4. Accordingly, should a relative of an uncertified teacher who has been continuously employed by a school district for the requisite period be appointed or elected to the school district board, the uncertified teacher may retain his or her position. Additionally, should the uncertified teacher become certified as a teacher, the school district board may promote the teacher to a position as a certified teacher so long as the relative does not participate in the board's deliberation or vote on the employment action.
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
ELIZABETH ROBINSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Kymberly K. Oltrogge Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
