Administrative
Policies And Procedures
| Policy: |
Attendance |
| Scope: |
Staff and Faculty |
| Policy Number: |
4.0 |
STAFF
Workweek and Hours
The official workweek for the campus is from 12:01 a.m. Saturday until
12:00 midnight of the following Friday. The President determines normal
hours for campus offices and operations. Departments may require personnel
to work shifts different from the normal campus hours. In no case will
the normal work schedule for full-time, nonexempt personnel exceed 40
hours in the workweek.
All salaried personnel are expected to be present for their assigned
jobs unless the appropriate authority approves the absence. Absence from
duty must be accounted for under established leave policies or other
approved means. In no case, will an employee be paid for unaccounted
time.
All personnel are expected to work established work hours unless the
supervisor authorizes the absence from duty. Failure to properly notify
a supervisor concerning an absence and to receive necessary permission
may result in disciplinary action up to and including termination.
The President requires all employees to disclose outside business affiliations
in order to track compliance with these provisions. The Disclosure of
Business Affiliation form is available in the Human Resources Office.
Determination as to whether an employee may hold a second job while off-duty
is at the agency's discretion. The Attorney General has expanded on this
ruling, finding that a state institution of higher education may prohibit
outside work undertaken by its employees, even if that employment is
serving as an elected government official.
Normal campus scheduling requires an hour unpaid meal break. Employees
are expected to conform to their assigned meal schedule. If such breaks
are taken on campus property, employees are expected to adhere to campus
rules and standards.
Each department or division head may allow for full-time personnel
one paid break period in each half of a work shift with the following
provisions:
1. No single break period exceeds fifteen minutes from the workstation.
2.
Unused break periods are not accumulated.
3. Breaks cannot be
used to cover early departure from work and late arrival to work.
4.
Any time taken beyond that authorized is charged to vacation or compensatory
leave.
5. Breaks are dependent on work schedule and supervisory approval.
6.
Breaks may be prohibited according to the judgment of the supervisor.
7.
During breaks, the employee is on paid time and all normal standards
of conduct are in effect.
8. Part time staff may be granted a rest period
if it is in accordance with departmental or divisional policy and such
breaks are subject to the same limitations set forth above.
An employee will, during
normal office hours, conduct agency business only at the employee’s regular place of business or assigned duty
point unless the employee is on travel status or has received prior written
authorization from the administrator of the employing agency. In no event
will an employee’s personal residence be deemed to be that employee’s
regular place of business or duty point for the purpose of this subsection
without the written authorization of the President.
Holidays
The legislature authorizes specified holidays each biennium. The college
is authorized to deviate from the State holiday schedule to conform to
our academic schedule. The President will issue the college holiday schedule
prior to the beginning of each fiscal year.
Only regular employees of institutions of higher education are eligible
for paid holidays. A regular employee is defined as someone who is employed
to work at least 20 hours per week for a period of at least four and
one-half months, excluding students employed in positions, which require
student status as a condition for employment.
Employees of institutions of higher education may be paid for holiday
compensatory time hours earned on a straight time basis when the taking
of compensatory time would be disruptive to normal teaching, research,
or other critical functions.
In order to be paid for a holiday that falls in mid-month (other than the first or last wokday of the month), the employee must be a state employee (the legal definition of which is employed by the state and not on LWOP) on the day before and the day after the holiday. If the holiday falls on the first workday of a month, the employee must be a state employee on the day immediately after the holiday to be paid. If the holiday falls on the last workday of the month, the employee must be a state employee on the day immediately before the holiday to be paid.
A state employee is entitled to observe Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur,
Good Friday, and Cesar Chavez Day in lieu of any skeleton crew holiday.
In the event that a state or national holiday falls between the dates
that an employee separates from one state agency and begins employment
in another state agency without a break in service, the agency to which
the employee transfers is responsible for paying the employee for the
holiday.
FACULTY
Absences
A faculty member employed by the College under the governance of the
Board of Regents of the Texas State University System must discharge
faithfully instructional duties and other responsibilities associated
with faculty appointment, including the meeting of all scheduled classes.
Faculty members, including Division Chairs, have the responsibility
to be available for the performance of duties beginning with regular
registration through commencement, the official end of the semester.
Faculty not teaching during the summer terms are considered to be on
vacation.
Absences from classes will be authorized only under the following conditions:
1. Professional meetings when, in the judgment of the president or
his or her designee, attendance at such meeting would contribute to the
improvement of teaching or scholarship at Lamar State College-Orange;
2. Personal or Immediate Family Illness;
3. Family Emergencies;
4. Specific Assignments of the president of short duration (the Board
of Regents discourages specific assignments which will cause a faculty
member to be absent from assigned classes);
5. Special Circumstances where the president considers such absences
to be for valid reasons and in the best interest of both the faculty
member and Lamar State College-Orange.
The faculty member is obligated
to notify the division chair as early as possible so that the latter
may make appropriate arrangements for classes. The instructor must
fill out a “Request to be Absent” form,
obtained from the Academic Affairs Office, prior to the planned absence
and the Division Chair must approve the absence by signing the form.
In cases of illness, the instructor must also complete the “Request
for Overtime and Leave” (F3.6A) form available from the Division
Chair and obtain approval from the Vice President of Academic Affairs.
Unauthorized Absences
Unauthorized Absences on
the part of the faculty member are not permitted. Such absences will
be regarded as a violation of the terms of the faculty member’s
appointment.
Office Hours
Faculty members are expected to post outside of their offices, and
publish in any other manner required by the Vice President of Academic
Affairs, office hours and conference periods most advantageous to students.
Outside Employment
1. Faculty members should
not be discouraged from accepting appropriate appointments of a consultative
or advisory capacity with government agencies, industry, or other educational
institutions as long as such activities do not conflict with the individual’s
work at Lamar State College-Orange. The consideration to the System
of such activity is the improvement of the individual through contact
with the non-academic world.
2. Members of the faculty should be discouraged from accepting regular
employment outside the college because such action does not directly
benefit the college as indicated herein.
3. Conflict of interest must
be avoided in all instances of outside employment. Conflict of interest
in an academic institution means any outside activity, which intrudes
upon the faculty member’s responsibility
to Lamar State College-Orange.
4. No member of the faculty engaged in outside remunerative activities
will use in connection therewith the official stationery, supplies, equipment,
personnel services, or other resources of the System or Lamar State College-Orange.
Nor will such member of the faculty accept pay from private persons or
corporations for tests, essays, chemical analysis, computer programming,
bacteriological examinations, or other work of a routine character, which
involves the use of property owned by the System or Lamar State College-Orange.
5. No member of the faculty will accept employment or any position
of responsibility if the discharge of such employment or responsibility
will be antagonistic to the interests of the State of Texas or the System
or Lamar State College-Orange.
6. Every member of the faculty
who gives professional opinions must protect the System and Lamar State
College-Orange against the use of such opinions for advertising purposes.
That is, when work is done in a private capacity, the faculty member
must make it clear to the employer that such work is unofficial and
that, absent the president’s prior
approval, the name of the System or Lamar State College-Orange are not
in any way to be connected with the faculty member’s name. Exceptions
may be made for the name of the author attached to books, pamphlets,
and articles in periodicals, and the identification of an individual
in publications of corporations or companies related to service as a
member of an advisory council, committee, or board of directors.
7. No member of the full-time faculty of the System employed on a twelve-month
or nine-month basis will be employed in any outside work or activity
or receive from an outside source a regular retainer fee or salary during
the period of employment by Lamar State College-Orange until a description
of the nature and extent of the employment has been filed with the Vice
President for Academic Affairs.
8. The President requires
all employees to disclose outside business affiliations in order to
track compliance with these provisions. The Disclosure of Business
Affiliation form is available in the Human Resources Office. Determination
as to whether an employee may hold a second job while off-duty is at
the agency’s discretion. The Attorney General
has expanded on this ruling, finding that a state institution of higher
education may prohibit outside work undertaken by its employees, even
if that employment is serving as an elected government official.
| Policy: |
Campus Closing |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.1 |
CAMPUS CLOSING PROCEDURES
If severe or inclement weather conditions warrant suspending Operations,
an announcement will be made through the following Media outlets:
KBMT-TV (12)
KBTV-TV (4)
KFDM-TV (6)
KPLC-TV (7)
FOX 29 (11)
KITU-TV (34)
KLVI (560 AM)
KOGT (1600 AM)
KYKR (95.1 FM)
KKMY (104.5 FM)
K106 (106.1 FM)
KAYD (97 FM)
KYKZ (96.0 FM)
KHLA (99.5 FM)
KZWA (105.3 FM)
Every effort will be made to make such announcements no later than
6 a.m. Divisions also may develop a calling list to notify employees
of closure.
Unless a specific announcement of closing is made through the above
media outlets, faculty, staff, and students should assume that normal
operations will be observed. However, conditions vary throughout the
area and employees are reminded to use their best judgment in determining
whether or not it is safe to travel.
Each agency has the discretion on how to post time when the agency
closes because of inclement weather.
| Policy: |
Leave Records |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.2 |
Employee and Department Responsibilities for Leave
A. The employee should communicate to his/her supervisor at the earliest
practical time details of his/her absence or anticipated absence(s) including
dates with appropriate documentation.
B. For illness and/or disability a doctor's certification may be needed
to certify fitness to work and/or certify the period of absences.
C. Leaving one's job without
proper notification to one’s supervisor
can constitute job abandonment. Any employee who is absent from work
without authorized leave for three (3) consecutive workdays will be deemed
to have abandoned his/her position and to have voluntarily resigned from
employment. Bona fide emergencies will be taken into consideration.
D. The employee is responsible for completing the application for leave
form (F3.6A), providing supporting documentation, and following up on
approvals.
E. Departments are responsible for notifying Human Resources regarding
employee leaves, especially when it is anticipated the employee will
not have enough paid leave and must coordinate out-of-pocket payments
to continue insurance benefits. The department is responsible for processing
the necessary documents (Personnel Action Request- F3.2, F 3.6) to process
the requested leave in a timely manner.
All leave must be reported on a monthly basis to the Human Resources
Office. This is done by completing an F3.6 and submitting it to the Human
Resources Office not later than the tenth workday of the following month.
Sick and vacation leave will automatically accrue according to the
employee's status (FTE, length of service, etc.). The employee is required
to account for all such leave taken during the month. The leave balance
will appear on the following month's F3.6. All leave must have prior
approval on a Request for overtime/leave form-F3.6A.
Employees must also account for all overtime earned and compensatory
time taken on the F3.6A. Please see the section on overtime for guidelines
on such leave.
Even if no leave is taken for the month, each employee is required
to complete the F3.6 and submit it to the Human Resources Office.
Time off should be reported to the nearest quarter hour of occurrence.
| Policy: |
Vacation Leave |
| Scope: |
Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.3 |
The purpose of vacation leave is to provide income protection to the
employee while allowing for period of recreational leave or other absences
from work not covered by other leaves. Employees are encouraged to use
the majority of their earned vacation leave each year. It is important
that employees have time to rest and relax each year in order to maintain
maximum productivity. Vacation leave also allows employees to take care
of a variety of personal matters when it is not possible to do so outside
normal working hours.
All regular non-faculty employees are entitled to paid vacation leave
as determined by length of service. The following table shows the vacation
leave allowances for eligible full-time employees. Accruals increased
one hour per month and the carry over was increased by 12 hours effective
July 2003. Eligible part-time employees earn leave on a proportional
basis.
Hours Accrued Allowance
Length of State Service |
Per Month |
Carry Over |
| 0 but less than 2 years |
08 |
180 |
| 2 but less than 5 years |
09 |
244 |
| 5 but less than 10 years |
10 |
268 |
| 10 but less than 15 years |
11 |
292 |
| 15 but less than 20 years |
13 |
340 |
| 20 but less than 25 years |
15 |
388 |
| 25 but less than 30 years |
17 |
436 |
| 30 but less than 35 years |
19 |
484 |
| At least 35 years or more |
21 |
532 |
An employee must complete the full year of employment to receive the
higher rate of vacation leave accrual. For these purposes, length of
employment is calculated from the employee's anniversary date if the
anniversary falls on the first calendar date of the month. Otherwise,
the increase in vacation allowance will occur on the first calendar day
of the following month.
Previous State employment is to be noted upon hire and will be verified
before adjustments to vacation, benefit replacement pay, and longevity
are made.
Credit for one month's accrual is given for each month or fraction
of a month of employment with the state and is posted on the first day
of employment and on the first day of each succeeding month thereafter,
provided that an employee who is in a leave status on the first day of
the month shall not be eligible to use leave accrued for such month until
the employee returns to duty. Vacation entitlement accrues from the first
day of employment and is terminated on the last day of duty.
None of the funds appropriated
by the Appropriations Act may be used to pay a state employee or former
state employee who resigns, is dismissed, or has otherwise separated
from state employment, for vacation time accrued at the time of separation
from the state unless the individual’s
employment with the state had been continuous for a period of six (6)
months.
Institutions of Higher Education
are allowed to immediately pay for accrued vacation leave upon separation
from state employment without having to wait 30 days after separation.
Separation from state employment includes, but is not limited to, a
state employee leaving one state agency to begin working at another
state agency, provided at least one workday occurs between the employee’s separation from the first state agency
and the employee’s first day at work at the second state agency.
An individual who is re-employed by a state agency to a position which
accrues vacation time within a period of thirty (30) calendar days from
the date of separation from the state employment shall have the individual’s
previous but unused vacation leave restored.
An employee terminating state employment may, with the agreement of
the employing agency, be allowed to remain on the payroll after the last
day worked to utilize vacation leave in lieu of being paid in a lump
sum. Such an employee will not accrue any additional vacation leave while
remaining on the payroll to utilize such vacation leave.
Vacation with pay may not be taken until the employee has been continuously
employed with the state for six months. Continuous employment means that
no leave without pay has been taken. Once an employee has completed six
months or more of continuous state employment and then leaves state employment,
that person is eligible to take vacation leave as it is earned upon re-employment,
or be paid for it on termination following such re-employment. Employees
who do not have six months continuous service upon termination will not
be paid for any accrued vacation time.
Employees transferring directly to another state agency shall transfer
all unexpended vacation leave.
When an employee moves from a vacation accruing position to a non-accruing
position, the balance will be frozen when the employee has less than
6 continuous months of employment. If the employee has 6 months of continuous
employment, he/she may be paid for the annual leave after 30 days.
Employees will not be allowed
to carry over any vacation leave in excess of the amount prescribed
for employees according to length of service. Excess unused vacation
time will be "rolled over" into the
sick leave balance each August 31. Employees may accrue leave in excess
of the maximum during the year without penalty.
While each employee is entitled to use accrued vacation leave, the
employee's supervisor may refuse to allow vacation time when it would
unduly hamper departmental efficiency. Employees are encouraged to request
vacation leave using the F3.6A with sufficient advance notice to the
supervisor so that work schedules may be rearranged as necessary. Supervisors
may refuse to grant any vacation leave requests during peak workload
periods.
Employees will not be advanced vacation leave. Any leave taken in excess
of the accrued balance will be charged to compensatory time if available.
If insufficient compensatory time exists, the employee will be placed
on Leave Without Pay. Please see the guidelines on LWOP.
Holidays occurring during a vacation period will not be charged to
vacation leave. See the guidelines on sick leave for the policy on illness
or injury while on vacation leave.
Return-to-Work Annual Leave Accruals.
Annual leave accruals for Return-to-work retirees are based on retirement and rehire dates. Return-to-work retirees who retired on or before 5-31-2005 and returned to work at any time will accrue annual leave based on total state service.
Return-to-work retirees who retired on or after 6-1-2005 and return to work on 9-1-2005 or after will accrue annual leave based on state service since retirement.
| Policy: |
Sick Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.4 Revised 3/03 |
The purpose of the sick leave benefit is to protect the employee's
income during periods of bona fide illness or injury, to the
employee or members of the employee’s immediate family, and which
require the employee to be absent from work. It is also designed to protect
other employees from being exposed to contagious diseases. All employees
are expected to work if their health permits and to remain at home if
it does not.
Sick leave may only be used where sickness, injury, or pregnancy prevent
an employee's performance of duty. This includes doctor or dental appointments
that cannot be made outside of normal working hours. Sick leave may also
be applied when a member of the employee's immediate family is ill or
injured. The immediate family is defined as those individuals related
by kinship, adoption, or marriage who are living in the same household
as the employee or if not living in the same household, are totally dependent
upon the employee for personal care or services on a continuing basis.
Sick leave may not be used for any other purpose.
All regular employees are eligible to earn sick leave at a rate of
eight hours for each month or fraction of a month of employment for full-time
employees. Regular part-time employees (at least 50% FTE) earn sick leave
on a proportional basis (e.g., half-time employees earn four hours per
month).
Sick leave accumulates with the unused amount carried forward each
month, and there is no limitation on the amount which may be accrued.
Sick leave is earned each month the employee is on the payroll. An
employee who is on leave on the first day of a month may not use the
sick leave that the employee accrues for that month until after a return
to duty. Employees on leave without pay will not accrue sick leave during
any full calendar month when they are not on the payroll. Faculty with
nine month contracts will not accrue sick leave during any month of the
summer unless they are teaching at least 50% FTE.
Faculty sick leave benefits will be charged when a faculty member is
unable to perform his/her duties due to illness or illness of an immediate
family member. Faculty duties include: teaching, office hours, committee
service, and attendance at scheduled meetings. Sick leave is charged
on a prorated basis of an eight-hour day. Each scheduled activity/duty
for the day is considered a portion of the eight-hour workday. The number
of daily required activities varies by day, person, and schedule. Individual
classes are counted as one activity as are each block of time scheduled
for office hours.
Any employee absent because
of illness must notify his/her supervisor at the earliest practical
time. To be eligible for accumulated sick leave with pay for any continuous
period of more than three (3) working days, an employee absent due
to illness shall send to the supervisor (administrative head of his/her
employing agency) a doctor’s certificate showing
the cause or nature of the illness,(or some other written statement of
the facts concerning the illness which is acceptable to such administrative
head.) It is within the discretion of the supervisor (administrative
head) to require documentation concerning illnesses resulting in absences
of three (3) working days or less. In addition, the supervisor may request
a doctor's certification as to the employee's fitness to return to normal
duties.
Normal utilization of sick leave benefits should not interfere with
overall productivity of the department. Therefore, it is appropriate
that corrective steps be taken if an employee abuses sick leave (e.g.,
calls in sick when absent for non-health related reasons), or if an employee
has prolonged and/or frequent and regular absences which substantially
hinder the employee in carrying out required duties and responsibilities.
Corrective steps may include medical consultations, counseling, disciplinary
warnings, and may eventually lead to termination.
Employees who exceed their accrued sick leave will be required to use
any accrued vacation or compensatory time. When all accrued leave is
exhausted, the employee will be placed on leave without pay (LWOP). An
F3.2 must be generated placing the employee on LWOP for the appropriate
time.
The President may grant extended sick leave to employees on an individual
basis after reviewing the particular case. Employees must request the
extended sick leave and provide a description of the circumstances that
might justify such a request.
If an employee becomes ill or injured while on vacation leave, the
employee may use accumulated sick leave provided the supervisor is notified
as soon as possible and the employee submits satisfactory evidence confirming
the illness. The supervisor will normally require doctor's certification.
Should a regular college holiday occur during a period of sick leave,
the time shall be charged as a paid holiday rather than as sick leave.
Again, the supervisor may require documentation of illness.
Terminating employees will not be paid for any accumulated sick leave.
The estate of an employee who dies while employed by the state is entitled
to payment for half of the accrued sick leave or for 336 hours of sick
leave, whichever is less. Payment is calculated at the salary rate paid
to the employee at the time of death. The payment is computed as though
the employee had actually used these leave hours while on the agency's
payroll. Any state holiday that falls within this period shall not be
charged against the accrued leave hours.
If an employee transfers to another state agency without a break in
service, the accumulated sick leave balance shall be transferred to the
hiring agency.
An employee separated from employment with the state under a formal
reduction-in-force shall have his/her sick leave balance restored if
re-employed by the state within twelve (12) months of termination. An
employee separated for other reasons shall also have his sick leave balance
restored:
(1) if re-employed by the agency or institution within twelve (12)
months of termination, provided there has been a break in service of
at least thirty (30) calendar days since termination, or
(2) if re-employed by the state, with an agency or institution other
than the agency or institution from which the employee separated, within
twelve (12) months of termination.
In addition, an employee restored to state employment immediately following
military service will have any accrued balance restored.
House Bill 1177, 75th Legislature
allows an employee who is a parent of a child who is a student attending
a grade from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade to use up to eight
hours of sick leave each fiscal year to attend parent-teacher conferences
regarding the employee’s children.
Employees must give reasonable advance notice of the need for this leave.
Retirees who return to state employment will not have their sick leave
balance restored.
| Policy: |
Catastrophic Sick Leave Pool |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.5 Revised 11/03 |
Use of the sick leave pool
is limited to cases of catastrophic illnesses or injuries. A catastrophic
injury or illness is defined by the Employees Retirement System of
Texas as: "A severe condition or combination
of conditions affecting the mental or physical health of the employee
or the employee's immediate family that requires the services of a licensed
practitioner for a prolonged period of time and that forces the employee
to exhaust all leave time earned by that employee and to lose compensation
from the State for the employee. Licensed practitioner means practitioner,
as defined in the Texas Insurance Code, who is practicing within the
scope of his or her license. Immediate family is defined as those individuals
related by kinship, adoption, marriage, or foster children who are so
certified by the Texas Department of Human Services who are living in
the same household or if not in the same household are totally dependent
upon the employee for personal care or services on a continuing basis. "A
prolonged period is defined by Lamar State College-Orange as 160 hours
of missed work within the immediate preceding three (3) months as a result
of a serious illness or injury. The missed work may be continuous or
intermittent. For part time employees, the period will be proportional
to their percent effort.
A. Administration of the Pool
1. The Human Resources Director will be responsible for administering
the Pool.
2. The Pool Administrator will appoint a 3-5 member committee to review
the request and make a recommendation as to thedisposition of the request.
3. The Pool Administrator is responsible for determining eligibility,
verifying procedures have been followed, approving or disapproving the
request, and determining the number of hours to be awarded if the request
is approved.
4. The Pool Administrator
will notify the employee of the decision. If approved, the employee’s
sick leave accrual will be credited with the approved hours and those
hours will be deducted from the Pool balance. Unused hours will be
deducted from the employee’s sick
leave accrual and credited to the Pool.
B. General Provisions of the Sick Leave Pool:
1. To be eligible for leave donation, the employee must have been
employed by Lamar State College-Orange for six consecutive months immediately
prior to the request, be eligible for leave accrual, have exhausted all
leave and have been absent at least 160 hours in the immediate preceding
three (3) months as a result of a catastrophic injury or illness.
2. If the combination of sick leave, vacation and compensatory time
does not cover the 160-hour requirement, then the employee will be placed
on leave without pay until the balance of the 160-hour requirement
is met. Once the requirement is satisfied, the employee may receive
hours from the pool.
3. Employees may use pool leave for their own catastrophic illness/injury
or for a member of the immediate family.
4. Employees may also use pooled sick leave if they contributed sick
leave to the pool and then exhausted their sick leave balance in the
same fiscal year. Such employees may receive only the number of hours
they contributed to the pool that fiscal year if they suffer a non-catastrophic
illness or injury.
5. Employees must exhaust all accrued leave before they are eligible
to use leave from the pool.
6. An employee on pooled sick leave for a full calendar month will
not receive credit for accrued sick leave and vacation until the first
day that he or she returns to work. An employee using sick leave pool
part time or intermittently will have vacation and sick leave credited
and must use the vacation and sick leave before using the sick leave
pool hours.
7. Employees with catastrophic illnesses or injuries are not required
to contribute to the pool before they can use pool leave.
8. Employees who use pool leave are not required to pay back pool leave.
9. Absences for maternity leave purposes are not eligible for leave
unless there are severe medical complications requiring additional
absence from work beyond 12 weeks absence.
10. This program cannot be used for elective surgeries or for anything
other than a severe injury or illness that could not have been reasonably
anticipated.
11. In no case may Sick
Leave Pool hours be used in conjunction with a Workers’ Compensation
Claim.
12. All eligible employees will have equal access to the pool. Decisions
to allocate pool resources to eligible employees will be equitable, consistent,
and without regard to employee classification or any other legally
impermissible reason.
C. Contributing Sick Leave to the Pool:
1. Contributions to the pool are strictly voluntary.
2. Active employees may contribute an unlimited number of hours of
sick leave to the pool each year in increments of eight hours; retiring
employees may contribute in increments of less than eight hours.
3. Employees who make contributions to the pool may not stipulate who
is to receive their contributions.
4. Employees will be encouraged to contribute to the pool at the time
of their separation from state employment.
5. Employees who contribute leave to the pool cannot get it back unless
they are eligible to use it.
D. Requesting to Use Leave From the Pool:
1. The Sick Leave Pool Withdrawal Request Form will be forwarded to
the Human Resource Director (Pool Administrator) through appropriate
supervisory channels, and will be considered by the Pool Administrator
on a first-come, first-served basis.
2. The Pool Administrator will process requests within 10 working days
following receipt of all information necessary to make a decision.
3. The Pool Administrator determines the amount of Pool Leave granted
for each catastrophic illness or injury. The amount of Sick Leave Pool
granted will be limited to 30 working days (240 hours). However, only
actual hours required should be requested.
4. The employee may reapply
for additional Sick Leave Pool if the amount previously granted is
insufficient to cover the employee’s absence.
The subsequent requests are subject to the same restrictions as indicated
previously, including additional physician’s statements.
5. Although employees may
make additional requests for Sick Leave Pool, the total amount granted
for catastrophic injuries or illnesses during an employee’s
tenure with the college cannot exceed one-third (1/3) of the balance
of hours in the pool, or 90 days, whichever is less.
6. Any unused balance of Pool Leave granted to an employee will be
returned to the Pool. The estate of a deceased employee is not entitled
to payment for unused Pool Leave.
7. Employees seeking permission
to withdraw time from the sick leave pool because of a catastrophic
illness or injury are required to provide a written statement from
the appropriate licensed practitioner sufficient to evaluate the
employee’s eligibility.
(S.B. 1624, 75th Legislature, General Appropriations Act)
8. The employee should advise in the sick leave pool request if they
are receiving subrogation benefits, i.e., by legal right collecting
pay, reimbursement for loss of work time, or damages from a third
party as a result of the catastrophic illness or injury.
9. Before a Sick
Leave Pool request will be granted, the following factors will be
taken into consideration:
Severity of the illness or injury;
Responsible use of sick leave in the past; and
Intent to return to work.
E. Employees have no right to Sick Leave Pool and the granting of it
is discretionary.
| Policy: |
Leave Without Pay (LWOP) |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.6 |
Leave without pay (LWOP) can only be granted according to the following
provisions:
All such leave without pay will be limited to 12 months.
Except for disciplinary, worker's compensation, and military situations,
all accumulated paid leave entitlement must be exhausted before such
LWOP can be granted. Sick leave must be exhausted only in those allowable
cases as provided in the sick leave provisions. All such leave will be
limited to twelve months.
Although approval of such leaves constitutes a guarantee of employment
for a specified period of time such a guarantee is subject to fiscal
constraints.
The President may waive these limitations for such reasons as interagency
agreements or for educational purposes.
Except in the case of an employee returning to state employment from
military LWOP, any full calendar month in which an employee is on LWOP
will not be counted in the calculation of total state service for the
purpose of vacation or longevity pay entitlement. No employee shall accrue
vacation or sick leave for such a month. Any such full calendar month
of LWOP shall not constitute a break in the continuity of state employment,
but shall not be considered in the calculation of six months continuous
service under vacation leave provisions.
A full-time employee or regular part-time employee who is subject to
FLSA and on leave without pay shall have his or her compensation reduced
for that particular pay period at the equivalent hourly rate of pay times
the number of work hours lost by leave without pay. FLSA exempt employees
may also be subject to salary reduction in the same manner, in accordance
with provisions set forth in the overtime provisions of 29 C.F.R. section
541.188. FLSA exempt employees who are absent from work for less than
one day for personal reasons or sickness or disability under certain
conditions may be subject to a salary reduction.
See guidelines on sick and vacation leave to determine limitations
on use of leave. Placing an employee on LWOP involves additional administrative
expenses and creates an additional workload for co-workers and therefore,
frequent or lengthy LWOP status may subject the employee to corrective
actions up to and including termination.
| Policy: |
Extended Leave Without Pay |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.7 |
Any employee who wishes to be placed on LWOP status for any period
of time for a full calendar month or longer must make a written request
to the appropriate Dean or Vice President. Normally such requests will
be limited to six months and in no case will they extend beyond twelve
months. When such leaves are granted, the employee will be eligible to
return to employment in a similar position provided that at the expiration
of the leave:
The employee is in satisfactory medical condition to resume full employment.
A doctor's certificate will be required;
The employee notifies the Human Resources Office in writing of the
intent to return to work;
The employee allows at least thirty days for reinstatement in a similar
position.
The College does not assure that employees returning from extended
LWOP will be returned to their same position but only that they will
be returned to a similar position for which their qualifications are
accepted by the supervisor holding an available and vacant position.
Failure of an employee to return to work at the end of an approved
LWOP will terminate employment unless a request for extension of the
LWOP has been approved by the appropriate Vice President. The request
will not be approved beyond the 12 month limit.
Employment while on a disability LWOP is cause for termination unless
specifically approved as related to the employee's College responsibilities.
During an extended LWOP (longer than a calendar month), except in the
case of FMLA, the employee is responsible for paying the full insurance
premiums on any coverage. That is, the employee must pay both the normal
employee cost and the state contribution, employees on FMLA are required
to pay for optional coverage. Failure to pay the premium will result
in cancellation of the insurance and a physical exam may be required
to have the insurance reinstated.
No sick or vacation leave will be accrued for any calendar month on
LWOP.
Retirement contributions are discontinued while on LWOP. Accrued benefits
are not forfeited, nor can they be withdrawn during the LWOP.
| Policy: |
Military Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.8 |
Regular employees are eligible for several types of military leave:
Authorized Training
or Duty . Regular
employees who are members of the State Military Forces or members of
reserve components of the U.S. Armed Forces engaged in authorized training
or duty are entitled to leaves of absence from their respective duties
without loss of efficiency rating, vacation leave, or salary for not
more than 15 days in a federal fiscal year. Such days may be consecutive
or non-consecutive.
If additional days are needed, the employee shall be allowed to use
vacation time, or if that is exhausted, be placed on LWOP.
Call to National Guard Active Duty by the Governor. An
employee who is a member of the National Guard called to active duty
by the Governor because of an emergency is entitled to receive and shall
be granted emergency leave without loss of military or annual leave.
Such leave shall be granted with full pay.
Call to National Emergency Duty, U.S. Armed Forces Reserve. An
employee called to active duty during a national emergency by a reserve
branch of the U.S. Armed Forces shall be granted a leave of absence.
Employees are entitled to 15 working days of compensation if they have
not already exhausted their 15-day annual entitlement. After exhausting
15 days of paid leave, leave will be unpaid. The employee will accrue
state service while on LWOP but does not accrue sick leave or vacation.
However, the employee retains any accrued sick leave or vacation and
will be credited with those balances upon return from leave.
Other Military Leave. Employees returning to their
position after active service in the military are considered to have
been on furlough or leave of absence. All leave balances will be restored
and time spent on active duty will be credited as state service. To be
eligible for restoration on returning from military service the employee
must have been honorably discharged no later than the 5th anniversary
of the date of induction, enlistment or called to active military service;
and be physically and mentally qualified to perform the duties of that
position, applied for restoration within 90 days after leaving military
service, and have been absent from state service not longer than five
years.
The Attorney General has ruled that state employees returning to work
following military service under restoration provisions are entitled
to include time spent on active duty with longevity of employment (state
service credit) for purposes of vacation and sick leave entitlement.
Returning employees do not accrue vacation or sick leave while on active
military duty and are not considered employed by the State.
Employees requesting any type of military leave must present copies
of their orders to be placed in their personnel files.
| Policy |
Volunteer Fire Fighter and EMS Training |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.9 |
Volunteer fire fighters and emergency medical services volunteers shall
be granted up to five days of paid leave each fiscal year for attending
training school conducted by state agencies. This leave is not charged
against the employee's accrued leave balance. Employees requesting such
leave should provide their supervisor with support documentation verifying
the training. Copies of the documentation will be placed in their personnel
file.
Leave with full pay may also be granted to volunteer firefighters and
emergency medical services volunteers for the purpose of responding to
emergency fire or medical situations if the agency or institution has
an established policy for granting the leave time.
| Policy: |
Leave for Employees with Disabilty Revised |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.10 |
A state employee who is a person with a disability as defined by the
Human Resources Code section 121.002 shall be granted a paid leave of
absence not to exceed 10 days each fiscal year for the purpose of attending
a training program to acquaint the employee with an assistance dog to
be used by the employee.
| Policy: |
Family Medical Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.11 |
FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE ACT
Date Issued: 9/1/93
1.Policy: It shall be the policy of Lamar State College
- Orange to provide all eligible employees twelve (12) weeks leave time
to care for their needs and those of their family members. This policy
shall meet the requirements of the Family Medical Leave Act. Employees
utilizing FML will be granted the rights preserved in that legislation
and the regulation defined by the U.S. Department of Labor and the State
Appropriations Act.
2.Eligibility: To be eligible for leave under the
Family Medical Leave, an employee (Faculty or Staff) must have
2.1 a total of at least 12 months of state service. In calculating
the required twelve (12) months, all state employment will be counted
and it need not be continuous. And,
2.2 worked at least 1250 hours during the (12) month period immediately
preceding the commencement of leave. 1250 hours refers to hours actually
worked and does not include paid time off.
State employees meeting the
above eligibility criteria are hereby entitled to leave pursuant to
the Federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) provided that the employee
utilizes all available applicable paid vacation and sick leave while
taking leave pursuant to this provision. As an exception to the requirement
to utilize all paid vacation and sick leave, employees on FMLA leave
who are receiving temporary disability benefit payments or workers’ compensation
benefits shall not be required to utilize paid vacation or sick leave
while receiving such benefits.
Those employees with less than a total of 12 months of state service
or who have worked less than 1,250 hours in the 12-month period immediately
preceding the commencement of leave are eligible to take a parental leave
of absence, not to exceed 12 weeks, provided that the employee utilizes
all available applicable paid vacation and sick leave while taking leave
pursuant to this subdivision. The leave authorized by this subdivision
is limited to, and begins with the date of, the birth of a natural child
or the adoption or foster care placement of a child under three years
of age.
The State Auditor’s
Office has issued a revised interpretation indicating that sick leave
may be used in conjunction with FMLA leave when a child under the age
of three is adopted regardless of whether the child is actually sick
at the time of adoption.
3.Qualifying Events: Eligible employees are entitled
to a total of twelve (12) weeks of leave during any twelve (12) month
period for one (1) or more of the following:
3.1 For the birth or placement of a child for adoption or foster care.
3.2 To care for an immediate family member (spouse, child, parent)
with a serious health conditions; or
3.3 When an employee is unable to work because of a serious health
condition.
Holidays occurring while an employee is on FMLA leave are not counted
towards the maximum total of 12 workweeks of unpaid leave in a 12-month
period.
4.Administration: Lamar State College - Orange will
use a rolling 12 month period measured backward from the date an employee
uses any FML.
4.1 Eligible employees must utilize all available applicable leave
when taking Family Medical Leave. After all paid leave is utilized, the
State will pay for the State paid portion of the employee's coverage
under the group health plan for any remaining calendar months of leave
without pay which may be taken under FML.
4.1.1 Leave is Unpaid: Family/medical leave is unpaid although the
employee may be eligible for short or long term disability payments and/or
workers' compensation benefits under those insurance plans. If the employee
requests leave because of a birth, adoption or foster care placement
of a child, any accrued paid vacation and compensation leave or applicable
sick leave first will be substituted for any unpaid family/medical leave.
If the employee requests leave because of his/her own serious health
condition, any accrued sick leave, paid vacation, or compensation leave,
will be substituted first for any unpaid family/medical leave. The substitution
of paid leave time for unpaid leave time does not extend beyond the twelve
(12) week leave period.
4.1.2 Medical and Other Benefits: Health care coverage will cease if
premium payment for dependent coverage is more than thirty (30) days
late. If the employee elects not to return to work at the end of the
leave period, he/she will be required to reimburse the State for the
cost of the premiums paid to maintain coverage during leave, unless he/she
cannot return to work because of a serious health condition or other
circumstances beyond his/her control.
4.2 An employee on FML is not entitled to accrue service credit for
any full calendar months of LWOP taken while on FML and shall not accrue
vacation or sick leave for such months. Further, any full calendar months
of LWOP shall not be included in the calculation of six (6) continuous
months of employment set forth in Article V of the Appropriations Act,
Section 1,4 and Section 8,1.
4.3 Notice of Leave: If need
for family/medical leave is foreseeable, employees must give Lamar
State College - Orange thirty (30) days’ prior
written notice. If not possible, at least as soon as practicable (within
1 to 2 business days of learning of that need for leave). Failure to
provide such notice may be grounds for delay of leave. Where the need
for leave is not foreseeable, notification must be given within 1 to
2 working days of learning of need for leave, except in extraordinary
circumstances. Request for FML on the F3.6A forms should clearly identify
leave under this policy.
4.4 Medical Certification: If requesting leave because of employee's
or a covered relation's serious health condition, the relevant health
care provider must supply appropriate medical certification. Medical
Certification Forms are available from the Human Resources Office. Failure
to provide requested medical certification in a timely manner may result
in denial of leave until it is provided.
4.5 Reporting While on Leave: The employee must report to the Human
Resources Director regarding the status of his/her condition and intention
to return to work on a monthly basis the 1st day of the month.
4.6 Intermittent and Reduced Schedule Leave: Leave because of a serious
health condition, may be taken intermittently (in separate blocks of
time due to a single health condition) or on a reduced leave schedule
(reducing the usual number of hours worked per workweek or workday) if
medically necessary. If leave is unpaid, Lamar State College - Orange
will reduce the employee's salary based on the amount of time actually
worked. In addition, while he/she is on an intermittent or reduced schedule
leave, Lamar State College - Orange may temporarily transfer the employee
to an alternative position which better accommodates the recurring leave
and which has equivalent pay and benefits.
4.7 Returning From Leave: If leave is taken because of employee's serious
health condition, he/she will be required to provide medical certification
to resume work. Return to Work Medical Certification Forms may be obtained
from the Human Resources Office. Employees failing to provide the Return
to Work Medical Certification Form or a doctor's release form will not
be permitted to resume work until it is provided.
4.8 Extended Leave For Serious Health Condition: Leave taken because
of an employee's own serious health condition may be extended additional
weeks (see Leave Without Pay Policy). If an employee does not return
to work on the originally scheduled return date nor requests in advance
an extension of the agreed upon leave with appropriate documentation,
he/she will be deemed to have voluntarily terminated employment with
Lamar State College - Orange.
5. Definitions: For the purposes of this policy,
the following definitions apply:
5.1 "Spouse" is
defined in accordance with applicable State law.
5.2 "Parent" includes
biological parents and individuals who acted as parents, but does not
include parents-in-law.
5.3 "Son" or "daughter" includes
biological, adopted, foster children, stepchildren, legal wards, and
other persons for whom the employee acts in the capacity of a parent
and who is under 18 years of age or over 18 years of age but incapable
of caring for themselves.
5.4 "Serious health condition" means
any illness, injury, impairment, or physical or mental condition that
involves: (1) any incapacity or treatment in connection with inpatient
care; (2) an incapacity requiring absence of more than three calendar
days and continuing treatment by a health care provider; or (3) continuing
treatment by a health care provider of a chronic or long term condition
that is incurable or will likely result in incapacity of more than
three (3) days if not treated.
5.5 "Continuing treatment" means:
(1) two or more treatments by a health care provider; (2) two or more
treatments by a provider of health care services (e.g., physical therapist)
on referral by or under orders of a health care provider; (3) at least
one treatment by a health care provider which results in a regimen
of continuing treatment under the supervision of the health care provider
(e.g., a program of medication or therapy); or (4) under the supervision
of, although not actively treated by, a health care provider for a
serious long-term or chronic condition or disability which cannot be
cured (e.g., Alzheimer's or severe stroke).
"Health Care Provider" includes:
licensed MD's and OD's, podiatrists, dentists, clinical psychologist,
optometrist, chiropractors authorized to practice in the State, nurse
practitioners and nurse-mid-wives authorized under the State law, and
Christian Science practitioners.
5.7 "Needed to care for" a
family member encompasses: (1) physical and psychological care, and
(2) where the employee is needed to fill in for others providing care
or to arrange for third party to care for the family member.
5.8 The phrase "unable to perform the functions of his/her job" means
an employee is: (1) unable to work at all; or (2) unable to perform any
of the essential functions of his/her position. The term "essential
functions" is borrowed from the Americans with Disabilities Act
(" ADA") to mean "the fundamental job duties of the employment
position," and does not include the marginal functions of the position.
REFERENCE: General Appropriations, Regular Session, Section 8 U.S. Public
Law 1033, Family Medical Leave Act, 29CFR825
| Policy: |
Parental Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.12 |
Employees with less than 12 months of state service or less than 1,250
hours of work in the 12 months immediately preceding the start of leave
are entitled to a parental (unpaid) leave of absence, not to exceed 12
weeks, if the employee uses all available paid vacation and sick leave
while taking the parental leave. Such parental leave may only be taken
for the birth of a natural child or the adoption or foster care placement
with the employee of a child under three years of age. The leave period
begins with the date of birth or the adoption or foster care placement.
| Policy: |
Foster Parental Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.13 |
A state employee, who is a foster parent to a child under the conservatorship
of the Department of Protective and Regulatory Services (DPRS) is entitled
to a leave of absence with full pay for the purpose of attending staffing
meetings held by the DPRS regarding the employee's foster child. In addition,
the employee may attend, with paid leave of absence, the Admission, Review,
and Dismissal (ARD) meeting held by a school district regarding his or
her foster child.
| Policy: |
Emergency Bereavement Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.14 |
A state employee is entitled
to emergency leave without a deduction in salary because of a death
in the employee’s family. The death
of the employee’s spouse or of a parent, brother, sister, grandparent,
grandchild or child of the employee or of the employee’s spouse
is considered to be a death in the employee’s family (Tex. Gov’t
Code 661.902)
Leave for anyone other than
members of the employee’s immediate
family shall be charged to vacation, compensatory time or leave without
pay. An employee who must be away from the job due to a death in the
immediate family should notify the supervisor on or before the first
day of such absence. The Request for Overtime and Leave Form (F3.6A)
should be completed and the absence approved. The Request for Leave should
show the name, relationship, date of death, and date of funeral service
of the family member.
The amount of time granted shall normally not exceed 3 days. Request
for leave in excess of 3 days may be approved by the President based
on the facts and circumstances of each case. A full 3 days is not automatically
granted since it is intended that such leave be limited to the reasonable
amount of time necessary for travel, funeral arrangements, funeral services,
and being with other family members during the immediate period of bereavement.
The President may determine that a reason other than a death in the
immediate family is sufficient for granting emergency leave.
| Policy: |
Emergency Leave |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.15 |
The President may grant emergency leave for reasons determined to be
for good cause. Such requests must be in writing and approved by the
President.
| Policy: |
Worker's Compensation |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.16 Revised 11/05 |
The State Office of Risk Management (SORM) administers the state’s Workers' Compensation system for
most state employees. SORM is the insurance carrier for all state agencies
except the Texas Department of Transportation, the University of Texas
System, and Texas A&M University System. The director of SORM represents
the State in Workers' Compensation matters, may make procedural rules,
and may prescribe forms necessary for the effective administration of
the program.
Recovery of workers' compensation benefits is the exclusive remedy of an employee covered by workers' compensation insurance coverage or a legal beneficiary against the employer or an agent or employee of the employer for the death of or a work-related injury sustained by the employee. However, this does not prohibit the recovery of exemplary damages by they surviving spouse or heirs of the body of a deceased employee whose death was caused by an intentional act or omission of the employer or by the employer's gross negligence as defined by Section 41.001, Civil Practice and Remedies Code. A determination by the Division of the Workers' Compensation (DWC) at the Texas Department of Insurance that a work-related injury is noncompensable does not adversely affect the exclusive remedy provisions in statute. To receive these benefits, an employee must suffer a compensable injury on the job. An injury is defined as "damage or harm to the physical structure of the body and a disease or infection naturally resulting from the damage or harm." An occupational disease is considered an injury.
All employing agencies are required to fully cooperate with SORM and the DWC in any way that may be required to properly administer the workers' compensation program for state employees.
State agencies are responsible for certain required "employer" reports and forms.
MEDICAL BENEFITS: An
injured employee is entitled to all health care reasonably required to treat an injury
or illness when needed. The injured worker is entitled to his or her choice of treating physicians; however, the physician must be one of the doctors listed on the DWC's approved doctor list. If an employee is dissatisfied with the initial choice of a doctor from the DWC's list, the employee may notify the DWC and request authority to select an alternative doctor. The notification must be in writing and state the reasons for the change, except notification may be made by telephone when a medical necessity exists for immediate change.
INCOME BENEFITS: In addition to medical payments,
employees are eligible to receive income benefits for time lost
from work as a result of an injury. To be eligible, an injury must result in disability for at least one week. Income benefits begin to accrue on the eighth day after the disabling injury. This entitlement ends upon the death of the employee. Eligibility for income benefits (for example, temporary income, impairment increment, or supplemental income) expires 401 weeks after the date of the disabling injury.
An employee may elect to use available sick leave before receiving
income benefits. If an employee chooses to use his or her sick leave,
all of the accrued sick leave must be exhausted before the compensatory
payments will begin. The employee may also elect not to use sick leave.
Once the election has been made, the employee cannot change his or her
election at a later date.
The Office of the Attorney
General has ruled that employees who are receiving temporary disability
payments or workers’ compensation
benefits may use their paid vacation leave.
There are four categories of income benefits: temporary, impairment,
supplemental, and lifetime. A brief description of each follows.
Temporary benefits continue until a worker has reached maximum
medical improvement (MMI). MMI is reached when certified by a doctor
or after 104 weeks after temporary benefits began to accrue whichever
occurs first. These benefits are paid at 70 percent of the difference
between the worker's average pre-injury weekly wage and the worker's
post-injury weekly earnings, not to exceed 100 percent of the state average
weekly wage rounded to the nearest whole dollar. For workers who earn
less than $8.50 an hour, benefits for the first 26 weeks are paid at
75 percent of the difference between the worker's average pre-injury
wage and the workers post-injury earnings.
Impairment benefits begin the day after a worker has reached
his or her MMI point and end either on the date of expiration computed
at a rate of three weeks for each percentage point of impairment, or
on the date of the employee's death, whichever comes first. A worker
who remains impaired by an injury after he or she has reached MMI will
be eligible for impairment benefits. If the diagnosis is disputed and
the parties cannot agree on a doctor to determine whether a worker has
reached MMI, the TWCC will assign a doctor.
The certifying doctor assigns a rating to the worker's impairment using
the America Medical Association's Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent
Impairment. The rating determines the number of weeks that impairment
benefits will be paid. If the impairment rating is disputed, a doctor
chosen by the agreement of both parties or, if the parties cannot agree,
a doctor appointed by the TWCC will assign a rating. Impairment income
benefits are paid at 70 percent of the worker's average pre-injury wage,
not to exceed 70 percent of the state average weekly wage rounded to
the nearest whole dollar.
Supplemental benefits are paid when a worker's impairment
benefits expire if the worker has an impairment rating of 15 percent
or more; has not returned to work at all or returns to work earning less
than 80 percent of his or her average pre-injury weekly wage; has not
decided to commute part of his or her impairment income benefit; and
has made a good faith effort to seek employment according to his or her
ability to work. Eligible employees may be paid supplemental benefits
not to exceed 70 percent of the state weekly wage rounded to the nearest
whole dollar. Benefits for a week are equal to 80 percent of the amount
calculated by subtracting a worker's weekly wage earned during the reporting
period from 80 percent of the worker's average weekly wage.
Lifetime benefits are paid for specific serious injuries until
the death of the employee. Employees may be paid at 75 percent of the
worker's average pre-injury weekly wage, not to exceed 100 percent of
the state average weekly wage rounded to the nearest whole dollar, for
the following injuries:
total and permanent loss of sight in both eyes; loss of both feet
at or above the ankle; loss of both hands at or above the wrist; loss
of one foot at or above the ankle and the loss of one hand at or above
the wrist; an injury to the spine that results in permanent and complete
paralysis of both arms, both legs, or one arm and one leg; or an injury
to the skull resulting in incurable insanity or imbecility.
Death and Burial Benefits: Death and burial
benefits are paid to the beneficiaries of the deceased employee if the
employee dies of a compensable injury. The beneficiaries of the employee
are entitled to 75 percent of the employee's average weekly salary not
to exceed 100 percent of the state average weekly wage rounded to the
nearest whole dollar. Beneficiaries may include eligible spouses, children,
grandchildren, or dependents.
Weekly payments to an employee's eligible spouse continue until the
spouse dies or remarries. If the spouse remarries, he or she may receive
104 weeks of death benefits, commuted according to TWCC rules. Weekly
payments to an employee's dependent child continue until the child reaches
age 18. If the child is enrolled as a full-time student at an accredited
educational institution, then weekly payments may continue until the
child reaches age 25, until the date the child is no longer enrolled
as a full-time student for the second semester in a row, or until the
child dies, whichever is first. A child who is an employee's dependent
at the time the employee dies is entitled to receive benefits until the
date the child dies, the date the child no longer has a disability, or,
if the child does not have a disability, after 364 weeks of death benefit
payments, whichever is first. All other beneficiaries are entitled to
364 weeks of payments or payments until the date they die. Burial benefits
include the actual costs incurred for reasonable burial expenses or $2,500.
Work Search Complance Standards: The commissioner by rule shall adopt compliance standards for supplemental income benefit recipients that require each recipient to demonstrate an active effort to obtain employment. To be eligible to receive supplemental income benefits, a recipient must provide evidence satisfactory to the DWC of one of the following:
Active participation in a vocational rehabilitation program conducted by the Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services or a private vocational rehabilitation provider.
Active participation in work search efforts conducted through the Texas Workforce Commission.
Active work search efforts documented by job applications submitted by the recipient.
By rule the comissioner shall:
Establish the level of activity that a recipient should have with the Texas Workforce Commission and the Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services.
Define the number of job applications required to be submitted by a recipient to satisfy the owrk search requirements.
Consider factors affecting the availability of employement, including recognition of access to employment in rural areas, economic conditions, and other apporpriate employemnt availability factors.
Notification and Claim Requirements: An employee
or party representing the employee must notify the employer within 30 days after the injury occurred or, if the injurty is an occupational disease, as soon as the employee knew that the injury might be related to the employment. Failure to notify the employer may relieve the employer of any liability in the matter unless the employer has actual knowledge of the injury; the DWC determines that good cause exists for failure to provide notice, or the employer or its insurance carrier does not contest the claim.
Claims for compensation must normally be filed within one year from the date of injury.
Failure to file a claim for compensation with the DWC as required by statute relieves the employer
and the employer's insurance carrier of liability under this subtitle unless good cause exists for
failure to file a claim in a timely manner or the employer or the employer's insurance carrier does
not contest the claim.
Claims for death benefits
generally must be filed within one year of the employee's death.
Failure to file bars the claim unless the person is a minor or incompetent
or good cause exists for the failure to file a claim. Separate
claim must be filed for each legal beneficiary unless the claim expressly
includes other parties.
Out-of-State Assignments or Positions: Workers' compensation coverage extends to employees who regularly work outside the state.
Emergency Leave and Worker's Compensation: The administrative head of an agency, department, or institution of higher education may authorize emergency leave with pay to an employee receiving workers' compensation benefits. The emergency leave payment may not exceed an amount equal to the difference between the basic monthly wage of the employee and the amount of income benefits the employee received for the month. Emergency leave payments may not extend beyond six months.
Reporting Requirements: At the close of
each calendar quarter, the State Office of Risk Management shall prepare
a statement reflecting the amount of Workers' Compensation benefits paid
to, or on behalf of, former and current state employees and present it
to the Comptroller.
WORK-RELATED EXPOSURE TO HIV: State
Employees who have a possible work-related exposure to HIV must obtain
a test for HIV within 10 days of the exposure to HIV to be eligible
for workers’ compensation
benefits. The employee must also provide the employer with a written
statement of the date and circumstances of the exposure and a copy of
the employee’s test results that indicate an absence of the disease
within 30 days of the receipt of the test results.
The cost of the employee’s test(s), regardless of the results,
shall be paid from workers’ compensation benefits.
( Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter 85)
| Policy: |
Return-to-Work Policy and Procedures |
| Scope: |
Faculty and Staff |
| Policy Number: |
4.17 |
Return-to-Work Policy Statement
It is the policy of Lamar State College-Orange to provide a Return-to-Work
Program as the means to return employees to meaningful, productive employment
following injury or illness. In order to provide the highest level of
quality service to the citizens of Texas, it is necessary for every employee
of Lamar State College-Orange to be available for work, ready and capable
of performing the duties and responsibilities for which the employee
was hired.
The return to work program provides opportunities for any employee
of this agency who sustains a compensable injury during the course and
scope of employment, a disability as defined by the Americans with Disabilities
Act, and/or a serious health condition as defined by the Family Leave
Act to return to work at full duty. If the employee is not physically
capable of returning to full duty, the return to work program provides
opportunities, when available, for the employee to perform a temporary
assignment in which the employee's regular position is modified to accommodate
the employee's physical capacities, or to perform an alternate duty position.
This return to work program shall not be construed as recognition by
Lamar State College-Orange, its management, or its employees that any
employee who participates in the program has a disability as defined
by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. If an employee sustains
an injury or illness that results in a disability under the ADA, it is
the employee's responsibility to inform his or her supervisor or a person
in a responsible management position when a disability under the ADA
exists and that a reasonable accommodation is necessary to perform the
essential functions of his or her job.
Specific procedures shall be provided to guide all employees regarding
the return to work program. All employees, divisions, and facilities
of Lamar State College-Orange are expected to support and fully comply
with this policy and the procedures provided to implement this policy.
A. Definitions
1. Serious Health Condition - An illness, injury, impairment, or
physical or mental condition that involves:
inpatient care in a hospital, hospice, or residential medical care
facility, including any period of incapacity; or continuing treatment
by a health care provider, including a period of incapacity.
2. FMLA Leave - Federal leave entitlement of up to 12 weeks of unpaid
leave when an eligible employee is unable to work because of a serious
health condition. The absence from work must be a period of incapacity
of more than three consecutive calendar days. The leave is normally
continuous, but may be taken intermittently or on a reduced leave
schedule.
3. Lost Time - Time spent away from work at the direction of the
treating doctor as a result of a compensable injury sustained in the
course and scope of employment. The term does not include time worked
in a temporary assignment.
4. Full Duty - Performance of all duties and tasks of the position
for which the employee is employed. Full duty entails performing all
essential and non-essential functions of the employee's regular job.
5. Temporary Assignment - Performance of a temporary job assignment
that is intended to return an injured employee to work at less than his
or her full duties when a compensable injury or serious medical condition
prevents the employee from working full duty. Two types of temporary
assignments are modified duty and alternate duty.
6. Modified Duty - Performance of all of the essential functions, but
only a portion of the non-essential functions and tasks of the regular
job duties for which the employee is employed. Modified duty allows the
employee to return to current employment in his or her regular job, and
perform those duties and tasks that are within the capabilities of the
employee, given the restrictions to duty imposed by the treating physician.
Modified duty is a temporary arrangement until the injured employee can
resume full duty. If the employee is a qualified individual with a disability
as defined under the Americans with Disabilities Act, then modified duty
may become a permanent arrangement as a reasonable accommodation, if
the accommodation does not create an undue hardship on Lamar State College-Orange.
7. Alternate Duty - Performance of the essential functions of a job
or position other than the position for which the employee is employed.
Alternate duty allows the employee to temporarily perform other duties
and tasks that are within the restrictions to duty imposed by the treating
doctor. Such alternate duty may be physically located in the same facility
or in some other facility. Alternate duty is a temporary arrangement
until the injured employee can resume full activities of his/her regular
job. If the employee is a qualified individual with a disability as defined
under the Americans with Disabilities Act, then alternate duty may become
a permanent accommodation, if the accommodation does not create an undue
hardship on Lamar State College-Orange.
B. Prohibited Actions
This Return to Work policy and procedure shall not be applied to any
situation or circumstance in a manner that discriminates on the basis
of race, color, sex, national origin, religion or disability.
It is a violation of the Return to Work policy, procedures and state
or federal law for any employee, supervisor or manager of Lamar State
College-Orange to:
Discharge (or in any other manner discriminate against) an employee
of Lamar State College-Orange solely because the employee:
files a workers' compensation claim in good faith;
hires a lawyer to represent the employee in a claim;
institutes or causes to be instituted in good faith a proceeding
under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act; or
testifies or is about to testify in a proceeding under the Texas
Workers' Compensation Act.
Discharge (or in any other
manner discriminate against) an employee of Lamar State College-Orange
solely because the employee:
opposes any practice by Lamar State College-Orange, which is unlawful
under the FMLA or ADA; or has filed any charge, or has instituted or
caused to be instituted any proceeding under or related to the FMLA;
has given, or is about to give, any information in connection with
any inquiry or proceeding relating to any right provided under the FMLA;
or
has testified, or is about to testify, in any inquiry or proceeding
relating to any right provided under the FMLA.
Interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of or the attempt
to exercise, any right provided by the FamilyMedical Leave Act (FMLA).
Discriminate on the basis of disability against an employee of Lamar
State College-Orange who is a qualified individual with a disability
under the Americans with Disabilities Act ( ADA) in regards to:
job assignments, job classifications, organizational structures,
position descriptions, lines of progression, and seniority lists;
leaves of absence, sick leave, or any other leave;
upgrading, promotion, award of tenure, demotion, transfer, layoff,
termination, right of return from layoff, and rehiring;
rates of pay or any other form of compensation, changes in compensation,
and fringe benefits available;
selection and financial support for training; or
social and recreational activities.
Limit, segregate, or classify a job applicant or employee in a way
that adversely affects his or her employment opportunities or status
on the basis of disability.
Require a medical examination of an employee who is disabled as defined
under the ADA unless the medical examination is job related and consistent
with business necessity.
Make inquiries as to whether an employee is an individual with a disability
or as to the nature or severity of such disability.
C. Position Descriptions of All Positions
All supervisors and managers are responsible for identifying, documenting
and maintaining the essential and non-essential functions in a position
description for all positions for which they are responsible. The physical
requirements of the position should be included in all position descriptions
as either an essential or non-essential function. All position descriptions
shall be reviewed at least annually, and must be submitted for approval
to the Human Resources Director |