Allen v. STATE OF IOWA, DEPT. OF PERSONNEL

528 N.W.2d 583, 1995 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 65, 1995 WL 134858
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 29, 1995
Docket94-02
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 528 N.W.2d 583 (Allen v. STATE OF IOWA, DEPT. OF PERSONNEL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Allen v. STATE OF IOWA, DEPT. OF PERSONNEL, 528 N.W.2d 583, 1995 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 65, 1995 WL 134858 (iowa 1995).

Opinion

HARRIS, Justice.

This dispute concerns the job classification of two public employees. Using an administrative proceeding designed for the purpose, they challenged their status, asserting their work was essentially the same as that undertaken by specialists in another, better paying, category. The matter is before us on their appeal following an adverse ruling on judicial review. We affirm.

Petitioners Gary Allen and Alen Teepe are employees of the Iowa department of agriculture and land stewardship. Both are classified as livestock compliance investigators, a position assigned to the regulatory division of the animal health bureau. That bureau is headed by an executive who supervises three livestock compliance investigators, six livestock inspectors, six veterinarians, and a secretary. Alen and Teepe were livestock inspectors from the 1970s until 1988 when a new, more demanding and complex classification — livestock compliance investigator — was created. Alen and Teepe both were then promoted to the new classification. There is similarity between the name of their new classification (livestock compliance investigator) and the classification they seek (compliance officer). Because the classification titles employ the word “compliance,” some care must be taken, initially, to avoid confusing the two.

Like all state agencies, the Iowa department of agriculture does not exist in a vacuum. Its employees are subject to a merit system of employment organized within the department of personnel under Iowa Code chapter 97A (1995). Prior to 1988 the state authorized what Alen and Teepe describe as “one catch-all series called hearings compliance officer.” Many positions were included in this classification. In 1988 those previously so classified, and who presided at administrative hearings, became administrative law judges. Others, those who prosecuted (or assisted in prosecuting) cases before administrative law judges, were placed into either of two classifications: (1) attorney; or, if not a lawyer, (2) compliance officer. At this time the department of agriculture, with permission of the department of personnel, decided to create the position of livestock compliance investigator. Because they perform more difficult and complex investigations than livestock investigators, Alen and Teepe were placed in this new category.

This dispute arose because Alen and Teepe think their duties are sufficiently similar to those of compliance officers as to demand they also be so classified. They contend their “special” classification as livestock compliance officers violates Iowa Code section 19A.9(1) and 581 Iowa administrative code section 3.1(1) (similar job responsibilities call for same classification).

I. To resolve the dispute over state job classification we enter a relatively new area of administrative law. In common with many, perhaps most, such areas, it is a world of its own. It has a special tribunal, test tools, even its own developing language.

The agency’s classification review process was well explained in the appellee’s brief filed by the attorney general. We quote and adopt that explanation as follows:

The Iowa Department of Personnel (IDOP) is the central agency responsible for State personnel management. See Iowa Code Chapter 19A (1993) and section 19A.1A The law requires the director of the department to be “professionally qualified by education and experience in the field of public personnel administration....” Id. The director’s duties are set forth in chapter 19A The personnel commission, an appointive board of five members created by section 19A.4, oversees the administration of IDOP. Its duties are also set out in chapter 19A.
*586 One of IDOP’s primary duties is to establish and administer a position classification plan, which is to include each position of employment in State government. See Iowa Code section 19A.9(1). The classification plan is created “so that the same qualifications may reasonably be required and the same schedule of pay may be equitably applied to all positions in the same class, in the same geographical area.” Id. IDOP is authorized to allocate the position of each employee to one of the classes in the plan. Id. The procedure for appealing that allocation is as follows:
Any employee or agency officials affected by the allocation of a position to a class shall, after filing with the director a written request for reconsideration in the manner and form the director prescribes, be given a reasonable opportunity to be heard by the director. An appeal may be made to the commission or to a qualified classification committee appointed by the commission....
Iowa Code section 19A.9(1). Id. IDOP rules governing the classification appeal process are found in 581 IAC Chapter 3.
IDOP makes the initial decision concerning a position classification review request. 581 IAC 3.2 and 3.4. The department staff may rely on classification descriptions, position classification standards or guidelines and position description questionnaires to arrive at position classification decisions. 581 IAC 3.2, 3.3, 3.4. Classification descriptions are published by the department at the time a new classification is created and describe the general nature of the work and qualifications required for a particular job classification. 581 IAC 3.2(1). They provide illustrations of duties and responsibilities assigned to the classification and the abilities and skills required. Id. Position classification guidelines also describe the kind and level of duties and responsibilities typically associated with a job classification, and compare and contrast the similarities and differences among levels in a series of job classifications. 581 IAC 3.2(2). Position description questionnaires are forms prescribed by the department for listing the specific duties assigned to an employee and allocating the percentages of time the employee devoted to each activity. 581 IAC 3.3. Position classification decisions are based upon the preponderance of duties assigned to the position. 581 IAC 3.2(1) and 3.4(2). Any request for review of a position must be accompanied by a showing of substantive changes in employment duties. 581 IAC 3.4(6). A new position description questionnaire must be prepared by the employee identifying all new duties. Id.
IDOP’s position classification decision may be appealed to the classification appeal committee, and a hearing requested. 581 IAC 3.5. The committee is appointed by the director and “shall consist of three persons whose professional background is in human resources management or an area of technical expertise peculiar to the subject matter of the appeal.” 581 IAC 3.5(2). If the employee is dissatisfied with the committee’s decision, a petition for review may be filed with the personnel commission. 581 IAC 3.5(5). Following the final commission decision, a petition for judicial review may be filed in district court. 581 IAC 3.5(7).
Allen and Teepe explain that:
A person may challenge classification decisions by the director of personnel by the “PDQ process.” This procedure is set forth in the rules of the department of personnel and calls for the preparation of a Position Description Questionnaire....

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528 N.W.2d 583, 1995 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 65, 1995 WL 134858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-state-of-iowa-dept-of-personnel-iowa-1995.