Heflin v. KANSAS CITY KANSAS COMM. COLLEGE

224 P.3d 1201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2010
Docket101,891
StatusPublished

This text of 224 P.3d 1201 (Heflin v. KANSAS CITY KANSAS COMM. COLLEGE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heflin v. KANSAS CITY KANSAS COMM. COLLEGE, 224 P.3d 1201 (kanctapp 2010).

Opinion

224 P.3d 1201 (2010)

Dr. Ruth J. HEFLIN, Appellant,
v.
KANSAS CITY KANSAS COMMUNITY COLLEGE, Appellee.

No. 101,891.

Court of Appeals of Kansas.

February 26, 2010.

*1203 Steven W. Cavanaugh and Scott A. Grosskreutz, of Cavanaugh & Lemon, P.A., of Topeka, for appellant.

Douglas M. Greenwald, of McAnany, Van Cleave & Phillips, P.A., of Kansas City, for appellee.

Before RULON, C.J., ELLIOTT and HILL, JJ.

RULON, C.J.

The petitioner, Dr. Ruth J. Heflin, appeals the due process hearing officer's decision upholding respondent Kansas City Kansas Community College's (KCKCC) decision to terminate petitioner's employment. We affirm.

UNDERLYING FACTS

When the events giving rise to this action occurred, petitioner had been employed as an associate professor of English at KCKCC for about 10 years. KCKCC has a main campus in Kansas City, Kansas, and a satellite campus in Leavenworth, Kansas, and offers on-line courses in which the teaching is all done via a computer.

In the 5 years leading up to the fall 2007 semester, petitioner had taught primarily on-line courses. To the extent petitioner taught "on-ground" classes, i.e., in a classroom on campus, petitioner taught exclusively at the Leavenworth campus. At the start of the spring 2006 semester there was an agreement reached among petitioner, her supervising dean, and the director of the Leavenworth campus that petitioner's office would be located at the Leavenworth campus. Because of petitioner's office designation, she requested mileage reimbursement for her trips between Leavenworth and the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas, for committee meetings and curriculum preparation. Leota Marks, KCKCC's Dean of Human Resources, denied petitioner's requested mileage reimbursement because, at the time, petitioner was teaching all on-line classes and the requested reimbursement did not fall within the provost's administrative procedures. Specifically, Marks referred to the following prohibition: "`Full time faculty are not paid to drive from their home to their designated work site.'" Petitioner objected to Marks' refusal to approve petitioner's mileage reimbursement request because petitioner's understanding was that petitioner's designated work site was the Leavenworth campus. Petitioner contended she should be paid mileage for her trips between the Leavenworth campus, as her designated work site, and the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas.

Through a series of e-mails sent in September and October 2006, the disagreement between petitioner and Marks over the mileage reimbursement escalated. Marks continued to refuse to pay the mileage on the ground petitioner's travel was not between work destinations. Petitioner complained of bias against the Leavenworth campus as the "poor sister" and against on-line faculty, and ultimately threatened to file a grievance over the mileage issue unless her mileage request was paid and the mileage policy was revised to allow for reimbursement to faculty who drove to the Kansas City campus from the Leavenworth campus to attend meetings.

According to petitioner, Marks eventually approved petitioner's reimbursement request in an amount close to $234. In July 2006, a new master contract between the Board of Trustees and faculty of KCKCC went into effect, covering the period of July 1, 2006, to June 30, 2009. A significant new requirement in this contract was the following provision related to professional work load:

"No work load will exceed thirty (30) semester hours for the two-semester academic year. The load will consist usually of between thirteen (13) and seventeen (17) hours of instruction per semester, together with at least 10 clock hours per week of regularly scheduled office hours for student conferences, paper checking, supervision and preparation.
"Professional Employees who teach at off-campus sites may keep office hours where they meet students. Such office hours should be for the benefit of the off-campus students. For those Professional Employees *1204 who teach online courses, no less than 50% of the required office hours shall be held on campus. Office hours of Professional Employees shall not interfere with the responsibilities of Professional Employees to participate in campus-based activities. Faculty will make arrangements with supervisors for participation in campus-based activities, including but not necessarily limited to division meetings and in-services."

On December 13, 2006, KCKCC Provost Morteza Ardebili notified petitioner via e-mail that petitioner's assigned work destination and office location, effective January 8, 2007, would be at the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas.

On January 9, 2007, petitioner filed a grievance challenging the provost's action in changing petitioner's work destination and office to the main campus. Petitioner's grievance was forwarded from Level Three (Faculty Unit Grievance Committee) to Level Four (College President), where petitioner's remedy sought: "To restore the Grievant's `work destination' and office as the Leavenworth campus, as per the agreement made between the former Dean of Humanities, the Executive Director of the Leavenworth Center, and the Grievant in January 2006."

Petitioner's grievance was denied at Level Four in February 2007 and petitioner appealed to Level Five (Board of Trustees). Although the Board of Trustees ultimately issued a final determination sustaining the Level Four denial of petitioner's grievance, the issuance of the determination occurred after the deadline for such determination, and petitioner claimed to have won the grievance based on the untimeliness of the Board of Trustees' determination. Petitioner claimed she won her grievance and was entitled to have her office officially located at the Leavenworth campus.

In late June 2007, petitioner sent the Board of Trustees a memorandum stating petitioner's understanding that the Board of Trustees had failed to respond to the grievance within the proper time limit and petitioner's remedy should be granted. Petitioner stated: "Therefore, I will continue to maintain my office at the Leavenworth campus, as per the agreement made between the former Dean of Humanities, the Executive Director of the Leavenworth Center and myself in January 2006."

The Board of Trustees responded with a letter disagreeing with petitioner's interpretation, maintaining petitioner's grievance was properly and timely denied, and informed petitioner her "primary place of duty will be the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas, not the Leavenworth facility." Eventually, petitioner's contract was renewed for the July 1, 2007—June 30, 2008, contract year in accordance with the terms and conditions of the master contract.

For the fall 2007 semester, petitioner was assigned to teach four on-line courses and one course at the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas. Petitioner was not assigned to teach any courses at the Leavenworth campus. Before classes started for the fall 2007 semester, petitioner's new supervising dean, Tamara Agha-Jaffar, learned petitioner had turned in her office key for the Kansas City campus and intended not to hold office hours on the Kansas City campus during the semester. Agha-Jaffar e-mailed petitioner on August 9 to confirm petitioner's intentions. Petitioner replied her office was located at Leavenworth, per petitioner's grievance remedy, where she would be holding part of her on-ground office hours.

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Heflin v. Kansas City Kansas Community College
224 P.3d 1201 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
224 P.3d 1201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heflin-v-kansas-city-kansas-comm-college-kanctapp-2010.