Kenneth Camp v. City of Pelham

625 F. App'x 422
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
Docket14-14804
StatusUnpublished

This text of 625 F. App'x 422 (Kenneth Camp v. City of Pelham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Camp v. City of Pelham, 625 F. App'x 422 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The City of Pelham (the “City”) appeals the district court’s orders (1) granting partial summary judgment to current and retired City firefighters (the “firefighters”) on their claim that the City incorrectly calculated their sick and vacation leave under the City’s civil service law, Ala. Act 1989-189, 1989 Reg. Sess. (Ala.1989), amended by Ala. Act 2015-416, 2015 Reg. Sess. (Ala.2015) (the “Civil Service Law”), and (2) ordering the City to convert the firefighters’ unused sick leave to- creditable service upon retirement using an eight-hour work day. In this appeal, we examine the Civil Service Law regarding the proper accrual rate of sick and vacation leave for firefighters, who work more hours than employees who work .a standard 40-hour week (“standard employees”). After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the district court’s first order granting partial summary judgment to the firefighters on their claim regarding sick and vacation leave, vacate the district court’s second order regarding the proper conversion rate for unused sick leave upon retirement, and remand for further proceedings.

I.

The Civil Service Law, which was enacted by the state legislature, governs City employees’ pay and terms of employment. 1 For standard employees, the Civil Service Law sets forth the accrual rates for vacation and sick leave. Standard employees accrue one day of sick leave each month and one to two days of vacation leave each month, depending on their length of service with the City. 2 City of Pelham Civil *424 Service Law §§ 7.11-.12, 7.18, Doc.;-No. 28-2. 3 , All employees receive eight hours of overtime pay for work scheduled on a holiday or when a holiday falls on a regularly scheduled day off. Id. § 7.24(d)(2).

City firefighters do not work a standard 40-hour work week; instead, they work 24-hour shifts, and each shift is followed by 48-hours off. In a 28-day period, a firefighter is scheduled to work 216 hours, 4 or nine 24-hour days, while a standard employee is scheduled to work1160 hours (40 hours a week). The Civil Service Law dictates that City employees — like firefighters — who have a pay base that “is other than the standard work week ... shall earn and use [sick or vacation] time in a comparable manner as set by executive order of the [Human Resources] Director.” 5 Id. §§ 7.11, 7.17.

Although the Civil Service Law has re-i quired, since 1989, that the City, issue an executive order setting forth the comparable manner in which firefighters would accrue sick leave and vacation time, the City did not do so until February 2009 (the “2009 Executive Order”). Both before and after the 2009 Executive Order', from 1992 until 2012, the City interpreted the requirement that firefighters be treated comparably to mean that they should earn sick and vacation time “at the same rate” as standard employees. 6 In other words, both standard employees and firefighters earned one, eight-hour day of sick time each month and one to two days of vacation time each month, depending on the length of their service.

The 2009 Executive Order did not change the accrual. of sick and vacation time for firefighters. It stated that firefighters would be compensated “by the ‘Kelly Day’ that they receive when they are over the maximum allowed hours.” Áff. of Jerry W. Nolan ¶ 11, Doc. No. 82-1. A “Kelly Day” is not compensation; it is a scheduled day off that does not count towards hours worked for Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) purposes and ensures a firefighter does not exceed FLSA hour thresholds for overtime hours. The Director, Jerry Nolan, acknowledged that this was the' practice in place prior to the 2009 Executive Order, which effectively did not change anything.

All City employees, including the firefighters, are covered by a pension plan with benefits managed by the Retirement Systems of Alabama (the “RSA”). When state and local employees retire, Alabama law allows those retiring in good standing to convert their unused sick leave into *425 service time, thereby increasing their pension benefits. See Ala.Code § 36-26-36.1 (permitting a plan member “to convert unused sick leave into membership service for purposes of service retirement”). The RSA defers to the City about how to convert an employee’s unused sick leave into service time for purposes of calculating retirement benefits. . During the period in which the firefighters accrued sick leave at the same rate as standard employees, the City converted all employees’ unused sick leave by dividing the unused hours by eight, which, represents a standard employee’s work day.

This lawsuit was filed as a class action alleging that the City’s scheduling of firefighters’ work violated the FLSA and that the City breached the Civil Service Law by failing to award firefighters sick, vacation, and holiday time in a comparable manner to standard employees. In their complaint, the firefighters sought both damages and injunctive relief.

In March 2012, the magistrate judge filed reports recommending that the district court certify an FLSA collective action and a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 class action pertaining to the state law claims. The City objected to the magistrate judge’s reports and recommendations. While the objections were pending, on January 1, 2013 the Director issued a new executive order changing the City’s policy for calculating firefighters’ sick and vacation leave (the “2013 Executive Order”). Under the 2013 Executive Order, firefighters would accrue 10.6 hours of sick time per month, and 10.6 tq,21.2 hours of vacation time per month depending on their length of service. Under this new policy, firefighters accrued 1.325 times more leave per month than standard employees, which is roughly equivalent to the 33 percent more hours that the firefighters worked each month. The. City also changed how it calculated the ^number of days of creditable service a firefighter had accrued upon retirement based on unused sick time. The City began converting firefighter retirees’ sick time into days by dividing the number of unused sick hours by 10.6. The City continued to divide standard employees’ unused sick hours by eight.

. . The district court then adopted the magistrate .judge’s reports and- recommendations and conditionally certified a collective action under the FLSA and a class under Rule 23 based on the state law claims. With regard to the claim regarding vacation and sick leave, the district court granted the firefighters partial summary judgment, holding that the; City violated the Civil Service Law by failing to award them sick and vacation leave in a comparable manner to that of standard employees. 7 The parties settled,, the FLSA claim. 8

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Bluebook (online)
625 F. App'x 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-camp-v-city-of-pelham-ca11-2015.