Rhonda K. Oliver v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 2026
Docket2025-CA-0551
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Tiffany Gautier Chase

This text of Rhonda K. Oliver v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans (Rhonda K. Oliver v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhonda K. Oliver v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans, (La. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

RHONDA K. OLIVER * NO. 2025-CA-0551

VERSUS * COURT OF APPEAL SEWERAGE & WATER * BOARD OF NEW ORLEANS FOURTH CIRCUIT * STATE OF LOUISIANA ******

APPEAL FROM CITY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION ORLEANS NO. 9684 ****** Judge Tiffany Gautier Chase ****** (Court composed of Judge Tiffany Gautier Chase, Judge Dale N. Atkins, Judge Rachael D. Johnson)

Rhonda K. Oliver

PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

Ashley Ian Smith Darryl Harrison SEWERAGE AND WATER BOARD OF NEW ORLEANS 625 St. Joseph Street, Room 201 New Orleans, LA 70165

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

REVERSED AND REMANDED MARCH 4, 2026 TGC DNA RDJ

This case involves an appeal from a decision issued by the Civil Service

Commission for the City of New Orleans (hereinafter “the Commission”).

Appellant, Rhonda K. Oliver (hereinafter “Ms. Oliver”), seeks review of the

Commission’s decision, which affirmed the termination of her employment by the

Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans (hereinafter “S&WB”). After

consideration of the record before this Court and the applicable law, the decision of

the Commission to uphold Ms. Oliver’s termination is reversed and the case

remanded to the S&WB to reinstitute termination proceedings that comply with

procedural due process.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Ms. Oliver began working for the City of New Orleans in 2015 in the

Department of Housing and Urban Development. In 2021, she was promoted and

transferred to the S&WB, obtaining permanent classified employee status in 2022.

Ms. Oliver briefly transferred to another City of New Orleans agency but

eventually returned to the S&WB, as a classified employee, on January 29, 2024.

In late October 2024, Ms. Oliver began notifying her supervisors that she

would not be reporting to work. On October 21, 2024, she emailed her supervisors,

1 Nicole Kelly (hereinafter “Ms. Kelly”), Utility Customer Service Manager and

Susannah Kirby (hereinafter “Ms. Kirby”), Interim Chief Customer Service Officer

the following: “Just emailing to inform you that I will be out today for a personal

matter.” Similar emails were sent on October 22, 23, 25 and 28. On November 4,

2024, Ms. Oliver sent an email stating that she was “still dealing with a personal

issue and will be out again this entire week.” Ms. Kelly responded to Ms. Oliver’s

email with the following: “Do you have an expected return date? Or have you

reached out to Benefits or [Human Resources] to see if your circumstances qualify

for an extended leave[?]” A week later, on November 11, 2024, Ms. Oliver

responded that she planned to return to work no later than December 2, 2024.

Throughout the duration of her absence and until her eventual termination, Ms.

Oliver self-coded her time sheets as Leave Without Pay (hereinafter “LWOP”).1

On November 11, 2024, the S&WB sent Ms. Oliver, by email and United

States Postal Service mail, a letter advising her that a pre-termination hearing

would be scheduled for November 21, 2024. The letter explained that Ms. Oliver

had been absent for three consecutive weeks, and that “failure to report to work or

communicate when/if [she] would be returning to work has been determined to be

job abandonment.” The letter quoted only to the following provision of the

S&WB’s Attendance Policy: “If an employee fails to report to work or call in to

inform their supervisor of their absence for three (3) consecutive days or more, the

employee will be considered to have voluntarily resigned employment.” The letter

also noted, “you have chosen to code your time sheets as [LWOP]” and “while this

was not formally approved, you have the discretion to code your time sheets in

this manner.” (emphasis added). Finally, it stated that if Ms. Oliver was “unable to

1 The time sheets were not introduced into evidence by either party.

2 appear in person, [she] may submit a written statement of response in lieu of [her]

attendance[,]” and her response would be presented at the hearing. Ms. Oliver sent

a written response and did not appear at the hearing.2 However, testimony at a

subsequent hearing revealed that the S&WB did not consider her response.

On November 25, 2024, the S&WB notified Ms. Oliver of her termination,

effective November 21, 2024. The letter again explained that she was being

terminated for job abandonment for failure to report to work or indicate a return

date. The letter cited the following violations as the reason for her termination: (1)

S&WB’s Attendance Policy; (2) Civil Service Rule IX, Section 1.1: Disciplinary

Actions, Maintaining the Standards of Service3, and; (3) Civil Service Rule VIII,

Section 5.1: Leave of Absence Without Pay, (a)-(c).4 The termination letter also

2 Ms. Oliver submitted a written statement, by email, on November 20, 2024. In her response,

she stated that she did not abandon her job because she communicated with her supervisor[s] by email regularly. 3 Civil Service Rule IX, DISCIPLINARY ACTIONS:

Section 1 MAINTAINING STANDARDS OF SERVICE

1.1 When an employee in the classified service is unable or unwilling to perform the duties of his/her position in a satisfactory manner, or has committed any act to the prejudice of the service, or has omitted to perform any act it was his/her duty to perform, or otherwise has become subject to corrective action, the appointing authority shall take action warranted by the circumstances to maintain the standards of effective service. The action may include one or more of the following:

(a) termination from the service.

4 Civil Service Rule VIII, 5.1. states in pertinent part:

ANNUAL AND OTHER FORMS OF LEAVE Section 5 LEAVE OF ABSENCE WITHOUT PAY, 5.1:

(a) An appointing authority may grant an employee leave without pay for a period not to exceed one (1) year, whenever such leave is considered to be in the best interests of the service. Leave without pay for an additional period of time may be granted only with the approval of the Civil Service Commission. (b) Appropriate personnel forms must be submitted by the appointing authority during the initial days of the period for which leave without pay was authorized in accordance with the provisions of this Section of these

3 pointed out that Ms. Oliver’s LWOP was never formally approved and noted that

“you do not have the discretion to code your time sheets in this matter.” (emphasis

in original). For the first time, the termination letter provided a more expansive

version of the S&WB’s Attendance Policy, which stated:

An employee who fails to report to work as scheduled for three (3) consecutive working days without notice or without approval may be considered to have voluntarily resigned from his or her position due to job abandonment. Since job abandonment is not a disciplinary action and therefore not subject to a Pre- Termination Hearing. (emphasis added)

Finally, the termination letter specifically highlighted that Ms. Oliver “failed to

attend the scheduled [pre-termination] hearing.”

Ms. Oliver timely appealed her termination to the Commission. At the

hearing, she argued that she did not violate the S&WB’s Attendance Policy

because she regularly notified her supervisors that she would not report to work

due to personal reasons. Ms. Oliver also explained that she coded her time sheets

as LWOP because “that’s what S&WB does all the time.[]”5

Testimony and evidence were taken by a Hearing Officer at the Civil Service

hearing from Ms. Oliver, Ms. Kelly and Sharita Curtis (hereinafter “Ms. Curtis").

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