Rodney Crayton v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 9, 2024
Docket2023-CA-0728
StatusPublished

This text of Rodney Crayton v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans (Rodney Crayton 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
Rodney Crayton v. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

RODNEY CRAYTON * NO. 2023-CA-0728

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

APPEAL FROM CITY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION ORLEANS NO. 9443 Honorable Jay Ginsburg, Hearing Officer ****** Judge Joy Cossich Lobrano ****** (Court composed of Judge Joy Cossich Lobrano, Judge Paula A. Brown, Judge Karen K. Herman)

Jack Bohannon SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA LEGAL SERVICES 1340 Poydras Street, Suite 120 New Orleans, LA 70112

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE

Darryl Harrison Chanelle L. Collins SEWERAGE & WATER BOARD 625 St. Joseph Street New Orleans, LA 70165

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT

AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; RENDERED

JULY 9, 2024 JCL This is a civil service case. The Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans

PAB (“SWB”) appeals the September 13, 2024 decision of the Civil Service

KKH Commission (“CSC” or “Commission”), which reinstated SWB employee, Rodney

Crayton (“Crayton”), with back pay and emoluments of employment. For the

reasons that follow, we find that Crayton violated SWB’s substance abuse policy.

Further, we find that, under the circumstances of this case, suspension is the

appropriate sanction for the infraction. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the

CSC to the extent it reinstated Crayton’s employment with back pay and all other

emoluments of employment and reverse the decision to the extent the back pay and

emolument award did not reflect an eighty-day suspension. Further, we render

judgment imposing an eighty-day suspension without pay.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Crayton became an employee of SWB on March 21, 2016. At the time of the

incident made subject of this appeal, he had permanent status as a painter in

Support Services.

On November 11, 2022 at approximately 12:02 p.m., Alvin Flint (“Flint”),

SWB’s Security Manager, received a text message concerning alcohol

consumption by two unidentified SWB employees. The text stated, “Van 39 is a

(sic) Dumaine and Claiborne[.] Two employees drinking beer on the clock[.]” Flint

asked, “Who is this!!”, and the informant replied, “Ms. Boyd with Parking and

Violations.”

Flint emailed screenshots of the texts to Edgar Edwards (“Edwards”), a

SWB investigator, and asked him to locate SWB vehicle no. 39 through the GPS

tracking system. Edwards accessed the GPS tracking system, but the location of

1 vehicle no. 39 did not register on the system. Thereafter, Dave Cappel (“Cappel”),

the Director of Support Services, called Just Lamare (“Lamare”), a supervisor in

the Maintenance Department, to ascertain who the occupants of vehicle no. 39

were. Lamare informed Cappel that Crayton and Dasper Newell (“Newell”) were

the occupants of the vehicle. Cappel then advised Edwards that “the occupants of

[] vehicle [no.] 39 . . . were just arriving.”

Cappel ordered that Crayton and Newell submit to substance abuse testing

based on grounds of “reasonable suspicion.”1 Crayton and Newell were driven to

the testing facility by Kedrick Williams (“Williams”), a supervisor in the

Maintenance Department. Crayton submitted to a substance abuse screen and

tested positive for alcohol at level .036 at 2:20 p.m. A second test confirmed

Crayton’s blood alcohol level was .030 at 2:39 p.m.

1 Civil Service Rule V, §9.12 sets forth the criteria for reasonable suspicion drug testing:

An employee shall be required to participate in the substance abuse screening procedure if there exists reasonable suspicion (Category III) to believe that the employee’s fitness for duty is questionable, based on the following criteria:

(a) Any observable, work-related behavior or similar pattern of conduct that appears to be abnormal, erratic or otherwise not in conformance with acceptable City policy.

(b) Any observable, work-related behavior or similar pattern of conduct that indicates signs of impairment in normal sensory and/or motor body functions.

(c) Any articulable facts or evidence that indicate possible substance abuse on the job.

(d) Any information or evidence that warrants, or emanates from, an authorized investigation of possible drug-related activity by a specific individual or group.

(e) Any pattern of alcohol and/or drug-related behavior, conduct or activity that is violative of municipal, state or federal law.

2 On November 14, 2022, Flint instructed Edwards to conduct an

investigation. Edwards visited a store located on the corner of Dumaine Street and

Claiborne Avenue, which he knew from prior investigations had surveillance

cameras. Edwards spoke with the store manager, who informed him that the store’s

camera system was inoperable at the time of the reported incident. Edwards also

interviewed Williams. Williams informed Edwards that he did not observe any

signs of impairment on the part of Crayton on November 11, 2022. Edwards

attempted to contact Ms. Boyd but was unsuccessful in doing so.2

A pre-disciplinary hearing was held on December 27, 2022. Following the

pre-disciplinary hearing, SWB sent Crayton a letter dated December 29, 2022

informing him that he was terminated effective December 28, 2022 for violating

SWB’s substance abuse policy.3 Crayton appealed his termination to the CSC. A

2 According to Edwards, Ms. Boyd was a city employee, not a SWB employee.

3 SWB’s substance abuse policy provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

Employees should report to work fit for duty and free of any adverse effects of illegal drugs or alcohol. This policy does not prohibit employees from the lawful use and possession of prescribed medications. Employees must, however, consult with their doctors about the medications’ effect on their fitness for duty and ability to work safely, and they must promptly disclose any work restrictions to their supervisor.

Whenever employees are working, are operating any [SWB] vehicle, are present on [SWB] premises or are conducting [SWB]- related work offsite, they are prohibited from:

1. Being under the influence of alcohol or an illegal drug as defined in this policy[;]

2. Using, possessing, buying, selling, manufacturing or dispensing an illegal drug (to include possession of drug paraphernalia)[;]

3. Possessing or consuming alcohol.

The substance abuse policy defines “under the influence of alcohol” as “a confirmed positive test result for an alcohol concentration greater than or equal to 0.02.”

3 hearing was conducted on April 28, 2023 before a hearing examiner appointed by

the CSC. The CSC issued a decision on September 13, 2024, finding that Crayton

was wrongfully terminated because SWB lacked reasonable suspicion to subject

Crayton to substance abuse testing and ordering that SWB reinstate Crayton with

back pay and all other emoluments of employment. SWB appeals the CSC’s

decision to this Court.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

La. Const. art. X, § 8(A) provides that a classified employee against whom

disciplinary action has been taken “shall have the right of appeal” at which time,

the “burden of proof ... shall be on the appointing authority.” In the appeal, “the

appointing authority [here, SWB] has the burden of proving, by a preponderance of

the evidence: 1) the occurrence of the complained of activity; and 2) that the

conduct complained of impaired the efficiency of the public service in which the

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