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HomeMy WebLinkAbout29- City Attorney CITY OF SAN BERN,& "INO - REQUEST FOP COUNCIL ACTION From: James F. Penman, City AttorneySubject: Resolution Adding Subsection (e) To Section 5 % of Resolution 6413 Dept: City Attorney Relating to Performance Evaluations For Management & Confidential Date: December 8, 1995 Employees of the City. Synopsis of Previous Council Action: Resolution 94-392, 12-19-94 Recommended Motion: Adopt Resolution. Signature Dennis A. Barlow 5255 Contact Person: Phone: Supporting Data Attached: Ward: FUNDING REQUIREMENTS: Amount: Source: (Acct. No.) (Acct. Description) Finance: Council Notes: 17D� Agenda Item No. �(7 SDE\dm'actform STAFF REPORT Recent cases have raised serious questions about how "at will" employees in public employment should be treated. In the case of Walker v. Northern San Diego County Hospital District (1982) 135 Cal.App.3d 896, the court considered the case of a head nurse who was fired as an "at will" employee from a public hospital. The Court stated that in determining whether a public employee has a property interest in his or her employment subject to due process rights review must be made of the employment "documents themselves, the provisions regarding the grievance processes, the personnel practices or policies of the employer, the employee's length of service, as well as the practice of the industry in which the employee is engaged." (at pg. 905; emphasis added) These are procedural protections previously granted only to employees with Civil Service- type rights. In 1988, the Court of Appeals considered the case of an associate professor at the University of California at Berkeley. Mr. Apte was a non-tenured employee of the university in a federally funded program. The university canceled the program and thereupon terminated Mr. Apte. The Court held that in such cases the employer had to take into consideration an employee's length of service and organizational rank as well as the employer's own personnel practices. The Court held that the fact that "Apte had worked 13 years for the university with no adverse record, attained the rank of associate professor, and was supported by a multi-year grant. " (emphasis added) supported the determination that the university had acted arbitrarily, capriciously and unreasonably in the termination and had been under an obligation to find alternative employment. (Apte v. Regents of University of California (1988) 198 Cal.App.3d 1084, 1094) Then with this background of the courts granting "at will" employees more and more rights in public employment, comes the case of Santa Clara County Counsel Attorneys Association v. Woodside (1994) 7 Cal.4th 1994, where the State Supreme Court determined that public attorneys could bring legal actions against the public entities that employ them, essentially their clients, to enforce statutory employment rights. These cases taken together reflect a trend by the courts to provide more and more legal protections to public employees, even those that have been historically viewed as "at will" employees. Therefore, since written performance evaluations would no doubt be used in court to challenge a termination of an "at will" employee, showing that the employee had always performed adequately, it is recommended that the attached resolution be approved making it optional for elected officials and those who supervise "at will" employees in the City to do written performance evaluations on their employees. DAB/tbm [AtWill.Rpt] December 7, 1995 1 RESOLUTION NO. 2 RESOLUTION OF THE MAYOR AND COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO ADDING SUBSECTION (e) TO SECTION FIVE AND ONE-HALF 3 OF RESOLUTION NO. 6413, AS AMENDED, RELATING TO PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT AND CONFIDENTIAL EMPLOYEES OF THE 4 CITY 5 NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE MAYOR AND COMMON 6 COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO AS FOLLOWS: 7 SECTION 1: Subsection (e) is hereby added to Section Five and One-half of 8 Resolution No. 6413, as added by by Resolution No. 94-392, to read as follows: 9 "(e) Notwithstanding anything in this resolution to the contrary, written 10 performance evaluations shall be optional for management or confidential employees in the 11 offices of elected officials or for those management or confidential employees who serve at the I 12 will of their appointing authority." 13 14 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 DAB/tbm [AtWill.Res] 1 December 7, 1995 1 RESOLUTION . . . ADDING SUBSECTION (e) TO SECTION FIVE AND ONE-HALF OF 2 RESOLUTION NO. 6413, AS AMENDED, RELATING TO PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS FOR MANAGEMENT AND CONFIDENTIAL EMPLOYEES OF THE 3 CITY 4 5 I HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing Resolution was duly adopted by the Mayor 6 and Common Council of the City of San Bernardino at a meeting thereof, held on the 7 day of , 1995, by the following vote, to-wit: 8 9 Council Members: AYES NAYS ABSTAIN ABSENT 10 NEGRETE 11 CURLIN 12 HERNANDEZ 13 OBERHELMAN 14 DEVLIN 15 POPE-LUDLAM 16 MILLER 17 � 18 City Clerk 19 20 21 The foregoing Resolution is hereby approved this day of , 1995. � 22 I 23 Tom Minor, Mayor 24 City of San Bernardino Approved as to form and 25 legal content: 26 James F. Penman, City Attorney 27 28 By: � /tbm [AtWill.Res] 2 December 7, 1995