WSR 05-08-136

PERMANENT RULES

DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL


[ Filed April 6, 2005, 9:39 a.m. , effective July 1, 2005 ]


     

     Purpose: These rules address definitions that apply to chapter 357-31 WAC, Holidays and leave; holidays and sick leave.

     Statutory Authority for Adoption: Chapter 41.06 RCW.

      Adopted under notice filed as WSR 05-01-249 on December 22, 2004.

     Changes Other than Editing from Proposed to Adopted Version: WAC 357-31-010, as a result of discussions with stakeholders it was determined that the language be changed in this section to address general government employees in subsection (1) and higher education employees in subsection (2).

     WAC 357-31-130 [(1)](e), as a result of discussions with stakeholders, reference to WAC 357-31-295, 357-31-300, and 357-31-305 has been added.

     WAC 357-31-130 (2)(b), as a result of discussions with stakeholders it was determined that reference to WAC 357-31-255 be added.

     Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 32, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0;      Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 32, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Date Adopted: January 26, 2005.

Eva Santos

Director

Chapter 357-31 WAC

Holidays and Leave


NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-001   What definitions apply to this chapter of the civil service rules?   The following definitions apply to chapter 357-31 WAC:

     (1) Anniversary date (Higher Education): For employees of higher education institutions or related higher education boards, anniversary date is the most recent date of hire into state service. The anniversary date is used to determine when vacation leave over two hundred forty (240) hours is lost. Higher education employers may make the anniversary date the first calendar day of the month in which the date of hire occurred. A higher education employee receives a new anniversary date when that employee is rehired following a break in state service, but not when the employee promotes, demotes, or transfers to another higher education employer.

     (2) Anniversary date (General Government): For employees of general government agencies, anniversary date is the unbroken service date plus prior state service minus leave without pay when it exceeds fifteen (15) consecutive calendar days as provided in WAC 357-31-345. The anniversary date is used to determine when vacation leave over two hundred forty (240) hours is lost and for computing the rate of vacation leave accrual beginning with the fifth (5th) year of total state employment.

     (3) Unbroken service date (General Government): The date a general government employee began current continuous state service. This date is used for computing the rate of vacation leave accrual through and including the employee's fourth (4th) year of continuous service. The unbroken service date is adjusted by leave without pay when it exceeds fifteen (15) consecutive calendar days as provided in WAC 357-31-345.

     (4) Minor/dependent child: A biological, adopted, or foster child, a stepchild, a legal ward, or a child of a person standing in loco parentis, who is:
Under eighteen (18) years of age, or
Eighteen (18) years of age or older and incapable of self-care because of a mental or physical disability.
     Persons who are in loco parentis are those with day-to-day responsibilities to care for and financially support a child.

     (5) Child: A biological, adopted, or foster child, or a stepchild.

     (6) Family members: Individuals considered to be members of the family are parent, step-parent, sister, brother, parent-in-law, spouse, grandparent, grandchild, minor/dependent child, and child.

     (7) Household members: Persons who reside in the same home who have reciprocal duties to and do provide financial support for one another. The term does not include persons sharing the same house when the living style is primarily that of a dormitory or commune.

     (8) Parent: A biological parent of an employee or an individual who stood in loco parentis to an employee when the employee was a child. A person who had day-to-day responsibilities to care for and financially support the employee when he or she was a child is considered to have stood in loco parentis to the employee.

     (9) Parent-in-law: A biological parent of an employee's spouse or an individual who stood in loco parentis to an employee's spouse when the employee's spouse was a child. A person who had day-to-day responsibilities to care for and financially support the employee's spouse when he or she was a child is considered to have stood in loco parentis to the employee's spouse.

     (10) Emergency health condition: A sudden, generally unexpected occurrence or set of circumstances related to a person's health, which requires immediate action and is typically short-term in nature.

     (11) Full-time employee: An employee who is scheduled to work:

Forty (40) hours in one (1) workweek;
Eighty (80) hours over two (2) workweeks; or
For law enforcement positions, one hundred sixty hours (160) in the twenty-eight-day work period.
     (12) Part-time employee: An employee who is scheduled to work less than that required for a full-time employee.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-005   What legal holidays are designated by statute?   The following are legal holidays, which are established by RCW 1.16.050:

     (1) The first day of January (New Year's Day);

     (2) The third Monday of January (Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday);

     (3) The third Monday of February (Presidents' Day);

     (4) The last Monday of May (Memorial Day);

     (5) The fourth day of July (Independence Day);

     (6) The first Monday in September (Labor Day);

     (7) The eleventh day of November (Veterans Day);

     (8) The fourth Thursday of November (Thanksgiving Day);

     (9) The day immediately following Thanksgiving Day; and

     (10) The twenty-fifth day of December (Christmas Day).

     Higher education employers may designate other days to be observed in place of the above holidays. Holiday schedules for higher education employers may be determined on a calendar or fiscal year basis. When a higher education employer establishes a modified schedule, paid holidays must be granted based on the modified schedule.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-010   Which employees qualify for holiday compensation?   (1) Full-time employees and cyclic year position employees who work full monthly schedules qualify for holiday compensation if they are employed before the holiday and are in pay status:

     (a) For at least eighty (80) non-overtime hours during the month of the holiday; or

     (b) For the entire work shift preceding the holiday.

     (2) Full-time higher education employees and cyclic year position employees who work full monthly schedules qualify for holiday compensation if they are in pay status for the entire work shift preceding the holiday.

     (3) Cyclic year position employees scheduled to work less than full monthly schedules throughout their work year qualify for holiday compensation if they work or are in pay status on their last regularly scheduled working day before the holiday(s) in that month.

     (4) Part-time general government employees who are in pay status during the month of the holiday qualify for holiday pay on a pro rata basis in accordance with WAC 357-31-020.

     (5) Part-time higher education employees who satisfy the requirements of subsection (1) of this section are entitled to the number of paid hours on a holiday that their monthly schedule bears to a full-time schedule.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-015   How many hours are general government employees compensated for on a holiday?   When a holiday designated under WAC 357-31-005 falls on a general government employee's scheduled work day:

     (1) Full-time employees receive holiday pay for the number of hours they are scheduled to work on that day.

     (2) Part-time employees are entitled to the number of paid hours on a holiday on a pro rata basis in accordance with WAC 357-31-020 (General Government pro-rata)

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-020   For general government part-time employees, how is holiday compensation pro rated?   Compensation for holidays (including personal holiday) for part-time general government employees will be proportionate to the number of hours in pay status in the month to that required for full-time employment, excluding all holiday hours.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-025   How many hours are higher education employees compensated for on a holiday?   When a holiday as designated under WAC 357-31-005 falls on a higher education employee's scheduled work day:

     (1) Full-time employees receive eight (8) hours of regular holiday pay per holiday. Any differences between the scheduled shift for the day and eight (8) hours may be adjusted by use of vacation leave, use of accumulation of compensatory time as appropriate, or leave without pay.

     (2) Part-time higher education employees are entitled to the number of paid hours on a holiday that their monthly schedule bears to a full-time schedule.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-030   What happens when a holiday falls on an employee's scheduled day off?   When a holiday (as identified in WAC 357-31-005) falls on an employee's regularly scheduled day off, the employer must provide that employee an in-lieu of holiday as follows:

     (1) For a full-time employee who is eligible for holiday compensation, the employer may:

     (a) Designate the prior or the following work day as the holiday;

     (b) Provide the employee with equivalent paid time off; or

     (c) Allow the employee to request an alternate work day to observe as the holiday. The employer may require that the employee request an alternate day off within the same pay period as the holiday.

     (2) For a part-time general government employee who is eligible for holiday compensation, the employer must compensate the employee on a pro rata basis in accordance with WAC 357-31-020.

     (3) For a part-time higher education employee who is eligible for holiday compensation, the employee is entitled to the equivalent paid time off for the holiday that their monthly schedule bears to a full-time schedule.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-035   How is an employee who works on a holiday compensated?   Time worked on a holiday must be compensated as provided in WAC 357-28-200.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-040   What happens when a holiday as identified in WAC 357-31-005 falls on Saturday or Sunday?   When a holiday falls on Saturday, the preceding Friday is observed as the nonworking or legal holiday. When a holiday falls on Sunday, the following Monday is observed as the nonworking or legal holiday.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-045   If an employee resigns or is dismissed or separated during a month in which there is a holiday, will he/she be compensated for the holiday?   Employees who resign or are dismissed or separated before a holiday do not qualify for holidays occurring after the effective date of resignation, dismissal or separation.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-050   How is an employee's holiday determined when an employee works a night shift schedule which begins on one calendar day and ends on the next?   For employees working a shift which begins on one calendar day and ends on the next, the twenty-four (24) hour period during which the holiday occurs must be determined by the employer to start either at the start of the shift that begins on the legal or observed holiday, or at the start of the shift that precedes the legal or observed holiday.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-055   When does an employee qualify for a personal holiday?   Employees are entitled to one (1) paid personal holiday per calendar year in addition to those specified in WAC 357-31-005 if the employee is scheduled to be, or has been, continuously employed by the State of Washington for at least four (4) months.

     An employee who is scheduled to work less than six (6) continuous months over a period covering two (2) calendar years only receives one (1) personal holiday during this period.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-060   How many hours are general government employees compensated for when taking a personal holiday?   (1) Full-time employees receive holiday pay for the number of hours they are scheduled to work on the day they select as their personal holiday.

     (2) Part-time employees are entitled to the number of paid hours for a personal holiday on a pro rata basis in accordance with WAC 357-31-020.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-065   How many hours are higher education employees compensated for when taking a personal holiday?   (1) Full-time employees receive eight (8) hours of regular holiday pay on a personal holiday. Any differences between the scheduled shift for the day and eight (8) hours may be adjusted by use of vacation leave, use or accumulation of compensatory time as appropriate, or leave without pay.

     (2) Part-time higher education employees are entitled to the number of paid hours on a personal holiday that their monthly schedule bears to a full time schedule.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-070   When is an employer required to approve an employee's request to use a personal holiday?   (1) An employer must approve the use of a personal holiday as long as:

     (a) The employee is entitled to a personal holiday in accordance with RCW 1.16.050 and WAC 357-31-055;

     (b) The employee has requested the personal holiday in accordance with the employer's leave procedures; and

     (c) The employee's absence does not interfere with the operational needs of the employer.

     (2) At any time, an employer must allow an employee to use part or all of the personal holiday for either of the following reasons:

     (a) To care for a child with a health condition that requires treatment or supervision.

     (b) To care for a spouse, parent, parent-in-law or grandparent of the employee who has a serious health condition or an emergency health condition.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-075   Within what timeframe must the personal holiday be taken?   The personal holiday must be used within the calendar year.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-080   What happens if an employee requests to use his/her personal holiday in accordance with the employer's leave procedures and the employer denies the request?   If before the end of the calendar year the employee requests the use of his/her personal holiday in accordance with the employer's leave procedures and the employer denies the request, the employee is entitled to carry over the personal holiday to the next calendar year.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-090   Can an employee request to donate or use part of a personal holiday?   An employee is only allowed to use part of a personal holiday in these two circumstances:

     (1) When donating a portion of the personal holiday to the shared leave program as provided in WAC 357-31-425(3), or

     (2) When using a portion of the personal holiday to provide care as provided in WAC 357-31-070(2).

     Any portion of the personal holiday that remains and is not used for the purposes specified in WAC 357-31-070(2) must be taken by the employee in one absence not to exceed the work shift on the day of the absence.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-095   If an employee donates a personal holiday to another employee and a portion of the personal holiday is returned, can the donating employee use the remaining hours?   An employee who has donated his/her personal holiday for purposes of shared leave and then has a portion of the personal holiday returned to him/her during the same calendar or fiscal year may use the remaining hours. If the hours are returned during a different calendar or fiscal year, the employee cannot use the remaining hours.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-100   Must an employer have a policy for requesting and approving leave?   Each employer must develop a leave policy which specifies the procedure for requesting and approving all leave, as provided in the civil service rules. The employer's policy must allow an employee to use vacation leave without advance approval when the employee is requesting to use vacation leave to respond to family care emergencies, or for an emergency health condition as provided in WAC 357-31-200(2).

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-105   How will an unauthorized absence be treated?   Unauthorized absence must be treated as unauthorized leave without pay and may be grounds for separation under the provisions of WAC 357-46-210 or discipline under chapter 357-40 WAC.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-110   What happens to an employee's accrued leave when the employee changes employers?   Unused sick and vacation leave credits of employees who change state employers without a break in service, as defined in WAC 357-01-145, transfer with the employee to the new employer.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-115   How many hours of sick leave does an employee earn each month?   (1) Full-time employees earn eight (8) hours of sick leave per month.

     (2) Part-time general government employees earn sick leave on a pro rata basis in accordance with WAC 357-31-125.

     (3) Part-time higher education employees earn sick leave on the same pro rata basis that their appointment bears to a full-time appointment.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-120   Do employees accrue sick leave if they have taken leave without pay during the month?   (1) Full-time general government employees who are in pay status for less than eighty (80) non-overtime hours in a month do not earn a monthly accrual of sick leave.

     (2) Full-time and part-time higher education employees who have more than ten (10) working days of leave without pay in a month do not earn a monthly accrual of sick leave.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-125   For general government part-time employees, how is leave accrual pro rated?   Vacation and sick leave accruals for part-time general government employees will be proportionate to the number of hours in pay status in the month to that required for full-time employment.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-130   When can an employee use accrued sick leave?   The employer may require medical verification or certification of the reason for sick leave use in accordance with the employer's leave policy.

     (1) Employers must allow the use of accrued sick leave under the following conditions:

     (a) Because of and during illness, disability, or injury that has incapacitated the employee from performing required duties.

     (b) By reason of exposure of the employee to a contagious disease when the employee's presence at work would jeopardize the health of others.

     (c) To care for a minor/dependent child with a health condition requiring treatment or supervision.

     (d) To care for a spouse, parent, parent-in-law, or grandparent of the employee who has a serious health condition or emergency health condition.

     (e) For family care emergencies per WAC 357-31-290, 357-31-295, 357-31-300, and 357-31-305.

     (f) For personal health care appointments.

     (g) For family members' health care appointments when the presence of the employee is required if arranged in advance with the employing official or designee.

     (h) When an employee is required to be absent from work to care for members of the employee's household or relatives of the employee/employee's spouse who experience an illness or injury, not including situations covered by subsection (1)(d) of this section.

     (i) The employer must approve up to five (5) days of accumulated sick leave each occurrence. Employers may approve more than five (5) days.

     (ii) For purposes of this subsection, "relatives" is limited to spouse, child, grandchild, grandparent or parent.

     (2) Employers may allow the use of accrued sick leave under the following conditions:

     (a) For condolence or bereavement.

     (b) When an employee is unable to report to work due to inclement weather in accordance with the employer's policy on inclement weather as described in WAC 357-31-255.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-135   When and how does an employee request the use of sick leave?   All requests for sick leave must be made as specified in the employer's leave policy.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-140   May an employee use sick leave before it is accrued?   An employee is not entitled to use sick leave in advance of its accrual.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-145   When an employee is on vacation leave and a condition listed in WAC 357-31-130(1) arises, can the employee use sick leave in place of vacation leave?   When a condition listed in WAC 357-31-130(1) arises while the employee is on vacation leave, the employer may allow the employee to use accrued sick leave in place of vacation leave. The employee must request the use of accrued sick leave in place of vacation leave according to the employer's leave policy.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-150   Can an employee be paid for accrued sick leave?   In accordance with the attendance incentive program established by RCW 41.04.340, employees are eligible to be paid for accrued sick leave as follows:

     (1) In January of each year, an employee whose sick leave balance at the end of the previous year exceeds four hundred eighty (480) hours may elect to convert the sick leave hours earned in the previous calendar year, minus those hours used during the year, to monetary compensation.

     (a) No sick leave hours may be converted which would reduce the calendar year-end balance below four hundred eighty (480) hours.

     (b) Monetary compensation for converted hours is paid at the rate of twenty-five (25) percent and is based on the employee's current salary.

     (c) All converted hours are deducted from the employee's sick leave balance.

     (d) Hours which are accrued, donated, and returned from the shared leave program in the same calendar year may be included in the converted hours for monetary compensation.

     (2) Employees who separate from state service because of retirement or death must be compensated for their total unused sick leave accumulation at the rate of twenty-five (25) percent or the employer may deposit equivalent funds in a medical expense plan as provided in WAC 357-31-330. Compensation must be based on the employee's salary at the time of separation. For the purpose of this subsection, retirement does not include "vested out-of-service" employees who leave funds on deposit with the department of retirement systems (DRS).

     (3) No contributions are to be made to the department of retirement systems (DRS) for payments under subsection (1) or (2) of this section, nor are such payments reported to DRS as compensation.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-155   Does an employee who separates for any reason other than retirement or death get paid for accrued sick leave?   Employees who separate for any reason other than retirement or death are not paid for their accrued sick leave.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 357-31-160   When a former employee is re-employed, is sick leave restored?   Former employees who are re-employed within five (5) years of their separation from service must be restored unused sick leave credits, if any, to which they were entitled at the time of separation. The employee may use the restored balance in accordance with WAC 357-31-130.

     If the employee was retired from government service before being re-employed, when the employee subsequently retires again or dies, only that unused sick leave accrued since the date of reemployment minus that taken within the same period may be compensated per the conversion provisions of WAC 357-31-150.

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