[2003] All rights reserved including the right
of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Our nation in the last few months has experienced the largest
military call-up in over a decade. As military deployments
end and service members return home, they and employers alike
are confronted with questions that accompany these returns.
Understanding the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment
Rights Act (USERRA), Chapter 43 of Title 38, U. S. Code, as
passed by Congress in October 1994 answers these questions
and eases the reemployment process.
USERRA
prohibits employment discrimination based on military service,
articulates the rights, benefits and protections afforded
to service members while on military leave and upon return
from military leave, and governs the reemployment of service
members upon completion of military service. USERRA also provides
its own enforcement procedures to ensure compliance.
Utah
State Law Provides More Extensive Rights
Familiarity with USERRA is essential, but it is also necessary
to be aware of the military leave laws of each state in which
an employer operates. In Utah such laws are found in Chapter
39 of the Utah Code. Although not required under USERRRA,
State of Utah employees are given fifteen (15) days paid military
leave per year, in addition to annual vacation leave and a
violation of Utah;s reemployment rights could also be punishable
as a misdemeanor. USERRA does not restrict any state law more
beneficial than rights provided to the returning service member
under federal law. However, USERRA does supersede any state
law, which attempts to reduce, restrict or eliminate rights
or benefits provided under USERRA.
USERRA
Navigating Uncharted Legal Territory
Since the Veteran;s Reemployment Rights Act (VRR) was replaced
by USERRA few courts have decided cases using USERRA. USERRA
case decisions commonly rely on VRR rulings and legislative
intent. There are, however, some cases that help navigate
USERRA;s uncharted legal territory. Lapine v. Wellesley, 304
F.3d 90 (1st Cir. 2002) offers an analysis of legislative
intent and Rogers v. City of San Antonio, Texas, 211 F.Supp.2d
829 (W.D. Tex. 2002) reviews VRR case history and current
application of USERRA.
Using
an abundance of caution, the court in Rogers, supra on March
24, 2003 issued an Order Granting Motion for Certification
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), 2003 WL 1571550 (W.D. Tex.)
allowing the parties to appeal two specific items to the Fifth
Circuit Court of Appeals, before proceeding further. On May
2, 2003, the Petition for Permission to Appeal was filed.
Said Petition was granted by the 5th Circuit court of appeals
on May 27, 2003, all briefs have recently been filed and this
matter is currently under consideration by the court. As of
the printing of this paper application of USERRA by the courts
seems to remain unclear.
Employee
– Service Members
The terms of USERRA are broad, applying to anyone in the uniformed
services whether voluntary or involuntary who was employed
in any non-temporary position even for only one day prior
to being called up.
“Service”
in the uniformed services is defined as the performance of
duty on a voluntary or involuntary basis in a uniformed service,
including active duty, active duty for training, initial active
duty for training, inactive duty for training, full-time National
Guard duty, absence from work for an examination to determine
an individual;s fitness for any of the named types of duty,
funeral honors duty performed by National Guard or reserve
members, duty performed by intermittent disaster response
personnel for the Public Health Service, and approved training
to prepare for such service.
“Uniformed
services” consist of the United States Army, Navy, Marine
Corps, Air Force, Coast Guard, Army Reserve, Naval Reserve,
Marine Corps Reserve, Air Force Reserve, Coast Guard Reserve,
Army National Guard, Air National Guard, commissioned corps
of the Public Health Service and any other category of persons
designated by the President in time of war or national emergency.
Part time, full time and probationary employees are protected
under USERRA.
Employers
– Public & Private
USERRA applies to all public and private employers, and their
successors, regardless of size or location in the world. USERRA
does not require the employer to be involved in interstate
commerce or to employ a minimum number of employees to apply.
The employer must grant an employee leave to fulfill their
military obligations whether the employee;s service is voluntary
or involuntary. Employers are prohibited from interfering
with the frequency or length of military leave taken by its
employees.
Invoking
Protected Rights Procedures by Service Member
A service member is entitled to rights furnished by USERRA
provided that the service member meets the criteria outlined
in Table 1.
Advance
Notice to the Employer
The service member or an appropriate military officer must
provide advance written or verbal notice to the employer of
all military duty, unless giving notice is impossible, unreasonable,
or precluded by military necessity. The law requires “advance”
notice, but does not specifically address how far in advance
notice must be given.
Maximum
Length of Military Leave
The cumulative leave of absence from employment for one employer
that causes a service member to be absent from a position
of employment may not exceed five years. Normally leaves for
service obligations will be cumulatively counted in the computation
of the five-year period, however there are eight categories
of exceptions that permit the five-year period to be extended.
Those categories are listed in Table 2.
Release
from Military Service
Notice of Return to Employer & Submitting a Reemployment
Application
A service member returning from service must timely notify
the employer of their intent to return to work. A service
member;s failure to submit an application for reemployment
within the time periods set forth by USERRA, will subject
the service member to the employer;s established policy governing
unexcused absences, which may be deemed by the employer, without
discrimination, as a voluntary termination of employment by
the service member with the employer. Timely application for
reemployment is based upon the service members; length of
military service (See Table 3).
Notably
there is no specific form for the application, however the
service member should notify their employer in writing that
the service member is ready to return to work.
Deadlines
for application for reemployment may be extended up to two
years for a service member who is hospitalized or convalescing
from an injury that occurred or was aggravated during military
service. A deadline will be extended by the length necessary
to accommodate the injured service member if the time of the
service member;s recovery will take longer than two years,
if due to circumstances beyond the service members; control.
Waiver
of Reemployment Rights
A service member may not waive their USERRA rights to reemployment
before or during their military service. The USERRA right
to reemployment does not mature until the service member has
returned from the period of service. Thus, any service member;s
USERRA rights that have not matured cannot be waived. The
intent of USERRA is to keep the service member;s options open
until the service member returns to civilian life.
Reemploying
Returning Service Member;s Positions
A returning service member with less than 91 days military
service is entitled to return to the position in which the
service member was employed or would have been employed if
their employment had not been interrupted.
A
returning service member whose military service was more than
90 days is entitled to return to the position in which the
service member was employed or would have been employed, or
a position of like seniority, status, and pay.
Seniority
Rights
Re-employed service members are entitled to the seniority
and all rights and benefits based on seniority they would
have received with reasonable certainty had the service member
remained continuously employed. A right or benefit is considered
seniority based if it accrues or is determined by length of
service.
Rights
not based on Seniority
Service members called up must be treated as if they were
on a leave of absence. While absent the service member must
be allowed to participate in any rights and benefits not based
on seniority that are available to employees on non-military
leaves of absence, whether such leave is paid or unpaid. If
the employer has several types of leaves, the service member
is entitled to the most favorable treatment among all of the
employers; comparable leaves.
Training
& Retraining
USERRA requires that employers make reasonable efforts to
allow returning service members to refresh and upgrade their
skills to qualify for reemployment in the position they would
have held if the service member had not been called to military
service.
Reemployment
Not Required
USERRA provides that reemployment is not required under certain
circumstances. Those exceptions are stated in Table 4.
These
limited exceptions will be narrowly construed in favor of
the returning service member and the burden of proof concerning
an exception will be on the employer.
Termination
of Service Member after Reemployment
Any service member Re-employed may only be terminated for
cause during a specific period of time after reemployment.
This period of protection is based upon the length of military
service (see Table 5).
“At
Will Employment”
Returning service members cannot be terminated, except for
cause, for a specified period of time, even if they were at-will
employees before they were called up for military service.
USERRA
& Collective Bargaining Agreements
USERRA supersedes any collective bargaining agreement that
decreases, restricts or eradicates any right or benefit provided
under USERRA. See: Rogers, supra.
Disabilities
Incurred or Aggravated while in Military Service
USERRA provides a three (3)-part reemployment procedure for
service members with disabilities incurred or aggravated while
in military service (See Table 6).
Protection
from Discrimination and Retaliation
USERRA prohibits an employer from discriminating in employment
or taking any adverse employment action against a service
member because of their past, present or future military obligations.
This ban is broad, extending to most areas of employment including
hiring, promotion, reemployment, termination and benefits.
The law protects from discrimination past members, current
members and persons who apply to be a member of any of the
branches of the uniformed services. Once a prima facie case
is established the burden of proof is clearly on the employer.
Employers
are prohibited from retaliating against anyone who files a
complaint under the law, who testifies, assists or otherwise
participates in an investigation or proceeding under the law,
or who exercises any right provided under the law, whether
or not the person has performed military service.
Benefits
Healthcare Benefits
A governmental healthcare program commonly known as Champus
or TRICARE, automatically covers service members called up
for a period of service of at least 31 days. However, many
service members may wish to continue their employer provided
healthcare benefits, especially for their dependents.
USERRA
provides that a service member on military leave has the right
to elect continuation of health benefits coverage under COBRA-like
terms if the service member was a participant in the employers
health benefits plan immediately before the service members
call up. This requirement, unlike COBRA, applies to all health
benefits plans, not just group plans. Unlike COBRA, USERRA
applies to all employers regardless of size.
Health
benefits coverage under USERRA continues for the lesser of
18 months from when military leave commences or a period ending
the day after the service member fails to return to work as
provided by USERRA after having been discharged from military
service. When a service member;s military leave is less than
31 days, the service member cannot be required to pay more
than the service member;s usual share of the health benefits
premium. If the employer;s policy permits employees to pay
only their share of the health benefits premium while on other
types of leave, then the service member on military leave
is entitled to the same benefit. However in the absence of
such a policy, after 31 days, the service member wishing to
continue health benefits coverage while on military leave
can be required to pay no more than 102 percent of the premium
cost to maintain the coverage. If a service member chooses
not to maintain health benefits coverage while on military
leave, the service member may seek reinstatement of coverage
on return to work with no plan waiting periods or exclusions.
USERRA
& FMLA
Employers must count the months and hours that service members
would have worked if they had not been serving military service
towards the service member;s FMLA eligibility. Simply put
the months and hours the service member would have worked,
but for the service members military service, must be combined
with the months employed and the hours actually worked to
determine if the employee has completed the 12 months and
1,250 hours of work required for eligibility for leave under
the FMLA.
Pension
& Retirement Benefit Plans
USERRA provides that a “pension plan” must comply
with the requirements of reemployment law and would be any
plan providing retirement income to employees to termination
of employment or later. Pension plans tied to seniority are
given separate, detailed treatment under USERRA (See Table
7).
Repayment
of service member;s contributions can be made over three times
the period of military service but no longer than five years.
Defined
benefit plans, defined contribution plans and profit sharing
plans that are retirement plans are covered by USERRA.
Multi
– employer Plans
In a multi-employer defined contribution pension plan, the
sponsor maintaining the plan may allocate the liability of
the plan for pension benefits accrued by persons absent for
military service. If no cost-sharing arrangement is provided,
the full liability to make the retroactive contributions to
the plan will be allocated to the last employer employing
the person before the period of military service or, if the
employer is no longer functional, to the overall plan. Within
30 days after reemployment, an employer who participates in
a multi-employer plan must provide written notice to the plan
administrator of the person;s reemployment.
Vacation
Under USERRA, service members called up are entitled to all
non-seniority based benefits that are available to other employees
who take non-military leaves of absence. Service members continue
to accrue vacation; sick time and remain eligible for such
benefits as company bonuses and life insurance while on military
leave, only if employees on non-military leave are entitled.
Employers must allow service members at their request to use
any vacation the service member had accrued before the beginning
of the service members military leave instead of unpaid leave.
However, employers may not force service members to use vacation
time while performing military service. Vacation was recently
discussed in Rogers, supra.
Enforcement
A great place to start is with the Ombudsmen Services Program,
which provides information, counseling and informal mediation
of issues relating to compliance with USERRA. You may contact
the program by visiting their website at www.esgr.org/employers/thelaw.asp.
On
a more formal level, the Department of Labor is the enforcement
authority for USERRA. Veterans; Employment and Training Service
(VETS) of the Department of Labor assist service members with
issues involving USERRA. VETS maintain a USERRA adviser on
its web site, www.dol.gov/vets, to answer the most often asked
questions. The law gives VETS right of access to examine and
duplicate employer documents and interview persons with information
it considers relevant to an investigation. The law authorizes
VETS to subpoena attendance and testimony of witnesses and
production of documents relating to any matter under investigation.
If
a complaint is not successfully resolved by VETS the non-federal
employee complainant may request their complaint be submitted
to the U.S. Attorney General for possible court action. When
the U.S. Attorney General is satisfied that a complaint is
meritorious, the U.S. Attorney General may file a court action
on the complainant;s behalf. Complaints of federal employee;s
are submitted to the Office of Special Counsel, www.osc.gov/userra.htm.
If the Special Counsel believes there is merit to the complaint,
the OSC will file before the Merit Systems Protect Board and
appear on behalf of the complainant.
Service
members continue to have the option to privately file court
actions. They may do so if they have chosen not to file a
complaint with VETS, have chosen not to request that VETS
refer their complaint to the U.S. Attorney General, or have
been refused representation by the U.S. Attorney General.
Damages can include double award of back pay or lost benefits
in cases where violations are found to be willful. The law,
at the court’s discretion, allows for awarding attorney
fees, expert witness fees and other litigation expenses to
successful plaintiffs who retain private counsel. Further
the law prohibits charging court fees or costs against anyone
who brings suit. Only persons claiming rights under the law
may bring lawsuits.
Jury
Trial
The court in Spratt v. Guardian Automotive Products, Inc.,
997 F. Supp 1138, (N.D. Indiana 1998), held that USERRA, which
now provides for liquidated damages, also provides the right
to a jury trial under the Seventh Amendment.
Resources:
Several good resources exist. For example, the best continually
updated, USERRA information website that I have found is www.roa.org.
Once on the site, click on “Legislative Affairs”
then on “Law Review Archive” at the bottom of
the drop-down menu. |