Once an Arbitrator determines the "award" (penalty), both sides can appeal the "award". In the DOE's part, the "award" was not termination and it should've been. While for the educator the "award" was too harsh. The Arbitrator "award" can be appealed to New York State Supreme Court under section 75-11 (CPLR 7511).
While all appeals can be filed, not all are heard. The City's Corporation Counsel will automatically ask for dismissal and receive it. The only appeals that will not eventually be dismissed is when the plantiff can show one of the following four conditions applied to the Arbitrator "award". They are as follows.
The sole grounds set out in Article 75 for overturning such a determination:
1. Proof of corruption, fraud or misconduct in procuring an award;
2. The partiality of the arbitrator;
3. The arbitrator exceeded his or her authority; or
4. The arbitrator failed to follow the procedures set out in Article 75.
In other words the Arbitrator's "award" is excessive or included actions not charged under section 3020-a. Previously, it was rare for a court judge to rule against an Arbitrator's "award". However, of late the NYS Supreme Court judges have been more sympathetic to educators in their appeals and some cases where termination was awarded to the DOE were reversed and in other cases the "awards" were reduced in severity. Therefore, if you are to appeal your "award" than here is the procedure to do so.
Once the arbitrator renders his
final determination ("award"), teachers that wish to contest must file a notice of claim within
10 days of the final determination in the New York State Supreme
Court. The NYS Supreme Court is located at 60 Centre Street and the petition
should be a lawsuit against the Department of Education and the Chancellor
(currently Hon. Dennis Walcott). The petition is pursuant to Article 75 of the
CPLR and should outline the reasons why the determination of the arbitrator was
too severe of a penalty and “shocking to the conscience and one’s sense of
fairness.”
Teachers who decide to go through with the appeal and believe they want to pursue their case in the NYS Supreme Court should compile all available
evidence and either contact an educational lawyer or seek legal advice to put
together the petition. Generally NYSUT lawyers will not continue on your case
if you pursue Article 75 and a private lawyer is necessary. Timing is very important in all legal cases against
the DOE, as all article 78 proceedings must be filed within 4 months of the
date of termination, and article 75 proceedings must be filed within 10 days of
the final determination. Filings after that cut-off date will be time-barred by
Corporation Counsel and the petition will generally be dismissed by the
presiding justice.
Once 3020-a decisions are made
traditionally NYS Supreme Court justices have been reluctant to overrule the
decision of the arbitrator, but in several recent high-profile cases judges
have vacated the ruling of the arbitrator and demanded a lesser penalty.
One case is the case of Christine
Rubino. In this case, the decision to vacate her termination was upheld in the
NYS Appellate Court:
Another is the case of Daniel
Esteban:
In both cases, the lawyers argued
effectively that the penalty (termination) imposed by the arbitrator was
excessive.
So if you are terminated by the
3020-a hearing, teachers should immediately file a petition within the NYS
Supreme Court within 10 days of the receipt of the final determination or "award".
This is the final section of my six part series on the NYC version of the 3020-a process. I hope you never have to use or experience it during your professional career as an educator.The other parts of the 3020-a process can be found below and is worth reading if you want a complete picture of the NYC 3020-a process and its aftermath..
- Part I, The Process
- Part II, The Arbitrator
- Part III, The Lawyers
- Part IV, The Educator,
- Part V, The "Award"
7 comments:
Wow! Great articles on the 3020a hearings and very informative. Thank goodness some of the blogs are giving us the information that seems to elude our union.
Two of my colleagues are being charged with a 3020-a for incompetence. I know that they don't know and understand the process. The UFT only gives them a very slim explanation of the process and the NYSUT lawyers will probably explain the rest if they end up with an excellent NYSUT lawyer.
I emailed your 3020-a blog articles to all my colleagues on my listserv.
Thank you so very much; it was extremely informative.
First and foremost, it was a pleasure to finally meet you and spend some time talking to you. You are a very knowledgeable writer who always lays things out....so that anyone can understand it. When, I come across teachers who are unaware of the 3020a process~~~> I direct them to your website. It is very informative and many have told me how helpful it is to them. Keep up the good work, you are a force to reckon with.
First and foremost, it was a pleasure to finally meet you. You have been an invaluable resource to me. I appreciate all the time you spent emailing me and answering my questions. When, I meet teachers who have no idea about this process, I lead them right to your blog. It is laid out in such a simple manner and always is dead on. Thank you for keeping many people informed. Appreciate this...a great deal.
Christine Rubino
You're the first blogger to put the entire tenured teacher discipline process in perspective. Thanks.
Great work on this Eric. Very useful for newcomers. It's a crazy process, but one needs to remain positive, strong and fully educate themselves. I'm in it right now with 9 days down and countless more to go. www.educatorfightsback.org
Does anyone have the format or template require to file an appeal of a 3020 a hearing decision - I need one ASAP -
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