Dear Executive Director, Rex Privett,
¶ 0 The Attorney General has received your letter asking for an official opinion addressing, in effect, the following questions:
1. Do the Federal Veterans' Reemployment Rights statutes("Federal Act") preempt the Oklahoma Public Employees RetirementSystem ("OPERS") statutes governing the granting of retirementservice credit for military service for participating members tothe extent that the OPERS statutes limit the rights of militaryservice personnel covered by the Federal Act? 2. Does service in the National Guard constitute militaryservice under the Federal Act? 3. Who must fund the contributions for the military servicecredit available to military service personnel covered by theFederal Act? 4. What conditions must be met before a member of OPERS canreceive the military service credit?
¶ 1 The Veterans' Reemployment Rights statutes, (hereinafter the "Federal Act"), are found at 38 U.S.C.A., title IV, ch. 43, 2021, (1982) et seq. The Federal Act generally sets out the reemployment rights and protected benefits of persons serving in the Armed Forces of the United States. The Federal Act provides that any person serving in the Armed Forces of the United States shall have the right to return to the employment position held immediately prior to his military service with all the rights and benefits he would have accrued had he not been in the service. U.S.C.A. 2021(a)(B) extends coverage of the Federal Act to employment positions with a State or political subdivision. The Oklahoma Public Employees Retirement System ("OPERS") statutes are found at 74 Ohio St. 901 (1981) et seq., as amended. Generally, the OPERS statutes provide for membership, rights, powers, duties, regulations, liabilities, administration, and financing of a retirement system for certain public employees of the State of Oklahoma. Specifically, 74 Ohio St. 913 provides for the crediting of prior and participating service including credit for prior military service at 74 Ohio St. 913(1)(d) and credit for participating service for periods of active military service while in the employ of a participating employer at 74 O.S.913(2)(c).
¶ 2 Since the Federal Act applies only to persons who leave a position (other than a temporary position) in the employ of an employer in order to perform military training and service, this opinion will address the relationship between the Federal Act and the corresponding OPERS statute, 74 Ohio St. 913(2)(c), regarding credit for participating service.
¶ 4 U.S.C.A. 2021(c) of the Federal Act provides that the states may have statutes establishing greater rights than those found in the Federal Act. Thus, Congress has not expressly limited the regulating power in this area to the Federal Government. We must therefore determine whether the OPERS statute, specifically 74 Ohio St. 913(2)(c), conflicts with the Federal Act.
¶ 5 The OPERS statutes provide for service credit to be granted for military service during periods of active military service during which the participant was a war veteran. To receive participating credit, one must leave the employment of a participating employer, serve during one of the specified time periods and return to state employment within 90 days after discharge from the military service. See, 74 Ohio St. 913(2)(c) (1990). The Federal Act provides that any time a person leaves state employment to serve in the Armed Forces, he has a right to return to that position with all the rights and benefits he would have accrued had he not been in the military service.
¶ 6 A conflict may occur because state law limits the service credit to "military service" as a "war veteran" which by definition may exclude members of the Armed Forces, such as the Reserves and National Guard, serving peacetime duty. The Federal Act provides reemployment and benefit protection for servicemen who perform military service as inductees and enlistees in the Armed Forces, members of the Reserves or National Guard regardless of whether such service is during wartime or peacetime. Military service under the Federal Act includes "active duty" and "active duty for training." See,
¶ 7 Military service is defined at 74 Ohio St. 902(23) (1990) of the OPERS statutes as "service in the Armed Forces of the United States in time of war or national emergency, as defined in 72O.S. 67.13a, from which the member was honorably discharged."72 Ohio St. 67.13a states in part that "the term `war veterans' shall include only those persons who shall have served during the times or in the areas prescribed hereinabove" (72 O.S.67.13a(a)-(g)). In addition to the other limitations found in 72 Ohio St. 67.13a, subsection (e) specifically excludes "any person who shall have served on active duty for training only, unless discharged from active duty for service-connected disability . . ." Further, by definition, the OPERS statutes appear to exclude all peacetime service.
¶ 8 Language which limits credit to war time service has been held to contravene the intent of the veterans' reemployment rights statutes by the court in Mazak v. Florida Department ofRetirement, 97 CCH Labor 10,083 (N.D. Fla. 1983). Therefore, based on Cronin, Dailey, Mazak, and their progeny, and based upon the clear intent of the Federal Act, the Federal Veterans' Reemployment Rights statutes do preempt the OPERS statutes governing the granting of retirement service credit for military service for participating members to the extent that the OPERS statutes limit the rights of military service personnel covered by the Federal Act.
¶ 10 Section 901 of title 74 states that the purpose of the OPERS Act is, in part, to "enable such employees to accumulate deferred income reserves for themselves and their dependents to provide for old age, death, and inactive service . . ." In spite of the reference to the accumulation of deferred income, the OPERS benefit does not appear to be earned by a significant amount of actual work nor is it intended to be a short-term reward for services rendered. Rather, the true nature of the pension plan appears to reward length of service. The OPERS benefits continue to accrue with reasonable certainty and the monthly benefit increases with each additional year of service.74 Ohio St. 915 (1990). Therefore, under Alabama Power, the OPERS benefits are the type of benefits protected by the Federal Act.
¶ 13 The intent of the Federal Act appears to be that the returning servicemen should be put in the same position he would have been in had he not left his employment to serve in the military. The Federal Act requires that the serviceman is entitled to the benefits he would have accrued if he had remained continuously employed. In this case, had the member been continuously employed, both employee and employer contributions as required by the OPERS statutes would have been made. 74 O.S.919.1 and 74 Ohio St. 920 (1990). While not addressing this issue specifically the majority of cases cited have allowed the member to purchase the service credit. Alabama Power, Daily andReilly. Therefore, to obtain the service credit, state law could require payment of the contributions by the employer and employee for the period in question prior to granting the service credit.
¶ 15 The conflict between the OPERS statute and the Federal Act arises because the OPERS statutes deny participating service credit to military service personnel performing peacetime duty. Therefore, the remaining conditions to be met to qualify for the service credit must be determined by the language contained in the Federal Act. While the essence of your opinion request involves military service credit under the OPERS statute for service in the National Guard, the answer to your fourth question necessarily involves a review of the Veterans' Reemployment Rights statutes for all military service. Whether individual members meet the specific conditions necessary to receive this type of service credit must be determined on a case by case basis, using the guidelines and limitations found in the Veterans' Reemployment Rights statutes. See, specifically 2021 and 2024 of the Federal Act.
¶ 16 It is, therefore, the official opinion of the AttorneyGeneral that:
1. The Federal Veterans' Reemployment Rights statutes (the"Federal Act"),
ROBERT H. HENRY ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA
DAN M. PETERS ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL