NANETTE K. LAUGHREY, District Judge.
Pending before the Court are the cross motions for summary judgment of Plaintiff United States of America and Defendants State of Missouri, et al. [Docs. 38 and 40]. For the reasons set forth below, Plaintiff United States' motion for partial summary judgment, Doc. 38, is granted in part, and Defendants' motion for summary judgment, Doc. 40, is denied.
The Missouri National Guard ("Guard") employs technicians to provide administrative, personnel, maintenance, and other support to the Guard's soldiers. These employees are referred to as "dual status technicians" because they are both full-time federal civilian employees and reservists in the Guard. The Guard is also responsible for staffing a full-time, active duty military program called the Active Guard and Reserve ("AGR") program. [Doc. 41, p. 3; Doc. 49, p. 4]. Unlike dual status technicians, AGR soldiers are on active military duty for the Guard. [Doc. 41, p. 4; Doc. 49, p. 4].
Dual status technicians often apply for and are accepted into full-time positions in the AGR program. [Doc. 41, p. 5; Doc. 49, p. 4]. Prior to July 2010, dual status technicians who accepted positions in the AGR program could choose either:
[Doc. 41, p. 6; Doc. 49, p. 4]. Employees on LWOP-US status received up to fifteen days of military leave each year pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 6323(a)
After July 2010, Defendants no longer permitted dual status technicians seeking employment in the AGR program to take LWOP-US status. Instead, the Guard required them to take Separation-US status. In addition, the dual status technicians who joined the AGR program after July 2010 are not given fifteen days of military leave pay. [Doc. 41, p. 9; Doc. 49, p. 4].
After July 2010, the Guard required dual status technicians enlisting as AGR employees to sign two forms: "Checklist for Technicians Entering AGR Active Duty Title 32 Military Career Service Program" ("AGR Checklist") and "Statement of Understanding." [Doc. 41, p. 10; Doc. 49, p. 4]. The AGR Checklist contains the following provisions:
Id. The Statement of Understanding contains the following statement:
Id. If an applicant refuses to take Separation-US status or sign one of these forms, the Guard will not employ that person in the AGR program. Id.
Congress enacted the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 ("USERRA") "to encourage noncareer service in the uniformed services by eliminating or minimizing the disadvantages to civilian careers and employment which can result from such service" and "to prohibit discrimination against persons because of their service in the uniformed services." 38 U.S.C. §§ 4301 et seq. In order to meet these goals, USERRA provides various vacation and reemployment guarantees to ensure that noncareer service members may maintain employment and advancement opportunities in civilian careers while completing military service and training as necessary. The Supreme Court has consistently held that USERRA is to be "liberally construed for the benefit of those who left private life to serve their country." Fishgold v. Sullivan Drydock and Repair Corp., 328 U.S. 275, 285, 66 S.Ct. 1105, 90 L.Ed. 1230 (1946); see also Dorris v. TXD Services, LP, 753 F.3d 740, 745 (8th Cir.2014).
The United States contends that it is entitled to summary judgment because the Guard's policy of refusing to allow dual status technicians entering the AGR program to assume LWOP-US status and denying them the fifteen days of military leave afforded to LWOP-US status-holders violates USERRA. Defendants argue that the Guard's policy is permissible in that it does not affect any USERRA-protected rights. The Court finds that Defendants' failure to provide military leave to Plaintiffs violates USERRA. Military leave is a benefit mandated by USERRA and the AGR Checklist and Statement of Understanding are not sufficient to waive that right.
USERRA requires that civilian employers
38 U.S.C. § 4316(b)(1). USERRA also prohibits discrimination against military personnel. Id. at § 4311(a). The United States contends that Defendants violate these statutes by forcing AGR participants to take on Separation-US status and denying them the annual fifteen days of military leave available to LWOP-US status holders.
"Sections 4311(a) and § 4316(b)(1) explicitly protect `benefits' of employment, which USERRA broadly defines as including `any advantage, profit, privilege, gain, status, account, or interest (other than wages or salary for work performed) that accrues by reason of an employment contract or agreement or an employer policy, plan, or practice.'" Dorris v. TXD Services,
The United States argues that Defendants violate 38 U.S.C. § 4316(b)(1)(A) when they classify dual status technicians taking full-time positions in the AGR program as Separation-US rather than LWOP-US. The United States argues that all absent civilian employees must be "deemed to be on furlough or leave of absence," and any classification to the contrary violates USERRA. However, the Code of Federal Regulations, as cited by the Eighth Circuit, makes clear that an employer's classification scheme is "of no effect" in the ultimate determination of whether the employer's actions violated USERRA. Dorris v. TXD Services, LP, 753 F.3d 740, 744 (8th Cir.2014). Individuals on leave to perform military service are entitled to benefits of employment regardless of how an employer classifies the servicemember's absence:
20 C.F.R. § 1002.149. Likewise, Defendants may not use their characterization of AGR program participants as Separation-US status to avoid providing military benefits of employment. Regardless of Defendants' classification of these individuals, dual status technicians "absent from [their jobs] by reason of service in the uniformed services" are entitled to protected USERRA benefits.
Defendants argue, however, that military leave under 5 U.S.C. § 6323(a) is not a USERRA-protected benefit because USERRA protects only rights which an employer gives to its non-military employees. Because the fifteen days of military leave is never given to civilian employees who are not providing military service, it cannot be a right protected by USERRA according to Defendants. The Court is not persuaded by this argument, as Defendants admit that USERRA entitles at least some subset of military employees to leave under 5 U.S.C. § 6323(a), leave which is never afforded to nonmilitary personnel. Furthermore, the cases Defendants cite in support of their contention address situations in which employers had unilateral policies affording additional benefits or rights to absent military personnel. While courts have consistently held that employers do not commit a USERRA violation in revoking these extra benefits, these cases do not address USERRA rights provided by statute.
Defendants also argue that even if military leave is a benefit guaranteed by USERRA, it is not a benefit to which a career military person is entitled. According to Defendants, the AGR job is a career military position and it would make no sense for someone making a career in the military to continue to get any civilian pay. It is true that once an individual's civilian employment is terminated from civilian employment, he or she is no longer entitled to military leave benefits. But there is evidence that some of the dual status technicians participating in the AGR program do so only in a temporary active duty capacity, and not in a career capacity that forever terminates their employment as a dual status technician. The AGR program specifically provides for "[e]ntry into the program of soldiers who may desire to serve only initial or occasional AGR tours, as well as soldiers who serve in a career duty status." Army Reg. 135-18, ¶ 1-6(d). Defendants state that "[o]ver the past four years, approximately 125 former dual technicians have entered the Missouri National Guard's AGR program, with only about one or two returning to the dual technician program each year." [Doc. 47, p. 2]. It is thus uncontroverted that Defendants are aware that not all dual status technicians entering the AGR program intend to or will make their AGR service a career, and that some AGR program participants will return to their dual status technician position.
Furthermore, the Court previously found in its order denying Defendants' motion to dismiss that AGR service does not inherently constitute an abandonment of an individual's civilian position in favor of a military career. [Doc. 23, p. 5]; citing Lindsley v. Office of Pers. Mgmt., 126 Fed.Appx. 959, 960 (Fed.Cir.2005); Lapine v. Town of Wellesley, 304 F.3d 90, 102 (1st Cir.2002).
Finally, there is a specific USERRA benefit waiver provision in 38 U.S.C. § 4316(b)(2)(A) which is discussed below. This waiver provision is the mechanism Congress chose to determine whether a person entering the military intends to remain in the military indefinitely or intends to return to his or her civilian employment. As stated in Dorris, an artificial classification, whether it be "career" or "Separation-US," is not controlling.
Therefore, the Court concludes as a matter of law that the Guard violated USERRA by refusing to provide military benefits to AGR employees who did not waive
Defendants contend that to the extent military leave under 5 U.S.C. § 6323(a) is a protected benefit, AGR program participants waived that right through execution of the AGR Checklist and Statement of Understanding. USERRA states that individuals who "knowingly provide[] written notice of intent not to return to a position of employment after service in the uniformed service, [are] not entitled to rights and benefits" protected by the statute. 38 U.S.C. § 4316(b)(2)(A). However, in order for the waiver to be effective, Defendants "have the burden of proving that a person knowingly provided clear written notice of intent not to return to a position of employment after service in the uniformed service and, in doing so, was aware of the specific rights and benefits to be lost." Id. at § 4316(b)(2)(B).
Defendants contend that the AGR Checklists and Statements of Understanding signed by AGR participants are sufficient to constitute statutory waiver of any USERRA protected military leave benefit. But USERRA does not provide that protected benefits may be waived through individual waiver of the benefits themselves. Instead, waiver may only be effectuated when an employee knowingly provides written notice of his or her "intent not to return" to their civilian position. The Guard's purported waivers could have contained a clear statement to that effect. Instead, the Guard used the term "SEPARATING," capitalized to suggest a term of art. As previously explained, Separation-US as used by the Guard means:
[Doc. 41, p. 6; Doc. 49, p. 4] (emphasis added). Thus, the term encompasses something other than a statement that the employee does not intend to return to her civilian position. The AGR Checklist also specifically references the AGR applicant's understanding that by "electing Separation-US," he or she will no longer be eligible for military leave. The reference to this election clearly distinguishes the AGR participant's status choice from a separation action initiated through provision of a written notice of intent not to return. The failure to use the statutory language is additionally confusing because the AGR Checklist and Statement of Understanding also discuss the right to reemployment under USERRA immediately after discussing separation status without explaining how one could have the present intent to never return to their civilian employment, but still have a right to do so in the future.
Because AGR participants' execution of the AGR Checklist and Statement of Understanding is insufficient for Defendants to successfully invoke waiver of military leave, the United States' motion for partial summary judgment is granted to the extent it requests a finding that Defendants violated USERRA by denying Holt fifteen days of military leave.