HomeMy WebLinkAbout22A - Time ManagementPolicy & Procedure Page 1 of 13
Lexington Police
Department
Subject:
Time Management
Policy Number:
22AAccreditation Standards:
Reference: 22.1.1; 22.2.1
Effective Date:
3/11/13
New
Revised Revision
Dates:
1/24/19
By Order of: Mark J. Corr, Chief of Police
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS AND GUIDELINES
Time Management is the Lexington Police Department’s program for administering and
managing leave and other compensation. The tabulation of these benefits is
automated through the Department’s central computer system. Each employee has
access to view their benefits available there at any time. Supervisors have the ability
to adjust these as needed. Without sufficient departmental knowledge, terms and
abbreviations used in this policy may be foreign to the reader.
All Department employees, including exempt employees and those represented by
collective bargaining units are served by the Town’s employee benefits program. The
collective bargaining agreements between the Town and various collective bargaining
units and other town benefits programs are similar in many ways but are sufficiently
unique that they may cause some confusion. The Department’s procedures for Time
Management have also evolved and can be difficult to understand if not used regularly.
The purpose of this policy is to provide one uniform document that addresses the
majority of the Time Management issues. It should be noted that Commanding
Officers are authorized to manage routine requests for leave. Extraordinary requests
for leave should be forwarded to the Captain of Administration for review before leave
is granted.
This policy is a guideline. Collective Bargaining Agreements take precedent
over any conflicting language that may appear in this policy.
At times, different unions have different agreements or procedures. Text boxes like this
will be used to identify exceptions or special circumstances. All previous General Orders,
Personnel Orders and Memorandum related to the administration of Time Management are null
and void or have been incorporated into this policy statement.
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PROCEDURES
A. Administration of the Time Management System
1. The Chief of Police through the Captain of Administration (or another
designee) administers the benefits program for the Police Department.
2. Commanding Officers are assigned the task of managing day-to-day activities
by approving routine requests for time off. The Chief of Police and Captain of
Administration audit data entries; review requests for leave, and make
discretionary decisions that are the privilege of the Chief of Police.
Extraordinary requests for leave must be approved by the Chief of Police or
his designee, typically the Captain of Administration.
3. When time allows, employees should request vacation, comp (compensatory
time taken in lieu of overtime) and personal leave from their assigned
Commanding Officer well in advance of the requested day(s).
4. This document cannot address every situation that may arise. If these
guidelines are not followed, the Commanding Officer and the employee
involved must document the incident. The Chief of Police and Captain of
Administration will review the circumstances and make appropriate changes.
5. Holidays. Legal holidays recognized by the Town are determined at the
beginning of each year by the Town Manager’s office and/or defined by a
collective bargaining contract.
B. Time Earned on New Year’s Day and Carry-Over
1. Benefits earned by employees will be measured by the hour with eight hours
representing the typical duty shift for police officers and dispatchers. This
standard shall have no bearing on the Town’s regular and holiday pay
procedures. The “eight hour” standard is used for simplicity. However, some
individual’s regular “day” may be calculated in 7 hours, 7.5 hours or 8 hours.
2. The smallest unit of measure will be ½ hour. Exception: comp time may be
earned in quarter hour increments. The various contracts may articulate the
smallest unit of measure for purposes of detail billing.
3. On January 1st of each year, the following benefits will be credited to each
employee unless otherwise specified in a contract.
a. Personal Days.
b. Vacation leave.
c. If eligible, FLEX days for officers working a 5 &2 schedule or “12th”
Holiday.
d. Sick time is earned at 1.25 days per month. At the beginning of each
year, employees will be credited with the 15 days they are expected to
earn for that year. However, the employee is not entitled to the leave
until such time as they earn it month to month.
4. Vacation, sick time and comp time qualify for carry-over from one calendar
year to another with the following restrictions:
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a. Sick time only up to any contractual limit will be carried over.
b. For Police Officers and Dispatcher, up to 10 vacation days will be
automatically carried over to the first quarter of the next calendar year.
Some collective bargaining agreements permit employees to sell back
vacation time up to the limits outlined in the contract.
c. Non-sworn personnel must follow vacation carry over guidelines establish
by the Town Manager or as may be included within collective bargaining
agreements.
d. Comp time will be automatically carried over up to the maximum allowed
by contracts. Employees may not bank more than that allowed by
contract without permission of the Chief of Police.
e. On or before December 1st each year, employees must submit to the
Captain of Administration any request to carry-over vacation that exceeds
approved limits.
f. Personal days may not be carried over.
g. All carry-over vacation must be used before April 1st unless authorized.
5. FLEX Time. Union employees (sworn staff) who voluntarily work a Monday
through Friday (5 & 2) schedule will receive 18 additional “FLEX” days per
year. The employee will be scheduled off on the eleven legal holidays
approved by the Town of Lexington, and seven days may be used at the
discretion of the employee. (FLEX time compensates employees working the
5&2 schedule due to the fact that they work more hours per year than
employees not on that schedule).
a. The FLEH code will be used to designate FLEX time used on holidays.
b. Otherwise, the FLEX code will be used when the employee takes
discretionary time off.
c. FLEX hours may not be carried over to a new year.
6. Commendations. Those who earn a commendation earn two days of leave
that are entered as FLEX. If earned at the end of a calendar year, the Chief or
a designee may authorize carry over into the next calendar year.
7. 2 & 1 Command Staff. One Lieutenant and one Sergeant scheduled to work
the 2 & 1 schedule will receive six additional vacation days each year,
documented as VACF. These days must be used in conformance with terms
and conditions outlined in the contracts. This benefit has been granted since
the 2 & 1 shift does not allow for two consecutive days off in the calendar year.
This time cannot be carried over from year to year.
C. Vacation and Peak Periods
1. Summer and Fall vacation lists will be posted as early as possible and a copy
of the original list will remain posted during the entire vacation period. If not
Local 501 members may, with approval, work holidays. The FLEH entry for that day should
be removed from Time Management. The FLEX hours can be taken on another day with
approval of the Chief of Police or his/her designee.
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otherwise defined by contract, the summer vacation period will begin on or
about June 15th and end on or about Labor Day. The fall list will begin in mid-
October and will end on or about January 1st. Full vacation weeks begin on
Saturday at 7:45 a.m. (on the Saturday B-shift) and end on the following
Saturday at 7:45 a.m. (after the Saturday A-shift).
2. Union members may sign-up for one or two consecutive vacation weeks by
order of seniority. For any given week, there may be five officers and one
dispatcher on full-week vacation during that vacation period. These limits
apply all year long. Other contractual restrictions may also apply. Members of
the Detective Bureau will have their own summer vacation list from which two
members of the Bureau may be on vacation at any given time.
C21: LPA -- Starting on or before March 1st (summer list) and August 1st (fall list), a sign-up list
will be posted. Starting with the most senior officer, each officer will have three days to sign-
up for a vacation period. These three days will be counted whether or not the officer is
scheduled for duty. If necessary, the officer may telephone, e-mail or otherwise have another
person (of his/her choosing) sign-up for the vacation during his/her absence. Officers may
wait beyond their designated time period and sign-up for vacation at a later time.
C22: AFSCME 1703 -- Vacation sign-up will begin when the vacation list is posted and
election will be by seniority. Each member will have six days to select a vacation and initial
and date the list when the period is recorded. After a six days or after the vacation is selected,
the next senior member may select a vacation period.
C23: Local 501 -- Local 501 members will sign-up for vacation in order of seniority. No
time limits will apply.
Sergeants - Starting on or before March 1st (summer list) and August 1st (fall list),
a sign-up list will be posted. Starting with the most senior officer, each officer will
have three days to sign-up for a vacation period. These three days will be
counted whether or not the officer is scheduled for duty. If necessary, the officer
may telephone, e-mail or otherwise have another person (of his/her choosing)
sign-up for the vacation during his/her absence. Officers may wait beyond their
designated time period and sign-up for vacation at a later time. (Until contracts &
other benefits are ironed out as a result of the merger, LPA rule still applies).
3. There may be three supervisors from patrol on full-week vacations at any
given time. One week is reserved for use by Patrol Sergeants. One week is
reserved for use by Patrol Lieutenants.
D. Guidelines to Using Benefits
1. Vacation: When possible, vacation leave will be granted to meet employee
needs.
a. Patrol Officers.
C31 Local 501
Only two Patrol Lieutenants will be on a full week vacation at the same time.
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i. When five officers are on full-week vacation leave, additional vacation
requests will not be granted if it is foreseeable that another officer may
be ordered to work to fill the vacancy.
ii. When less than five officers from patrol are on full-week vacation;
leave in the form of single days including single Vacation Days,
Personal Days, COMP or FLEX, will not be granted on any given day
if the total number of officers exceeds five. As an example; if two
officers are on full vacation weeks on any given day, then three other
officers may be granted leave on that day (includes all shifts) even if it
creates an ordering situation and the request(s) for leave were made
three full days before the start of the shift in question.
iii. Absent conditions in paragraph i. and ii. single vacation day requests
will generally be approved with a minimum of 72-hours’ notice (except
on Holidays), and, leave may be granted within the three day period
as long as it does not create an ordering situation, and otherwise
complies with paragraphs i and ii above.
iv. Earned vacation time in blocks of full weeks as follows:
(a) Employees earning five (5) weeks of vacation shall take at least
two (2) weeks in full week blocks,
(b) Employees earning four (4) weeks of vacation shall take at least
two (2) weeks in full week blocks,
(c) Employees earning three (3) weeks of vacation shall take at least
one (1) week in full week blocks,
(d) Employees earning two (2) weeks of vacation shall take at least
one (1) week in full week blocks.
b.Dispatchers.When one dispatcher is on vacation, additional vacation
leave will not be granted unless the vacancy is filled voluntarily.
i. Single vacation day (and partial vacation day) requests may not
create an ordering situation if another dispatcher is already scheduled
for vacation, personal day or comp day.
ii. Absent conditions in paragraph i, single vacation day requests will be
approved with a minimum of 72-hours’ notice (except on holidays).
Ordering to fill a shift is authorized.
iii. Patrol Supervisors. When three supervisors from patrol are on
approved vacation, Patrol Lieutenants and Sergeants will not be
granted vacation leave unless the vacation is filled voluntarily.
2. Family Vacation Leave. Only the patrol Lieutenant and Sergeant assigned
the 2 & 1 (as described in section B7) will receive six (6) additional vacation
days and may use “FAMV” in following manner.
a. “FAMV” vacation leave must be taken in three periods of two shifts
during the calendar year. Language about this leave specifically states
when using this leave, the A & C shifts on the same day must both be
taken off.
b. The days may not be taken to extend another vacation period.
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3. Comp Time. When offered, employees who choose comp time in lieu of
overtime will receive 1½-hours comp per hour worked overtime.
a. Comp time may be taken as staffing permits, including single hours.
Although comp may be earned in quarter hour increments, leave should be
taken with increments no smaller than ½-hour.
b. When earned, the Commanding Officer on-duty will enter the actual
number of hours earned. For example, the C.O. in lieu of an 8-hour
overtime shift will add 12-hours comp.
OT Hours = COMP OT Hours = COMP
0.5 .75 4.5 6.75
1.0 1.5 5.0 7.5
1.5 2.25 5.5 8.25
2.0 3.0 6.0 9.0
2.5 3.75 6.5 9.75
3.0 4.5 7.0 10.5
3.5 5.25 7.5 11.25
4.0 6.0 8.0 12.0
c. At times, the Department will be receiving reimbursement for expending
overtime, such as grant funded patrols or when there is a state of
emergency. Employees may not be offered comp time because this is not
reimbursable.
4. Personal days may be used for urgent personal business that can’t be
conducted on the employee’s off-duty time.
a. Where possible, personal days will be granted and, if necessary, another
employee will be ordered to work to fill the opening.
b. The Captain of Administration may grant PD leave on any day for
extenuating personal situations. The Captain may require a written notice,
with the specific reasons for the request.
4ai) LPA (Lexington Police Association) – Requests for personal leave will be granted in
accordance with terms and conditions as may be outlined from time to time in the
contract. Generally speaking, requests for personal leave will not be granted on Holiday
shifts including the A, B, and C shift of the holiday.
4a2) Local #501 (Superior Officers union) - Requests for personal leave will be granted in
accordance with the terms and conditions as they may be described and as may be
outlined from time to time in the contract. Generally speaking, requests for personal leave
will not be granted on Holiday shifts including the A, B and C shift of the holiday.
4a3) AFSCME 1703 (Dispatchers union), except in emergency cases as determined by the
Chief of Police or designee, requests for personal leave will be made with 24-hours’ notice
prior to the beginning of the shift. Requests for such leave shall not be unreasonably
denied.
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5. Bereavement leave will be granted within the guidelines established by each
collective bargaining agreement.
6. FLEX may be taken as staffing permits and in accordance with the terms and
conditions of contractual agreements.
7. Partial Vacation, Comp, FLEX and Personal Day Requests.Requests for
leave amounting to less than an 8-hour shift will be granted whenever possible
but are subject to additional restrictions.
a. Leave will be deducted from an employee’s benefits hour-for-hour with one
exception; if the Department must pay a four-hour overtime minimum, then
a minimum of four hours will be deducted from the employee requesting
leave. Specific contractual language controls the use of partial days for the
purpose of working details.
b. Partial PD leave will be granted as staffing permits. If necessary, another
employee will be ordered to work to fill the shift to meet minimum staffing
needs.
c. Partial vacation, FLEX and comp day requests are subject to the approval
and discretion of the Commanding Officer on-duty. Any number of
legitimate operational needs will take precedence over the approval of
leave including, but not limited to: volume of calls, weekend or special
event coverage, directed patrol assignments, reports due, center or bike
patrol coverage, and unavailability of staffing for a subsequent shift.
E. Mandatory Overtime
1. LPA
a. All supervisors and desk officers should routinely examine the worksheets
to insure that anticipated overtime shifts are filled.
i. By the very nature of police service, unexpected short notice
situations arise where officers must be ordered to work. Available
officers, by seniority, should expect to be ordered to work from
time to time. There will be times when the most senior officer may
be the only available officer.
ii. Any officer ordered should anticipate working the shift unless
another officer voluntarily agrees to work the shift.
iii. The officer should contact the Department prior to reporting to
work to insure that [s] he is still required to work.
LOCAL # 501
The four-hour minimum does not apply to 501 members who have
agreed to work hour for hour to cover another member’s leave.
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b. 72-hour Grace Period. ANY officer ordered to work is ineligible for
another mandatory overtime shift until 72-hours has passed from the
beginning of the shift ordered, except where:
i. An emergency or exigent circumstance exists;
ii. No other officer of equal rank is available; and/or
iii. No other officer is eligible due to the number of consecutive hours
worked or due to court or when other required attendance is
necessary.
c. Equitable Ordering List. The equitable ordering list was established as a
fair and equitable way to distribute anticipated mandatory overtime. The
five junior officers (by badge number) will make up the ordering list.
i. Anticipated overtime is when an officer is given 72-hour’snotice of
the mandatory overtime shift.
ii. When short notice vacancies occur, the list will not be used. The
Commanding Officer on-duty will have the discretion to order any
eligible officer with a preference towards using seniority in rank.
iii. Mandatory overtime hours from the anticipated ordering will
be recorded on the equitable ordering list. All mandatory
overtime hours (ordering situation) will be recorded as
“ORD” in time management.
iv. The equitable ordering list will recycle each year with the number
of hours worked returning to zero on January 1st.
v. Newly hired officers will move to the top of the list once they are
deemed eligible to work overtime as solo patrol officers. When
this takes place the senior member on the list will be removed.
d. Unanticipated Overtime. Unanticipated overtime occurs frequently when
on short notice an officer requests sick leave, personal time, comp, flex or
vacation time on short notice. Commanding Officers are authorized to
grant reasonable requests for leave with the understanding that leave is not
guaranteed without consideration for the needs of the organization. This
includes a consideration of seniority when appropriate and a review of
available personnel to cover shift vacancies.
2. AFSCME 1703 – Ordering List.
a. Anticipated Shift Vacancy. An anticipated over-time shift is one created
twenty-four (24) hours prior to the shift beginning. When this occurs, the
following procedures will be used:
i. When possible, hiring will begin 5-days prior to the vacancy.
ii. Procedures outlined by contract should be used.
iii. In the event that the shift cannot be filled voluntarily, a dispatcher
will be ordered to cover the shift using the Anticipated Ordering
List.
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iv. All members of AFSCME 1703 are recorded on the Anticipated
Order List. The member with the fewest number of mandatory
hours (with seniority used as a tie breaker) will be ordered to work
the anticipated opening.
b. Unanticipated Shift Vacancy.
i. When unanticipated overtime becomes available, an attempt to hire
dispatcher voluntarily will be made by the senior dispatcher on-
duty.
ii. If the shift cannot be filled, the C.O. will order the junior dispatcher
on-duty to work the open shift unless otherwise ineligible.
F. Printing Worksheets and Approving Leave
1. A minimum of two weeks of worksheets will be printed and available for review
by members of the command staff. Each member of the command staff has
an obligation to review work sheets and identify open shifts and other
conditions that involve hiring on overtime and or granting of leave on a regular
basis.
a. Worksheets will be printed out in one-week intervals.
b. The Administrative Lieutenant is responsible for printing out worksheets so
that a minimum of two week (14 days) but not more than three weeks (21
days) of sheets are available.
2. Requests for one or two weeks of vacation (outside peak vacation periods as
defined by contract) will be granted on a first come first serve basis in
conformance with contractual language. Full week vacation periods will be
given priority over other requests for vacation leave.
3. Single day requests for leave will be granted in accordance with the terms and
conditions outlined previously within this policy and in conformance with
language included within the various contracts with preference given in the
following order; 1). Personal Days, 2). Single vacation Days followed by 3).
COMP and FLEX Days.
4. Available staffing levels will limit partial day requests for leave. Partial
days will be approved when another employee has agreed to work or when
staffing levels can accommodate the absence. By necessity, some partial day
F31 LPA – Patrol -- Employees will be granted leave within each category according to
terms of contract.
F32 AFSCME 1703, Local 501 and non-union. Employees will be granted leave within
each category on a first come, first serve basis.
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requests may be approved or disapproved with short notice to the employee.
It will be the responsibility of the employee to plan on working the full shift and
monitor when the leave has been approved.
5. Requests that cannot be granted will be noted on the worksheets as a request
to be filled voluntarily.
6. When an employee believes his or her request should be given priority, a
written notice outlining the special circumstances should be submitted to the
Captain of Administration.
a. If approved, the Captain will enter the leave into TM with a notation,
“APPROVED BY CAPTAIN.”
b.If not approved, the request will be entered into TM as a “REQUEST” and
subject to the provisions of this directive.
G. Crossing Guards, Auxiliaries and Cadets
1. Crossing Guards (SEIU Local 88): On September 1st, Crossing Guards
receive only sick days and personal days as benefits. These benefits are for
current school year (September to June). At the end of the school year,
personal days not used will not be carried over. Sick days not used will be
accrued up to the contract maximum.
a. The five sick days are entered into Time Management as a bank of ten (10)
and the personal days as a bank of four (4). A morning crossing and the
afternoon crossing equals one block of time each. If a Crossing Guard
misses one crossing, it is entered as -1, and full day is -2. Technically,
crossings only last 45 minutes but the 1-hour breakdown simplifies the
documentation of leave.
b. When the allotted leave is used, Crossing Guards will not receive pay for
any additional absences. Crossing Guard use of leave without pay must
be approved by the Chief of Police (up to five days) and this will be
managed through the Traffic Officer Manager. Crossing Guards must
provide timely notice when requesting leave.
2. Non-Represented Employees (Cadets and Parking Lot Attendants)
a. Cadets and Parking Lot Attendants receive their leave benefits in
accordance with Administrative Directive #21, and include Sick Leave and
Personal Leave.
b. Regular work hours for Cadets are tracked in Crime Track while
Parking Lot Attendants regular time is tracked by the Traffic Office
In Munis.
c. Sick Leave and Personal Leave for Cadets and Parking Lot Attendants is
tracked in Crime Track. Cadets are scheduled to work a six hour shift or a
three hour shift. When they do the number of hours is entered into Crime
Track as “REG”. In the event leave time is used a corresponding entry of
“SICK” or “PD” is made with “1” representing a six hour shift and “.5”
representing a three hour shift.
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MUNIS – The Town of Lexington uses a payroll system called MUNIS. The Office Manager
regular enters payroll, overtime, adds pay and details into MUNIS. The Crimetrack or
ProPhoenix time management system is not part of the payroll system and is only intended to
be an accessible means for employees to view what their payroll is likely to be. It also allows
employees to know when OT and details are documented.
d. Personal Leave does not carry over from year to year although
“SICK” leave can carry over and accumulate up to 20 days.
H. Understanding Your Own Benefits
1. It is the responsibility of all employees to remain familiar with their own
benefits. Employees should not request nor accept leave that exceeds their
available hours. Employees should also audit their own records to insure that
overtime, details and other benefits are properly recorded. Officers may not
carry a negative balance for any leave.
2. All employees can review their own benefits directly by logging into the Crime
Track Computer System or with the assistance of a command staff officer.
The menu option for personal records is 8-15-1; use the following
procedures.
e. Select previously worked hours (P) for a past history of hours permanently
posted to your records, or future hours (F) that displays hours not yet
posted.
c. “From” and “To” dates are important to enter. Only enter dates for one
calendar year at a time. Some benefits do not display properly when more
than one calendar year is used.
d. A “Time Category” and “Time Code” are different. Time Categories are
blocks of codes that are grouped together; for example, the overtime
category “OT” groups many overtime codes together. The “F4” window
key can be used to display all of the categories and codes. When in doubt,
enter “ALL” to see every record for the selected time period.
3. Time codes are used for several different functions:
a. Pay Records. Overtime, regular pay, holiday pay and details are
examples of how Time Management keeps track of money earned by an
employee. These figures do not affect your paycheck but should still be
accurate within a few dollars. Totals represent calendar year figures and
will differ from payroll records.
b. Banks: Time used by an employee in categories listed in this section shall
be documented and tracked by the number of hours used (i.e. a full day of
vacation used would be –8 VAC). Vacation, comp time, flex, sick and
personal days are the categories in which this system is uses.
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c. Counters: Is a term used to explain the function of tracking time/benefits in
certain categories (listed below) which is done by “counting the number of
instances the event occurred” (i.e. if a person is late to work, this is
documented by entering a “1” “LATE”for this incident, and not the amount
of time the person was late).
i. Late, bereavement, swap, work and military service are examples
of counters. Whenever these codes are used, the number “1” is
entered. The total should represent how many times the code
was used for the year.
ii. Training and “AUX” are also categories tracked counters. For these
events, the actual number of hours worked are entered.
d. Error Codes. “PDX,” “VACX,” and “COMX” are error codes used to
correct data entry errors. When possible, these will be used on the same
date and shift where the error occurred.
e. Carry-over Benefits. “VACF,” “COMF” and “SICF” are the codes to
represent carry-over benefits from the previous year. They should be used
only once per year.
f. Paired Codes are used together. The code “WORK” records the
employee who is working a shift, followed by the employee being replaced
using a shift swap code: “SWAP,” “FLIP” and “ADMN.”
g. Details. Detail billing is the most involved Time Management process.
Different codes reflect different pay rates and will also add administrative
fees where appropriate. Staff members who have not been trained in
detail billing should not use these codes.
h. Overtime.
i. In order to improve budgeting records, overtime codes document
the reason overtime was necessary. Specific overtime codes
should be used when possible.
ii. “OTOT” is a general code which represents “other overtime”. It
should be used as the last choice if other codes do not fit. When
used, the comment line should explain the reason for the
overtime.
iii. The comment line should also be used to identify training
programs (OTTR), case numbers for investigations (OTIN), or the
reasons for increased staffing (OTIS).
4. Payment of Benefits in the event of a death.
a. In the event any member dies while in service to the Town of Lexington, and
is owed monies from salary, overtime compensation, accrued vacation pay,
comp time, holiday pay, or other monies, those funds will be paid to the
MUNIS - Some collective bargaining groups have leave tracked by the MUNIS system. In these instances,
the leave that appears on the employee’s paycheck takes precedent over any leave that may appear in
Crimetrack or ProPhoenix.
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estate of the deceased member in accordance with rules and regulations as
may be promulgated by the Internal Revenue Service or the Massachusetts
Department of Revenue, and in accordance with terms and conditions
outlined in collective bargaining and employment agreements.
b. Payments for salary, overtime compensation, accrued vacation pay, comp
time, holiday pay or other monies may not be paid to any other person or
entity.
5. Military Leave
a. Military leave will be granted to employees who serve in a Reserve Unit of
the U.S. Military or as a member of a State National Guard Unit in
compliance with the terms and conditions outlined in contracts.
b. In the event an employee is called up for active duty in the U.S. Military or as
a part of a National Guard Unit, The Town of Lexington will compensate the
employee with wages equal to the difference between their base pay and the
compensation received for Military Duty. Employees will continue to be
covered by health and dental benefits as long as there is sufficient
compensation to cover the employee’s share of these expenses.
c. Any member so called to active duty will not lose any seniority during their
active duty service. All other benefits will accrue or not as may be outlined
in collective bargaining agreements.
I. NEMLEC (North Eastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council) Callouts
1. When Officers are called for RRT (Regional Response Team) duty and
authorized by the Operations Captain to respond, they will be paid overtime
or “COMP” for any time they are committed to the event beyond their regular
shift. The hours that they are authorized to be compensated for are generally
dictated by NEMLEC Supervisors who will tell RRT members the number of
hours they should put in for.
2. When RRT Members are called out during their regular shift they will respond to
the call out, will remain on the clock for their regular shift and compensated with
overtime or “COMP”, for time beyond their regular shifts. In some cases the
department can receive reimbursements for overtime expenses and in those
cases “COMP” may not be available.
3. RRT members are always on standby. In the event they are “placed on
standby” they will report for their regular shifts and will not be
administratively swapped. The department will always try to provide whatever
resources they can when callouts occur but there will be times when all
members of the RRT will not be sent to any given event. Superseding events
include vacations, short days, court appearances, personal issues and other
circumstances.
4. All NEMLEC Callouts will be documented with a journal note as a mutual aid
call and the individuals responding to a callout will be documented in TM (Time
Management) with the code “NMLC” and the number “1”. If overtime is being
paid to a member of RRT or to another backfilling a shift for a member of RRT,
the overtime entry “OTNM” should be used for each officer with the number of
hours worked.