CONTRACT 5759 - PERM Memorandum of Understanding CLOSEDAgreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING
BETWEEN
THE CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
AND
EL SEGUNDO SUPERVISORY AND PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEES
ASSOCIATION
TERM:
October 1, 2018 to September 30, 2022
Agreement No. 5759
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ARTICLE.............................................................................................PAGE
Article 1- Recognition
Section 1- Classified Positions Represented by the Association............................................................. 5
Section 2 - City Recognition of Association ................................ ........ ___ ...... ___ ............. ..,...... .......5
Section 3 -Term of this Memorandum of Understanding (M.O.U)........................................................5
Article 2 - Non -Discrimination
Statementof Non-Discrimination.......................................................................................................... 5
Article 3 - Health and Welfare
Section1- Health Insurance..................................................................................................................5
Section 2 - Alternative Medical Plans.................................................................................................... 6
Section3 - Dental Insurance.....................................................................................................................6
Section4 - Optical Insurance............................................................................................................. 6
Section5 - Life Insurance.................................................................................................................. 6
Section6 - Insurance Cap.................................................................................................................. 6
Section 7 - Long Term Disability Insurance (LTD)........................................................................... 6
Section8 - Workers Compensation .............................................. .............................. ............ ........,,....... 6
Section 9 - Flexible Spending Account.....................................................................................................6
Section 10 - Bereavement Leave............................................................................................................ 7
Section 11- California State Disability Insurance (SDI) Program........................................................ 7
Article 4 - Retirement
Section I - PERS Retirement Formulas............................................................................................. 7
Section 2 - Retiree Medical Insurance Contribution.............................................................................. 8
Section 3 - Deferred Compensation Plan.........................................................................................................8
Section4 - Leave Payoff................................................................................................................... 8
Section 5 - Cash Equivalency for Vacation, Sick Leave and Floating Holidays ................................... 8
Section 6 - Public Agency Retirement System (PARS).........................................................................9
Article 5 - Sick Leave
Section1 - Accrued Sick Leave ........................... ........................................................ .............,.,..,........ ....9
Section 2 - Annual Medical Examination.............................................................................................9
1
Section 3 - Sick Leave Usage for Family Care.. . ......
Section 4 - Catastrophic Illness Leave................................................................
Article 6 - Employee Assistance Program (EAP)
Article 7 - Vacation
Section 1- Accrual Schedule ...............................................
Section 2 - Accrued Vacation Leave after six months.........
Section 3 - Maximum Accumulation of Vacation ...............
Section 4 - Cash in Lieu of Vacation Time .........................
Section 5 -Leave Payment Upon Separation ....................
Article 8 - Holidays
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Section 1- Listing of Holidays and Personal Leave/Floating Holiday .............................................- 11
Section2 - Holidays and Sundays........................................................................................................12
Section 3 - Holidays and Fridays/Saturdays........................................................................................ 12
Section4 - Floating Holiday.................................................................................................................... 12
Section 5 - Leave Payment Upon Separation......................................................................................12
Article 9 - Professional Development
EducationalReimbursement................................................................................................................ � 2
Article 10 - Computer Loan Program ... ........ .... ...... ..... ............ .................................................... 13
Article 11- Salary
Section1- Salary Adjustments.......................................................................................................13
Section 2 - Accelerated Salary Step Advancement.............................................................................. 13
Section3 - Direct Deposit................................................................................................................... 13
Section 4 - Use of Personal Vehicle on Official City Business..............................................................14
Section 5 - Educational Incentive Pay...................................................................................„...............14
Section6 - Bilingual Pay................................................................................................................ 14
Section7 - Longevity Pay...............................................................................................................15
Section8 -Certification Pay...........................................................................................................15
Section 9 - Salary Table Step Advancement ....................... .....,..,............,.,,,.................................... 15
Article 12 - Uniforms
List of Job Classifications having uniforms/footwear provided....... ....... ........... .... ___ 16
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Article 13 - Overtime
Section 1- Fair Labor Standards Act - Overtime Compensation.........................................................16
Section 2 - Definition of Hours Worked for Overtime - Computation purposes.„...............................17
Section 3 - Overtime Authorization .................................... ... ........... ,...... ,,.......... ,,.....,.......„.....,..„ 17
Section 4 - Maximum Accumulation of Compensatory Time..............................„....,....,.........,,..,,,,,,,17
Section 5 - Work Time Credit...,___ ........... ... _ ...... .... „..„......,,..,...17
Article 14 - Grievance Procedure
Section 1- Definition of Terms....................„........„.„„............................. .....................„„ 18
Section2 - Time Limits....................„,....„.....,..,.,...............„,........„....„.............,...........„..............,...,,........,,,18
Section3 - Procedure............„.,.,.......,„..................................„.„.„.....,..„....„.....................,..,.......,...........18
Section 4 - Matters Excluded from the Grievance Procedure._, ... ................. ..... ,........„ 19
Section5 - Conferences............................................................ ..... ___ ... .......,....„,...,...........19
Section 6 - Employee appeals from Disciplinary Actions.............................................................„....,19
Article 15 - Layoff
Section1- Grounds for Layoff..........................„....„„.,...................,...,.,.,,..„........,...„..........„..............„..20
Section2 - Notice to Employees ................
___ .... ....... __...... ,....,............„................. .......................... 20
Section3 - At -Will Employees..........................................„..„..„....„,...„.....„..,..,...............,...................,.20
Section 4 - Procedures for Layoff...................................„....„........,...,........,..„,............„.....„.......,....,.....20
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Section 5 Breaking Ties ............................
..„....,,...„.........................................„...,,.............,„.,....,....„.20
Section 6 - Reduction to a Vacant Position
........ ........ .„............. ..,......„.„„......................................... 21
Section7 - Displacement Rights,,,....„....„.„...................„.....„.......„...,.,................................„........
.......,,21
Section8 - Salary Placement...,.......„ .............................
____ .... — ........,.,.„,....,......,............„.„...„..,„.„..21
Section9 - Reemployment List.........................................................................................„,.......,.....,.„21
Section 10 - Rights upon Reemployment. -
......... ....... ...... ___21
Article 16 - Miscellaneous
Section1- Credit Union..............................................................„....,„.„...„,............„...,.........,.,,...„„.........22
Section 2 - Temporary Assignment to Higher Classification.............................„............„......,„.„...,....22
2Section3 - Rest Periods.................................„,.,...„......„..„..„..„...................„.......................,................22
Section 4 - Request for Reclassification Review............................„,..,...............„.....,.„,.............,„........22
Section5 - Seniority: .................................................................. _ ....... 23
Section6 - Standby Duty..............................„......„,...,„....„..,.......,,..........,....,.,.....,.........„.....,,...........,.,.23
Section7 - Jury Duty.......................................................„...„...............„....................................„„.........24
Section8 - Cell Phone Stipend ......... ........ .................... ,..,„....................... ............ ...„.......... .,.......... 25
Section 9 - Assignment of Work Schedule ......................................... .„..„............................... ......... „.., 25
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Article 17 - Drug -Free Workplace Statement, Substance Abuse Policy,
and Smoking and Break Policy............ .......................... .......... ............. .........................25
Article 18 - Personnel File
Section1- Personnel File ...... ........................................................ ........................................... ........,,... 25
Section 2 - Derogatory Material...........................................................................................................26
Section3 - Positive Material................................................................................................................26
Article 19 -Association Deductions............................................................................................. 26
Article 20 - Catastrophic Leave Bank ................................................... ............................... 26
Article 21 — Binding Arbitration ................... . ............ . ......................... . . ... ............27
Article22 — Reopener ...................................................................................... ,.30
SignaturePage....................................................................................... ............................... 31
Appendix A - Bargaining Unit Classifications
Appendix B - Smoking Policy
Appendix C - Drug Free Workplace Statement and Substance Abuse Policy, Revised July 1,2008
Appendix D - Department of Transportation Drug Testing Guidelines
Appendix E - Catastrophic Leave Bank Policy
Appendix F -Occupational Injury and Illness Policy
Appendix G - Salary Schedule
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Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No,
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING
BETWEEN
THE CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
AND
EL S E GUN DO SUPERVISORY AND PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION
ARTICLE I- RECOGNITION
SECTION 1. Pursuant to the provisions of the City of El Segundo Resolution No. 3208, establishing
procedures governing employer-employee organization relations, the City of El Segundo (hereinafter
referred to as the 'City' and 'Employer' (interchangeably) has recognized the El Segundo Supervisory
and Professional Employees' Association (herein after referred to as the `Association'). as the
exclusive representative of employees within the bargaining unit consisting of the classified positions
listed in Appendix A - Bargaining Unit Classifications.
SECTION 2. The City recognizes the Association as the representative of the employees in the
classifications and assignments set forth in Section 1, above, for the purpose of meeting the joint
obligations of the City and Association as set forth within the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act, Government
Code 3500 et seq.
SECTION 3. The term of this Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) shall commence on October 1,
2018 and end on September 30, 2022.
ARTICLE II -NON-DISCRIMINATION
Neither the City nor the Association shall discriminate against any employee because of race, color, age,
creed, national origin, sex, handicap, medical condition, marital status, or Association activities in any
matter.
ARTICLE Ill- HEALTH AND WELFARE
SECTION 1. Health hsurance - Employees participate as members of the PERS administered Public
Employees' Medical and Hospital Care Program. Employees have a choice of HMO and Indemnity
medical coverage plans.
A. Cita° Medical Contribution: For the term of this Agreement, the City will pay the Public Employees'
Medical and Hospital Care Act ("PEMHCA") minimum contribution required under Government
Code section 22892. The City will contribute as outlined below toward an employee's and his/her
eligible dependent(s)' medical costs. This maximum contribution below includes the minimum
PEMHCA contribution:
i. Effective on the first day of the second month following City Council adoption of the MOU,
City contribution of $1,500 per member per month for medical -health insurance coverage;
ii. Effective January 1, 2020, City contribution of $1,550 per member per month for medical -
health insurance coverage;
iii. Effective January 1, 2021, City contribution of $1,600 per member per month for medical -
health insurance coverage;
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iv. Effective January 1, 2022, City contribution of $1,650 per member per month for medical -
health insurance coverage
Any employee premium amounts above the C i t y c o n t r i b u t i o n a in o u n t will be paid by the
employee through pre-tax payroll deduction.
Effective the first day of the second month following City Council Adoption of the MOU, the cash -out
option is discontinued.
SECTION 2. Alternative Medical Plans - During the term of this agreement, the City may reopen the
contract in order to consider alternatives to the PERS medical plan. The City agrees that it will only
propose plans that provide for a cost-effective, comprehensive medical package for employees and their
families (i.e., provides comparable benefits to current plan, including portability). There will be no change
in insurance plans without agreement of the parties.
SECTION 3. Dental Insurance - The City provides fully paid dental insurance for the employee and all
eligible dependents.
SECTION 4. Optical Insurance - The City provides fully paid optical insurance for the employee and
all eligible dependents.
SECTION 5. Life Insurance - Employees are provided a fully paid $50,000 term life insurance policy.
Additional coverage for self ($100,000 maximum) and for family members may be purchased at group
rates by the individual employee.
SECTION 6. Insurance Cap - The City's aggregate contribution for current dental, optical and life
insurance for the term of this agreement shall be set and fixed at $184.25 per month. The City shall
provide optical benefits for each employee and the employee's dependents. Within the monthly
contribution cap currently established for dental, optical and life insurance coverage, the City's monthly
contributions toward dental and life insurance coverage for an employee shall be made after the City's full
monthly vision benefit contribution for an employee and his/her dependents has been made.
SECTION T Lonp-Term Disability hisurance (LTD) -The City provides employees with a fully paid long
term disability insurance policy which allows continuance of 66-2/3% of the first $9,750 of the
employee's monthly salary. The policy applies to non job related occurrences and benefits are payable
following a 60 -day waiting period. The maximum benefit period -varies on the basis of the employee's
age at the time disability begins.
SECTION 8. Workers Compensation - The City provides employees who receive job related injuries
that are compensable under California Worker's Compensation Laws 75 % of their regular monthly
salary for a period of up to one year.
SECTION 9. Flexible Spending Account - Pursuant to applicable federal laws, the City allows for
payment of employee paid insurance premiums, non -reimbursed medical expenses and/or dependent
care expenses with pre-tax dollars. Participation in the program is voluntary.
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SECTION 10. Bereavement Leave - The present practice of granting three (3) working days of
bereavement leave per incident shall be increased up to five (5) working days commensurate with
the employees normally assigned work schedule per incident in those circumstances where travel
to a funeral or other memorial proceeding is 500 or more miles one way as measured from the El Segundo
City Hall. Additionally, the definition of the immediate family whose funeral or memorial proceeding
qualifies for use of bereavement leave, shall include the children, parents, siblings, grandparents of the
employee, the employee's spouse or significant other.
SECTION 11. California State Disability Insurance (SDI)_Ps'o>�_- The City has taken all the
necessary administrative steps to provide Association employees with State Disability Insurance
Program coverage through the California Employment Development Department. All actual costs
associated with participation in the State Disability Program will be the responsibility of Association
employees.
ARTICLE N - RETIREMENT
SECTION 1. (a) Effective November 8, 2000, employees participate in the Public Employees
Retirement System (PERS) 2% at 55 Miscellaneous Plan.
(b) Tier II - As soon as practicable, the City shall amend its contract with the California Public
Employees' Retirement System (Ca1PERS) to implement the 2%@60 retirement formula in accordance
with Government Code Section 21353. This new formula shall apply to miscellaneous employees who
are hired on or after the effective date of the Ca1PERS contract amendment and are otherwise not a "new
employee" and/or "new member" of Ca1PERS under Government Code section
7522.04 of AB 340, also known as the California Pension Reform Act of 2013.
Effective January 1, 2013, new miscellaneous employees and/or members, as defined by AB 340, will
be subject to the 2%@62 retirement formula as well as all other statutory requirements established by
A13340.
(c) The Plan's retirement benefits are integrated with Social Security.
(d) Effective January 1, 1992, the City's contract with PERS was amended to include the single
highest year retirement calculation option. The present City contract with PERS also calls for
incremental yearly increases in the City contribution towards retirees' medical coverage (currently
$375 per month) so that by 1995 the contribution for current employees and retirees will be equal.
(e) Effective the beginning of the first pay period in January 2018, and for the term of this
agreement, miscellaneous employees defined as "classic" members by the California Pension Reform
Act of 2013 (AB340) agree to pay the statutorily required employee contribution equal to seven percent
(7%) (pre-tax) of compensation.
i. Effective on the first day of the first full pay -period in September 2021, miscellaneous employees
defined as "classic' members of the Association by the California Pension Reform Act of 2013 (AB 340)
agree to pay an additional one percent (1%) for a total required employee contribution of eight percent
(8%) (pre-tax) of compensation.
Effective January 1, 2013, "new employees" and/or "new members", as defined by AB 340, will be
statutorily required to pay half of the normal cost of retirement benefits.
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SECTION 2. 1tetiree Medical Insurance Contribution - A member of the Association will be eligible to
receive the City -provided retiree medical insurance contribution towards the member's and his/her eligible
dependent(s)' medical costs, which is equal to that amount outlined in Article III, Section 1, sub -section A
(i, ii, iii, iv), available to Association members currently employed by the City after a minimum of five (5)
full years of service with the City of El Segundo. The City's maximum per month contribution outlined
in Article 111, Section 1, sub -section A (i, ii, iii, iv) includes the PEMHCA minimum contribution required
under Government Code section 22892. As required by Government Code section 22892(b), the City's
contribution will be an equal amount for both employees and retirees. Any Retiree premium amounts
above the City's contribution amount will be paid by the retiree through their Ca1PERS annuity.
SECTION 3. Deferred Compensation Plan - Employees are e l i g i b l e t o participate i n the
International City Management Association Retirement Corporation (ICMA-RC) and the Nationwide
Retirement Solutions (NRS) Deferred Compensation Plans. Participation is voluntary and there is no City
contribution to the plan.
SECTION 4. Leave Pavoff - Employees retiring from the City service are paid the accumulated total of
their unused vacation leave, personal floating holiday leave, compensatory leave, and sick leave, as
provided for in this Agreement. Effective beginning of the first pay period in March 2018, leave payouts
shall be paid at the employee's base salary hourly rate of pay.
SECTION 5. Government Code 20022(a)(1) provides that compensation for purposes of computing PERS
retirement benefits includes remuneration paid in cash because of holidays, sick leave and vacation, as
well as other remuneration furnished in payment for services. This MOU section memorializes that
members of this unit have been contractually eligible to receive City paid cash equivalencies for vacation,
sick leave and floating holidays accrued during the employee's final year of employment. Said members
have also been eligible to receive a cash distribution equal to the monthly differential between $500.00 and
the monthly amount designated by each member for funding health insurance and similar programs (herein
referred to as an insurance differential.) Pursuant to City Council action in December 1991, the former
management/confidential unit was modified, with members of this Supervisory Unit being removed from
the then existing management/confidential unit. The classifications now contained within this Supervisory
Unit being removed from the then existing management/confidential unit. The classifications now contained
within this Supervisory Unit were included within the prior management/confidential unit and City
contractual agreements prior to December 1, 1992 to provide the management/confidential unit members
with payment for vacation, sick leave and floating holidays accrued during the final year of employment, as
well as the above insurance differential, fully insured to the benefit of those classifications now within
the Supervisory Unit.
On June 2, 1992, the City Council adopted the first Memorandum of Understanding between the City
and the Supervisory Unit, with Article VII of said MOU providing in pertinent part that all wages, hours
and terms and conditions of employment in full force and effect prior to the adoption of the MOU, are
to remain infull force and effect and are to be set forth within a later document entitled a Comprehensive
Memorandum of Understanding. As members of the prior management/confidential unit, those
classifications within the Supervisory Unit were therefore subject to earlier Council determination
providing the described paid remuneration for vacation, sick leave and floating holidays accrued during
the final year of employment, as well as the above insurance differential, and the June 2, 1992
Memorandum of Understanding contractually signifies that said benefits are to remain in full force and
effect unless and until altered pursuant to the meet and confer process. This "Comprehensive
Memorandum of Understanding" thereby codifies pre -December 1992 contractual provision of the stated
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compensation benefits to unit members.
SECTION 6. Public Asyencv retirement Svstem Pte- Effective October 1, 2008, the City will contract
with the Public Agency Retirement System (PARS) to provide an additional retirement benefit for eligible
Association employees. Eligible employees are those who are 1) 55 years of age or older, 2) have
completed 15 years of continuous service with the City of El Segundo and 3) service or disability retire from
the City of El Segundo. Eligible employees are entitled to receive the PARS .5 @ 55 retirement
enhancement formula as a supplement to the City's 2% @ 55 Public Employees' Retirement System
formula. This benefit will no longer be available to bargaining unit members who are both 1) hired and/or
appointed to a position in the bargaining unit on or after October 1, 2012, and 2) not already a participant
in the plan.
The City and the PARS participants have agreed to cease future accruals under the current PARS Plan
and to relinquish PARS participants of their obligations to make future mandatory contributions to fund
the current PARS Plan, as detailed in the executed side letter "Public Agency Retirement System
Retirement Enhancement Plan ('PARS')" and in the City's November 3, 2015 Resolution
adopting "The City of El Segundo Public Agency Retirement System (PARS) retirement Enhancement
Plan (as Amended and Restated Effective October 31, 2015) ("Plan Amendment").
ARTICLE V - •SICK LEAVE
SECTION 1. Employees accrue sick leave at a rate of eight (8) hours per month. The maximum carryover
of sick leave from November 30 to December 1 of each year is six hundred (600) hours.
City provides a one hundred percent (100%) payoff each December 101 of any accumulated sick leave
hours above the maximum carryover.
Employees who, on July 1, 1998, had an accumulated sick leave balance higher than six hundred (600)
hours will have a maximum carryover equal to their accumulated sick leave balance on that date. No
such maximum carryover can be greater than one thousand fifty-six (1056) hours. Should an employee's
personal sick leave accrual limit drop below six hundred (600) hours, their future maximum carryover
shall not be allowed to exceed six hundred (600) hours.
Employees, with at least five (5) full years of service with the City, receive payment for one hundred
percent (100%) of their accumulated sick leave upon service retirement, disability retirement, or death.
Effective beginning of the first pay period in March 2018, leave payouts shall be paid at the employee's
base salary hourly rate of pay.
SECTION 2. Aianual Medical Examination,- Employees are eligible for a fully paid comprehensive
medical examination each year.
The City currently utilizes Westchester Medical Group/Center for Heart and Health for the examinations.
The results of the examination include extensive written documentation and feedback, fitness
consultation, recommended further testing and/or adjustments to current lifestyle practices and ongoing
monitoring.
Up to two (2) days of sick leave may be used each year for physical examinations.
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SECTION 3, Sick Leave Us a g e for Family C are -Affected e m p l o y e e s are eligible to utilize a
maximum of forty-eight (48) hours of sick leave per calendar year in order that care may be provided to
immediate family members suffering from illness or injury. The term "immediate family member" shall
exclusively include the children, parents, siblings, the grandparents of the employee, the employee's
spouse or significant other. "Immediate family member" shall also include mother-in-law and father-in-
law. The City shall require each affected employee utilizing sick leave for said purpose to provide in writing
a statement evidencing the facts justifying the use of sick leave inthis regard.
SECTION 4. Catastror)hic Illness Leave - An employee may transfer sick leave, vacation or
compensatory leave to a sick leave bank to be donated to an employee who is experiencing
catastrophic illness and has exhausted all personal sick leave. Such a transfer can be made on July 1 of each
year or during additional designated times on forms provided by the City of El Segundo. The City has
the right to verify all catastrophic illnesses before donation from the sick leave ban
ARTICLE VI - EMPLOYEE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (EAP)
Provides confidential assistance, referrals, and counseling to the employee and members of the
immediate family. The program is designed to provide professional assistance and support to help
employees and their families resolve problems that affect their personal lives or job performance.
The City shall provide the basic level of service to employees at City cost. Basic level shall consist of
three (3) sessions per member/per incident/per year. Employees may voluntarily enroll in the
EAP/Outpatient tier at their own cost ($9.52/month).
ARTICLE VII - VACATION
SECTION 1.
Employees covered by this MOU shall accumulate vacation leave as follows:
From commencement of the 1st year of service through and including completion of the 5th year of
service: 96 hours;
From commencement of the 6th year of service through and including completion of the 10th year of
service: 120 hours;
From commencement of the 11th year of service through and including completion of the 15th year of
service: 144 hours;
From commencement of the 16th year of service and for all years of service thereafter: 176 hours.
Current/non-probationary employees
Effective August 20, 2019, for employees who have passed their probationary period as of August 20, 2019,
vacation accrual rates shall be determined by combining total years of City service and prior PERS service
with another agency.
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Probationary employees
Employees who are on probation, whether newly hired or promotional, shall have their vacation accrual rates
determined by combining total years of City service and prior PERS service with another agency in the pay
period following the employees passage of probation.
SECTION 2. Employees may use their accrued vacation leave after six (6) months of employment.
SECTION 3. Maximum accumulation of vacation leave allowed is the equivalent of two (2) years of
service accrual.
SECTION 4. Employees who have completed one year of service may receive cash payment in lieu of
accrued vacation leave up to a maximum of 100% the annual accrual to which they are entitled by length
of service. Effective beginning of the first pay period in March 2018, leave payouts shall be paid at the
employee's base salary hourly rate of pay. Employees may exercise this option twice per calendar year.
SECTION 5. Employees shall receive payment for one hundred percent (100%) of their accumulated
vacation leave upon service retirement, disability retirement, death, resignation, or termination.
Effective on the beginning of the first pay period in March 2018, vacation leave payouts shall be paid at
the employee's base salary hourly rate.
ARTICLE VIII - HOLIDAYS
SECTION 1. Employees shall receive the following holidays:
January 1 st
The third Monday in January (Martin Luther King Jr. Day)
The third Monday in February (President's Day)
The last Monday in May (Memorial Day)
July 4th
The first Monday in September (Labor Day)
November 11th (Veteran's Day)
Thanksgiving Day
The Friday after Thanksgiving Day
December 24th
December 25th
December 31 st
Holidays will be paid based on the employee's assigned daily work schedule. For example, employees
assigned to a 4/10 schedule will have holidays paid in ten (10) hour increments. Employees assigned to
a 9/80 schedule will have holidays paid in nine (9) hour increments, unless the holiday falls on their
assigned eight-hour scheduled work day in which case they will be paid eight hours of holiday pay.
In addition to the holidays enumerated above, each employee shall receive one day (10 hours for 4/10
scheduled employees; 9 hours for 9/80 scheduled employees) per calendar year as a Personal
Leave/Floating Holiday. The Personal Leave/Floating Holiday shall be credited to the employee every
January. Newly hired bargaining unit members shall also receive this personal leave day which may be
used six (6) months after the employee's initial appointment date.
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SECTION 2. In the event any of the above holidays fall on a Sunday, it will be observed on the
following Monday and City Hall will be closed.
SECTION 3. In the event any of the above holidays fall on a Friday or Saturday (or an employee's
otherwise regularly scheduled day off), the employee will receive a floating holiday consisting of a
number of hours based on the employee's assigned daily work schedule. For example, employees assigned
to a 4/10 schedule will receive a floating holiday of ten (10) hours. Employees assigned to a 9/80 schedule
will receive a floating holiday of nine (9) hours.
SECTION 4. Floating Holidays will be credited to the employee's leave bank the pay period in which
the holiday falls. Floating Holiday hours may not be carried over to the following calendar year. However,
Floating Holiday hours credited in either November or December may be carried over to the next calendar
year, but must be used by October 31 st of the following year.
SECTION 5. Employees shall receive payment for one hundred percent (100%) of their accumulated
Personal Leave/Floating Holiday leave upon service retirement, disability retirement, death, resignation,
or termination. Effective beginning of the first pay period in March 2018, leave payouts shall be paid at
the employee's base salary hourly rate of pay.
ARTICLE IX — PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SECTION 1. College course reimbursement
Employees are reimbursed 100% of the cost of tuition and books to a maximum of $2,000 per
calendar year for satisfactory completion of work related college courses. Requires prior written
approval of department head and City Manager and requires a C average or better grade.
Employees who participate in the program must sign the following agreement:
Educational Reimbursement- "I certify that I successfully completed the course(s), receiving at
least a grade of 'C' or better." (Attach copy of grade verification) Further, I agree to refund the City
or have deducted from my final paycheck any educational reimbursement funds received under
this program if I should leave the City's employment, voluntarily or through termination, with
cause, within one year after completion ofthe course work for which I am to receive reimbursement,
in accordance with the following schedule.
Below is the reimbursement schedule for the full months worked between course completion
and resignation dates and the percentage of the total reimbursement to be refunded to the City.
1 100%
7
50%
2 100%
8
40%
3 90%
9
30%
4 80%
10
20%
5 70%
11
10%
6 60%
12
0%
Probationary employees are not eligible to participate in this program.
SECTION 2. Professional memberships, conferences, meetings, and workshops
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With the approval of the department head and/or City Manager, the City also pays the cost of an
employee's professional membership fees and conference, meeting and workshop attendance.
ARTICLE X - COMPUTER LOAN PROGRAM
Effective upon adoption of this MOU by the City Council, the Computer Loan Program will be eliminated,
and no new computer loans will be granted by the City.
However, for current employees with outstanding Computer Loans, the City and employee shall continue
to recognize existing loan and repayment obligations under the same terms and conditions.
The following language is retained to reflect the prior understanding of the parties and for historical context:
"Employees are eligible to receive an interest-free loan not to exceed $4,000 for the purpose of
purchasing personal computer hardware, software, ergonomically correct furniture and related equipment.
Loans shall be repaid through payroll deductions over a three (3) year period. The City shall retain title,
as security, to any equipment purchased through the program until the loan is fully paid off. After the
fact financing shall be permitted upon the loan applicant receiving prior written approval from the
Director of Finance. Outstanding loan balances must be paid off at the time an employee separates from
the City: The Human Resources Department shall update Program guidelines periodically as necessitated
by changes in technology or organizational requirements."
ARTICLE XI - SALARY
SECTION 1. Sala
EH Adiutmeaats -
The City shall provide the following salary increases to employees, per Appendix G:
• Effective upon the first day of the first payroll period after City Council ratification of this MOU,
increase base salary by 4%
• Effective Pay Period that includes October 1, 2019: increase base salary by Two Percent (2%)
• Effective Pay Period that includes October 1, 2020: increase base salary by Two Percent (2%)
• Effective Pay Period that includes October 1, 2021: increase base salary by Two Percent (2%)
SECTION 2. Accelerated Salary Stena Advancement - Employees who have yet to reach the top step of
their salary range are eligible to receive an accelerated salary step advancement of upto 5% in 12 -month
period upon recommendation and approval by the department head and City Manager. An accelerated
salary advancement is intended to recognize an employee's job performance which consistently and
uniquely exceeds normal expectations.
SECTION 3. Direct Deoosit - The City shall electronically deposit employees' paychecks directly into
a savings or checking account designated by the employee. Employees shall be responsible for providing
the Finance Department with the correct transit routing number of their banking institution and the correct
number of the account into which their paycheck will be deposited. Exceptions to this policy shall be
granted upon an employee's written request to the Finance Director.
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SECTION 4. Use of Personal Vehicle on Official City Business - Employees authorized to use a personal
vehicle while on official City business will receive mileage reimbursement at the rate approved by the
Internal Revenue Service. Use of a personal vehicle will not be authorized if a City motor pool vehicle
is available to the employee. Under appropriate circumstances, Department Heads may approve
exceptions to the requirement to utilize available motor pool vehicles.
SECTION 5. bdUcational Incentive Pay - Eligible employees shall be entitled to receive educational
incentive pay as shown below. Eligibility for educational incentive pay is limited to those employees who
(a) are working in ajob classification that does not require a bachelor's degree or higher degree to qualify
for the classification, and (b) were awarded such degree from an accredited college or university in
one of the majors of public administration, business administration, engineering, or other job-related
major, which had been approved by the department head, in writing.
Educational Incentive Pay
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 30S - 395: Job $318.04/month
Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 40S - 49S: Job $407.11/month
Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 50S - 535: $449.38/month
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If during the term of this Memorandum of Understanding a job classification is assigned a salary grade
higher than 535, the flat dollar monthly amount of educational incentive pay for the employee shall be
equivalent to five percent (5%) of the base salary E Step of the salary grade.
SECTION 6. Bili t >r►�,}? - An employee who demonstrates conversational and written fluency in a
language approved by their Department Head and who is assigned duties in which such language skills
are regularly used, shall be entitled to bilingual pay as shown below.
The City will be responsible for utilizing a standardized, industry accepted test (such as Berlitz, Inc.) to
determine an employee's qualifications for bilingual pay.
Bilingual Pay
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 30S - 395: $159.02/month
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 40S — 495: $203.56/month
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 50S- 53S: $224.69/month
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If during the term of this Memorandum of Understanding a job classification is assigned a salary grade
higher than 535, the flat dollar monthly amount of bilingual pay for the employee shall be equivalent to
two and one-half percent (2.5%) ofthe base salary E Step of the salary grade.
SECTION 7. Longevity Pay - An employee who has completed twenty (20) years of continuous service
with the City of El Segundo shall be entitled to longevity pay as shown below
Longevity Pay
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 30S - 395: $318 .04/month
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 40S - 49S: $407.11/month
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 50S - 53S: $449.38/month
If during the term of this Memorandum of Understanding a j ob classification is assigned a salary grade higher
than 53S, the flat dollar monthly amount of longevity pay for the employee shall be equivalent to five
percent (5%) of the base salary E Step of the salary grade.
SECTION 8. Certification 1' - Employees occupying the job classifications of Wastewater Supervisor
and Water Supervisor shall be entitled to certification pay as shown below for obtaining and maintaining
a certification above the level required on the City Council approved class specification. Eligible
certifications will be determined by the employee's Department Head.
Certification Pay
Job Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 30S - 39S: Job $318.04/month
Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 40S - 49S: Job $407.11/month
Classifications Occupying Salary Grades 50S - 53S: $449.38/month
If during the term of this Memorandum of Understanding a job classification is assigned a salary grade
higher than 53S, the flat dollar monthly amount of certification pay for the employee shall be equivalent
to five percent (5%) of the base salary E Step of the salary grade
SECTION 9. Salary Table Step Advancement
The advancement of an employee from Step A to Step B shall be on the beginning of the pay period
immediately following satisfactory completion of his or her first six months' service. Advancement from Step
B to Step C, from Step C to Step D, and from Step D to Step E, shall each occur on the beginning of the pay
period immediately after completion of one year's satisfactory service in each of such classification.
A supervisor may recommend at any time to the department head that an employee receive an accelerated
advancement to the next salary Step B, C, D, or E, based on exemplary job performance. If the department
head concurs, he/she shall submit a written report on the prescribed form to the Director of Human
Resources citing specific examples of work performed by the employee that consistently exceeds
expectations and warrants approval of the next salary step prior to the employee's anniversary date. The
Director of Human Resources shall submit the request along with a recommendation for action by the City
Manager. An employee may receive more than one salary step advancement within a twelve (12) month
period of time, if warranted. The accelerated salary advancement(s) shall not change the affected employee's
anniversary date.
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ARTICLE XII - UNIFORMS
Employees occupying the following job classifications shall have uniforms and footwear provided and
replaced by the City:
Assistant Fire Marshal
Crime Prevention Analyst I/11
Emergency Management Coordinator
Environmental Safety Manager
Equipment Maintenance Supervisor
Facilities Maintenance Supervisor
Fire Marshal
Park Maintenance Supervisor
Police Records Supervisor
Principal Environmental Specialist
Senior Building Inspector
Street Maintenance Supervisor
Wastewater Supervisor
Water Supervisor
Department Heads will determine appropriate uniform and footwear for employees occupying
Departmental job classifications. Style and cost will be determined solely by the City, with the
Association provided the opportunity for information input. The determination of the City shall not be
subject to administrative or judicial appeal. Uniform cleaning services shall be provided by the City.
In addition, an Association member occupying the job classifications of Assistant Fire Marshal,
Environmental Safety Manager, Principal Environmental Specialist, Fire Marshal, Crime Prevention
Analyst 1/11, Emergency Management Coordinator, Police Records Supervisor and Senior Building
Inspector shall receive a uniform cleaning allowance of $400 per year.
ARTICLE XIII -OVERTIME
SECTION 1. Fail° Labor Standards Act --Overtime Compensation
{a) Pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act, employees occupying the classifications and assignments
described in Appendix A, are entitled to overtime pay at the rate of one and one-half (1.5) times their
regular rate of pay for all hours worked in excess of forty (40) hours in a seven (7) day workweek, as
defined in Article XVI, Section 9.
(b) Effective January 6, 2018, employees of this bargaining unit shall work a "9/80" schedule, which
consists of eighty (80) scheduled hours in a 14 -day (two-week) cycle where, (1) in one week the employee
works four 9 -hour workdays and one 8 -hour workday , and (2) the subsequent week consists of four 9 -
hour workdays. For FLSA purposes the "work week" for FLSA overtime purposes shall be established as
four hours into the shift of the eight-hour day and in such a manner that no consecutive seven-day (168
hour) period shall exceed 40 hours. The work week for employees working other than a Monday through
Friday schedule shall be defined in such a manner as to comply with FLSA work period requirements.
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SECTION 2. Definition of hours worked for overtime -Computation purposes
The City, for purposes of calculating overtime pay, will include holiday leave as time worked.
The following shall not be considered as time worked for purposes of computing entitlement to overtime
compensation:
Meal breaks;
2. Utilization of paid or non -paid leaves of absence (including but not limited to
vacation leave, sick leave, leave without pay, compensatory time off);
3. All travel time to and from the work site when responding to a regularly
scheduled shift;
4. All time in off-duty voluntary training assignments (homework, study time,
meal time, sleep, etc.).
5. All off-duty travel;
6. All time for personal preparation and clean up;
7. Any other time not deemed hours worked by the FLSA, except holiday leave.
SECTION 3. Overtime Authorization
No employee shall be eligible for receipt of overtime compensation unless the working of overtime
hours has been specifically authorized in advance by the employee's supervisor.
SECTION 4. Affected employees shall be entitled to accumulate a maximum of eighty (80) hours of
compensatory time off. Utilization of compensatory time off shall be subject to approval of the affected
employee's department head. Employees may opt to receive cash payment for accrued compensatory
leave earned yearly. Employees shall receive payment for one hundred percent (100%) of their
accumulated compensatory leave upon service retirement, disability retirement, death, resignation, or
termination. Effective beginning of the first pay period in March 2018, leave payouts shall be paid at
the employee's base salary hourly rate of pay.
SECTION 5. Affected employees ordered by a supervisor to return to a designated worksite other than
during the employee's regularly scheduled hours of work and at a time not contiguous with said regularly
scheduled hours of work, shall be provided a minimum of four (4) hours work time credit. Said minimum
of four (4) hours shall then be included within the work period described in Section 1 for computation
of overtime purposes.
ARTICLE XIV - GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
SECTION I. DEFINITION OF TERMS
A. Grievance - A grievance is a violation, misinterpretation or misapplication of a specific
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written departmental or agency rule or regulation or a specific provision of a
memorandum of understanding. A grievance is distinct from an appeal in that it is a
violation, misinterpretation or misapplication of a specific written departmental or
agency rule and/or policy or a specific provision of a memorandum of understanding.
B. Grievaiat. - A grievant is an employee or group of employees adversely affected by an
act or omission of the agency.
C. Dom- A day is a calendar day.
D. Immediate Suoervisor - The first level supervisor of the grievant.
SECTION 2. TIME LIMITS
A Comoliance and Flexibility - With the written consent of both parties, the time
limitation for any step may be extended or shortened.
B. Calculation of Time Lim.its_- Time limits for appeal provided ineach level shall begin
the day following receipt of awritten decision or appeal by the parties.
C. Failure to Meet Timeliness - Failure at any level of this procedure to communicate the
decision on a grievance by the City within the specified time limits shall permit lodging
an appeal at the next level of the procedure within the time allotted had the decision been
given. If the grievance is not processed by the grievant or grievant in accordance with
the time limits, the decision last made by the City shall be deemed final.
SECTION 3. PROCEDURE
Grievances will be processed following the procedures set forth below.
A. Level I- Within ten days of the date the employee reasonably knew or should have known
of the incident giving rise to the grievance, the employee should make an effort to resolve
the grievance informally with the employee's immediate supervisor. The supervisor shall
hold discussions and attempt to resolve the grievance within five (5) days.
B. Level II - In the event such efforts do not produce a mutually satisfactory resolution, the
grievant shall have ten (10) calendar days to file a formal written grievance after the
employee's immediate supervisor is unable to resolve the grievance through the discussion
process. Under no circumstances may a grievance be filed more than twenty-five (25)
days from the date the employee knew or should have known of the incident giving rise to
the grievance.
1. Procedure for 1°ilim-,, a Grievance -
Infiling a grievance, the employee should set forth the following information:
a. The specific section of the departmental or agency rules or regulations
allegedly violated, misinterpreted or misapplied.
b. The specific act or omission which gave rise to the alleged violation,
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misinterpretation or misapplication.
C. The date or dates on which the violation, misinterpretation or misapplication
occurred.
d. What documents, witnesses or other evidence supports the grievant's position,
e. The remedy requested.
C. Level 111- If the grievance is not resolved by the immediate supervisor the grievant may
presentthe grievance inwritingtothe department headwithinfive {5)days. The department
head will respond in writing within ten (10) days.
D. Level IV — See Article XXI — binding arbitration.
SECTION 4. MATTERS EXCLUDED FROM THE GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
A. The grievance procedure is not intended to be used for the purpose of resolving
complaints, requests or changes in wages, hours or working conditions.
B. The procedure is not intended to be used to challenge the content of employee
evaluations or performance reviews.
C. The procedure is not intended to be used to challenge the merits of a reclassification, lay-
off, transfer, denial of reinstatement, or denial of a step or merit increase.
D. The procedure is not intended to be used in cases of reduction in pay, demotion,
suspensions or a termination, but is subject to the formal appeal process as outlined in
Ordinance 586.
SECTION 5. CONFERENCES
Grievants and City representatives, upon request, shall have the right to a conference at any
level of the grievance procedure.
SECTION 6. EMPLOYEE APPEALS FROM DISCIPLINARY ACTIONS
A. Any permanent employee in the Classified Service who has been suspended, for a period
of six (6) days or more, demoted, dismissed, or reduced in pay shall have a period of ten
(10) days following written notification in which to file an appeal or answer the charges.
B, The employee shall forthwith be given in said written notification a statement ofthe extent
and nature of any disciplinary action and a full explanation of the reasons for the action
including specific information as to time and place of incidents.
C. Each disciplinary action shall automatically be given administrative review by the City
Manager, immediately after the written notification, and the City Manager may
countermand the disciplinary action or modify the discipline imposed prior to any
hearing as hereinafter provided.
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D. Appeals and requests for hearings shall be filed with the City Manager, and then
immediately referred to the Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission or City
Council, as the case may be.
E,. The Commission shall have the right to refuse to hold a hearing in any case in which the
appellant fails to present sufficient grounds to warrant a hearing.
F. Procedures for all hearings to be conducted by the Count shall be in accordance with the
Rules ofthe Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission.
G. Alternatively, employees may appeal discipline to binding arbitration pursuant to Article
XXI.
ARTICLE XV -LAYOFF
SECTION 1. Grounds fo r L a o f - Whenever, in the judgment of the City Council, it becomes
necessary to reduce the workforce because of a lack of funds, lack of work or reorganization, an
employee may be laid off, reduced in classification or displaced by another employee. Such layoff,
reduction or displacement shall result from action of the City Manager or his designee. Such action shall
not entitle the laid off, reduced or displaced employee to a right of appeal. The City Manager shall
recommend to the City Council each classification to be affected by any such change.
SECTION 2. Notice to An employee filling a full-time position shall be given fourteen
(14) Calendar day's prior notice of lay off. Employees transferred, reduced or displaced shall be given five
(5) calendar days' notice. The City Council may approve a reduction inthe notice requirements,
if so recommended by the City Manager.
SECTION 3. At -Will Employees_- The City Manager retains the right to layoff or alter the work
assignment of the following employees at any time without notice or right of appeal: emergency
employees, temporary or seasonal employees, part-time employees, original probationary employees,
promotional probationary employees and employees designated as at -will. The promotional probationary
employee shall revert to his/her previously held classification and position without loss of seniority.
SECTION 4. procedures f r L a v o f - A permanent employee in a classification effected by a
reduction in force shall be laid off based on seniority in City service; that is the employee with the least
City service shall be laid off first, followed by the employee with the second least City service, etc.
Seniority shall be determined by hire date.
SECTION 5. Breakcin Ties;- Provided that seniority, hiring date is equal retention points for job
performance shall be credited on the basis of the average of the overall evaluation ratings for the last three
(3) years in a classification, provided the last rating had been filed at least thirty (3 0) days prior to the date
of the layoff notice. Retention points are as follows:
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1. "Unsatisfactory" rating
2. "Improvement needed" rating
3. "Satisfactory" rating
4. "Exceeds expectations" rating
5. "Outstanding" rating
0 retention points.
6 retention points.
12 retention points.
18 retention points.
24 retention points.
SECTION 6. Reduction to a Vacant Position - An employee designated for layoff as a result of abolition
of a position or classification may be offered appointment to a vacant position in a lower classification, if
the employee is qualified by education and/or experience for such position. If there is more than one
qualified employee eligible to be offered such appointment(s), the offer(s) shall be based on seniority, with
the employee with the highest seniority offered the position first, then the next highest, etc. ff the employees
have the same seniority, then the procedure for breaking ties set forth above shall apply. An employee
accepting such appointment shall be placed on the step for the lower classification most closely
corresponding, but in no case higher, than to the salary step of his/her previously held position, and the
employee will be assigned a new salary anniversary date on the effective date of the appointment.
SECTION 7. Disolacement Ri2bts - An employee designated for layoff as a result of abolition of a position
or classification may displace (bump) an employee in a lower classification, if the employee previously
held permanent status in such classification. An employee who is bumped shall be laid off in the same
manner as an employee whose position or classification is abolished.
SECTION 8. Salary Placement - An employee who is assigned to a lower classification as a result of a
displacement (bump) shall receive the compensation reflected by the step of the salary range of the new
classification closest to the compensation of the employee in the previous classification, and the employee
will also be assigned a new salary anniversary date on the effective date of the appointment. An
employee accepting such appointment shall be placed on the step for the lower classification most
closely corresponding, but in no case higher, than the salary step of his/her previously held position,
and the employee will be assigned a new salary anniversary date on the effective date of the appointment.
The employee shall, however, retain seniority while his/her name remains on a reemployment list or lists,
as set forth in subsection 9.
SECTION 9. Reemolovinent List - The names of permanent employees who have been laid off under
this section (including employees who bumped down) shall be placed, in order of seniority from highest to
lowest, on a reemployment list for their classification or any lower classification for which the employee
is qualified by education and/or experience. Persons on such lists shall retain eligibility for appointment
there from for a period for three years from the date their names were placed on the list. As a vacancy within
a classification or a lower related classification becomes available, the name appearing at the top for the list
shall be offered the opportunity to fill the vacancy. The name of an individual selected from the list to
fill the vacancy who refuses the re-employment offer shall be permanently removed from the re-
employment list without right of appeal. Laid -off employees do not earn seniority credit or benefits while
on the re-employment list.
SECTION 10. ftilits twori Reemplrr iay eM -If a person is reemployed by the City within three years, the
employee's accumulated sick leave allowance, seniority and vacation accrual shall be reinstated. Employees
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should be placed on the same salary step previously held upon reemployment.
ARTICLE XVI — MISCELLANEOUS
SECTION 1. Credit Union - Employees are eligible to join the South Bay Credit Union.
SECTION 2. Temporary Assignment to Hip °„ Classification - Where an employee is qualified for and
is required for an appreciable period of time to serve temporarily in and have the responsibility for
work in a higher class or position, when approved by the City Manager, such employee, while so
assigned, shall receive the entrance salary rate of that class or whatever step thereof that is not less than
five percent above his or her present rate, whichever is higher. For the purpose of this section,
"appreciable period of time" is defined as ten consecutive working days (eight working days if on
four/ten plan) or longer.
SECTION 3. Rest _Pri ds - All bargaining unit employees shall be provided a fifteen (15) minute rest -
break near the mid -point of every four hours of scheduled work. In order to ensure that such affected
employees are prepared to reconvene performance oftheir duties precisely at the conclusion of the fifteen
(15) minute rest -break, such employees are encouraged to take their break within the building where
they are regularly assigned or on the grounds immediately adjacent to the work assignment.
As it concerns lunch breaks, all affected employees are scheduled for either a thirty (30) or sixty (60)
minute lunch break depending upon the work assignment. Said scheduling shall be in accord with
pre-existing City practices and procedures.
Failure by an employee to utilize a rest or lunch break shall not result in any accumulation or other
"banking" of said unused time; nor shall failure to utilize said rest or lunch break time result in
conclusion of the employees regularly scheduled work shift at a time earlier than scheduled nor shall any
unused break time be utilized to extend a lunch break. However, in any instance where management
mandates that a rest or lunch break not be taken because of the need to provide services to the City,
then said additional work time shall be compensated in accord with this MOU, City Rules and Regulations
and applicable statutory requirements. Additionally, in said circumstances, management does have the
discretion to allow for early termination of an employee's regularly scheduled work hours in amounts of
time equivalent to the missed breaks.
SECTION 4. bequest for Reclassification Review
A. Basis for request - A bargaining unit employee or the Association may make a
request for reclassification once every two years, if an employee's job duties and responsibilities have
become significantly different over the two-year period.
B. Processing of request - The request for reclassification review must be submitted by the
employee or the Association to the employee's immediate supervisor. The employee's supervisor
shall submit a written recommendation to the employee's Department Head concerning the merits of
the reclassification review request. If the Department Head determines that the employee's job duties
and responsibilities have significantly changed, the Director of Human Resources will initiate the
reclassification review process.
Human Resources Department staff will have the responsibility to conduct the reclassification review
process. However, if the Association and the City mutually agree, a consultant may be utilized at any
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step of the reclassification review process. The cost of the agreed upon Consultant will be paid by
the City.
C. Comoonents of reclassification review -
1. The employee requesting the reclassification review will provide information summarizing
the scope and complexity of the duties and responsibilities of the position.
2. The employee requesting the reclassification review will be interviewed and observed at
work to assess the validity of the information provided by the employee and to develop a
full understanding of the job duties and responsibilities.
3. A salary survey will be performed comparing the employee's position with similar
positions in the Cities of Culver City, Gardena, Hawthorne, Hermosa Beach, Inglewood,
Los Angeles, Manhattan Beach, Redondo Beach, Santa Monica, Torrance, and the
County of Los Angeles. For purposes of the salary survey, the mid -point of the City's
current pay schedule will be compared to the midpoints of the surveyed public entities for
positions with similar education and/or experience requirements. Variances of+/- 5% will
be considered comparable to the prevailing rate.
D. Action by the Director of Hmnan Resources - The completed reclassification survey and a
draft job description shall be reviewed by the employee's supervisor and the Director of Human
Resources. The Director shall then meet and confer with the Association on the results of the
reclassification review. The Director shall then make his or her recommendation to the City Manager.
The Director shall recommend to the City Manager the approval of any reclassification request that
reflects a substantial change in the duties and responsibilities of the position.
E. Action by the City Council - All reclassifications must be approved by the City Council,
F. Effective date of reclassification - Any approved reclassification shall become effective the
pay period following approval.
G. Challenee to decision on reclassification reoucst„ The Association may challenge the denial of
the reclassification request by the Director of Human Resources, the City Manager or the City Council.
Any challenge to the denial of the reclassification request will be governed by this section and not by
Article XVI, Grievance Procedure. If a challenge is made, a new classification review will be
completed by a neutral entity selected by mutual agreement of the Association and the City. The parties
agree to accept the conclusions reached by the neutral entity. The cost of the consultant's services will
be shared equally by the Association and the City.
SECTION 5. Senioritv - For the purpose of this Memorandum of Understanding, seniority shall be
defined as a bargaining unit member's total, continuous employment in a position in the City's
classified service. Total, continuous employment is that which is uninterrupted by separation and
includes 1) actual time worked, 2) authorized leave of absence, both paid and unpaid, 3) family leave,
4) military leave and 5) industrial injury or illness leave. For purposes of this section, a leave of
absence without pay is limited to a maximum of 90 continuous days.
SECTION 6. Standby° Duty_- Standby Duty is the time that employees, who have been released from
duty, are specifically required by their supervisor to be available for return to duty when required by the
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City. During Standby Duty, employees are not required to remain at their City work station or any other
specified location. Standby Duty employees are free to engage in personal business or activities.
However, standby duty requires that employees:
1. Be ready to respond immediately.
2. Be reachable by paging device or telephone. The City may, in its discretion, provide a
paging device (e.g., a beeper) to an assigned Standby Duty employee.
3. Be able to report to work within one (1) hour of notification.
4. Refrain from activities which might impair their ability to perform assigned duties. This
includes, but is not limited to, abstaining from the consumption of any alcoholic beverage
and the use of any illegal drug or incapacitating medication.
5. Respond to any call back during the assigned standby period. As with any City
equipment, any paging device assigned to an employee is the responsibility of the
standby employee during the standby assignment. The employee is liable for loss or
damage to the paging device which is caused by the employee's negligence or intentional acts.
Failure of an employee to comply with the provisions of standby duty may subject the employee to
discipline, up to and including termination of employment with the City.
For each period of standby duty, employees shall be provided the choice of two (2) hours of
compensatory time off or two (2) hours of paid time. A period of standby duty shall be defined as one
(1) day, commencing at 0001 and ending at 2400.
An employee who uses sick leave or vacation leave during a standby period, occurring on or after
September 9, 2000, shall not be provided any form of compensation for the standby period, unless the
employee's department head approves, in writing, the provision of the normal standby period
compensation.
SECTION 7. Jury Dutv - Employees shall be entitled to a leave of absence for jury duty subject to
compliance with all of the following conditions:
A The employee must provide written notice ofthe expected jury duty to his or her supervisor as
soon as possible, but in no case later than 14 calendar days before the beginning of the jury duty.
B. During the first two weeks of jury duty, an employee shall be entitled to receive his or her
regular compensation.
C. For any portion of jury duty that extends beyond the first two weeks, such extended jury duty
period shall be without regular pay.
D. Any compensation for the first two weeks of jury duty, except travel reimbursement pay, must
be deposited with the Director of Human Resources.
E. While on jury duty, the employee must report to work during any portion of a day that the
employee is relieved of jury duty for three or more consecutive hours. Employees relieved of
jury duty for three or more consecutive hours may use accrued leave to take the rest of the
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day off, provided they have secured prior supervisory approval.
F. The employee must provide documentation of his or her daily attendance on j ury duty.
G. However, notwithstanding Section C above, employees may access accrued vacation leave,
sick leave and compensatory time, if jury duty extends beyond two weeks.
SECTION 8. Cell Phone Stipend - Employees in classifications which are currently issued a cell
phone may elect not to be issued cell phones and instead receive an eighty dollar ($80) monthly
stipend to offset the cost of utilizing their personal devices for work related purposes. Non-exempt
employees shall not use their personal cell phones to perform any work on behalf ofthe City outside of
normal working hours without prior supervisory approval. Employees who elect this option shall make
their personal cell phones and cell phone records available for inspection by the City on the same
terms and conditions as employees who are issued City cell phones.
SECTION 9. A signment of Work Schedule
Effective the first day of the first pay period in January 2018, employees of this bargaining unit shall
operate on a 9B0 work schedule. Employees shall typically be -assigned a Monday through Friday
9/80 schedule. The City and SPEA membership agree that the membership may be split into "A", "B",
and "C" shift by their respective Department Heads, such that "A" and "B" shift work opposite Fridays
and have opposite Fridays off, whereas "C" shift works Monday through Friday 5/40 schedule.
Due to operational needs, the City may assign employees to operate a different 9/80 schedule if the
change is intended to be permanent and the exercise of such right is not arbitrary, capricious,
retaliatory, or discriminatory. The City shall provide SPEA and the employee with 30 days' notice prior
to the implementation of any change in the designated workweek. Such notification shall provide a
description of the operational need for the proposed change.
The City shall not change an employee to any other schedule (5/40 or 4/10) without mutual written
agreement by (1) the employee, (2) his or her Department Head, and (3) the SPEA Association
Board.
SECTION 10. New Hire Notification
The City shall notify the Association of all new hires in positions in this bargaining unit (see Appendix
A) within 10 working days.
ARTICLE XVII - DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE STATEMENT AND SUBSTANCE
ABUSE POLICY, SMOKING POLICY, AND BREAK POLICY
The parties have met and conferred in good faith regarding the adoption of a revised drug-free
workplace statement and substance abuse policy dated July 1,2008, as well as a non-smoking policy
and break policy and the same shall be implemented concurrent with adoption ofthis MOU.
ARTICLE XVIII - PERSONNEL FILE
SECTION 1. The official personnel file of each employee shall be maintained in the Human
Resources Department. A unit member and/or Association representative authorized by the member, in
26
Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
writing, may review or obtain copies of material from the employee's file with the exception of
material that includes ratings, reports or records which are obtained prior to the employment of the
employee involved.
SECTION 2. Employees shall be provided any copies of derogatory material placed in their official
file. Employees will be requested to acknowledge they received any derogatory material prior to it
being placed in their personnel file.
SECTION 3. All customer or citizen letters of a positive nature and/or any City commendations,
letters of achievements and recognition will be placed inthe employee's personnel file.
ARTICLE XIX — ASSOCIATION DEDUCTIONS
Upon notification by the Association, the City shall deduct Association dues from the pay of employees
represented by the Association as required by law. Amounts to be deducted shall be certified to the
City by the appropriate Association official. Any collected authorized payroll deductions shall be
transmitted to the appropriate designated party.
The Association agrees to defend, indemnify and hold harmless the City from any claim, suit or liability
of any nature arising from the operation of this provision, including, but not limited to: (a) a challenge
to the validity of this Section; or (b) any action of the Association taken pursuant to, or in violation of,
this Section. The City will give the Association prompt written notice of any claim, suit or liability
which it contends is subject to this provision. It is also agreed that neither any employee nor the
Association shall have any claim for error against the City for any deductions made or not made, as the
case may be.
ARTICLE XX - CATASTROPHIC LEAVE BANK
Pursuant to the meet -and -confer process for 1997-98, it was agreed upon that effective July 1, 1997, or as
soon thereafter as is possible, the City shall establish a Catastrophic Leave Bank for represented
employees as follows:
I. PURPOSE
To establish a program whereby City employees may donate accumulated time to a
catastrophic sick leave bank to be used by permanent, part-time and full-time employees who
are incapacitated due to a catastrophic illness or injury.
2. DEFINITION
A catastrophic illness or injury is a chronic or long-term health condition that is incurable or
so serious that, if not treated, it would likely result in a long period of incapacity.
3. PROCEDURES
A. There is established a joint-employer/employee committee composed of an individual
from each recognized employee organization and a representative of City
Administration charged with administering the Catastrophic Leave Bank.
27
Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
B. Employees may transfer sick leave, vacation or compensatory leave to the
Catastrophic Leave Bank to be donated to an employee who is experiencing
catastrophic illness and has exhausted all personal sick leave. Such a transfer can be
made on July 1 of each year on forms provided by the City of El Segundo. The
employee to receive the donation will sign the "Request to Receive Donation" form
allowing publication and distribution of information regarding his/her situation.
C. Sick leave, vacation and compensatory time leave donations will be made in increments
of no less than one day. These will be hour for hour donations.
D. Employees must hold a minimum of one hundred (100) hours of accumulated
illness/injury leave after a donation has been made.
E. The donation of time is irrevocable. Should the recipient employee not use all of the
donated time for the catastrophic illness or injury, any balance will remain in the
Catastrophic Leave Bank to be administered by the committee and utilized for the next
catastrophic leave situation.
ARTICLE XXI — BINDING ARBITRATION
A. Civil Claims:
Both the City and individual employees covered by this Memorandum of Understanding agree
that the claims described in this Article shall be submitted to and determined exclusively by
binding arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act, in conformity with the procedures of the
California Arbitration Act ("CAA") (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. Sec 1280 et. seq, including section
1283.05 and all of the CAA's other mandatory and permissive rights to discovery). Nothing in
this Memorandum of Understanding shall prevent either party from obtaining provisional
remedies to the extent permitted by Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.8 either before the
commencement of or during the arbitration process. All rules of pleading, (including the right of
demurrer), all rules and judgment under Code of Civil Procedure Section 631.8 shall apply and be
observed. Resolution of the dispute shall be based solely upon the law governing the claims and
defenses pleaded.
The civil claims which are subject to final and binding arbitration shall include, but not be
limited to, any and all employment-related claims or controversies, such breach of
employment agreement, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligent
supervision or hiring, wrongful discharge in violation of public policy, unpaid wages of
overtime under the state and federal wage payment laws, breach of privacy claims,
intentional or negligent infliction of emotional distress claims, fraud, defamation, and
divulgence of trade secrets. This also specifically includes claims that could be asserted
under all state and federal anti -discrimination laws, including but not limited to the
California Fair Employment and Housing Act, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the
Family and Medical Leave Act, and claims for discrimination and harassment in
employment on the basis of race, age, sex, religion, national origin, alienage, religion,
marital status, sexual orientation, disability, political activity, or any other statutorily -
protected basis. It shall also include any and all claims an employee may have under the
Fair Labor Standards Act, the California Labor Code, and the Industrial Welfare
Commission Wage Orders, as well as any other state and federal statutes. This Article XXI
is further intended to apply to any claim Employee(s) may have against the City and/or any
28
Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
of its directors, employees, or agents, and to any and all past and future employment
relationships Employee may have with the City regardless of job position or title. City
shall also arbitrate all claims it has against the employee under the same rules and
regulations set forth herein.
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of this Article, employees covered by this Memorandum
of Understanding may elect to file a claim for workers' compensation and unemployment
insurance benefits with the appropriate state agencies, and administrative charges with the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, California Department of Fair Employment
and Housing, California Department of Labor Standards Enforcement, U.S. Department of
Labor and any similar state or federal agency. Unless otherwise required by applicable law,
all other employment-related claims shall be resolved by final and binding arbitration and
not by a jury in a court of law.
3. To the fullest extent permitted by law, employees covered by this Memorandum of
Understanding agree that they shall not join or consolidate claims submitted for arbitration
pursuant to this Article with those of any other persons, and that no form of class,
collective, or representative action shall be maintained without the mutual consent of the
parties. Any dispute over the validity, effect, or enforceability of the provisions of this
paragraph, including whether the arbitration may proceed as class, collective, or
representative action, shall be for a court of law and not an arbitrator to decide.
The City shall bear the costs of any arbitration conducted pursuant to this Article, including
the compensation of the Arbitrator, all administrative expenses, and CSR transcripts.
Except as may otherwise be required by law, the parties shall be responsible for their own
attorneys' fees and costs incurred in presenting their case to the Arbitrator. The Arbitrator
shall render a written award within 30 days after the matter is submitted for determination,
and the award of the arbitrator shall be final and binding on the City, and the employee.
The arbitration shall be held before a single arbitrator, who shall be an attorney at law and
an experienced employment law arbitrator. The arbitrator shall be mutually selected by
the parties. The Arbitrator shall have the power to award all legal relief available in a court
of law, including any and all damages that may be available for any of the claims asserted.
In addition, each of the parties shall retain all defenses that they would have in a judicial
proceeding, including defenses based on the expiration of the statute of limitations and that
the damages being sought are not authorized or are excessive.
B. Appeal of Discipline
The Parties understand that employees covered by this Memorandum of Understanding are entitled
to disciplinary appeal procedures under the City's Personnel Merit System Administrative Code.
Under Administrative Code Section 1-6-8, employees have the right to have the Los Angeles County
Civil Service Commission hear appeals from dismissal, demotion, and suspensions for a period of six
(6) days or longer. The Parties agree that an employee covered by this Memorandum of
Understanding may opt to have these disciplinary actions be submitted to binding and final
arbitration.
The arbitration shall be held before a single arbitrator, who shall be an experienced labor
and employment law arbitrator. The parties shall select an arbitrator from a list of seven
arbitrators provided by the State Mediation and Conciliation Service. If the parties are unable
to reach an agreement in the selection of a hearing officer, each shall strike names from the
list until a final name is selected as the Arbitrator.
29
Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
2. The City shall pay the costs of the arbitrator and court reporter fees and transcript, if a court
reporter is requested by the parties. The parties shall be responsible for their own attorneys'
fees and costs incurred in presenting their case to the Arbitrator.
3, Any dispute over the validity, effect, or enforceability of the provisions of this Article, shall
be for a court of law and not an arbitrator to decide.
4. Under this Section B, the Arbitrator's authority will be limited to determining: Whether the
City has satisfied the seven tests of just cause; and, if not, what is the appropriate remedy.
The Arbitrator shall render a written award within 30 days after the matter is submitted for
determination, and the award of the arbitrator shall be final and binding on the City, the
Association and the employee. The Arbitrator may not increase the level of discipline.
At least ten business days before the scheduled arbitration, the parties shall exchange the
following information: (i) a list of all witnesses each party intends to call during its case-
in -chief, and (ii) copies of all documents each party intends to introduce during its case -in -
chief.
C. Contract Interpretation Disputes
The Parties agree that any grievance filed under the Grievance Procedure, Article XIV, of this
Memorandum of Understanding shall be subject to final and binding arbitration. The Association
must file a written request for final and binding arbitration within ten (10) days of receipt of the City's
response at Level III.
1. The arbitration shall be held before a single arbitrator, who shall be an experienced labor
and employment law arbitrator. The parties shall select an arbitrator from a list of seven
arbitrators provided by the State Mediation and Conciliation Service. If the parties are unable
to reach an agreement in the selection of a hearing officer, each shall strike names from the
list until a final name is selected as the Arbitrator.
The City shall pay the costs of the arbitrator and court reporter fees and transcript, if a court
reporter is requested by the parties. The parties shall be responsible for their own attorneys'
fees and costs incurred in presenting their case to the Arbitrator.
Any dispute over the validity, effect, or enforceability of the provisions of this Article C,
shall be for a court of law and not an arbitrator to decide.
4. The Arbitrator's authority will be limited to interpreting the provisions of the Memorandum
of Understanding and the Arbitrator has no authority to add to, subtract from, or modify the
Memorandum of Understanding in any way. The Arbitrator shall have the authority to
determine questions of arbitrability of contract interpretation disputes. The Arbitrator shall
render a written award within 30 days after the matter is submitted for determination, and
the award of the arbitrator shall be final and binding on the City, the Association and the
employee.
5. At least ten business days before the scheduled arbitration, the parties shall exchange the
following information: (i) a list of all witnesses each party intends to call during its case-
in -chief; and (ii) copies of all documents each party intends to introduce during its case -in -
chief.
D. This Article XXI is entered into under the California Arbitration Act and the Meyers-Milias-Brown
Act, and shall be interpreted and construed in accordance with the law and procedures developed
under those respective statutes.
30
Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
ARTICLE XXII — Reopener:
A. Parties agree to reopener regarding amendments to the Personnel Merit System, modification of
Municipal Code that covers Personnel Merit System;
B. Parties agree to reopener regarding employee evaluation process, procedure, forms, and evaluation
criteria;
C. Parties agree that any and all changes proposed pursuant to this reopener provision can only be
implemented by mutual agreement of the parties.
31
For the Associatiow
Paul Samaras, President
64t-llardo Schon
Ma 'a erritos
Evanette G -r
I 71111—Z�Johq(n,
OL
Agreement No. 5759
Agreement No.
For the City of "I Segundo:
Scoti;A'itnick,C'TIty "anagen
I % .---) 121211,7
David errano, 41.r.=an Resources
L ren aniels, Human esot r es Manager
Dana VH"an Sr. Hu . man , sourcestnalyst
O�
Leslie D. Campbell, Human Resources Analyst
2- A
Date: Date- t
32
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL
EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
4% effective first pay-perioid following ratification by
City Council
30S
CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST I
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
DEPUTY CITY TREASURER
BASE
$5,971.13 $6,269.69
$6,583.17
$6,912.33
$7,257.94
32S
LIBRARIAN I
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
1 STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE
$6,216.96 $6,527.81
$6,854.20
$7,196.91
$7,556.76
33S
ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
PROPERTY OWNER COORDINATOR
MONTHLY
BASE
$6,344.51 $6,661.74
$6,994.82
$7,344.56
$7,711.79
RECREATION SUPERVISOR
WELLNESS COORDINATOR
34S
CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST II
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
1$7,238-96
BASE
$6,475.251$6,799.01
1$7,495.91
,$7,870.70
37S
EQUIPMENT MAINT. SUPERVISOR
1STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
PARK MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
BASE
$6,887.38 $7,231.75
$7,593.34
$7,973.00
$8,371.65
PROJECT SPECIALIST; SR. ACCOUNTANT
STREET MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
WATER/WASTEWATER SUPERVISOR
38S
CONSTRUCTION COORDINATOR
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
1$8,547.04
G.I.S..S. ANALYST
BASE
$7,031.67
1$7,752.41
$
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
RSI DESIGN COORDINATOR
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
39S INFORMATION SYSTEMS DEVELOPER STEP STEP A 'STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE $7,179.59 $7,538.57 $7,915.50 $8,311.27 $8,726.83
40S ACCOUNTING SUPERVISOR
ECONOMIC DEV. ANALYST
POLICE RECORDS SUPERVISOR
SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
42S ASSOCIATE ENGINEER
FACILITIES MAINT. SUPERVISOR
PLAN CHECK ENGINEER
PURCHASING AGENT
RSI SUPERVISOR
43S INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST
44S SENIOR BUILDING INSPECTOR
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY 1$8,082.64 1BASE $7,331.19 $7,697.75 ,$8,911.11
(STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
IBA MONTHLY $7,645.86 1$8,028.15 1$8,429.56 1$8,851.04 $9,293.59
STEP ISTEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE 1$7,809.12 $8,199.58 $8,609.56 $9,040.03 $9,492.04
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
'BASE $7,976.471$8,375.29 1$8,794.06 l$9,233.76 1$9,695.45
145S ASSISTANT FIRE MARSHALL 1STEP STEP A STEP B I'STEP C STEP D ISTEP E
MONTHLY
EMERGENCY MGMT. COORDINATOR 1BASE $8,148.00 $8,555.41 1$8,983.18 $9,432.33 1$9,903.95
PRINCIPAL ENVIRON. SPECIALIST 1
46S SENIOR ENGINEER ASSOCIATE ISTEP STEP A STEP B STEP C I STEP D (STEP E
1MONTHLY
BASE $8,323.82 $8,740.01 $9,177.01 1$9,635.86 1$10,117.65
4% effective first pay -period followign ratification by City Council
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
47S TECHNICAL SERVICES ANALYST STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C ISTEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE $8,504.03 $8,929.23 $9,375.69 1'$9,844.48 $10,336.70
49S FIRE MARSHAL STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE $8,878.07 $9,321.98 $9,788.08 $10,277.48 $10,791.35
52S PRINCIPAL PLANNER STEP STEP A STEP BSTEP C STEP D JISTEP E
MONTHLY
SENIOR PLAN CHECK ENGINEER BASE $9,474.94 $9,948.6
9 $10,446.12 $10,968,43
$11,516.85
53S ENVIRONMENTAL SAFTEY MGR. STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE $9,598.24$10,078.16 �$10,582.061$11,111.171$11,666.72
4% effective first pay -period followign ratification by City Council
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
2% effective October 1, 2019
Agreement No. 5759
30S
CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST I
STEP STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
DEPUTY CITY TREASURER
BASE SALARY $6,090.55 $6,395.08
$6,714.83
$7,050.57
$7,403.10
32S
LIBRARIAN I
B STEP STEP A STEP B
1 STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
1 BASE SALARY $6,341.30 $6,658.37
1$6,991.29
$7,340.85
,$7,707.89
33S
ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
STEP STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
PROPERTY OWNER COORDINATOR
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,471.40 $6,794.97
$7,134.72
1$7,491.45
$7,866.03
RECREATION SUPERVISOR
WELLNESS COORDINATOR
34S
CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST II
STEP STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,604.751$6,934.99
1$7,281.74
($7,645.83
$8,028.12
37S EQUIPMENT MAINT. SUPERVISOR
PARK MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
PROJECT SPECIALIST, SR. ACCOUNTANT
STREET MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
WATER/WASTEWATER SUPERVISOR
38S CONSTRUCTION COORDINATOR
G.I.S. ANALYST
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
RSI DESIGN COORDINATOR
2% effective October 1, 2019
STEP STEP A I STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,025.13 1$7,376.38 $7,745.20 $8,132.46 $8,539.09
ISTEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
1MONTHLY
BASE SALARY „$7,172.30 1$7,530.92 1$7,907.46 1$8,302.84 1$8,717.98
39S
40S
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
INFORMATION SYSTEMS DEVELOPER STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
(MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,323.18 $7,689.34 $8,073.81 $8,477.50 1$8,901.37
ACCOUNTING SUPERVISOR
ECONOMIC DEV. ANALYST
POLICE RECORDS SUPERVISOR
SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
42S ASSOCIATE ENGINEER
FACILITIES MAINT. SUPERVISOR
PLAN CHECK ENGINEER
PURCHASING AGENT
RSI SUPERVISOR
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,477.81 $7,851.70 1$8,244.29 1$8,656.50 $9,089.33
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,798.78 $8,188.72 1$8,S98.15 1$9,028.06 1$9,479.46
43S INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D iSTEP E
STEP E
MONTHLY
1BASESALARY
$7,965.30 $8,363.57
$8,781.75
$9,220.83 $9,681.88
44S SENIOR BUILDING INSPECTOR
455 ASSISTANT FIRE MARSHALL
EMERGENCY MGMT. COORDINATOR
PRINCIPAL ENVIRON. SPECIALIST
46S SENIOR ENGINEER ASSOCIATE
2% effective October 1, 2019
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,136.00 1$8,542.80 1$8,969.94 1$9,418.43 1$9,889.3S
STEP STEP ASTEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,310.96 ($8,726.51 $9,162.84 $9,620.98 $10,102.03
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP CSTEP
D
STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY
$8,490.29 $8,914.81
$9,360.55
$9,828.58
$10,320.00
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
47S TECHNICAL SERVICES ANALYST (STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
(MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,674.11 $9,107.81 .$9,563.20 $10,041.36 $10,543.43
1
49S FIRE MARSHAL STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $9,055.64 $9,508.42 $9,983.84 $10,483.03 $11,007.18
1
152S PRINCIPAL PLANNER ,STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
SENIOR PLAN CHECK ENGINEER IBASESALARY $9,664.44 $10,147.66 $10,655.04.$11,187.80 $11,747.19
U
53S ENVIRONMENTAL SAFTEY MGR. STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
1 MONTHLY
ASE SALARY $9,790.21 1$10,279.72 $10,793.70 1$11,333.39 1$11,900.06
2% effective October 1, 2019
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
2% effective October 1, 2020
Agreement No. 5759
30S
CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST I
I STEP STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
I STEP E
MONTHLY
DEPUTY CITY TREASURER
BASE SALARY $6,212.36
$6,522.98
$6,849.13
$7,191.59
1$7,551.17
32S
LIBRARIAN I STEP STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,468.13
$6,791.54
$7,131.11
$7,487.67
$7,862.05
33S ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
PROPERTY OWNER COORDINATOR
RECREATION SUPERVISOR
WELLNESS COORDINATOR
34S CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST II
37S EQUIPMENT MAINT. SUPERVISOR
PARK MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
PROJECT SPECIALIST; SR. ACCOUNTANT
STREET MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
WATER/WASTEWATER SUPERVISOR
385 CONSTRUCTION COORDINATOR
G.I.S. ANALYST
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
RSI DESIGN COORDINATOR
2% effective October 1, 2020
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E 1
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,600.83 $6,930.87 $7,277.41 $7,641.28 $8,023.35
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,736.85 1$7,073.69 1$7,42.7.37 $7,798.74 1$,8,188.68
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,165.63 $7,523.91 ,$7,900.11 $8,295.11 $8,709.87
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,315.75 1$7,681.54 1$8,065.61 1$8,468.89 1$8,892.34
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
39S
INFORMATION SYSTEMS DEVELOPER
IS'TEP
STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY
1$7,469.64
$7,843.13
$8,235.28
$8,647.05
$9,079.40
40S
ACCOUNTING SUPERVISOR
STEP
STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
ECONOMIC DEV. ANALYST
BASE SALARY
_$7,627.37
1$8,008.74
1$8,4109.17
1$8,829.63
1$9,271.11
POLICE RECORDS SUPERVISOR
SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
42S
ASSOCIATE ENGINEER
STEP
iSTEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
1$8,770.12
1$9,208.62
FACILITIES MAINT. SUPERVISOR
BASE SALARY
$7,954.75
1$8,352.49
$9,669.05
PLAN CHECK ENGINEER
PURCHASING AGENT
RSI SUPERVISOR
43S
INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST
STEP
STEP A
(STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E 1
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY
$8,124.61
1$8,530.84
$8,957.38
$9,405.25
$9,875.51
44S
SENIOR BUILDING INSPECTOR
STEP
1STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E 1
MONTHLY
1$9,606.80
1$10,087.14
BASE SALARY
1$8,298.72
1$8,713.65
1$9,149.33
,
455
ASSISTANT FIRE MARSHALL
(STEP
STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
EMERGENCY MGMT. COORDINATOR
1BASE SALARY
$8,477.18
1$8,901.04
$9,346.10
$9,813.40
$10,304.07
PRINCIPAL ENVIRON. SPECIALIST
I
,
46S
SENIOR ENGINEER ASSOCIATE
STEP
STEP A
'S'TEP B
ISTEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY
$8,660.10
$9,093.10
1$9,547.76
$10,025.15 $10„526.40
2% effective October 1, 2020
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
47S TECHNICAL SERVICES ANALYST
ISTEP STEP A
ISTEP B
STEP C
(STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,847.59
,$9,289.97
$9,754.47 1$10,242.19 $10,754.30
49S FIRE MARSHAL (STEP STEP A
STEP B
STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
1BASESALARY
1$9,236.75
$9,698.59
$10,183.52 $10,692.69 $11,227.33
52S PRINCIPAL PLANNER
SENIOR PLAN CHECK ENGINEER
53S ENVIRONMENTAL SAFTEY MGR.
2% effective October 1, 2020
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $9,857.73 $10,350.61 $10,868.15 $11,411.55 $11,982.13
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $9,986.01 1$10,485.31 1$11,009.58 1$11,560.06 1$12,138.06
Agreement Na. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
2% effective October 1, 2021
CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST!
305 STEP STEP A STEP B 1 STEP C STEP D STEP E
DEPUTY CITY TREASURER MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,336.61 $6,653.44 1$6,986.11 $7,335.42 ,$7,702.19
32S LIBRARIAN I
1335 ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
PROPERTY OWNER COORDINATOR
RECREATION SUPERVISOR
WELLNESS COORDINATOR
34'S CRIME PREVENTION ANALYST 11
375 EQUIPMENT MAINT. SUPERVISOR
PARK MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
PROJECT SPECIALIST; SR. ACCOUNTANT
,STREET MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
WATER/WASTEWATER SUPERVISOR
I
38S CONSTRUCTION COORDINATOR
G.I.S. ANALYST
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
RSI DESIGN COORDINATOR
2% effective October 1, 2021
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,597.49 $6,927.37 $7,273.73 $7,637.42 $8,019.29
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C I STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY 1$6,732.84 $7,069.49 $7,422.96 1$7,794.11 ($8,183.81
(STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $6,871,58 1$7,225.16 1$7,57S.92 1$7,954.72 1$8,3S2.4S
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D (STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,308.94 1$7,674.39 $8,058.11 $8,461.01 1$8,884.06
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $7,462.06 1$7,835.17 1$8,226.92 $8,638.27 1$9,070.18
39S
40S
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
INFORMATION SYSTEMS DEVELOPER
STEP
STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
$8,287.10 ',$8,701.46
MONTHLY
$9,593.36
1$9,260.99
BASE SALARY
$7,619.04
$7,999.99
$8,399.99
$8,819.99
ACCOUNTING SUPERVISOR STEP
STEP A
STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
1$9,456.54
ECONOMIC DEV. ANALYST BASE SALARY
$7,779.92
1$8,168.91
1$8,577.36
1$9,006.23
POLICE RECORDS SUPERVISOR
SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST
42S ASSOCIATE ENGINEER
FACILITIES MAINT. SUPERVISOR
PLAN CHECK ENGINEER
PURCHASING AGENT
RSI SUPERVISOR
43S INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST
44S SENIOR BUILDING INSPECTOR
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,113.85 1$8,519.54 $8,945.52 1$9,392.80 $9,862.43
STEP
STEP A STEP B
STEP C
STEP D
STEP E
MONTHLY
1$10,073.02
BASE SALARY
$8,287.10 ',$8,701.46
$9,136.53
$9,593.36
I
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,464.69 1$8,887.93 1$9,332.32 1$9,798.94 1$10,288.88
45S ASSISTANT FIRE MARSHALL STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
EMERGENCY MGMT. COORDINATOR BASE SALARY $8,646.73 $9,079.06 $9,533.02 $10,009.67 $10,510.15
PRINCIPAL ENVIRON. SPECIALIST
46S SENIOR ENGINEER ASSOCIATE
2% effective October 1, 2021
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP' D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $8,833.30 $9,274.97 $9,7'38.71 $10,2,2,5.65 $10,736.93
47S
49S
Agreement No. 5759
CITY OF EL SEGUNDO
SALRY TABLES
SUPERVISORY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEE ASSOCIATION
TECHNICAL SERVICES ANALYST ]STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $9,024.54 $9,475.77 $9,949.56 $10,447.04 $10,969.39
FIRE MARSHAL
52S PRINCIPAL PLANNER
SENIOR PLAN CHECK ENGINEER
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $9,421.48 (,$9,892.56 $10,387.19 ,$10,906.54 $11,451.87
STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $10,054.88 $10,557.63 $11,085.51 $11,639.781$12,221,77
a
53S ENVIRONMENTAL SAFTEY MGR. STEP STEP A STEP B STEP C STEP D STEP E
MONTHLY
BASE SALARY $10,185.73 $10,695.02 j$11,229.77 ($711,791.26 $12,380.82
2% effective October 1, 2021