The purpose of the merit system is to establish and set forth
a uniform system for competitive, performance-based hiring, promotion
and retention of employees for the Charles County Sheriff's Office.
A. No person may be hired to, promoted to, or experience a change of
pay within a merit system position except in accordance with merit
system rules.
B. Exclusions.
(1) Probationary employees serve in an at-will status and do not become
merit system employees until they have attained regular status.
(2) Part-time, temporary, contractual and emergency employees are not
part of the merit system.
(3) Individuals in appointed positions serve in an at-will status and
are not part of the merit system. Individuals serving in appointed
positions may be dismissed, demoted or reassigned at the sole discretion
of the Sheriff.
C. Employees in grant-funded positions are within the merit system,
assuming they meet the qualifications of their probationary period,
with the exception that they may be separated without cause based
upon the loss of grant funding and any other special provisions set
forth in the grant funding agreement.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
APPOINTING AUTHORITY
The authority to hire, dismiss, promote, transfer and make
such other employment decisions concerning positions within, and in
accordance with, the rules of the merit system. The Sheriff is the
appointing authority for all merit system and non-merit system positions.
APPOINTED POSITIONS
Regular full-time positions, outside the merit system, which
are staffed through an at-will employment relationship. Employees
in appointed positions serve at the pleasure of the Sheriff and may
be dismissed with or without cause. Appointed positions include the
Assistant Sheriff, officers appointed to the ranks of Lieutenant Colonels,
Majors, Captains, and the Director of Administrative Services, the
Director of the Charles County Detention Center and others as added
or deleted by the Sheriff.
CLASSIFICATION
The process of reviewing the duties and responsibilities
of a position and incorporating these duties and responsibilities
into a position description.
CONTRACTUAL EMPLOYEE
An individual who, under a written agreement, provides temporary
personal services to the office of the Sheriff for pay, who is not
employed in a budgeted position, and who has an employer-employee
relationship with the Office of the Sheriff, in which the Office of
the Sheriff furnishes the necessary tools and a place to work, has
the right to control and direct the details, means, and results of
the performance or services and has the right to discharge the individual
from employment.
DEMOTION
The movement of a merit system employee from the currently
occupied pay grade or rank to a lower pay grade or rank.
ELIGIBILITY LIST
A list of persons who have satisfactorily completed all of
the requirements necessary to become eligible for appointment or promotion
to a merit system position.
EMERGENCY EMPLOYEE
An employee serving in an at-will, temporary relationship
with the Office of the Sheriff, which may only be activated in the
event of an immediate need for an individual with specialized skills
or knowledge. An emergency employee is not part of the merit system.
EMPLOYEE
One employed by the Charles County Sheriff's Office
for wages or salary, in an at-will or regular position where the Office
of the Sheriff has the right and the ability to direct the individual's
conduct and work performance.
FIELD PROMOTION
The advancement of a merit system employee to a rank or pay
grade higher than the one currently occupied by that employee as a
result of a particularly heroic, meritorious, valiant or courageous
act on the part of the employee.
GRANT-FUNDED POSITIONS
Positions which are funded in part or in total by federal/state
funds, the continuation of which may be strictly dependent on that
funding.
MERIT SYSTEM
The name given to the classified system which includes the
regulations and procedures prescribed in and promulgated under the
authority of this article, the Director of Administrative Services,
the Charles County Sheriff's Office Administrative and Operational
Manual, position descriptions, the Charles County Sheriff's Office
pay plan and all Charles County Sheriff's Office employees who
are included in the merit system of the Charles County Sheriff's
Office under this article.
MERIT SYSTEM POSITIONS
All regular full-time positions within the Office of the
Sheriff, except that of the Sheriff, Assistant Sheriff, officers appointed
to the ranks of Lieutenant Colonel, Major, Captain, and the Director
of Administrative Services, the Director of the Charles County Detention
Center, probationary employees, student officers, contractual employees,
temporary employees, and emergency employees.
PAY PLAN
The written salary scales placing every position in a pay
grade. Each pay grade consists of a maximum and minimum level and
intermediate levels of pay.
POSITION
A group of duties and responsibilities assigned to one employee.
A position may be vacant or occupied.
POSITION DESCRIPTION
A written explanation of one position or a number of positions
with the same duties and responsibilities, essential functions and
title for the position. A position description may contain the minimum
qualifications and performance specifications applicable.
PROBATIONARY EMPLOYEE
An employee serving in an at-will relationship with the Office
of the Sheriff, pending successful completion of the employee's
training and probationary period.
PROMOTION
The advancement of a merit system employee to a rank or pay
grade higher than the one currently occupied by that employee.
RANK
The designation utilized to identify the level of authority
for sworn, corrections and police communications officers within the
agency chain of command and to designated placement on the respective
agency pay plan.
RECLASSIFICATION
The process of reviewing the duties and responsibilities
of an existing position in order to revise the position description
or moving a position description from one pay grade or rank to another
pay grade or rank.
REGULAR STATUS
The standing given to merit system employees who have satisfactorily
completed their probationary period of employment. Regular status
shall not be effective until conveyed in writing by the appointing
authority.
RESIGNATION
The formal renouncement or relinquishment of employment with
the Office of the Sheriff other than retirement.
RETIRE
To complete a specified term of service or meet the requirements
of the Disability Review Board for retirement and formally terminate
service with the Charles County Sheriff's Office making the individual
eligible for retirement benefits.
RIGHT OF RETREAT
A sworn or correctional officer's ability to reclaim
the employee's last permanent rank within the merit system when
the employee is removed from or fails to complete the probationary
standards of the employee's current rank.
TRANSFER
The movement of a merit system employee from one position
to another at the same pay grade or rank.
VOLUNTARY DEMOTION
When a merit system employee requests a transfer to and accepts
a position within the merit system at a lower pay grade or rank than
the position the employee currently occupies.
The Sheriff, in accordance with Chapter
125 of the Code, will develop and implement an administrative and operational manual, which shall set forth the rules and regulations governing merit system employees. Copies of all merit system rules and regulations will be made available to all merit system employees.
[Amended 11-1-2011 by Bill No. 2011-09]
A. The Sheriff may appoint a Director of Administrative Services. The
Director of Administrative Services may be sworn or civilian personnel
who will serve at the pleasure of the Sheriff and may be removed and
replaced at any time by the Sheriff, with or without cause.
B. The Director of Administrative Services, with the approval of the
Sheriff, shall be responsible for preparing such rules and regulations
as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this article.
C. The duties or tasks of the Director of Administrative Services shall
be determined by the Sheriff and set forth in the administrative and
operational manual.
Nothing in these sections shall be interpreted to abridge or
supersede any right granted any sworn employee under the Law Enforcement
Officers' Bill of Rights or any employee under federal or state
law.
A. The tenure of every employee shall be conditioned on good behavior
and the satisfactory performance of the duties of his or her position.
Any employee may be temporarily separated by layoff or suspension
and regularly separated by dismissal.
B. When necessary, due to a lack of work or funds, the Sheriff may designate
layoffs. Employees in the designated positions shall be laid off in
inverse order of their length of service and quality of service. Probationary
employees shall be laid off before regular employees.
C. When an employee's work performance or conduct justifies disciplinary
action, the Sheriff may take any appropriate disciplinary action,
to include but not limited to suspending an employee with or without
pay, removing, demoting or dismissing an employee from his position
or take any lesser action he deems appropriate.
D. Any act, activity, failure to act or perform the essential functions
of a position by any employee, by itself or in aggregate with past
occurrences, shall be grounds for disciplinary action.
All merit system employees shall have the right and opportunity
to be heard with respect to any punitive action taken against them
as set forth in the Sheriff's Administrative and Operational
Manual.
Hours of work shall be as described in the employee's position
description as published in the administrative and operational manual
or work schedule or as assigned from time to time by the Sheriff.
Leave will be administered as published in the administrative and
operational manual.
The Sheriff, in coordination with the County Commissioners,
shall make any changes to the merit system he deems appropriate.
A. Any proposed amendments to this article shall first be referred to
the Sheriff.
B. The Sheriff shall review any proposed amendments and shall refer
the proposed amendments, along with the Sheriff's recommendations
to the Board of County Commissioners.
C. The Board of County Commissioners upon receipt of proposed amendments:
(1) May decide to adopt all or part of the proposed amendments or the
Sheriff's recommendations.
(2) May decline to adopt the proposed amendments.
(3) May decide to hold public hearings on the proposed amendments or
changes, provided that at least seven days' notice of the time
and place of such a hearing shall be published in a paper of general
circulation in the County.
(4) Shall decide to reject or make the proposed amendment or change to
this article in accordance with the procedures governing the ordinance-making
powers of the Board of County Commissioners of Charles County.