Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2003 )


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  •                               ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
    GREG       ABBOTT
    November     12,2003
    The Honorable Jose R. Rodriguez                        Opinion No. GA-O 119
    El Paso County Attorney
    500 East San Antonio, Room 503                         Re: Whether a school district that does not
    El Paso, Texas 79901                                   participate in the state uniform group coverage
    program is required to provide health coverage to
    persons who have retired under the Teacher
    Retirement System and are eligible for coverage
    under the Texas Public School Retired Employees
    Group Insurance Program, but who have returned
    to work for the district (RQ-0062-GA)
    Dear Mr. Rodriguez:
    On behalf of the Ysleta Independent School District, you ask whether and to what extent
    section 22.004 of the Texas Education Code requires a school district that does not participate in the
    Texas School Employees Uniform Group Health Coverage Program (“TRS-ActiveCare”) to provide
    health coverage to retired persons eligible for coverage under the Texas Public School Retired
    Employees Group Insurance Program (“TRS-Care”) who have, as you put it, “returned to work under
    so-called ‘retire/rehire’ provisions.“’
    Section 22.004(b) of the Education Code, originally adopted in 1991, provides, in relevant
    Part
    A district that does not participate in [TRS-ActiveCare] shall
    make available to its employees group health coverage . . . [that is]
    comparable to the . . . Texas Employees Uniform Group Insurance
    Benefits Act . . . . The board of trustees of the Teacher Retirement
    System of Texas shall adopt rules to determine whether a school
    district’s group health coverage is comparable to the basic health
    coverage specified by this subsection.
    TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. 8 22.004(b) (Vernon Supp. 2004). Section 22.004(c) provides that the cost
    of such coverage “shall be shared by the employees and the district” using state contributions as well.
    
    Id. 8 22.004(c).
    Thus, a district that has elected not to participate in TRS-ActiveCare is required to
    provide comparable basic health coverage to its employees. Your question is whether employees
    ‘Letter from Honorable Jo& R. Rodriguez, El Paso County Attorney, to Honorable Greg Abbott, Attorney
    General of Texas, at 1 (June 5,2003) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter Request Letter].
    The Honorable Jose R. Rodriguez           - Page 2          (GA-01 19)
    for this purpose must be construed to include retirees who are working for a district under a
    retire/rehire plan, and who are eligible for coverage under the TRS-Care plan for retired employees.
    See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1.
    TRS-ActiveCare, established pursuant to what is now chapter 1579 of the Insurance Code,
    is a group health insurance program in which, by statute, all school districts with 500 or fewer
    employees are required to participate. See TEX. INS.CODE ANN. 9 1579.15 1 (Vernon Supp. 2004).
    Section 1579.1525 of the statute permits, but does not require, larger districts to participate in the
    program “if [the Teacher Retirement System of Texas] determines” that such participation “would
    be administratively  feasible and cost-effective.” 
    Id. $ 1579.1525.
    A brief from the Teacher
    Retirement System of Texas informs us that such a determination was made “[b]y resolution dated
    November 20,2002,” and that accordingly now “all large school districts are eligible to participate
    in TRS-ActiveCare.“2
    The Teacher Retirement System brief also points out that there may be persons who have
    retired under TRS who do not qualify for TRS-Care because of differences between the eligibility
    criteria for retirement under the system and for participation in TRS-Care. See TRS Brief, supra
    note 2, at 1.
    Generally, “a retiree is not entitled to service or disability retirement benefit payments, as
    applicable, for any month in which the retiree is employed in any position by a Texas public
    educational institution.” TEX. GOV’TCODEANN. 5 824.601 (Vernon 1994). However, under section
    824.602 of the Government Code, as you point out, “certain educational personnel can be re-
    employed by Texas school districts, without foregoing their retirement benefits, under certain
    specific conditions and circumstances.”        Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. “Pursuant to this
    provision, numerous TRS retirees have returned to active employment with Texas school districts.”
    
    Id. Your question
    is whether retirees eligible for TRS-Care coverage must also be afforded coverage
    under section 22.004(b). See 
    id. Section 22.004(b)
    of the Education Code does not define the term “employee.” See TEX.
    EDUC. CODE ANN. 8 22.004(b) (Vernon Supp. 2004). Ordinarily, the term means “every person in
    the service of another under any contract of hire, express or implied, . . . where the employer has the
    power or right to control and direct the employee in the material details of how the work is to be
    performed.” Riverbend Country Club v. Patterson, 399 S.W.2d 382,383 (Tex. Civ. App.-Eastland
    1966, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Such a definition would, of course, include any person hired by an
    independent school district to perform services under its direction and control.
    On the other hand, the term is defined for the purposes                of TRS-ActiveCare       in section
    1579.003 of the Insurance Code:
    “[Elmployee”   means a participating member of the Teacher
    Retirement System of Texas who is employed by a participating
    *Brief from Conni H. Brennan, General Counsel, Teacher Retirement System of Texas, to Honorable Greg
    Abbott, Attorney General of Texas, at 4 (July 3 1, 2003) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter TRS BriefJ.
    The Honorable Jose R. Rodriguez          - Page 3          (GA-01 19)
    entity and who is not receiving coverage . . . under [TRS-Care]. The
    term does not include an individual performing personal services as
    an independent contractor.
    TEX. INS. CODE ANN. 8 1579.003 (Vernon Supp. 2004). This definition         was originally adopted in
    2001 as part of House Bill 3343, which established TRS-ActiveCare to deal with the financial
    implications of the requirement of section 22.004 that school districts provide health insurance
    benefits comparable to the insurance offered under the group plan for state employees. See Act of
    May 28, 2001, 77th Leg., R.S., ch. 1187, 5 1 .Ol, 2001 Tex. Gen. Laws 2667, 2668. Under this
    definition of employee, TRS-Active&-e    coverage is not available to retirees who receive TRS-Care
    coverage.
    You argue, as does a brief presented on behalf of the Texas Association of School Boards
    Legal Assistance Fund,3 that reading section 22.004(b) to require that TRS retirees who receive TRS-
    Care also be covered under its separate provision would result in the anomaly that those school
    districts that participate in TRS-ActiveCare need not offer this class of personnel overlapping
    coverage, while non-participating school boards are required to do so. See Request Letter, supra
    note 1, at 2. On the other hand, as noted before, the TRS Brief suggests that the matter is somewhat
    more complicated than you describe because, as a result of the difference between the period of
    service required to qualify for retirement and that necessary to qualify for health care coverage, some
    TRS retirees in fact would not qualify for TRS-Care. See TRS Brief, supra note 2, at 1-2.
    Read in the light of the rule of statutory interpretation requiring that undefined terms be given
    their ordinary meaning, see TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 3 11 .Ol 1 (Vernon 1998), section 22.004(b)
    makes unavoidable the discrepancy that concerns you. Certainly retirees who return to work for an
    independent school district are employees of the body in the common parlance, and as such are
    eligible for section 22.004(b) coverage. It has been suggested, however, that such an anomaly may
    be avoided by reading chapter 1579’s definition of employee and section 22.004(b) in pari materia.
    As the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has noted
    The rule of in pari materia is nothing more than a principle of
    statutory interpretation, a means of devining [sic] and giving full
    effect to legislative intent. Two statutes that are in pari materia are to
    be construed together, “each enactment in reference to the other, as
    though they were part of one and the same law. Any conflict between
    their provisions will be harmonized, if possible, and effect will be
    given to all the provisions of each act if they can be made to stand
    together and have concurrent efficacy.”
    3Brief from JoAnn S. Wright, Walsh, Anderson, Brown, Schulze & Aldridge,       P.C. on behalf of Texas
    Association of School Boards Legal Assistance Fund, to Nancy S. Fuller, Chair, Opinion   Committee, Office of the
    Attorney General, at 3 (July 17,2003) (on file with Opinion Committee).
    The Honorable    Jose R. Rodriguez    - Page 4         (GA-01 19)
    Burke v. State, 28 S.W.3d 545,546 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (quoting Mills v. State, 
    722 S.W.2d 411
    ,
    413-14 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986)); accord Calvert v. Fort Worth Nat’/ Bank, 
    356 S.W.2d 918
    , 921
    (Tex. 1962) (“It is . . . well settled that statutes in pari materia are to be read and construed together
    in arriving at the intention of the Legislature.“).         “Similarity of purpose or object is the most
    important factor in assessing whether two provisions are inpari materia. The two provisions must
    have been enacted with the same purpose in mind in order for the doctrine to apply. They must be
    ‘closely enough related to justify interpreting one in the light of the other.“’ 
    Burke, 28 S.W.3d at 547
    (quoting Alejos v. State, 555 S.W.2d 444,450 (Tex. Crim. App. 1977)).
    In this instance, the object of both section 22.004(b) and chapter 1579 is to provide health
    care coverage to school district employees. Section 22.004(b) is explicitly intended to make group
    coverage available to employees of school districts that do not participate in TRS-ActiveCare.     See
    TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. 5 22.004(b) (Vernon Supp. 2004). However, section 22.004(b)‘s reference
    to employees predates section 1579.002’s definition of the term by a decade. See Act of May 27,
    1991,72d Leg., R.S., ch. 391, 8 45, 1991 Tex. Gen. Laws 1475, 1493. It cannot be asserted that,
    when section 22.004(b) was adopted in 1991, the legislature had in mind a definition and a
    distinction it did not fashion until 2001.
    Further, both section 22.004(b) as amended and section 1579.002’s statutory predecessor
    were contained in House Bill 3343, as enacted in 2001 by the Seventy-seventh Legislature. See Act
    of May 28, 2001 $9 1.01, 3.18, 2001 Tex. Gen. Laws at 2668, 2686-88. While the legislation
    explicitly refers to the relation of these two statutory schemes, and specifically excepts retirees
    receiving TRS-Care from the ActiveCare definition of employee, it neither refers to that exception
    in section 22.004 nor makes a parallel exception to the definition of employee, but simply leaves the
    term, as it was before, undefined.     See 
    id. Since the
    legislature could have redefined the term
    “employee” for the purposes of section 22.004 in the very bill in which it limited the definition for
    ActiveCare purposes, we presume it was conscious of and intended the distinction between the two
    schemes.
    Finally, as previously noted, the assumption that retired teachers are necessarily entitled to
    participate in TRS-Care breaks down in the case of those employees who had sufficient years of
    service to retire, but not to qualify for health care coverage. The existence of what appears to be a
    gap in the general scheme here is a further argument against reading section 22.004 and section
    1579.002 in pari materia. Accordingly, we cannot read the statutes in that manner, and conclude that
    the word “employees” in section 22.004(b) must be given its ordinary meaning.
    You ask further whether a district must subsidize under section 22.004(c) any coverage
    available to a retiree who is not receiving TRS-Care coverage because he has waived it. See Request
    Letter, supra note 1, at 3. Section 22.004(c) requires that “[tlhe cost of coverage . . . be shared by
    the employees and the district” using certain state contributions. TEX.EDUC.CODEANN. 8 22.004(c)
    (Vernon Supp. 2004). Again here, nothing in the language of section 22.004 would define the retiree
    in question as anything other than an employee. Given that any person who works for and under the
    direction of the school district is its employee in the ordinary sense of the term, including those
    retirees about whom you inquire, a district subject to section 22.004 must share the costs of group
    health insurance in accordance with the formula of section 22.004(c).
    The Honorable   Jose R. Rodriguez    - Page 5        (GA-01 19)
    SUMMARY
    Section 22.004(b) of the Texas Education Code obliges an
    independent school district not participating in the Texas School
    Employees      Uniform Group Health Coverage Program (TRS-
    Active&-e) to provide group health coverage to all of its employees,
    including retired persons receiving such coverage under the Texas
    Public School Retired Employees Group Insurance Program (TRS-
    Care) who have returned to work. Section 22.004(c) obliges an
    independent school district to share the costs of participation of such
    a retiree who has waived coverage under TRS-Care.
    BARRY R. MCBEE
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DON R. WILLETT
    Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
    NANCY S. FULLER
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    James E. Tourtelott
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: GA-119

Judges: Greg Abbott

Filed Date: 7/2/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017