Federal Employment Law Training Group

TRAINING BY PROFESSIONALS FOR PROFESSIONALS

Peter Broida  Renn Fowler  Gary Gilbert 

Ernest Hadley  Eleanor Laws  William Wiley

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UPCOMING SEMINARS

MSPB LAW Week

4TH Annual SYMPOSIUM

SPECIALTY PRACTICES Week

EEOC LAW Week

HEARING PRACTICES Week

ONLINE REGISTRATION

Employment and Labor
LAW ARTICLES

DC AREA ACCOMMODATIONS

SPRING 2009 FLYER

ON-SITE TRAINING
CATALOG

FELTG
DIRECTORS                              
                        BIOS:

PETER BROIDA

RENN FOWLER

GARY GILBERT

ERNEST HADLEY

ELEANOR LAWS

WILLIAM WILEY

Adjunct Instructors



Spring 2009 Calendar

PLAN AHEAD: Fall 2009 Calendar









 
MSPB Law Week
March 23 -- 27, 2009

Seminar held at the Cafritz Conference Center in the Marvin Building at George Washington University, 800 21st Street NW, Washington, DC 20052.

Registration with credit card payment, or
PRINTABLE REGISTRATION  form for SF-182 invoicing, by FAX OR MAIL


Registrations are accepted FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED and must be accompanied by a method of payment.  This program has SOLD OUT each of the last three times it has been offered; early registration is strongly recommended.


 
WHO SHOULD ATTEND:  Attorneys, employee and labor relations specialists, human resources generalists, union representatives, and others with a responsibility for representing either the agency or an appellant in an appeal filed with the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board or advising management or employees on rights and options relative to disciplinary and performance actions. CLE credit for attorney attendees is supported by FELTG through individual applications to the registrants' state bar or commission. 

SAMPLE of seminar handouts from previous programs.

INSTRUCTORS:  Peter Broida, Renn Fowler and William Wiley,


Monday, March 23 -- Adverse Actions.  William Wiley. The five elements of every disciplinary case and the burdens of proof , the fundamentals of penalty selection and defense, obtaining testimony to protect the penalty selection should one or more charges fail, types of evidence necessary to support a penalty selection, the MSPB’s power to mitigate a penalty and recent trends in the Board’s use of that authority, the advantages and disadvantages of using a non-labeled narrative charges, converting an unacceptable performance problem into a Part 752 disciplinary action, educating uninformed arbitrators.  SAMPLE.

Tuesday, March 24 -- Charges.  Renn Fowler and Wiley. Types of charges, parts of a charge, how charges are interpreted, the role of the proposing and deciding officials, capitalizing on the general charge, allowing the inclusion of lesser-included offenses, charging in the alternative, attractive options to difficult charges and common charging mistakes, proving the difficult, “intent” charge element, a step by step approach to charge drafting, practical exercises to develop charge framing skills.

Wednesday, March 25 --Penalties.  Fowler and Wiley. MSPB and Federal Circuit lead cases in penalty determination, getting “intent” penalties off of “non-intent” charges, proving harsh penalties off of vanilla charges, charging down and proving up, how the maximum penalty is established, an update of recent Board and court decisions: what’s really new and what’s old wine in new bottles, placing the emphasis on notice.

Thursday, March 26 -- Leave Abuse and Medical Issues.  Peter Broida and Wiley. Overview of federal  laws and entitlements, documenting AWOL and subsequent discipline; FMLA rights and abuses, developing strategies.  Approved leave terminations; unavailability for work and inability to maintain a regular schedule.  Medical inability-to-perform terminations, disability retirement.  "True" disability vs. non-disability medical problems; limitations on FFDE authority.  SAMPLE.

Friday, March 27 -- Unacceptable Performance.  Broida and Wiley. Performance actions in perspective; legal basis.  Drafting a defensible performance standard, implementing PIP's, removal, appeals, evidence and arguments; alternatives to 5 CFR 432 procedures. SAMPLE.

Each day begins at 8:30 and ends at 4:00 with an hour for lunch. Continental breakfast is served beginning at 8:00.

FELTG reserves the right to cancel a session, or make changes, upon notice.

Early Registration is strongly advised as each seminar has a maximum capacity.

 

FELTG does not seek pre-approval of its seminars for CLE credit because the attorneys who attend often are admitted to many different state bars with many different requirements for CLE credit. However, we are happy to work with any individual attorney seeking CLE credit for attendance, and it has been our general experience that many states will approve some number of CLE credit hours based on submission of the course materials, an agenda, and resumes of the speakers. To facilitate the award of CLE, FELTG takes roll at every seminar and maintains a record of attendance for a minimum of five years, a requirement of many state bar associations.  The bottom line for CLE credit is that while the responsibility for applying for credit lies with each attorney attendee, FELTG will work to assist in the application process.  Please consult your state CLE commission for an 'Individual CLE Application' and let us know what submissions we can supply in your support.

FELTG is a non-profit organization.  EIN # 54-2023887.  DUNS # 066070090.