Panel approves bill letting county public-health staff retain accrued leave when transferring to state positions
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The committee approved a substitute to House Bill 1096 to let certain county board of health employees who move directly to state Department of Public Health positions keep accrued annual and sick leave; sponsors said the narrow change will aid retention and preserve institutional knowledge.
Committee members voted to approve a substitute to House Bill 1096, legislation that allows county board of health employees who transition directly to state Department of Public Health positions with no break in service to retain accrued annual and sick leave rather than receiving a payout from their county employer.
Representative Taylor, the bill sponsor, said the measure addresses staff retention problems identified by a prior study committee on public-health funding and staffing. He said the provision applies narrowly to members of the state retirement system who transfer directly to state employment and that it explicitly prohibits counties from paying out accrued leave at transfer to avoid double benefits.
Committee members asked clarifying questions about how county employment and state benefits interact; Representative Taylor said county employees often participate in state benefit plans but are county-employed and the arrangement is unusual. The sponsor and members said the change protects institutional knowledge, reduces turnover, and limits fiscal impact by applying only to occasional transfers. The substitute passed on a voice vote; a roll-call tally was not included in the transcript.
