Tex. Educ. Code Section 22.003
Minimum Personal Leave Program


(a)

A state minimum personal leave program consisting of five days per year personal leave with no limit on accumulation and transferable among districts shall be provided for school district employees. School districts may provide additional personal leave beyond this minimum. The board of trustees of a school district may adopt a policy governing an employee’s use of personal leave granted under this subsection, except that the policy may not restrict:

(1)

the purposes for which the leave may be used; or

(2)

the order in which an employee may use the state minimum personal leave and any additional personal leave provided by the school district.

(b)

In addition to all other days of leave provided by this section or by the school district, an employee of a school district who is physically assaulted during the performance of the employee’s regular duties is entitled to the number of days of leave necessary to recuperate from all physical injuries sustained as a result of the assault. At the request of an employee, the school district must immediately assign an employee to assault leave and, on investigation of the claim, may change the assault leave status and charge the leave against the employee’s accrued personal leave or against an employee’s pay if insufficient accrued personal leave is available. Days of leave taken under this subsection may not be deducted from accrued personal leave. The period provided by this subsection may not extend more than two years beyond the date of the assault. Notwithstanding any other law, assault leave policy benefits due to an employee shall be coordinated with temporary income benefits due from workers’ compensation so that the employee’s total compensation from temporary income benefits and assault leave policy benefits equals 100 percent of the employee’s weekly rate of pay.

(c)

For purposes of Subsection (b), an employee of a school district is physically assaulted if the person engaging in the conduct causing injury to the employee:

(1)

could be prosecuted for assault; or

(2)

could not be prosecuted for assault only because the person’s age or mental capacity makes the person a nonresponsible person for purposes of criminal liability.

(c-1)

Any informational handbook a school district provides to employees in an electronic or paper form or makes available by posting on the district website must include notification of an employee’s rights under Subsection (b) in the relevant section of the handbook. Any form used by a school district through which an employee may request leave under this section must include assault leave under Subsection (b) as an option.

(d)

A school district employee with available personal leave under this section is entitled to use the leave for compensation during a term of active military service. This subsection applies to any personal or sick leave available under former law or provided by local policy of a school district, including a home-rule school district.

(e)

A school district, including a home-rule school district, may adopt a policy providing for the paid leave of absence of employees taking leave for active military service as part of the consideration of employment by the district.

(f)

A public school employee who retains any sick leave accumulated under former Section 13.904(a), as that section existed on January 1, 1995, is entitled to use the sick leave provided under that section or the personal leave provided under Subsection (a) in any order to the extent that the leave the employee uses is appropriate to the purpose of the leave.
Added by Acts 1995, 74th Leg., ch. 260, Sec. 1, eff. May 30, 1995. Amended by Acts 1997, 75th Leg., ch. 936, Sec. 1, eff. June 18, 1997; Acts 2001, 77th Leg., ch. 1015, Sec. 1, eff. June 15, 2001; Acts 2003, 78th Leg., ch. 971, Sec. 2, eff. June 20, 2003.
Amended by:
Acts 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., Ch. 19 (S.B. 522), Sec. 1, eff. May 12, 2009.
Acts 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., Ch. 379 (H.B. 1470), Sec. 1, eff. June 19, 2009.

Source: Section 22.003 — Minimum Personal Leave Program, https://statutes.­capitol.­texas.­gov/Docs/ED/htm/ED.­22.­htm#22.­003 (accessed May 11, 2024).

22.001
Salary Deductions for Professional Dues
22.002
Assignment, Transfer, or Pledge of Compensation
22.003
Minimum Personal Leave Program
22.004
Group Health Benefits for School Employees
22.005
Health Care Plan and Fund
22.006
Discrimination Based on Jury Service Prohibited
22.007
Incentives for Early Retirement
22.011
Requiring or Coercing Employees to Make Charitable Contributions
22.051
Definition
22.052
Administration of Medication by School District Employees or Volunteer Professionals
22.053
School District Volunteers
22.054
Liability of Certain Institutions of Higher Education
22.055
Frivolous Suit Against Employee
22.081
Definitions
22.082
Access to Criminal History Records by State Board for Educator Certification
22.083
Access to Criminal History Records of Employees by Local and Regional Education Authorities
22.084
Access to Criminal History Records of School Bus Drivers, Bus Monitors, and Bus Aides
22.085
Employees and Applicants Convicted of or Placed on Deferred Adjudication Community Supervision for Certain Offenses
22.086
Liability for Reporting Offenses
22.087
Notification to State Board for Educator Certification
22.091
Definition
22.092
Registry of Persons Not Eligible for Employment in Public Schools
22.093
Requirement to Report Employee Misconduct
22.094
Notice of Alleged Misconduct
22.095
Internet Portal
22.096
Compliance Monitoring
22.101
Definitions
22.102
Authority to Adopt Rules
22.103
Designation of Compensation as Health Care Supplementation
22.104
Funds Held in Trust
22.105
Written Election Required
22.106
Use of Designated Compensation
22.107
Wage Increase for Support Staff
22.0511
Immunity from Liability
22.0512
Immunity from Disciplinary Proceedings for Professional Employees
22.0513
Notice of Claim
22.0514
Exhaustion of Remedies
22.0515
Limitation on Damages
22.0516
Alternative Dispute Resolution
22.0517
Recovery of Attorney’s Fees in Action Against Professional Employee
22.0815
Applicability of Subchapter to Districts of Innovation and Other Charter Entities
22.0825
Access to Criminal History Records by Texas Education Agency
22.0831
National Criminal History Record Information Review of Certified Educators
22.0832
National Criminal History Record Information Review of Certain Open-enrollment Charter School Employees
22.0833
National Criminal History Record Information Review of Noncertified Employees
22.0834
Criminal History Record Information Review of Certain Contract Employees
22.0835
Access to Criminal History Records of Student Teachers and Volunteers by Local and Regional Education Authorities
22.0836
National Criminal History Record Information Review of Substitute Teachers
22.0837
Fee for National Criminal History Record Information
22.901
Unlawful Inquiry into Religious Affiliation
22.902
Instruction Related to Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Use of Automated External Defibrillator
22.904
Mental Health Training
22.05125
Immunity from Disciplinary Proceedings for Classroom Teachers
22.08361
National Criminal History Record Information Review of Certain Private School Employees
22.08391
Confidentiality of Information

Accessed:
May 11, 2024

§ 22.003’s source at texas​.gov