Frankfort Fire District Updates Sick Leave Policy for Non-Union Employees
Article Summary: The Frankfort Fire Protection District has approved updates to its administrative sick leave policy, aligning the benefits for non-union staff with those in the firefighters’ collective bargaining agreement. The new policy formalizes the process for administrative and mechanical staff to cash out or exchange sick hours through a 457 retirement plan buy-back.
Administrative Sick Leave Policy Key Points:
-
The board unanimously approved updates to the sick leave policy for non-covered employees.
-
The policy applies to administrative staff and mechanics who are not part of the firefighters’ union.
-
The updates formalize a “457” Plan buy-back option for sick hours, making it consistent with the union contract.
FRANKFORT — The Frankfort Fire Protection District Board of Trustees has unanimously approved updates to its sick leave policy for non-union employees, ensuring their benefits are consistent with their union counterparts.
During the board’s June 17 meeting, Interim Fire Chief Paul Kinsella explained that the policy changes outline how non-covered employees, specifically administrative staff and mechanics, can cash out or exchange sick hours. The mechanism for this is a buy-back into the employees’ “457” deferred-compensation retirement plan.
Kinsella stated that the updates are “in-line” with the provisions already established in the district’s Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) with its firefighters.
Trustee and President Nicholas Spano made a motion to approve the policy updates, which was seconded by Trustee James McGeever, Jr. In a roll call vote, the measure was approved unanimously by the four trustees present: Spano, McGeever, Robert Boll, and Patricia Field. Trustee Justin Lohrens was absent from the meeting.
The policy change formalizes an important financial and retirement benefit for the district’s administrative support staff.
Latest News Stories
Republican senators introduce bill to address childcare, immigration fraud
More than $1 billion spent on noncitizen hospital costs in fiscal 2025
IL Senate GOP: Pritzker, not Trump, raised power bills
SC weighs whether Amazon must pay workers for mandatory COVID screenings
Federal judge allows New York wind project to proceed
Goodlander faces federal probe over ‘illegal orders’ video
Pennsylvania lawmakers criticize violent ICE encounters
Trump says ‘Great Healthcare Plan’ will save $36 billion
Trump threatens invoking Insurrection Act after Venezuelan national shot
Maine officials brace for ICE operations
WATCH: Tax increase talk at Statehouse; Bost’s election lawsuit against Illinois wins standing
Medical group ‘optimistic’ Supreme Court will affirm biological sex in sports