State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Jud > Article-2 > 39

§  39.  Unified  court  budget;  first  instance  payments  by  state;  provision  for  prepayment;   payment   by   localities;   transfer   of  non-judicial  personnel.  1. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,  and except as provided in subdivision three of this  section  the  state  shall  pay  in the first instance from regular appropriations, beginning  April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven the expenses for the supreme  court and  appellate  divisions  and  appellate  terms  thereof,  county  courts,  family  courts,  surrogate's courts, civil court of the city of  New York, criminal court of the city of New York, district courts,  city  courts,  the  county  clerks'  offices in the city of New York and those  portions of the county clerks' offices outside the city of New York that  perform services pursuant to the role of the county clerk  as  clerk  of  the  court  where  the  budgets of the political subdivisions separately  identify those services, and commissioners of jurors  and  their  staffs  where separate from the county clerks, or, of not so separate, where the  budgets of the political subdivisions separately identify that function.    2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the allocation of costs  of the courts and court-related agencies set forth in subdivision one of  this section to each political subdivision shall be as follows:    (a)  Effective  for  the  state  fiscal  year  beginning  April first,  nineteen hundred seventy-nine, the state comptroller shall  deduct  from  any  moneys  payable  to  each such political subdivision from the local  assistance account twenty-five percent of the amount set forth in column  A. In the event that the judiciary budget adopted for  the  fiscal  year  beginning   April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine  includes  an  allocation  for  any  political  subdivision  that  is  less  than   the  appropriated  budget  used  to calculate column A, then the deduction to  the locality shall be proportionately reduced. The amount to be deducted  pursuant to this paragraph, as reduced pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  subdivision  or  any  other  provision  of  law, shall be deducted  pursuant to a plan prepared by the state comptroller with  the  approval  of  the  state  director  of  the budget. Such plan shall, to the extent  practicable, provide for the amount of such deductions to coincide  with  the  state  first  instance  payments  for  the  expenses  enumerated in  subdivision one of this section. In lieu of deducting such  amount  from  moneys  payable  from the local assistance account, the plan prepared by  the state comptroller with the approval of the  state  director  of  the  budget may provide for the rendering of monthly or bi-monthly statements  requiring  the  payment  of  fractional portions of such amount, and may  provide for the payment of interest at a rate to be fixed by  the  state  comptroller,  not  to exceed six percent per annum, in the event payment  shall not be made at the time and in the amount prescribed therein.                                                                   NetLocal                                                                Commitment  Sub-parg.                                                       Column A  _________                                                     __________  1. Albany Co.                                                  1,070,972  2. Allegany Co.                                                  163,292  3. Broome Co.                                                    631,332  4. Cattaraugus Co.                                               283,404  5. Cayuga Co.                                                    276,422  6. Chautauqua Co.                                                505,825  7. Chemung Co.                                                   417,520  8. Chenango Co.                                                  163,660  9. Clinton Co.                                                   375,908  10. Columbia Co.                                                 218,664  11. Cortland Co.                                                 136,53012. Delaware Co.                                                 132,998  13. Dutchess Co.                                               1,306,400  14. Erie Co.                                                   4,477,957  15. Essex Co.                                                    185,590  16. Franklin Co.                                                 227,027  17. Fulton Co.                                                   353,064  18. Genesee Co.                                                  293,468  19. Greene Co.                                                   209,268  20. Hamilton Co.                                                  64,839  21. Herkimer Co.                                                 235,259  22. Jefferson Co.                                                351,634  23. Lewis Co.                                                    103,147  24. Livingston Co.                                               176,190  25. Madison Co.                                                  238,472  26. Monroe Co.                                                 3,202,248  27. Montgomery Co.                                               311,582  28. Nassau Co.                                                17,989,885  29. Niagara Co.                                                1,101,979  30. Oneida Co.                                                   971,718  31. Onondaga Co.                                               1,899,769  32. Ontario Co.                                                  338,318  33. Orange Co.                                                 1,271,126  34. Orleans Co.                                                  133,546  35. Oswego Co.                                                   499,791  36. Otsego Co.                                                   221,928  37. Putnam Co.                                                   274,839  38. Rensselaer Co.                                               584,464  39. Rockland Co.                                               1,385,788  40. St. Lawrence Co.                                             444,423  41. Saratoga Co.                                                 445,098  42. Schenectady Co.                                              650,378  43. Schoharie Co.                                                120,366  44. Schuyler Co.                                                  69,832  45. Seneca County                                                147,571  46. Steuben Co.                                                  377,784  47. Suffolk Co.                                               12,667,065  48. Sullivan Co.                                                 391,361  49. Tioga Co.                                                    136,855  50. Tompkins Co.                                                 291,294  51. Ulster Co.                                                   569,779  52. Warren Co.                                                   323,586  53. Washington Co.                                               245,885  54. Wayne Co.                                                    281,637  55. Westchester Co.                                            4,855,637  56. Wyoming Co.                                                  172,799  57. Yates Co.                                                     99,050  58. City of Albany                                               312,321  59. City of Binghamton                                           208,564  60. City of Buffalo                                            1,297,555  61. City of Mt. Vernon                                           330,491  62. City of New Rochelle                                         300,473  63. City of New York                                          81,528,585  64. City of Niagara Falls                                        252,006  65. City of Rochester                                            902,475  66. City of Rome                                                  82,972  67. City of Schenectady                                          152,607  68. City of Syracuse                                             712,583  69. City of Troy                                                 158,57670. City of Utica                                                264,612  71. City of White Plains                                         311,387  72. City of Yonkers                                              759,013  73. City of Amsterdam                                             37,126  74. City of Auburn                                                62,938  75. City of Batavia                                               38,790  76. City of Beacon                                                24,085  77. City of Canandaigua                                           35,301  78. City of Cohoes                                                38,892  79. City of Corning                                               23,067  80. City of Cortland                                              39,104  81. City of Dunkirk                                               54,523  82. City of Elmira                                               107,398  83. City of Fulton                                                31,947  84. City of Geneva                                                34,909  85. City of Glen Cove                                             87,917  86. City of Glens Falls                                           58,427  87. City of Gloversville                                          32,404  88. City of Hornell                                               30,769  89. City of Hudson                                                15,934  90. City of Ithaca                                               106,175  91. City of Jamestown                                             75,074  92. City of Johnstown                                             28,346  93. City of Kingston                                              46,983  94. City of Lackawanna                                            94,215  95. City of Little Falls                                          18,583  96. City of Lockport                                              67,567  97. City of Long Beach                                           222,129  98. City of Mechanicville                                         20,935  99. City of Middletown                                            62,970  100. City of Newburgh                                             85,009  101. City of North Tonawanda                                      88,793  102. City of Norwich                                              28,893  103. City of Ogdensburg                                           54,133  104. City of Olean                                                43,699  105. City of Oneida                                               25,331  106. City of Oneonta                                              46,804  107. City of Oswego                                               57,552  108. City of Peekskill                                            92,493  109. City of Plattsburgh                                          39,544  110. City of Port Jervis                                          33,701  111. City of Poughkeepsie                                         92,647  112. City of Rensselaer                                           22,920  113. City of Rye                                                  42,620  114. City of Salamanca                                            16,719  115. City of Saratoga Springs                                     67,444  116. City of Sherrill                                              6,643  117. City of Tonawanda                                            71,307  118. City of Watertown                                           120,076  119. City of Watervliet                                           21,274     (a-1)  (i) Effective for each state fiscal year beginning April first,  nineteen hundred ninety-five, the state comptroller shall, on or  before  the  end  of that fiscal year: (1) deduct from any moneys payable to the  city of New York from the local assistance account as state aid for  the  support  of  local  government the amount certified to him or her by the  chief administrator of the courts immediately  following  the  close  of  such  fiscal  year  pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, and(2) transfer the amount of such  deduction  from  the  local  assistance  account to the New York city county clerks' operations offset fund.    (ii)  On  or  before  March  first  in each year commencing with March  first,  nineteen  hundred  ninety-six,  the  chief  administrator  shall  determine  and certify to the comptroller the difference between (1) the  amount of the disbursements under the judiciary budget made  during  the  fiscal  year  ending  the previous March thirty-first for the payment of  services and expenses incurred in that fiscal year by the offices of the  county clerks of the city of New York, excluding services  and  expenses  incurred  by  those  offices in discharge of a county clerk's powers and  duties as commissioner of jurors, and (2) the aggregate receipts derived  by the state from the fees  specified  in  paragraphs  one  and  two  of  subdivision  (f)  of  section  eight  thousand  twenty and section eight  thousand twenty-one of the civil  practice  law  and  rules  during  the  fiscal year commencing April first, nineteen hundred ninety.    (iii)  On  or  before  March first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven, and  each March first thereafter, the chief administrator shall determine the  actual difference between (1) the amount of the disbursements under  the  judiciary  budget  made during the fiscal year ending the previous March  thirty-first for the payment of services and expenses incurred  in  that  fiscal year by the offices of the county clerks of the city of New York,  excluding  services  and expenses incurred by those offices in discharge  of a county clerk's powers and duties as commissioner of jurors and  (2)  the aggregate receipts derived from the state from the fees specified in  paragraphs  one  and  two  of  subdivision (f) of section eight thousand  twenty and section eight thousand twenty-one of the civil  practice  law  and  rules  during  the  preceding  fiscal year. The chief administrator  shall compare this actual amount of difference with the projected amount  of difference calculated pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph  and certify the difference between the two amounts to  the  comptroller.  Such  amount shall be added to, or deleted from, as the case may be, the  amount of the deduction made from state aid payments to the city of  New  York pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.    (b)  To  the  extent  the moneys so estimated by the state comptroller  with the approval of the state director of the budget to be  payable  to  such  political  subdivision  from  the local assistance fund during any  state fiscal year are insufficient to provide for the deduction  of  the  amount  required  to be deducted pursuant to this subdivision, each such  political subdivision shall pay on a monthly basis to  the  commissioner  of  taxation  and  finance an amount determined by the state comptroller  and the state director of the budget  to  provide  for  payment  of  the  amount   by  which  the  estimated  moneys  payable  to  such  political  subdivision is insufficient. The amount of such payments may be adjusted  from time to time as the estimate of moneys payable  to  such  political  subdivision is adjusted.    (c) For the state fiscal year commencing April first, nineteen hundred  seventy-nine, each political subdivision shall repay to the State of New  York an amount equal to twenty-five precent of its portion of the amount  appropriated  in  the first instance from the state purposes fund to the  judiciary for the state fiscal year  commencing  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-six,  as determined by the state department of taxation  and finance.    (d) Except as provided in  subdivision  three  of  this  section,  the  allocation  of  costs to each political subdivision for its share of the  expenses of the courts and court related agencies of the  unified  court  system  set forth in subdivision one of this section shall be determined  by law for the fiscal year  commencing  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine,  and no allocation of such costs to political subdivisionsshall be made for any fiscal year commencing on or  after  April  first,  nineteen hundred eighty.    (e)  All  fees  collected pursuant to sections eighteen hundred three,  eighteen hundred three-A and nineteen hundred eleven  of  the  New  York  city  civil  court  act, all fees collected pursuant to state law by the  county clerks in the city of New  York,  except  as  otherwise  provided  herein  with  respect  to  fees collected pursuant to subdivision (a) of  section eight thousand eighteen of the civil practice law and rules  and  except those fees collected by the clerk of Richmond county which in the  other  counties  of  the  city  of  New  York  are collected by the city  registers,  all  fees  collected  pursuant  to  section  eight  thousand  eighteen  of  the civil practice law and rules except only to the extent  of one hundred sixty-five dollars  of  any  fee  collected  pursuant  to  subparagraph (i) of paragraph one of subdivision (a) of such section and  except  for  those  collected pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph  one of paragraph three of  such  subdivision  (a),  all  fees  collected  pursuant  to section eight thousand twenty of the civil practice law and  rules except for those collected pursuant to subdivisions (f),  (g)  and  (h)  of  said  section,  all  fees  collected  pursuant to section eight  thousand twenty-two of the  civil  practice  law  and  rules,  all  fees  collected pursuant to section twenty-four hundred two of the surrogate's  court  procedure  act,  all  fees collected pursuant to section eighteen  hundred three, eighteen hundred three-A and subdivision (a)  of  section  nineteen  hundred  eleven  of  the  uniform district court act, all fees  collected pursuant to section eighteen hundred three,  eighteen  hundred  three-A  and  subdivision  (a) of section nineteen hundred eleven of the  uniform  city  court  act  and  all  fines,  penalties  and  forfeitures  collected  pursuant  to  subdivision  eight  of section eighteen hundred  three of the vehicle and traffic law, except such fines,  penalties  and  forfeitures   collected   by  the  Nassau  county  traffic  and  parking  violations agency, section 71-0211  of  the  environmental  conservation  law,  section  two hundred one of the navigation law and subdivision one  of section 27.13 of the parks, recreation and historic preservation  law  shall  be  paid  to  the state commissioner of taxation and finance on a  monthly basis no later than ten days after the last day of  each  month.  The  additional  fee  of  five dollars collected by county clerks in New  York city pursuant to paragraph three  of  subdivision  (a)  of  section  eight  thousand  eighteen  of  the civil practice law and rules shall be  distributed monthly by the county clerks as follows:  four  dollars  and  seventy-five cents to the commissioner of education for deposit into the  local  government  records management improvement funds; and twenty-five  cents to the city of New York.    (f) Effective April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven,  the  state  shall  no  longer make any payments pursuant to section thirty-four-a of  this chapter nor any payments pursuant to section ninety-nine-l  of  the  general  municipal  law for matters handled by the criminal court of the  city of New York, the district courts and city courts.    (g) The amounts to be deducted from the local assistance fund  and  to  be paid by political subdivisions to the state of New York, and the fees  to be paid to the state commissioner of taxation and finance pursuant to  paragraphs  (a), (b), (c) and (e) of subdivision two of this section are  hereby made available for the reimbursement of expenditures made by  the  judiciary  in  the  first  instance  from  state purposes appropriations  authorized by subdivision one of this section.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the comptroller is  hereby  authorized  to  repay  from  such amounts and such fees the expenditures  made by  the  judiciary  in  the  first  instance  from  state  purposes  appropriations authorized by subdivision one of this section.3. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, all goods, services  and  facilities  presently  furnished  and  paid  for  by  any political  subdivision to the courts and court-related agencies  affected  by  this  section  not  included  in  that  portion of the budget of the political  subdivision  used  in  the  computation  of  the  amounts  set  forth in  subdivision two of this section, shall continue to be furnished and paid  for by the political subdivision. Each political subdivision shall  also  be  responsible  for  supplying  such additional facilities suitable and  sufficient for the transaction of business as may  become  needed  after  the  effective  date  of this subdivision. In the event that a political  subdivision during any state fiscal year  ceases  to  provide  any  such  goods,  services and facilities, the state administrator shall determine  the value of such goods, services and facilities and  shall  notify  the  state  comptroller  of such determination. During each state fiscal year  in which a political subdivision ceases to provide such goods,  services  and  facilities,  an amount equal to the value of such services shall be  deducted by the state  comptroller  from  any  moneys  payable  to  such  political subdivision from the local assistance fund. All federal moneys  allocated  as  of  March thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven by  any political subdivision for  goods,  services  or  facilities  in  the  courts or court-related agencies affected by this section shall continue  to  be so allocated for as long as those federal moneys remain available  to that political  subdivision,  except  that,  if  the  federal  moneys  granted  to the political subdivision from which such goods, services or  facilities are provided are reduced below the amount granted as of March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, the political  subdivision  may  make  a proportionate reduction in the federal moneys allocated for  such goods, services or facilities.    (b) Political subdivisions which provide  security  services  for  the  courts,  the cost of which is not included in that portion of the budget  of the political subdivision used in the computation of the amounts  set  forth  in  column  A in paragraph (a) of subdivision two of this section  shall be entitled to reimbursement  by  the  state  within  the  amounts  appropriated  to  the  administrative  office  for  the  courts for that  purpose.    (c) All employees  providing  goods  and  services  pursuant  to  this  subdivision shall remain the employees of the political subdivision. All  deputy  sheriffs  or  police officers providing security services in the  courts shall be deemed  persons  providing  services  pursuant  to  this  subdivision.    4.  In  preparing  and  submitting  to  the  administrative  board the  itemized estimates of the annual  financial  needs  of  the  courts  and  court-related agencies set forth in subdivision one of this section, the  state administrator shall consider the relative caseloads of such courts  and  agencies in the event that increases in such itemized estimates are  proposed for  inclusion  in  the  judiciary  budget  submission  to  the  legislature.    5.  The  state  administrator  shall render an annual statement of the  amount determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of subdivision two  of  this  section  to  each political subdivision on or about the fifteenth day of  September of each year. The amount set forth in such statement shall  be  paid  to  the  state commissioner of taxation and finance by the city of  New York no more than thirty days after receipt thereof and by all other  political subdivisions on or before the thirty-first of January  of  the  following  year.  In  the  event that any political subdivision fails to  remit a payment due at the time specified herein, the comptroller  shall  withhold  payments  of  installments  or  quarterly  payments  of  state  assistance due such political subdivision pursuant to the provisions  ofarticle  four-a of the state finance law until the indebtedness due from  such political subdivision pursuant to this subdivision shall be paid in  full or until the installments  or  quarterly  payments  of  such  state  assistance or portions thereof so withheld shall equal the amount so due  from the political subdivision pursuant to this subdivision.    6.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and except as provided  in paragraph (c) of subdivision three of this section, commencing  April  first,   nineteen   hundred  seventy-seven  all  justices,  judges,  and  nonjudicial officers and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies  of  the  unified  court system set forth in subdivision one of  this section shall be employees  of  the  state  of  New  York  and  the  salaries,   wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and  conditions  of  their  employment shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this  section.    (a) Such justices, judges,  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  shall  be  placed  on  the payroll of the state of New York and shall be  entitled to the salaries, wages, hours and other terms and conditions of  employment to which they were entitled pursuant to any law  or  contract  in  effect  immediately  prior to the effective date hereof, except that  they shall receive the rates of reimbursement  for  travel  and  lodging  expenses  provided  by  the state to state-paid nonjudicial officers and  employees of the unified court system not affected  by  this  paragraph,  provided, however, that where an agreement has expired with no successor  contract  yet  having been executed prior to the effective date hereof a  contract subsequently executed and retroactive to the expiration of such  predecessor contract shall be controlling. Such salaries,  wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and conditions of employment shall continue in effect  until altered by state law or by the  terms  of  a  successor  contract,  except  that  salaries,  wages,  hours and other terms and conditions of  employment of such  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  not  provided  pursuant  to  contract  and  hours  and  other  terms  and conditions of  employment of justices and  judges  may  be  altered  by  administrative  action  in  accordance  with  law.  Provided, however, that no liability  shall be deemed to accrue to the state as result  of  any  such  law  or  contract   for  any  period  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven.    (b) Notwithstanding any provision of paragraph (a) of this subdivision  every local law enacted, contract entered into  or  action  taken  by  a  political  subdivision or other instrumentality of the state on or after  the effective date of this  paragraph  with  respect  to  the  terms  or  conditions  of  employment  of  any  such  justice,  judge, non-judicial  officer or employee shall be  subject  to  the  prior  approval  of  the  administrative board of the judicial conference. Provided, however, that  any  such  local  law,  contract  or  action affecting any such justice,  judge, non-judicial officer or employee of  any  court  of  the  unified  court  system located in a city for which an emergency financial control  board has been created shall be subject only to the  prior  approval  of  such emergency financial control board.    (c) For the purposes of this section, the term "salary" shall mean the  annual  salary  otherwise  payable  to any judge, justice or nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  to  whom  the  provisions  of  this  section  are  applicable, exclusive of overtime compensation and any allowance in lieu  of maintenance. The salary of the incumbent of a position compensable on  an  hourly  or  per  diem basis, or on any basis other than at an annual  salary rate, shall be deemed to be the salary which would  otherwise  be  payable  if  the  services were required on a full time annual basis for  the number of hours per day and days per  week  established  by  law  or  administrative rules or orders for regular full-time employees.(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law:    (i)   Any   nonjudicial   officer   or  employee  of  the  courts  and  court-related agencies of  the  unified  court  system  who  becomes  an  employee  of  the state of New York pursuant to this subdivision may, at  the option of such officer or employee,  be  credited  with  sick  leave  earned  and  accumulated  but  unused  at  the  time  he becomes a state  employee, but not in excess of two hundred days and  shall  be  credited  with  vacation  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he  becomes  a  state  employee,  but  not  in   excess   of   forty   days.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  such  nonjudicial officer or employee,  with the approval of the state administrator, may elect at any  time  to  be  credited  with  additional  sick  leave credits by the state, to the  extent such credits were earned prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven  and not already so credited pursuant to this subparagraph  (i); in such event, such sick leave credits shall not be  available  for  the  purposes  of  subparagraph (iii) of this paragraph. The state shall  not award credit or compensation for any other time  or  leave  credits,  and  shall not be liable for any terminal leave benefits based upon time  or  leave  credits  earned  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen   hundred  seventy-seven.    (ii)  Every  such nonjudicial officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive payments for time or leave credits, other  than  sick  leave  or  terminal  leave,  attributable to service rendered prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  and  not  transferred  to  the  state  pursuant to subparagraph (i), which payments such nonjudicial officer or  employee  would  otherwise  have received from the political subdivision  had he been involuntarily terminated without fault from  the  employ  of  the  political  subdivision  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven. Such credits shall be payable in cash before July  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  if  such  credits  would have been so  payable by the political subdivision or  if  such  officer  or  employee  would  otherwise  have  been  retained  on  the payroll of the political  subdivision until any such credits had been exhausted.    (iii) At the time of retirement  or  any  other  permanent  separation  without  fault  from  the  employment of the state, any such nonjudicial  officer or employee shall be entitled  to  receive  from  the  political  subdivision  payments  for  terminal leave based upon any time and leave  credits accrued before April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven,  and  not  transferred  to  the state pursuant to subparagraph (i) nor used in  the computation of any award of compensation  pursuant  to  subparagraph  (ii)  of  this  paragraph,  which  payments  such nonjudicial officer or  employee would otherwise have received from  the  political  subdivision  had   he  retired  or  separated  from  the  service  of  the  political  subdivision on March thirty-first, nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven.  If  such  officer  or  employee  retires,  such  entitlement  shall  include  payments he would have received from the political subdivision as if  he  had  been  eligible  to  retire  and  as  if  he  had  retired  on March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven. Any nonjudicial officer or  employee  who  retires  or  is  separated  from  service   after   March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  who is not entitled to  receive payment hereunder solely because of  insufficient  service  with  the  political  subdivision  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven, shall receive from the  political  subdivision  pro  rata  payments  based  upon  such  nonjudicial  officer or employee's time and  service with such local subdivision provided he is otherwise entitled to  receive such payments based upon his combined service with the political  subdivision and the state pursuant to a collective bargaining  agreement  negotiated with the state. Such credits shall be payable in cash if suchcredits  would  have  been so payable by the political subdivision or if  such officer or employee would  otherwise  have  been  retained  on  the  payroll  of  the  political  subdivision until any such credits had been  exhausted.    (e)  (i)  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law, all justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies of the unified court system who became employees  of the state of New York pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  receive  insurance benefits as set forth in this paragraph. Such justices, judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  or employees may elect to receive all of the  insurance benefits provided by the state to state-paid justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the unified court system  immediately prior to the effective date hereof. If such election is  not  made, such justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees shall  be  entitled  to  receive  the  insurance  benefits  to  which they were  entitled pursuant to any law or contract in effect immediately prior  to  the  effective date hereof, in which case the political subdivision from  which such justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees  were  entitled  to  receive  insurance benefits shall continue to provide such  insurance coverage and such justices, judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  shall  be deemed employees of the political subdivisions  for purposes of receiving such insurance coverage and for the processing  of  claims  thereunder.  The  state  shall  reimburse   each   political  subdivision  for  the amount of premiums paid pursuant to this paragraph  or, in the case of self-insurance, for the cost of the benefit  paid  by  the  political subdivision. Insurance benefits provided pursuant to this  paragraph shall continue in effect until altered by law,  administrative  action  in  accordance  with  law,  or, for those officers and employees  receiving insurance benefits pursuant to contract, by  the  terms  of  a  successor  contract.  Nothing in this paragraph shall preclude the state  from enrolling  any  such  justice,  judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  in  the  state  insurance  plan  upon  his withdrawal from the  insurance plan paid for by the political subdivision  pursuant  to  this  paragraph.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of this chapter, all  justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees of the  eleventh  judicial   district   shall  have  the  same  dual  insurance  coverage,  consisting of the state insurance plan and the insurance plan  paid  for  by  the  political  subdivision  pursuant  to  this  paragraph, which is  provided to the justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and  employees  of the first and second judicial districts.    (ii)  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  subparagraph  (i)  of this  paragraph,  all  state-paid  justices  and  judges  and  all  state-paid  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees of the unified court system not in  any collective negotiating unit established pursuant to article fourteen  of the civil service law who,  on  the  day  immediately  preceding  the  effective  date of this subparagraph, are enrolled in a health insurance  plan paid for by a political  subdivision,  shall  be  deemed  withdrawn  therefrom  and  shall  exclusively  be  enrolled  in  the  state  health  insurance plan.    (f) All monetary contributions made by a political  subdivision  prior  to   April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven  on  behalf  of  an  individual justice, judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  to  a  welfare  fund administered by an employee organization or by a political  subdivision   shall,   commencing   April   first,   nineteen    hundred  seventy-seven, be paid by the state.    (g) Each political subdivision shall be liable for the satisfaction of  any  claims  by  any  officer  or  employee arising out of the terms andconditions of his employment prior to the date on which such officer  or  employee became a state employee pursuant to this subdivision.    7.  Upon  the termination of the period of unchallenged representation  of any  employee  organization  certified  or  recognized  to  represent  employees  of  the courts or court related agencies of the unified court  system, petitions may be filed  with  the  public  employment  relations  board  to  alter  negotiating units in accordance with the standards set  forth in section two hundred seven of the civil service  law;  provided,  however,  that  such  board  shall  not  alter any such negotiating unit  comprised exclusively of such  employees  or  that  part  of  any  other  negotiating  unit  comprised  of  such employees. The provisions of this  subdivision shall be applicable in any case  in  which  the  negotiating  unit  is  so  defined  on  the  effective  date  of  this subdivision in  accordance with the provisions of either section two  hundred  seven  or  section two hundred twelve of the civil service law, as the case may be.  Nothing  herein  shall  preclude the merger of negotiating units of such  employees with the consent of the administrative board of  the  judicial  conference  and  the  recognized  or  certified  representatives  of the  negotiating units involved.    8. (a) The administrative board of the judicial conference shall adopt  a classification structure for all non-judicial officers  and  employees  who  become  employees of the state of New York pursuant to this section  which shall provide for the classification of  positions  in  accordance  with  duties required to be performed in title in these positions and in  accordance with the responsibilities of the position and the  volume  of  work  in the court or court-related agency in which the position exists.  Nothing in this section shall prohibit the subsequent  restructuring  of  the  classification and duties of employees in accordance with the rules  of the administrative board. The administrative board in accordance with  section  two  hundred  nineteen  of  this   article   shall   determine,  retroactive  to  April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, the salary  grade of each employee who becomes an employee of the state of New  York  pursuant  to  this  section; provided, however, nothing herein contained  shall be deemed to diminish: (i) the right of any employee  organization  to negotiate wages or salaries pursuant to article fourteen of the civil  service  law,  or;  (ii)  the  right of any employee to receive wages or  salaries pursuant to subdivision six of  this  section.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of  law,  an application to the public employment  relations board seeking a designation by the board that certain  persons  are  managerial  or  confidential  may be filed at any time before April  first, nineteen hundred seventy-eight, and thereafter  pursuant  to  the  provisions of the civil service law.    (b) A nonjudicial officer or employee whose position is allocated to a  salary  grade  pursuant  to  paragraph  (a) of this subdivision shall be  placed into that salary grade at the salary received by such officer  or  employee  immediately prior to said allocation or at the minimum of that  grade, whichever is higher. The  salary  of  such  officer  or  employee  within  such  salary  grade,  as  determined  by  this  paragraph, shall  establish the increment step into which the employee shall be placed and  shall determine the number of years of service  to  be  credited  within  such salary grade as of April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, for  the   purpose  of  computing  future  increments.  Each  employee  shall  thereafter receive increment credit for each subsequent year of  service  in  such  position  up  to the maximum prescribed by section two hundred  nineteen of this article.    9. (a) On and after the effective date of this paragraph all justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies  of  the  unified  court  system  set  forth  insubdivision  one  who  become  employees  of  the  state   pursuant   to  subdivision  six  of  this section shall thereupon become members of the  New York state employees retirement system to the  extent  permitted  or  required  by  the  provisions of the retirement and social security law,  and the reserves in any other retirement system shall be transferred  to  the  New  York  state employees retirement system without any request by  them or any notice to the retirement systems, except that: (1) any  such  justice, judge or nonjudicial officer or employee who is a member of the  New  York  city  employees'  retirement  system  or  the  New  York city  teachers' retirement system may elect to continue membership in the  New  York  city  employees'  retirement system or the New York city teachers'  retirement system, as the case may be, and (2) any justice or judge  who  is  a  member of both the New York city employees' retirement system and  the New York state employees' retirement system may  elect  to  continue  membership  in  the  New  York  city employees' retirement system and to  discontinue membership in  the  New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system.  Any  election pursuant to this paragraph shall be made no later  than the ninetieth day next succeeding the date on which the  provisions  hereof  become  effective,  by  filing a written notice thereof with the  administrative head of the New York state employees'  retirement  system  and  the New York city employees' retirement system or the New York city  teachers'  retirement  system  and,  once  made  and  filed,  shall   be  irrevocable.  Upon  the  retirement  of  a justice, judge or nonjudicial  officer or employee who has made such an election,  the  calculation  of  final  average  salary by the New York city employees' retirement system  or the New York city teachers' retirement system shall be  performed  as  if the salary earned as a state employee on and after such effectiveness  were earned in New York city employment. In the case of a justice, judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or employee who remains or becomes a member of  the New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system  pursuant  to  this  paragraph,  the  New  York  city employees' retirement system or the New  York city teachers' retirement system shall make a transfer of reserves,  contributions and credits to the New York  state  employees'  retirement  system,  in the manner required by section forty-three of the retirement  and social security law. In the case of an election to continue  in  the  New  York city employees' retirement system by a justice or judge who is  a member of both retirement  systems,  the  New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system  shall make a transfer of reserves, contributions and  credits to the New York city employees' retirement system, in the manner  provided by section forty-three of such law.    (b) The comptroller of the city of New York shall certify to the state  administrator the amount of money required to be paid by  the  state  of  New  York  for  pension  costs resulting from elections made pursuant to  paragraph (a) of this subdivision. The comptroller of the state  of  New  York  shall pay to the New York city employees' retirement system or the  New York city teachers' retirement system, upon approval  by  the  state  administrator,  the  amounts so certified by the comptroller of the city  of New York. The comptroller of the city of New York shall also  certify  to   the  state  administrator  the  amount  of  money  required  to  be  contributed by each of such employees. The comptroller of the  state  of  New  York  shall  be  authorized  to  withhold  the contribution of such  employees and pay that amount to the New York city employees' retirement  system or the New York city teachers' retirement system. The  amount  so  certified  pursuant  to  this paragraph shall be the same as the amounts  required to be contributed for similarly situated city employees by  the  city of New York and by employees of the city of New York.    10.  (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, commencing April  first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three,  in   the   event   the   chiefadministrator  of  the  courts,  in his sole discretion, determines that  court security services provided by the county of  Westchester  pursuant  to  subdivision three of this section should be provided by employees of  the  unified  court  system:  (i)  the  state  shall  be responsible for  providing security services to the courts in such county, and  (ii)  all  permanent  officers  and  employees  of  the department of public safety  service of such county who provide security services in  the  courts  of  such  county  pursuant  to  subdivision  three  of this section shall be  eligible to become employees of the state of  New  York  upon  filing  a  notice  of state employment election with the chief administrator of the  courts in a manner and  form  determined  by  the  chief  administrator;  provided,  however,  that such employment shall be subject to acceptance  by the employee  of  the  salary,  wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and  conditions  of  employment  enjoyed  by  other  state  employees  in the  negotiating unit into which his position is placed.    (b) Each nonjudicial officer and employee who files a notice of  state  employment  election  as  provided  in paragraph (a) of this subdivision  shall be placed on a payroll of the state of  New  York  in  a  position  which  shall  be classified and allocated pursuant to the classification  structure, established by the chief administrator of the courts  on  May  twenty-eighth,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine. The salary of each such  nonjudicial  officer  and  employee  shall  be  his  salary   on   March  thirty-first,   nineteen  hundred  eighty-three,  plus  such  number  of  increments equalling his  years  of  permanent  service  in  his  county  position  on  March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, not to  exceed the maximum of the salary grade of the position to  which  he  is  allocated  hereunder.  Eligibility  for future increments shall be based  solely upon state service commencing upon the  effective  date  of  this  subdivision.    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law:    (i)  Any  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  of  the courts and court  related agencies of the unified court system who becomes an employee  of  the  state  of  New  York pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision,  may, at the option of such officer or employee, be  credited  with  sick  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he becomes a state  employee, but not in excess of two hundred days and  shall  be  credited  with  vacation  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he  becomes a state employee, but not in excess of  forty  days.  The  state  shall  not  award  credit  or  compensation  for any other time or leave  credits and shall not be liable for any terminal  leave  benefits  based  upon time or leave credits earned prior to April first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three.    (ii)  Each  such  nonjudicial officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive payments from the  county  of  Westchester  for  time  or  leave  credits,  other  than  sick  leave  or  terminal  leave, attributable to  service prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three  and  not  transferred to the state pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph,  which payments such nonjudicial officer or employee would otherwise have  received  from  the  county had he been involuntarily terminated without  fault from the employ of the  county  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three. Such credits shall be payable in cash before July  first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, if such credits would have been so  payable by the county of Westchester or  if  such  officer  or  employee  would  otherwise  have  been retained on the payroll of the county until  any such credits have been exhausted.    (iii) At the time of retirement, or  any  other  permanent  separation  without  fault  from  the  employment of the state, any such nonjudicial  officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive  from  the  county  ofWestchester  payments  for  terminal leave based upon any time and leave  credits accrued before April first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three,  and  not  transferred  to  the  state  pursuant  to  subparagraph (i) of this  paragraph,  which  payments  such  nonjudicial officer or employee would  otherwise have received from the county had he retired or separated from  the service of  the  county  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three.    (d)  Upon  the  effective  date  of this subdivision, each officer and  employee who elects to become a state employee pursuant to paragraph (a)  of this subdivision shall have permanent status in  his  state  position  without  further examination or qualification. Each officer and employee  having permanent status in a competitive class county position who  does  not  make  such election shall have his name entered upon an appropriate  preferred list for reinstatement to the same or similar positions in the  service of the county of Westchester.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Jud > Article-2 > 39

§  39.  Unified  court  budget;  first  instance  payments  by  state;  provision  for  prepayment;   payment   by   localities;   transfer   of  non-judicial  personnel.  1. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,  and except as provided in subdivision three of this  section  the  state  shall  pay  in the first instance from regular appropriations, beginning  April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven the expenses for the supreme  court and  appellate  divisions  and  appellate  terms  thereof,  county  courts,  family  courts,  surrogate's courts, civil court of the city of  New York, criminal court of the city of New York, district courts,  city  courts,  the  county  clerks'  offices in the city of New York and those  portions of the county clerks' offices outside the city of New York that  perform services pursuant to the role of the county clerk  as  clerk  of  the  court  where  the  budgets of the political subdivisions separately  identify those services, and commissioners of jurors  and  their  staffs  where separate from the county clerks, or, of not so separate, where the  budgets of the political subdivisions separately identify that function.    2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the allocation of costs  of the courts and court-related agencies set forth in subdivision one of  this section to each political subdivision shall be as follows:    (a)  Effective  for  the  state  fiscal  year  beginning  April first,  nineteen hundred seventy-nine, the state comptroller shall  deduct  from  any  moneys  payable  to  each such political subdivision from the local  assistance account twenty-five percent of the amount set forth in column  A. In the event that the judiciary budget adopted for  the  fiscal  year  beginning   April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine  includes  an  allocation  for  any  political  subdivision  that  is  less  than   the  appropriated  budget  used  to calculate column A, then the deduction to  the locality shall be proportionately reduced. The amount to be deducted  pursuant to this paragraph, as reduced pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  subdivision  or  any  other  provision  of  law, shall be deducted  pursuant to a plan prepared by the state comptroller with  the  approval  of  the  state  director  of  the budget. Such plan shall, to the extent  practicable, provide for the amount of such deductions to coincide  with  the  state  first  instance  payments  for  the  expenses  enumerated in  subdivision one of this section. In lieu of deducting such  amount  from  moneys  payable  from the local assistance account, the plan prepared by  the state comptroller with the approval of the  state  director  of  the  budget may provide for the rendering of monthly or bi-monthly statements  requiring  the  payment  of  fractional portions of such amount, and may  provide for the payment of interest at a rate to be fixed by  the  state  comptroller,  not  to exceed six percent per annum, in the event payment  shall not be made at the time and in the amount prescribed therein.                                                                   NetLocal                                                                Commitment  Sub-parg.                                                       Column A  _________                                                     __________  1. Albany Co.                                                  1,070,972  2. Allegany Co.                                                  163,292  3. Broome Co.                                                    631,332  4. Cattaraugus Co.                                               283,404  5. Cayuga Co.                                                    276,422  6. Chautauqua Co.                                                505,825  7. Chemung Co.                                                   417,520  8. Chenango Co.                                                  163,660  9. Clinton Co.                                                   375,908  10. Columbia Co.                                                 218,664  11. Cortland Co.                                                 136,53012. Delaware Co.                                                 132,998  13. Dutchess Co.                                               1,306,400  14. Erie Co.                                                   4,477,957  15. Essex Co.                                                    185,590  16. Franklin Co.                                                 227,027  17. Fulton Co.                                                   353,064  18. Genesee Co.                                                  293,468  19. Greene Co.                                                   209,268  20. Hamilton Co.                                                  64,839  21. Herkimer Co.                                                 235,259  22. Jefferson Co.                                                351,634  23. Lewis Co.                                                    103,147  24. Livingston Co.                                               176,190  25. Madison Co.                                                  238,472  26. Monroe Co.                                                 3,202,248  27. Montgomery Co.                                               311,582  28. Nassau Co.                                                17,989,885  29. Niagara Co.                                                1,101,979  30. Oneida Co.                                                   971,718  31. Onondaga Co.                                               1,899,769  32. Ontario Co.                                                  338,318  33. Orange Co.                                                 1,271,126  34. Orleans Co.                                                  133,546  35. Oswego Co.                                                   499,791  36. Otsego Co.                                                   221,928  37. Putnam Co.                                                   274,839  38. Rensselaer Co.                                               584,464  39. Rockland Co.                                               1,385,788  40. St. Lawrence Co.                                             444,423  41. Saratoga Co.                                                 445,098  42. Schenectady Co.                                              650,378  43. Schoharie Co.                                                120,366  44. Schuyler Co.                                                  69,832  45. Seneca County                                                147,571  46. Steuben Co.                                                  377,784  47. Suffolk Co.                                               12,667,065  48. Sullivan Co.                                                 391,361  49. Tioga Co.                                                    136,855  50. Tompkins Co.                                                 291,294  51. Ulster Co.                                                   569,779  52. Warren Co.                                                   323,586  53. Washington Co.                                               245,885  54. Wayne Co.                                                    281,637  55. Westchester Co.                                            4,855,637  56. Wyoming Co.                                                  172,799  57. Yates Co.                                                     99,050  58. City of Albany                                               312,321  59. City of Binghamton                                           208,564  60. City of Buffalo                                            1,297,555  61. City of Mt. Vernon                                           330,491  62. City of New Rochelle                                         300,473  63. City of New York                                          81,528,585  64. City of Niagara Falls                                        252,006  65. City of Rochester                                            902,475  66. City of Rome                                                  82,972  67. City of Schenectady                                          152,607  68. City of Syracuse                                             712,583  69. City of Troy                                                 158,57670. City of Utica                                                264,612  71. City of White Plains                                         311,387  72. City of Yonkers                                              759,013  73. City of Amsterdam                                             37,126  74. City of Auburn                                                62,938  75. City of Batavia                                               38,790  76. City of Beacon                                                24,085  77. City of Canandaigua                                           35,301  78. City of Cohoes                                                38,892  79. City of Corning                                               23,067  80. City of Cortland                                              39,104  81. City of Dunkirk                                               54,523  82. City of Elmira                                               107,398  83. City of Fulton                                                31,947  84. City of Geneva                                                34,909  85. City of Glen Cove                                             87,917  86. City of Glens Falls                                           58,427  87. City of Gloversville                                          32,404  88. City of Hornell                                               30,769  89. City of Hudson                                                15,934  90. City of Ithaca                                               106,175  91. City of Jamestown                                             75,074  92. City of Johnstown                                             28,346  93. City of Kingston                                              46,983  94. City of Lackawanna                                            94,215  95. City of Little Falls                                          18,583  96. City of Lockport                                              67,567  97. City of Long Beach                                           222,129  98. City of Mechanicville                                         20,935  99. City of Middletown                                            62,970  100. City of Newburgh                                             85,009  101. City of North Tonawanda                                      88,793  102. City of Norwich                                              28,893  103. City of Ogdensburg                                           54,133  104. City of Olean                                                43,699  105. City of Oneida                                               25,331  106. City of Oneonta                                              46,804  107. City of Oswego                                               57,552  108. City of Peekskill                                            92,493  109. City of Plattsburgh                                          39,544  110. City of Port Jervis                                          33,701  111. City of Poughkeepsie                                         92,647  112. City of Rensselaer                                           22,920  113. City of Rye                                                  42,620  114. City of Salamanca                                            16,719  115. City of Saratoga Springs                                     67,444  116. City of Sherrill                                              6,643  117. City of Tonawanda                                            71,307  118. City of Watertown                                           120,076  119. City of Watervliet                                           21,274     (a-1)  (i) Effective for each state fiscal year beginning April first,  nineteen hundred ninety-five, the state comptroller shall, on or  before  the  end  of that fiscal year: (1) deduct from any moneys payable to the  city of New York from the local assistance account as state aid for  the  support  of  local  government the amount certified to him or her by the  chief administrator of the courts immediately  following  the  close  of  such  fiscal  year  pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, and(2) transfer the amount of such  deduction  from  the  local  assistance  account to the New York city county clerks' operations offset fund.    (ii)  On  or  before  March  first  in each year commencing with March  first,  nineteen  hundred  ninety-six,  the  chief  administrator  shall  determine  and certify to the comptroller the difference between (1) the  amount of the disbursements under the judiciary budget made  during  the  fiscal  year  ending  the previous March thirty-first for the payment of  services and expenses incurred in that fiscal year by the offices of the  county clerks of the city of New York, excluding services  and  expenses  incurred  by  those  offices in discharge of a county clerk's powers and  duties as commissioner of jurors, and (2) the aggregate receipts derived  by the state from the fees  specified  in  paragraphs  one  and  two  of  subdivision  (f)  of  section  eight  thousand  twenty and section eight  thousand twenty-one of the civil  practice  law  and  rules  during  the  fiscal year commencing April first, nineteen hundred ninety.    (iii)  On  or  before  March first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven, and  each March first thereafter, the chief administrator shall determine the  actual difference between (1) the amount of the disbursements under  the  judiciary  budget  made during the fiscal year ending the previous March  thirty-first for the payment of services and expenses incurred  in  that  fiscal year by the offices of the county clerks of the city of New York,  excluding  services  and expenses incurred by those offices in discharge  of a county clerk's powers and duties as commissioner of jurors and  (2)  the aggregate receipts derived from the state from the fees specified in  paragraphs  one  and  two  of  subdivision (f) of section eight thousand  twenty and section eight thousand twenty-one of the civil  practice  law  and  rules  during  the  preceding  fiscal year. The chief administrator  shall compare this actual amount of difference with the projected amount  of difference calculated pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph  and certify the difference between the two amounts to  the  comptroller.  Such  amount shall be added to, or deleted from, as the case may be, the  amount of the deduction made from state aid payments to the city of  New  York pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.    (b)  To  the  extent  the moneys so estimated by the state comptroller  with the approval of the state director of the budget to be  payable  to  such  political  subdivision  from  the local assistance fund during any  state fiscal year are insufficient to provide for the deduction  of  the  amount  required  to be deducted pursuant to this subdivision, each such  political subdivision shall pay on a monthly basis to  the  commissioner  of  taxation  and  finance an amount determined by the state comptroller  and the state director of the budget  to  provide  for  payment  of  the  amount   by  which  the  estimated  moneys  payable  to  such  political  subdivision is insufficient. The amount of such payments may be adjusted  from time to time as the estimate of moneys payable  to  such  political  subdivision is adjusted.    (c) For the state fiscal year commencing April first, nineteen hundred  seventy-nine, each political subdivision shall repay to the State of New  York an amount equal to twenty-five precent of its portion of the amount  appropriated  in  the first instance from the state purposes fund to the  judiciary for the state fiscal year  commencing  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-six,  as determined by the state department of taxation  and finance.    (d) Except as provided in  subdivision  three  of  this  section,  the  allocation  of  costs to each political subdivision for its share of the  expenses of the courts and court related agencies of the  unified  court  system  set forth in subdivision one of this section shall be determined  by law for the fiscal year  commencing  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine,  and no allocation of such costs to political subdivisionsshall be made for any fiscal year commencing on or  after  April  first,  nineteen hundred eighty.    (e)  All  fees  collected pursuant to sections eighteen hundred three,  eighteen hundred three-A and nineteen hundred eleven  of  the  New  York  city  civil  court  act, all fees collected pursuant to state law by the  county clerks in the city of New  York,  except  as  otherwise  provided  herein  with  respect  to  fees collected pursuant to subdivision (a) of  section eight thousand eighteen of the civil practice law and rules  and  except those fees collected by the clerk of Richmond county which in the  other  counties  of  the  city  of  New  York  are collected by the city  registers,  all  fees  collected  pursuant  to  section  eight  thousand  eighteen  of  the civil practice law and rules except only to the extent  of one hundred sixty-five dollars  of  any  fee  collected  pursuant  to  subparagraph (i) of paragraph one of subdivision (a) of such section and  except  for  those  collected pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph  one of paragraph three of  such  subdivision  (a),  all  fees  collected  pursuant  to section eight thousand twenty of the civil practice law and  rules except for those collected pursuant to subdivisions (f),  (g)  and  (h)  of  said  section,  all  fees  collected  pursuant to section eight  thousand twenty-two of the  civil  practice  law  and  rules,  all  fees  collected pursuant to section twenty-four hundred two of the surrogate's  court  procedure  act,  all  fees collected pursuant to section eighteen  hundred three, eighteen hundred three-A and subdivision (a)  of  section  nineteen  hundred  eleven  of  the  uniform district court act, all fees  collected pursuant to section eighteen hundred three,  eighteen  hundred  three-A  and  subdivision  (a) of section nineteen hundred eleven of the  uniform  city  court  act  and  all  fines,  penalties  and  forfeitures  collected  pursuant  to  subdivision  eight  of section eighteen hundred  three of the vehicle and traffic law, except such fines,  penalties  and  forfeitures   collected   by  the  Nassau  county  traffic  and  parking  violations agency, section 71-0211  of  the  environmental  conservation  law,  section  two hundred one of the navigation law and subdivision one  of section 27.13 of the parks, recreation and historic preservation  law  shall  be  paid  to  the state commissioner of taxation and finance on a  monthly basis no later than ten days after the last day of  each  month.  The  additional  fee  of  five dollars collected by county clerks in New  York city pursuant to paragraph three  of  subdivision  (a)  of  section  eight  thousand  eighteen  of  the civil practice law and rules shall be  distributed monthly by the county clerks as follows:  four  dollars  and  seventy-five cents to the commissioner of education for deposit into the  local  government  records management improvement funds; and twenty-five  cents to the city of New York.    (f) Effective April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven,  the  state  shall  no  longer make any payments pursuant to section thirty-four-a of  this chapter nor any payments pursuant to section ninety-nine-l  of  the  general  municipal  law for matters handled by the criminal court of the  city of New York, the district courts and city courts.    (g) The amounts to be deducted from the local assistance fund  and  to  be paid by political subdivisions to the state of New York, and the fees  to be paid to the state commissioner of taxation and finance pursuant to  paragraphs  (a), (b), (c) and (e) of subdivision two of this section are  hereby made available for the reimbursement of expenditures made by  the  judiciary  in  the  first  instance  from  state purposes appropriations  authorized by subdivision one of this section.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the comptroller is  hereby  authorized  to  repay  from  such amounts and such fees the expenditures  made by  the  judiciary  in  the  first  instance  from  state  purposes  appropriations authorized by subdivision one of this section.3. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, all goods, services  and  facilities  presently  furnished  and  paid  for  by  any political  subdivision to the courts and court-related agencies  affected  by  this  section  not  included  in  that  portion of the budget of the political  subdivision  used  in  the  computation  of  the  amounts  set  forth in  subdivision two of this section, shall continue to be furnished and paid  for by the political subdivision. Each political subdivision shall  also  be  responsible  for  supplying  such additional facilities suitable and  sufficient for the transaction of business as may  become  needed  after  the  effective  date  of this subdivision. In the event that a political  subdivision during any state fiscal year  ceases  to  provide  any  such  goods,  services and facilities, the state administrator shall determine  the value of such goods, services and facilities and  shall  notify  the  state  comptroller  of such determination. During each state fiscal year  in which a political subdivision ceases to provide such goods,  services  and  facilities,  an amount equal to the value of such services shall be  deducted by the state  comptroller  from  any  moneys  payable  to  such  political subdivision from the local assistance fund. All federal moneys  allocated  as  of  March thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven by  any political subdivision for  goods,  services  or  facilities  in  the  courts or court-related agencies affected by this section shall continue  to  be so allocated for as long as those federal moneys remain available  to that political  subdivision,  except  that,  if  the  federal  moneys  granted  to the political subdivision from which such goods, services or  facilities are provided are reduced below the amount granted as of March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, the political  subdivision  may  make  a proportionate reduction in the federal moneys allocated for  such goods, services or facilities.    (b) Political subdivisions which provide  security  services  for  the  courts,  the cost of which is not included in that portion of the budget  of the political subdivision used in the computation of the amounts  set  forth  in  column  A in paragraph (a) of subdivision two of this section  shall be entitled to reimbursement  by  the  state  within  the  amounts  appropriated  to  the  administrative  office  for  the  courts for that  purpose.    (c) All employees  providing  goods  and  services  pursuant  to  this  subdivision shall remain the employees of the political subdivision. All  deputy  sheriffs  or  police officers providing security services in the  courts shall be deemed  persons  providing  services  pursuant  to  this  subdivision.    4.  In  preparing  and  submitting  to  the  administrative  board the  itemized estimates of the annual  financial  needs  of  the  courts  and  court-related agencies set forth in subdivision one of this section, the  state administrator shall consider the relative caseloads of such courts  and  agencies in the event that increases in such itemized estimates are  proposed for  inclusion  in  the  judiciary  budget  submission  to  the  legislature.    5.  The  state  administrator  shall render an annual statement of the  amount determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of subdivision two  of  this  section  to  each political subdivision on or about the fifteenth day of  September of each year. The amount set forth in such statement shall  be  paid  to  the  state commissioner of taxation and finance by the city of  New York no more than thirty days after receipt thereof and by all other  political subdivisions on or before the thirty-first of January  of  the  following  year.  In  the  event that any political subdivision fails to  remit a payment due at the time specified herein, the comptroller  shall  withhold  payments  of  installments  or  quarterly  payments  of  state  assistance due such political subdivision pursuant to the provisions  ofarticle  four-a of the state finance law until the indebtedness due from  such political subdivision pursuant to this subdivision shall be paid in  full or until the installments  or  quarterly  payments  of  such  state  assistance or portions thereof so withheld shall equal the amount so due  from the political subdivision pursuant to this subdivision.    6.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and except as provided  in paragraph (c) of subdivision three of this section, commencing  April  first,   nineteen   hundred  seventy-seven  all  justices,  judges,  and  nonjudicial officers and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies  of  the  unified  court system set forth in subdivision one of  this section shall be employees  of  the  state  of  New  York  and  the  salaries,   wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and  conditions  of  their  employment shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this  section.    (a) Such justices, judges,  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  shall  be  placed  on  the payroll of the state of New York and shall be  entitled to the salaries, wages, hours and other terms and conditions of  employment to which they were entitled pursuant to any law  or  contract  in  effect  immediately  prior to the effective date hereof, except that  they shall receive the rates of reimbursement  for  travel  and  lodging  expenses  provided  by  the state to state-paid nonjudicial officers and  employees of the unified court system not affected  by  this  paragraph,  provided, however, that where an agreement has expired with no successor  contract  yet  having been executed prior to the effective date hereof a  contract subsequently executed and retroactive to the expiration of such  predecessor contract shall be controlling. Such salaries,  wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and conditions of employment shall continue in effect  until altered by state law or by the  terms  of  a  successor  contract,  except  that  salaries,  wages,  hours and other terms and conditions of  employment of such  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  not  provided  pursuant  to  contract  and  hours  and  other  terms  and conditions of  employment of justices and  judges  may  be  altered  by  administrative  action  in  accordance  with  law.  Provided, however, that no liability  shall be deemed to accrue to the state as result  of  any  such  law  or  contract   for  any  period  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven.    (b) Notwithstanding any provision of paragraph (a) of this subdivision  every local law enacted, contract entered into  or  action  taken  by  a  political  subdivision or other instrumentality of the state on or after  the effective date of this  paragraph  with  respect  to  the  terms  or  conditions  of  employment  of  any  such  justice,  judge, non-judicial  officer or employee shall be  subject  to  the  prior  approval  of  the  administrative board of the judicial conference. Provided, however, that  any  such  local  law,  contract  or  action affecting any such justice,  judge, non-judicial officer or employee of  any  court  of  the  unified  court  system located in a city for which an emergency financial control  board has been created shall be subject only to the  prior  approval  of  such emergency financial control board.    (c) For the purposes of this section, the term "salary" shall mean the  annual  salary  otherwise  payable  to any judge, justice or nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  to  whom  the  provisions  of  this  section  are  applicable, exclusive of overtime compensation and any allowance in lieu  of maintenance. The salary of the incumbent of a position compensable on  an  hourly  or  per  diem basis, or on any basis other than at an annual  salary rate, shall be deemed to be the salary which would  otherwise  be  payable  if  the  services were required on a full time annual basis for  the number of hours per day and days per  week  established  by  law  or  administrative rules or orders for regular full-time employees.(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law:    (i)   Any   nonjudicial   officer   or  employee  of  the  courts  and  court-related agencies of  the  unified  court  system  who  becomes  an  employee  of  the state of New York pursuant to this subdivision may, at  the option of such officer or employee,  be  credited  with  sick  leave  earned  and  accumulated  but  unused  at  the  time  he becomes a state  employee, but not in excess of two hundred days and  shall  be  credited  with  vacation  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he  becomes  a  state  employee,  but  not  in   excess   of   forty   days.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  such  nonjudicial officer or employee,  with the approval of the state administrator, may elect at any  time  to  be  credited  with  additional  sick  leave credits by the state, to the  extent such credits were earned prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven  and not already so credited pursuant to this subparagraph  (i); in such event, such sick leave credits shall not be  available  for  the  purposes  of  subparagraph (iii) of this paragraph. The state shall  not award credit or compensation for any other time  or  leave  credits,  and  shall not be liable for any terminal leave benefits based upon time  or  leave  credits  earned  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen   hundred  seventy-seven.    (ii)  Every  such nonjudicial officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive payments for time or leave credits, other  than  sick  leave  or  terminal  leave,  attributable to service rendered prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  and  not  transferred  to  the  state  pursuant to subparagraph (i), which payments such nonjudicial officer or  employee  would  otherwise  have received from the political subdivision  had he been involuntarily terminated without fault from  the  employ  of  the  political  subdivision  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven. Such credits shall be payable in cash before July  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  if  such  credits  would have been so  payable by the political subdivision or  if  such  officer  or  employee  would  otherwise  have  been  retained  on  the payroll of the political  subdivision until any such credits had been exhausted.    (iii) At the time of retirement  or  any  other  permanent  separation  without  fault  from  the  employment of the state, any such nonjudicial  officer or employee shall be entitled  to  receive  from  the  political  subdivision  payments  for  terminal leave based upon any time and leave  credits accrued before April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven,  and  not  transferred  to  the state pursuant to subparagraph (i) nor used in  the computation of any award of compensation  pursuant  to  subparagraph  (ii)  of  this  paragraph,  which  payments  such nonjudicial officer or  employee would otherwise have received from  the  political  subdivision  had   he  retired  or  separated  from  the  service  of  the  political  subdivision on March thirty-first, nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven.  If  such  officer  or  employee  retires,  such  entitlement  shall  include  payments he would have received from the political subdivision as if  he  had  been  eligible  to  retire  and  as  if  he  had  retired  on March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven. Any nonjudicial officer or  employee  who  retires  or  is  separated  from  service   after   March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  who is not entitled to  receive payment hereunder solely because of  insufficient  service  with  the  political  subdivision  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven, shall receive from the  political  subdivision  pro  rata  payments  based  upon  such  nonjudicial  officer or employee's time and  service with such local subdivision provided he is otherwise entitled to  receive such payments based upon his combined service with the political  subdivision and the state pursuant to a collective bargaining  agreement  negotiated with the state. Such credits shall be payable in cash if suchcredits  would  have  been so payable by the political subdivision or if  such officer or employee would  otherwise  have  been  retained  on  the  payroll  of  the  political  subdivision until any such credits had been  exhausted.    (e)  (i)  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law, all justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies of the unified court system who became employees  of the state of New York pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  receive  insurance benefits as set forth in this paragraph. Such justices, judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  or employees may elect to receive all of the  insurance benefits provided by the state to state-paid justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the unified court system  immediately prior to the effective date hereof. If such election is  not  made, such justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees shall  be  entitled  to  receive  the  insurance  benefits  to  which they were  entitled pursuant to any law or contract in effect immediately prior  to  the  effective date hereof, in which case the political subdivision from  which such justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees  were  entitled  to  receive  insurance benefits shall continue to provide such  insurance coverage and such justices, judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  shall  be deemed employees of the political subdivisions  for purposes of receiving such insurance coverage and for the processing  of  claims  thereunder.  The  state  shall  reimburse   each   political  subdivision  for  the amount of premiums paid pursuant to this paragraph  or, in the case of self-insurance, for the cost of the benefit  paid  by  the  political subdivision. Insurance benefits provided pursuant to this  paragraph shall continue in effect until altered by law,  administrative  action  in  accordance  with  law,  or, for those officers and employees  receiving insurance benefits pursuant to contract, by  the  terms  of  a  successor  contract.  Nothing in this paragraph shall preclude the state  from enrolling  any  such  justice,  judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  in  the  state  insurance  plan  upon  his withdrawal from the  insurance plan paid for by the political subdivision  pursuant  to  this  paragraph.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of this chapter, all  justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees of the  eleventh  judicial   district   shall  have  the  same  dual  insurance  coverage,  consisting of the state insurance plan and the insurance plan  paid  for  by  the  political  subdivision  pursuant  to  this  paragraph, which is  provided to the justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and  employees  of the first and second judicial districts.    (ii)  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  subparagraph  (i)  of this  paragraph,  all  state-paid  justices  and  judges  and  all  state-paid  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees of the unified court system not in  any collective negotiating unit established pursuant to article fourteen  of the civil service law who,  on  the  day  immediately  preceding  the  effective  date of this subparagraph, are enrolled in a health insurance  plan paid for by a political  subdivision,  shall  be  deemed  withdrawn  therefrom  and  shall  exclusively  be  enrolled  in  the  state  health  insurance plan.    (f) All monetary contributions made by a political  subdivision  prior  to   April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven  on  behalf  of  an  individual justice, judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  to  a  welfare  fund administered by an employee organization or by a political  subdivision   shall,   commencing   April   first,   nineteen    hundred  seventy-seven, be paid by the state.    (g) Each political subdivision shall be liable for the satisfaction of  any  claims  by  any  officer  or  employee arising out of the terms andconditions of his employment prior to the date on which such officer  or  employee became a state employee pursuant to this subdivision.    7.  Upon  the termination of the period of unchallenged representation  of any  employee  organization  certified  or  recognized  to  represent  employees  of  the courts or court related agencies of the unified court  system, petitions may be filed  with  the  public  employment  relations  board  to  alter  negotiating units in accordance with the standards set  forth in section two hundred seven of the civil service  law;  provided,  however,  that  such  board  shall  not  alter any such negotiating unit  comprised exclusively of such  employees  or  that  part  of  any  other  negotiating  unit  comprised  of  such employees. The provisions of this  subdivision shall be applicable in any case  in  which  the  negotiating  unit  is  so  defined  on  the  effective  date  of  this subdivision in  accordance with the provisions of either section two  hundred  seven  or  section two hundred twelve of the civil service law, as the case may be.  Nothing  herein  shall  preclude the merger of negotiating units of such  employees with the consent of the administrative board of  the  judicial  conference  and  the  recognized  or  certified  representatives  of the  negotiating units involved.    8. (a) The administrative board of the judicial conference shall adopt  a classification structure for all non-judicial officers  and  employees  who  become  employees of the state of New York pursuant to this section  which shall provide for the classification of  positions  in  accordance  with  duties required to be performed in title in these positions and in  accordance with the responsibilities of the position and the  volume  of  work  in the court or court-related agency in which the position exists.  Nothing in this section shall prohibit the subsequent  restructuring  of  the  classification and duties of employees in accordance with the rules  of the administrative board. The administrative board in accordance with  section  two  hundred  nineteen  of  this   article   shall   determine,  retroactive  to  April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, the salary  grade of each employee who becomes an employee of the state of New  York  pursuant  to  this  section; provided, however, nothing herein contained  shall be deemed to diminish: (i) the right of any employee  organization  to negotiate wages or salaries pursuant to article fourteen of the civil  service  law,  or;  (ii)  the  right of any employee to receive wages or  salaries pursuant to subdivision six of  this  section.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of  law,  an application to the public employment  relations board seeking a designation by the board that certain  persons  are  managerial  or  confidential  may be filed at any time before April  first, nineteen hundred seventy-eight, and thereafter  pursuant  to  the  provisions of the civil service law.    (b) A nonjudicial officer or employee whose position is allocated to a  salary  grade  pursuant  to  paragraph  (a) of this subdivision shall be  placed into that salary grade at the salary received by such officer  or  employee  immediately prior to said allocation or at the minimum of that  grade, whichever is higher. The  salary  of  such  officer  or  employee  within  such  salary  grade,  as  determined  by  this  paragraph, shall  establish the increment step into which the employee shall be placed and  shall determine the number of years of service  to  be  credited  within  such salary grade as of April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, for  the   purpose  of  computing  future  increments.  Each  employee  shall  thereafter receive increment credit for each subsequent year of  service  in  such  position  up  to the maximum prescribed by section two hundred  nineteen of this article.    9. (a) On and after the effective date of this paragraph all justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies  of  the  unified  court  system  set  forth  insubdivision  one  who  become  employees  of  the  state   pursuant   to  subdivision  six  of  this section shall thereupon become members of the  New York state employees retirement system to the  extent  permitted  or  required  by  the  provisions of the retirement and social security law,  and the reserves in any other retirement system shall be transferred  to  the  New  York  state employees retirement system without any request by  them or any notice to the retirement systems, except that: (1) any  such  justice, judge or nonjudicial officer or employee who is a member of the  New  York  city  employees'  retirement  system  or  the  New  York city  teachers' retirement system may elect to continue membership in the  New  York  city  employees'  retirement system or the New York city teachers'  retirement system, as the case may be, and (2) any justice or judge  who  is  a  member of both the New York city employees' retirement system and  the New York state employees' retirement system may  elect  to  continue  membership  in  the  New  York  city employees' retirement system and to  discontinue membership in  the  New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system.  Any  election pursuant to this paragraph shall be made no later  than the ninetieth day next succeeding the date on which the  provisions  hereof  become  effective,  by  filing a written notice thereof with the  administrative head of the New York state employees'  retirement  system  and  the New York city employees' retirement system or the New York city  teachers'  retirement  system  and,  once  made  and  filed,  shall   be  irrevocable.  Upon  the  retirement  of  a justice, judge or nonjudicial  officer or employee who has made such an election,  the  calculation  of  final  average  salary by the New York city employees' retirement system  or the New York city teachers' retirement system shall be  performed  as  if the salary earned as a state employee on and after such effectiveness  were earned in New York city employment. In the case of a justice, judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or employee who remains or becomes a member of  the New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system  pursuant  to  this  paragraph,  the  New  York  city employees' retirement system or the New  York city teachers' retirement system shall make a transfer of reserves,  contributions and credits to the New York  state  employees'  retirement  system,  in the manner required by section forty-three of the retirement  and social security law. In the case of an election to continue  in  the  New  York city employees' retirement system by a justice or judge who is  a member of both retirement  systems,  the  New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system  shall make a transfer of reserves, contributions and  credits to the New York city employees' retirement system, in the manner  provided by section forty-three of such law.    (b) The comptroller of the city of New York shall certify to the state  administrator the amount of money required to be paid by  the  state  of  New  York  for  pension  costs resulting from elections made pursuant to  paragraph (a) of this subdivision. The comptroller of the state  of  New  York  shall pay to the New York city employees' retirement system or the  New York city teachers' retirement system, upon approval  by  the  state  administrator,  the  amounts so certified by the comptroller of the city  of New York. The comptroller of the city of New York shall also  certify  to   the  state  administrator  the  amount  of  money  required  to  be  contributed by each of such employees. The comptroller of the  state  of  New  York  shall  be  authorized  to  withhold  the contribution of such  employees and pay that amount to the New York city employees' retirement  system or the New York city teachers' retirement system. The  amount  so  certified  pursuant  to  this paragraph shall be the same as the amounts  required to be contributed for similarly situated city employees by  the  city of New York and by employees of the city of New York.    10.  (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, commencing April  first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three,  in   the   event   the   chiefadministrator  of  the  courts,  in his sole discretion, determines that  court security services provided by the county of  Westchester  pursuant  to  subdivision three of this section should be provided by employees of  the  unified  court  system:  (i)  the  state  shall  be responsible for  providing security services to the courts in such county, and  (ii)  all  permanent  officers  and  employees  of  the department of public safety  service of such county who provide security services in  the  courts  of  such  county  pursuant  to  subdivision  three  of this section shall be  eligible to become employees of the state of  New  York  upon  filing  a  notice  of state employment election with the chief administrator of the  courts in a manner and  form  determined  by  the  chief  administrator;  provided,  however,  that such employment shall be subject to acceptance  by the employee  of  the  salary,  wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and  conditions  of  employment  enjoyed  by  other  state  employees  in the  negotiating unit into which his position is placed.    (b) Each nonjudicial officer and employee who files a notice of  state  employment  election  as  provided  in paragraph (a) of this subdivision  shall be placed on a payroll of the state of  New  York  in  a  position  which  shall  be classified and allocated pursuant to the classification  structure, established by the chief administrator of the courts  on  May  twenty-eighth,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine. The salary of each such  nonjudicial  officer  and  employee  shall  be  his  salary   on   March  thirty-first,   nineteen  hundred  eighty-three,  plus  such  number  of  increments equalling his  years  of  permanent  service  in  his  county  position  on  March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, not to  exceed the maximum of the salary grade of the position to  which  he  is  allocated  hereunder.  Eligibility  for future increments shall be based  solely upon state service commencing upon the  effective  date  of  this  subdivision.    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law:    (i)  Any  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  of  the courts and court  related agencies of the unified court system who becomes an employee  of  the  state  of  New  York pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision,  may, at the option of such officer or employee, be  credited  with  sick  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he becomes a state  employee, but not in excess of two hundred days and  shall  be  credited  with  vacation  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he  becomes a state employee, but not in excess of  forty  days.  The  state  shall  not  award  credit  or  compensation  for any other time or leave  credits and shall not be liable for any terminal  leave  benefits  based  upon time or leave credits earned prior to April first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three.    (ii)  Each  such  nonjudicial officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive payments from the  county  of  Westchester  for  time  or  leave  credits,  other  than  sick  leave  or  terminal  leave, attributable to  service prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three  and  not  transferred to the state pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph,  which payments such nonjudicial officer or employee would otherwise have  received  from  the  county had he been involuntarily terminated without  fault from the employ of the  county  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three. Such credits shall be payable in cash before July  first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, if such credits would have been so  payable by the county of Westchester or  if  such  officer  or  employee  would  otherwise  have  been retained on the payroll of the county until  any such credits have been exhausted.    (iii) At the time of retirement, or  any  other  permanent  separation  without  fault  from  the  employment of the state, any such nonjudicial  officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive  from  the  county  ofWestchester  payments  for  terminal leave based upon any time and leave  credits accrued before April first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three,  and  not  transferred  to  the  state  pursuant  to  subparagraph (i) of this  paragraph,  which  payments  such  nonjudicial officer or employee would  otherwise have received from the county had he retired or separated from  the service of  the  county  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three.    (d)  Upon  the  effective  date  of this subdivision, each officer and  employee who elects to become a state employee pursuant to paragraph (a)  of this subdivision shall have permanent status in  his  state  position  without  further examination or qualification. Each officer and employee  having permanent status in a competitive class county position who  does  not  make  such election shall have his name entered upon an appropriate  preferred list for reinstatement to the same or similar positions in the  service of the county of Westchester.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Jud > Article-2 > 39

§  39.  Unified  court  budget;  first  instance  payments  by  state;  provision  for  prepayment;   payment   by   localities;   transfer   of  non-judicial  personnel.  1. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,  and except as provided in subdivision three of this  section  the  state  shall  pay  in the first instance from regular appropriations, beginning  April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven the expenses for the supreme  court and  appellate  divisions  and  appellate  terms  thereof,  county  courts,  family  courts,  surrogate's courts, civil court of the city of  New York, criminal court of the city of New York, district courts,  city  courts,  the  county  clerks'  offices in the city of New York and those  portions of the county clerks' offices outside the city of New York that  perform services pursuant to the role of the county clerk  as  clerk  of  the  court  where  the  budgets of the political subdivisions separately  identify those services, and commissioners of jurors  and  their  staffs  where separate from the county clerks, or, of not so separate, where the  budgets of the political subdivisions separately identify that function.    2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the allocation of costs  of the courts and court-related agencies set forth in subdivision one of  this section to each political subdivision shall be as follows:    (a)  Effective  for  the  state  fiscal  year  beginning  April first,  nineteen hundred seventy-nine, the state comptroller shall  deduct  from  any  moneys  payable  to  each such political subdivision from the local  assistance account twenty-five percent of the amount set forth in column  A. In the event that the judiciary budget adopted for  the  fiscal  year  beginning   April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine  includes  an  allocation  for  any  political  subdivision  that  is  less  than   the  appropriated  budget  used  to calculate column A, then the deduction to  the locality shall be proportionately reduced. The amount to be deducted  pursuant to this paragraph, as reduced pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  subdivision  or  any  other  provision  of  law, shall be deducted  pursuant to a plan prepared by the state comptroller with  the  approval  of  the  state  director  of  the budget. Such plan shall, to the extent  practicable, provide for the amount of such deductions to coincide  with  the  state  first  instance  payments  for  the  expenses  enumerated in  subdivision one of this section. In lieu of deducting such  amount  from  moneys  payable  from the local assistance account, the plan prepared by  the state comptroller with the approval of the  state  director  of  the  budget may provide for the rendering of monthly or bi-monthly statements  requiring  the  payment  of  fractional portions of such amount, and may  provide for the payment of interest at a rate to be fixed by  the  state  comptroller,  not  to exceed six percent per annum, in the event payment  shall not be made at the time and in the amount prescribed therein.                                                                   NetLocal                                                                Commitment  Sub-parg.                                                       Column A  _________                                                     __________  1. Albany Co.                                                  1,070,972  2. Allegany Co.                                                  163,292  3. Broome Co.                                                    631,332  4. Cattaraugus Co.                                               283,404  5. Cayuga Co.                                                    276,422  6. Chautauqua Co.                                                505,825  7. Chemung Co.                                                   417,520  8. Chenango Co.                                                  163,660  9. Clinton Co.                                                   375,908  10. Columbia Co.                                                 218,664  11. Cortland Co.                                                 136,53012. Delaware Co.                                                 132,998  13. Dutchess Co.                                               1,306,400  14. Erie Co.                                                   4,477,957  15. Essex Co.                                                    185,590  16. Franklin Co.                                                 227,027  17. Fulton Co.                                                   353,064  18. Genesee Co.                                                  293,468  19. Greene Co.                                                   209,268  20. Hamilton Co.                                                  64,839  21. Herkimer Co.                                                 235,259  22. Jefferson Co.                                                351,634  23. Lewis Co.                                                    103,147  24. Livingston Co.                                               176,190  25. Madison Co.                                                  238,472  26. Monroe Co.                                                 3,202,248  27. Montgomery Co.                                               311,582  28. Nassau Co.                                                17,989,885  29. Niagara Co.                                                1,101,979  30. Oneida Co.                                                   971,718  31. Onondaga Co.                                               1,899,769  32. Ontario Co.                                                  338,318  33. Orange Co.                                                 1,271,126  34. Orleans Co.                                                  133,546  35. Oswego Co.                                                   499,791  36. Otsego Co.                                                   221,928  37. Putnam Co.                                                   274,839  38. Rensselaer Co.                                               584,464  39. Rockland Co.                                               1,385,788  40. St. Lawrence Co.                                             444,423  41. Saratoga Co.                                                 445,098  42. Schenectady Co.                                              650,378  43. Schoharie Co.                                                120,366  44. Schuyler Co.                                                  69,832  45. Seneca County                                                147,571  46. Steuben Co.                                                  377,784  47. Suffolk Co.                                               12,667,065  48. Sullivan Co.                                                 391,361  49. Tioga Co.                                                    136,855  50. Tompkins Co.                                                 291,294  51. Ulster Co.                                                   569,779  52. Warren Co.                                                   323,586  53. Washington Co.                                               245,885  54. Wayne Co.                                                    281,637  55. Westchester Co.                                            4,855,637  56. Wyoming Co.                                                  172,799  57. Yates Co.                                                     99,050  58. City of Albany                                               312,321  59. City of Binghamton                                           208,564  60. City of Buffalo                                            1,297,555  61. City of Mt. Vernon                                           330,491  62. City of New Rochelle                                         300,473  63. City of New York                                          81,528,585  64. City of Niagara Falls                                        252,006  65. City of Rochester                                            902,475  66. City of Rome                                                  82,972  67. City of Schenectady                                          152,607  68. City of Syracuse                                             712,583  69. City of Troy                                                 158,57670. City of Utica                                                264,612  71. City of White Plains                                         311,387  72. City of Yonkers                                              759,013  73. City of Amsterdam                                             37,126  74. City of Auburn                                                62,938  75. City of Batavia                                               38,790  76. City of Beacon                                                24,085  77. City of Canandaigua                                           35,301  78. City of Cohoes                                                38,892  79. City of Corning                                               23,067  80. City of Cortland                                              39,104  81. City of Dunkirk                                               54,523  82. City of Elmira                                               107,398  83. City of Fulton                                                31,947  84. City of Geneva                                                34,909  85. City of Glen Cove                                             87,917  86. City of Glens Falls                                           58,427  87. City of Gloversville                                          32,404  88. City of Hornell                                               30,769  89. City of Hudson                                                15,934  90. City of Ithaca                                               106,175  91. City of Jamestown                                             75,074  92. City of Johnstown                                             28,346  93. City of Kingston                                              46,983  94. City of Lackawanna                                            94,215  95. City of Little Falls                                          18,583  96. City of Lockport                                              67,567  97. City of Long Beach                                           222,129  98. City of Mechanicville                                         20,935  99. City of Middletown                                            62,970  100. City of Newburgh                                             85,009  101. City of North Tonawanda                                      88,793  102. City of Norwich                                              28,893  103. City of Ogdensburg                                           54,133  104. City of Olean                                                43,699  105. City of Oneida                                               25,331  106. City of Oneonta                                              46,804  107. City of Oswego                                               57,552  108. City of Peekskill                                            92,493  109. City of Plattsburgh                                          39,544  110. City of Port Jervis                                          33,701  111. City of Poughkeepsie                                         92,647  112. City of Rensselaer                                           22,920  113. City of Rye                                                  42,620  114. City of Salamanca                                            16,719  115. City of Saratoga Springs                                     67,444  116. City of Sherrill                                              6,643  117. City of Tonawanda                                            71,307  118. City of Watertown                                           120,076  119. City of Watervliet                                           21,274     (a-1)  (i) Effective for each state fiscal year beginning April first,  nineteen hundred ninety-five, the state comptroller shall, on or  before  the  end  of that fiscal year: (1) deduct from any moneys payable to the  city of New York from the local assistance account as state aid for  the  support  of  local  government the amount certified to him or her by the  chief administrator of the courts immediately  following  the  close  of  such  fiscal  year  pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, and(2) transfer the amount of such  deduction  from  the  local  assistance  account to the New York city county clerks' operations offset fund.    (ii)  On  or  before  March  first  in each year commencing with March  first,  nineteen  hundred  ninety-six,  the  chief  administrator  shall  determine  and certify to the comptroller the difference between (1) the  amount of the disbursements under the judiciary budget made  during  the  fiscal  year  ending  the previous March thirty-first for the payment of  services and expenses incurred in that fiscal year by the offices of the  county clerks of the city of New York, excluding services  and  expenses  incurred  by  those  offices in discharge of a county clerk's powers and  duties as commissioner of jurors, and (2) the aggregate receipts derived  by the state from the fees  specified  in  paragraphs  one  and  two  of  subdivision  (f)  of  section  eight  thousand  twenty and section eight  thousand twenty-one of the civil  practice  law  and  rules  during  the  fiscal year commencing April first, nineteen hundred ninety.    (iii)  On  or  before  March first, nineteen hundred ninety-seven, and  each March first thereafter, the chief administrator shall determine the  actual difference between (1) the amount of the disbursements under  the  judiciary  budget  made during the fiscal year ending the previous March  thirty-first for the payment of services and expenses incurred  in  that  fiscal year by the offices of the county clerks of the city of New York,  excluding  services  and expenses incurred by those offices in discharge  of a county clerk's powers and duties as commissioner of jurors and  (2)  the aggregate receipts derived from the state from the fees specified in  paragraphs  one  and  two  of  subdivision (f) of section eight thousand  twenty and section eight thousand twenty-one of the civil  practice  law  and  rules  during  the  preceding  fiscal year. The chief administrator  shall compare this actual amount of difference with the projected amount  of difference calculated pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph  and certify the difference between the two amounts to  the  comptroller.  Such  amount shall be added to, or deleted from, as the case may be, the  amount of the deduction made from state aid payments to the city of  New  York pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.    (b)  To  the  extent  the moneys so estimated by the state comptroller  with the approval of the state director of the budget to be  payable  to  such  political  subdivision  from  the local assistance fund during any  state fiscal year are insufficient to provide for the deduction  of  the  amount  required  to be deducted pursuant to this subdivision, each such  political subdivision shall pay on a monthly basis to  the  commissioner  of  taxation  and  finance an amount determined by the state comptroller  and the state director of the budget  to  provide  for  payment  of  the  amount   by  which  the  estimated  moneys  payable  to  such  political  subdivision is insufficient. The amount of such payments may be adjusted  from time to time as the estimate of moneys payable  to  such  political  subdivision is adjusted.    (c) For the state fiscal year commencing April first, nineteen hundred  seventy-nine, each political subdivision shall repay to the State of New  York an amount equal to twenty-five precent of its portion of the amount  appropriated  in  the first instance from the state purposes fund to the  judiciary for the state fiscal year  commencing  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-six,  as determined by the state department of taxation  and finance.    (d) Except as provided in  subdivision  three  of  this  section,  the  allocation  of  costs to each political subdivision for its share of the  expenses of the courts and court related agencies of the  unified  court  system  set forth in subdivision one of this section shall be determined  by law for the fiscal year  commencing  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine,  and no allocation of such costs to political subdivisionsshall be made for any fiscal year commencing on or  after  April  first,  nineteen hundred eighty.    (e)  All  fees  collected pursuant to sections eighteen hundred three,  eighteen hundred three-A and nineteen hundred eleven  of  the  New  York  city  civil  court  act, all fees collected pursuant to state law by the  county clerks in the city of New  York,  except  as  otherwise  provided  herein  with  respect  to  fees collected pursuant to subdivision (a) of  section eight thousand eighteen of the civil practice law and rules  and  except those fees collected by the clerk of Richmond county which in the  other  counties  of  the  city  of  New  York  are collected by the city  registers,  all  fees  collected  pursuant  to  section  eight  thousand  eighteen  of  the civil practice law and rules except only to the extent  of one hundred sixty-five dollars  of  any  fee  collected  pursuant  to  subparagraph (i) of paragraph one of subdivision (a) of such section and  except  for  those  collected pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph  one of paragraph three of  such  subdivision  (a),  all  fees  collected  pursuant  to section eight thousand twenty of the civil practice law and  rules except for those collected pursuant to subdivisions (f),  (g)  and  (h)  of  said  section,  all  fees  collected  pursuant to section eight  thousand twenty-two of the  civil  practice  law  and  rules,  all  fees  collected pursuant to section twenty-four hundred two of the surrogate's  court  procedure  act,  all  fees collected pursuant to section eighteen  hundred three, eighteen hundred three-A and subdivision (a)  of  section  nineteen  hundred  eleven  of  the  uniform district court act, all fees  collected pursuant to section eighteen hundred three,  eighteen  hundred  three-A  and  subdivision  (a) of section nineteen hundred eleven of the  uniform  city  court  act  and  all  fines,  penalties  and  forfeitures  collected  pursuant  to  subdivision  eight  of section eighteen hundred  three of the vehicle and traffic law, except such fines,  penalties  and  forfeitures   collected   by  the  Nassau  county  traffic  and  parking  violations agency, section 71-0211  of  the  environmental  conservation  law,  section  two hundred one of the navigation law and subdivision one  of section 27.13 of the parks, recreation and historic preservation  law  shall  be  paid  to  the state commissioner of taxation and finance on a  monthly basis no later than ten days after the last day of  each  month.  The  additional  fee  of  five dollars collected by county clerks in New  York city pursuant to paragraph three  of  subdivision  (a)  of  section  eight  thousand  eighteen  of  the civil practice law and rules shall be  distributed monthly by the county clerks as follows:  four  dollars  and  seventy-five cents to the commissioner of education for deposit into the  local  government  records management improvement funds; and twenty-five  cents to the city of New York.    (f) Effective April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven,  the  state  shall  no  longer make any payments pursuant to section thirty-four-a of  this chapter nor any payments pursuant to section ninety-nine-l  of  the  general  municipal  law for matters handled by the criminal court of the  city of New York, the district courts and city courts.    (g) The amounts to be deducted from the local assistance fund  and  to  be paid by political subdivisions to the state of New York, and the fees  to be paid to the state commissioner of taxation and finance pursuant to  paragraphs  (a), (b), (c) and (e) of subdivision two of this section are  hereby made available for the reimbursement of expenditures made by  the  judiciary  in  the  first  instance  from  state purposes appropriations  authorized by subdivision one of this section.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the comptroller is  hereby  authorized  to  repay  from  such amounts and such fees the expenditures  made by  the  judiciary  in  the  first  instance  from  state  purposes  appropriations authorized by subdivision one of this section.3. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, all goods, services  and  facilities  presently  furnished  and  paid  for  by  any political  subdivision to the courts and court-related agencies  affected  by  this  section  not  included  in  that  portion of the budget of the political  subdivision  used  in  the  computation  of  the  amounts  set  forth in  subdivision two of this section, shall continue to be furnished and paid  for by the political subdivision. Each political subdivision shall  also  be  responsible  for  supplying  such additional facilities suitable and  sufficient for the transaction of business as may  become  needed  after  the  effective  date  of this subdivision. In the event that a political  subdivision during any state fiscal year  ceases  to  provide  any  such  goods,  services and facilities, the state administrator shall determine  the value of such goods, services and facilities and  shall  notify  the  state  comptroller  of such determination. During each state fiscal year  in which a political subdivision ceases to provide such goods,  services  and  facilities,  an amount equal to the value of such services shall be  deducted by the state  comptroller  from  any  moneys  payable  to  such  political subdivision from the local assistance fund. All federal moneys  allocated  as  of  March thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven by  any political subdivision for  goods,  services  or  facilities  in  the  courts or court-related agencies affected by this section shall continue  to  be so allocated for as long as those federal moneys remain available  to that political  subdivision,  except  that,  if  the  federal  moneys  granted  to the political subdivision from which such goods, services or  facilities are provided are reduced below the amount granted as of March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, the political  subdivision  may  make  a proportionate reduction in the federal moneys allocated for  such goods, services or facilities.    (b) Political subdivisions which provide  security  services  for  the  courts,  the cost of which is not included in that portion of the budget  of the political subdivision used in the computation of the amounts  set  forth  in  column  A in paragraph (a) of subdivision two of this section  shall be entitled to reimbursement  by  the  state  within  the  amounts  appropriated  to  the  administrative  office  for  the  courts for that  purpose.    (c) All employees  providing  goods  and  services  pursuant  to  this  subdivision shall remain the employees of the political subdivision. All  deputy  sheriffs  or  police officers providing security services in the  courts shall be deemed  persons  providing  services  pursuant  to  this  subdivision.    4.  In  preparing  and  submitting  to  the  administrative  board the  itemized estimates of the annual  financial  needs  of  the  courts  and  court-related agencies set forth in subdivision one of this section, the  state administrator shall consider the relative caseloads of such courts  and  agencies in the event that increases in such itemized estimates are  proposed for  inclusion  in  the  judiciary  budget  submission  to  the  legislature.    5.  The  state  administrator  shall render an annual statement of the  amount determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of subdivision two  of  this  section  to  each political subdivision on or about the fifteenth day of  September of each year. The amount set forth in such statement shall  be  paid  to  the  state commissioner of taxation and finance by the city of  New York no more than thirty days after receipt thereof and by all other  political subdivisions on or before the thirty-first of January  of  the  following  year.  In  the  event that any political subdivision fails to  remit a payment due at the time specified herein, the comptroller  shall  withhold  payments  of  installments  or  quarterly  payments  of  state  assistance due such political subdivision pursuant to the provisions  ofarticle  four-a of the state finance law until the indebtedness due from  such political subdivision pursuant to this subdivision shall be paid in  full or until the installments  or  quarterly  payments  of  such  state  assistance or portions thereof so withheld shall equal the amount so due  from the political subdivision pursuant to this subdivision.    6.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and except as provided  in paragraph (c) of subdivision three of this section, commencing  April  first,   nineteen   hundred  seventy-seven  all  justices,  judges,  and  nonjudicial officers and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies  of  the  unified  court system set forth in subdivision one of  this section shall be employees  of  the  state  of  New  York  and  the  salaries,   wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and  conditions  of  their  employment shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this  section.    (a) Such justices, judges,  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  shall  be  placed  on  the payroll of the state of New York and shall be  entitled to the salaries, wages, hours and other terms and conditions of  employment to which they were entitled pursuant to any law  or  contract  in  effect  immediately  prior to the effective date hereof, except that  they shall receive the rates of reimbursement  for  travel  and  lodging  expenses  provided  by  the state to state-paid nonjudicial officers and  employees of the unified court system not affected  by  this  paragraph,  provided, however, that where an agreement has expired with no successor  contract  yet  having been executed prior to the effective date hereof a  contract subsequently executed and retroactive to the expiration of such  predecessor contract shall be controlling. Such salaries,  wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and conditions of employment shall continue in effect  until altered by state law or by the  terms  of  a  successor  contract,  except  that  salaries,  wages,  hours and other terms and conditions of  employment of such  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  not  provided  pursuant  to  contract  and  hours  and  other  terms  and conditions of  employment of justices and  judges  may  be  altered  by  administrative  action  in  accordance  with  law.  Provided, however, that no liability  shall be deemed to accrue to the state as result  of  any  such  law  or  contract   for  any  period  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven.    (b) Notwithstanding any provision of paragraph (a) of this subdivision  every local law enacted, contract entered into  or  action  taken  by  a  political  subdivision or other instrumentality of the state on or after  the effective date of this  paragraph  with  respect  to  the  terms  or  conditions  of  employment  of  any  such  justice,  judge, non-judicial  officer or employee shall be  subject  to  the  prior  approval  of  the  administrative board of the judicial conference. Provided, however, that  any  such  local  law,  contract  or  action affecting any such justice,  judge, non-judicial officer or employee of  any  court  of  the  unified  court  system located in a city for which an emergency financial control  board has been created shall be subject only to the  prior  approval  of  such emergency financial control board.    (c) For the purposes of this section, the term "salary" shall mean the  annual  salary  otherwise  payable  to any judge, justice or nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  to  whom  the  provisions  of  this  section  are  applicable, exclusive of overtime compensation and any allowance in lieu  of maintenance. The salary of the incumbent of a position compensable on  an  hourly  or  per  diem basis, or on any basis other than at an annual  salary rate, shall be deemed to be the salary which would  otherwise  be  payable  if  the  services were required on a full time annual basis for  the number of hours per day and days per  week  established  by  law  or  administrative rules or orders for regular full-time employees.(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law:    (i)   Any   nonjudicial   officer   or  employee  of  the  courts  and  court-related agencies of  the  unified  court  system  who  becomes  an  employee  of  the state of New York pursuant to this subdivision may, at  the option of such officer or employee,  be  credited  with  sick  leave  earned  and  accumulated  but  unused  at  the  time  he becomes a state  employee, but not in excess of two hundred days and  shall  be  credited  with  vacation  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he  becomes  a  state  employee,  but  not  in   excess   of   forty   days.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  such  nonjudicial officer or employee,  with the approval of the state administrator, may elect at any  time  to  be  credited  with  additional  sick  leave credits by the state, to the  extent such credits were earned prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven  and not already so credited pursuant to this subparagraph  (i); in such event, such sick leave credits shall not be  available  for  the  purposes  of  subparagraph (iii) of this paragraph. The state shall  not award credit or compensation for any other time  or  leave  credits,  and  shall not be liable for any terminal leave benefits based upon time  or  leave  credits  earned  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen   hundred  seventy-seven.    (ii)  Every  such nonjudicial officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive payments for time or leave credits, other  than  sick  leave  or  terminal  leave,  attributable to service rendered prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  and  not  transferred  to  the  state  pursuant to subparagraph (i), which payments such nonjudicial officer or  employee  would  otherwise  have received from the political subdivision  had he been involuntarily terminated without fault from  the  employ  of  the  political  subdivision  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven. Such credits shall be payable in cash before July  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  if  such  credits  would have been so  payable by the political subdivision or  if  such  officer  or  employee  would  otherwise  have  been  retained  on  the payroll of the political  subdivision until any such credits had been exhausted.    (iii) At the time of retirement  or  any  other  permanent  separation  without  fault  from  the  employment of the state, any such nonjudicial  officer or employee shall be entitled  to  receive  from  the  political  subdivision  payments  for  terminal leave based upon any time and leave  credits accrued before April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven,  and  not  transferred  to  the state pursuant to subparagraph (i) nor used in  the computation of any award of compensation  pursuant  to  subparagraph  (ii)  of  this  paragraph,  which  payments  such nonjudicial officer or  employee would otherwise have received from  the  political  subdivision  had   he  retired  or  separated  from  the  service  of  the  political  subdivision on March thirty-first, nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven.  If  such  officer  or  employee  retires,  such  entitlement  shall  include  payments he would have received from the political subdivision as if  he  had  been  eligible  to  retire  and  as  if  he  had  retired  on March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven. Any nonjudicial officer or  employee  who  retires  or  is  separated  from  service   after   March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven,  who is not entitled to  receive payment hereunder solely because of  insufficient  service  with  the  political  subdivision  prior  to  April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven, shall receive from the  political  subdivision  pro  rata  payments  based  upon  such  nonjudicial  officer or employee's time and  service with such local subdivision provided he is otherwise entitled to  receive such payments based upon his combined service with the political  subdivision and the state pursuant to a collective bargaining  agreement  negotiated with the state. Such credits shall be payable in cash if suchcredits  would  have  been so payable by the political subdivision or if  such officer or employee would  otherwise  have  been  retained  on  the  payroll  of  the  political  subdivision until any such credits had been  exhausted.    (e)  (i)  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law, all justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies of the unified court system who became employees  of the state of New York pursuant  to  this  subdivision  shall  receive  insurance benefits as set forth in this paragraph. Such justices, judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  or employees may elect to receive all of the  insurance benefits provided by the state to state-paid justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the unified court system  immediately prior to the effective date hereof. If such election is  not  made, such justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees shall  be  entitled  to  receive  the  insurance  benefits  to  which they were  entitled pursuant to any law or contract in effect immediately prior  to  the  effective date hereof, in which case the political subdivision from  which such justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees  were  entitled  to  receive  insurance benefits shall continue to provide such  insurance coverage and such justices, judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  shall  be deemed employees of the political subdivisions  for purposes of receiving such insurance coverage and for the processing  of  claims  thereunder.  The  state  shall  reimburse   each   political  subdivision  for  the amount of premiums paid pursuant to this paragraph  or, in the case of self-insurance, for the cost of the benefit  paid  by  the  political subdivision. Insurance benefits provided pursuant to this  paragraph shall continue in effect until altered by law,  administrative  action  in  accordance  with  law,  or, for those officers and employees  receiving insurance benefits pursuant to contract, by  the  terms  of  a  successor  contract.  Nothing in this paragraph shall preclude the state  from enrolling  any  such  justice,  judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  in  the  state  insurance  plan  upon  his withdrawal from the  insurance plan paid for by the political subdivision  pursuant  to  this  paragraph.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of this chapter, all  justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and employees of the  eleventh  judicial   district   shall  have  the  same  dual  insurance  coverage,  consisting of the state insurance plan and the insurance plan  paid  for  by  the  political  subdivision  pursuant  to  this  paragraph, which is  provided to the justices, judges and nonjudicial officers and  employees  of the first and second judicial districts.    (ii)  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  subparagraph  (i)  of this  paragraph,  all  state-paid  justices  and  judges  and  all  state-paid  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees of the unified court system not in  any collective negotiating unit established pursuant to article fourteen  of the civil service law who,  on  the  day  immediately  preceding  the  effective  date of this subparagraph, are enrolled in a health insurance  plan paid for by a political  subdivision,  shall  be  deemed  withdrawn  therefrom  and  shall  exclusively  be  enrolled  in  the  state  health  insurance plan.    (f) All monetary contributions made by a political  subdivision  prior  to   April  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-seven  on  behalf  of  an  individual justice, judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  to  a  welfare  fund administered by an employee organization or by a political  subdivision   shall,   commencing   April   first,   nineteen    hundred  seventy-seven, be paid by the state.    (g) Each political subdivision shall be liable for the satisfaction of  any  claims  by  any  officer  or  employee arising out of the terms andconditions of his employment prior to the date on which such officer  or  employee became a state employee pursuant to this subdivision.    7.  Upon  the termination of the period of unchallenged representation  of any  employee  organization  certified  or  recognized  to  represent  employees  of  the courts or court related agencies of the unified court  system, petitions may be filed  with  the  public  employment  relations  board  to  alter  negotiating units in accordance with the standards set  forth in section two hundred seven of the civil service  law;  provided,  however,  that  such  board  shall  not  alter any such negotiating unit  comprised exclusively of such  employees  or  that  part  of  any  other  negotiating  unit  comprised  of  such employees. The provisions of this  subdivision shall be applicable in any case  in  which  the  negotiating  unit  is  so  defined  on  the  effective  date  of  this subdivision in  accordance with the provisions of either section two  hundred  seven  or  section two hundred twelve of the civil service law, as the case may be.  Nothing  herein  shall  preclude the merger of negotiating units of such  employees with the consent of the administrative board of  the  judicial  conference  and  the  recognized  or  certified  representatives  of the  negotiating units involved.    8. (a) The administrative board of the judicial conference shall adopt  a classification structure for all non-judicial officers  and  employees  who  become  employees of the state of New York pursuant to this section  which shall provide for the classification of  positions  in  accordance  with  duties required to be performed in title in these positions and in  accordance with the responsibilities of the position and the  volume  of  work  in the court or court-related agency in which the position exists.  Nothing in this section shall prohibit the subsequent  restructuring  of  the  classification and duties of employees in accordance with the rules  of the administrative board. The administrative board in accordance with  section  two  hundred  nineteen  of  this   article   shall   determine,  retroactive  to  April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, the salary  grade of each employee who becomes an employee of the state of New  York  pursuant  to  this  section; provided, however, nothing herein contained  shall be deemed to diminish: (i) the right of any employee  organization  to negotiate wages or salaries pursuant to article fourteen of the civil  service  law,  or;  (ii)  the  right of any employee to receive wages or  salaries pursuant to subdivision six of  this  section.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of  law,  an application to the public employment  relations board seeking a designation by the board that certain  persons  are  managerial  or  confidential  may be filed at any time before April  first, nineteen hundred seventy-eight, and thereafter  pursuant  to  the  provisions of the civil service law.    (b) A nonjudicial officer or employee whose position is allocated to a  salary  grade  pursuant  to  paragraph  (a) of this subdivision shall be  placed into that salary grade at the salary received by such officer  or  employee  immediately prior to said allocation or at the minimum of that  grade, whichever is higher. The  salary  of  such  officer  or  employee  within  such  salary  grade,  as  determined  by  this  paragraph, shall  establish the increment step into which the employee shall be placed and  shall determine the number of years of service  to  be  credited  within  such salary grade as of April first, nineteen hundred seventy-seven, for  the   purpose  of  computing  future  increments.  Each  employee  shall  thereafter receive increment credit for each subsequent year of  service  in  such  position  up  to the maximum prescribed by section two hundred  nineteen of this article.    9. (a) On and after the effective date of this paragraph all justices,  judges  and  nonjudicial  officers  and  employees  of  the  courts  and  court-related  agencies  of  the  unified  court  system  set  forth  insubdivision  one  who  become  employees  of  the  state   pursuant   to  subdivision  six  of  this section shall thereupon become members of the  New York state employees retirement system to the  extent  permitted  or  required  by  the  provisions of the retirement and social security law,  and the reserves in any other retirement system shall be transferred  to  the  New  York  state employees retirement system without any request by  them or any notice to the retirement systems, except that: (1) any  such  justice, judge or nonjudicial officer or employee who is a member of the  New  York  city  employees'  retirement  system  or  the  New  York city  teachers' retirement system may elect to continue membership in the  New  York  city  employees'  retirement system or the New York city teachers'  retirement system, as the case may be, and (2) any justice or judge  who  is  a  member of both the New York city employees' retirement system and  the New York state employees' retirement system may  elect  to  continue  membership  in  the  New  York  city employees' retirement system and to  discontinue membership in  the  New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system.  Any  election pursuant to this paragraph shall be made no later  than the ninetieth day next succeeding the date on which the  provisions  hereof  become  effective,  by  filing a written notice thereof with the  administrative head of the New York state employees'  retirement  system  and  the New York city employees' retirement system or the New York city  teachers'  retirement  system  and,  once  made  and  filed,  shall   be  irrevocable.  Upon  the  retirement  of  a justice, judge or nonjudicial  officer or employee who has made such an election,  the  calculation  of  final  average  salary by the New York city employees' retirement system  or the New York city teachers' retirement system shall be  performed  as  if the salary earned as a state employee on and after such effectiveness  were earned in New York city employment. In the case of a justice, judge  or  nonjudicial  officer  or employee who remains or becomes a member of  the New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system  pursuant  to  this  paragraph,  the  New  York  city employees' retirement system or the New  York city teachers' retirement system shall make a transfer of reserves,  contributions and credits to the New York  state  employees'  retirement  system,  in the manner required by section forty-three of the retirement  and social security law. In the case of an election to continue  in  the  New  York city employees' retirement system by a justice or judge who is  a member of both retirement  systems,  the  New  York  state  employees'  retirement  system  shall make a transfer of reserves, contributions and  credits to the New York city employees' retirement system, in the manner  provided by section forty-three of such law.    (b) The comptroller of the city of New York shall certify to the state  administrator the amount of money required to be paid by  the  state  of  New  York  for  pension  costs resulting from elections made pursuant to  paragraph (a) of this subdivision. The comptroller of the state  of  New  York  shall pay to the New York city employees' retirement system or the  New York city teachers' retirement system, upon approval  by  the  state  administrator,  the  amounts so certified by the comptroller of the city  of New York. The comptroller of the city of New York shall also  certify  to   the  state  administrator  the  amount  of  money  required  to  be  contributed by each of such employees. The comptroller of the  state  of  New  York  shall  be  authorized  to  withhold  the contribution of such  employees and pay that amount to the New York city employees' retirement  system or the New York city teachers' retirement system. The  amount  so  certified  pursuant  to  this paragraph shall be the same as the amounts  required to be contributed for similarly situated city employees by  the  city of New York and by employees of the city of New York.    10.  (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, commencing April  first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three,  in   the   event   the   chiefadministrator  of  the  courts,  in his sole discretion, determines that  court security services provided by the county of  Westchester  pursuant  to  subdivision three of this section should be provided by employees of  the  unified  court  system:  (i)  the  state  shall  be responsible for  providing security services to the courts in such county, and  (ii)  all  permanent  officers  and  employees  of  the department of public safety  service of such county who provide security services in  the  courts  of  such  county  pursuant  to  subdivision  three  of this section shall be  eligible to become employees of the state of  New  York  upon  filing  a  notice  of state employment election with the chief administrator of the  courts in a manner and  form  determined  by  the  chief  administrator;  provided,  however,  that such employment shall be subject to acceptance  by the employee  of  the  salary,  wages,  hours  and  other  terms  and  conditions  of  employment  enjoyed  by  other  state  employees  in the  negotiating unit into which his position is placed.    (b) Each nonjudicial officer and employee who files a notice of  state  employment  election  as  provided  in paragraph (a) of this subdivision  shall be placed on a payroll of the state of  New  York  in  a  position  which  shall  be classified and allocated pursuant to the classification  structure, established by the chief administrator of the courts  on  May  twenty-eighth,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine. The salary of each such  nonjudicial  officer  and  employee  shall  be  his  salary   on   March  thirty-first,   nineteen  hundred  eighty-three,  plus  such  number  of  increments equalling his  years  of  permanent  service  in  his  county  position  on  March  thirty-first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, not to  exceed the maximum of the salary grade of the position to  which  he  is  allocated  hereunder.  Eligibility  for future increments shall be based  solely upon state service commencing upon the  effective  date  of  this  subdivision.    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law:    (i)  Any  nonjudicial  officer  or  employee  of  the courts and court  related agencies of the unified court system who becomes an employee  of  the  state  of  New  York pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision,  may, at the option of such officer or employee, be  credited  with  sick  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he becomes a state  employee, but not in excess of two hundred days and  shall  be  credited  with  vacation  leave  earned  and accumulated but unused at the time he  becomes a state employee, but not in excess of  forty  days.  The  state  shall  not  award  credit  or  compensation  for any other time or leave  credits and shall not be liable for any terminal  leave  benefits  based  upon time or leave credits earned prior to April first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three.    (ii)  Each  such  nonjudicial officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive payments from the  county  of  Westchester  for  time  or  leave  credits,  other  than  sick  leave  or  terminal  leave, attributable to  service prior to April first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three  and  not  transferred to the state pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph,  which payments such nonjudicial officer or employee would otherwise have  received  from  the  county had he been involuntarily terminated without  fault from the employ of the  county  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three. Such credits shall be payable in cash before July  first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, if such credits would have been so  payable by the county of Westchester or  if  such  officer  or  employee  would  otherwise  have  been retained on the payroll of the county until  any such credits have been exhausted.    (iii) At the time of retirement, or  any  other  permanent  separation  without  fault  from  the  employment of the state, any such nonjudicial  officer or employee shall be entitled to  receive  from  the  county  ofWestchester  payments  for  terminal leave based upon any time and leave  credits accrued before April first, nineteen hundred  eighty-three,  and  not  transferred  to  the  state  pursuant  to  subparagraph (i) of this  paragraph,  which  payments  such  nonjudicial officer or employee would  otherwise have received from the county had he retired or separated from  the service of  the  county  on  March  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-three.    (d)  Upon  the  effective  date  of this subdivision, each officer and  employee who elects to become a state employee pursuant to paragraph (a)  of this subdivision shall have permanent status in  his  state  position  without  further examination or qualification. Each officer and employee  having permanent status in a competitive class county position who  does  not  make  such election shall have his name entered upon an appropriate  preferred list for reinstatement to the same or similar positions in the  service of the county of Westchester.