Utah Administrative Code (Current through November 1, 2019) |
R477. Human Resource Management, Administration |
R477-9. Employee Conduct |
R477-9-6. Employee Indebtedness to the State
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(1) An employee indebted to the state because of an action or performance in official duties may have a portion of salary that exceeds the minimum federal wage withheld. Overtime salary shall not be withheld.
(a) The following three conditions shall be met before withholding of salary may occur:
(i) The debt shall be a legitimately owed amount which can be validated through physical documentation or other evidence.
(ii) The employee shall know about and, in most cases, acknowledge the debt. As much as possible, the employee should provide written authorization to withhold the salary.
(iii) An employee shall be notified of this rule which allows the state to withhold salary.
(b) An employee separating from state service will have salary withheld from the last paycheck.
(c) An employee going on leave without pay for more than two pay periods may have salary withheld from their last paycheck.
(d) The state may withhold an employee's salary to satisfy the following specific obligations:
(i) travel advances where travel and reimbursement for the travel has already occurred;
(ii) state credit card obligations where the state's share of the obligation has been reimbursed to the employee but not paid to the credit card company by the employee;
(iii) evidence that the employee negligently caused loss or damage of state property;
(iv) payroll advance obligations that are signed by the employee and that the Division of Finance authorizes;
(v) misappropriation of state assets for unauthorized personal use or for personal financial gain. This includes reparation for employee theft of state property or use of state property for personal financial gain or benefit;
(vi) overpayment of salary determined by evidence that an employee did not work the hours for which they received salary or was not eligible for the benefits received and paid for by the state;
(vii) excessive reimbursement of funds from flexible reimbursement accounts;
(viii) other obligations that satisfy the requirements of Subsection R477-9-5(1) above.
(2) This rule does not apply to state employee obligations to other state agencies where the obligation was not caused by their actions or performance as an employee.