By: Wesley Muller – Louisiana Illuminator
Louisiana Senate chambers during the close of the 2023 legislative session on June 8, 2023. (Photo credit: Wes Muller/Louisiana Illuminator)
Louisiana lawmakers are trying to change the state constitution to wrestle power away from the Civil Service Commission to eliminate state worker protections and allow for the quick firing of thousands of employees for any reason, creating fear among critics that some dismissals could be politically motivated.
Senate Bill 8, sponsored by Sen. Jay Morris. R-West Monroe, is nearing final passage in the Louisiana Legislature, though voters will get the final say on a constitutional amendment on a ballot that could have significant consequences for how state government operates.
Morris’ proposal would give state lawmakers power that currently rests with the Civil Service Commission, a seven-member independent review panel that oversees the hiring and firing of 28,000 “classified” state workers. The commission hears complaints from classified employees and appeals from any who want to contest their dismissal or demotion, affording them due process when it comes to discipline and terminations.
In an interview Tuesday, Morris said his bill would let lawmakers “unclassify” state employees, removing them from the oversight of the commission. An unclassified employee does not have Civil Service protections and can be fired “at will” for no reason. The bill’s current version would also apply to local civil service workers such as municipal police and firefighters, but Morris said he intends to change his measure to exclude them and restrict it to only state employees.
“If you believe in democracy or republicanism — [because] we’re a republic — then the Legislature should have some ability to alter how our civil service system works,” Morris said. “Right now we can’t do anything because the constitution prevents it.”
Some Democrats have taken issue with the latest iteration of the ballot language in Morris’ bill because it doesn’t explicitly mention classified employees and could mislead voters into thinking the amendment doesn’t affect those state workers who are currently protected under Civil Service. When asked about the proposal following Tuesday’s meeting of the House Committee on Civil Law and Procedure, Rep. Wilford Carter, D-Lake Charles, said the ballot language doesn’t align with what’s in the bill.
The ballot language states: “Do you support an amendment to allow the legislature to remove or add officers, positions, and employees to the unclassified civil service?”
Critics have pointed to other issues that have not been addressed or debated in any of the committee hearings on Morris’ proposal.
One of those is the vague use of the word “remove,” which could be interpreted to mean “fire” or “terminate,” said Peter Robins-Brown, who opposes the bill on behalf of Louisiana Progress, which advocates for low and middle-income people. He said lawmakers have not drafted any kind of companion measure that would establish statutes or regulations to implement the specific necessary changes.
“No one has really been paying attention to the details,” Robins-Brown said. “I’m not sure how the average voter will be able to figure it out, especially when the bill doesn’t have a statutory companion to prove the goal of this exercise.”
Rep. Nicholas Muscarello, R-Hammond, who chairs the House Committee on Civil Law and Procedure, said the intent of the amendment is to give lawmakers the power to unclassify state employees, not fire employees. Hiring and terminating decisions would be left up to the executive branch, he said.
The Civil Service Commission, a nonpartisan entity, has taken a neutral position on Morris’ proposal. When asked about it Wednesday, commission administrators said they assume “remove” means the act of changing an employee’s classification status, but they pointed out the word is not actually defined in the bill.
State Civil Service Director Byron Decoteau said Morris’ civil service amendment amendment, if adopted, could technically allow lawmakers to simply “remove” an unclassified job position with no intention of classifying it, leaving a current employee in a limbo with neither a classified nor unclassified status.
Sherri Gregoire, Civil Service general counsel, said the lack of a clear definition invites different interpretations, including that the amendment gives lawmakers the power to remove governor’s staff members, and creates a situation that would certainly end up in court.
The more likely course of events, if voters decide to approve the amendment, would be that the legislature designates all future hires as unclassified employees — a move that would eventually end the classified civil service system altogether, Gregoire said. The Civil Service Commission, itself, would still exist under the constitution but would effectively become pointless because it would no longer have anything to oversee.
“Eventually you won’t have any classified employees, so why do you need a commission?” Gregoire said.
Morris said he doesn’t yet have a vision for how lawmakers would exercise their new power if voters approve the amendment.
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry has tried repeatedly to exert authority over the commission. In February, he tried unsuccessfully to revoke civil service classifications from 900 state jobs, mostly positions for engineers, shortly after President Donald Trump made a similar move at the federal level. The state Civil Service Commission rejected Landry’s request in a 4-2 decision in February.
Because unclassified workers can be subject to political punishment and coercion, removing such a large number of engineers from the classified service could create ethical conflicts and unnecessary risks to the public, the commissioners said.
A similar version of Morris’ bill stalled on the House floor last year, but some Republicans who likely would have supported the bill were absent when the final vote took place.
Morris’ bill is expected to earn final passage before the regular session ends June 12 and will be placed before voters on the Nov. 3, 2026, statewide election ballot.