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Manual

Instructions

Introduction

Attendance (Part 20)

Absence with Pay
(Part 21)

Leaves Without Pay (Part 22)

Drawing of Earned Credits Upon Separation
(Part 23)

Crediting Other Public Service Employment as State Service (Part 24)

Suspension of Rules
(Part 25)

Applicability (Part 26)


Appendices

A. Civil Service Attendance Rules

B. Calendar of Legal Holidays & Religious Holy Days

C. Alternative Work Schedules

D. Part-Time Employment

E. Seasonal Employment

F. Attendance Rules for Managerial/Confidential Employees

G. Reciprocal Agreements

H. Leave Donation

I. Family & Medical Leave Act

Disclaimer

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Attendance and Leave Manual

Transmittal Memorandum No. 49

Appendix B - 2024 Calendar of Legal Holidays and Days of Religious Significance - June 2023

TO: Manual Recipients
FROM: Jessica Rowe, Director Staffing Services Division
SUBJECT: Attendance and Leave Manual Appendix B

This memorandum transmits the material listed below for insertion in your copy of the Attendance and Leave Manual.

  Section Pages Date

(1) Introduction

Appendix B

1-2

June 2023

(2) 2024 Calendar of
Legal Holidays and
Days of Religious
Significance

Appendix B

 

3-6

 

June 2023

 

 

The following material should be retained until July 30, 2025, and then removed from your copy of the Manual and destroyed.

  Section Pages Date

(1) Introduction

Appendix B

1-2

July 2022

(2) 2023 Calendar of
Legal Holidays and
Days of Religious
Significance

Appendix B

 

3-6

 

July 2022

 

Introduction

The New York State General Construction Law establishes the days or dates on which legal holidays are observed in New York State. Under this law, holidays other than Flag Day which fall on a Sunday are observed on the following Monday. The Attendance Rules and negotiated agreements identify which of these legal holidays are observed as paid holidays by New York State as an employer. This calendar does not modify negotiated agreements or Attendance Rules items on the subject of holidays. (See Section 21.1, Holidays, in this Manual.)

Information concerning the days of religious significance was obtained from official religious sources. Since it is not possible to include in this calendar the days of religious significance of every faith, agencies with questions about other religious observances should call the Attendance and Leave Unit of this Department at (518) 457-2295.

The calendar is intended as a guide, since special and local conditions may cause variation from official practice. It is impossible here to note every observance, such as an individual saint’s day, which ordinarily would not require absence from work.

The following further explains days of religious significance and the calendar notations:

  1. An asterisk (*) indicates a day of required religious observance. The letters before an asterisk indicate the faiths for which the day is a day of required religious observance. The abbreviations used correspond to the following denominations or subdenominations:

    EO - Eastern Orthodox
    P - Protestant
    RC - Roman Catholic
    OJ - Orthodox Jew
    CJ - Conservative Jew
    RJ - Reform Jew
    M - Muslim

  2. All days of religious significance for the Jewish faith begin at sundown on the evening before the date given.
  3. The Orthodox Jewish faith requires its members to observe each Saturday as the Sabbath. Its members are not permitted to travel by car or common carrier after sundown on Friday evening.
  4. Reform Jews observe one day of required religious observance at the beginning and end of holy days rather than the two days Conservative and Orthodox Jews observe.
  5. The Roman Catholic Church requires its members to attend Mass every Sunday and on days of required religious observance. In some areas, this obligation may be fulfilled by attending Mass after 4 p.m. on the preceding day. In some communities, the Solemnity of the Mother of God (January 1), The Assumption (August 15), and All Saints Day (November 1) are not considered to be days of required religious observance if they fall on a Saturday or a Monday.
  6. The Eastern Orthodox Church requires its members to attend Divine Liturgy on Sundays and on days of required religious observance.
  7. Some Eastern Orthodox churches, including many Russian Orthodox parishes, follow the Julian rather than the Gregorian calendar. For this reason, they celebrate certain days of religious significance 13 days later than the dates listed by the Eastern Orthodox Church.
  8. Members of the Islamic faith observe Fridays as their major day of worship. The fast of Ramadan begins at sundown on the evening before the date given; there is no prohibition on working during Ramadan. The two days of required religious observance are Eid-ul-Fitr (Festival of Fastbreaking) and Eid-ul-Adha (Festival of Sacrifice). Members of the Islamic faith are prohibited from working on those two days. All of the dates of Islamic observance are tentative because they are based on sightings of the moon. Those wishing to confirm the exact dates should call the Attendance and Leave Unit no more than 30 days before the date listed on the calendar.

MONTH

DATE

DAY

LEGAL HOLIDAYS

DAYS OF RELIGIOUS
SIGNIFICANCE

JANUARY

1

Monday

New Year’s Day

Feast of the Circumcision (EO) Solemnity of the Mother of God (RC*)

6

Saturday

 

Feast of the Epiphany (P) (EO*)

7

Sunday

 

Feast of the Epiphany (RC)

15

Monday

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

 

18 – 25

Thursday – Thursday

 

Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (P) (RC)

25

Thursday

 

Tu Bi Shevat (OJ, CJ, RJ)

FEBRUARY

2

Friday

 

The Presentation of Christ (EO*)

12

Monday

Lincoln’s Birthday1

 

14

Wednesday

 

Ash Wednesday (RC) (P)

18

Sunday

 

First Sunday of Lent (P)

19

Monday

Washington’s Birthday (Observed)

 

MARCH

1

Friday

 

World Day of Prayer (P)

9

Saturday

 

Saturday of Souls (EO)

11

Monday

 

First Day of Ramadan (M)2

16

Saturday

 

Saturday of Souls (EO)

21

Thursday

 

Fast of Esther (OJ, CJ, RJ)

23

Saturday

 

Saturday of Souls (EO)

24

Sunday

 

Palm Sunday (RC) (P)
Purim (OJ, CJ, RJ)
Sunday of Orthodoxy (EO)

25

Monday

 

The Annunciation (EO*)

28

Thursday

 

Holy Thursday (RC)
Maundy Thursday (P)

29

Friday

 

Good Friday (RC) (P)

31

Sunday

 

Easter Sunday (RC) (P)

APRIL

9

Tuesday

 

Eid-al-Fitr (Festival of Fast breaking) (M*)

22

Monday

 

First Passover Seder (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

23

Tuesday

 

Passover (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

24

Wednesday

 

Passover (OJ*, CJ*, RJ)

25 – 28

Thursday – Sunday

 

Intermediate Days of Passover (OJ, CJ, RJ)

28

Sunday

 

Palm Sunday (EO*)

29

Monday

 

Passover (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

30

Tuesday

 

Passover (OJ*, CJ*)

MAY

2

Thursday

 

Holy Thursday (EO*)

3

Friday

 

Good Friday (EO*)
May Friendship Day (P)

4

Saturday

 

Holy Saturday (EO)

5

Sunday

 

Easter Sunday (EO)

6

Monday

 

The Feast of St. George (EO)
Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Memorial Day)

9

Thursday

 

Ascension Thursday (RC*) (P)

10

Friday

 

The Feast of the Life-Giving Fountain (EO)

13

Monday

 

Yom HaZikaron (Day of Remembrance)

14

Tuesday

 

Yom HaAtzmaut (Israel Independence Day)

19

Sunday

 

Pentecost (RC) (P)

21

Tuesday

 

The Feast of Sts. Constantine and Helen (EO)

26

Sunday

 

Lag Ba Omer (OJ, CJ, RJ)

27

Monday

Memorial Day

 

 

JUNE

2

Sunday

 

Corpus Christi (RC) (observed in NY Dioceses)

5

Wednesday

 

Yom Yerushalayim (Jerusalem Day)

12

Wednesday

 

Shavuot (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

13

Thursday

 

Ascension Thursday (EO*)
Shavuot (OJ*, CJ*)

14

Friday

Flag Day3

 

16

Sunday

 

Eid-ul-Adha (Festival of
Sacrifice) (M*)

19

Wednesday

Juneteenth

 

22

Saturday

 

Saturday of Souls (EO)

23

Sunday

 

Pentecost (EO*)

24

Monday

 

The Feast of the Holy Spirit (EO)

29

Saturday

 

Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul (EO)

JULY

4

Thursday

Independence Day

 

23

Tuesday

 

Fast of the 17th Tammuz (OJ, CJ, RJ)

AUGUST

6

Tuesday

 

The Transfiguration of Jesus Christ (EO*)

13

Tuesday

 

Fast of the 9th of Av (OJ, CJ, RJ)

15

Thursday

 

The Assumption (RC*)
The Repose of the Blessed
Mother (EO)

SEPTEMBER

2

Monday

Labor Day

 

8

Sunday

 

Nativity of Theotokos (EO)

14

Saturday

 

The Elevation of the Holy Cross (EO*)

 

OCTOBER

3

Thursday

 

Rosh Hashanah (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

4

Friday

 

Rosh Hashanah (OJ*, CJ*, RJ)

6

Sunday

 

Fast of the Gedalia (OJ, CJ, RJ)
World Communion Sunday (P)

11

Friday

 

Kol Nidrei (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

12

Saturday

 

Yom Kippur (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

14

Monday

Columbus Day

 

17

Thursday

 

Sukkot (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

18

Friday

 

Sukkot (OJ*, CJ*)

19 – 23

Saturday – Wednesday

 

Intermediate Days of Sukkot (OJ, CJ, RJ)

24

Thursday

 

Shemini Atzeret (OJ*, CJ*, RJ*)

25

Friday

 

Simchat Torah (OJ*, CJ*)

26

Saturday

 

Feast of St. Demetrios (EO)

31

Thursday

 

Reformation Day (P)

NOVEMBER

1

Friday

 

All Saints Day (RC*) (P)
World Community Day (P)

2

Saturday

 

All Souls Day (RC)

5

Tuesday

Election Day

 

11

Monday

Veterans’ Day

 

21

Thursday

 

Presentation of the Virgin Mary (EO)

28

Thursday

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving Day (P)

DECEMBER

1

Sunday

 

First Sunday of Advent (P)

6

Friday

 

Feast of St. Nicholas (EO)

9

Monday

 

Feast of the Immaculate Conception (RC*)

25

Wednesday

Christmas Day

Feast of the Nativity of the
Lord (RC*)
Feast of the Nativity (EO*)
Christmas Day (P)

26

Thursday

 

First Day of Kwanzaa4

26 – 1/2/25

Thursday – Thursday

 

Chanukah (OJ, CJ, RJ)

27

Friday

 

Feast of St. Stephen (EO)

(1) Lincoln’s Birthday is designated as a Floating Holiday.
(2) The observance of Ramadan is anticipated to begin on March 11, 2024. See introduction, Note 8.
(3) Flag Day is not a paid holiday for State employees.
(4) Kwanzaa ends on January 1, 2025.

TM 49 - New or Revised Material - June 2023

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