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               NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL SERVICE 
                State Personnel Management Manual 
                Advisory Memorandum # 05-05 
               
            
            
              
                 
                  | 1200 Examinations | 
                   
                     November, 2005  
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      This Advisory  Memorandum amends certain information published in State Personnel Management  Manual Advisory Memorandum #04-03. Please annotate the section “Make-up Examinations”  in Advisory  Memorandum #04-03 to reflect the changes discussed below. 
	  
      Chapter 425 of the Laws of  2005 amends §243-b of the Military Law (ML) to greatly expand the availability  of special military make-up examinations for candidates who miss application  deadlines and/or scheduled examinations due to qualifying military duty. A copy  of the statute is included on the last page of this memorandum, with changes in italics. 
	  
          Expansion of Types of Military Service Qualifying for  Benefits 
		 New subdivisions (2) and (3)  of §243-b now cover individuals in the  reserve armed forces or organized militia who perform any ordered State  (i.e. military duty by order of the Governor) or federal military service,  except for a call to active duty solely for training. In practice, that means  that virtually all ordered military duty performed by the reserve armed forces  or organized militia, other than the “traditional” or “routine” reserve  training and drill obligations (e.g. one weekend per month, plus two weeks per  year, and/or drill meetings of less than a day), will now entitle an applicant  to make-up exam administrations. 
		 Candidates  who timely filed for examinations and were denied an opportunity to compete  because of short-term training duty should continue to be accommodated through  alternate test date procedures. 
		 This statute applies to all  candidates for New    York State examinations (and exams for NY political  subdivisions) whether or not the candidate is currently an employee of the State  or one of its political subdivisions. 
      Elimination of the Pre-Examination Filing Requirement  
	  The requirement that  candidates for an open-competitive examination, including current NYS  employees, must have filed for the examination at least 10 days before the  scheduled exam date (see ML §243-c)  has been eliminated for members of the reserve armed forces or organized  militia who were unavailable either during the announced filing period or on  the original examination date due to qualifying military duty. A make-up examination  may be requested even while the candidate remains on military duty for as long  as the eligible list from the missed examination remains in existence. 
	  A candidate who requests a military  make-up examination within 10 days prior to an announced test date may be  admitted to the scheduled test or provided an alternate test date, if required,  without completing an application beforehand. 
      Issues and Notes 
      
        - Members of the  regular armed forces (including the regular Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marines)  continue to be governed by subdivision (1) of §243-b and ML section 243-c. In  order to compete in open competitive examinations, these candidates are still  required to file examination applications at least ten business days before the  scheduled examination holding or filing deadline, whichever is later.
 
        - A qualified  candidate who failed to timely file an application is not guaranteed an  opportunity to take an examination on a walk-in basis. Even if the candidate is  available on the scheduled test date, he or she may be required to compete  according to alternate test date procedures.
 
        
        There is no  waiver of any required examination fees for a military make-up examination.  No examination fees will be charged candidates for military make-up examinations (see SPMM Advisory Memorandum #08-02). 
        - A military  make-up examination candidate is not automatically entitled to receive  veterans’ or disabled veterans’ credits. Each applicant should be evaluated  according to the appropriate criteria and definitions (see SPMM Advisory Memorandum  #04-03).
 
        - Qualified,  successful military make–up examination candidates are entitled to have their  names entered, in rank order, on the eligible list resulting from the original  examination.
 
        - To receive placement  of his or her name on an eligible list following a military make-up  examination, a candidate must have been qualified to compete as of the date of  the original holding of the examination. An examination application should be  on file for each make-up exam candidate, even if the application is filed after  the administration of the examination.
 
        - Success on a  military make-up examination does not guarantee special military list (SML)  status. All of the requirements for the appropriate type of SML must also be  met (see ML §§243(5) and 243 (7-b)).
 
        - To ensure the  greatest period of list eligibility and to meet any applicable SML time  requirements (see ML §243(5) and (7-b)),  candidates should be encouraged to request a make-up examination within 60 days  (for missed promotional examinations) or 90 days (for open competitive  examinations where the candidate timely  filed prior to the holding of the original examination) of termination of  qualifying military duty. Candidates may still request make-up examinations after  these deadlines, however they will not be eligible for SML status.
 
        - Unless a  candidate obtains SML status following a make-up examination, his or her period  of eligibility will end with the expiration of the original eligible list.
 
        - The period of  eligibility for candidates on continuous recruitment (CR) eligible lists will  commence following the scoring of the make-up CR examination.
 
        - The DCS may  decline to administer a special make-up examination if there would be no obvious  benefit to the candidate (e.g. the make-up request is received one week before  the associated eligible list is due to expire and the candidate could not  obtain SML status).
 
        - Although ML §243-b  is silent on the matter, military make-up examinations should not be afforded  candidates who have received a dishonorable discharge from military service. This  is the same standard contained in ML §243-c, and is lower than the standards  for military discharge and release found in ML §243 – which provides, among  other benefits, the potential entitlement to SML status.
 
       
      Questions from potential  candidates to whom this memo applies should be referred to your Staffing  Services Representative. 
      § 243-b. Civil service examinations by military personnel. 
      
        - Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter or  any other law, any member of the armed forces of the United States of America  who having duly filed an application to compete in a scheduled competitive  examination for civil service employment by the state of New York or any of its  subdivisions and who due to active military duty is deprived of the opportunity  to compete in such examination shall be provided with an opportunity to  compete, under terms and conditions deemed appropriate by the state department  of civil service or municipal commission, by way of a special military make-up  examination.
 
        - Notwithstanding any  other provision of this chapter or any other law, any member of the force of  the organized militia, as the term is defined in subdivision nine of section  one of this chapter or reserve armed forces, as that term is defined in  subdivision twenty-nine of section two hundred ninety-two of the executive law  who missed the application deadline for a scheduled competitive examination for  civil service employment by the state of New York or any of its subdivisions  due to military service, as defined in subdivision one of section three hundred  one of this chapter or due to a call to active duty other than for training,  pursuant to 10 USC 101 (d) (1), and is deprived of the opportunity to compete  in such examination due to military service, as defined in subdivision one of  section three hundred one of this chapter or due to a call to active duty other  than for training, pursuant to 10 USC 101 (d) (1), shall be provided with an  opportunity to compete, under terms and conditions deemed appropriate by the  state department of civil service or municipal commission, by way of a special  military make-up examination.
 
        - Notwithstanding any  other provision of this chapter or any other law, any member of the force of  the organized militia, as the term is defined in subdivision nine of section  one of this chapter or reserve armed forces, as that term is defined in  subdivision twenty-nine of section two hundred ninety-two of the executive law  who missed the application deadline for a scheduled competitive examination for  civil service employment by the state of New York or any of its subdivisions  due to military service, as defined in subdivision one of section three hundred  one of this chapter or due to a call to active duty other than for training,  pursuant to 10 USC 101 (d) (1), and who returns from such duty prior to the  administration of such competitive examination shall be granted a waiver of the  application requirement and allowed to compete in such upcoming examination. 
 
  
        
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