Truman Settles Police Officer's Employment Claim
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The southern Minnesota city of Truman and the federal government have settled an employment claim filed by a police officer who served in Kuwait.
The U.S. Justice Department had sued the city for not giving Navy reservist Michael Schutz (shoots) his full-time job back after he served overseas in the military.
The lawsuit alleged the city violated federal law by making Schutz a part-time officer. The city denied violating the law and maintained it had shifted Shutz to part-time solely for budgetary reasons.
Under the agreement, Truman must pay Schutz $11,000 — the value of unpaid benefits — and provide him with 40 additional hours of vacation time for 2012 and 2013.
Schutz returned to full-time work as a police office last March. He says all he wanted was his job back.
Jon Iverson, an attorney for Truman, says the city settled to avoid litigation expenses.
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