North Dakota Attorney General Silent on Former Director’s Severance Package

November 18, 2008

North Dakota Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem has declined to resolve an argument about whether North Dakota’s former workers’ compensation director was entitled to almost $128,000 worth of severance benefits.

State Auditor Robert Peterson had asked Stenehjem whether the payment was legal in light of evidence that Sandy Blunt resigned shortly before the directors of Workforce Safety and Insurance voted on Dec. 6, 2007 to dump him.

North Dakota law prohibits severance payments to employees who quit on their own. During followup work on an earlier audit, state auditors discovered an e-mail from Blunt that prompted questions about whether he quit before the board’s vote.

“Although you raise the possibility that Mr. Blunt may have resigned prior to the Dec. 6 meeting, the resolution of that question would require a factual determination that is beyond the scope of legal opinions that can be offered by this office,” Stenehjem’s letter to Peterson says.

In any case, Blunt signed a severance agreement with Workforce Safety on Dec. 21, which superseded any agreement made beforehand, Stenehjem said.

Blunt could not be reached immediately for comment.

Peterson also asked the attorney general if the payment met state law’s requirement that a severance agreement increase an agency’s efficiencies or reduce its expenses.

Stenehjem said it was up to Workforce Safety’s board to determine whether it was worth it to pay Blunt to give up potential legal claims against the state.

“Although WSI paid Mr. Blunt a very large amount of money, about which I expressed deep reservations at the time, it is for the WSI board to determine in the exercise of its discretion whether the settlement with Mr. Blunt could reduce legal expenses through the release and waiver of potential claims,” Stenehjem’s letter says.

In his agreement with WSI, Blunt did keep the option of suing the agency to force it to pay attorneys’ fees he has paid defending himself against felony charges alleging he misspent agency funds and conspired to misuse confidential information.

The conspiracy charge was dropped. Blunt is facing a trial next month on two remaining felony charges alleging he misspent agency funds on gifts, meals and trinkets for employees and state legislators, and on illegal bonuses for WSI executives.

The severance agreement required that Blunt be paid his salary and health insurance benefits from Dec. 7, 2007, through Aug. 31, 2008. WSI records show he was paid $122,393 in salary and $5,454 to maintain health coverage, for a total of $127,847.

In addition, Blunt was paid $19,740 to compensate him for unused vacation and $2,646 for his December work time, which brought the package’s value to $150,233.

The payments for vacation and work time were not counted as part of the severance payment, because Blunt had earned the money and vacation benefit. He was paid the settlement’s proceeds last January, agency documents show.

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