South Carolina Code of Laws
Chapter 17 - State Or Local Employees Grievance Procedure
Section 8-17-370. Exemptions.

The provisions of this article do not apply to:
(1) members, officers, or employees of the General Assembly;
(2) employees within the Office of the Governor who work at the mansion or in the State House or those employees appointed by the Governor to serve at or above the organizational level of assistant directors of the individual program components;
(3) elected public officials of this State or persons appointed to fill vacancies in these offices;
(4) all judges, officers, and employees of the Judicial Department; jurors; all employees of the Commission on Prosecution Coordination; and the judges, officers, and employees of the Administrative Law Court;
(5) members of state boards, commissions, councils, advisory councils, or committees compensated on a per diem basis;
(6) inmate help in a charitable, penal, or correctional institution, residents of rehabilitation facilities, or students employed in institutions of learning;
(7) part-time professional personnel engaged in consultant or contractual services;
(8) an agency head who has the authority and responsibility for an agency within state government including the divisions of the Department of Administration and the State Fiscal Accountability Authority;
(9) employees of the Public Service Authority, State Ports Authority, the Jobs-Economic Development Authority, or the Division of Public Railways and the Division of Savannah Valley Development of the Department of Commerce;
(10) teaching or research faculty, professional librarians, academic administrators, or other persons holding faculty appointments at a four-year post-secondary educational institution, including its branch campuses, if any, as defined in Section 59-107-10;
(11) athletic coaches and unclassified employees in the athletic departments of four-year post-secondary educational institutions as defined in Section 59-107-10;
(12) deputy directors as defined in Section 8-17-320;
(13) regional and county directors of the Department of Social Services as defined in Section 43-3-40(B);
(14) employees of the Medical University Hospital Authority, provided the Medical University Hospital Authority has promulgated an employee grievance plan in accordance with its enabling provision;
(15) presidents of the South Carolina Technical College System;
(16) a retired member of the South Carolina Police Officers Retirement System or a retired member of the South Carolina Retirement System who is hired by an agency to fill all or some fraction of a full-time equivalent (FTE) position covered by the State Employee Grievance Procedure Act; and
(17) notwithstanding the provisions of Section 9-1-2210(E), any participant in the Teacher and Employee Retention Incentive Program.
(18) the chief investment officer and all other employees of the Retirement System Investment Commission.
(19) employees of the Office of the Lieutenant Governor if the employees report directly to the Lieutenant Governor or report directly to a person who reports directly to the Lieutenant Governor.
(20) the executive director, assistant directors, and the area directors of the South Carolina Department of Employment and Workforce created pursuant to Section 1-30-10(A)(20).
HISTORY: 1982 Act No. 402, Section 7; 1993 Act No. 177, Section 1, eff June 16, 1993, and applies to personnel actions taken after that date; 1993 Act No. 181 Section 73, eff July 1, 1993; 1994 Act No. 452, Section 8, eff June 16, 1994; 1996 Act No. 284, Section 8, eff October 1 1996; 2000 Act No. 264, Section 3, eff May 1, 2000; 2002 Act No. 171, Section 1, eff February 7, 2002; 2002 Act No. 356, Section 11, eff July 1, 2002; 2005 Act No. 153, Pt II, Sections 3.A, 3.B, Pt IV, Section 4, eff July 1, 2005; 2008 Act No. 353, Section 2, Pt 25B, eff July 1, 2009; 2010 Act No. 146, Section 6, eff March 30, 2010.

Editor's Note
The Teacher and Employee Retention Incentive Program, Section 9-1-2210, was repealed by 2012 Act No. 278, Part I, Section 16, effective July 1, 2018.