The question in this appeal is whether reimbursement of accumulated sick leave and severance pay are mandatory subjects of bargaining under our Public Employment Bargaining Act. We conclude they are not mandatory subjects and affirm the trial court ruling.
The dispute in question arose during the course of negotiations for a collective bargaining agreement for the 1983-84 year between Western Hills Area Education Agency 12 (AEA 12), and the Professional Staff Association of Area Education Agency 12 (Association). The Association is a certified employee organization, authorized to bargain on behalf of the professional nonsupervisory employees of AEA 12. AEA 12 is a public employer as defined by section 20.3(1) of the Code. The Association proposed the following items be included in the collective bargaining agreement:
Reimbursement for Unused Sick Leave
Upon termination of employment, the Board shall reimbuse the employee for all unused sick leave days not to exceed one hundred thirty-five (135) days by multiplying one-half (V2) of the employee’s daily pay rate by the number of unused days. The resulting amount shall be paid the employee in one lump sum within thirty (30) days following the effective date of the employee’s termination.
Severance Pay
At the time of termination of employment, an employee with five (5) or more years of service to the Agency shall receive an additional salary payment as follows:
1. The Agency shall compute the salary payment by determining four (4) percent of the employee’s current base salary.
2. This base salary shall be multiplied times the number of years of service the employee has rendered to the Agency.
3. This total amount shall be in addition to the amount provided for salary in the contract for the final year of employment.
AEA 12 contended it was not obligated to bargain on the items and filed a petition for expedited resolution of the matter with the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). PERB determined that neither proposal was illegal, but that both were permissive, and not mandatory subjects of bargaining. Upon appeal to the district court, the trial court affirmed the PERB result.
Our review is limited to whether the court below correctly applied the law. Woodbine Community School District v. Public Employment Relations Board, 316 N.W.2d 862, 864 (Iowa 1982). The scope of negotiations regarding public employees is set out at Iowa Code section 20.9 (1985):
The public employer and the employee organization shall meet at reasonable times, including meetings reasonably in advance of the public employer’s budget-*518making process, to negotiate in good faith with respect to wages, hours, vacations, insurance, holidays, leaves of absence, shift differentials, overtime compensation, supplemental pay, seniority, transfer procedures, job classification, .health and safety matters, evaluation procedures, procedures for staff reduction, in-service training and other matters mutually agreed upon. (Emphasis added.)
Bargaining topics affecting public employees are categorized as mandatory (shall meet to negotiate) and permissive (other matters mutually agreed upon) for purposes of negotiation. City of Fort Dodge v. Iowa P.E.R.B., 275 N.W.2d 393, 395 (Iowa 1979). This distinction is important to the parties involved because when a topic is mandatory, they must negotiate on it, and failure to resolve the issue can lead to final binding arbitration. Id.] Iowa Code § 20.9, .10 (1985).
Unlike the National Labor Relations Act,1 this section of the Code specifically lists items considered mandatory. Because the legislature rejected the general language of the NLRA and adopted a specific list of mandatory topics, the supreme court has concluded the legislature intended to restrict mandatory topics to those listed. City of Fort Dodge, 275 N.W.2d at 398; see also Charles City Community School District v. P.E.R.B., 275 N.W.2d 766, 772-73 (Iowa 1979). The listed items are a definition rather than a description of mandatory topics. Id. at 772. Therefore, to be a mandatory item, the issue must fall within those listed at section 20.9, Id.
I. Payment of Accumulated Sick Leave
The Association argues that reimbursement for unused sick leave falls within the terms “wages,” “supplemental pay” and “leaves of absence” which are mandatory bargaining items under section 20.9. Several prior PERB decisions are cited as support that this payment is compensation. Decisions from other jurisdictions are also relied on. These are not persuasive. The PERB decisions were made before the supreme court determined that the specific listing in section 20.9 was to be restrictively applied. See Fort Dodge, 275 N.W.2d at 398. Other jurisdictions have statutes similar or identical to the NLRA, which we have already discussed contains broader language and is more inclusive, see Note, The Scope of Negotiations Under the Iowa Public Employment Relations Act, 63 Iowa L.Rev. 649, 667, n. 153 (1978).
In Fort Dodge Community School District v. P.E.R.B., 319 N.W.2d 181, 183-84 (Iowa 1982), wages are defined as a specific sum or price paid by an employer in return for the employee’s services, and supplemental pay is pay for extra services relative to the time, skill and nature of the services. The Fort Dodge case held cash incentives for early retirement pay are not wages or supplemental pay, and the rationale is controlling here. Id. The proposal here calls for reimbursement of unused sick leave in a lump sum cash payment upon termination of employment. It is not directly related to services rendered or to the time, skill, and nature of additional services, but rather is a form of severance pay to be paid to any employee leaving his or her employment, whether due to retirement, lay-off, or any other reason. Under the proposal, the payment is triggered by the termination of the employment relationship, and not by the rendering of primary or additional services. While it may be argued employees perform a service by not taking sick leave, we believe this stretches the meaning of service and is not what the legislature intended.
The Association also argues the unused sick leave payment falls within “leaves of absence.” The supreme court has not addressed the meaning of leaves of absence in the context of section 20.9. PERB decisions have generally included factors such as when an employee may be *519absent, how often absences are allowed and the rate of compensation during the absence as falling within leaves of absence bargaining. We agree with AEA 12 that no return of the employee is contemplated when the unused sick leave payment is made, nor is it in any way directly connected to any conditions regarding a leave of absence. It merely uses sick leave as a basis for calculating what is clearly intended to be a severance benefit.
Reimbursement for unused sick leave does not fall within any of the mandatory bargaining categories of section 20.9. The proposal is a permissive subject of bargaining.
II. Severance Pay
The Association argues this proposal is also mandatory under the categories, “wages” or “supplemental pay.” Terms of this proposal would grant a payment to any employee severed from employment for any reason after five years of service. It is not a payment made for any actual services rendered. The circumstance which triggers the payment is the termination of employment, and not the performance of any primary or extra services. As with the sick leave reimbursement proposal, no extra service not already compensated is provided by the employee in order to obtain this benefit. The severance pay proposal is likewise a permissive subject of bargaining.
The Association makes several persuasive arguments regarding the public benefit, including discouraging absenteeism, rewarding those who do not use their sick leave and encouraging continuity in the workforce, contending these desirable results should elevate the matters to the mandatory-bargaining category. Our courts have previously explained why more restrictive bargaining is necessary in the public employment sector. Charles City, 275 N.W.2d at 769-73. We are, therefore, unpersuaded by the public benefit argument because other public benefits are also to be considered.
It is important to note that a finding that the two severance pay proposals at issue here are permissive rather than mandatory subjects of bargaining will not prohibit such provisions from being negotiated. “[T]he restrictive interpretation of mandatory bargaining topics does not inhibit voluntary bargaining and agreement on permissive topics.” Iowa City Community School District v. Iowa City Education Association, 343 N.W.2d 139, 141 (Iowa 1983). School districts are free to maintain existing policies or collective bargaining agreements regarding reimbursement for unused sick leave or other types of severance pay if they find it necessary or desirable in order to discourage absenteeism and encourage longevity of employment.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur except OXBERGER, C.J., who dissents.
. The National Labor Relations Act broadly lists the mandatory items of negotiation as "wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.” 29 U.S.C. § 158(d).