TOPICS
TOPICS
House approves agreement on Pentagon pay-for-performance, sick leave benefit
The House on Thursday approved the fiscal 2010 Defense authorization conference report containing several provisions affecting federal employees, including one that eliminates the Pentagon's pay-for-performance system.
The conference agreement repeals the law authorizing the National Security Personnel System, and mandates the return of all NSPS employees to their previous pay system by Jan. 1, 2012. It also includes a provision, phased in over a four-year period, that allows workers in the Federal Employees Retirement System to count unused sick leave toward their retirement. In addition, the report contains language that would make it easier for agencies to rehire federal retirees without forcing them to take a cut in their annuity checks, and that moves federal employees who live and work outside the continental United State to the locality pay system,
The Senate could vote on the agreement next week. The two chambers passed their versions of the fiscal 2010 Defense authorization bill this summer and released the conference committee report on Wednesday.
Several lawmakers praised the language axing NSPS.
"This system, as implemented by the Department of Defense, has been a near-total failure, and I support making a fresh start," said Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
Bob Tobias, the former National Employee Treasury Union president and member of a task force that called for the reconstruction of NSPS, said the legislation didn't follow the panel's suggestion, but the same result could be achieved.
"We didn't recommend that NSPS be eliminated, but we did recommend that it be significantly changed," Tobias said. "My guess is that they will significantly change it."
The conference report also gives the Defense secretary the ability to propose new personnel flexibilities, but would subject those to congressional approval.
The provision allowing FERS employees to count unused sick time toward their retirement annuity survived because of a compromise the conference committee brokered. Some lawmakers were concerned by the provision's potential price tag, so the final version allows employees to count their sick time but only at 50 percent of its value for the next four years, when more than 180,000 employees are expected to retire, according to projections from the Office of Personnel Management.
"It was a question of compromising, or walking away with nothing," said Daniel Adcock, legislative director of the National Active and Retired Federal Employee Association, which has supported the provision.
"Especially with the current state of the economy, the budget was the biggest obstacle," said Randy Erwin, legislative director for the National Federation of Federal Employees. "Certainly, the way we look at it, we'd like to have the full benefit. In the end, even the people who are retiring in the next four years, that's a benefit they wouldn't have gotten otherwise."
COMMENTS
- "For those FERS employees that were burning up their sick leave without actually being sick prior to retiring, they should be investigated. Isn't labor mischarging by a Federal eimployee a Federal crime?" You are an idiot. Unlike some civilian employees, we do not get personal time, only vacation time. My friends get personal time, vacation time and sick time. Therefore if you need a mental break or have a scheduled doctors appointment, there is nothing wrong with scheduling sick leave. The real dummies are the ones that save up their sick time, never take a mental break and get excited over retiring a 1/2 year early because they saved 2000 hours of sick leave. I'd rather use my time now and take mental breaks when needed, while still working hard, and survive the work environment 30 years instead of retiring a whole 1/2 year early. Big deal. I have about 500 hours SL saved after working here 6 years for emergency purposes. I think about 600 hours (15 weeks) is good to have saved, above that is a waste. mike Posted October 29, 2009 12:05 PM
- You know some of these comments tick me off. Great for those of you that got payraises under NSPS. My problem is it is underfunded and cloated in secrecy! My husband is a federal employee under NSPS. He busts his tail to make sure the cadets have what they need. Leaves his family for 6-8 weeks out of the summer while some don't do that in his job to do training with the cadets across the country (while I was pregnant and on BEDREST), goes tdy several weeks out of the year for FTXs, goes in early, stays late to make sure the cadets have what they need. His thanks was a $300 performance award for his stellar performance and a $1000 payraise. It has been like that every single year for the last three years. This year we are rejoicing because he will FINALLY get a decent payraise with the GS system. NSPS rewards the 10% while brutally punishing the 90%. sabrina Posted October 26, 2009 7:26 AM
- You know I have evaluated the NSPS/GS system side-by-side since I was converted in spiral 1. At that time, I was a GS-12/05. Assuming i nerver converted to NSPS, I would now be GS12/6 approximately 1/2 way to GS-12/7. I looked at the Pay Charts and did the math when/if I am converted back to NSPS, I will be a GS12/10 with absolutely no room for further raise. Ah that is unless I want to move to another position at a higher rate. I will miss NSPS but I understand many of you have been brutalized so that I could flourish.... Mark Posted October 20, 2009 5:15 PM









