Unnamed top USPS official’s compensation exceeds legal limit, IG says
- By Amanda Palleschi
- October 26, 2012
- Comments
Charles Dharapak/AP file photo
A U.S. Postal Service officer earned more than $300,000 in salary, pension and bonus in 2011– exceeding the legal limit maximum compensation for the agency’s executives, according to an audit from the USPS’ inspector general.
According to Federal Times, the Postal Service and the IG disagree over whether the pension should count in determining the top officer’s total compensation. The unnamed officer received a total compensation of $306,250, exceeding the $276,840 pay limit for his position.
A recent IG audit points to a 2006 law setting that cap for “critical positions” within the agency, but USPS officials say the officer’s $131,952 annual pension should not have been considered as part of compensation package under those limits. The audit defined “basic salary” as the officer’s pension plus his annual salary of $113,048, plus a bonus of $61,250, Federal Times wrote.
Five officials, including Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe, Chief Financial Officer Joe Corbett and Chief Operating Officer Megan Brennan, are considered to have “critical positions,” according to the report, although three other posts have the same designation.
By using this service you agree not to post material that is obscene, harassing, defamatory, or otherwise objectionable. Although GovExec.com does not monitor comments posted to this site (and has no obligation to), it reserves the right to delete, edit, or move any material that it deems to be in violation of this rule.
Older Feds Aren't Playing to Their Strengths
Is It Too Hard to Fire Misbehaving Feds?
Americans Still Like the Postal Service
A Forced 4-Day Weekend for Many Feds
No More Tax-Cheating Feds, Senators Say
Video: The Daily Show on Apple's Taxes
Sponsored
3 Ways Data is Improving DoD Performance
Research Report: Powering Continuous Monitoring Through Big Data
Need to Know Memo: Big Data
Cutting costs: Inside the effort to improve the efficiency of federal operations
