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A poster promoting a career in TSA sits by a crowded TSA Checkpoint at the Philadelphia International Airport on March 28, 2026.
Management
TSA workforce, aviation leaders challenge Trump push to expand privatized airport screening
Protesters against the Department of Government Efficiency on Feb. 5, 2025, in Washington, D.C. DOGE pushed many civil servants out of government last year.
Management
Survey: Feds were less engaged, less satisfied and more burnt out in 2025
The cooling tower of the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station, 26 miles east of Toledo, Ohio.
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Nuclear waste oversight at risk as staffing vacancies mount, watchdog warns
President Donald Trump has fired multiple agency inspectors general and installed replacements with political backgrounds.
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Newest inspector general nominees show shift from overtly political backgrounds
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The century-old GS system is 'disintegrating' and government can't agree on how to fix it
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A poster promoting a career in TSA sits by a crowded TSA Checkpoint at the Philadelphia International Airport on March 28, 2026.
Management
TSA workforce, aviation leaders challenge Trump push to expand privatized airport screening
Protesters against the Department of Government Efficiency on Feb. 5, 2025, in Washington, D.C. DOGE pushed many civil servants out of government last year.
Management
Survey: Feds were less engaged, less satisfied and more burnt out in 2025
The cooling tower of the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station, 26 miles east of Toledo, Ohio.
Workforce
Nuclear waste oversight at risk as staffing vacancies mount, watchdog warns
President Donald Trump has fired multiple agency inspectors general and installed replacements with political backgrounds.
Oversight
Newest inspector general nominees show shift from overtly political backgrounds
Pay & Benefits
The century-old GS system is 'disintegrating' and government can't agree on how to fix it
sponsor content
AI-Powered Infrastructure: How Public-Private Partnerships are Building the Future of Transportation
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TSA workforce, aviation leaders challenge Trump push to expand privatized airport screening

Survey: Feds were less engaged, less satisfied and more burnt out in 2025

Nuclear waste oversight at risk as staffing vacancies mount, watchdog warns

Newest inspector general nominees show shift from overtly political backgrounds

The century-old GS system is 'disintegrating' and government can't agree on how to fix it

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Pay & Benefits

Paid Parental Leave, Human Capital Reviews and More

A weekly round-up of pay and benefits news.

Erich Wagner

|
July 3, 2018
  • Pay & Benefits Watch
Erich Wagner
Erich Wagner

Legislation introduced in Congress last week would provide paid leave for federal civilian employees who have or adopt a child for the first time.

The Federal Employees Paid Parental Leave Act (H.R. 6275), introduced by Rep. Barbara Comstock, R-Va., would provide federal workers 12 weeks of paid leave following the birth, adoption or fostering of a child. Currently, feds may take up to 12 weeks of parental leave, but it is unpaid.

In a statement, Comstock said the measure would bring federal agencies more in line with benefits offered in the private sector.

“Today most large employers provide at least 12 weeks paid [leave] and this is a competitiveness issue as well as a retention issue for the federal workplace to attract and maintain the top talent in the workplace,” she said. “Paid parental leave has been proven to help women remain in the workforce, lower infant mortality rates, improve infant health, and reduce depression and other postpartum mental health issues in women.”

National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association President Richard Thissen applauded the bill’s introduction in a statement.

“Parents should not be forced to make difficult trade-offs between spending invaluable time to bond with their new child, or being able to pay their bills and save for their child’s future,” Thissen said. “The policy also reflects smart human resource management practice. Paid parental-leave policies have been shown to improve the recruitment and retention of young workers, reducing turnover costs significantly.”

The bill marks the latest of a long string of efforts, thus far unsuccessful, to provide federal workers with paid parental leave. Last year, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., introduced a bill that would provide six weeks of paid leave to feds who are new parents, with an option to take an additional six weeks of unpaid leave.

Meanwhile, the Office of Personnel Management last week announced a new process for agencies to review their human capital goals in an effort to update procedures to better align with agency strategic goals.

In a memo to agencies, Mark Lambert, OPM associate director for merit system accountability and compliance, and Mark Reinhold, associate director for employee services, said agencies should highlight both accomplishments and “concerns and needs” as part of their reviews.

“Taking an evidence-based approach, the discussions will focus on agency human capital programs and the design and use of their Human Capital Operating Plans, HRStat, and Independent Audit Programs to improve human capital planning and outcomes in support of organizational performance,” the memo stated. 

According to OPM, the process will involve discussions between agencies and OPM officials, and culminate in the release of an annual report on governmentwide HR practices, as well as a new Federal Workforce Priorities Report every four years.

Over at the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia, a group of four current and former lawmakers from both parties have filed an amicus brief in support of federal employee unions’ legal challenge against President Trump’s recent executive orders that seek to make it easier to fire federal workers and curb the influence of labor groups.

In the filing, Reps. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., and Peter King, R-N.Y., and former Reps. Bill Clay, D-Mo., and Jim Leach, R-Iowa, argued that the executive orders run contrary to a number of key aspects of the 1978 Civil Service Reform Act, at times citing Clay’s own comments in support of the law during the House floor debate on the measure.

In recent weeks, the American Federation of Government Employees, one of 15 unions party to the recently consolidated lawsuit, issued a second lawsuit challenging two of the executive orders. In the new complaint, the union argued that the White House’s efforts to exclude firings and adverse personnel actions from grievance procedures run against the CSRA, and that the order aiming to shorten collective bargaining negotiations seeks to circumvent procedures enshrined in existing law.

“The statute does not provide that the president can dictate how long or when the parties will meet to bargain, nor does it allow the president to dictate whether the filing of an [unfair labor practice] will or will not delay negotiations,” AFGE wrote. “Put another way, the statute does not permit the president to determine in advance what duration of collective bargaining may ‘ordinarily be considered reasonable.’ ”

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