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Thread: Fers sick leave credit

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    Default Re: Fers sick leave credit

    Quote Originally Posted by James48843 View Post
    By the way - for those of you in Defense, covered by NSPS- this bill also has something in it for you. Here is govexec.com's writeup on the passage last night in the Senate of this bill:

    Senate sends bill ending Pentagon pay system to president's desk

    By Alyssa Rosenberg
    arosenberg@govexec.com
    October 22, 2009

    President Obama's signature is the only obstacle remaining to a full repeal of the Pentagon's pay-for-performance arrangement, after the Senate passed legislation that would roll back the controversial system and provide members of the armed forces with a 3.4 percent pay raise in 2010.


    The Senate on Thursday approved the final version of the fiscal 2010 Defense authorization bill by a vote of 68-29, sending it to the president's desk. In addition to language dismantling the National Security Personnel System and allowing a military pay raise 0.5 percentage points higher than that requested by Obama, the measure contains significant changes to federal retirement law.

    The final version of the policy bill repeals NSPS in full and requires that all NSPS employees return to their previous pay system by Jan. 1, 2012. It asks the Defense secretary to begin moving NSPS employees back into their old pay system within six months, and prohibits the Pentagon from decreasing the salaries of employees who got raises under NSPS. Until they are returned to their old pay systems, NSPS employees will be guaranteed the full pay hikes given to General Schedule workers.

    The bill also sets the course for changes in how Defense Department employees are evaluated. It directs the Defense secretary to work with the Office of Personnel Management chief to create a "fair, credible and transparent" performance appraisal system for employees and a similar system "for linking employee bonuses and other performance-based actions to performance appraisals of employees." Employees are to receive "performance assistance plans," giving them access to on-the-job training and mentoring.

    The bill also gives the Defense secretary the ability to propose new personnel flexibilities, pending congressional approval.

    Beyond the Defense Department, the final authorization bill contains governmentwide changes to retirement rules, including a provision that would allow workers in the Federal Employees Retirement System to count unused sick leave toward their retirement. Until Dec. 31, 2013, employees would receive 50 percent credit for unused sick time; they would receive full credit beginning on Jan. 1, 2014.

    The bill also allows federal retirees to return to government for limited, part-time appointments without having to take cuts in their annuities. And it will let employees who work part time before they retire use higher salary figures to calculate how that work factors into their retirement benefits. FERS employees who left and returned to government service would be able to redeposit savings in the retirement system and earn credit for years they already worked in government.

    In addition, the bill moves federal employees who work outside the continental United States from a cost-of-living-adjustment system into the locality pay system. COLA payments do not count toward retirement calculations, and they are not matched as part of Thrift Savings Plan contributions.

    The leaders of federal employee groups praised the legislation, and urged President Obama to sign it swiftly.

    "The administration and Congress have tasked federal employees with immense responsibility in the face of an ambitious agenda to restructure the federal government's role in the delivery of services to the American public," said Darryl Perkinson, president of the Federal Managers Association. "We need experienced individuals to lend their expertise as we tackle the challenges ahead and to mentor those who will serve the nation in the future. Signing this bill into law will ensure the federal government builds on its successes as we transition to the next generation of public servants."

    Randy Erwin, legislative director for the National Federation of Federal Employees, praised the provision ending NSPS, noting the union has been battling the pay system for six years. "Had NSPS been implemented as first proposed, federal employee unions probably would not even exist today," he said. "DoD would have stripped our right to collectively bargain and we would have disappeared."

    Source: http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cf...dcn=todaysnews
    Isn't this the same bill that the Dems slipped in a revision to the Hate Crimes Bill adding additional penalties for crimes committed against Homosexuals?
    ¿Tiene suerte, Baboso?

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  3. #14
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    Default Re: Fers sick leave credit

    Quote Originally Posted by James48843 View Post
    Ok CB- I'll make you a promise- about swinging both ways..???

    My promise is.....

    If you dont' ask.....I won't tell.

    :-)


    (Yes- I loved your line.... )
    I believe you're saying "Ask me no questions and I'll tell you no lies."
    ¿Tiene suerte, Baboso?

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    Default Re: Fers sick leave credit

    Quote Originally Posted by Viva La Migra View Post
    Isn't this the same bill that the Dems slipped in a revision to the Hate Crimes Bill adding additional penalties for crimes committed against Homosexuals?
    Yes- that is Section "E". Items 4701 through 4713 address Hate Crimes. The definition now covers:

    RACE, COLOR, RELIGION, OR NATIONAL ORIGIN, GENDER, SEXUAL ORIENTATION, GENDER IDENTITY, OR DISABILITY.


    That section also includes making it a hate crime if the person being attacked is a U.S. Serviceman, if the attacker is doing it on account of military service status of the victim:

    ----------------------------------------------

    SEC. 4712. ATTACKS ON UNITED STATES SERVICEMEN.


    • (a) In General- Chapter 67 of title 18, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:

    `Sec. 1389. Prohibition on attacks on United States servicemen on account of service


    • `(a) In General- Whoever knowingly assaults or batters a United States serviceman or an immediate family member of a United States serviceman, or who knowingly destroys or injures the property of such serviceman or immediate family member, on account of the military service of that serviceman or status of that individual as a United States serviceman, or who attempts or conspires to do so, shall--

      • `(1) in the case of a simple assault, or destruction or injury to property in which the damage or attempted damage to such property is not more than $500, be fined under this title in an amount not less than $500 nor more than $10,000 and imprisoned not more than 2 years;

      • `(2) in the case of destruction or injury to property in which the damage or attempted damage to such property is more than $500, be fined under this title in an amount not less than $1000 nor more than $100,000 and imprisoned not more than 5 years; and

      • `(3) in the case of a battery, or an assault resulting in bodily injury, be fined under this title in an amount not less than $2500 and imprisoned not less than 6 months nor more than 10 years.

    • `(b) Exception- This section shall not apply to conduct by a person who is subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
    ----------------

    Just some of the provisions included in the bill.

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    Default Re: Fers sick leave credit

    Quote Originally Posted by McDuck View Post
    Wrong. I was referring to the FERS retires don't get COLA until they are 62 (which will probably be raised in the future).
    Ah. you are absolutely correct. Those FERS employees who retire at their minimum retirement age, and who get a FERS Social Security Supplement until they are age 62, do not get ANY COLA until they are age 62. This IS a very important point to keep in mind, when deciding whether to retire at 55/30 (or full retirement age of 57/30 for those born later) and age 62.

    Standard FERS employees get no COLA in that time period.

    The only exception is those with special retirement provisions- Firefighter, Loaw enforcement, Air traffic controllers, and (of course) Congresscritters, who DO get a COLA, even if they are only in their 40's by the time the retire. Those lucky FERS folks get full COLA from the day they retire.

    But the rest of us either have to work until Age 62, or learn to live without any COLA until we turn age 62.

    that's something to keep in mind when you are deciding at what age to retire.

    thanks for pointing that out McDuck- a lot of folks don't know about that particular issue.

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