A chronology of the major milestones in the evolution of employee performance management in the Federal Government
is presented below.
Year |
Actions |
1883 |
Pendleton Act, or Civil Service Act
- Provided a merit system to end favoritism
- Required promotions by merit competition, but no centralized appraisal system was established.
|
1912 |
First Law on Appraisal
- An appropriations act directed the U.S. Civil Service Commission (now the U.S. Office of Personnel
Management) to establish a uniform efficiency rating system for all agencies.
|
1923 |
Classification Act of 1923
- Resulted in establishment of a "graphic rating scale" in 1924, which was used until
1935.
- Was effective, but unpopular.
- Supervisor marked along a scale for each "service rendered."
|
1935 |
Uniform Efficiency Rating System
The Civil Service Commission established, by regulation, the Uniform Efficiency Rating System, which was
used until 1950.
- Factors were grouped under the headings Quality of Performance, Productiveness, and
Qualifications
- There were five rating levels for each of the three categories, and also five summary rating
levels.
|
1940 |
Ramspeck Act
- Directed establishment of independent Boards of Review to decide rating appeals in each agency
- Boards included the Civil Service Commission and employee representatives
|
1950 |
Performance Rating Act
- Purpose was to identify the best and weakest employees and to improve supervisor-employee
relations
- Required the establishment of appraisal systems within all agencies, with prior approval by the
Civil Service Commission
- Established three summary rating levels: Outstanding, Satisfactory, and Unsatisfactory
- Employees could still appeal ratings, but now through a statutory board of three
members––one from an agency, one selected by employees, and the Chairman of the Civil
Service Commission
|
1954 |
Incentive Awards Act
- Authorized honorary recognition and cash payments for superior accomplishment, suggestions,
inventions, special acts or services, or other personal efforts
|
1958 |
Government Employees' Training Act
- Provided for training to improve performance and to prepare for future advancement
|
1962 |
Salary Reform Act
- Required an "acceptable level of competence" determination for granting General Schedule
within-grade increases
- Provided for the denial of the within-grade increase when performance is below the acceptable
level
- Authorized an additional step increase for "high quality performance"
|
1978 |
Civil Service Reform Act
Agencies required to develop appraisal systems for all Federal employees
- Established the U.S. Office of Personnel Management
- Required OPM's approval of appraisal systems
- Appraisals must be based on job-related performance standards
- Agencies must encourage employee participation in establishing performance standards
- Eliminated appeal of appraisals outside an agency
- Results of the appraisal must be used as a basis for training, rewarding, reassigning,
promoting, reducing in grade, retaining and removing employees
- Authorized removal of employees for unacceptable performance on one or more critical elements,
but only after providing an opportunity to demonstrate acceptable performance; reduced the
standard of proof from preponderance of evidence to substantial evidence
- Authorized appeal to the Merit Systems Protection Board of reductions in grade and removals
Established a separate performance appraisal system for Senior Executive Service (SES)
members
- Required one or more fully successful rating levels, a minimally satisfactory level, and an
unsatisfactory level
- Required agency Performance Review Boards to make recommendations to appointing officials on
final ratings
Established performance-related pay authorities
- Provided for performance awards for career executives; required at least a Fully Successful
rating and the recommendation of the Performance Review Board
- Provided for Senior Executive Service Meritorious (career) executive awards ($10,000 for
sustained accomplishment over a period of years; limited to 5 percent of executives) and
Distinguished (career) executives awards ($20,000 for sustained extraordinary accomplishment,
limited to 1 percent of executives)
- Established Merit Pay for supervisors and management officials in Grades GS 13-15, with funding
for merit increases limited to what agency would have paid as within-grade increases, quality
step increases, and half of comparability adjustments (guaranteed employees half of
comparability adjustments)
|
1984 |
Civil Service Retirement Spouse Equity Act
- Established a 5 percent minimum performance award for Senior Executive Service members
- Abolished Merit Pay System and established Performance Management and Recognition System (PMRS)
covering supervisors and management officials in Grades GS 13-15 (same coverage as Merit Pay
System)
- Guaranteed full comparability increases to PMRS Employees rated Fully Successful or higher, half to
those with Minimally Successful rating, and none to those rated Unacceptable
- Guaranteed PMRS Employees merit increases of specific amount based on their performance ratings and
position in pay range for their grade level
- Established performance awards program for PMRS employees, with a minimum funding level from 0.75
percent to 1.15 percent of estimated aggregate salaries over five years and required a minimum
performance award of 2 percent of employee's salary for an Outstanding rating; set maximum award
funding at 1.5 percent of estimated aggregate salaries
- Added performance appraisal revisions in PMRS requiring five summary rating levels, no forced
distributions of ratings, and joint participation in setting standards
|
1985 |
Final Performance Management and Recognition System appraisal and pay regulations issued
- Implemented legal provisions regarding general increases, merit increases and performance awards
- Established procedures for determining merit increases and performance awards for
“unrateable” employees
- Described pay-setting procedures when employees move between pay systems
- Established minimum appraisal periods and procedures for rating employees who are detailed to other
positions
- Required higher-level approval of ratings and performance-based personnel actions
|
1986 |
Final Performance Management System regulations issued
- Issued appraisal regulations for General Schedule and Prevailing Rate employees and for SES members,
which paralleled Performance Management and Recognition System appraisal regulations of 1985
Regulatory pay-for-performance system established
- Required Fully Successful rating for within-grade increases
- Required Outstanding rating for quality step increases
- Required Fully Successful rating for career-ladder promotions
- Required performance award program for General Schedule and Prevailing Rate employees
|
1989 |
Legislation extends the Performance Management and Recognition System (PMRS)
- Revised merit increase amount for Fully Successful employees in the middle-third of the pay range
from one-third to one-half of a merit increase, to parallel step increases in the General
Schedule
- Set minimum performance awards funding at 1.15 percent of estimated aggregate salaries for duration
of the extension
- Allowed for the reassignment, removal or reduction in grade of PMRS employees who did not attain a
fully successful level of performance after being given an opportunity to do so
Revised Senior Executive Service appraisal regulations
- Permitted three to five summary rating levels, including Unsatisfactory, Minimally Satisfactory and
Fully Successful levels specified in statute
- Deleted requirement for rating period to end between June 30 and September 30
|
1991 |
Legislation again extends the Performance Management and Recognition System
- Allowed using a written statement of work objectives to establish performance requirements
- Removed requirement for mandatory performance award for employees rated Outstanding and the accompanying
2 percent minimum award
Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act
- Provided specific legislative authority for payment of rating-based cash awards to General Schedule
employees like those authorized under the Performance Management and Recognition System
- Provided authority to grant paid time off as an award
|
1992 |
Revised regulations on summary rating levels for General Schedule and Prevailing Rate appraisal
systems
- Allowed summary ratings at 3, 4, or 5 levels but required agencies to include Unacceptable, Fully
Successful, and Outstanding levels
|
1993 |
Performance Management and Recognition System terminated
- Provided for orderly termination of the PMRS, and payout of merit increases and performance awards based
on October 1993 ratings
- Provided for phased conversion of employees not on a step rate back to step rates based on specified
personnel changes
- Retained authority to pay employees at non-step rates until changes occur to place all employees on a
step rate
|
1995 |
Revised performance management regulations
- Further decentralized the performance management program to allow agencies to develop programs to meet
their individual needs and cultures
- Established eight permissible summary rating patterns, allowing from two to five levels for summary
ratings
- Combined all award authorities in one part of the regulations, 5 CFR 451
- Streamlined the appraisal system approval process
|
1997 |
Revised regulations on reduction in force and performance management
- Allowed flexible crediting of between 12 and 20 additional years of service retention credit for ratings
of record given under different summary level patterns
- Retained traditional 12-16-20-year crediting when all ratings of record being credited were given under
a single summary level pattern
- Revised credit averaging to use actual ratings of record given without ”filling in the
blanks“ with presumed fully successful
- Removed use of presumed fully successful ratings and replaced them with credit based on the modal rating
when employee had no ratings of record
- Provided for immediate or delayed implementation at agency discretion to allow for education,
partnership and automated system revision efforts
|
1998 |
Revised regulations on ratings of record
- Codified long-standing OPM policy regarding ratings of record
- Described when a rating of record is considered final
- Prohibited retroactive, carryover and assumed ratings of record
- Provided limited circumstances under which an agency can change a rating of record
|
2000 |
Revised Senior Executive Service appraisal regulations
- Reinforced the link between performance management and strategic planning
- Required agencies to use balanced measures in evaluating executive performance
- Provided agencies more flexibility to tailor performance management systems to their unique
missions
|
2002 |
Chief Human Capital Officers Act
Established certification of performance appraisal systems for employees in senior-level (SL) and
scientific or professional (ST) positions and SES members
- Required agencies to design and implement performance appraisal systems that make meaningful
distinctions in performance for SES and SL/ST employees for appraisal systems to be certified
- Required agencies to obtain certification of performance appraisal systems from OPM, with the
concurrence of the Office of Management and Budget, before applying a higher aggregate pay limitation,
up to the Vice President's salary
Required the establishment of systems, standards, and metrics for assessing agencies' management of human
capital
- Required OPM to set standards for sustaining a culture that cultivates and develops a
high-performing workforce
- OPM developed the Human Capital Assessment and Accountability Framework (HCAAF) to guide agencies in
implementing the systems
Established Chief Human Capital Officers (CHCO) and the CHCO Council
- Required the heads of 24 Executive Departments and agencies to appoint or designate CHCOs to serve
as his/her agency's chief policy advisor on all human resources management issues
- Established a CHCO Council to advise and coordinate the activities of member agencies on such
matters as the modernization of human resources systems, improved quality of human resources
information, and legislation affecting human resources operations and organizations
Provided authority for the Department of Homeland Security to design its own human resources systems,
including a pay-for-performance system
Issued interim Presidential Rank Awards regulations
- Extended eligibility for Presidential Rank Awards to employees in SL/ST positions
- Codified long-standing OPM policy regarding rank awards for career members of the SES
|
2003 |
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004
Established a pay-for-performance system for members of the Senior Executive Service
- Replaced a six-level pay system with a single, open-range payband
- Removed annual across-the-board and locality pay adjustments and required pay adjustments based on
performance
- Authorized agencies with certified performance appraisal system(s) to set higher pay (up to level II
of the Executive Schedule)
Established Human Capital Performance Fund to pay top-performing employees
- Not implemented due to lack of funding
- Provided agencies with additional resources to grant pay increases to their highest performing
employees
Provided authority for the Department of Defense to design its own human resources systems, including a
pay-for-performance system
|
2004 |
Issued interim regulations for Certification of Performance Appraisal Systems
- Established criteria and procedural requirements for the certification of SES and SL/ST
performance appraisal systems
- Required agencies to submit evidence they have designed, implemented, and applied appraisal
systems that make meaningful distinctions in performance and pay
Issued final Senior Executive Service pay regulations
- Established rules for setting and adjusting SES pay on the basis of the employee's performance
and/or contribution to the agency's performance
- Revised rules for paying performance awards and applying the aggregate limitation on pay
Revised regulations on performance-based awards to non-GS employees
- Permitted agencies to grant performance-based cash awards to non-GS employees covered by 5 U.S.C.
chapter 45 who are not covered by an explicit statutory authority to pay such awards
|
2005 |
Revised awards regulations on calculating the payment of performance-based awards
- Required agencies granting performance-based cash award as a percentage of basic pay to include
locality payments and special rate supplements in computing the awards
|
2006 |
Established Performance Appraisal Assessment Tool (PAAT) for non-SES employees
- Designed to help agencies evaluate performance appraisal programs, identify strengths and weaknesses,
and develop plans for making improvements to programs
Revised awards regulations on performance-based awards
- Codified statutory threshold for performance-based cash awards (i.e., performance-based awards must
be based on a rating of record of Fully Successful or higher)
- Required agencies to ensure that performance-based awards reflect meaningful distinctions based on
levels of performance
|
2007 |
Established Performance Appraisal Assessment Tool (PAAT) for SES and SL/ST appraisal systems for
determining certification
- Designed as an agency self-assessment tool for evaluating SES and SL/ST appraisal systems against
certification criteria
|
2008 |
Senior Professional Performance Act
Established access to higher pay for employees in SL/ST positions
- Authorized agencies with SL/ST certified performance appraisal system(s) to set higher pay (up to
level II of the Executive Schedule)
- Removed locality pay adjustments
Authorized certifications up to 24 months with a possible 6 month extension for SES and SL/ST appraisal
systems
Inspector General Reform Act of 2008
- Required each Office of Inspector General (OIG) be treated as a separate agency for provisions relating to SES
- Resulted in establishment of OIG SES appraisal systems separate from the agency SES system
- Resulted in OPM approval and certification of those systems
|