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Defense official outlines pay freeze details
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Defense official outlines pay freeze details

Posted 1/10/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service


1/10/2011 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Defense Department civilian employees affected by the federal pay freeze for 2011 and 2012 will still have the opportunity to receive performance awards, promotions and normal longevity increases, a senior defense official said.

Pasquale M. Tamburrino Jr., the deputy under secretary of defense for civilian personnel policy, said senior leaders are working to ensure that employees are treated fairly during the freeze.

"We value the contributions of our career federal employees, and we value their service to the nation," he said. "Nothing has changed there."

From the time the pay freeze was announced, the emphasis has been on ensuring all federal employees receive equal treatment, he said.

"Whether you're the most junior civil servant on the first day of the job or you're a member of the executive leadership team, it applies to you," he said.

Defense leaders, he noted, have been "very clear" in directing that the freeze should affect all employees equally.

"Not everything is covered by statute," Mr. Tamburrino said, noting that heads of agencies have some administrative discretion in some dimensions of pay.

Guidance on the pay freeze instructs agency heads to manage administrative privileges the same way the president treated general pay increases in the executive order, he said.

"You should not use that privilege to grant a pay raise," he said.

Mr. Tamburrino said he encourages managers to use the tools that always have been available to them, and still are, to reward employees.

"When it's appropriate, you give somebody a performance award," he said. "If you tell them the organization has five or six goals, and they do a lot of heavy lifting to help you get to those goals, then I think you should sit down as a leader and say, 'We have to recognize that.'"

Most employees, he said, want three things: clear guidance on the management team's priorities, the tools and resources necessary to complete their work, and coaching and feedback.

"Financial compensation is important because it is; we all have financial obligations that have to be satisfied," he said. "But what's really important as well is (that) you want to tell your employees, 'You're doing a really fine job.'"

President Barack Obama announced his intent for a two-year pay freeze for federal civilian workers Nov. 29. Congress approved the proposal, and President Obama signed it into law Dec. 22.

Officials at the Office of Personnel Management issued a memorandum Dec. 30 to heads of executive departments and agencies, detailing how the freeze applies to the federal work force in accordance with existing law and presidential guidance. Defense Department officials issued guidance in line with OPM's the same day.

"It's a response to the difficulties the country is facing, and I think what's really good about it is (that) it's universal," Mr. Tamburrino said. "You have to have a very clear understanding of what's in and what's out, because that's what affects employees."

The freeze covers what have traditionally been known as general pay increases, he said, which normally take effect each January and consist of a combination of base pay and locality pay increases for most civilian employees.

Federal civilian pay increased an average of 3.5 percent in 2008, 3.9 percent in 2009, and 2 percent in 2010, according to government figures.

"The president determined, based on the state of the economy, that those pay raises that are statutory in nature should not be granted (during the two-year freeze)," Mr. Tamburrino said.

According to the OPM guidance, the freeze, which extends through Dec. 31, 2012, affects some 2 million federal civilian employees in most pay systems: general schedule, executive schedule, senior executive service, senior foreign service, senior-level and scientific, and professional. Postal employees and military service members are not affected by the freeze.

However, OPM officials said, the pay freeze policy may not apply to any increase that is required by a collective bargaining agreement that has already been executed.

Except for minor instances in Alaska, Hawaii and other nonforeign areas, locality pay also is frozen, Mr. Tamburrino said.

"I think everybody recognizes (the pay freeze) was a really difficult decision," he said. "I think we did a tremendous job in issuing some very clear guidance, and I think the leadership of the Department of Defense did a really good job in making it very level and even across the department."



tabComments
7/18/2011 3:21:01 PM ET
If it was across the board why are the Postal employees exempt?
RR, TX
 
1/21/2011 2:48:53 PM ET
I am actually in agreement that drastic times call for drastic measures. I would have forgone my 1.whatever pay raise as an active duty military member to help balance the budget. Although if you look at this it is small change compared to other areas of spending that could and must be cut also to balance a budget that was balanced back in the 1990s. Food for thought.
Jeremy, Korea
 
1/12/2011 10:02:07 AM ET
As a civilian employee affected by this decision I have to say I support it. It is the right decision at the right time. Nobody wants to forgo a wage increase but with the economy as it is this is the best solution. There may also need to be either a cut in pay or a cut in the size of the workforce as well. Hard times require hard decisions.
Jerry, Oklahoma
 
1/12/2011 7:57:47 AM ET
Actually congress is for retirement and health care purposes just more federal employees. Their retirement system is FERS and their healthcare system is FEHBP same as all GS and SES employees of the government.
jeff, deployed
 
1/11/2011 1:28:21 PM ET
This article is full of double-talk. One place it states the pay freeze applies to all civilians then it turns around and lists civiians it doesn't apply to. This is all a bunch of politicians Republicans and Democrats alike who are grandstanding at our expense. When I was in the Reserve I would have made a heckuva lot more money had I been called to active duty and they give the pay raise to the military and not us When warfighter support slows down just remember the pay and hiring freeze DOD.
A W, Robins AFB GA
 
1/11/2011 12:23:06 PM ET
Agree that it should. All should be held accountable at every level something which does not happen. Of course neither members of Congress nor the POTUS actually need the money.
JB, FL
 
1/11/2011 12:03:31 PM ET
Instead of complaining on a message board why don't you look it up? P.L. 111-165 was signed into law in May 2010 and prevents a pay raise in 2011 for Congress. Also the Conusmer Price Index has risen less than 0.8 percent over the last 12 months. Perhaps in the midst of a national economic crisis a pay raise or cost of living is not required for public servants. As a military member perhaps we should not receive one either.
Brian, VA
 
1/11/2011 11:09:54 AM ET
If you are going to freeze employees pay then it should also happen to Congress, and the Senate, White House employees, and the President. Cost of living should be allowed to social security and federal employees at least if they are not getting a raise. It is always the peons that feel the effect, not the upper echlon.
Laurie, NJ
 
1/11/2011 9:47:34 AM ET
Will Congress and the President do the same?
D. Frioux, Vance
 
1/11/2011 6:27:37 AM ET
This is fair as long as it's across the board. All working people are feeling the same pains. Let's just hope our politicians face the same freezes. It gets old with all the political talk of retiring at 20 years in the military is no good and being paid to much as a civil servant. I believe politicians receive money for life after only a term or two. Lastly if I can sound the working class around the country and world are sacrificing so the free loaders that can work but get paid more through welfare can continue freeloading.
David Brett, Korea
 
1/11/2011 1:23:24 AM ET
What about Step Increases when the Step Increase is the Performance Award. On my first LES this year I am still listed as Step 1 although I received a Step Increase as a Performance Award.
Ralph England, Landstuhl Regional Medical Center Germany
 
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