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March
12, 2004
President authorizes remainder of federal raise
By
Kathy Eastwood
Staff Writer
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| President bush signed the order Wednesday giving the civilians the rest of their 2004 raise. |
President
Bush issued an executive order Wednesday officially releasing the rest of the
2004 percent average pay raise for civilian employees.
Congress
passed the raise in its 2004 omnibus appropriations bill, which Bush signed into
law Jan. 23. The raise could not go into effect, however, until the president
issued the executive order to implement it. Federal employees have been
receiving a portion of the raise (2 percent) since January.
The
order labels 2.7 of the 4.1 percent raise as an across-the-board raise and 1.4
percent as a locality increase.
Bush
originally sought a 2 percent pay raise for civil servants and a 4.1 percent pay
raise for military personnel. In January, Congress rejected that formula and
provided both civilian and military personnel with a 4.1 percent increase.
The
American Federation of Government Employees Thursday issued tongue-in-cheek
praise for the order.
“AFGE
is glad the president finally found the time to pay the people who work for the
public good every day,” AFGE President John Gage said.
Wage
Grade employees will receive as much as a 4.39 percent increase because of
congressional action to give blue-collar employees pay raises for fiscal 2004
that are comparable to those given GS employees.
Actual
increases will vary based on surveys of private-sector rates in a given pay
area. The increases will be retroactive to the normal effective date for pay
raises, which varies by area. For example, the effective date for the
Washington-area wage schedule is Oct. 19.
The
president and a group of supporters in the House are locked in a battle with
pay-parity advocates over the 2005 raise. They are proposing 1.5 percent for
civilians and 3.5 percent for military. The Senate Budget Committee Chairman,
Don Nickles of Okla., has already included language in the budget resolution
requiring equal pay raises for military personnel and civil servants.