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December 9, 2005 |
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President approves raise
Washington (Govexec)
President
Bush has formally approved a 3.1 percent average pay raise for white-collar
federal employees next year.
The
raise is included in the fiscal 2006 Transportation-Treasury appropriations
measure that Bush signed Nov. 30.
The
3.1 percent increase provides pay parity between civilians and military service
members.
Now
President Bush must decide how the raise will be divided between an
across-the-board increase and locality pay differentials. Earlier this year, the
Federal Salary Council recommended that 2.1 percent be allocated to
across-the-board pay and 1 percent to locality raises. Historically, the
president has followed the council’s advice.
Colleen
Kelley, president of the National Treasury Employees Union called on President
Bush to issue an executive order immediately detailing how the raise would be
divided. Such an action, she said, “would send not only an important message
to federal workers about the value of their efforts on behalf of the American
people, but it would send the right message.”
The
Transportation-Treasury measure also includes provisions designed to help
federal employees whose jobs are placed up for competition with private firms
under the Bush administration’s competitive sourcing initiative.
Under the legislation, agencies must let in-house employees form a team and defend their jobs against outside bidders any time more than 10 positions are at stake. In those contests, federal employee teams will be granted a cost advantage amounting to either 10 percent of personnel-related costs or $10 million -- whichever is lower.