Federal workers aren\'t the only people who will feel the impact of the president\'s proposed two-year pay freeze. It could also impact federal unions, governme...
President Obama’s surprise decision to freeze non-postal federal pay for two years (2011 and 2012) will also have a major impact on lots and lots of people who don’t work for the federal government.
Among them:
In addition to the two-year pay freeze itself (assuming Congress goes along), it will have a major impact on future retirement benefits of current workers. Federal employee annuities are based on two things: salary and length of service. The pension is based on the highest three-year average salary (which for most people is the last three years worked). If that high-3 figure is frozen it will mean smaller than expected benefits when workers do retire.
Pay Factoids:
Federal union leaders – all of whom worked hard for the president’s election – were gob-smacked by the pay freeze announcement. Several of them reportedly tried all morning to get through to the White House when the first rumors (of a 3-year pay freeze) starting circulating in the Washington grapevine.
” I would have expected this from the Republicans,” a union official said, “but Obama? Unbelievable.”
Another recalled that when he first took office, President Bill Clinton proposed a federal pay freeze. Congress overrode him in that case, although it did go along with a 270,000 federal job reduction. Each year of his presidency Clinton proposed raises that were smaller than those called for by the 1990 federal pay law formula (FEPCA). President George W. Bush didn’t propose a pay freeze, but he too proposed (and like Clinton was usually overridden by Congress) smaller-than-the-FEPCA-formula raises.
To reach me, email me at mcausey@federalnewsradio.com.
Nearly Useless Factoid
by Suzanne Kubota
Next month, a total eclipse of the Moon and the solstice will occur on the same day.
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