Borrowing the military compensation commission concept and applying it to the civilian workforce could usher in a new era of certainty for employees, agencies a...
Federal employees have dodged another pay-and-benefits bullet. The House passed its revised budget April 30 with provisions removed that would make federal paychecks smaller. House Republicans earlier had proposed a menu of changes to the federal employee compensation package that included increases to pension contributions and workforce size cuts through attrition. For this year, though, it appears they’re all off the table. That’s good for several reasons. One, of course, is that federal employees won’t have to deal with these cuts, at least for another year. But the better reason is that it buys employees some time for Congress to do the right thing, and solve once-and-for-all the fight over what the federal employee compensation package should look like, in a fair, reasoned way. More good news: A model already exists for how to do it. Congressional overseers need look no further than the recently-concluded Military Compensation and Retirement Modernization Commission. The commission did a lot of things right as they did their work, and it shows in the responses from the White House and House Armed Services Committee. The White House supports 10 of the 15 recommendations; HASC has included a chunk of the recommendations in the 2016 National Defense Authorization Act markup. Remember this is happening just three months after the commission released its final report and recommendations. A civilian compensation commission modeled after the military version should do several important things its military counterpart did:
Francis Rose is host of Federal News Radio’s In Depth radio show, which airs weekdays from 4-7 p.m.
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