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Obama Sets 2 Percent Civilian Pay Hike for 2010
Alyssa Rosenberg | Government Executive
President Obama late Monday reiterated that he will limit the base pay raise for civilian federal employees to 2 percent in 2010.
In a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Joe Biden, the president invoked his power to override the statutorily required annual across-the-board and locality pay increases in times of emergency or economic hardship.
“A national emergency… has existed since September 11, 2001,” Obama wrote. “Likewise, our country continues to face serious economic conditions affecting the general welfare and most Americans would not understand or accept that federal employees should receive an average pay increase of 18.9 percent while many of their fellow citizens are facing employment cutbacks or unemployment.”
Under the law governing pay for civilian federal employees, workers are entitled to an across-the-board raise equal to 0.5 percentage points less than the growth in the Labor Department’s Employment Cost Index. This year, that would have been a 2.4 percent raise, plus an increase in locality pay, predicted to be 16.5 percent by a survey of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. As he argued in August, Obama said the $22.6 billion required to implement the statutorily required pay hike would be too costly.
Congress could still override the president’s plan. But since July, competing pay provisions have languished in the fiscal 2010 Financial Services appropriations bill. The Senate’s version of the legislation includes a 2.9 percent civilian raise for 2010, while the House bill follows Obama’s initial budget request for a 2 percent increase. The House passed its bill in late July, but the full Senate has yet to vote on the measure, and it is likely to get wrapped into an omnibus spending package.
Federal employee groups have protested the administration and Congress’ approach to pay, expressing concern that higher raises for military members have sent discouraging messages about the value of civilian employees’ work. The 2010 National Defense Authorization Act included a 3.4 percent military raise, 0.5 percent higher than the 2.9 percent raise Obama requested for service members in his initial budget. Obama signed the Defense policy bill in October.
Previous administrations also have cited national emergencies to justify alternative pay plans. Max Stier, president of the nonprofit Partnership for Public Service, has criticized the practice, urging the president to take a more straightforward approach and simply say he does not want to increase pay.
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jasonnano
almost 3 years ago
60 comments
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JAMES_MORGAN
over 3 years ago
6 comments
I stand corrected. My co-worker just pointed out to me that you started out your article with "President Obama". My sincere apologies, but damnit once is not enough.
JAMES_MORGAN
over 3 years ago
6 comments
Pajbrown, your concern is but one microcasm of the big picture and I agree with you 100%. Deployed DoD employees should be afforded the same tax breaks as our brothers and sisters in arms. I have worked side by side with DoD employees in the combat theater and I assure you the threat to them is no less then it was to me. President Obama should address this area individual of the whole but I do believe the change would take an Act of Congress.
JAMES_MORGAN
over 3 years ago
6 comments
Just once I would love to have you refer to him as President, afterall he is the President of ALL of us. I just like the vast majority of my federal co-workers would love to get the full recommended pay increases but I remember where we were at as a country just a mere 12 months ago and I don't believe we are out of the woods yet. I'm gonna give President Obama a pass on this one. No one can accuse the President of not giving a damn and with that in mind I will have faith in his decision.
pajbrown
over 3 years ago
2 comments
Unfortunately it does add credence to the devaluing of civilian Federal employees. This in addition to deployed DoD civilians do not benefit from a tax break on dollars earned OCONUS. Military pay is totally tax free, while contractor civilian's pay is tax free up to the first $85K. DoD civilians zero.