"The Posts below express the opinion of the author(s), and
do not reflect the position of any federal employee organization."

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Are you worth 3.5% more?

The leader of the nation’s largest independent union of federal employees has joined with a coalition of organizations representing members of the military and their families in calling for a 3.5 percent pay raise in fiscal 2008 for military personnel.

That raise would be half-a-percentage point higher than the three percent raise proposed by the administration for next year for both those in the military and members of the civilian federal workforce.

In letters to every member of the military personnel subcommittees of both the House and Senate Armed Services Committees, President Colleen M. Kelley of the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) said the higher raise would help close the pay gap between these two groups of public servants and the private sector.

The NTEU leader noted that the Defense Authorization Act for fiscal years 2000 and 2004 both required that pay increases for military personnel equal the annual increase in the Employment Cost Index (ECI), plus one-half of one percent. “That standard has been used in every year of the current administration until 2007,” she said, “when military personnel received only a 2.2 percent raise.” Citing the military coalition’s March 1 testimony before the House Military Personnel Subcommittee, she said the 2.2 percent figure was the smallest pay increase for the military in 13 years and occurred at a time “when troops are putting their lives on the line every day for the rest of America.”

Like the military, President Kelley said, “federal civilian workers serve their country faithfully and are facing a widening pay gap.”

Despite the existence of the 1990 Federal Employee Pay Comparability Act—which was intended to close, in stages over 10 years, the public-private pay gap—such a gap remains; at present, she said, federal employee pay is, on average, 13 percent less than that of their private sector counterparts.

In her letter to the House and Senate members, the NTEU leader reminded them that in nearly every year over the past two decades, there have been “equal adjustments in military and civilian pay” to help close the pay gap for these two groups of federal workers.

The pay raise is one of the important issues under consideration in both sides of Congress. The House and Senate Appropriations Committees continue to hold hearings on federal agencies’ budgets for Fiscal Year 2008 and in the upcoming weeks legislation addressing federal employees’ and military pay will be proposed. In addition to deliberations by the subcommittees with jurisdiction over the federal employee pay, the military pay raise is being considered by the House and Senate Subcommittees on Defense Appropriations and by the Armed Services authorizing committees.

Please email your Members of Congress requesting them to write to the Chairs of the House and Senate Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government Appropriations in support of a 3.5% pay raise for federal employees.

Monday, April 23, 2007

If at first you don't suceed.....

I attempted to get this blog started a year ago. I gave up too soon before it could find its audience. I have been inspired to give it another try.

Many of you know I am the Legislative Coordinator for Chapter 032 of the National Treasury Employee’s Union (NTEU) in Denver. I send out a weekly legislative update to a distribution list of interested federal employees and retirees across the country in various agencies, but primarily in the IRS.

There are many topics and issues we can not discuss or send through official email. I was encouraged to create this blog where YOU can more fully participate, interact with each other, and express your opinions.

It will only be of interest to you, if you participate....
I encourage you to visit the blog frequently and keep coming back to it. It will take a few weeks for it to be "found" and begin to take off. It will only be of interest to you, if you participate. I urge you to encourage participation by your friends and coworkers in all federal agencies. Your involvement and interaction will make this a more informative space and more valuable to yourself and others. My desire is that through this blog, federal employees and retirees throughout all agencies will become more fully informed and more actively involved in the legislative process. Your feedback and comments to my posts and interaction with others is encouraged.

David R. Larkin


Bills of interest to federal employees and retirees we are currently tracking in the 110th Congress include:

  • H.R. 82 and S. 206: To amend Title II of the Social Security Act to repeal the government pension offset and windfall elimination.
  • H.R. 695 and S. 335: To Repeal Authority for Private Tax Collection.
  • H.R. 985: Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act of 2007 (Passed House 03/14/2007 by vote of 331 – 94; received in Senate 03/15/2007, referred to Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs)
  • H.R. 1073: To provide law enforcement status/20-year retirement option for Customs Inspectors and IRS Revenue Officers.
  • H.R. 1110 and S. 773: To allow Federal civilian and military retirees to pay health premiums on a pretax basis and to allow a deduction for TRICARE supplemental premiums.
  • H.R. 1256: To increase the government contribution for federal employee’s health insurance from 72% to 80%.
  • S. 1000: To enhance the Federal Telework Program.