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Administration limits performance award spending

The Obama administration has announced limits on the total amount agencies can spend on individual performance awards for federal employees.
 
Under the new guidelines, the total amount an agency may spend on individual performance awards for members of its Senior Executive Service and senior-level and scientific and professional employees may be no more than 5 percent of their aggregate salaries. Performance awards and individual contribution awards for all other employees may not total more than 1 percent of their aggregate salaries.

The details were laid out in a memo issued to department heads June 10 by Office of Personnel Management Director John Berry and Office of Management and Budget Deputy Director for Management and Chief Performance Officer Jeffrey Zients.

The memo said the spending limits apply immediately, and will remain in effect for awards with effective dates during fiscal 2012. The memo noted that while the award limits will require a reduction from current award spending levels at some agencies, other agencies that are “already spending at or below these levels must continue to limit spending to their fiscal year 2010 levels.”

“The budgetary limits specified in this memorandum apply to spending for individual awards only, which include rating-based performance awards and individual special act awards,” the memo states. “Other awards and incentives are frozen at fiscal year 2010 spending levels, except travel savings and foreign language awards.”

Reader comments

Wed, Jun 15, 2011

So, the studies indicate that awards are not allocated fairly in practice or perception, so the answer is to limit the amount available for all awards... Why not enforce the rules and make them more fair? What will this policy do to change who gets the big nonuses?

Tue, Jun 14, 2011

The new limits only apply to the total spending by group. So you can still receive cash awards higher than 1 or 5% of your salary as long as the total abmount amount is not exceeded.

Tue, Jun 14, 2011 Jim FL

Wow! What a gap. While I can sort of see the administration worrying about losing their leadership to the private sector, I seriously doubt many of the SES would actually throw away their potential retirement benefits for a short-term salary increase. I really feel for the rest of the work force and can relate. I'm a contractor and we were just informed the HIGH END of our raises would be 2% this year. We don't get bonuses. Pretty sad for an office where the average salary is well under $40K/yr.

Tue, Jun 14, 2011

And we'll get to choose the next president between the incumbent and a Republican... I have a feeling they will get the staff reduction they want by mass retirements and brain drainwith the inability to attract future young capable federal employees. The only future employees they will be able attract will be either "patriotic", making a several year "mission" of public service OR too unqualified to work anywhere else. Back to - "who would want one of those jobs?"

Tue, Jun 14, 2011

The more they get paid, the bigger their bonus can be in comparision to their salary. Hmmm.

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