Military Pay, Retiree Pay and Civilian Pay: What’s the Difference?
Will federal employees receive the same pay raise as that given to military personnel in 2006?
Will federal employees receive the same pay raise as that given to military personnel in 2006?
Proposing cuts in federal retirement benefits may be politically popular but the latest proposal is not likely to fly
Readers questioned the data on federal employee salaries in a recent article. Here is more information on what goes into the data and why the information generates interest among readers.
Does the recent decision of the DC Circuit Court lead to the dramatic conclusions offered by some observers? The decision does not but the process of introducing change to the federal bureaucracy follows a predictable pattern and requires pushing the right buttons for the players in the process who can make a difference.
The recent court decision on the proposed changes to the labor relations system in DHS has generated a lot of press and many comments and calls for change. While change may come, the decision does not support a conclusion that the proposed system for DHS is now dead in the water.
An injunction against a portion of the new rules for a human resources system in the Department of Homeland Security is the latest round in the implenting a new civil service structure
Several large unions have withdrawn from the AFL-CIO, taking with them millions of dollars and millions of members. Federal employee unions have experienced substantial losses in power and members also.
The agency and the union are starting labor negotiations and the parties are far apart in their initial positions.
The EEOC last Friday approved a plan to reorganize the agency by changing the way the Commission’s field offices operate.
NTEU gambled that it could require Customs to bargain an entire labor agreement and delay changes to the work assignment agreement negotiated under the Clinton partnership directive. The gamble did not pay off and the agency issued its new policy which successfully withstood several years of review by third parties and the Court of Appeals for DC.