Legislation Introduced to Reform Postal Employees’ Benefits
Legislation has been introduced in the House that would make a number of reforms to the Postal Service including changes to current and retired Postal employees’ benefits.
Stay informed on proposed federal legislation that could impact federal employees and retirees. Explore updates on newly introduced Congressional bills, workforce policy proposals, retirement and benefits legislation, pay and leave reforms, and agency‑specific measures under consideration in Congress. Find clear summaries, analysis, and tracking of bills that may affect FERS, CSRS, FEHB, TSP, pay raises, labor relations, and other key aspects of federal employment. Keep up with the latest developments as lawmakers debate changes that shape the federal workforce.
Legislation has been introduced in the House that would make a number of reforms to the Postal Service including changes to current and retired Postal employees’ benefits.
Legislation has been introduced in Congress to give federal employees a 3.2% pay raise in 2018.
Legislation has been reintroduced in the House to prohibit federal employees from watching porn on their work computers.
Legislation was recently introduced in the House of Representatives to make it easier to fire VA employees for poor performance.
Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) reintroduced legislation this week that would make it easier to fire VA employees for misconduct or poor performance.
Congressman Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) introduced a resolution this week which provides support for the notion of moving federal agencies out of Washington and into other parts of the country.
Legislation has been introduced in the House that would prevent individuals with seriously delinquent tax debt from working for the federal government.
The House passed legislation this week that would allow traveling federal employees to be reimbursed for ride sharing services such as Uber or Lyft.
The House recently passed legislation that would limit the rule making authority of federal agencies.
The House has voted to pass a bill that would make reprimands remain permanently on a VA employee’s record.