Federal Workers in Alaska, Hawaii, and U.S. Territories to get Pension Increase and Locality Pay
Friday, November 6, 2009(National Federation of Federal Employees)
Nearly 20 years after the
passage of the Federal Employees Pay
Comparability Act, legislation that established
the federal locality pay structure but left
those stationed in Alaska, Hawaii, and the U.S.
territories out of the system, federal workers
from these areas will soon be getting justly
compensated for their service.
In a Defense bill that
included major victories such as the repeal of
the National Security Personnel System and the
establishment of a sick leave retirement
benefit for FERS employees, the expansion of
locality pay to non-foreign areas seemed like a
footnote. However, to those federal
employees stationed outside of the contiguous
48 states, this change will make a lifetime’s
worth of difference.
Under the new law,
the biggest change will be a dramatic increase
in the value of employees’ retirement
annuities. Currently, workers located
outside of the mainland United States receive a
cost-of-living allowance that ranges from 13%
to 25% depending on the location. While
this is a great benefit, the tradeoff for these
workers is they don’t get any locality pay
whatsoever. In addition, an employee’s
“high three,” which is a critical figure used
to calculate one’s retirement annuity, is
calculated using only a worker’s base pay and
locality pay. The cost-of-living
allowance is ignored entirely in the annuity
calculation. By moving into the locality
pay system, an employee’s high three will be
increased significantly, and the result will be
a much bigger retirement annuity payment for
the employee.
In time, this change in
law will also represent a significant boost in
pay for impacted federal employees. These
employees will soon receive locality pay in
lieu of a yearly cost-of-living
allowance. Since pay data must be
collected to make a determination on pay gaps,
it is not currently possible to say what the
locality pay adjustments will be for all the
impacted areas, although the pay adjustments
are likely to range between the highest and
lowest pay adjustments given to current
locality pay areas. The minimum locality
pay adjustment that these areas will receive is
the adjustment given to the Rest of U.S.
locality, currently at 13.86%, while the
highest possible pay adjustment could go up to
or even exceed the San Francisco locality,
which currently receives a 34.35% pay
adjustment above the base GS pay levels.
“For workers located in
Alaska, Hawaii, and the U.S. territories, this
is a really big deal,” said NFFE National
President William R. Dougan, who was himself
stationed in Alaska for a number of years. “For
a couple decades now, federal employees from
these regions have been forced into leaving the
workforce without the retirement annuity they
had worked for and earned. Now that they
are going to get locality pay, and therefore
bigger retirement annuities, these federal
workers are going to be much better
off.”
The shift into the
locality pay system will take place
incrementally from calendar years 2010 to 2012.
