House Republicans Tell Super Committee to Slash $375 Billion in Federal Worker Pay and Benefits, Jobs
Tuesday, October 18, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
In a letter to the
congressional “super committee” last week,
House Committee on Oversight and Government
Darrell Issa (R-CA) laid out a long list of
proposals targeting federal workers for huge
cuts to their jobs, pay, and benefits.
The
recommendations, which read like a ‘greatest
hits’ album of anti-federal worker legislation,
calls for huge cuts to federal retirement plans
including a transition to a “high 5” pension
calculation, a 6.2% increase in employee
contributions to their FERS pensions, a 3%
increase in contributions for CSRS employees,
and the outright elimination of the FERS
pension for new hires.
“These
changes would be devastating to federal workers
counting on the modest retirement they were
promised,” said NFFE National President William
R. Dougan. “Pulling the rug out from under the
feet of current employees, and offering no
retirement security to future employees, is no
solution to the problems facing the federal
workforce. We should be investing in a cutting
edge workforce to solve the many problems we
face as a nation rather than setting the stage
for a second-rate workforce under Chairman
Issa’s plan.”
As if it
were not enough to rob federal workers of their
future savings, the proposals also seek to curb
current federal jobs and pay. In the letter
Chairman Issa calls for massive workforce
reductions through a flawed attrition scheme
which permits federal agencies to hire only one
new federal employee for every three who leave
the government. The Republican chairman also
recommends an extension of the current pay
freeze through 2015, accompanied by the
outright elimination of periodic step increases
for workers.
“Federal workers have already sacrificed by accepting two years of frozen pay and substantially lower agency resources, which have lead to job cuts,” said Dougan. “We cannot afford to tap the federal employee well every time Congress refuses to make the tough choices.”
Click Here to Read Chairman
Issa's
Letter
