97-1008 GOV
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Federal Pay: FY1999 Salary Adjustments
Updated July 8, 1998
Barbara L. Schwemle
Analyst in American National Government
Government Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

ABSTRACT
This report analyzes the pay adjustment that Federal employees are to receive in fiscal 1999
under P.L. 101-509, the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act. The Employment Cost
Index-based annual adjustment and locality-based comparability payments are discussed.
Legislation to modify the conditions under which the President could change the
recommended pay adjustments is pending in the House and Senate. This report will be
updated periodically. For more from CRS, see the Guide to CRS Products under
Government Employees.

Federal Pay: FY1999 Salary Adjustments
Summary
Federal white-collar employees are to receive an annual pay adjustment and a
locality-based comparability payment, effective in January of each year, under
Section 529 of P.L. 101-509, the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act
(FEPCA). Although federal pay adjustments are sometimes referred to as cost-of-
living adjustments, neither the annual adjustment nor the locality payment has
anything to do with living costs. The annual adjustment is based on the Employment
Cost Index (ECI), which measures the change in private sector wages and salaries.
The ECI requires a 3.1% increase in January 1999. The size of the locality payment
is determined by the President and is based on a comparison of non-federal and
General Schedule salaries in 32 pay areas nationwide. The Federal Salary Council
and the Pay Agent have issued their recommendations on the 1999 locality payments.
If 70% of the target pay gap between these salaries is made up in 1999, as required
by FEPCA, the increase in locality payments would range from 7.95% in the “Rest
of the United States” pay area to 17.70% in the San Francisco pay area, and would
be 10.46% in the Washington, DC, pay area. The nationwide average net pay
increase, if the ECI and locality-based comparability payments were granted as
required by law, would be 12.75%.
The Council’s memorandum to the Pay Agent states that the credibility of the
locality pay program is suffering because the small amount of money allocated for
locality pay combined with changing the pay gaps each year leads to results that are
hard for many to understand and accept. Among its recommendations are that the
Pay Agent recommend and the President adopt the FEPCA requirement for
eliminating 70% of the target pay gaps in setting January 1999 locality rates.
Another recommendation is that, if an alternative plan is issued, instead of applying
a uniform phase-in factor across-the-board to all localities, the increases would be
based on the size of the pay gap in each locality. Areas with gaps larger than the
average target gap would get bigger increases whether the gap had increased or
decreased since the previous report.
President Clinton proposed a 3.1% pay adjustment for federal employees in his
FY1999 budget. This amount is the overall average increase, including locality pay
adjustments. Section 644(d) of H.R. 4104, Treasury, Postal Service, and General
Government Appropriations Bill, 1999, as reported to the House, would provide an
annual pay adjustment of "3.1 percent, unless otherwise provided for" under 5 U.S.C.
5303. Incorporated at section 644(a)-(c) is the text of legislation, H.R. 3251 and S.
1679, introduced by Representative Steny Hoyer and Senator Paul Sarbanes,
respectively, which would modify the conditions that must be met before the
President could issue alternative plans for the annual and locality-based
comparability pay adjustments. The standard for issuing an alternative plan would
be “a declared state of war or severe economic conditions.” The latter would be
considered to exist if, during the 12-month period ending two calendar quarters
before the date as of which the adjustment is scheduled to take effect, there occur two
consecutive quarters of negative growth in the real Gross Domestic Product.

Contents
1999 Pay Increases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Annual Pay Adjustment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Locality-Based Comparability Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
FY1999 Budget Proposal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
105 Congress Legislation
th
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Other Views . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
List of Tables
Table 1. Federal Salary Council’s and Pay Agent’s January 1999
Recommended Locality Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Federal Pay: FY1999 Salary Adjustments
Federal white-collar employees are to receive an annual pay adjustment and a
locality-based comparability payment, effective in January of each year, under P.L.
101-509, the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act (FEPCA).1 Although federal
pay adjustments are sometimes referred to as cost-of-living adjustments, neither the
annual adjustment nor the locality payment has anything to do with living costs. The
annual adjustment is based on the Employment Cost Index (ECI), which measures
the change in private sector wages and salaries. The ECI requires a 3.1% annual pay
adjustment in January 1999. The size of locality payments is determined by the
President and is based on a comparison of non-federal and General Schedule salaries
in 32 pay areas nationwide. The Federal Salary Council and the Pay Agent have
issued their recommendations on the 1999 locality payments. If 70% of the pay gap
between these salaries is made up in 1999, as required by FEPCA, the increase in
locality rates would range from 7.95% in the “Rest of the United States” pay area to
17.70% in the San Francisco pay area. In the Washington, DC, pay area, the
increase in the locality payment would be 10.46%. The nationwide average net pay
increase, if the ECI and locality-based comparability payments were granted as
required by law, would be 12.75%.2
President Clinton proposed a 3.1% pay adjustment for federal employees in his
FY1999 budget. This amount is the overall average increase, including locality pay
adjustments. Before the budget proposal was announced, four federal employee
unions proposed, in a letter to the OPM Director, that locality-based comparability
payments of either 4.3% (over 4 years) or 2.8% (over six years) be granted each year.
Section 644(d) of H.R. 4104, Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government
Appropriations Bill, 1999, as reported to the House, would provide an annual pay
adjustment of "3.1 percent, unless otherwise provided for" under 5 U.S.C. 5303.
Incorporated at section 644 (a)-(c) is the text of legislation, H.R. 3251 and S. 1679,
introduced by Representative Steny Hoyer and Senator Paul Sarbanes, respectively,
which would modify the conditions that must be met before the President could issue
alternative plans for the annual and locality-based comparability pay adjustments.
This report does not cover salary adjustments for federal officials, federal
judges, or Members of Congress.3
1 104 Stat. 1427.
2 The new locality rate subsumes the old locality rate. These numbers do not reflect
net pay raises.
3 See: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Salary Adjustment
Cost Estimates: Federal Officials, 1998 and 1999, CRS Report 98-497 GOV; Salaries of
Federal Officials: A Fact Sheet
, CRS Report 98-53 GOV; and Salary of the President
(continued...)

CRS-2
In January 1998, federal white-collar employees received combined annual and
locality pay adjustments ranging from 2.44% in the Indianapolis pay area to 6.52%
in the Hartford pay area. The combined adjustment in the Washington, DC, pay area
was 2.45%. The cost of both pay adjustments was about $2.2 billion dollars.4
FEPCA has never been implemented as originally enacted. In 1994, the annual
Employment Cost Index-based pay adjustment was not provided and, in 1995, 1996,
and 1998 reduced amounts of the annual adjustment were provided. For the years
1995 through 1998, reduced amounts of the locality payments were provided.
1999 Pay Increases
Federal white-collar employees are to receive an annual pay adjustment and a
locality-based comparability payment, effective in January of each year, under
Section 529 of P.L. 101-509, the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act
(FEPCA). The pay adjustment is calculated as follows. First, the basic General
Schedule (GS) is increased by the annual adjustment percentage, resulting in a new
GS schedule. These new basic GS rates are then increased by the locality payment.
The resulting pay rates (annual + locality) are compared with the 1998 pay rates
(annual + locality) to derive the net increase in pay for 1999.
Annual Pay Adjustment
Federal employees under the General Schedule (GS), Foreign Service Schedule,
and Veterans Health Administration Schedule receive the annual pay adjustment.
The President may extend the annual adjustment to the Senior Executive Service and
Senior Foreign Service. Individuals in senior-level and scientific and professional
positions may receive the annual adjustment at the discretion of agency heads.
Annual adjustments for administrative law judges and contract appeals board
members depend on whether Executive Schedule pay is adjusted.
Although the federal pay adjustments are sometimes referred to as cost-of-living
adjustments, neither the annual adjustment nor the locality payment has anything to
do with living costs. The annual pay adjustment is based on the Employment Cost
Index (ECI) which measures change in private sector wages and salaries. Basic pay
rates are to be increased by an amount that is 0.5 percentage points less than the
3(...continued)
Compared With That of Other Federal Officials, CRS Report 97-761 GOV, all by Sharon
S. Gressle (Washington: May 26, 1998; Jan. 21, 1998; and Aug. 7, 1997), 6p.; 2p.; and 6p.
See: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Salaries of Members of
Congress: Current Procedures and Recent Adjustments
, CRS Report 98-44 GOV; Salaries
and Allowances: The Congress
, CRS Report 97-659 GOV; and Salaries of Members of
Congress: Congressional Votes, 1990-1997
, CRS Report 97-615 GOV, all by Paul E.
Dwyer (Washington: Dec. 30, 1997; June 27, 1997; and Nov. 5, 1997), 20p., 13p., and 9p.
a
n
o
i
s
s
e
r
g
n
o
C

,
s
s
e
r
g
n
o
C

f
o

y
r
a
r
b
i
L

.
S
.
U


:
e
e
s

s
t
n
e
m
t
s
u
j
d
a

y
r
a
l
a
s

8
9
9
1

e
h
t
4 For
Research Service, Federal Pay: FY1998 Salary Adjustments, by Barbara L. Schwemle, CRS
Report 97-232 GOV (Washington: Jan. 8, 1998), 9 p.

CRS-3
percent by which the ECI, for the quarter ending September 30 of the year before the
preceding calendar year, exceeds the ECI for that same quarter of the second year (if
at all). The ECI requires a 3.1% annual pay adjustment in January 1999, which
reflects the September 1996 to September 1997 change in private sector wages and
salaries of 3.6% minus .5% which equals 3.1%.5 The pay adjustment is effective as
of the first day of the first applicable pay period beginning on or after January 1 of
each calendar year.
The Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act (FEPCA) authorizes the
President to issue an alternative plan calling for a different percentage than the ECI
requires in the event of a national emergency or serious economic conditions
affecting the general welfare. The alternative plan must be submitted to Congress
before September 1 preceding the scheduled effective date.6
Locality-Based Comparability Payments
GS employees receive the locality-based comparability payments; the Pay
Agent
7 may also extend those payments to employees in other pay systems including
the Foreign Service, Senior Foreign Service, Senior Executive Service, and
employees in senior-level, scientific and professional, administrative law judge, and
contract appeals board member positions.8 The locality-based comparability
payments procedure was established by FEPCA. It provides that payments are to be
made within each locality determined to have a pay disparity greater than 5%. When
uniformly applied to General Schedule employees within a locality, the adjustment
is intended to make their pay rates substantially equal, in the aggregate, to those of
non-federal workers for the same levels of work in the same locality.
Under the law, the Bureau of Labor Statistics conducts surveys that document
non-federal rates of pay in each pay area. The survey results are submitted to OPM,
which serves as the staff to the Federal Salary Council and the Pay Agent. OPM
documents federal rates of pay in each of the pay areas and compares non-federal and
General Schedule salaries by grade for each pay area. The average salaries at each
grade, both federal and non-federal, are then aggregated and compared to determine
an overall average percentage pay gap for each area. By law, the disparity between
non-federal and federal salaries is to be reduced to 5%. Therefore, the overall
average percentage pay gaps for each pay area are adjusted to this level.
5 U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment Cost Index-
September 1997, (Washington: Oct. 28, 1997), p. 12.
6 104 Stat. 1429-1431; 5 U.S.C. 5301-5303.
7 The Pay Agent is comprised of the Secretary of Labor (Alexis Herman), Director of
the Office of Management and Budget (Franklin Raines) and Director of the Office of
Personnel Management (Janice Lachance).
8 The President, by Executive Order, delegated to the Pay Agent the authority to extend
locality-based comparability payments to certain categories of positions not otherwise
covered. U.S. President (Clinton), “Delegating a Federal Pay Administration Authority,”
Executive Order 12883, Federal Register, vol. 58, Dec. 1, 1993, p. 63281.

CRS-4
Under FEPCA, as well, a certain percentage of the adjusted gap between
General Schedule average salaries and non-federal average salaries in each pay area
is to be closed each year. Twenty percent of the gap was closed in 1994, the first year
of locality pay, as authorized by FEPCA. An additional 10% of the gap was to be
closed each year thereafter. By January 1999, 70% of the gap is scheduled to have
been closed. This percentage is applied to the adjusted percentage gaps in each pay
area to determine the locality rates recommended by the Pay Agent to the President,
after receiving advice from the Federal Salary Council.9
The pay gaps on which the locality payments are based are 22 months old by the
effective date of the adjustment; i.e. March 1997 gaps determine the January 1999
locality payments. The Federal Salary Council and the Pay Agent have issued their
recommendations on the 1999 locality payments; they reported that, as of March
1997, the overall gap between General Schedule average salaries and non-federal
average salaries was 30.43%. The amount needed to reduce this disparity to 5%, as
mandated by law, averaged 24.22% for 1999.10
The Council and the Pay Agent recommended locality payments ranging from
13.37% in the “Rest of the United States” (RUS) pay area to 29.76% in the San
Francisco pay area; that recommended for the Washington, DC, pay area was
17.73%. Because the new locality rate replaces the existing locality rate, the change
in locality rates is derived by comparing 1998 locality payments with those
recommended for 1999. This comparison results in increases in locality rates from
1998 to 1999 of 7.95% in the “Rest of the United States” pay area to 17.70% in the
San Francisco pay area. In the Washington, DC, pay area, the increase in the locality
payment would be 10.46%. Table 1 shows the Council’s and the Pay Agent’s
recommended locality payments for January 1999; the 1998 authorized locality
payments; and the 1999 increase in locality payments. (1999 increase in locality
payments = 1999 recommended locality payments minus 1998 authorized locality
payments.)
The President’s Pay Agent estimates that the cost of the January 1999 locality-
based comparability payments will be $5 billion 410 million if 70% of the pay gap
9 The Council is comprised of nine members. Three members generally recognized for
their impartiality, knowledge, and experience in labor relations and pay policy, are William
J. Sheffield, Chair; Anthony F. Ingrassia, Vice-Chair; and Margaret A. Coil. The other six
members represent the Public Employee Department, AFL-CIO (John F. Leyden); American
Federation of Government Employees (Bobby Harnage); National Treasury Employees
Union (Robert M. Tobias); National Federation of Federal Employees (Sheila K. Velazco);
American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO (Peter A. Tchirkow); and the
American Nurses Association (Geri Marullo).
10 Memorandum for the President’s Pay Agent from the Federal Salary Council, Level
of Comparability Payments for January 1999, (Washington: Oct. 27, 1997), 11p. (Hereafter
referred to as Level of Comparability Payments.) and Report on Locality-Based
Comparability Payments for the General Schedule, Annual Report of the President’s Pay
Agent
(Washington: 1997), 24p. (Hereafter referred to as 1997 Pay Agent's Report.)

CRS-5
is closed in January 1999 as required by FEPCA.11 When added to the cost of the
ECI-required 3.1% annual pay adjustment, the calendar year total cost amounts to
over $8 billion dollars. Each ECI increment (such as an increase from 3.0% to 3.1%)
and each locality pay increment (such as an increase from 0.5% to 0.6%) costs $108
million dollars on a calendar year basis and $81 million dollars on a fiscal year
basis.12
The Council accepted the following recommendations from its methodology
work group on locality pay:
! The Pay Agent should direct the Bureau of Labor Statistics to reinstate survey
methodology previously approved by the Council and the Pay Agent. For
surveys starting after October 1996, BLS switched to a new survey process.
The resurveying of 15 pay areas to conform to methodology approved by the
Council or the Pay Agent was not done; therefore, data from previous surveys
had to be aged to March 1997. This resulted in surveys being an average of
10.9 months old as of the reference date of the pay gaps; March 1997. BLS
was unable to collect any data for RUS and aged the entire RUS survey from
its previous reference date of November 1995. Only half of the RUS data
were actually new data in 1995 since half the 1994 sample was aged to reduce
survey costs;
! The Pay Agent should recommend, and the President adopt, the FEPCA
requirement for eliminating 70% of the target pay gaps in setting January 1999
locality rates;
! If an alternative plan is issued for 1999, locality rates should be determined by
the size of existing pay gaps in the latest pay data rather than by questionable
changes in pay gaps from the 1996 data to 1997. Instead of applying a
uniform phase-in factor across-the-board to all localities, the increases would
be based on the size of the pay gap in each locality. Areas with gaps larger
than average would get bigger increases whether the gap had increased or
decreased since the previous report. Areas with smaller gaps than average
would get smaller increases. For example, if the alternative plan provided a
0.5% average increase, RUS with a target gap of 19.1% would get 0.7886%
of the average increase, or 0.39%. Washington, DC, with a target gap of
25.33% would get 1.0458% of the average increase, or 0.52%;
! No changes are needed in the criteria for areas of application. New London,
CT, should remain as an area of application to the Hartford, CT, pay area.
13
11 1997 Pay Agent's Report, p. 22. This estimate is for calendar year 1999, excludes
the cost of benefits affected by a pay increase, and covers only the General Schedule and
pay plans receiving locality pay by action of the Pay Agent.
1 2 U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Workforce Compensation and Performance
Service, Office of Compensation Administration. The calculations are based on an
approximate FY1999 payroll with benefits of $108 billion dollars.
13 Level of Comparability Payments, p. 7 and U.S. Federal Salary Council, FSC Work
(continued...)

CRS-6
As in previous years, Santa Barbara County CA, and a portion of Edwards Air
Force Base are included in the Los Angeles pay area, and St. Mary’s County
MD, is included in the Washington, DC, pay area. Areas with pay gaps below
the pay gap in RUS will receive the same pay adjustment as RUS. Therefore,
Indianapolis, Kansas City, and Orlando will be included with RUS in 1999.
FEPCA provides the President with the authority to fix an alternative level of
locality-based comparability payments if, because of national emergency or serious
economic conditions affecting the general welfare, he considers the level that would
otherwise be payable to be inappropriate. At least one month before those
comparability payments would be payable, he must prepare and transmit to Congress
a report describing the alternative level of payments he intends to provide, including
the reasons why that alternative level is necessary.14
Blue-collar workers under the Federal Wage System (FWS) receive a prevailing
rate adjustment tied to the federal white-collar pay adjustment.15 Special rate
employees, including those receiving law enforcement officer special rates, receive
either the special rate or the locality payment, whichever is higher.
Federal employees in Alaska, Hawaii, and outside the continental United States
receive a cost-of-living (COLA) allowance rather than locality pay. Approximately
16
44,000 white-collar federal employees, including Postal Service employees, receive
the allowance. OPM, on May 1, announced that the survey upon which the
allowance is based will be conducted in the summer of 1998 by the research firm,
Joel Popkin and Company. The survey will cover a random sample of 9,000
employees in the nonforeign COLA areas (Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin
Islands). It will also cover 4,000 employees in the Washington, DC, area because,
according to OPM, "the District of Columbia is, by law, the reference or base area
for computing the allowance." The prices of approximately 200 items, including
goods and services, housing, transportation, and miscellaneous expenses, will be
13(...continued)
Group Report, (Washington: Oct. 14, 1997), 5p.
14 104 Stat. 1429-1436, as amended by 106 Stat. 1355-1356 and 1360; 5 U.S.C. 5301-
5302 and 5304-5304a.
1 5 Section 614 of H.R. 4104, Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government
Appropriations Bill, 1999 continues this provision.
16 5 U.S.C. 5941 note, as amended by P.L. 105-61, provides that the allowance cannot
be reduced through December 31, 2000, and mandates that OPM propose adjustments to the
methodology to Congress by March 1, 2000. OPM is to study the issue and submit a report
to Congress proposing appropriate changes in the method of fixing compensation for
affected employees, including any necessary legislative changes. The study will include an
examination of the pay practices of other employers in the affected areas; a consideration
of alternative approaches to dealing with the unusual and unique circumstances of the
affected areas, including modifications to the current methodology for calculating
allowances to take into account all costs of living in the geographic areas of the affected
employee; and an evaluation of the likely impact of the different approaches on the
government’s ability to recruit and retain a well-qualified workforce.

CRS-7
surveyed in each of the allowance areas and in Washington, DC. Information about
the nonforeign area cost-of-living allowances is on the Internet at the following web
site address: http://www.opm.gov.
Despite concerns expressed by the Clinton Administration in 1993 that the
methodology for locality pay was flawed, no proposals have been made to change the
federal pay law. A 1993 draft memorandum from the Pay Agent to the Federal
Salary Council concluded that “the current methodology is flawed because the
completeness of the data varies greatly among survey areas, because the gaps are not
credible in light of other labor market indicators, and because the single percentage
adjustment for all jobs in a locality is a poor reflection of market realities.”17
According to the Federal Salary Council, “the credibility of the [locality pay]
program is suffering because the small amount of money allocated for locality pay
increases (0.6% of payroll in 1995, 0.4% in 1996, 0.7% in 1997, and 0.5% in 1998)
combined with changing the pay gaps each year leads to results that are hard for
many to understand and accept. This is especially true for 1998, when employees in
the Rest of U.S. pay area will receive a higher net pay raise than employees in a
number of locations with much bigger pay gaps, including the Washington, DC, pay
area, due to fluctuations in the pay gaps and only 0.5% of payroll authorized to fund
locality pay increases.”18
The Council’s memorandum also states that the Pay Agent's staff and the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) are not in agreement on the workability and
acceptability of new BLS surveys and this circumstance further erodes the credibility
of the locality pay program. This was evidenced at the April 16, 1998, meetings of
the Federal Salary Council and the Pay Agent. At the morning meeting of the
Council, its methodology work group reported its findings on the new BLS survey
methodology for locality pay and recommended that the survey methodology not be
accepted.
According to the work group, the methodology does not meet the requirements
of FEPCA. Additionally, "the error rate in assigning work levels (and eventually GS
levels) to survey data is unacceptably high ... . Every indication is that the results
will fluctuate from location to location and from year to year by much greater
amounts than experienced under the current system." Specific concerns, a
19
s
summarized from the work group's report to the Council, include the following: (1)
whether the new approach meets the requirements of title 5 on requiring comparison
of General Schedule pay rates with rates of pay of non-federal workers at the same
levels of work within each pay locality, and on the role of the Council in regard to the
coverage of BLS surveys; (2) significant pay inversions in the data where the average
salary for a work level was higher than the average for the next work level; (3) a job
17 Draft memorandum from the President’s Pay Agent to Anthony F. Ingrassia, Acting
Chairman, Federal Salary Council, [March 1993].
18 Level of Comparability Payments, pp. 5,6.
19 Report of the FSC Work Group Meeting, February 12, 1998, as submitted by Tony
Ingrassia, Chairman. Provided by facsimile to CRS by OPM's Office of Compensation
Administration, May 4, 1998.

CRS-8
mix that varies among locations and would vary from year to year within locations;
(4) difficulties in constructing an adequate cross-walk between federal job series and
the census occupation codes used by BLS to group non-federal data in the surveys;
(5) possible over representation of female-dominated low-paying jobs that are
numerous in the private sector, but not in the federal government; (6) an effect of the
new survey on the pay gap that seems to vary by area and likely would vary from year
to year, and pay gaps that are reduced, sometimes by as much as half; (7) lack of data
at higher grade levels; and (8) lack of data for specific occupations.20
OPM, in a March 1998, letter to BLS, emphasized similar concerns about the
survey methodology. First, OPM, in reporting that the Council "question[s
21
]
whether these surveys meet the legal requirement that pay comparisons be made for
the same levels of work, [noted that] errors of only one grade can significantly affect
pay gap results because Federal average salaries vary by 6 to 20 percent from one
grade to the next. Errors of two grades, where Federal pay may vary by as much as
45 percent, could have an even more pronounced effect on the pay gaps." Second,
with regard to BLS' experimental efforts to account for supervisory duties, OPM staff
believes that, "It is inappropriate to base the assignment of supervisory points on the
supervisor's level in the organization without reference to the base level of work
supervised." Third, OPM staff "found it inherently difficult to create an adequate
"crosswalk" between the General Schedule classification system and the census job
titles used" by BLS. Cited as an example was the occupation called Inspectors and
Compliance Officers, Except Construction, which is matched with General Schedule
jobs with "vastly different backgrounds and job requirements." Fourth, OPM staff is
concerned about the pay disparities among areas that result from application of the
methodology. "Most locations show changes well outside the annual fluctuations in
pay gaps seen to date under the locality pay program. [OPM staff's] preliminary
analysis of the 15 pilot surveys indicates that San Francisco shows an 11-point
increase in the pay gap, while Detroit shows a 10-point decrease."22
According to the BLS, its survey methodology complies with FEPCA and it
stands behind the survey results published to date. As to the first concern, BLS noted
"that there is nothing in [the methodology] that precludes field economists looking
at other grades in a job series or looking at a job's position in the organization's
structure. We ... have revised our data collection procedures to encourage our staff
to view sampled jobs in the context of related jobs." As to the second concern, BLS
"agrees that more than the supervisor's position in the organizational hierarchy needs
to be considered in the evaluation of supervisory duties." The agency looks forward
to working with OPM in figuring out how to assess the type and grade level of
subordinate employees. As to the third concern, BLS noted that OPM staff "matched
virtually all Federal workers to [the methodology's] job categories," and that the
richness of the data yield would permit some jobs to be deleted from the "crosswalk"
20 Ibid.
21 OPM serves as staff to the Federal Salary Council and the Pay Agent.
2 2 Letter to Katharine G. Abraham, Commissioner, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
from Henry Romero, Associate Director for Workforce Compensation and Performance,
U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Washington: Mar. 11, 1998, 5p. (Hereafter cited as
OPM Correspondence.)

CRS-9
if OPM believes they should not be matched to federal occupations. As to the fourth
concern, BLS stated that the underlying salary data produced by the new
methodology is very similar to that produced under the current methodology. "A
simple average across the 15 cities of the pay comparisons made [by OPM staff]
shows that [under the new methodology] nonfederal salaries were 34.33 percent
higher than Federal pay; the comparable figure ... from the Pay Agent's 1997 Report
was 33.59 percent." BLS also believes that the new "method of replacing one-fifth
of the establishment sample in each locality each year will result in more stable
survey estimates than the [current] approach of completely replacing a locality's
sample every 2,3, or 4 years."23
The Council agreed to the working group's recommendation that the survey
methodology not be accepted and presented its decision to the Pay Agent at an
afternoon meeting the same day. The Pay Agent did not act on the recommendation.
Before it reports to the President on the FY2000 locality pay adjustment, it must
make a decision on the BLS survey methodology. OPM's Associate Director for
Workforce Compensation and Performance has informed the BLS that, "We believe
both a literal and common sense reading of the statute lead to the conclusion that
BLS is obligated to follow the instructions of the Pay Agent once a final decision is
made." In response, the Associate Commissioner for Compensation and Working
24
Conditions at BLS asserted: "In our view, the BLS role is to design and execute
surveys to meet the needs defined by the Pay Agent. We do not believe that
Congress intended for BLS to function strictly as a 'job shop' for the Pay Agent, but
that BLS was expected to use its judgment to assure that the surveys it conducted
were objective and employed the best statistical techniques available." BLS asked
25
OPM to work with it in addressing the concerns about the new methodology.
FY1999 Budget Proposal
President Clinton proposed a 3.1% pay adjustment for federal employees in his
FY1999 budget.26 By law, the President must submit an alternative plan(s) to
Congress if the pay adjustment differs from the ECI-based annual adjustment and/or
the Federal Salary Council/Pay Agent locality payment recommendations. The ECI
requires an annual pay adjustment of 3.1% in 1999, the size of the pay increase
recommended by the President. Since the budget states that the proposed 3.1% is the
overall average increase, including locality pay adjustments, an alternative plan for
the annual adjustment would be required by the end of August 1998, and an
alternative plan for the locality payments would be required in November 1998.
2 3 Letter to Henry Romero, Associate Director for Workforce Compensation and
Performance, U.S. Office of Personnel Management from Kathleen M. MacDonald,
Associate Commissioner for Compensation and Working Conditions, U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics, Washington: Apr. 2, 1998, 8p. (Hereafter cited as BLS Correspondence.)
24 OPM Correspondence, p. 2.
25 BLS Correspondence, p. 7.
26 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Budget
of the United States Government Fiscal Year 1999, (Washington: GPO, 1998), p. 29.

CRS-10
Prior to the budget proposal, four members of the House Committee on
Government Reform and Oversight sent a letter to President Clinton urging him to
“includ[e] the maximum authorized comparability adjustment in your FY1999
budget.” In December 1997, four federal employee unions, in a letter to Office of
27
Personnel Management Director Janice Lachance, called for the Administration “to
address the heretofore unaddressed real and/or imagined flaws in the pay setting
methodology, and pay federal employees on a basis that they can understand.” The
28
unions--National Treasury Employees Union, American Federation of Government
Employees, Public Employee Department of the AFL-CIO, and National Federation
of Federal Employees--proposed that locality-based comparability payments of either
4.3% (over four years) or 2.8% (over six years) be granted each year, in addition to
the ECI-based annual adjustment.29 They stated their belief that an alternative plan
should not be proposed, but said that, if one were to be proposed, the locality
payment should be no less than 2.8%. According to the unions, “If an agreement
could be reached to pay at least a 2.8% average locality adjustment for 1999 and
2000, we would be willing to continue working with the Administration to address
concerns regarding the methodology of the current pay surveys with a commitment
to finding a consensus methodology before 2001.”30
105 Congress Legislation
th
Section 644(d) of H.R. 4104, Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government
Appropriations Bill, 1999, as reported to the House, would provide an annual pay
adjustment of "3.1 percent, unless otherwise provided for" under 5 U.S.C. 5303. The
bill was reported from the Committee on Appropriations (H. Rept. 105-592) on June
22, 1998, and is expected to be considered by the House in July 1998. Incorporated
31
at section 644 (a)-(c) of H.R. 4104 is the text of legislation, H.R. 3251 and S. 1679,
introduced by Representative Steny Hoyer on February 24, 1998, and Senator Paul
27 Letter to President William Jefferson Clinton from Representative Henry Waxman,
Representative Elijah Cummings, Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, and Representative
Harold Ford, Jr., Jan. 28, 1998, 2p.
28 Letter to the Honorable Janice Lachance, Director, Office of Personnel Management
from Robert M. Tobias, National President, NTEU; Bobby Harnage, National President
AFGE; John Leyden, Secretary-Treasurer, Public Employee Department AFL-CIO; and Al
Schmidt, Acting President, National Federation of Federal Employees, Dec. 3, 1997, 4p.
(Hereafter cited as Union Letter.)
29 Union Letter, pp. 2,3. The 4.3% recommendation was calculated as follows: 24.22%
average pay gap minus 6.94% average 1998 locality payment equals 17.28% deficiency; to
close the pay gap by 2002, 17.28% divided by 4 years equals 4.3% per year. The 2.8%
recommendation was calculated as follows: 24.22% average pay gap minus 6.94% average
1998 locality payment equals 17.28% deficiency; to close the pay gap by 2004, 17.28%
divided by 6 years equals 2.8% per year.
30 Union Letter, p. 3.
31 U.S. House Committee on Appropriations, Treasury, Postal Service, and General
Government Appropriations Bill, 1999, Report to Accompany H.R. 4104, H. Rept. 105-592,
105th Cong., 1 Sess., (Washington: GPO, June 22, 1998), p. 110.
st

CRS-11
Sarbanes on February 25, 1998, respectively, which would modify the conditions that
must be met before the President could issue alternative plans for the annual and
locality-based comparability pay adjustments. Current law at 5 U.S.C. 5303(b)(1)
and at 5 U.S.C. 5304a(a) would be amended to authorize the President to issue an
alternative plan calling for a different percentage than the ECI requires in the event
of a declared state of war or severe economic conditions. (Current law specifies a
national emergency or serious economic conditions affecting the general welfare.)
New language, specifying that “severe economic conditions” would be
considered to exist if, during the 12-month period ending two calendar quarters
before the date as of which the adjustment is scheduled to take effect, there occur two
consecutive quarters of negative growth in the real Gross Domestic Product, would
be added as a new paragraph (4) to 5 U.S.C. 5303(b), and as a redesignated
subsection (b) to 5 U.S.C. 5304a. According to the statements introducing the bills,
this is the definition of recession most commonly used by economists. A technical
amendment to 5 U.S.C. 5303(b)(2) would insert “economic conditions for purposes
of this subsection” in lieu of “an economic condition affecting the general welfare
under this subsection.”
The new standards would apply to any alternative plan taking effect after 1999.32
The American Federation of Government Employees, Federal Managers Association,
National Federation of Federal Employees, National Treasury Employees Union, and
Professional Managers Association endorsed H.R. 3251 and S. 1679.
Legislation to amend the overtime pay system for federal structural firefighters
is included as section 639 of H.R. 4104. The Federal Firefighters Overtime Pay
Reform Act of 1998 is based on a proposal submitted to Congress by OPM on June
4, 1998. (Similar overtime pay provisions are expected to be included in civil service
reform legislation to be introduced shortly by Representative John Mica.) Among the
changes to the overtime pay system proposed by OPM are these: "the basic pay of
firefighters would be treated as basic pay for a 53-hour weekly tour, while standby
pay would be eliminated. Work hours above a 53-hour threshold would be overtime
hours, paid at one and one-half times the firefighter's hourly rate of basic pay."33
32 As originally introduced in the Federal Pay Fairness Act of 1998, the new standards
would have applied to any alternative plan taking effect after 1998. Additionally, the bills
would have provided as a transition, a revised deadline for submitting an alternative plan for
the January 1999 annual pay adjustment; it would have to have been submitted to Congress
by December 1, 1998 (current law specifies before September 1). Any alternative plan or
report for the locality-based comparability payments taking effect after 1998 would not have
been implemented if based on the standards in effect prior to enactment of the legislation.
Such plan or report would not have precluded the submission of any other plan or report
according to the provisions of the bills.
3 3 Letter to the Honorable Newt Gingrich, Speaker of the House of Representatives,
from Janice R. Lachance, Director, Office of Personnel Management, June 4, 1998, p. 1.
Accompanied by a six-page legislative proposal.

CRS-12
Other Views
Quit rate data is sometimes examined when federal pay adjustments are
discussed. The overall federal quit rate de
34
clined from 4.3% in FY1987 and FY1989
to 2.4% in FY1992-1994, and FY1996, but increased to 2.5% in FY1995 and to 2.6%
in FY1997, about 60% of the 1987 level. Comparing just the FY1987 and FY1997,
quit rates by occupational category show the following: for professionals, it has
declined from 4.1% to 2.6%; for administrators, it has declined from 2.1% to 1.6%;
for technicians, it has declined from 4.3% to 3.0%; for clericals, it has declined from
7.4% to 4.2%; and for all other occupations, it has declined from 6.6% to 3.8%.35
Occupations having quit rates higher than 5% in FY1996 include Patent
Examining (5.04%), Aircraft Operations (5.08%), Computer Engineering (5.17%),
Dental Assistant (5.25%), Office Automation Clerk (5.29%), General Education
(5.31%), Health Aid (5.31%), Pharmacy Technician (5.44%), Computer Science
(5.76%), Pharmacist (6.17%), Clerk Typist (6.25%), Medical Clerk (6.38%),
Education and Training Technician (6.98%), Practical Nurse (7.54%), Financial
Institute Examining (8.37%), Nurse (8.61%), and Securities Compliance Examining
(9.09%).36
A reporter for Scripps Howard News Service, using OPM payroll data,
compared federal General Schedule salaries for 1992 (before the National
Performance Review (NPR)) with those for 1996 (after NPR). The following
summarizes his research findings, which were published in a Washington Times
newspaper article, and OPM's response.
37
38
! The federal payroll for salaries and benefits grew from $93.7 billion (covering
2.2 million civilian employees) to $101.4 billion (covering 1.9 million civilian
employees). According to OPM, its "figures show that Federal payroll costs
increased by 46.9 percent from 1987 to 1996, but most of this increase
occurred during the first 5 years of that period, when total Federal payroll
costs increased by 35.9 percent. If Federal payroll costs had increased from
1993 to 1996 at the same rate as from 1987 to 1993, the total Federal payroll
34 The quit rate is the percentage of Federal employees who quit their jobs during any
given year for reasons other than retirement, involuntary separation, or transfer to another
Federal agency.
35 U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Office of Workforce Information, Quit Rates
by Fiscal Year for GS and Equivalent Pay Plans (Excludes seasonal, on-call, and student
trainees), 1p. Sent to CRS by facsimile on May 6, 1998.
3 6 U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Office of Workforce Information, Selected
Occupations With Higher than Average Quit Rates, 1p. Sent to CRS by facsimile on May
6, 1998.
37 Hargrove, Thomas, “Reinvention leads to fatter salaries for federal workers,”
Washington Times, Feb. 9, 1998, p. A4.
38 U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Office of Workforce Information, Trends in
Federal Salaries, Payroll Costs, and Quit Rates Since 1987, March 9, 1998, 7p. Sent to
CRS by facsimile on March 17, 1998. (Hereafter cited as OPM Response.)

CRS-13
would have been about $113.8 billion in 1996, instead of $101.4 billion. This
represents an estimated savings of about $12.4 billion (about 12.2 percent of
actual 1996 payroll costs). Clearly, the Clinton Administration's downsizing
efforts have resulted in a substantial decline in the rate of growth of the
Federal payroll."39
! The total number of employees in GS grades 12, 13, 14, and 15 increased by
several thousand from 1992 to 1996. CRS research using OPM's Pay
Structure
report shows that, from March 31, 1992 to March 31, 1997, the
number of employees at GS-12 declined by 5.3%, at GS-13 increased by
0.6%, at GS-14 declined by 19.4%, and at GS-15 declined by 9.2%.
! The average General Schedule grade rose from 8.9 in 1992 to 9.4 in 1996.
OPM responds that "From the beginning of the Clinton Administration until
1997, OPM's figures show that the overall average GS grade did increase
slightly from 9.2 to 9.4. However, this is part of a long-term trend. From
1987 to 1997, the overall average grade increased from 8.5 to 9.4. ... Though
there probably has been some "grade creep" during this period, the higher
overall average grade is primarily a function of a demonstrable shift from
lower-graded clerical jobs to higher-graded jobs in the Federal job mix."40
! The average GS-15 salary increased by 15.1% and the average GS-1 salary
increased by 12.5% from 1992 to 1996. Over the same period, merit raises
increased from 4.2% to 5%. OPM says that "The reference to merit increases
appears to be a reference to average step position within a grade. If the
average salary for employees at a given grade level has increased slightly
faster than the inflation rate during the past few years, this is at least partially
attributable to the fact that, in an era of downsizing, few new workers are
hired at entry salary levels, while those who remain are advanced to a higher
rate within their grade at regular intervals. ... A more apt comparison would
be between (1) increases in the scheduled rates of pay (plus locality payments
since 1994) for employees at grade GS-9 (the current average GS grade) and
(2) increases in nationwide average employment costs, as measured by the
Employment Cost Index for civilian white-collar workers, excluding sales
(ECI). ... From 1987 to 1997, the rate of pay for GS-9, step 5, increased by 3.6
percentage points less than the ECI. In other words, GS pay increases have
fallen slightly behind increases in nationwide average employment costs since
1987."41
Commenting on the newspaper article, the Director of the National Performance
Review, Morley Winograd, said that the President's Management Council is
reviewing overall reinvention plans to make sure they still follow the goals of the
39 OPM Response, p. 2.
40 OPM Response, p. 1-2.
41 OPM Response, p. 1.

CRS-14
NPR for streamlined government and will report on their evaluation at the April 1998
meeting.42
42 Telephone conversation with CRS, Mar. 10, 1998.

CRS-15
Table 1. Federal Salary Council’s and Pay Agent’s January 1999
Recommended Locality Payments
Pay Areas
1999 Recommended
1998 Authorized
Point Increase in
Locality Payments
Locality Payments
Locality Payments
Atlanta
14.57%
6.18%
8.39%
Boston
21.01%
8.61%
12.40%
Chicago
22.93%
9.21%
13.72%
Cincinnati
17.89%
7.71%
10.18%
Cleveland
16.81%
6.35%
10.46%
Columbus, OH
16.67%
6.90%
9.77%
Dallas
16.80%
6.90%
9.90%
Dayton
14.34%
6.19%
8.15%
Denver
20.78%
8.46%
12.32%
Detroit
22.90%
9.36%
13.54%
Hartford
21.29%
9.13%
12.16%
Houston
28.55%
11.96%
16.59%
Huntsville
13.94%
5.84%
8.10%
Indianapolis
13.37%
5.63%
7.74%
Kansas City
13.37%
6.06%
7.31%
Los Angeles
24.71%
10.31%
14.40%
Miami
19.38%
7.86%
11.52%
Milwaukee
16.25%
6.19%
10.06%
Minneapolis
17.79%
7.32%
10.47%
New York
23.40%
9.76%
13.64%
Orlando
13.37%
5.42%
7.95%
Philadelphia
18.84%
7.67%
11.17%
Pittsburgh
13.88%
6.21%
7.67%
Portland, OR
18.81%
7.17%
11.64%
Richmond
14.62%
6.12%
8.50%
Sacramento
18.70%
7.64%
11.06%
St. Louis
13.64%
5.71%
7.93%
San Diego
20.17%
7.94%
12.23%
San Francisco
29.76%
12.06%
17.70%

Pay Areas
1999 Recommended
1998 Authorized
Point Increase in
Locality Payments
Locality Payments
Locality Payments
Seattle
18.43%
7.34%
11.09%
Washington, D.C.
17.73%
7.27%
10.46%
Rest of the U.S.
13.37%
5.42%
7.95%
Average
16.95%
6.94%
10.01%
Source: Memorandum for the President’s Pay Agent from the Federal Salary Council, Level of
Comparability Payments for January 1999
, (Washington: Oct. 27, 1997), p. 9 and Report on
Locality-Based Comparability Payments for the General Schedule, Annual Report of the President’s
Pay Agent
(Washington: 1997), p.18. Point increase in locality payments = 1999 recommended
locality payments minus 1998 authorized locality payments.