Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2000/12/19/00-31710/opm-criteria-for-irs-broadbanding-system
Timestamp: 2018-07-21 10:43:12
Document Index: 104539619

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 550', 'art 531', 'art 531', 'art 531', 'art 536', 'art 550']

Federal Register :: OPM Criteria for IRS Broadbanding System
OPM Criteria for IRS Broadbanding System
A Notice by the Personnel Management Office on 12/19/2000
79433-79438 (6 pages)
Changes From the Interim Criteria
Comments on the Interim Criteria
III. Broadbanding System Plan
V. Broadbanding Criteria
A. Ensure That the Structure of Any Broadbanding System Maintains the Principle of Equal Pay for Substantially Equal Work
B. Establish the Minimum and Maximum Number of Grades That May Be Combined Into Bands
C. Establish the Requirements for Setting the Minimum and Maximum Rates of Pay in a Band
D. Establish the Requirements for Adjusting the Pay of an Employee Within a Band
E. Establish the Requirements for Setting the Pay of a Supervisory Employee Whose Position Is in a Broad Band or Who Supervises Employees Whose Positions Are in Broad Bands
F. Establish the Requirements and Methodologies for Setting the Pay of an Employee Upon Conversion to a Broadbanding System, Initial Appointment, Change of Position or Type of Appointment (Including Promotion, Demotion, Transfer, Reassignment, Reinstatement, Placement in Another Broad Band, or Movement to a Different Geographic Location), and Movement Between a Broadbanding System and Another Pay System
G. Conform Related Provisions of Law and Regulations to Broadbanding Systems
Appendix A—Staffing Supplements
Appendix B—Conversion into Broadbanding Systems
Appendix C—Procedures for Converting Employees Back to the General Schedule Pay System
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/00-31710 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/00-31710
This publicizes final criteria for broadbanding systems for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to establish one or more broadbanding systems covering all or any portion of the IRS workforce under the General Schedule (GS). Title 5, United States Code, directs the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to prescribe criteria for IRS broadbanding systems and specifies certain principles that such criteria must follow, at a minimum.
Gregory Zygiel, Workforce Compensation and Performance Service, Strategic Compensation Policy Center, OPM, 1900 E Street NW., Room 7305, Washington, DC 20415-8320, 202-606-8047, strategiccomp@opm.gov.
The Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-206) authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to establish one or more broadbanding systems covering all or any portion of the IRS workforce under the General Schedule (GS). Section 9509(b) of title 5, United States Code, directs OPM to prescribe criteria for IRS broadbanding systems and specifies certain principles that such criteria must follow, at a minimum. OPM publicized the interim criteria in the Federal Register on July 16, 1999, and requested comments.
OPM developed the criteria after conferring with the Department of the Treasury, the Internal Revenue Service, and the National Treasury Employees Union. The criteria are broadly written to give IRS the flexibility to establish pay practices that support mission accomplishment, and to base pay decisions on performance. The criteria incorporate lessons learned from previous experience with broadbanding under personnel demonstration projects.
Before implementing any broadbanding system under this authority, IRS must develop written plans, policies, and implementing procedures that address each relevant criterion, including descriptions of broadbanding structure(s), classification criteria, positions covered, the method of pay progression within a band, pay-setting policies, policies for paying supervisors or management officials, and policies for converting positions into broadbanding systems.
Section 9509(b)(3) of title 5, United States Code, requires that employees covered by IRS broadbanding systems remain subject to the laws and regulations covering General Schedule employees (e.g., locality payments, the aggregate limitation on pay, premium pay, and recruitment and relocation bonuses and retention allowances), except as otherwise provided in the criteria.
OPM made one change. We gave particular consideration to the unusual situation where an employee is moved out of the broadbanding system shortly after entering it. In this situation, we found that the regular conversion rules could produce an undesirable pay result. Therefore, we have modified the rules for converting employees back to the General Schedule pay system. The change affects only employees who move back to the General Schedule before any pay adjustment event (e.g., any within-band increase, a promotion, or any systemwide pay adjustment) under the broadbanding system. The change ensures that these employees will not experience an unwarranted gain or an unwarranted loss in pay.
To make this change, we added one paragraph to Appendix B—Conversion into Broadbanding System, and revised Appendix C—Procedures for Converting Employees Back to the General Schedule Pay System.
OPM received comments from three individuals. The commenters were concerned that broadbanding could lead to fewer and/or smaller pay increases for employees, and that broadbanding created the potential for inequitable treatment of employees. The commenters suggested that broadbanding systems align with the IRS's employee retention strategies, and that OPM require IRS to collect and report data to permit demographic analysis of broadbanding's effects.
OPM believes that the final criteria and existing laws and requirements address the commenters' concerns and suggestions appropriately.
Section 9509 of title 5, United States Code, as added by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-206), provides the Secretary of the Treasury with the authority to establish one or more broadbanding systems covering all or any portion of the IRS workforce under the General Schedule (GS). Section 9509(b) directs the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to prescribe criteria for IRS broadbanding systems and specifies certain principles that such criteria must follow, at a minimum.
Section 9509(a) defines a “broad-banded system” as a system for grouping positions for pay, job evaluation, and other purposes that is different from the General Schedule pay and classification system established Start Printed Page 79434under chapter 51 and subchapter III of chapter 53 of title 5, United States Code. Employees covered by IRS broadbanding systems are not covered by subchapter III of chapter 53 or by those provisions of chapter 51 that define General Schedule grades. However, selected provisions from those parts of law are used in applying parallel features to employees in IRS broadbanding systems, as provided in these criteria.
As required by 5 U.S.C. 9509(b)(3), employees covered by IRS broadbanding systems are to be treated as if they are General Schedule employees for the purpose of applying other laws and regulations governing General Schedule employees, except as otherwise provided in these criteria. Applicable laws and regulations include, but are not limited to: 5 U.S.C. 5304, authorizing locality-based comparability payments; 5 U.S.C. 5307, establishing a limitation on aggregate pay; 5 U.S.C. chapter 55, subchapter V, authorizing various forms of premium pay; and 5 U.S.C. 5753 and 5754, authorizing recruitment and relocation bonuses and retention allowances.
Many title 5 provisions apply to Federal employees on a more general basis and do not base coverage on whether an employee is covered by the General Schedule system (e.g., severance pay, leave, retirement, and insurance).
Employees in IRS broadbanding systems are not covered by the special salary rate program established under 5 U.S.C. 5305. However, IRS broadbanding systems may use a parallel authority to establish staffing supplements, which are linked to established special salary rates, as described in Appendix A.
These criteria apply only to broadbanding systems that cover General Schedule positions. Section 9509(b)(1)(B) of title 5, United States Code, authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury, with the prior approval of the Director of OPM, to include in a broadbanding system positions that otherwise would be subject to subchapter IV of chapter 53 (prevailing rate systems) or 5 U.S.C. 5376 (senior-level positions). Including such positions would require OPM's separate review and approval of a specific plan for that purpose. The criteria presented here are not intended to apply to broadbanding systems that include such positions.
Before implementing any broadbanding system under this authority, IRS must develop a written plan that includes policies and implementing procedures to address each criterion that is relevant to the broadbanding system, including descriptions of broadbanding structure(s), positions covered, classification criteria, the method of pay progression within a band, policies for setting and adjusting pay, policies for paying supervisors or managerial employees, and policies for converting positions into broadbanding systems.
Under these criteria—
Broadbanding system means a system for grouping positions for pay, job evaluation, and other purposes that is different from the General Schedule system established under chapter 51 and subchapter III of chapter 53 of title 5, United States Code, as a result of combining the grades and related ranges of pay for one or more occupational series.
Employee means an individual who would otherwise be covered by chapter 51 and subchapter III of chapter 53 of title 5, United States Code, if not covered by a broadbanding system.
Supervisor and managerial employee have the meaning given those terms in OPM's General Schedule Supervisory Guide.
Criteria are provided below under the applicable principles listed in 5 U.S.C. 9509(b)(3)(A)-(F) (labeled A-F) and an additional principle (labeled G).
IRS broadbanding systems must—
1. Link to the General Schedule.
2. Assign occupations to career paths based on the nature of work performed, the qualifications required, the normal career and pay progression, and other characteristics of those occupations.
3. Combine General Schedule grades into bands following the criteria in B. The range of difficulty and responsibility of each band must be the same as the range of difficulty and responsibility of the band's constituent grades (i.e., consistent with the grade level criteria in standards published by OPM in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 5105) and must represent the normal range of work performed in the organization.
4. Place positions into bands within career paths in accordance with—
a. Classification standards published by OPM under 5 U.S.C. 5105; or
b. Any agency guidance which places a position within its correct band and career path (but which need not be sufficient to determine a position's correct General Schedule grade).
5. Not include law enforcement officers covered by special salary rates under section 403 of the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990 in the same band as non-law enforcement officers when the maximum grade in the band is any one of grades 3 through 10.
6. Use established General Schedule rates of pay (including any applicable locality rates or special salary rates) for premium pay purposes under subchapter V of chapter 55 of title 5, United States Code, and 5 CFR part 550, subpart A (i.e., for the purpose of determining the maximum hourly overtime rate and the biweekly premium pay limitation).
A band under an IRS broadbanding system may contain—
1. A minimum of one General Schedule grade.
2. A maximum of—
a. Eight General Schedule grades when grades 13, 14, and 15 are not included in the band.
b. Five General Schedule grades when grade 13 is included, but neither grade 14 nor 15 is included in the band.
c. Three General Schedule grades when grade 14 is included, but grade 15 is not included in the band.
d. Two General Schedule grades when grade 15 is included in the band.
1. The minimum rate of basic pay for each band must equal the minimum rate of basic pay payable under 5 U.S.C. 5332 for the lowest General Schedule grade in that band. The maximum rate of basic pay for each band must equal the maximum rate of basic pay payable under 5 U.S.C. 5332 for the highest General Schedule grade in that band.
a. Notwithstanding C1, preceding, the maximum rates of basic pay for bands covering law enforcement officers must equal the maximum special salary rates for grades 3 through 10 established under section 403 of the Federal Start Printed Page 79435Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990, where applicable.
b. The minimum and maximum rates of basic pay that define each band must be adjusted at the same time and in the same manner as adjustments are made in the corresponding minimum and maximum General Schedule rates of basic pay under 5 U.S.C. 5303 or similar provision of law.
2. The maximum rate of basic pay for any band may not exceed the maximum rate of basic pay for grade 15.
3. Employees in IRS broadbanding systems are not covered by the special salary rate authority in 5 U.S.C. 5305. However, IRS broadbanding systems may provide for the use of staffing supplements instead of special salary rates under Appendix A of these criteria. If special salary rates are not replaced with staffing supplements, special rate employees must be converted into a broadbanding system under the procedures established in Appendix B of these criteria.
4. Only employees receiving retained rates of pay under subchapter VI of chapter 53 of title 5, United States Code, as applied in the broadbanding system, or in an approved staffing supplement category may receive rates of pay that exceed the locality-adjusted band maximum rates.
1. IRS broadbanding systems must include—
a. Policies for adjusting the pay of an employee within a band, including—
(1) Adjustments made in accordance with paragraphs D2a and D3a; and
(2) Increases based on individual factors such as an employee's performance, skills, or competencies and/or time at pay level, except that such increases may not be based solely on time at pay level. Increases that advance an employee's relative position in a band (i.e., exceed the adjustments made in accordance with paragraphs D2a and D3a) may be paid only to employees whose performance meets or exceeds retention standards.
b. Policies concerning which level of management will make pay adjustment decisions for employees.
c. Principles for managing pay progression and payroll costs associated with basic pay adjustments. IRS must provide funding for salary increases under its broadbanding systems. Because broadbanding systems provide more choices on how to distribute pay to employees, it is necessary to have an overall budget to manage the costs associated with such choices. At a minimum, the salary increase budget must include funds equal to the amounts that would be required for individual pay adjustments made at the time of schedule adjustments under 5 U.S.C. 5303 (or similar provision of law) and locality-based comparability payments under 5 U.S.C. 5304 (or similar provision of law). A salary increase budget must meet salary cost objectives and be consistent with policies and procedures for adjusting pay under a broadbanding system that are established to ensure equal pay for work of equal value.
2. IRS broadbanding systems must provide for—
a. Making adjustments in the rates of basic pay for all employees who are not supervisors or managerial employees equivalent to the annual adjustments provided to General Schedule employees under 5 CFR 531.205. Employees on pay retention must be granted 50 percent of the increase in the maximum rate of basic pay for their band.
b. The payment of locality-based comparability payments for employees covered by 5 U.S.C. 5304 and 5 CFR part 531, subpart F, and special geographic adjustments for law enforcement officers covered by section 404 of the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990 and 5 CFR part 531, subpart C. (See Appendix A of these criteria for information on possible staffing supplements.)
3. IRS pay adjustment policies may provide for—
a. Determining the circumstances under which adjustments in rates of basic pay may be granted to supervisors or managerial employees up to the equivalent of the annual adjustments provided to General Schedule employees under 5 CFR 531.205. However, an employee's rate of basic pay may not fall below the minimum rate of his or her band as a result of receiving less than the full adjustment.
b. Reducing an employee's rate of basic pay within a band, but only for unacceptable performance, misconduct, or loss of supervisory status (if such loss results in reversal of a within-band adjustment granted at the time of placement in a supervisory position). Any reductions based on unacceptable performance or misconduct are adverse actions under 5 U.S.C. 7512.
c. Control points within bands. Control points are dollar points within bands that limit or restrict pay-setting or the movement of employees through the rate range of the band. If control points are used, IRS broadbanding systems must include policies on the number of control points within bands and how they are derived (e.g., as a percentage of the rate range) and applied (i.e., the circumstances under which an employee's rate of pay may be set or adjusted at, above, or below a control point).
1. IRS broadbanding systems may provide for a separate broadbanding system or career path for supervisors and managerial employees.
2. A supervisor's or managerial employee's rate of pay may not be based on the salaries of the employees he or she supervises or manages.
1. Conversion into a broadbanding system. IRS broadbanding systems must include policies for determining the career path, band, and pay rate for employees upon conversion into the system consistent with the provisions in Appendix B. IRS broadbanding systems may also include policies for making prorated within-grade increase or career-ladder promotion payments to employees as an adjustment in basic pay or a lump-sum payment upon conversion from the General Schedule to a broadbanding system consistent with the provisions in Appendix B.
2. Pay-setting policies. IRS broadbanding systems must include policies for determining an employee's career path, band, and rate of basic pay upon initial appointment, promotion, demotion, transfer, reassignment, or placement in a different band or career path. The methods used to set pay must be consistent with the principle of equal pay for substantially equal work.
a. Pay must be set at least at the minimum rate and must not exceed the maximum rate of basic pay of the band to which assigned (unless pay retention applies).
b. Policies must specify the conditions under which pay may be set above the minimum rate of the band and the amount of any minimum or maximum pay increase upon Start Printed Page 79436promotion. The time-in-grade provisions in 5 CFR 300.601-605 do not apply to employees under a broadbanding system.
c. Upon movement to a different geographic area, locality-based comparability payments and special pay adjustments for law enforcement officers must be redetermined and paid in accordance with 5 CFR part 531, subparts F and C, respectively. Staffing supplements must also be redetermined consistent with the provisions in Appendix A of these criteria.
d. Movement of an employee to a band with a lower maximum rate of basic pay than the employee's former band is equivalent to a reduction in grade for the purpose of chapters 43 and 75 of title 5, United States Code.
3. Conversion to the General Schedule. Agencies must use the procedures in Appendix C of these criteria for determining an employee's GS equivalent grade and pay rate upon conversion from a broadbanding system to the General Schedule.
1. For provisions of chapter 51 that apply to the determination of General Schedule grades, other than sections 5104 and 5105, the term “grade” is deemed to mean “band within a career path”.
2. The provisions in these criteria related to grade and pay retention are based on the current grade and pay retention authority in subchapter VI of Chapter 53 of title 5, United States Code, and 5 CFR part 536. When applying the grade and pay retention provisions, the term “band” has the same meaning as “grade” under the statute and regulations. Under 5 U.S.C. 9509(c), the Secretary of the Treasury may provide for variations from the grade and pay retention authority for employees who are covered by broadbanding systems with prior approval of the Director of OPM and in accordance with a plan for implementing such variations.
3. When applying paragraph (4) in the definition of “reasonable offer” in the severance pay provisions at 5 CFR part 550.703 to employees covered by IRS broadbanding systems, the term “band” has the same meaning as “grade”. When applying paragraph (4), IRS will also consider a position one band below the employee's current band level a “reasonable offer” in the case of a broadbanding system under which the next lower band comprises two or more grades.
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) broadbanding systems may use staffing supplements instead of the special salary rate authority in 5 U.S.C. 5305 under the following terms and conditions:
A. If an employee is assigned to an occupational series and geographic area covered by a special salary rate under 5 U.S.C. 5305 and is in a band where the maximum adjusted rate for the banded GS grades is a special rate that exceeds the maximum GS locality rate under 5 U.S.C. 5304 (or similar provision of law) for the banded grades, the employee is eligible for a staffing supplement.
B. Conversion. Upon conversion, the employee's broadbanding rate of basic pay is established by dividing the employee's old GS adjusted rate (the higher of the special rate or locality rate) by the staffing factor. The staffing factor is determined by dividing the maximum special rate for the banded grades by the GS unadjusted rate corresponding to that special rate (step 10 of the GS rate for the same grade as the special rate). The employee's staffing supplement is derived by multiplying the employee's broadbanding rate of basic pay by the staffing factor minus one. The employee's final staffing supplement-adjusted rate equals the employee's broadbanding rate of basic pay plus the staffing supplement. This amount will equal the employee's former GS adjusted rate of pay. Since the employee's total pay immediately after conversion into the broadbanding system will be the same as immediately before conversion, adverse action and pay retention provisions do not apply.
C. Formulas. The conversion rules in paragraph B of Appendix A of these criteria are expressed by the following formulas:
D. If an employee is in a band where the maximum GS adjusted rate for the banded grades is a locality rate, the broadbanding basic rate upon conversion into a broadbanding system is derived by dividing the employee's former GS adjusted rate (the higher of the locality rate or special rate) by the applicable locality pay factor (e.g., 1.0905 in the Washington-Baltimore locality pay area in 2000). The employee's broadbanding locality-adjusted rate will equal the employee's former GS adjusted rate. Adverse action and pay retention provisions do not apply because there is no change in total salary.
E. The staffing supplement is added to the employee's broadbanding basic rate much like locality adjustments are added to basic pay. Any General Schedule or special rate schedule adjustment will require recomputation of the staffing supplement. Employees receiving a staffing supplement remain entitled to an underlying locality rate, which may, over time, supersede the need for a staffing supplement. If OPM discontinues or decreases a special rate schedule on which staffing supplements are based, pay retention rules will be applied, as appropriate. Upon geographic movement, an employee who receives a staffing supplement will have the supplement removed or recomputed to reflect any applicable special rates in the new location, consistent with paragraph C. Any Start Printed Page 79437resulting reduction in pay is not an adverse action or a basis for pay retention.
F. The employee's broadbanding basic rate adjusted by the staffing supplement is basic pay for the same purposes as a locality rate under 5 CFR 531.606(b)—i.e., for retirement, life insurance, premium pay, and severance pay purposes, and for advances in pay. The staffing supplement is also basic pay under 5 U.S.C. 5363 and subchapter II of chapter 75 for the limited purpose of determining whether a reduction in basic pay occurs at the point of an employee's conversion into a broadbanding system. The staffing supplement will also be used to compute worker's compensation payments and lump-sum payments for accrued and accumulated annual leave.
G. The Office of Personnel Management may approve staffing supplements for categories of employees within an IRS broadbanding system who are not in approved special rate categories for General Schedule employees, consistent with the provisions in 5 U.S.C. 5305(a) and (b).
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) broadbanding systems must include policies for determining the career path, band, and pay rate for employees upon conversion into a broadbanding system under the following terms and conditions:
A. Employees may not suffer a reduction in total pay upon initial conversion to a broadbanding system.
B. If conversion into a broadbanding system is accompanied by a simultaneous geographic move, the employee's General Schedule pay entitlements in the new geographic area must be determined before converting the employee into the broadbanding system.
C. IRS broadbanding systems may include policies for making prorated within-grade increase or career-ladder promotion payments to employees as an adjustment in basic pay or a lump-sum payment upon conversion from the General Schedule to a broadbanding system under the following conditions:
1. The amount of any within-grade increase or career-ladder promotion payment may not be more than the prorated value of the employee's within-grade increase or career-ladder promotion at the time of conversion, based on the number of weeks of creditable service the employee has performed as of the date of initial conversion into the broadbanding system. There is no restriction on when such payments may be made.
2. A prorated within-grade increase or career-ladder promotion payment may be made only to an employee whose performance meets or exceeds retention standards at the time of conversion into a broadbanding system.
3. A within-grade increase payment may not be made to an employee receiving the maximum rate of pay for his or her grade (or band, if made after conversion into a broadbanding system) or a retained rate.
4. For employees receiving special rates before conversion into an IRS broadbanding system, the pay conversion described in paragraph D of Appendix B of these criteria must be applied before making any prorated within-grade increase or career-ladder promotion payment.
5. Adverse action and pay retention provisions do not apply to reductions in basic pay that occur when the IRS subtracts any prorated within-grade or career-ladder promotion increase from a career-ladder employee's rate of basic pay upon conversion back to the General Schedule as required by the introductory note in Appendix C (dealing with reconstruction of GS pay rates).
D. Special salary rate employees. If an IRS broadbanding system uses staffing supplements instead of special rates under 5 U.S.C. 5305, special rate employees must be converted into the system consistent with the provisions in Appendix A. If an IRS broadbanding system eliminates special salary rates, a new locality-adjusted rate of pay must be derived for each employee, as follows:
1. Divide the employee's adjusted rate of basic pay (the higher of the special rate or locality rate or similar adjusted rate) by the locality pay factor for the area (e.g., 1.0905 for the Washington-Baltimore locality pay area in 2000) to determine the new broadbanding rate of basic pay. If the employee's broadbanding rate of basic pay exceeds the maximum rate of basic pay for the employee's band, the employee must be placed on pay retention.
2. Add the full locality adjustment to the employee's broadbanding rate of basic pay, including any retained rate. The locality adjustment is basic pay under 5 U.S.C. 5363 and subchapter II of chapter 75 for the limited purpose of determining whether a reduction in basic pay occurs at the point of an employee's conversion into a broadbanding system.
E. Employees on pay retention. Upon conversion, employees on pay retention must be placed in the band commensurate with the grade of their position. If possible, an employee's rate of basic pay will be placed within the assigned band. If not possible (because the employee's retained rate is higher than the maximum rate of basic pay of the band), the employee will be placed on pay retention.
F. Employees on grade retention. Upon conversion, employees on grade retention must be placed in the band that encompasses their retained grade until the original 2-year grade retention period expires. When the 2-year period expires, employees must be moved to the band that encompasses the grade of their position. If the rate of basic pay exceeds the maximum rate of the new band, the employee is entitled to pay retention.
When an employee covered by a broadbanding system moves voluntarily or involuntarily to a General Schedule (GS) position, IRS must use the following procedures to convert the employee's band and pay rate to a GS-equivalent grade and rate of pay before the employee moves out of the system. IRS must determine the converted GS-equivalent grade and rate of pay before any accompanying geographic move, promotion, or other simultaneous action. The new employing organization must use the converted GS-equivalent grade and rate of pay in applying various pay administration rules that govern how pay is set in the GS position (e.g., rules for promotion, highest previous rate, and pay retention). For the purpose of those rules, the converted GS grade and rate of pay are deemed to have been in effect at the time the employee left the broadbanding system. The rules for determining the converted GS grade for pay administration purposes do not apply to the determination of an employee's GS-equivalent grade for other purposes, such as reduction-in-force or adverse action.
The conversion procedures below do not apply to employees who involuntarily move back to the same General Schedule career-ladder position they held immediately before conversion into the broadbanding system prior to any pay adjustment event under the system (including any promotion, demotion, or systemwide pay adjustment). (A pay adjustment event does not include any prorated within-grade or career-ladder promotion pay increase received as part of conversion into the system or any across-the-board increase.) For such employees, IRS must subtract any prorated within-grade or career-ladder promotion payment and reconstruct the employee's grade and adjusted rate of pay under the General Schedule as if he or she had never entered the broadbanding system.
A. GS grade level determination—Upon conversion of an employee out of a broadbanding system to the GS pay system, IRS must determine the employee's GS-equivalent grade level under the following rules (except as otherwise provided in section C of these procedures):
1. Convert an employee in a band encompassing a single GS grade to that grade.
2. For an employee in a band encompassing more than one GS grade, compare the employee's adjusted rate of pay (including any locality adjustment (or similar geographic adjustment) or staffing supplement, as applicable) with the rates of pay in the highest applicable GS rate range for each grade encompassed by the employee's band. (For this purpose, a “GS rate range” includes a rate range in (1) the GS basic pay schedule, (2) the locality pay schedule (including any special geographic-adjusted schedule for law enforcement officers (LEOs)) for the locality pay area in which the position is located, or (3) the appropriate special rate schedule for the employee's occupational series and geographic location, as applicable.) If the employee's occupational series is a two-grade interval series, consider only odd-numbered grades between GS-5 and GS-11.
3. If the employee's adjusted rate of pay fits into an area of the rate range for a GS grade that does not overlap with the rate range of the next higher or lower grade in the same band, convert the employee to that GS grade.
4. If the employee's adjusted rate of pay fits into an area of the rate range for a GS grade that overlaps with the rate range of the next higher or lower grade in the same band, compare the employee's adjusted rate of pay Start Printed Page 79438with the dollar midpoint of the overlap area. If the employee's adjusted rate of pay is lower than the dollar midpoint of the overlap area, convert the employee to the lower grade. If the employee's adjusted rate of pay is equal to or higher than the dollar midpoint of the overlap area, convert the employee to the higher grade.
5. Exception: An employee's converted GS grade may not be lower than the GS grade held by the employee immediately preceding a lateral conversion into the broadbanding system, unless the employee was retaining a GS grade immediately before conversion or the employee underwent a reduction in band while in the broadbanding system.
6. Exception: If an employee moves back to the General Schedule before any pay adjustment event under the broadbanding system (including any promotion, demotion, or systemwide pay adjustment), the employee's converted GS grade is the grade the employee held immediately before conversion into the broadbanding system. (A pay adjustment event does not include any prorated within-grade or career-ladder promotion pay increase received as part of conversion into the system or any across-the-board increase.)
B. GS pay rate determination—IRS must determine the employee's GS-equivalent rate of pay under the following rules (except as otherwise provided in section C). If an employee voluntarily moves back to the General Schedule before any pay adjustment event under the broadbanding system (as described in paragraph 6 of section A of these procedures), IRS must subtract any prorated basic pay increase received as part of conversion into the broadbanding system (including any applicable locality payment or staffing supplement associated with that increase) before applying these rules.
1. Convert the employee's adjusted rate of basic pay under the broadbanding system (including any locality adjustment (or similar geographic adjustment) or staffing supplement, as applicable) to a GS adjusted rate on the highest applicable rate range for the converted GS grade derived under section A of these procedures. (For this purpose, a “GS rate range” includes a rate range in (1) the GS basic pay schedule, (2) an applicable locality pay schedule (including any special geographic-adjusted schedule for LEOs), or (3) an applicable special rate schedule.)
2. If the highest applicable GS rate range is under a locality pay schedule, convert the employee's adjusted rate of pay under the broadbanding system to a GS locality rate of pay. Since this converted rate is used only as a basis for setting the employee's rate in the new position, do not adjust the converted rate to equal a standard step rate. The rate of basic pay underlying the converted GS locality rate of pay becomes the employee's converted GS unadjusted rate of basic pay. (If such an employee is also covered by a special rate schedule, add the special rate increment for the grade to the employee's converted GS unadjusted rate of basic pay to derive the employee's converted special rate.)
3. If the highest applicable GS rate range is a special rate range, convert the employee's adjusted rate of pay to a special rate. The converted special rate may fall between the standard step rates. The converted special rate is the employee's converted GS unadjusted rate of basic pay.
4. If the employee's adjusted rate of pay exceeds the maximum rate of the highest applicable rate range, apply the procedures provided in the table under C.2., following, to determine the employee's GS-equivalent pay rate. Use the employee's adjusted rate of pay and unadjusted rate of pay in place of “adjusted retained rate” and “unadjusted retained rate,” respectively.
C. Apply the following procedures to determine the converted GS-equivalent grade and pay rate for employees retaining a band or pay rate under the broadbanding system.
1. If an employee is retaining a band, apply the procedures in sections A and B using the grades encompassed by the employee's retained band to determine the employee's GS-equivalent retained grade and pay rate. The time in a retained band counts toward the 2-year limit on grade retention in 5 U.S.C. 5362.
2. If the employee's rate of pay under the broadbanding system is a retained rate, the employee's GS-equivalent grade is the highest grade encompassed in his or her band.
If the employee's adjusted retained rate* * *
Then* * *
(i) is less than the maximum rate of the highest applicable rate range apply the procedures in B.1.-B.3. to determine the employee's GS-equivalent pay rate.
(ii) exceeds the maximum rate of the highest applicable rate range and the employee is not in a special rate category convert the employee's unadjusted retained rate to a GS-equivalent retained rate.
(iii) exceeds the maximum rate of the highest applicable rate range and the employee is in a special rate category convert the employee's adjusted retained rate to a GS-equivalent retained rate.
D. Within-grade increase “equivalent increase”determinations—Service under a broadbanding system is creditable for within-grade increase purposes upon conversion to the GS pay system. Basic pay increases (excluding across-the-board increases) under a broadbanding system are “equivalent increases” for the purpose of determining the beginning of a within-grade increase waiting period under 5 CFR 531.405(b). A performance-based increase in basic pay of any amount (including a zero increase) is considered a last “equivalent increase” for this purpose. Do not include any prorated within-grade or career-ladder promotion basic pay increases received as part of the conversion into the broadbanding system in determining an employee's last “equivalent increase,” if such increases were subtracted prior to determining the employee's GS-equivalent rate of pay under section B of these procedures.
[FR Doc. 00-31710 Filed 12-18-00; 8:45 am]