Pay Administration (General), 19093-19099 [E7-7266]
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19093
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 72, No. 73
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
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OFFICE OF PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 550
RIN 3206–AK74
Pay Administration (General)
Office of Personnel
Management.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Office of Personnel
Management is issuing final regulations
on compensatory time off for time spent
in a travel status away from the official
duty station when such time is not
otherwise compensable.
DATES: The regulations are effective May
17, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Vicki Draper by telephone at (202) 606–
2858, by fax at (202) 606–0824, or by email at pay-performancepolicy@opm.gov.
On
January 27, 2005, the Office of
Personnel Management (OPM)
published interim regulations (70 FR
3855) in 5 CFR part 550, subpart N, to
implement section 203 of the Federal
Workforce Flexibility Act of 2004 (Pub.
L. 108–411, October 30, 2004), hereafter
referred to as ‘‘the Act.’’ Section 203 of
the Act amended 5 U.S.C. chapter 55,
subchapter V, by adding a new section
5550b, which established a new form of
compensatory time off for time spent by
an employee in a travel status away
from the employee’s official duty station
when such time is not otherwise
compensable. The 60-day comment
period for the interim regulations ended
on March 28, 2005. During the comment
period, OPM received comments from
16 Federal agencies, 7 unions, and 81
individuals, all of which are addressed
in this final rule. In addition, in March
2006, we issued additional guidance,
including questions and answers, to
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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address many of the comments we
received on the interim regulations. We
encourage agencies and employees to
review these materials on OPM’s Web
site at https://www.opm.gov/oca/pay/
HTML/compensatory_time.asp. We will
continue to provide additional guidance
on the administration of compensatory
time off for travel, as necessary.
Effective Date
Two individuals suggested the new
provision be applied retroactively to
cover previous travel times that were
not compensable under title 5, United
States Code. Section 203(c) of the Act
provided that the new form of
compensatory time off for travel would
take effect on the earlier of (1) the
effective date of the implementing
regulations or (2) the 90th day after the
date of the law’s enactment (January 28,
2005). The interim regulations became
effective on January 28, 2005, and apply
prospectively from that date.
Covered Employees
Several commenters requested
clarification on the categories of
employees covered by the new
compensatory time off provision, while
others objected to omissions of certain
categories of employees in OPM’s
regulations at 5 CFR 550.1402. Because
the law authorizing the new
compensatory time off provision is in 5
U.S.C. chapter 55, subchapter V, the
new provision applies to an ‘‘employee’’
as defined in 5 U.S.C. 5541(2), who is
employed in an ‘‘Executive agency,’’ as
defined in 5 U.S.C. 105, without regard
to whether the employee is exempt from
or covered by the overtime pay
provisions of the Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938 (FLSA), as amended. OPM
cannot broaden coverage to include
additional employee groups. The
definition includes employees in seniorlevel (SL) and scientific or professional
(ST) positions, but not members of the
Senior Executive Service, Senior
Foreign Service, Foreign Service
officers, or prevailing rate (wage grade)
employees.
The compensatory time off for travel
provision also does not apply to
employees of Non-Appropriated Fund
Instrumentalities (NAFI). NAFI
employees are not covered by the laws
administered by OPM, with a few
narrow exceptions, which are listed in
5 U.S.C. 2105(c). Although title 38
employees are not specifically excluded
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from the definition of ‘‘employee’’ in 5
U.S.C. 5541(2), the title 38 employment
system is administered by the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
under its own legal authority and any
determinations as to coverage under 5
U.S.C. 5541(2) would be made by VA.
A commenter noted that the Department
of Justice (DOJ) has determined the
compensatory time off for travel statute
does not apply to attorneys at DOJ.
Congress recently enacted legislation
(Pub. L. 109–425, December 20, 2006)
which provides that attorneys at DOJ
shall be eligible for compensatory time
off for travel under section 5550b of title
5, United States Code.
Employees who are on intermittent
work schedules are not eligible to earn
and use compensatory time off for travel
because they do not have a scheduled
tour of duty for leave purposes. Under
5 CFR 550.1406(b), compensatory time
off for travel may be used by an
employee when the employee is granted
time off from his or her scheduled tour
of duty established for leave purposes.
Finally, a part-time employee may be
entitled to compensatory time off for
travel if the travel time does not qualify
as compensable hours of work under 5
U.S.C. 5542(b)(2)(B) and 5 CFR
550.112(g)(2) and meets the other
requirements in 5 CFR part 550, subpart
N.
Definitions
Many commenters recommended the
addition or revision of certain
definitions in § 550.1403. One agency
recommended adding a definition of
accrued compensatory time off, which
is used in § 550.1406. We agree and
have added a definition to § 550.1403.
In addition, we have added a definition
of authorized agency official to mean
the head of the agency or an official who
is authorized to act for the head of the
agency in the matter concerned.
Two individuals recommended that
OPM define time the employee would
have spent in normal home-to-work or
work-to-home commuting. We do not
believe this is necessary, since agencies
may use procedures already in place for
deducting commuting time from travel
hours as required by 5 CFR 550.112(j)(2)
and 5 CFR 551.422(b). One agency
recommended that OPM establish a
minimum commute time for an
employee whose residence is
considered his or her official duty
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station. We are not adopting this
recommendation because an employee
whose residence is his or her official
duty station does not spend time
commuting to work.
Two individuals recommended
revising the definition of official duty
station to be consistent with the term
official station as defined in the Federal
Travel Regulation (41 CFR 300–3.1)
issued by the General Services
Administration. Official duty station in
§ 550.1403 means the geographic area
surrounding an employee’s regular work
site that is the same as the area
designated by the employing agency for
the purpose of determining whether
travel time is compensable for the
purpose of determining overtime pay,
consistent with the regulations in 5 CFR
550.112(j) and 551.422(d). The term
official station prescribes the geographic
limits of an employee’s permanent work
station for the purpose of determining
the employee’s entitlement to
subsistence allowances (per diem). We
are not adopting the recommendation
because the geographic area an agency
designates for the purpose of
determining whether an employee is
entitled to overtime pay for a period of
travel may be different than the
geographic area covered by official
station as defined in 41 CFR 300–3.1.
One agency recommended that the
definition of travel status be stated
exactly as it is in § 550.1404(b), and one
individual recommended clarifying the
definition. We do not believe it is
necessary to revise the definition
because it refers directly to
§ 550.1404(b).
Compensable Travel Time
Several commenters recommended
clarifying whether travel under certain
circumstances is compensable. Under
§ 550.1403, compensable refers to
periods of time that are creditable as
hours of work for the purpose of
determining a specific pay entitlement,
even when that work time may not
actually generate additional
compensation because of applicable pay
limitations. One agency and an
individual recommended clarifying
whether an employee who receives
administratively uncontrollable
overtime (AUO) pay under 5 U.S.C.
5545(c)(2) is eligible to receive
compensatory time off for travel. An
employee receiving AUO pay may be
entitled to compensation for travel time
during (1) nonovertime hours, (2) AUO
hours (i.e., irregular or occasional
overtime hours), or (3) regularly
scheduled overtime hours—if the travel
hours meet one of the conditions in 5
CFR 550.112(g) or 5 CFR 551.422, as
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applicable. If an AUO employee has
other qualifying travel time that does
not meet the applicable conditions to be
treated as compensable hours of work,
such travel time may be used to earn
compensatory time off under 5 CFR part
550, subpart N.
One agency recommended clarifying
an employee is not eligible for
compensatory time off for travel when
the time spent traveling has been
compensated under the FLSA. Overtime
hours compensated under the FLSA
clearly meet the definition of
compensable in § 550.1403. Therefore,
we believe no clarification in the
regulations is necessary. One union
recommended clarifying that a class of
accommodations, such as business
class, does not influence whether the
travel time is compensable. We agree.
Allowing an employee to upgrade his or
her travel to business class does not
eliminate his or her eligibility to earn
compensatory time off for travel.
One individual and one agency
recommended clarifying whether an
employee is eligible to earn
compensatory time off for any portion of
a period of travel under 5 CFR
550.112(g)(2) which may not be
compensable because of the biweekly
cap on premium pay. One union and
one agency recommended that such an
employee should be eligible. We
disagree. Even though an employee may
not be paid overtime pay for all of his
or her travel hours because of the
biweekly premium pay cap, all of the
travel time is still considered to be
compensable under 5 CFR 550.112(g)(2).
Under these circumstances, therefore,
the employee has been compensated
fully under the law for all of the travel
hours; the employee may not earn
compensatory time off for any portion of
such travel.
Earning Compensatory Time Off for
Travel
Two unions and one individual
recommended an employee should be
able to earn compensatory time off
when he or she travels while performing
union representational duties. We are
not adopting this recommendation. The
term travel is defined at 5 CFR 550.1403
to mean officially authorized travel—
i.e., travel for work purposes that is
approved by an authorized agency
official or otherwise authorized under
established agency policies. The term
‘‘travel for work purposes’’ is intended
to mean travel for agency-related work
purposes. The Federal Labor Relations
Authority (FLRA) has held that the
performance of representational duties
does not involve the performance of
work as used in the phrase ‘‘technology
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of performing work’’ under 5 U.S.C.
7106(b)(1). See AFGE, Council 214,
AFL–CIO, 31 FLRA 1259, 1261–62
(1988). The FLRA has similarly held
that the performance of representational
activities does not involve ‘‘work’’
within the meaning of 5 U.S.C.
7106(a)(2)(B). See AAFES, Dallas, 53
FLRA at 24. Finally, the FLRA also has
determined that, under 5 U.S.C. chapter
43, job performance encompasses the
performance of agency-assigned duties
and does not include duties performed
on behalf of a union. See United States
Department of Health and Human
Services., Soc. Sec. Admin., Office of
Hearings & Appeals, 48 FLRA 357, 364
(1993). Thus, employees who travel
while performing union activities are
not entitled to earn compensatory time
off because they are traveling for the
benefit of the union and not for agencyrelated work purposes. We have revised
the definition of travel in § 550.1403 to
clarify that time spent traveling in
connection with union activities is not
creditable for the purpose of earning
compensatory time off for travel.
One union and four individuals
objected to an employee not being
entitled to compensatory time off for
travel when he or she is required to
travel on a Federal holiday (or ‘‘in lieu
of’’ holiday) during his or her basic
(non-overtime) hours. Although most
employees do not receive holiday
premium pay for time spent traveling on
a holiday (or an ‘‘in lieu of’’ holiday),
an employee continues to be entitled to
pay for the holiday in the same manner
as if the travel were not required. Thus,
an employee may not earn
compensatory time off for travel during
basic (non-overtime) holiday hours
because the employee is entitled to his
or her rate of basic pay for those hours.
Compensatory time off for travel may be
earned by an employee only for time
spent in a travel status away from the
employee’s official duty station when
such time is not otherwise compensable.
Some commenters requested
clarification regarding an employee’s
travel status as described in
§ 550.1404(b). Under § 550.1404(b),
creditable travel time for the purpose of
earning compensatory time off for travel
includes the time an employee actually
spends traveling between the official
duty station and a temporary duty
station, or between two temporary duty
stations, and the usual waiting time that
precedes or interrupts such travel
(subject to certain exclusions). One
union recommended revising
§ 550.1404(b)(1) to include situations
where an employee may depart from his
or her residence. We do not believe this
is necessary, since travel to and from
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home is addressed in § 550.1404(c). One
agency recommended clarifying
compensatory time off for travel
requires travel orders and it is not
appropriate when travel is within an
employee’s normal commuting area. We
are not adopting these
recommendations. Agencies are already
required to process travel orders for
officially authorized travel. In addition,
§ 550.1404(a) already requires an
employee to travel away from (i.e.,
outside the limits of) his or her official
duty station in order to earn
compensatory time off.
Under § 550.1404(b)(1), time spent at
a temporary duty station between arrival
and departure is not time in a travel
status. One individual recommended
clarifying whether the arrival and
departure are from the temporary duty
worksite or lodging. We agree and have
revised § 550.1404(b)(1) to clarify arrival
and departure times. Time in a travel
status ends when the employee arrives
at the temporary duty worksite or his or
her lodging in the temporary duty
station, wherever the employee arrives
first. Time in a travel status resumes
when an employee departs from the
temporary duty worksite or his or her
lodging in the temporary duty station,
from whichever the employee departs
last.
One agency recommended clarifying
whether travel in connection with a
permanent change of station (PCS) is
considered time spent in a travel status,
and one individual recommended that it
should be. Although PCS travel is
officially authorized travel, it is not
travel between an official duty station
and a temporary duty station or between
two temporary duty stations. Therefore,
it is not considered time in a travel
status for the purpose of earning
compensatory time off for travel. The
law applies to travel ‘‘away from the
official duty station of the employee,’’
not travel to a new official duty station.
We believe that the regulation limiting
application to temporary duty travel is
consistent with the law and the intent
of Congress. We have revised
§ 550.1404(b)(1) to clarify that travel
time in connection with an employee’s
PCS is not time in a travel status for the
purpose of earning compensatory time
off.
Six individuals requested clarification
of how travel is calculated when an
employee travels between different time
zones. We have added a new paragraph
(e) to § 550.1404 to provide clarification
regarding the calculation of an
employee’s travel time when the
employee’s travel involves two or more
time zones. Under 5 CFR 550.1404(b)(1),
time in a travel status includes the time
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an employee ‘‘actually spends
traveling’’ and the usual waiting time
that precedes or interrupts the travel,
subject to certain exclusions as specified
in section 550.1404 of the regulations.
When an employee’s travel involves two
or more time zones, the time zone from
the point of first departure must be used
to determine how many hours (i.e.,
elapsed time) the employee actually
spent in a travel status for the purpose
of accruing compensatory time off.
We received a number of comments
on § 550.1404(b)(1) concerning the
employing agency’s sole and exclusive
discretion to determine what is
creditable as ‘‘usual waiting time.’’ One
agency, one union, and two individuals
objected to providing agencies with this
authority. The agency recommended
establishing an upper and lower range
of what is considered acceptable ‘‘usual
waiting time.’’ The union recommended
including examples of ‘‘usual waiting
times.’’ The two individuals suggested
defining ‘‘usual waiting time’’ to
include the time it takes to get service
at ticket counters, security, baggage
claim, and transportation counters or
using waiting times determined by the
airlines or travel agencies. One
individual commented that there may
be different determinations of ‘‘usual
waiting time’’ within an agency. We are
not adopting any of these
recommendations. The concept of
‘‘usual waiting time’’ is currently used
in determining overtime hours of work
under title 5 and the FLSA, and
agencies are knowledgeable and
experienced in applying this concept. In
addition, we believe it is appropriate to
give agencies the flexibility to make this
determination.
Several commenters recommended
removing § 550.1404(b)(2), which states
that bona fide meal periods during
actual travel time or waiting time are
not creditable as time spent in a travel
status. An agency stated it was absurd
to subtract bona fide meal periods from
creditable travel time but allow time
periods for making telephone calls,
dozing, chatting, wandering through
terminals, etc., to be considered
creditable travel time. Another agency
commented that the results of making
distinctions between employees who
choose to eat at a terminal restaurant
and employees who choose to eat while
walking to or waiting at the gate are so
anomalous that consistent application of
the regulation cannot be expected. OPM
included this limitation in the interim
regulations because it is consistent with
the requirement to subtract bona fide
meal periods from an employee’s
creditable overtime hours of work under
5 CFR 550.112(m) and 551.432(c).
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19095
However, we agree that agencies should
not try to make distinctions in the
employee’s activities during waiting
time. Further, we agree it is not efficient
or cost-effective to try to track
employees’ bona fide meal periods
during travel time or waiting time solely
for the purpose of crediting
compensatory time off for travel, and we
have removed § 550.1404(b)(2)
accordingly.
Many commenters requested
clarification of, or objected to,
§ 550.1404(b)(3), which states that
extended waiting time is not creditable
as time in a travel status. Under
§ 550.1404(b)(3), if an employee
experiences an extended (i.e., not usual)
waiting time between the periods of
actual travel during which the employee
is free to rest, sleep, or otherwise use the
time for his or her own purposes, the
extended waiting time is not creditable
as time in a travel status. Three agencies
recommended providing guidance on a
range of acceptable hours for ‘‘extended
waiting time,’’ how much discretion an
agency has in determining extended
waiting times, or where to draw the line
between ‘‘usual’’ and ‘‘extended’’
waiting times. Another agency
recommended permitting an employee
to earn compensatory time off for
situations beyond the control of the
employee, though not a large amount of
compensatory time off. Three agencies
and a union recommended revising
§ 550.1404(b)(3) to limit extended
waiting time to any period during which
an employee must obtain overnight
lodging. We are not adopting any of
these recommendations. Under
§ 550.1404(b)(1), determinations
regarding what is creditable as usual
waiting time are within the sole and
exclusive discretion of the agency. The
concept of excluding extended waiting
time is currently used in determining
creditable overtime hours of work under
title 5 and the FLSA, and agencies are
experienced in applying this limitation.
Agencies should not establish a policy
to credit compensatory time off for
travel beyond the usual waiting time
applied under title 5 and the FLSA.
We received several comments about
subtracting commuting time from
creditable travel time under
§ 550.1404(c)(1) and § 550.1404(d).
Under § 550.1404(c)(1), an agency must
deduct the hours the employee would
have spent in normal home-to-work or
work-to-home commuting from travel
between the employee’s home and a
temporary duty station. Under
§ 550.1404(d), if a transportation
terminal (such as an airport) is located
within the limits of the employee’s
official duty station, the employee’s
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travel time to and from the airport
(outside regular working hours) is
considered to be equivalent to
commuting time and is not creditable
time in a travel status. If the airport is
located outside the limits of the
employee’s official duty station, the
travel time to and from the airport
(outside regular working hours) is
creditable time in a travel status, but it
is subject to an offset for the time the
employee would have spent in normal
home-to-work or work-to-home
commuting.
Several commenters objected to
deducting normal commuting time on
non-workdays as required by
§ 550.1404(d). An agency recommended
deleting § 550.1404(d) entirely. Another
agency and a union recommended
revising § 550.1404(d) to make travel to
and from a transportation terminal
within an employee’s official duty
station official travel time rather than
equivalent commuting time. The union
also objected to subtracting an
employee’s normal commuting time
under § 550.1404(c)(1). One individual
recommended making an exception for
employees who reside outside the local
commuting area or to limit the amount
of normal commuting time the agency
deducts for such employees. We are not
adopting any of these recommendations.
The requirement in OPM’s regulations
in § 550.1404(c) and (d) regarding the
deduction of normal commuting time is
consistent with the requirement to
deduct normal commuting time from an
employee’s travel time in determining
creditable overtime hours of work under
5 CFR 550.112(j)(2) and 5 CFR
551.422(b).
An individual expressed concern
regarding how § 550.1404(c) might be
applied by his agency. In particular, he
was concerned his agency might define
‘‘official duty station’’ to encompass an
unreasonably large area so that an
employee could not be credited for
travel from home to a temporary duty
station. It is true that, under the
regulations, travel to a temporary duty
station within an employee’s official
duty station is not creditable for the
purpose of accruing compensatory time
off for travel. However, as explained in
an earlier paragraph regarding
comments on the definition of ‘‘official
duty station,’’ an agency is required to
use the same geographic area that is
used for determining whether travel
time is compensable under the overtime
pay provisions. (See 5 CFR 550.112(j)
and 551.422(d).) Thus, agency
discretion is limited. We have no
information indicating that the agencies
have defined ‘‘official duty station’’ for
overtime pay purposes in an
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unreasonable way. Therefore, we
decline to make any change in the
regulations in this regard.
In the case of an employee who is
offered one mode of transportation and
who is permitted to use an alternative
mode of transportation, or who travels
at a time or by a route other than that
selected by the agency, the agency must
determine the estimated amount of time
in a travel status the employee would
have had if the employee had used the
mode of transportation offered by the
agency or traveled at the time or by the
route selected by the agency under
§ 550.1404(c)(2). As recommended by an
agency, we made a minor editorial
correction to § 550.1404(c)(2) and
replaced ‘‘traveled at the time and by
the route selected by the agency’’ with
‘‘traveled at the time or by the route
selected by the agency’’ [emphasis
added].
One agency and an individual asked
if compensatory time off for travel may
be authorized when the employee
returns a day earlier than planned. In
such cases, the agency must credit an
employee with the lesser of the
estimated time in travel status the
employee would have had if the
employee had traveled on the day
selected by the agency, or the
employee’s actual travel hours on a day
other than that selected by the agency.
One individual commented an
alternative mode of transportation may
save the agency money and
recommended imposing a daily limit on
the amount of compensatory time off for
travel rather than crediting the lesser
travel time. We do not agree. The cost
of travel may influence how an agency
schedules an employee’s travel, but it
does not have any impact on an
employee’s entitlement to compensatory
time off for travel.
Another individual asked if crediting
the lesser travel time when an employee
uses an alternative mode of
transportation discriminates against
employees with documented special
needs and/or disabilities, such as a fear
of flying, by not allowing the employee
to earn compensatory time off for travel
for the extra time spent traveling using
the alternative mode of transportation.
The regulatory requirement in
§ 550.1404(c)(2) regarding how to credit
time when an employee uses an
alternative mode of transportation, or
travels at another time or by a route
other than that selected by the agency,
is consistent with the same requirement
in determining creditable overtime
hours of work under 5 CFR 551.422(c).
In addition, an alternative mode of
transportation or alternative route or
time period may influence an agency’s
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authorization of official travel but does
not have an impact on an employee’s
entitlement to compensatory time off for
travel. Therefore we have not changed
the regulation.
Two agencies recommended
clarifying whether an agency may
change an employee’s work schedule for
travel purposes. An agency may not
adjust the regularly scheduled
administrative workweek that normally
applies to an employee (part-time or
full-time) solely for the purpose of
including planned travel time that
would not otherwise be considered
compensable hours of work. One
individual recommended clarifying
whether time spent traveling would be
creditable as credit hours or
compensatory time off for travel for an
employee who is authorized to earn
credit hours under an alternative work
schedule. Credit hours are hours an
employee elects to work, with
supervisory approval, in excess of the
employee’s basic work requirement
under a flexible work schedule. Under
certain conditions, an agency may
permit an employee to earn credit hours
by performing productive and essential
work while in a travel status. See OPM’s
Handbook on Alternative Work
Schedules at https://www.opm.gov/oca/
worksch/HTML/Cred_hrs.htm#travel for
the conditions that must be met. If those
conditions are met and the employee
does earn credit hours for travel, the
time spent traveling would be
compensable and the employee would
not be eligible to earn compensatory
time off for travel. If the conditions are
not met, the employee would be eligible
to earn compensatory time off for travel.
One agency, one union, and one
individual expressed concerns about the
provision in § 550.1405(a) which allows
the employing agency to credit an
employee’s earned compensatory time
off in increments of one-tenth of an hour
(6 minutes) or one-quarter of an hour
(15 minutes). The agency recommended
mandating the use of either 6-minute or
15-minute increments, rather than
providing the choice, for payroll
consistency. The union recommended
permitting agencies to continue their
established minimum charges to leave
rather than modifying the payroll
systems. The requirement to credit and
use compensatory time off for travel in
increments of 6 or 15 minutes is
consistent with OPM’s standardized
policy for charging annual and sick
leave in the same increments. In
addition, agency time and attendance
and payroll processing systems have
already been modified to accommodate
this change as a result of the interim
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regulations issued in January 2005 on
compensatory time off for travel.
Under § 550.1405(b), an employee
must comply with his or her agency’s
procedures for requesting credit of the
employee’s compensatory time off and
file such requests within the time period
specified by the agency. An agency
recommended adding a requirement
that an employee’s request for credit of
compensatory time off for travel may be
denied if the request is not filed within
the time periods established by agency
policy or guidelines. We agree and have
added this requirement to § 550.1405(b).
One union recommended that an agency
should approve a request to earn
compensatory time off for travel at the
same time the travel authorization is
issued. Another agency recommended
setting a specific time period within
which employees must submit requests
for credit of compensatory time off for
travel. We are not adopting these
recommendations. We do not believe it
is necessary to limit an agency’s
discretionary authority to prescribe such
procedures and time limitations in its
internal policies.
An agency recommended
modification of OPM Form 71, Request
for Leave or Approved Absence, or
develop a new form, for employee
requests to earn or use compensatory
time off for travel. We do not believe it
is necessary or desirable to mandate the
use of a Governmentwide form for this
purpose. However, an agency may
choose to develop a form as part of its
internal policies and procedures for
requesting and using compensatory time
off for travel.
Three agencies recommended
establishing a limit on the number of
hours of compensatory time off for
travel an employee may earn.
Establishing a cap on the amount of
compensatory time off for travel an
employee may earn would require a
legislative change. A union and an
individual recommended not limiting
compensatory time off to domestic
travel. These regulations are not limited
to domestic travel; OPM’s regulations
apply to both domestic and foreign
travel.
Using Compensatory Time Off for
Travel
Under § 550.1406(a), an employee
must request permission from his or her
supervisor to schedule the use of his or
her accrued compensatory time off in
accordance with agency-established
policies and procedures. One agency
recommended requiring agencies to
charge compensatory time off for travel
on a first-in, first-out basis. We agree
and have revised § 550.1406(b) to
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14:53 Apr 16, 2007
Jkt 211001
require agencies to charge compensatory
time off in the chronological order in
which it was earned, with compensatory
time off earned first being charged first.
One individual recommended
compensatory time off for travel should
be redeemable at the rate of 1.5 times
the number of hours spent traveling. No
legal authority exists to permit an
employee to be absent from his or her
scheduled tour of duty on the basis of
1.5 hours for each hour of creditable
travel time. In addition, the hour-forhour rule in the interim regulation is
consistent with the policy for earning
and using compensatory time off in lieu
of overtime pay under 5 CFR 550.114
and 551.531.
Under § 550.1406(b), earned
compensatory time off may be used
when an employee is granted time off
from his or her scheduled tour of duty
for leave purposes. One agency and two
individuals requested clarification of
how the use of earned compensatory
time off for travel relates to ‘‘use-orlose’’ annual leave. (‘‘Use or lose’’
annual leave is accrued annual leave in
excess of the maximum leave ceilings
(i.e., 30, 45, or 90 days) that is subject
to forfeiture at the end of the leave year.)
Section 6304(d) of title 5, United States
Code, prescribes the conditions under
which an employee’s forfeited annual
leave may be restored to an employee.
There is no legal authority to restore an
employee’s forfeited annual leave
because the employee elected to use
earned compensatory time off for travel
instead of using his or her excess annual
leave.
Forfeiting Unused Compensatory Time
Off for Travel
We received several comments on
§ 550.1407(a)(1), which requires
employees to forfeit unused
compensatory time off if it is not used
by the end of the 26th pay period after
the pay period during which it was
credited, except as provided in
§ 550.1407(a)(2) (e.g., when an employee
separates or is placed in a leave without
pay status to perform service in the
uniformed services with restoration
rights or who has suffered an on-the-job
injury with entitlement to injury
compensation under 5 U.S.C. chapter 81
and who later returns to service.). Two
agencies recommended clarifying
whether the forfeiture of unused
compensatory time off occurs within 26
pay periods after it has been earned or
credited to their payroll account. We
agree and have revised § 550.1407(a)(1)
to clarify that an employee must use his
or her accrued compensatory time off
within 26 pay periods after it is earned
or forfeit such compensatory time off.
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One agency recommended giving
agencies discretionary authority to
provide a time limit for an employee to
use compensatory time off for travel in
the same way agencies are allowed to
provide time limitations for the use of
other compensatory time off. Another
agency recommended establishing a
specific date for using earned
compensatory time off for travel. A
union recommended an employee be
allowed to use his or her earned
compensatory time off for travel from
the date earned until the end of the next
leave year. Two individuals expressed
concerns that agencies would not allow
their employees to use their earned
compensatory time for travel within 26
pay periods. One union and an
individual recommended establishing a
longer period of time, such as 52 pay
periods, before requiring forfeiture of
compensatory time off for travel. Several
commenters recommended providing
agencies discretionary authority to
extend the time limit for using earned
compensatory time off for travel in
emergency situations or when
employees are required to complete
mission-critical assignments.
While the use of compensatory time
off for travel is subject to agency work
demands, we believe 26 pay periods is
a sufficient amount of time for most
employees to use their earned
compensatory time off. However, we
believe exceptions may be warranted in
exceptional situations, for example,
during emergency situations, to
complete mission-critical assignments,
or when employees are deployed to
perform work directly related to a
military operation. Therefore, we have
added a new paragraph (e) to § 550.1407
to permit an authorized agency official,
at his or her sole and exclusive
discretion, to extend the time limit for
using earned compensatory time off for
travel if an employee’s failure to use the
compensatory time off within 26 pay
periods is due to an exigency of the
service beyond the employee’s control.
Section 550.1407(a)(2) extends the
period for using earned compensatory
time off for travel for an employee who
separates from Federal service or is
placed in a leave without pay status to
perform service in the uniformed
services with restoration rights or who
has suffered an on-the-job injury with
entitlement to injury compensation
under 5 U.S.C. chapter 81 and who later
returns to service in the same (or
successor) agency. In these
circumstances, the employee must use
his or her earned compensatory time off
by the end of the 26th pay period
following the pay period in which the
employee returns to duty. One agency
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 73 / Tuesday, April 17, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
objected to allowing the 26 pay periods
to start over from the beginning upon an
employee’s return to duty. We believe it
is reasonable to provide an employee,
under these circumstances, a full 26 pay
periods following his or her return to
duty within which to use earned
compensatory time off for travel.
An agency recommended allowing
agencies to consider unused
compensatory time off when
determining an employee’s separation
date. We are not adopting this
recommendation. An agency has the
authority under § 550.1406(a) to
approve or disapprove an employee’s
request to use his or her accrued
compensatory time off in accordance
with agency-established policies and
procedures.
Two individuals objected to the
provision in § 550.1408 which prohibits
an individual from receiving payment
under any circumstances for any unused
compensatory time off for travel that he
or she earned. However, the law
explicitly prohibits payment for unused
compensatory time off. (See 5 U.S.C.
5550b(b).)
E.O. 12866, Regulatory Review
The Office of Management and Budget
has reviewed this rule in accordance
with E.O. 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that these regulations will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
because they will apply only to Federal
agencies and employees.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Government
employees, Wages.
Office of Personnel Management.
Linda M. Springer,
Director.
Accordingly, the interim rule
amending 5 CFR part 550, which was
published at 70 FR 3855 on January 27,
2005, is adopted as final with the
following changes:
I
PART 550—PAY ADMINISTRATION
(GENERAL)
1. The authority citation for part 550
continues to read as follows:
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I
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5304 note, 5305 note,
5541(2)(iv), 5545a(h)(2)(B) and (i), 5547(b)
and (c), 5548, and 6101(c); sections 407 and
2316, Pub. L. 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681–101
and 2681–828 (5 U.S.C. 5545a); E.O. 12748,
3 CFR, 1992 Comp., p. 316.
14:53 Apr 16, 2007
Jkt 211001
2. Revise the first sentence of
§ 550.1401 to read as follows:
I
§ 550.1401
Purpose.
This subpart contains OPM
regulations implementing 5 U.S.C.
5550b, which establishes a separate type
of compensatory time off. * * *
I 3. In § 550.1403, add the definitions of
accrued compensatory time off and
authorized agency official and revise the
definition of travel to read as follows:
§ 550.1403
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Accrued compensatory time off means
the compensatory time off earned by an
employee that has not been used or
forfeited.
Authorized agency official means the
head of the agency or an official who is
authorized to act for the head of the
agency in the matter concerned.
*
*
*
*
*
Travel means officially authorized
travel—i.e., travel for work purposes
that is approved by an authorized
agency official or otherwise authorized
under established agency policies. Time
spent traveling in connection with
union activities is excluded.
*
*
*
*
*
I 4. In § 550.1404, revise paragraph
(b)(1), remove paragraph (b)(2),
redesignate paragraph (b)(3) as
paragraph (b)(2), revise the first
sentence of paragraph (c)(2), and add
paragraph (e) to read as follows:
§ 550.1404
Creditable travel time.
*
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 550
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Subpart N—Compensatory Time Off
for Travel
*
*
*
*
(b)(1) Travel status. Time in a travel
status includes the time an employee
actually spends traveling between the
official duty station and a temporary
duty station, or between two temporary
duty stations, and the usual waiting
time that precedes or interrupts such
travel, subject to the exclusion specified
in paragraph (b)(2) of this section and
the requirements in paragraph (c), (d)
and (e) of this section. Time spent at a
temporary duty station between arrival
and departure is not time in a travel
status. Time in a travel status ends
when the employee arrives at the
temporary duty worksite or his or her
lodging in the temporary duty station,
wherever the employee arrives first.
Time in a travel status resumes when an
employee departs from the temporary
duty worksite or his or her lodging in
the temporary duty station, from
whichever the employee departs last.
Travel time in connection with an
employee’s permanent change of station
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
is not time in a travel status.
Determinations regarding what is
creditable as ‘‘usual waiting time’’ are
within the sole and exclusive discretion
of the employing agency.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) In the case of an employee who is
offered one mode of transportation and
who is permitted to use an alternative
mode of transportation, or who travels
at a time or by a route other than that
selected by the agency, the agency must
determine the estimated amount of time
in a travel status the employee would
have had if the employee had used the
mode of transportation offered by the
agency or traveled at the time or by the
route selected by the agency. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Travel involving two or more time
zones. When an employee’s travel
involves two or more time zones, the
time zone from the point of first
departure must be used to determine
how many hours the employee actually
spent in a travel status for the purpose
of accruing compensatory time off.
I 5. In § 550.1405, paragraph (b) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 550.1405
off.
Crediting compensatory time
*
*
*
*
*
(b) An employee must comply with
his or her agency’s procedures for
requesting credit of compensatory time
off under this section. Employees must
file such requests within the time period
required by the agency. An employee’s
request for credit of compensatory time
off for travel may be denied if the
request is not filed within the time
period required by the agency.
I 6. In § 550.1406, revise the section
heading and paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
§ 550.1406
time off.
Use of accrued compensatory
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Compensatory time off may be
used when the employee is granted time
off from his or her scheduled tour of
duty established for leave purposes. An
employee must use earned
compensatory time off under this
subpart in increments of one-tenth of an
hour (6 minutes) or one-quarter of an
hour (15 minutes). Agencies must
charge compensatory time off in the
chronological order in which it was
earned, with compensatory time off
earned first being charged first.
I 7. In § 550.1407, revise paragraph
(a)(1) and add a new paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
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§ 550.1407 Forfeiture of unused
compensatory time off.
(a) After 26 pay periods. (1) Except as
provided in paragraphs (a)(2) and (e) of
this section, an employee must use
accrued compensatory time off by the
end of the 26th pay period after the pay
period during which it was earned. If an
employee fails to use the compensatory
time off within 26 pay periods after it
was earned, he or she must forfeit such
compensatory time off.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Exception due to an exigency. If an
employee fails to use his or her
compensatory time earned under
§ 550.1404(a) by the end of the 26th pay
period after the pay period during
which it was earned due to an exigency
of the service beyond the employee’s
control, an authorized agency official, at
his or her sole and exclusive discretion,
may extend the time limit for using such
compensatory time off for travel for up
to an additional 26 pay periods.
[FR Doc. E7–7266 Filed 4–16–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325–39–P
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 890
RIN 3206–AI62
Waiver of Requirements for Continued
Coverage During Retirement
Office of Personnel
Management.
ACTION: Final Rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Under current Federal
Employees Health Benefits (FEHB)
Program regulations, the Office of
Personnel Management (OPM) may
waive the eligibility requirements for
health benefits coverage as an annuitant
for an individual when, in its sole
discretion, it determines that it would
be against equity and good conscience
not to allow a person to be enrolled in
the FEHB Program as an annuitant. The
regulations state that an individual’s
failure to satisfy eligibility requirements
must be due to exceptional
circumstances. They also list specific
situations where a waiver will not be
granted by OPM such as when an
individual’s retirement is based on a
disability or an involuntary separation,
or when an individual was misadvised
by his/her employing office. This final
regulation eliminates these specific
situations from the regulation. This final
regulation provides OPM with more
flexibility when granting waivers.
EFFECTIVE DATE: May 17, 2007.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:53 Apr 16, 2007
Jkt 211001
This document is available
for viewing at the U.S. Office of
Personnel Management, 1900 E Street,
NW., Washington DC 20415. Send all
comments to Michael Kaszynski,
Insurance Policy, U.S. Office of
Personnel Management, 1900 E Street,
NW., Room 3415, Washington DC
20415.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Kaszynski, Policy Analyst, at
202–606–0004.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under 5
U.S.C. 8905(b), OPM may waive the
eligibility requirements for health
benefits coverage as an annuitant for an
individual when, in its sole discretion,
it determines that it would be against
equity and good conscience not to allow
a person to be enrolled in the FEHB
Program as an annuitant. Under 5 CFR
890.108, an individual’s failure to
satisfy eligibility requirements must be
due to exceptional circumstances. An
individual requesting a waiver must
provide OPM with evidence that (1) the
individual intended to have FEHB
coverage as an annuitant (retiree); (2)
the circumstances that prevented the
individual from meeting the
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 8905(b) were
beyond the individual’s control; and (3)
the individual acted reasonably to
protect his or her right to continue
coverage into retirement.
Section 890.108 lists specific
situations where a waiver will not be
granted by OPM such as when an
individual’s retirement is based on a
disability or an involuntary separation,
or an individual was misadvised by his/
her employing office. This final
regulation eliminates these specific
situations from 5 CFR 890.108 to
provide more flexibility to the waiver
process.
On August 7, 2006, a proposed
regulation was published in the Federal
Register at 71 FR 44592. We received no
comments on the proposed rule. We
have made no changes to this rule from
its proposed version.
ADDRESSES:
Collection of Information Requirement
This final rule does not impose
information collection and
recordkeeping requirements that meet
the definition of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995’s term
‘‘collection of information’’ which
means obtaining, causing to be obtained,
soliciting, or requiring the disclosure to
third parties or the public, of facts or
opinions by or for an agency, regardless
of form or format, calling for either
answers to identical questions posed to,
or identical reporting or recordkeeping
requirements imposed on ten or more
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
19099
persons, other than agencies,
instrumentalities, or employees of the
United States; or answers to questions
posed to agencies, instrumentalities, or
employees of the United States which
are to be used for general statistical
purposes. Consequently, it need not be
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget under the authority of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
requires agencies to analyze options for
regulatory relief of small businesses. For
purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit
organizations, and government agencies
with revenues of $11.5 million or less in
any one year. This final rulemaking
affects FEHB Program health insurance
eligibility requirements which do not
impact the dollar threshold. Therefore,
I certify that this final regulation will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
Regulatory Impact Analysis
We have examined the impact of this
final rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 (September 1993,
Regulatory Planning and Review), the
RFA (September 16, 1980, Pub. L. 96–
354), section 1102(b) of the Social
Security Act, the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995, (Pub. L. 104–4), and
Executive Order 13132. Executive Order
12866 (as amended by Executive Order
13258, which merely assigns
responsibility of duties) directs agencies
to assess all costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). A regulatory impact
analysis must be prepared for major
rules with economically significant
effects ($100 million or more in any one
year). This rule is not considered a
major rule, as defined in section 804(2)
of title 5, United States Code, because
we estimate its impact will only affect
federal government employment offices.
Any resulting economic impact would
not be expected to exceed the dollar
threshold.
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Review
This final rule has been reviewed by
the Office of Management and Budget in
accordance with Executive Order 12866.
E:\FR\FM\17APR1.SGM
17APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 73 (Tuesday, April 17, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19093-19099]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-7266]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 73 / Tuesday, April 17, 2007 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 19093]]
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 550
RIN 3206-AK74
Pay Administration (General)
AGENCY: Office of Personnel Management.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Office of Personnel Management is issuing final
regulations on compensatory time off for time spent in a travel status
away from the official duty station when such time is not otherwise
compensable.
DATES: The regulations are effective May 17, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Vicki Draper by telephone at (202)
606-2858, by fax at (202) 606-0824, or by e-mail at pay-performance-
policy@opm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On January 27, 2005, the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) published interim regulations (70 FR 3855) in 5 CFR
part 550, subpart N, to implement section 203 of the Federal Workforce
Flexibility Act of 2004 (Pub. L. 108-411, October 30, 2004), hereafter
referred to as ``the Act.'' Section 203 of the Act amended 5 U.S.C.
chapter 55, subchapter V, by adding a new section 5550b, which
established a new form of compensatory time off for time spent by an
employee in a travel status away from the employee's official duty
station when such time is not otherwise compensable. The 60-day comment
period for the interim regulations ended on March 28, 2005. During the
comment period, OPM received comments from 16 Federal agencies, 7
unions, and 81 individuals, all of which are addressed in this final
rule. In addition, in March 2006, we issued additional guidance,
including questions and answers, to address many of the comments we
received on the interim regulations. We encourage agencies and
employees to review these materials on OPM's Web site at https://
www.opm.gov/oca/pay/HTML/compensatory_time.asp. We will continue to
provide additional guidance on the administration of compensatory time
off for travel, as necessary.
Effective Date
Two individuals suggested the new provision be applied
retroactively to cover previous travel times that were not compensable
under title 5, United States Code. Section 203(c) of the Act provided
that the new form of compensatory time off for travel would take effect
on the earlier of (1) the effective date of the implementing
regulations or (2) the 90th day after the date of the law's enactment
(January 28, 2005). The interim regulations became effective on January
28, 2005, and apply prospectively from that date.
Covered Employees
Several commenters requested clarification on the categories of
employees covered by the new compensatory time off provision, while
others objected to omissions of certain categories of employees in
OPM's regulations at 5 CFR 550.1402. Because the law authorizing the
new compensatory time off provision is in 5 U.S.C. chapter 55,
subchapter V, the new provision applies to an ``employee'' as defined
in 5 U.S.C. 5541(2), who is employed in an ``Executive agency,'' as
defined in 5 U.S.C. 105, without regard to whether the employee is
exempt from or covered by the overtime pay provisions of the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA), as amended. OPM cannot broaden coverage
to include additional employee groups. The definition includes
employees in senior-level (SL) and scientific or professional (ST)
positions, but not members of the Senior Executive Service, Senior
Foreign Service, Foreign Service officers, or prevailing rate (wage
grade) employees.
The compensatory time off for travel provision also does not apply
to employees of Non-Appropriated Fund Instrumentalities (NAFI). NAFI
employees are not covered by the laws administered by OPM, with a few
narrow exceptions, which are listed in 5 U.S.C. 2105(c). Although title
38 employees are not specifically excluded from the definition of
``employee'' in 5 U.S.C. 5541(2), the title 38 employment system is
administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) under its own
legal authority and any determinations as to coverage under 5 U.S.C.
5541(2) would be made by VA. A commenter noted that the Department of
Justice (DOJ) has determined the compensatory time off for travel
statute does not apply to attorneys at DOJ. Congress recently enacted
legislation (Pub. L. 109-425, December 20, 2006) which provides that
attorneys at DOJ shall be eligible for compensatory time off for travel
under section 5550b of title 5, United States Code.
Employees who are on intermittent work schedules are not eligible
to earn and use compensatory time off for travel because they do not
have a scheduled tour of duty for leave purposes. Under 5 CFR
550.1406(b), compensatory time off for travel may be used by an
employee when the employee is granted time off from his or her
scheduled tour of duty established for leave purposes. Finally, a part-
time employee may be entitled to compensatory time off for travel if
the travel time does not qualify as compensable hours of work under 5
U.S.C. 5542(b)(2)(B) and 5 CFR 550.112(g)(2) and meets the other
requirements in 5 CFR part 550, subpart N.
Definitions
Many commenters recommended the addition or revision of certain
definitions in Sec. 550.1403. One agency recommended adding a
definition of accrued compensatory time off, which is used in Sec.
550.1406. We agree and have added a definition to Sec. 550.1403. In
addition, we have added a definition of authorized agency official to
mean the head of the agency or an official who is authorized to act for
the head of the agency in the matter concerned.
Two individuals recommended that OPM define time the employee would
have spent in normal home-to-work or work-to-home commuting. We do not
believe this is necessary, since agencies may use procedures already in
place for deducting commuting time from travel hours as required by 5
CFR 550.112(j)(2) and 5 CFR 551.422(b). One agency recommended that OPM
establish a minimum commute time for an employee whose residence is
considered his or her official duty
[[Page 19094]]
station. We are not adopting this recommendation because an employee
whose residence is his or her official duty station does not spend time
commuting to work.
Two individuals recommended revising the definition of official
duty station to be consistent with the term official station as defined
in the Federal Travel Regulation (41 CFR 300-3.1) issued by the General
Services Administration. Official duty station in Sec. 550.1403 means
the geographic area surrounding an employee's regular work site that is
the same as the area designated by the employing agency for the purpose
of determining whether travel time is compensable for the purpose of
determining overtime pay, consistent with the regulations in 5 CFR
550.112(j) and 551.422(d). The term official station prescribes the
geographic limits of an employee's permanent work station for the
purpose of determining the employee's entitlement to subsistence
allowances (per diem). We are not adopting the recommendation because
the geographic area an agency designates for the purpose of determining
whether an employee is entitled to overtime pay for a period of travel
may be different than the geographic area covered by official station
as defined in 41 CFR 300-3.1.
One agency recommended that the definition of travel status be
stated exactly as it is in Sec. 550.1404(b), and one individual
recommended clarifying the definition. We do not believe it is
necessary to revise the definition because it refers directly to Sec.
550.1404(b).
Compensable Travel Time
Several commenters recommended clarifying whether travel under
certain circumstances is compensable. Under Sec. 550.1403, compensable
refers to periods of time that are creditable as hours of work for the
purpose of determining a specific pay entitlement, even when that work
time may not actually generate additional compensation because of
applicable pay limitations. One agency and an individual recommended
clarifying whether an employee who receives administratively
uncontrollable overtime (AUO) pay under 5 U.S.C. 5545(c)(2) is eligible
to receive compensatory time off for travel. An employee receiving AUO
pay may be entitled to compensation for travel time during (1)
nonovertime hours, (2) AUO hours (i.e., irregular or occasional
overtime hours), or (3) regularly scheduled overtime hours--if the
travel hours meet one of the conditions in 5 CFR 550.112(g) or 5 CFR
551.422, as applicable. If an AUO employee has other qualifying travel
time that does not meet the applicable conditions to be treated as
compensable hours of work, such travel time may be used to earn
compensatory time off under 5 CFR part 550, subpart N.
One agency recommended clarifying an employee is not eligible for
compensatory time off for travel when the time spent traveling has been
compensated under the FLSA. Overtime hours compensated under the FLSA
clearly meet the definition of compensable in Sec. 550.1403.
Therefore, we believe no clarification in the regulations is necessary.
One union recommended clarifying that a class of accommodations, such
as business class, does not influence whether the travel time is
compensable. We agree. Allowing an employee to upgrade his or her
travel to business class does not eliminate his or her eligibility to
earn compensatory time off for travel.
One individual and one agency recommended clarifying whether an
employee is eligible to earn compensatory time off for any portion of a
period of travel under 5 CFR 550.112(g)(2) which may not be compensable
because of the biweekly cap on premium pay. One union and one agency
recommended that such an employee should be eligible. We disagree. Even
though an employee may not be paid overtime pay for all of his or her
travel hours because of the biweekly premium pay cap, all of the travel
time is still considered to be compensable under 5 CFR 550.112(g)(2).
Under these circumstances, therefore, the employee has been compensated
fully under the law for all of the travel hours; the employee may not
earn compensatory time off for any portion of such travel.
Earning Compensatory Time Off for Travel
Two unions and one individual recommended an employee should be
able to earn compensatory time off when he or she travels while
performing union representational duties. We are not adopting this
recommendation. The term travel is defined at 5 CFR 550.1403 to mean
officially authorized travel--i.e., travel for work purposes that is
approved by an authorized agency official or otherwise authorized under
established agency policies. The term ``travel for work purposes'' is
intended to mean travel for agency-related work purposes. The Federal
Labor Relations Authority (FLRA) has held that the performance of
representational duties does not involve the performance of work as
used in the phrase ``technology of performing work'' under 5 U.S.C.
7106(b)(1). See AFGE, Council 214, AFL-CIO, 31 FLRA 1259, 1261-62
(1988). The FLRA has similarly held that the performance of
representational activities does not involve ``work'' within the
meaning of 5 U.S.C. 7106(a)(2)(B). See AAFES, Dallas, 53 FLRA at 24.
Finally, the FLRA also has determined that, under 5 U.S.C. chapter 43,
job performance encompasses the performance of agency-assigned duties
and does not include duties performed on behalf of a union. See United
States Department of Health and Human Services., Soc. Sec. Admin.,
Office of Hearings & Appeals, 48 FLRA 357, 364 (1993). Thus, employees
who travel while performing union activities are not entitled to earn
compensatory time off because they are traveling for the benefit of the
union and not for agency-related work purposes. We have revised the
definition of travel in Sec. 550.1403 to clarify that time spent
traveling in connection with union activities is not creditable for the
purpose of earning compensatory time off for travel.
One union and four individuals objected to an employee not being
entitled to compensatory time off for travel when he or she is required
to travel on a Federal holiday (or ``in lieu of'' holiday) during his
or her basic (non-overtime) hours. Although most employees do not
receive holiday premium pay for time spent traveling on a holiday (or
an ``in lieu of'' holiday), an employee continues to be entitled to pay
for the holiday in the same manner as if the travel were not required.
Thus, an employee may not earn compensatory time off for travel during
basic (non-overtime) holiday hours because the employee is entitled to
his or her rate of basic pay for those hours. Compensatory time off for
travel may be earned by an employee only for time spent in a travel
status away from the employee's official duty station when such time is
not otherwise compensable.
Some commenters requested clarification regarding an employee's
travel status as described in Sec. 550.1404(b). Under Sec.
550.1404(b), creditable travel time for the purpose of earning
compensatory time off for travel includes the time an employee actually
spends traveling between the official duty station and a temporary duty
station, or between two temporary duty stations, and the usual waiting
time that precedes or interrupts such travel (subject to certain
exclusions). One union recommended revising Sec. 550.1404(b)(1) to
include situations where an employee may depart from his or her
residence. We do not believe this is necessary, since travel to and
from
[[Page 19095]]
home is addressed in Sec. 550.1404(c). One agency recommended
clarifying compensatory time off for travel requires travel orders and
it is not appropriate when travel is within an employee's normal
commuting area. We are not adopting these recommendations. Agencies are
already required to process travel orders for officially authorized
travel. In addition, Sec. 550.1404(a) already requires an employee to
travel away from (i.e., outside the limits of) his or her official duty
station in order to earn compensatory time off.
Under Sec. 550.1404(b)(1), time spent at a temporary duty station
between arrival and departure is not time in a travel status. One
individual recommended clarifying whether the arrival and departure are
from the temporary duty worksite or lodging. We agree and have revised
Sec. 550.1404(b)(1) to clarify arrival and departure times. Time in a
travel status ends when the employee arrives at the temporary duty
worksite or his or her lodging in the temporary duty station, wherever
the employee arrives first. Time in a travel status resumes when an
employee departs from the temporary duty worksite or his or her lodging
in the temporary duty station, from whichever the employee departs
last.
One agency recommended clarifying whether travel in connection with
a permanent change of station (PCS) is considered time spent in a
travel status, and one individual recommended that it should be.
Although PCS travel is officially authorized travel, it is not travel
between an official duty station and a temporary duty station or
between two temporary duty stations. Therefore, it is not considered
time in a travel status for the purpose of earning compensatory time
off for travel. The law applies to travel ``away from the official duty
station of the employee,'' not travel to a new official duty station.
We believe that the regulation limiting application to temporary duty
travel is consistent with the law and the intent of Congress. We have
revised Sec. 550.1404(b)(1) to clarify that travel time in connection
with an employee's PCS is not time in a travel status for the purpose
of earning compensatory time off.
Six individuals requested clarification of how travel is calculated
when an employee travels between different time zones. We have added a
new paragraph (e) to Sec. 550.1404 to provide clarification regarding
the calculation of an employee's travel time when the employee's travel
involves two or more time zones. Under 5 CFR 550.1404(b)(1), time in a
travel status includes the time an employee ``actually spends
traveling'' and the usual waiting time that precedes or interrupts the
travel, subject to certain exclusions as specified in section 550.1404
of the regulations. When an employee's travel involves two or more time
zones, the time zone from the point of first departure must be used to
determine how many hours (i.e., elapsed time) the employee actually
spent in a travel status for the purpose of accruing compensatory time
off.
We received a number of comments on Sec. 550.1404(b)(1) concerning
the employing agency's sole and exclusive discretion to determine what
is creditable as ``usual waiting time.'' One agency, one union, and two
individuals objected to providing agencies with this authority. The
agency recommended establishing an upper and lower range of what is
considered acceptable ``usual waiting time.'' The union recommended
including examples of ``usual waiting times.'' The two individuals
suggested defining ``usual waiting time'' to include the time it takes
to get service at ticket counters, security, baggage claim, and
transportation counters or using waiting times determined by the
airlines or travel agencies. One individual commented that there may be
different determinations of ``usual waiting time'' within an agency. We
are not adopting any of these recommendations. The concept of ``usual
waiting time'' is currently used in determining overtime hours of work
under title 5 and the FLSA, and agencies are knowledgeable and
experienced in applying this concept. In addition, we believe it is
appropriate to give agencies the flexibility to make this
determination.
Several commenters recommended removing Sec. 550.1404(b)(2), which
states that bona fide meal periods during actual travel time or waiting
time are not creditable as time spent in a travel status. An agency
stated it was absurd to subtract bona fide meal periods from creditable
travel time but allow time periods for making telephone calls, dozing,
chatting, wandering through terminals, etc., to be considered
creditable travel time. Another agency commented that the results of
making distinctions between employees who choose to eat at a terminal
restaurant and employees who choose to eat while walking to or waiting
at the gate are so anomalous that consistent application of the
regulation cannot be expected. OPM included this limitation in the
interim regulations because it is consistent with the requirement to
subtract bona fide meal periods from an employee's creditable overtime
hours of work under 5 CFR 550.112(m) and 551.432(c). However, we agree
that agencies should not try to make distinctions in the employee's
activities during waiting time. Further, we agree it is not efficient
or cost-effective to try to track employees' bona fide meal periods
during travel time or waiting time solely for the purpose of crediting
compensatory time off for travel, and we have removed Sec.
550.1404(b)(2) accordingly.
Many commenters requested clarification of, or objected to, Sec.
550.1404(b)(3), which states that extended waiting time is not
creditable as time in a travel status. Under Sec. 550.1404(b)(3), if
an employee experiences an extended (i.e., not usual) waiting time
between the periods of actual travel during which the employee is free
to rest, sleep, or otherwise use the time for his or her own purposes,
the extended waiting time is not creditable as time in a travel status.
Three agencies recommended providing guidance on a range of acceptable
hours for ``extended waiting time,'' how much discretion an agency has
in determining extended waiting times, or where to draw the line
between ``usual'' and ``extended'' waiting times. Another agency
recommended permitting an employee to earn compensatory time off for
situations beyond the control of the employee, though not a large
amount of compensatory time off. Three agencies and a union recommended
revising Sec. 550.1404(b)(3) to limit extended waiting time to any
period during which an employee must obtain overnight lodging. We are
not adopting any of these recommendations. Under Sec. 550.1404(b)(1),
determinations regarding what is creditable as usual waiting time are
within the sole and exclusive discretion of the agency. The concept of
excluding extended waiting time is currently used in determining
creditable overtime hours of work under title 5 and the FLSA, and
agencies are experienced in applying this limitation. Agencies should
not establish a policy to credit compensatory time off for travel
beyond the usual waiting time applied under title 5 and the FLSA.
We received several comments about subtracting commuting time from
creditable travel time under Sec. 550.1404(c)(1) and Sec.
550.1404(d). Under Sec. 550.1404(c)(1), an agency must deduct the
hours the employee would have spent in normal home-to-work or work-to-
home commuting from travel between the employee's home and a temporary
duty station. Under Sec. 550.1404(d), if a transportation terminal
(such as an airport) is located within the limits of the employee's
official duty station, the employee's
[[Page 19096]]
travel time to and from the airport (outside regular working hours) is
considered to be equivalent to commuting time and is not creditable
time in a travel status. If the airport is located outside the limits
of the employee's official duty station, the travel time to and from
the airport (outside regular working hours) is creditable time in a
travel status, but it is subject to an offset for the time the employee
would have spent in normal home-to-work or work-to-home commuting.
Several commenters objected to deducting normal commuting time on
non-workdays as required by Sec. 550.1404(d). An agency recommended
deleting Sec. 550.1404(d) entirely. Another agency and a union
recommended revising Sec. 550.1404(d) to make travel to and from a
transportation terminal within an employee's official duty station
official travel time rather than equivalent commuting time. The union
also objected to subtracting an employee's normal commuting time under
Sec. 550.1404(c)(1). One individual recommended making an exception
for employees who reside outside the local commuting area or to limit
the amount of normal commuting time the agency deducts for such
employees. We are not adopting any of these recommendations. The
requirement in OPM's regulations in Sec. 550.1404(c) and (d) regarding
the deduction of normal commuting time is consistent with the
requirement to deduct normal commuting time from an employee's travel
time in determining creditable overtime hours of work under 5 CFR
550.112(j)(2) and 5 CFR 551.422(b).
An individual expressed concern regarding how Sec. 550.1404(c)
might be applied by his agency. In particular, he was concerned his
agency might define ``official duty station'' to encompass an
unreasonably large area so that an employee could not be credited for
travel from home to a temporary duty station. It is true that, under
the regulations, travel to a temporary duty station within an
employee's official duty station is not creditable for the purpose of
accruing compensatory time off for travel. However, as explained in an
earlier paragraph regarding comments on the definition of ``official
duty station,'' an agency is required to use the same geographic area
that is used for determining whether travel time is compensable under
the overtime pay provisions. (See 5 CFR 550.112(j) and 551.422(d).)
Thus, agency discretion is limited. We have no information indicating
that the agencies have defined ``official duty station'' for overtime
pay purposes in an unreasonable way. Therefore, we decline to make any
change in the regulations in this regard.
In the case of an employee who is offered one mode of
transportation and who is permitted to use an alternative mode of
transportation, or who travels at a time or by a route other than that
selected by the agency, the agency must determine the estimated amount
of time in a travel status the employee would have had if the employee
had used the mode of transportation offered by the agency or traveled
at the time or by the route selected by the agency under Sec.
550.1404(c)(2). As recommended by an agency, we made a minor editorial
correction to Sec. 550.1404(c)(2) and replaced ``traveled at the time
and by the route selected by the agency'' with ``traveled at the time
or by the route selected by the agency'' [emphasis added].
One agency and an individual asked if compensatory time off for
travel may be authorized when the employee returns a day earlier than
planned. In such cases, the agency must credit an employee with the
lesser of the estimated time in travel status the employee would have
had if the employee had traveled on the day selected by the agency, or
the employee's actual travel hours on a day other than that selected by
the agency.
One individual commented an alternative mode of transportation may
save the agency money and recommended imposing a daily limit on the
amount of compensatory time off for travel rather than crediting the
lesser travel time. We do not agree. The cost of travel may influence
how an agency schedules an employee's travel, but it does not have any
impact on an employee's entitlement to compensatory time off for
travel.
Another individual asked if crediting the lesser travel time when
an employee uses an alternative mode of transportation discriminates
against employees with documented special needs and/or disabilities,
such as a fear of flying, by not allowing the employee to earn
compensatory time off for travel for the extra time spent traveling
using the alternative mode of transportation. The regulatory
requirement in Sec. 550.1404(c)(2) regarding how to credit time when
an employee uses an alternative mode of transportation, or travels at
another time or by a route other than that selected by the agency, is
consistent with the same requirement in determining creditable overtime
hours of work under 5 CFR 551.422(c). In addition, an alternative mode
of transportation or alternative route or time period may influence an
agency's authorization of official travel but does not have an impact
on an employee's entitlement to compensatory time off for travel.
Therefore we have not changed the regulation.
Two agencies recommended clarifying whether an agency may change an
employee's work schedule for travel purposes. An agency may not adjust
the regularly scheduled administrative workweek that normally applies
to an employee (part-time or full-time) solely for the purpose of
including planned travel time that would not otherwise be considered
compensable hours of work. One individual recommended clarifying
whether time spent traveling would be creditable as credit hours or
compensatory time off for travel for an employee who is authorized to
earn credit hours under an alternative work schedule. Credit hours are
hours an employee elects to work, with supervisory approval, in excess
of the employee's basic work requirement under a flexible work
schedule. Under certain conditions, an agency may permit an employee to
earn credit hours by performing productive and essential work while in
a travel status. See OPM's Handbook on Alternative Work Schedules at
https://www.opm.gov/oca/worksch/HTML/Cred_hrs.htm#travel for the
conditions that must be met. If those conditions are met and the
employee does earn credit hours for travel, the time spent traveling
would be compensable and the employee would not be eligible to earn
compensatory time off for travel. If the conditions are not met, the
employee would be eligible to earn compensatory time off for travel.
One agency, one union, and one individual expressed concerns about
the provision in Sec. 550.1405(a) which allows the employing agency to
credit an employee's earned compensatory time off in increments of one-
tenth of an hour (6 minutes) or one-quarter of an hour (15 minutes).
The agency recommended mandating the use of either 6-minute or 15-
minute increments, rather than providing the choice, for payroll
consistency. The union recommended permitting agencies to continue
their established minimum charges to leave rather than modifying the
payroll systems. The requirement to credit and use compensatory time
off for travel in increments of 6 or 15 minutes is consistent with
OPM's standardized policy for charging annual and sick leave in the
same increments. In addition, agency time and attendance and payroll
processing systems have already been modified to accommodate this
change as a result of the interim
[[Page 19097]]
regulations issued in January 2005 on compensatory time off for travel.
Under Sec. 550.1405(b), an employee must comply with his or her
agency's procedures for requesting credit of the employee's
compensatory time off and file such requests within the time period
specified by the agency. An agency recommended adding a requirement
that an employee's request for credit of compensatory time off for
travel may be denied if the request is not filed within the time
periods established by agency policy or guidelines. We agree and have
added this requirement to Sec. 550.1405(b). One union recommended that
an agency should approve a request to earn compensatory time off for
travel at the same time the travel authorization is issued. Another
agency recommended setting a specific time period within which
employees must submit requests for credit of compensatory time off for
travel. We are not adopting these recommendations. We do not believe it
is necessary to limit an agency's discretionary authority to prescribe
such procedures and time limitations in its internal policies.
An agency recommended modification of OPM Form 71, Request for
Leave or Approved Absence, or develop a new form, for employee requests
to earn or use compensatory time off for travel. We do not believe it
is necessary or desirable to mandate the use of a Governmentwide form
for this purpose. However, an agency may choose to develop a form as
part of its internal policies and procedures for requesting and using
compensatory time off for travel.
Three agencies recommended establishing a limit on the number of
hours of compensatory time off for travel an employee may earn.
Establishing a cap on the amount of compensatory time off for travel an
employee may earn would require a legislative change. A union and an
individual recommended not limiting compensatory time off to domestic
travel. These regulations are not limited to domestic travel; OPM's
regulations apply to both domestic and foreign travel.
Using Compensatory Time Off for Travel
Under Sec. 550.1406(a), an employee must request permission from
his or her supervisor to schedule the use of his or her accrued
compensatory time off in accordance with agency-established policies
and procedures. One agency recommended requiring agencies to charge
compensatory time off for travel on a first-in, first-out basis. We
agree and have revised Sec. 550.1406(b) to require agencies to charge
compensatory time off in the chronological order in which it was
earned, with compensatory time off earned first being charged first.
One individual recommended compensatory time off for travel should be
redeemable at the rate of 1.5 times the number of hours spent
traveling. No legal authority exists to permit an employee to be absent
from his or her scheduled tour of duty on the basis of 1.5 hours for
each hour of creditable travel time. In addition, the hour-for-hour
rule in the interim regulation is consistent with the policy for
earning and using compensatory time off in lieu of overtime pay under 5
CFR 550.114 and 551.531.
Under Sec. 550.1406(b), earned compensatory time off may be used
when an employee is granted time off from his or her scheduled tour of
duty for leave purposes. One agency and two individuals requested
clarification of how the use of earned compensatory time off for travel
relates to ``use-or-lose'' annual leave. (``Use or lose'' annual leave
is accrued annual leave in excess of the maximum leave ceilings (i.e.,
30, 45, or 90 days) that is subject to forfeiture at the end of the
leave year.) Section 6304(d) of title 5, United States Code, prescribes
the conditions under which an employee's forfeited annual leave may be
restored to an employee. There is no legal authority to restore an
employee's forfeited annual leave because the employee elected to use
earned compensatory time off for travel instead of using his or her
excess annual leave.
Forfeiting Unused Compensatory Time Off for Travel
We received several comments on Sec. 550.1407(a)(1), which
requires employees to forfeit unused compensatory time off if it is not
used by the end of the 26th pay period after the pay period during
which it was credited, except as provided in Sec. 550.1407(a)(2)
(e.g., when an employee separates or is placed in a leave without pay
status to perform service in the uniformed services with restoration
rights or who has suffered an on-the-job injury with entitlement to
injury compensation under 5 U.S.C. chapter 81 and who later returns to
service.). Two agencies recommended clarifying whether the forfeiture
of unused compensatory time off occurs within 26 pay periods after it
has been earned or credited to their payroll account. We agree and have
revised Sec. 550.1407(a)(1) to clarify that an employee must use his
or her accrued compensatory time off within 26 pay periods after it is
earned or forfeit such compensatory time off.
One agency recommended giving agencies discretionary authority to
provide a time limit for an employee to use compensatory time off for
travel in the same way agencies are allowed to provide time limitations
for the use of other compensatory time off. Another agency recommended
establishing a specific date for using earned compensatory time off for
travel. A union recommended an employee be allowed to use his or her
earned compensatory time off for travel from the date earned until the
end of the next leave year. Two individuals expressed concerns that
agencies would not allow their employees to use their earned
compensatory time for travel within 26 pay periods. One union and an
individual recommended establishing a longer period of time, such as 52
pay periods, before requiring forfeiture of compensatory time off for
travel. Several commenters recommended providing agencies discretionary
authority to extend the time limit for using earned compensatory time
off for travel in emergency situations or when employees are required
to complete mission-critical assignments.
While the use of compensatory time off for travel is subject to
agency work demands, we believe 26 pay periods is a sufficient amount
of time for most employees to use their earned compensatory time off.
However, we believe exceptions may be warranted in exceptional
situations, for example, during emergency situations, to complete
mission-critical assignments, or when employees are deployed to perform
work directly related to a military operation. Therefore, we have added
a new paragraph (e) to Sec. 550.1407 to permit an authorized agency
official, at his or her sole and exclusive discretion, to extend the
time limit for using earned compensatory time off for travel if an
employee's failure to use the compensatory time off within 26 pay
periods is due to an exigency of the service beyond the employee's
control.
Section 550.1407(a)(2) extends the period for using earned
compensatory time off for travel for an employee who separates from
Federal service or is placed in a leave without pay status to perform
service in the uniformed services with restoration rights or who has
suffered an on-the-job injury with entitlement to injury compensation
under 5 U.S.C. chapter 81 and who later returns to service in the same
(or successor) agency. In these circumstances, the employee must use
his or her earned compensatory time off by the end of the 26th pay
period following the pay period in which the employee returns to duty.
One agency
[[Page 19098]]
objected to allowing the 26 pay periods to start over from the
beginning upon an employee's return to duty. We believe it is
reasonable to provide an employee, under these circumstances, a full 26
pay periods following his or her return to duty within which to use
earned compensatory time off for travel.
An agency recommended allowing agencies to consider unused
compensatory time off when determining an employee's separation date.
We are not adopting this recommendation. An agency has the authority
under Sec. 550.1406(a) to approve or disapprove an employee's request
to use his or her accrued compensatory time off in accordance with
agency-established policies and procedures.
Two individuals objected to the provision in Sec. 550.1408 which
prohibits an individual from receiving payment under any circumstances
for any unused compensatory time off for travel that he or she earned.
However, the law explicitly prohibits payment for unused compensatory
time off. (See 5 U.S.C. 5550b(b).)
E.O. 12866, Regulatory Review
The Office of Management and Budget has reviewed this rule in
accordance with E.O. 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that these regulations will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because they
will apply only to Federal agencies and employees.
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 550
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Government
employees, Wages.
Office of Personnel Management.
Linda M. Springer,
Director.
0
Accordingly, the interim rule amending 5 CFR part 550, which was
published at 70 FR 3855 on January 27, 2005, is adopted as final with
the following changes:
PART 550--PAY ADMINISTRATION (GENERAL)
0
1. The authority citation for part 550 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5304 note, 5305 note, 5541(2)(iv),
5545a(h)(2)(B) and (i), 5547(b) and (c), 5548, and 6101(c); sections
407 and 2316, Pub. L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681-101 and 2681-828 (5
U.S.C. 5545a); E.O. 12748, 3 CFR, 1992 Comp., p. 316.
Subpart N--Compensatory Time Off for Travel
0
2. Revise the first sentence of Sec. 550.1401 to read as follows:
Sec. 550.1401 Purpose.
This subpart contains OPM regulations implementing 5 U.S.C. 5550b,
which establishes a separate type of compensatory time off. * * *
0
3. In Sec. 550.1403, add the definitions of accrued compensatory time
off and authorized agency official and revise the definition of travel
to read as follows:
Sec. 550.1403 Definitions.
* * * * *
Accrued compensatory time off means the compensatory time off
earned by an employee that has not been used or forfeited.
Authorized agency official means the head of the agency or an
official who is authorized to act for the head of the agency in the
matter concerned.
* * * * *
Travel means officially authorized travel--i.e., travel for work
purposes that is approved by an authorized agency official or otherwise
authorized under established agency policies. Time spent traveling in
connection with union activities is excluded.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 550.1404, revise paragraph (b)(1), remove paragraph (b)(2),
redesignate paragraph (b)(3) as paragraph (b)(2), revise the first
sentence of paragraph (c)(2), and add paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 550.1404 Creditable travel time.
* * * * *
(b)(1) Travel status. Time in a travel status includes the time an
employee actually spends traveling between the official duty station
and a temporary duty station, or between two temporary duty stations,
and the usual waiting time that precedes or interrupts such travel,
subject to the exclusion specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section
and the requirements in paragraph (c), (d) and (e) of this section.
Time spent at a temporary duty station between arrival and departure is
not time in a travel status. Time in a travel status ends when the
employee arrives at the temporary duty worksite or his or her lodging
in the temporary duty station, wherever the employee arrives first.
Time in a travel status resumes when an employee departs from the
temporary duty worksite or his or her lodging in the temporary duty
station, from whichever the employee departs last. Travel time in
connection with an employee's permanent change of station is not time
in a travel status. Determinations regarding what is creditable as
``usual waiting time'' are within the sole and exclusive discretion of
the employing agency.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) In the case of an employee who is offered one mode of
transportation and who is permitted to use an alternative mode of
transportation, or who travels at a time or by a route other than that
selected by the agency, the agency must determine the estimated amount
of time in a travel status the employee would have had if the employee
had used the mode of transportation offered by the agency or traveled
at the time or by the route selected by the agency. * * *
* * * * *
(e) Travel involving two or more time zones. When an employee's
travel involves two or more time zones, the time zone from the point of
first departure must be used to determine how many hours the employee
actually spent in a travel status for the purpose of accruing
compensatory time off.
0
5. In Sec. 550.1405, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 550.1405 Crediting compensatory time off.
* * * * *
(b) An employee must comply with his or her agency's procedures for
requesting credit of compensatory time off under this section.
Employees must file such requests within the time period required by
the agency. An employee's request for credit of compensatory time off
for travel may be denied if the request is not filed within the time
period required by the agency.
0
6. In Sec. 550.1406, revise the section heading and paragraph (b) to
read as follows:
Sec. 550.1406 Use of accrued compensatory time off.
* * * * *
(b) Compensatory time off may be used when the employee is granted
time off from his or her scheduled tour of duty established for leave
purposes. An employee must use earned compensatory time off under this
subpart in increments of one-tenth of an hour (6 minutes) or one-
quarter of an hour (15 minutes). Agencies must charge compensatory time
off in the chronological order in which it was earned, with
compensatory time off earned first being charged first.
0
7. In Sec. 550.1407, revise paragraph (a)(1) and add a new paragraph
(e) to read as follows:
[[Page 19099]]
Sec. 550.1407 Forfeiture of unused compensatory time off.
(a) After 26 pay periods. (1) Except as provided in paragraphs
(a)(2) and (e) of this section, an employee must use accrued
compensatory time off by the end of the 26th pay period after the pay
period during which it was earned. If an employee fails to use the
compensatory time off within 26 pay periods after it was earned, he or
she must forfeit such compensatory time off.
* * * * *
(e) Exception due to an exigency. If an employee fails to use his
or her compensatory time earned under Sec. 550.1404(a) by the end of
the 26th pay period after the pay period during which it was earned due
to an exigency of the service beyond the employee's control, an
authorized agency official, at his or her sole and exclusive
discretion, may extend the time limit for using such compensatory time
off for travel for up to an additional 26 pay periods.
[FR Doc. E7-7266 Filed 4-16-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325-39-P