Reemployment Rights, 64859-64861 [E8-26009]
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64859
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 73, No. 212
Friday, October 31, 2008
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.
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 352
RIN 3206–AI19
Reemployment Rights
U.S. Office of Personnel
Management.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The U.S. Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) is issuing final
regulations on the detail and transfer of
Federal employees to international
organizations. The final regulation
eliminates the ‘‘equalization
allowance,’’ modernizes regulatory
language, and clarifies that the
Department of State is the delegated
authority to designate any organization
as an international organization.
DATES: This rule is effective on
December 1, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jacquelyn A. Carrington at (202) 606–
0960, FAX at (202) 606–2329, TDD at
(202) 418–3134, or e-mail at
jacquelyn.carrington@opm.gov.
On
October 2, 2007, OPM issued proposed
regulations in the Federal Register at 72
FR 56019 to make part 352, subpart C,
of title 5, Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR), consistent with section 3582(b) of
title 5, United States Code (U.S.C.). We
requested comments on the proposed
rule to be submitted by December 3,
2007.
Section 2504 of Public Law 105–277
amended 5 U.S.C. 3582 by eliminating
employee entitlement to be paid an
‘‘equalization allowance’’ upon return to
Federal service from a transfer to an
international organization. The
equalization allowance was a payment
equal to the difference between the pay,
allowances, post differential, and other
monetary benefits paid by the
ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with RULES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
13:44 Oct 30, 2008
Jkt 217001
international organization and the pay,
allowances, post differential, and other
monetary benefits that would have been
paid by the employing agency had the
employee been detailed to the
international organization. Because of
the amendment, an employee who
transferred, with the consent of the
employing agency, to an international
organization on or after October 21,
1998, is entitled, upon reemployment,
to only the rate of basic pay the
employee would have received had the
employee remained in the civil service.
We proposed removing section 352.310
to reflect this change.
We also proposed revising section
352.309 to make clear agency
responsibilities and employee
entitlements, and explain action
required to retain an employee’s
coverage under the retirement, health
benefits, and group life insurance
system when the employee transfers to
an international organization. No other
substantive changes were proposed in
this section.
Employees returning from detail or
transfer to an international organization
are not entitled to back pay for the time
they were absent from the employing
agency. However, such employees are
entitled to any promotions, position
upgrades, or other salary increases they
would have received, but for their
absence, retroactive to the date such
actions otherwise would have taken
effect.
Comments
The Office of Personnel Management
received comments from three agencies
and one individual.
One agency requested that we replace
the phrase ‘‘period of consent’’ used in
section 352.308(d)(2), with the word
‘‘period’’ and clarify the phrase ‘‘all
appropriate civil service employment
purposes’’ used in section 352.311(d).
We are adopting the agency’s
recommendation that the phrase
‘‘period of consent’’ should be replaced
with the word ‘‘period’’, and have
amended section 352.311(d)
accordingly. The phrase ‘‘all appropriate
civil service employment purposes’’
includes time in grade, tenure, service
computation dates, within grade
increases, etc.
Another agency suggested that OPM
clarify whether individuals serving on
term appointments are eligible for
details or transfers to international
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Frm 00001
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
organizations under this part. The law
does not exclude individuals serving on
term appointments from coverage.
Therefore, individuals serving on term
appointments are included under this
part. However, 5 U.S.C. 3582 excludes
individuals serving on temporary
appointments from coverage.
An individual asked OPM to revise
section 352.311(b) to include the
equalization allowance. OPM cannot
adopt this request because Congress
repealed this provision in Public Law
105–277.
One agency recommended OPM
amend section 352.314(b) by inserting
‘‘upon return’’ at the end of the
sentence. We are adopting the agency’s
recommendation that section 352.314(b)
should end with the word ‘‘return’’ and
have amended that section accordingly.
OPM received comments from
another Federal agency which went
beyond the scope of the proposed
amendments to the regulation. However,
OPM agrees that further information
may be helpful to agencies; therefore,
we will address these comments in
supplementary guidance. These
comments are as follows:
• How should an agency determine
the pay of an employee if the agency has
a pay-for-performance system where pay
is linked directly to performance?
• How does an agency make pay
actions effective as if the employee were
not absent?
• How does an agency evaluate an
employee detailed or transferred to an
international organization (IO) if the IO
does not have a systematic way of
evaluating the individual’s
performance?
• How does an agency determine
effective dates for career-ladder
promotions for individuals detailed or
transferred to an international
organization?
• When should position upgrades
occur, and should an employee be
downgraded upon return if the position
the employee held was downgraded in
the employee’s absence?
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that these regulations will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
because the regulations pertain only to
Federal employees and agencies.
E:\FR\FM\31OCR1.SGM
31OCR1
64860
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 212 / Friday, October 31, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements contained in this final rule
are currently approved by OMB under
3206–AI19. This final regulation does
not modify this approved collection.
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Review
This rule has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget in
accordance with Executive Order 12866.
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 352
Administrative practice and
procedure, Government employees,
Reemployment rights.
§ 352.306
Office of Personnel Management.
Michael W. Hager,
Acting Director.
Accordingly, OPM amends 5 CFR part
352 as follows:
■
PART 352—REEMPLOYMENT RIGHTS
Subpart C—Detail and Transfer of
Federal Employees to International
Organizations
1. The authority citation for part 352,
subpart C, continues to read:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 3584, E.O. 11552, 3
CFR, 1966–1970 Comp., p. 954; Section
352.313 also issued under 5 U.S.C. 7701, et
seq.
§ 352.303
■
■
International organizations
(a) An agency may detail or transfer
an employee under this subpart,
without prior approval, to an
organization which the Department of
State has designated as an international
organization.
(b) An agency may detail or transfer
an employee under this subpart to any
other public international organization
or international organization
preparatory commission only when the
Department of State agrees that the
organization concerned could be
designated as an international
organization covered by sections 3343
and 3581 of title 5, United States Code.
■ 4. Revise § 352.305 to read as follows:
ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with RULES
§ 352.305
Eligibility for detail.
An employee is eligible for detail to
an international organization with the
rights provided for in, and in
accordance with, section 3343 of title 5,
United States Code, and this subpart,
except the following:
(a) A Presidential appointee (other
than a postmaster, Foreign Service
VerDate Aug<31>2005
13:44 Oct 30, 2008
Length of details.
The total length of a detail or several
details combined must not exceed 5
consecutive years, except that when the
Secretary of State, on the
recommendation of the head of the
agency, determines it to be in the
national interest, the 5 years allowed for
details may be extended for up to an
additional 3 years. A detail or
combination of details and transfers
must not exceed 8 years in the aggregate
throughout an employee’s Federal
career.
■ 6. Revise § 352.308(d) to read as
follows:
§ 352.308
transfer.
Effecting employment by
*
[Removed]
2. Remove and reserve § 352.303.
3. Revise § 352.304 to read as follows:
§ 352.304
covered.
officer or a Foreign Service information
officer), regardless of whether the
appointment was made by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate.
(b) A person serving in the executive
branch in a confidential or policydetermining position excepted from the
competitive service under Schedule C of
part 213 of this chapter.
(c) A person serving under a noncareer, limited emergency, or limited
term appointment in the Senior
Executive Service (SES).
(d) A person serving under a
temporary appointment.
■ 5. Revise § 352.306 to read as follows:
Jkt 217001
*
*
*
*
(d) Recording requirement. The
agency must furnish the employee with
a leave statement, showing his or her
annual and sick leave balances at the
time of transfer. In addition, the
notification of personnel action effecting
the employee’s separation for transfer
must include:
(1) Identification of the international
organization to which the employee is
transferring,
(2) A clear statement of the period
during which the employee has
reemployment rights in the agency
under section 3582 of title 5, United
States Code, and this subpart, and
(3) The legal and regulatory
conditions for reemployment.
■ 7. Revise § 352.309 to read as follows:
§ 352.309 Retirement, health benefits, and
group life insurance.
(a) Agency action. An employee who
is transferred to an international
organization with the consent of the
employing agency is entitled to retain
coverage for retirement, health benefits,
and group life insurance purposes if he
or she so chooses. The period during
which coverage, rights, and benefits are
retained under this paragraph, during
employment with the international
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
organization, is deemed employment by
the United States. At the time an
employing Federal agency consents to
the transfer of an employee, the agency
must advise the employee in writing of
the employee’s right to continue
retirement, health benefits, and group
life insurance coverage, as applicable,
for the duration of the assignment or
transfer. The notice must explain the
conditions for continued coverage and
the employee’s obligations and
responsibilities with regard to
continued coverage. The notice must
also explain that, if the employee elects
to retain coverage, the agency will
continue to make the agency
contributions to the funds, and the
employee’s coverage will continue as
long as employee payments are
currently deposited in the respective
funds.
(b) Employee action. The employee
must acknowledge, in writing, receipt of
the notice and state whether or not he
or she wishes to retain coverage under
the retirement, health benefits, and
group life insurance systems or any of
them by continuing the required
employee payments. The employee
must make a written election to retain
benefits, as applicable, and make
arrangements for the required employee
payments. An employee who transfers
to an international organization is not
eligible to participate in the Thrift
Savings Plan (TSP) while employed by
the international organization even if he
or she elects to retain Federal retirement
coverage. However, upon
reemployment, an employee who
elected to retain Federal retirement
coverage while employed by the
international organization and has made
all deposits required for such coverage
may make contributions to the TSP
which he or she missed as a result of the
service with an international
organization, and receive make-up
agency contributions and lost earnings
on the agency contributions, as
provided under § 352.311(e).
(c) Agency responsibility. For
retirement and group life insurance
purposes, the employing agency is
responsible for determining the
applicable rate of pay in accordance
with the provisions of section 3583 of
title 5, United States Code. The agency
is also responsible for collecting,
accounting for, and depositing in the
respective funds all retirement, health
benefits, and group life insurance
employee payments required to be made
for the purpose of protecting the rights
of the employee so transferred; and for
accounting for and depositing in the
respective funds all agency
contributions. The agency must furnish
E:\FR\FM\31OCR1.SGM
31OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 212 / Friday, October 31, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
the employee with specific information
as to how, when, and where the
payments are to be submitted.
(d) Coverage. Employee payments are
considered to be currently deposited if
received by the agency before, during, or
within 3 months after the end of the pay
period covered by the deposit. If the
contributions are not currently
deposited, coverage terminates on the
last day of the pay period for which the
required contributions were currently
deposited, subject to a 31-day extension
of group life insurance and health
benefits coverage as provided in parts
870 and 890 of this chapter and to the
conversion benefits provided in parts
870 and 890 of this chapter. Coverage so
terminated may not be re-established
before the employee actually enters on
duty, on the first day in a pay status in
an agency. However, terminated
retirement, health benefits, and group
life insurance coverage must be
reinstated retroactively when, in the
judgment of OPM, the failure to make
the required current deposit was due to
circumstances beyond the employee’s
control and the required payments were
deposited at the first opportunity.
Coverage under a system other than the
Civil Service Retirement System must
be reinstated retroactively if the agency
which administers the retirement
system determines that the failure to
make the required current deposit was
due to circumstances beyond the control
of the employee and the required
payments were deposited at the first
opportunity.
§ 352.310
[Removed]
8. Remove and reserve § 352.310.
9. Revise § 352.311 through § 352.314
to read as follows:
■
■
ebenthall on PROD1PC60 with RULES
§ 352.311
Reemployment.
(a) An employee who transferred to an
international organization with the
consent of the employing agency is
entitled to be reemployed in his or her
former position, or one of like seniority,
status, and pay, within 30 days of
applying for reemployment if the
employee:
(1) Is separated, either voluntarily or
involuntarily, without cause, within the
term of employment with an
international organization; and
(2) Applies for reemployment with
the employing agency or its successor
no later than 90 days after separation
from the international organization.
(b) Pay upon reemployment will be
set at that to which the employee would
have been entitled had the employee
remained with the employing agency.
(c) When an employee’s
reemployment right is to a position in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
13:44 Oct 30, 2008
Jkt 217001
the SES, reemployment may be to any
position in the SES for which the
employee is qualified. The employee
must be returned at not less than the
SES rate of basic pay as determined
under 5 CFR part 534, subpart D, at
which the employee was being paid
immediately before transfer to the
international organization, or if pay has
been adjusted under § 352.314(c), at not
less than the adjusted pay level.
(d) The period of separation caused by
the employment of the employee with
the international organization and the
period necessary to effect reemployment
are creditable service for all appropriate
civil service employment purposes (e.g.,
tenure, service computation date,
retirement, time in grade). Employees,
upon return, are also entitled to
restoration of any sick leave.
(e) An employee who elected to retain
Federal retirement coverage while
employed by the international
organization and has made all deposits
required for such coverage may make
contributions to the TSP which he or
she missed as a result of the service
with the international organization, and
receive make-up agency contributions
and lost earnings on the agency
contributions, consistent with
applicable TSP requirements.
§ 352.312
When to apply.
An employee may apply for
reemployment, in writing, either before
or after separation from the
international organization. If the
employee applies before separation, the
30-day period prescribed in § 352.311
begins either with the date of the
application or 30 days before the
employee’s date of separation from the
international organization, whichever is
later. If the employee applies for
reemployment after separation, the
application must be received by the
employing agency no later than 90 days
after separation from the international
organization.
§ 352.313
appeal.
Failure to reemploy and right of
Frm 00003
issue a decision to the Merit Systems
Protection Board under the provisions
of the Board’s regulations.
(c) An employee may submit an
appeal, alleging that the agency has
failed to comply with any of the other
provisions of sections 3343 and 3581–
3584 of title 5, United States Code, or
of this part, to the Merit Systems
Protection Board under the provisions
of the Board’s regulations.
§ 352.314 Consideration for promotion and
pay increases.
(a) The employing agency must
consider an employee who is detailed or
transferred to an international
organization for all promotions for
which the employee would be
considered if not absent. A promotion
based on this consideration is effective
on the date it would have been effective
if the employee were not absent.
(b) When the position of an employee
who is absent on detail or transfer to an
international organization is upgraded
during the employee’s absence, the
employing agency must place the
employee in the upgraded position
upon return.
(c) The employing agency must
consider an employee who is detailed or
transferred to an international
organization from an ungraded pay
system for all pay increases for which
the employee would have been
considered if not absent. An increase is
effective on the date it would have been
effective if the employee were not
absent.
[FR Doc. E8–26009 Filed 10–30–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325–39–P
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 537
RIN 3206–AK51
Repayment of Student Loans
Office of Personnel
Management.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
(a) When an agency fails to reemploy
an employee within 30 days of receiving
the employee’s application, it must
notify the employee, in writing, of the
reasons and of the employee’s right to
appeal to the Merit Systems Protection
Board under the provisions of the
Board’s regulations. The agency must
comply with the provisions of § 1201.21
of this title.
(b) If the agency fails to reach and
issue a decision to the employee within
30 days from the date of the application
for reemployment, the employee is
entitled to appeal the agency’s failure to
PO 00000
64861
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
SUMMARY: The U.S. Office of Personnel
Management is issuing final regulations
to revise the rules governing the
authority to offer student loan
repayment benefits to Federal job
candidates or current Federal employees
when necessary to recruit or retain
highly qualified personnel. These
revisions include certain policy changes
and clarifications to assist agencies in
the administration of the Federal
student loan repayment program.
E:\FR\FM\31OCR1.SGM
31OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 212 (Friday, October 31, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 64859-64861]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-26009]
========================================================================
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. 73, No. 212 / Friday, October 31, 2008 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 64859]]
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 352
RIN 3206-AI19
Reemployment Rights
AGENCY: U.S. Office of Personnel Management.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is issuing final
regulations on the detail and transfer of Federal employees to
international organizations. The final regulation eliminates the
``equalization allowance,'' modernizes regulatory language, and
clarifies that the Department of State is the delegated authority to
designate any organization as an international organization.
DATES: This rule is effective on December 1, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jacquelyn A. Carrington at (202) 606-
0960, FAX at (202) 606-2329, TDD at (202) 418-3134, or e-mail at
jacquelyn.carrington@opm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On October 2, 2007, OPM issued proposed
regulations in the Federal Register at 72 FR 56019 to make part 352,
subpart C, of title 5, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), consistent
with section 3582(b) of title 5, United States Code (U.S.C.). We
requested comments on the proposed rule to be submitted by December 3,
2007.
Section 2504 of Public Law 105-277 amended 5 U.S.C. 3582 by
eliminating employee entitlement to be paid an ``equalization
allowance'' upon return to Federal service from a transfer to an
international organization. The equalization allowance was a payment
equal to the difference between the pay, allowances, post differential,
and other monetary benefits paid by the international organization and
the pay, allowances, post differential, and other monetary benefits
that would have been paid by the employing agency had the employee been
detailed to the international organization. Because of the amendment,
an employee who transferred, with the consent of the employing agency,
to an international organization on or after October 21, 1998, is
entitled, upon reemployment, to only the rate of basic pay the employee
would have received had the employee remained in the civil service. We
proposed removing section 352.310 to reflect this change.
We also proposed revising section 352.309 to make clear agency
responsibilities and employee entitlements, and explain action required
to retain an employee's coverage under the retirement, health benefits,
and group life insurance system when the employee transfers to an
international organization. No other substantive changes were proposed
in this section.
Employees returning from detail or transfer to an international
organization are not entitled to back pay for the time they were absent
from the employing agency. However, such employees are entitled to any
promotions, position upgrades, or other salary increases they would
have received, but for their absence, retroactive to the date such
actions otherwise would have taken effect.
Comments
The Office of Personnel Management received comments from three
agencies and one individual.
One agency requested that we replace the phrase ``period of
consent'' used in section 352.308(d)(2), with the word ``period'' and
clarify the phrase ``all appropriate civil service employment
purposes'' used in section 352.311(d). We are adopting the agency's
recommendation that the phrase ``period of consent'' should be replaced
with the word ``period'', and have amended section 352.311(d)
accordingly. The phrase ``all appropriate civil service employment
purposes'' includes time in grade, tenure, service computation dates,
within grade increases, etc.
Another agency suggested that OPM clarify whether individuals
serving on term appointments are eligible for details or transfers to
international organizations under this part. The law does not exclude
individuals serving on term appointments from coverage. Therefore,
individuals serving on term appointments are included under this part.
However, 5 U.S.C. 3582 excludes individuals serving on temporary
appointments from coverage.
An individual asked OPM to revise section 352.311(b) to include the
equalization allowance. OPM cannot adopt this request because Congress
repealed this provision in Public Law 105-277.
One agency recommended OPM amend section 352.314(b) by inserting
``upon return'' at the end of the sentence. We are adopting the
agency's recommendation that section 352.314(b) should end with the
word ``return'' and have amended that section accordingly.
OPM received comments from another Federal agency which went beyond
the scope of the proposed amendments to the regulation. However, OPM
agrees that further information may be helpful to agencies; therefore,
we will address these comments in supplementary guidance. These
comments are as follows:
How should an agency determine the pay of an employee if
the agency has a pay-for-performance system where pay is linked
directly to performance?
How does an agency make pay actions effective as if the
employee were not absent?
How does an agency evaluate an employee detailed or
transferred to an international organization (IO) if the IO does not
have a systematic way of evaluating the individual's performance?
How does an agency determine effective dates for career-
ladder promotions for individuals detailed or transferred to an
international organization?
When should position upgrades occur, and should an
employee be downgraded upon return if the position the employee held
was downgraded in the employee's absence?
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that these regulations will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because the
regulations pertain only to Federal employees and agencies.
[[Page 64860]]
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements contained in this final
rule are currently approved by OMB under 3206-AI19. This final
regulation does not modify this approved collection.
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Review
This rule has been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget
in accordance with Executive Order 12866.
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 352
Administrative practice and procedure, Government employees,
Reemployment rights.
Office of Personnel Management.
Michael W. Hager,
Acting Director.
0
Accordingly, OPM amends 5 CFR part 352 as follows:
PART 352--REEMPLOYMENT RIGHTS
Subpart C--Detail and Transfer of Federal Employees to
International Organizations
0
1. The authority citation for part 352, subpart C, continues to read:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 3584, E.O. 11552, 3 CFR, 1966-1970 Comp., p.
954; Section 352.313 also issued under 5 U.S.C. 7701, et seq.
Sec. 352.303 [Removed]
0
2. Remove and reserve Sec. 352.303.
0
3. Revise Sec. 352.304 to read as follows:
Sec. 352.304 International organizations covered.
(a) An agency may detail or transfer an employee under this
subpart, without prior approval, to an organization which the
Department of State has designated as an international organization.
(b) An agency may detail or transfer an employee under this subpart
to any other public international organization or international
organization preparatory commission only when the Department of State
agrees that the organization concerned could be designated as an
international organization covered by sections 3343 and 3581 of title
5, United States Code.
0
4. Revise Sec. 352.305 to read as follows:
Sec. 352.305 Eligibility for detail.
An employee is eligible for detail to an international organization
with the rights provided for in, and in accordance with, section 3343
of title 5, United States Code, and this subpart, except the following:
(a) A Presidential appointee (other than a postmaster, Foreign
Service officer or a Foreign Service information officer), regardless
of whether the appointment was made by and with the advice and consent
of the Senate.
(b) A person serving in the executive branch in a confidential or
policy-determining position excepted from the competitive service under
Schedule C of part 213 of this chapter.
(c) A person serving under a non-career, limited emergency, or
limited term appointment in the Senior Executive Service (SES).
(d) A person serving under a temporary appointment.
0
5. Revise Sec. 352.306 to read as follows:
Sec. 352.306 Length of details.
The total length of a detail or several details combined must not
exceed 5 consecutive years, except that when the Secretary of State, on
the recommendation of the head of the agency, determines it to be in
the national interest, the 5 years allowed for details may be extended
for up to an additional 3 years. A detail or combination of details and
transfers must not exceed 8 years in the aggregate throughout an
employee's Federal career.
0
6. Revise Sec. 352.308(d) to read as follows:
Sec. 352.308 Effecting employment by transfer.
* * * * *
(d) Recording requirement. The agency must furnish the employee
with a leave statement, showing his or her annual and sick leave
balances at the time of transfer. In addition, the notification of
personnel action effecting the employee's separation for transfer must
include:
(1) Identification of the international organization to which the
employee is transferring,
(2) A clear statement of the period during which the employee has
reemployment rights in the agency under section 3582 of title 5, United
States Code, and this subpart, and
(3) The legal and regulatory conditions for reemployment.
0
7. Revise Sec. 352.309 to read as follows:
Sec. 352.309 Retirement, health benefits, and group life insurance.
(a) Agency action. An employee who is transferred to an
international organization with the consent of the employing agency is
entitled to retain coverage for retirement, health benefits, and group
life insurance purposes if he or she so chooses. The period during
which coverage, rights, and benefits are retained under this paragraph,
during employment with the international organization, is deemed
employment by the United States. At the time an employing Federal
agency consents to the transfer of an employee, the agency must advise
the employee in writing of the employee's right to continue retirement,
health benefits, and group life insurance coverage, as applicable, for
the duration of the assignment or transfer. The notice must explain the
conditions for continued coverage and the employee's obligations and
responsibilities with regard to continued coverage. The notice must
also explain that, if the employee elects to retain coverage, the
agency will continue to make the agency contributions to the funds, and
the employee's coverage will continue as long as employee payments are
currently deposited in the respective funds.
(b) Employee action. The employee must acknowledge, in writing,
receipt of the notice and state whether or not he or she wishes to
retain coverage under the retirement, health benefits, and group life
insurance systems or any of them by continuing the required employee
payments. The employee must make a written election to retain benefits,
as applicable, and make arrangements for the required employee
payments. An employee who transfers to an international organization is
not eligible to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) while
employed by the international organization even if he or she elects to
retain Federal retirement coverage. However, upon reemployment, an
employee who elected to retain Federal retirement coverage while
employed by the international organization and has made all deposits
required for such coverage may make contributions to the TSP which he
or she missed as a result of the service with an international
organization, and receive make-up agency contributions and lost
earnings on the agency contributions, as provided under Sec.
352.311(e).
(c) Agency responsibility. For retirement and group life insurance
purposes, the employing agency is responsible for determining the
applicable rate of pay in accordance with the provisions of section
3583 of title 5, United States Code. The agency is also responsible for
collecting, accounting for, and depositing in the respective funds all
retirement, health benefits, and group life insurance employee payments
required to be made for the purpose of protecting the rights of the
employee so transferred; and for accounting for and depositing in the
respective funds all agency contributions. The agency must furnish
[[Page 64861]]
the employee with specific information as to how, when, and where the
payments are to be submitted.
(d) Coverage. Employee payments are considered to be currently
deposited if received by the agency before, during, or within 3 months
after the end of the pay period covered by the deposit. If the
contributions are not currently deposited, coverage terminates on the
last day of the pay period for which the required contributions were
currently deposited, subject to a 31-day extension of group life
insurance and health benefits coverage as provided in parts 870 and 890
of this chapter and to the conversion benefits provided in parts 870
and 890 of this chapter. Coverage so terminated may not be re-
established before the employee actually enters on duty, on the first
day in a pay status in an agency. However, terminated retirement,
health benefits, and group life insurance coverage must be reinstated
retroactively when, in the judgment of OPM, the failure to make the
required current deposit was due to circumstances beyond the employee's
control and the required payments were deposited at the first
opportunity. Coverage under a system other than the Civil Service
Retirement System must be reinstated retroactively if the agency which
administers the retirement system determines that the failure to make
the required current deposit was due to circumstances beyond the
control of the employee and the required payments were deposited at the
first opportunity.
Sec. 352.310 [Removed]
0
8. Remove and reserve Sec. 352.310.
0
9. Revise Sec. 352.311 through Sec. 352.314 to read as follows:
Sec. 352.311 Reemployment.
(a) An employee who transferred to an international organization
with the consent of the employing agency is entitled to be reemployed
in his or her former position, or one of like seniority, status, and
pay, within 30 days of applying for reemployment if the employee:
(1) Is separated, either voluntarily or involuntarily, without
cause, within the term of employment with an international
organization; and
(2) Applies for reemployment with the employing agency or its
successor no later than 90 days after separation from the international
organization.
(b) Pay upon reemployment will be set at that to which the employee
would have been entitled had the employee remained with the employing
agency.
(c) When an employee's reemployment right is to a position in the
SES, reemployment may be to any position in the SES for which the
employee is qualified. The employee must be returned at not less than
the SES rate of basic pay as determined under 5 CFR part 534, subpart
D, at which the employee was being paid immediately before transfer to
the international organization, or if pay has been adjusted under Sec.
352.314(c), at not less than the adjusted pay level.
(d) The period of separation caused by the employment of the
employee with the international organization and the period necessary
to effect reemployment are creditable service for all appropriate civil
service employment purposes (e.g., tenure, service computation date,
retirement, time in grade). Employees, upon return, are also entitled
to restoration of any sick leave.
(e) An employee who elected to retain Federal retirement coverage
while employed by the international organization and has made all
deposits required for such coverage may make contributions to the TSP
which he or she missed as a result of the service with the
international organization, and receive make-up agency contributions
and lost earnings on the agency contributions, consistent with
applicable TSP requirements.
Sec. 352.312 When to apply.
An employee may apply for reemployment, in writing, either before
or after separation from the international organization. If the
employee applies before separation, the 30-day period prescribed in
Sec. 352.311 begins either with the date of the application or 30 days
before the employee's date of separation from the international
organization, whichever is later. If the employee applies for
reemployment after separation, the application must be received by the
employing agency no later than 90 days after separation from the
international organization.
Sec. 352.313 Failure to reemploy and right of appeal.
(a) When an agency fails to reemploy an employee within 30 days of
receiving the employee's application, it must notify the employee, in
writing, of the reasons and of the employee's right to appeal to the
Merit Systems Protection Board under the provisions of the Board's
regulations. The agency must comply with the provisions of Sec.
1201.21 of this title.
(b) If the agency fails to reach and issue a decision to the
employee within 30 days from the date of the application for
reemployment, the employee is entitled to appeal the agency's failure
to issue a decision to the Merit Systems Protection Board under the
provisions of the Board's regulations.
(c) An employee may submit an appeal, alleging that the agency has
failed to comply with any of the other provisions of sections 3343 and
3581-3584 of title 5, United States Code, or of this part, to the Merit
Systems Protection Board under the provisions of the Board's
regulations.
Sec. 352.314 Consideration for promotion and pay increases.
(a) The employing agency must consider an employee who is detailed
or transferred to an international organization for all promotions for
which the employee would be considered if not absent. A promotion based
on this consideration is effective on the date it would have been
effective if the employee were not absent.
(b) When the position of an employee who is absent on detail or
transfer to an international organization is upgraded during the
employee's absence, the employing agency must place the employee in the
upgraded position upon return.
(c) The employing agency must consider an employee who is detailed
or transferred to an international organization from an ungraded pay
system for all pay increases for which the employee would have been
considered if not absent. An increase is effective on the date it would
have been effective if the employee were not absent.
[FR Doc. E8-26009 Filed 10-30-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325-39-P