Government Executive
Skip to Content
  • Exercise Your Privacy Rights
Special Report
The Internal Revenue Service began issuing RIFs on April 4
Workforce
Federal Workforce Reduction Tracker
Pay & Benefits
Retirement board finalizes new rule on how debt is calculated for some TSP loans
Updated
Management
Federal agencies can resume mass layoffs, Supreme Court rules
The freeze, which the president initially ordered on Jan. 20, the day he took office, prevents the hiring of civilian employees at federal agencies for either vacancies or new positions.
Workforce
Trump extends hiring freeze for 3 more months
Mark Robbins — former vice chairman and acting chairman of the Merit Systems Protection Board, on Feb. 6, 2019, when he was the only appointed person remaining on the board — with some backlogged case files. A public employees nonprofit is warning that the agency is once again headed toward a backlog in appeals.
Management
High case numbers could snarl federal employees who appeal their removals
sponsor content
Navigating the Priorities of a New Administration
Special Report
The Internal Revenue Service began issuing RIFs on April 4
Workforce
Federal Workforce Reduction Tracker
Pay & Benefits
Retirement board finalizes new rule on how debt is calculated for some TSP loans
Updated
Management
Federal agencies can resume mass layoffs, Supreme Court rules
The freeze, which the president initially ordered on Jan. 20, the day he took office, prevents the hiring of civilian employees at federal agencies for either vacancies or new positions.
Workforce
Trump extends hiring freeze for 3 more months
Mark Robbins — former vice chairman and acting chairman of the Merit Systems Protection Board, on Feb. 6, 2019, when he was the only appointed person remaining on the board — with some backlogged case files. A public employees nonprofit is warning that the agency is once again headed toward a backlog in appeals.
Management
High case numbers could snarl federal employees who appeal their removals
sponsor content
Navigating the Priorities of a New Administration
Government Executive
Government Executive
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • About
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise
  • News
  • Tech
  • Management
  • Pay & Benefits
  • Oversight
  • Workforce
  • Defense
  • Insights
  • Leadership Voices
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • About
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise
  • Exercise Your Privacy Rights
  • News
  • Management
  • Oversight
  • Defense
  • Tech
  • Pay & Benefits
  • Workforce
  • Insights
  • Leadership Voices
  • Trending
  • DOGE
  • RIFs
  • Schedule F
  • Budget
  • TSP
Federal Workforce Reduction Tracker

Retirement board finalizes new rule on how debt is calculated for some TSP loans

Federal agencies can resume mass layoffs, Supreme Court rules

Trump extends hiring freeze for 3 more months

High case numbers could snarl federal employees who appeal their removals

[SPONSORED] Navigating the Priorities of a New Administration

R.Iegosyn / Shutterstock.com

Get the latest pay and benefits news delivered to your inbox.

View Privacy Policy

Stay Connected

Featured eBooks
The State of the Federal Workforce 2025
AI Applications
2025 Top 100
Insights & Reports
From Paper to Pixels: Driving efficiency through digital forms modernization
Presented By Adobe
Download Now
Building a unified federal workplace at mission speed and scale
Presented By Atlassian
Download Now
Pay & Benefits

Paid Family Leave, Double Incentive Pay for a Stressful Job and More

A weekly roundup of pay and benefits news.

GovExec Staff

|
January 21, 2015
  • Pay & Benefits Watch
By GovExec Staff

The president’s annual State of the Union speech often addresses the role of government, broadly, and may even give a shout out to particular federal workers. But it rarely delves into specific federal pay and benefits issues, and this year was no exception. Obama did, however, make reference Tuesday night to one hot button proposal that would affect the federal workforce: paid family leave.

“Today, we're the only advanced country on Earth that doesn't guarantee paid sick leave or paid maternity leave to our workers,” Obama said.

He did not specifically mention civil servants, but they are among the workers who lack paid maternity leave. Last week Obama ordered agencies to change that, by advancing employees six weeks of paid sick time to care for newborn babies or ill family members. He asked lawmakers to pass a bill granting another six weeks of paid leave for the birth, adoption or foster placement of a child.

Of course, it’s unclear if Congress will cooperate. Past proposals to give feds paid parental leave haven’t gotten very far. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., has been offering bills along those lines since 2000; the House has passed the measure twice, but it has stalled in the Senate. Maloney plans to try again, and if her bill does become law with President Obama’s weight behind it, new federal parents would have a total of 12 weeks of paid leave. 

Obama on Tuesday night also praised the work of both military members and civilians abroad, but some lawmakers are not as enamored of Defense civilians. A group of Republicans has again unveiled a bill that would cut about 115,000 civilian jobs at the Pentagon. Senior executives wouldn’t be insulated from the cuts; the legislation would cap the number of top-level managers at 1,000 from fiscal 2022 through fiscal 2026. 

Troops likely have their own worries, with the Military Compensation and Retirement Modernization Commission due to make its recommendations to President Obama and Congress by Feb. 1. The report comes as Defense leaders have warned that growth in compensation is unsustainable.

That said, there are pockets within the military where generous pay has been deemed a necessity. Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James last week authorized a bump in incentive pay for drone pilots to decrease turnover that is resulting from long hours and stressful work. Bonus pay for these pilots will nearly double, jumping from $650 per month to $1,500 per month.

Meanwhile, a husband and wife who hatched a scheme to collect $4 million in Army recruiting bonuses remain employed by the Defense Department, according to Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. The couple is said to have set up a bogus website to collect the names of people who likely would have joined the Army anyway. The names netted a $2,000 bonus per recruit. The practice may have been sleazy, but it was legal, a Defense official told McCaskill. The senator still wants the department to take a “hard look” at the perpetrators, though, and she asked for more safeguards to protect against future recruiting schemes.

(Image via R.Iegosyn / Shutterstock.com)

Share This:

NEXT STORY: Sanders: Obama Won't Put Social Security Cuts in Budget

President Bill Clinton looks on as Vice President Al Gore presents his National Performance Review. The two are standing among piles of government regulations.
Management
Reinventing government: Reflections 30 years later
Outgoing NTEU President Tony Reardon said he believes federal employee unions learned a lot from the Trump era.
Workforce
Retiring NTEU President Reflects on 3 Decades in Organized Labor
Management
'Long, Long Overdue': An Oral History of the GPRA
Members and supporters of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) participate in a "Stand Up, Stand In" protest in the Hart Senate Office Building atrium in Washington, D.C., as part of the 2020 Legislative and Grassroots Mobilization Conference.
Workforce
State of the Unions: A New Normal
Government Executive started as a print magazine in 1969 and has been a digital publication since 1996.
Oversight
What I Learned Covering Government for 34 Years
sponsor content
FedRAMP approved, mission-ready
President Bill Clinton looks on as Vice President Al Gore presents his National Performance Review. The two are standing among piles of government regulations.
Management
Reinventing government: Reflections 30 years later
Outgoing NTEU President Tony Reardon said he believes federal employee unions learned a lot from the Trump era.
Workforce
Retiring NTEU President Reflects on 3 Decades in Organized Labor
Management
'Long, Long Overdue': An Oral History of the GPRA
Members and supporters of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) participate in a "Stand Up, Stand In" protest in the Hart Senate Office Building atrium in Washington, D.C., as part of the 2020 Legislative and Grassroots Mobilization Conference.
Workforce
State of the Unions: A New Normal
Government Executive started as a print magazine in 1969 and has been a digital publication since 1996.
Oversight
What I Learned Covering Government for 34 Years
sponsor content
FedRAMP approved, mission-ready
Government Executive
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Nextgov/FCW
  • Defense One
  • Route Fifty
  • Washington Technology
  • GovTribe
  • More
© 2025 by Government Media Executive Group LLC. All rights reserved.
Back to top
Almost There!

Help us tailor content specifically for you:

Thank you!

Thank you for subscribing! Please check out our other newsletter offerings on our Newsletter page.

Get federal business news in your inbox. Sign up for Govexec Today
Privacy Policy
Almost There! Help us tailor content specifically for you:
Privacy Policy