People

Letter: Revolving background specialist announcements questioned

Agencies have announced, recruited and interviewed background specialists only to have the administration cancel the announcement and reopen.

People

Letter: Pay for performance is a 'zero-sum game'

Without more funds, the new system is a zero-sum game. If one person gets more someone else gets less! Just another beauty contest.

People

The Lectern: Working with career feds

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People

Letter: Collaboration suffers when performance pay objectives not well-established

The lack of a financial or profit motive in government makes pay for performance problematic because employees are not competing against another organization, so it tends to foster more internal competition.

People

Letter: Performance pay diminishes freedom, protection

Pay for performance eliminates protection from negative personnel actions by managers who can harass and fire employees who don't cooperate when asked to overlook policy violations. This is one of the most basic reasons government employees are needed.

People

Letter: Performance pay system needs more funding, restructuring

NSPS is constrained by funds available to award for performance, just like the demonstration projects of previous years. This forces supervisors to fit the actual performance and adjective grades of their employees into a "normal distribution model" to not give "too many" high marks.

People

Letter: Union, employees have little room to complain about pay increases

Given the reports earlier this month that AVERAGE pay increase for employees under the NSPS was in excess of 7 percent, I find it hard to understand the wailing, moaning and gnashing of teeth from government employees and their union representatives on this issue.

People

Letter: History repeats itself in pay- for-performance system

USDA tried the performance pay system in the 1980's; it was called the General Merit system. It failed because additional funding was not provided for true merit raises.

People

DHS handoff worries lawmakers

Department refuses to share presidential transition document with lawmakers.

People

VA to use IT to speed disability benefits

The Veterans Affairs Department plans to implement information technology and business process improvements recommended by IBM.

People

Buzz of the Week: 'Unique opportunity' lures Walker from GAO

Comptroller General David Walker will become president and chief executive officer of a new public-interest foundation launched by billionaire financier Peter Peterson.

People

Bush nominates new SBA IG

Carol Dillon Kissal has a solid senior-level finance and management background, according to SBA Administrator Steven Preston.

People

Bush to nominate new SBA IG

He also intends to nominate Joseph Benkert as assistant secretary of Defense for global security affairs.

People

OMB: Security clearance backlog will be under control this year

Clay Johnson predicts that most agencies will be able to significantly reduce the amount of older backlogged applications by September.

People

In search of contracting officers

Coalition initiative targets college students to relieve strain on acquisition workforce.

Modernization

Home is where the work is

Federal teleworkers navigate the ins and outs of life in a home office environment.

People

Circuit

Jump Start to civilian life; Comings and Goings; Security by the numbers

People

Comptroller general to leave GAO for foundation

David Walker, head of the Government Accountability Office, will become president and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation next month.

People

DOD, OPM said ready for security clearance reform

Officials say agencies will speed processes for clearances.

People

Report: Agencies need pipeline of new hires

Merit Systems Protection Board researchers say entry-level employees are the building blocks of federal workforce planning.