For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
November 30, 2004
Text of a Letter from the President to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate
Dear Mr. Speaker: (Dear Mr. President:)
I am transmitting an alternative plan for the locality pay increase
payable to civilian Federal employees covered by the General Schedule
(GS) and certain other pay systems in January 2005.
Under title 5, United States Code, civilian Federal employees
covered by the GS and certain other pay systems would receive a
two-part pay increase in January 2005: (1) a 2.5 percent
across-the-board increase in scheduled rates of basic pay derived from
Employment Cost Index data on changes in the wages and salaries of
private industry workers, and (2) a locality pay increase based on
Bureau of Labor Statistics' salary surveys of non-Federal employers in
each locality pay area, which would average about 10.6 percent for
eligible employees. Including increases for blue-collar and other
workers, the total Federal employee pay increase would cost about 11.2
percent of payroll in calendar year 2005. For Federal employees
covered by the GS locality pay system, the overall average pay increase
would be about 13.1 percent, far higher than the 1.5 percent total pay
increase I proposed in my Fiscal Year 2005 budget.
For the reasons described below, I have determined that it is
appropriate to exercise my statutory alternative plan authority to
limit the January 2005 GS locality pay increase.
A national emergency has existed since September 11, 2001, which
now includes Operation Enduring Freedom (in Afghanistan) and Operation
Iraqi Freedom. Full statutory civilian locality pay increases
averaging 10.6 percent in 2005 would divert resources from and
interfere with our Nations ability to fight the war on terror, with
respect to which a national emergency is in effect under the law. Such
increases would cost about $9.8 billion in fiscal year 2005 alone and
would build in later years.
Accordingly, I have determined that --
Under the authority of section 5304a of title 5, United States
Code,
the locality pay percentages authorized in 2004 shall remain in
effect in 2005.
Finally, the law requires that I include in this report an
assessment of the impact of my decision on the Government's ability to
recruit and retain well-qualified employees. This decision will not
materially affect our ability to continue to attract and retain a
quality Federal workforce. To the contrary, since the Congress has not
funded the cost of a pay raise in excess of the 1.5 percent increase I
proposed, agencies would have to absorb the additional cost and could
have to freeze hiring in order to pay the higher rates. Moreover, GS
quit rates are at an all-time low of 1.6 percent per year, well below
the overall average quit rate in private enterprise. Should the need
arise, the Government has many compensation tools, such as recruitment
bonuses, retention allowances and special salary rates, to maintain the
high quality workforce that serves our Nation so very well.
Sincerely,
GEORGE W. BUSH
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