95-2013. Prevailing Rate Systems; Special Wage Schedules for Supervisors of Negotiated Rate Bureau of Reclamation Employees  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 18 (Friday, January 27, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 5309-5312]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-2013]
    
    
    
    ========================================================================
    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. 60, No. 18 / Friday, January 27, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    [[Page 5309]]
    
    OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
    
    5 CFR Part 532
    
    RIN 3206-AG12
    
    
    Prevailing Rate Systems; Special Wage Schedules for Supervisors 
    of Negotiated Rate Bureau of Reclamation Employees
    
    AGENCY: Office of Personnel Management.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Office of Personnel Management is issuing a final rule to 
    establish special wage schedules for the supervisors of certain Bureau 
    of Reclamation, Department of the Interior, employees who negotiate 
    their wage rates.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: February 27, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Paul Shields, (202) 606-2848.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On September 7, 1994, at 59 FR 46201, the 
    Office of Personnel Management (OPM) published a proposed rule to 
    establish special wage schedules for the supervisors of certain Bureau 
    of Reclamation, Department of the Interior, employees who negotiate 
    their wage rates, with a 30-day comment period. During the comment 
    period, which ended October 7, 1994, OPM received comments from a local 
    union officer and six employees.
    
    Discussion of Comments
    
        1. The local union officer and two employees said they thought the 
    new special schedule system would be expensive and recommended that the 
    current process of linking the pay of supervisors with bargaining unit 
    rates of pay be continued or modified.
        We do not agree with these comments. This new special schedule 
    proposal was developed by the Bureau of Reclamation working in 
    partnership with the covered supervisors and reflects agreements 
    reached in those discussions. When the agency removed the supervisors 
    from the bargaining units in 1990, the only pay system available was 
    the Federal Wage System (FWS) under the provisions of title 5, United 
    States Code. The agency received authority to temporarily continue (as 
    an agency ``set-aside'' practice) the historical pay differentials at 
    each location, subject to the statutory pay limitations of the FWS. Pay 
    setting for these supervisors is complicated by the combined factors of 
    wage negotiations for bargaining unit employees, delays in those 
    negotiations, pay limitation statutes, and FWS locality pay rates. The 
    purpose of this special schedule is to eliminate, in the pay-setting 
    process for these supervisors, the dependence on negotiated rates for 
    the bargaining unit and the associated complications of delays in 
    negotiations.
        Based on the information currently available, the proposed special 
    schedule will not result in a significant increase in operating costs. 
    Under the new survey process, the special wage survey for supervisors 
    will be timed to coincide with the annual survey that is done for 
    bargaining unit employees. The surveys will be done at the same time 
    with many of the same firms being surveyed for both purposes. The 
    special wage survey committees and data collector personnel will be the 
    same, with a few additions for the supervisory survey.
        2. Several questions were raised about how special wage area 
    boundaries were set up. Special wage area boundaries were generally 
    established to correspond to the boundaries currently being used for 
    the wage surveys for bargaining unit employees. However, in some cases, 
    areas were consolidated either because of the desire to simplify the 
    survey and wage setting process, the geographic location of the Bureau 
    of Reclamation projects, the desire to permit use of the same survey 
    company in more than one project, or the similarity of the rates being 
    paid to the Bureau of Reclamation supervisors in consolidated areas.
        Three employees recommended that the survey area for the Hungry 
    Horse Project Office be extended to include Pend Oreille County, 
    Washington, which would include Boundary Dam, a facility of Seattle 
    City Light Company. As a city government facility, Boundary Dam does 
    not meet the statutory FWS requirement that only private industry 
    companies be surveyed. However, since Pend Oreille County is within the 
    survey area used for the bargaining unit employees, and the Bureau of 
    Reclamation is attempting to coordinate surveys for the supervisors 
    with those of the bargaining unit, we have added Pend Oreille County to 
    the Hungry Horse Project Office survey area. This will also facilitate 
    the process in the future should the local area survey committee need 
    to add private industry survey companies in that county.
        3. The local union officer and three employees commented on the 
    industries and companies to be included in the special surveys. The 
    union suggested that only unionized companies be surveyed. We do not 
    agree with this suggestion because under statutes and regulations, FWS 
    pay-setting is based on a determination of private industry prevailing 
    rates, regardless of union organization. The three employees expressed 
    concern that private industry electric utility and hydro-electric 
    companies would not be included in the surveys. No changes in the 
    regulation are needed. These industries are expressly included by the 
    regulation at Sec. 532.285(c)(1) (Standard Industrial Classification 
    Major Group 49--Electric, Gas, and Sanitary Services).
        4. Two employees expressed concern that the survey jobs being used 
    in the special surveys would not cover jobs in large hydro-electric 
    facilities with multi-crafts. We do not feel a change is necessary. 
    This special schedule process takes into account the number of crafts 
    supervised and the range of work supervised through application of the 
    classification criteria found in Factor 1 and Subfactor IIIA of the FWS 
    Job Grading Standard for Supervisors. These job aspects are covered by 
    Subfactor IIIA, Scope of Assigned Work Function and Organizational 
    Authority, which addresses aspects reflecting the variety of crafts and 
    the range of work. For example, at Level A-4, the scope and diversity 
    of work supervised is addressed. Similarly, one of the elements used in 
    distinguishing the difference among situations in Factor 1, Nature of 
    Supervisory Responsibility, is the number of levels of supervision 
    through which work activities are [[Page 5310]] controlled. More levels 
    of supervision tend to be associated with a greater number of crafts 
    supervised.
        One employee asked how the four levels for Supervisors I-IV fit 
    into the survey process. As explained in Sec. 532.285 (b) and (c)(3) of 
    the final regulation, survey jobs representing positions at up to four 
    levels will be tailored to correspond to the positions of each covered 
    supervisor in that area. They will be matched to private industry jobs 
    in each special wage area. Special schedule rates for each position 
    will be based on prevailing rates for that particular job in private 
    industry. The special survey and wage schedule for a given area 
    includes only those occupations and levels having employees in that 
    area. The regulation was not changed in this respect.
        5. An employee expressed concern that current supervisors would not 
    be adequately compensated for their experience upon conversion to the 
    new special schedule as compared to newly hired supervisors. The new 
    special schedule provides special consideration to current supervisors 
    in the first year of implementation. Under Sec. 532.285(f)(2), current 
    supervisors are placed in step 2 of the new special schedule, unless 
    their rate of pay exceeds step 2, in which case they will be placed in 
    step 3. Pay retention benefits will apply to any employee whose current 
    rate of pay exceeds step 3. New employees will enter at step 1 of the 
    grade, unless a higher rate is established in accordance with the 
    advanced in-hire rate procedure. The new special schedule provides 
    added compensation for the experience of current employees, and no 
    changes are necessary.
        6. Two employees recommended that the definition of compensation 
    measured in industry surveys be expanded to include other company 
    benefits, such as a company vehicle with gas provided to get to and 
    from work, paid insurance coverage, company housing, and company stock 
    purchase options. The regulation will not be modified in this regard. 
    Under FWS statutes and practices, surveyed wages do include certain 
    bonuses, incentive rates, and cost of living allowances. Surveying the 
    additional benefits suggested would require a change in the law.
        7. Finally, one employee commented that while the beginning month 
    of the survey for each special area is specified in the rule, 
    implementation or effective dates for the new schedules are not 
    specified. No change is necessary because, as with the regular FWS, 
    beginning dates for the special surveys are specified in the 
    regulation, and by statute (5 U.S.C. 5344(a)) increases in rates of pay 
    are effective not later than the first day of the first pay period 
    beginning on or after the 45th day following the date the survey is 
    ordered to be made.
    
    Other Changes
    
        The special schedule survey cycle in this rule has been changed 
    from 3 years to 2 years because it has been determined that the 3-year 
    proposal exceeded OPM's regulatory flexibility. The prevailing rate law 
    grants OPM great flexibility to establish special schedules that differ 
    from regular schedules in terms of wage area boundaries; industrial, 
    geographic, and occupational survey coverage; step rate structures; and 
    wage rate progressions. However, the regulatory flexibility to adjust 
    the normal 2-year survey cycle allows only for more frequent, not less 
    frequent full-scale surveys.
        In Sec. 532.285(f)(1), the reference to ``fiscal year 1995'' has 
    been deleted because this final rule will not be effective until well 
    into the fiscal year.
    
    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 affect only Federal agencies and employees.
    
    List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 532
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Freedom of information, 
    Government employees, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Wages.
    
    Office of Personnel Management.
    Lorraine A. Green,
    Deputy Director.
        Accordingly, OPM is amending 5 CFR part 532 as follows:
    
    PART 532--PREVAILING RATE SYSTEMS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 532 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5343, 5346; Sec. 532.707 also issued under 5 
    U.S.C. 552.
    
        2. Subpart B is amended by adding Sec. 532.285 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 532.285  Special wage schedules for supervisors of negotiated rate 
    Bureau of Reclamation employees.
    
        (a) The Department of the Interior shall establish and issue 
    special wage schedules for wage supervisors of negotiated rate wage 
    employees in the Bureau of Reclamation. These schedules shall be based 
    on annual special wage surveys conducted by the Bureau of Reclamation 
    in each special wage area. Survey jobs representing Bureau of 
    Reclamation positions at up to four levels will be matched to private 
    industry jobs in each special wage area. Special schedule rates for 
    each position will be based on prevailing rates for that particular job 
    in private industry.
        (b) Each supervisory job shall be described at one of four levels 
    corresponding to the four supervisory situations described in Factor I 
    and four levels of Subfactor IIIA of the FWS Job Grading Standard for 
    Supervisors. They shall be titled in accordance with regular FWS 
    practices, with the added designation of level I, II, III, or IV. The 
    special survey and wage schedule for a given special wage area includes 
    only those occupations and levels having employees in that area. For 
    each position on the special schedule, there shall be three step rates. 
    Step 2 is the prevailing rate as determined by the survey; step 1 is 96 
    percent of the prevailing rate; and step 3 is 104 percent of the 
    prevailing rate.
        (c) For each special wage area, the Bureau of Reclamation shall 
    designate and appoint a special wage survey committee, including a 
    chairperson and two other members (at least one of whom shall be a 
    supervisor paid from the special wage schedule), and one or more two-
    person data collection teams (each of which shall include at least one 
    supervisor paid from the special wage schedule). The local wage survey 
    committee shall determine the prevailing rate for each survey job as a 
    weighted average. Survey specifications are as follows for all surveys:
        (1) Tailored to the Bureau of Reclamation activities and types of 
    supervisory positions in the special wage area, private industry 
    companies to be surveyed shall be selected from among the following 
    Standard Industrial Classification Major Groups: 12 coal mining; 13 oil 
    and gas extraction; 14 mining and quarrying of nonmettalic minerals, 
    except fuels; 35 manufacturing industrial and commercial machinery and 
    computer equipment; 36 manufacturing electronic and other electrical 
    equipment and components, except computer equipment; 42 motor freight 
    transportation and warehousing; 48 communications; 49 electric, gas, 
    and sanitary services; and 76 miscellaneous repair services. No minimum 
    employment size is required for surveyed establishments.
        (2) Each local wage survey committee shall compile lists of all 
    companies in the survey area known to have potential job matches. For 
    the first survey, all companies on the list will be surveyed. 
    Subsequently, companies shall be removed from the survey list if they 
    [[Page 5311]] prove not to have job matches, and new companies will be 
    added if they are expected to have job matches. Survey data will be 
    shared with other local wage survey committees when the data from any 
    one company is applicable to more than one special wage area.
        (3) For each area, survey job descriptions shall be tailored to 
    correspond to the position of each covered supervisor in that area. 
    They will be described at one of four levels (I, II, III, or IV) 
    corresponding to the definitions of the four supervisory situations 
    described in Factor I and four levels of Subfactor IIIA of the FWS Job 
    Grading Standard for Supervisors. A description of the craft, trade, or 
    labor work supervised will be included in each supervisory survey job 
    description.
        (d) Special wage area boundaries shall be identical to the survey 
    areas covered by the special wage surveys. The areas of application in 
    which the special schedules will be paid are generally smaller than the 
    survey areas, reflecting actual Bureau of Reclamation worksites and the 
    often scattered location of surveyable private sector jobs. Special 
    wage schedules shall be established in the following areas:
    
    The Great Plains Region
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Montana: All counties except Lincoln, Sanders,Lake, Flathead, 
    Mineral, Missoula, Powell, Granite, and Ravalli
    Wyoming: All counties except Lincoln, Teton, sublette, Uinta, and 
    Sweetwater
    Colorado: All counties except Moffat, Rio Blanco, Garfield, Mesa, 
    Delta, Montrose, San Miguel, Ouray, Delores, San Juan, Montezuma, La 
    Plata, and Archuleta
    North Dakota: All counties
    South Dakota: All counties
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Montana: Broadwater, Jefferson,Lewis and Clark, Yellowstone, and 
    Bighorn Counties
    Wyoming: All counties except Lincoln, Teton, Sublette, Uinta, and 
    Sweetwater
    Colorado: Boulder, Chaffee, Clear Creek, Eagle, Fremont, Gilpin, 
    Grand, Lake, Larimer, Park, Pitkin, Pueblo, and Summitt
    Beginning month of survey: August
    
    The Mid-Pacific Region
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    California: Shasta, Sacramento, Butte, San Francisco, Merced, 
    Stanislaus
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    California: Shasta, Sacramento, Fresno, Alameda, Tehoma, Tuolumne, 
    Merced
    Beginning month of survey: October
    
    Green Springs Power Field Station
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Oregon: Jackson
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Oregon: Jackson
    Beginning month of survey: April
    
    Pacific NW. Region Drill Crew
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Montana: Flathead, Missoula
    Oregon: Lane, Bend, Medford, Umatilla, Multnomah
    Utah: Salt Lake
    Idaho: Ada, Canyon, Adams
    Washington: Spokane, Grant, Lincoln, Okanogan
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Oregon: Deschutes, Jackson, Umatilla
    Montana: Missoula
    Idaho: Ada
    Washington: Grant, Lincoln, Douglas, Okanogan, Yakima
    Beginning month of survey: April
    
    Snake River Area Office (Central Snake/Minidoka)
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Idaho: Ada, Caribou, Bingham, Bannock
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Idaho: Gem, Elmore, Bonneville, Minidoka, Boise, Valley, Power
    Beginning month of survey: April
    
    Hungry Horse Project Office
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Montana: Flathead, Missoula, Cascade, Sanders, Lake
    Idaho: Bonner
    Washington: Pend Oreille
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Montana: Flathead
    Beginning month of survey: March
    
    Grand Coulee Power Office (Grand Coulee Project Office)
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Oregon: Multnomah
    Washington: Spokane, King
    
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Washington: Grant, Douglas, Lincoln, Okanogan
    Beginning month of survey: April
    
    Upper Columbia Area Office (Yakima)
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Washington: King, Yakima
    Oregon: Multnomah
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Washington: Yakima
    Oregon: Umatilla
    Beginning Month of Survey: September
    
    Colorado River Storage Project Area
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Arizona: Apache, Coconino, Navajo
    Colorado: Moffat, Montrose, Routt, Gunnison, Rio Blanco, Mesa, 
    Garfield, Eagle, Delta, Pitkin, San Miguel, Delores, Montezuma, La 
    Plata, San Juan, Ouray, Archuleta, Hindale, Mineral
    Wyoming: Unita, Sweetwater, Carbon, Albany, Laramie, Goshen, Platte, 
    Niobrara, Converse, Natrona, Fremont, Sublette, Lincoln
    Utah: Beaver, Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Davis, Duchesne, 
    Emery, Garfield, Grand, Iron, Juab, Kane, Millard, Morgan, Piute, 
    Rich, Salt Lake, San Juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Summit, Tooele, Uintah, 
    Utah, Wasatch, Washington, Wayne, Weber
    
    Special Survey Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Arizona: Coconino
    Colorado: Montrose, Gunnison, Mesa
    Wyoming: Lincoln
    Utah: Daggett
    Beginning month of survey: March
    
    Elephant Butte Area
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    New Mexico: Grant, Hidalgo, Luna, Dona Ana, Otero, Eddy, Lea, 
    Roosevelt, Chaves, Lincoln, Sierra, Socorro, Catron, Cibola, 
    Valencia, Bernalillo, Torrance, Guadalupe, De Baca, Curry, Quay
    Texas: El Paso, Hudspeth, Culberson, Jeff Davis, Presido, Brewster, 
    Pecos, Reeves, Loving, Ward, Winkler
    Arizona: Apache, Greenlee, Graham, Cochise
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    New Mexico: Sierra
    Beginning month of survey: June
    
    Lower Colorado Dams Area
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Nevada: Clark
    California: Los Angeles
    Arizona: Maricopa
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Nevada: Clark
    California: San Bernardino
    Arizona: Mohave
    Beginning month of survey: August
    
    Yuma Projects Area
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    California: San Diego
    Arizona: Maricopa, Yuma
    
        (Note: Bureau of Reclamation may add other survey counties for 
    dredge operator supervisors because of the uniqueness of the 
    occupation and difficulty in finding job matches.)
    
    Special Wage Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Arizona: Yuma
    Beginning month of survey: November (Maintenance) and April 
    (Dredging)
    
    Bureau of Reclamation, Denver, CO, Area
    
    Special Wage Survey Area (Counties)
    
    Colorado: Jefferson, Denver, Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Larimer
    
    Special Wage Survey Area of Application (Counties)
    
    Colorado: Jefferson
    Beginning month of survey: February
    
        (e) These special schedule positions will be identified by pay plan 
    code XE, grade 00, and the Federal Wage System occupational codes will 
    be used. New employees shall be hired at step 1 of the 
    [[Page 5312]] position. With satisfactory or higher performance, 
    advancement between steps shall be automatic after 52 weeks of service.
        (f) (1) In the first year of implementation, all special areas will 
    have full-scale surveys.
        (2) Current employees shall be placed in step 2 of the new special 
    schedule, or, if their current rate of pay exceeds the rate for step 2, 
    they shall be placed in step 3. Pay retention shall apply to any 
    employee whose rate of basic pay would otherwise be reduced as a result 
    of placement in these new special wage schedules.
        (3) The waiting period for within-grade increases shall begin on 
    the employee's first day under the new special schedule.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-2013 Filed 1-26-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6325-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/27/1995
Published:
01/27/1995
Department:
Personnel Management Office
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-2013
Dates:
February 27, 1995.
Pages:
5309-5312 (4 pages)
RINs:
3206-AG12
PDF File:
95-2013.pdf
CFR: (1)
5 CFR 532.285