95-21571. Restoration to Duty From Uniformed Service or Compensable Injury  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 170 (Friday, September 1, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 45650-45658]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-21571]
    
    
    
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    OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
    5 CFR Parts 353, 870, and 890
    
    RIN 3206-AG02
    
    
    Restoration to Duty From Uniformed Service or Compensable Injury
    
    AGENCY: Office of Personnel Management.
    
    ACTION: Interim regulations with request for written comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is issuing interim 
    regulations on the restoration rights of Federal employees who leave 
    their employment to perform duty with the uniformed services. These 
    regulations implement the Uniformed Services Employment and 
    Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (USERRA), Public Law 103-353, which was 
    enacted into law on October 13, 1994. The new law revises and 
    restructures the Veteran's Reemployment Rights law (codified in chapter 
    43 of title 38, United States Code), which governs the restoration 
    rights of employees who perform military duty. USERRA clarifies, 
    expands, and strengthens the rights and benefits of applicants and 
    employees, alters the appeal procedures available to Federal employees, 
    and, for the first time, provides Federal employees Department of Labor 
    assistance in processing claims. USERRA also requires OPM to place 
    certain returning employees when their former agencies determine that 
    it is ``impossible or unreasonable'' to reemploy them.
        Although the sections have been renumbered, and in some cases 
    renamed, there is no substantive change in the regulations governing 
    the restoration rights of employees who sustain compensable injuries. 
    However, in Sec. 353.301(a), the word ``may'' has been changed to 
    ``must'' to make clear that an agency must place an employee who fully 
    recovers from a compensable injury within 1 year, even if it means 
    placing the person in a different location. Also, Sec. 353.301(d) makes 
    clear that partially recovered employees are entitled to restoration 
    rights only in the local commuting area, not agencywide. (This 
    provision was inadvertently omitted from the final regulations 
    published in the Federal Register on January 13, 1995, that 
    incorporated into the regulations various staffing provisions 
    previously found only in the Federal Personnel Manual.)
        These interim regulations also implement provisions that expand on 
    the coverage of the affected employees under the Federal Employees' 
    Group Life Insurance (FEGLI) Program and the Federal Employees Health 
    Benefits (FEHB) Program. Both the FEGLI and the FEHB regulations are 
    amended to show that employees who separate to perform military service 
    under the provisions of this Act are considered to be employees in 
    nonpay status. The FEHB regulations are further amended to show that 
    FEHB coverage may continue for up to 18 months after the employee 
    enters military service.
    
    DATES: Effective: September 1, 1995. Comments must be received on or 
    before November 30, 1995.
    
    ADDRESS: Send or deliver comments to: Leonard R. Klein, Associate 
    Director for Employment, U.S. Office of Personnel Management, 1900 E 
    Street, NW., Washington, DC 20415.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For part 353: Raleigh M. Neville, 
    (202) 606-
    
    [[Page 45651]]
    0830. For parts 870 and 890: Margaret Sears (202) 606-0004.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The job rights of employees who leave their 
    employment to perform military duty have been protected under the 
    Veterans' Reemployment Rights Act (chapter 43 of title 38, United 
    States Code) since 1940. However, this law had become a confusing 
    patchwork of statutory amendments, which, over the years, had been 
    interpreted by over one thousand different (and sometimes conflicting) 
    court decisions. It became increasingly difficult for employers and 
    employees to understand their respective rights and responsibilities.
        Thus, on October 13, 1994, President Clinton signed into law the 
    new Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 
    (USERRA), Pub. L. 103-353. The new law completely rewrites the existing 
    provisions of title 38, United States Code, governing the rights of 
    employees who perform military duty and makes many substantive changes 
    that will affect employees, agencies, and OPM.
        Among the important changes made by the new law are the following:
        --Coverage is broader. USERRA covers persons who perform duty in 
    the ``uniformed services.'' (Under the old law, coverage was limited to 
    the ``armed forces.'') It also covers all employees except those 
    serving in positions where there is ``no reasonable expectation that 
    employment will continue indefinitely or for a reasonable period.'' 
    (The old law specifically excluded temporary service.) The interim 
    regulations provide that all employees are covered. However, an 
    employee on a time-limited appointment who enters uniformed service 
    serves out any remaining unexpired portion of the appointment upon his 
    or her return.
        --Intelligence agencies are treated differently under the law. 
    Although employees in these agencies (CIA, FBI, NSA, etc.) have 
    substantially the same rights as other Federal employees under the law, 
    they are not subject to OPM's regulations and do not have the same 
    appeal rights as other employees.
        --There is a 5-year cumulative total on uniformed service. For the 
    first time, the law makes clear that it is intended to protect 
    ``noncareer'' service and establishes a 5-year cumulative total on 
    uniformed service. (Under the interpretations applied to the old law, a 
    Federal employee could be absent on military duty for up to 4 years at 
    a time and there was no cumulative limit.) However, there are important 
    exceptions to the 5-year limit. These include initial enlistments 
    lasting more than 5 years, periodic training duty, and involuntary 
    active duty extensions and recalls. The new law expressly provides that 
    an employee's job protections do not depend on the timing, frequency, 
    or duration of uniformed service.
        --Enhanced protections for disabled veterans. Agencies must make 
    reasonable efforts to accommodate the disability. Servicemembers 
    convalescing from injuries received during service now have up to 2 
    years to return to their jobs (as opposed to 1 year under the old law).
        --New skills training required for some veterans. As under the old 
    law, USERRA provides that returning servicemembers be reemployed in the 
    job they would have attained had they not been absent for military 
    service (the longstanding ``escalator'' principle). However, the new 
    law also requires that reasonable efforts be made (such as training or 
    retraining) that would enable returning servicemembers to refresh or 
    upgrade their skills so that they might qualify for reemployment.
        --The position to which the person has restoration rights is now 
    determined by how long the employee has been gone. If the period of 
    military duty is less than 91 days, the employee is entitled to the 
    position he or she would have attained had the absence not occurred. If 
    the military duty lasts more than 90 days, the person's entitlement is 
    essentially the same except that he or she may be placed in an 
    equivalent position. (Under the old law, restoration rights were based 
    largely on the kind of military duty performed, for example, active 
    duty, active duty for training, inactive duty, etc.)
        --Similarly, the length of time an employee has to report back for 
    duty following uniformed service is now determined by how long he or 
    she has been gone. If the absence was for less than 31 days, the 
    employee must return at the beginning of the next regularly scheduled 
    work period on the first full day after release from service, taking 
    account safe travel home plus an 8 hour rest period. For service of 
    more than 30 days but less than 181 days, the employee must submit an 
    application for restoration within 14 days of release from service. For 
    service of more than 180 days, an application for restoration must be 
    submitted within 90 days of release from service. Failure to return 
    within these time limits does not mean that restoration rights are 
    forfeited; it only means the agency can take whatever disciplinary 
    action it would normally take for unexcused absences. (Under the old 
    law, the length of time an employee had to apply for restoration was 
    determined by the type of military duty performed.)
        --Notice requirement. For the first time, the law requires that 
    servicemembers provide advance written or verbal notice to their 
    agencies for all military service. (Under the old law, notice was 
    required only for training duty.)
        --Appeal rights have changed. Federal employees and applicants with 
    complaints under the new law may now seek assistance from the 
    Department of Labor's Veterans' Employment and Training Service (VETS). 
    VETS will attempt to informally resolve any disputes with the agency 
    over military duty. If informal resolution fails, Labor will refer the 
    case to the Office of the Special Counsel which is authorized to 
    represent the employee before the Merit Systems Protection Board. 
    Alternatively, an employee may still elect to appeal directly to MSPB 
    and by-pass Labor and the Special Counsel.
        --Special placement provisions are mandated for certain returning 
    employees when their former agencies are unable to reemploy them. The 
    new law requires OPM to place in the executive branch the following 
    categories of employees when their former agencies determine that it is 
    ``impossible or unreasonable'' to reemploy them:
        (1) Executive branch employees whose agencies no longer exist and 
    the functions have not been transferred, or it is otherwise impossible 
    or unreasonable to reemploy the person;
        (2) Legislative and judicial branch employees;
        (3) National Guard technicians; and
        (4) Employees of the intelligence agencies.
        The interim regulations specify how this will be carried out.
        --Status while absent. While on duty with the uniformed services, 
    an employee is considered to be on a leave of absence (leave without 
    pay) unless the employee elects to use other leave.
        --Nondiscrimination. USERRA broadens the nondiscrimination 
    provisions of the old law and expressly forbids any discrimination in 
    employment or proportion because of uniformed service.
        --Enhanced health and pension plan coverage. Employees performing 
    military duty of more than 30 days may elect to continue their health 
    benefit coverage for up to 18 months. Also under USERRA, to receive 
    retirement credit for military service, employees under the Federal 
    Employees Retirement System (FERS) are required to pay only what they 
    would have paid had they not gone on military duty. 
    
    [[Page 45652]]
    USERRA also expands retirement coverage to include all full-time 
    National Guard duty if that duty interrupts creditable civilian service 
    and is followed by reemployment that occurs after August 1, 1990. (Only 
    National Guard service performed for the U.S. was covered under the old 
    law.)
        Under 38 U.S.C. 4316, employee benefits, other than health 
    benefits, continue for employees covered by this Act in the same way as 
    they do for other employees who are on leave without pay. Employees who 
    leave their jobs to enter the uniformed services are considered to be 
    employees on leave without pay so long as they meet the requirements 
    for reemployment under this Act. Under the Federal Employees' Group 
    Life Insurance (FEGLI) Program, employees may continue their life 
    insurance coverage for up to 12 months in nonpay status at no cost to 
    the employee. Therefore, the interim regulations amend 5 CFR 870.502 to 
    show that an employee who separates from Federal service to enter the 
    uniformed services is considered to be an employee in nonpay status for 
    so long as the employee remains eligible for benefits under 38 U.S.C. 
    4316. As a result, life insurance coverage continues for up to one year 
    for employees who do not separate, but go on military furloughs (nonpay 
    status). For those who actually separate from their Federal jobs to 
    enter the uniformed services, life insurance coverage continues for up 
    to 12 months or until a date that is 90 days after the service with the 
    uniformed services ends, whichever is earlier.
        Under 38 U.S.C. 4317, employees who are covered by an employers' 
    group health plan and who enter the uniformed services may elect to 
    continue their coverage for up to 18 months after the date the absence 
    to serve in the uniformed services begins. If the service continues for 
    more than 30 days, the employee can be charged up to 102 percent of the 
    premium. The Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) law provides for 
    continued coverage for up to 12 months for employees in leave without 
    pay status. FEHB regulations provide that these employees may pay their 
    respective shares of the premium; however, an employee may choose to 
    incur a debt and postpone payment until he or she returns to pay and 
    duty status. The employing agency must pay the Government contribution 
    on a current basis. Therefore, for the first 12-months, employees 
    entitled to benefits under 38 U.S.C. 4317 are charged only the employee 
    share of the premium.
        The interim regulations amend Secs. 890.303 and 890.304 to provide 
    that the enrollment of an employee who enters on military furlough 
    (nonpay status) may continue an additional 6 months after the coverage 
    would otherwise stop due to the expiration of 365 days in nonpay status 
    if the employee's eligibility for benefits under 38 U.S.C. 4317 
    continues. The enrollment of an employee who separates to enter the 
    uniformed services may continue for up to 18 months if the employee's 
    eligibility for benefits under 38 U.S.C. 4317 continues. (Eligibility 
    for benefits under 38 U.S.C. 4317 ends the earlier of 18 months after 
    the date the employee's absence due to service in the uniformed 
    services began or 90 days after the service ends.) Employees on 
    military furlough or in nonpay status to serve in the uniformed 
    services on the date of enactment of Pub. L. 103-353, October 13, 1994, 
    are also entitled to continued coverage under 38 U.S.C. 4317 for the 
    balance of the 18-month period after their absence to enter the 
    uniformed services began. An enrollment that had already terminated due 
    to the expiration of 365 days in nonpay status may be reinstated for 
    the balance of the 18-month period.
        The interim regulations also amend 5 CFR 890.502(g) to provide that 
    employees whose enrollment continues beyond 12 months in nonpay status 
    because of their eligibility for benefits under 38 U.S.C. 4317 must pay 
    102 percent of the premium (the employee share plus the Government 
    share, plus 2 percent of the total). In addition, the interim 
    regulations amend the provision for waiving the employee share of the 
    health benefits premium for employees who enter the uniformed services 
    in support of Operations Desert Shield and/or Desert Storm by limiting 
    its application to those who enter before the effective date of these 
    interim regulations.
        --Enhanced thrift savings plan coverage. The new law allows 
    employees to make up contributions to the thrift savings plan missed 
    because of military duty. Under the old law, employees who went on 
    military duty were ineligible to make contributions to the thrift 
    savings plan. (The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board is 
    issuing regulations on this aspect of the law.)
        --Effective date. The new law applies to restorations effected on 
    or after December 12, 1994.
    
    Waiver of Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    
        Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B), I find that good cause exists 
    for waiving the general notice of proposed rulemaking. Specifically, 
    the law which these regulations implement was enacted in October 1994 
    and became fully effective as of December 12, 1994.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        I certify that this regulation will not have a significant impact 
    on a substantial number of small entities because it pertains only to 
    Federal employees and agencies.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    5 CFR Part 353
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Government employees.
    5 CFR Part 870
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Government employees, 
    Hostages, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Life insurance, Retirement.
    
    5 CFR Part 890
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Government employees, Health 
    facilities, Health insurance, Health professions, Hostages, Iraq, 
    Kuwait, Lebanon, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Retirement.
    
    Office of Personnel Management,
    James B. King,
    Director.
        Accordingly, OPM is amending parts 353, 870, and 890 as follows:
        1. Part 353 is revised to read as follows:
    
    PART 353--RESTORATION TO DUTY FROM UNIFORMED SERVICE OR COMPENSABLE 
    INJURY
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
    Sec.
    353.101  Scope.
    353.102  Definitions.
    353.103  Persons covered.
    353.104  Notification of rights and obligations.
    353.105  Maintenance of records.
    353.106  Personnel actions during employee's absence.
    353.107  Service credit upon reemployment.
    353.108  Effect of performance and conduct on restoration rights.
    353.109  Transfer of function to another agency.
    353.110  OPM placement assistance.
    
    Subpart B--Uniformed Service
    
    353.201  Introduction.
    353.202  Discrimination and acts of reprisal prohibited.
    353.203  Length of service.
    353.204  Notice to employer.
    353.205  Return to duty and application for reemployment.
    353.206  Documentation upon return.
    353.207  Position to which restored.
    
    [[Page 45653]]
    
    353.208  Use of paid leave during uniformed service.
    353.209  Retention protections.
    353.210  Department of Labor assistance to applicants and employees.
    353.211  Appeal rights.
    
    Subpart C--Compensable Injury
    
    353.301  Restoration rights.
    353.302  Retention protections.
    353.303  Restoration rights of TAPER employees.
    353.304  Appeals to the Merit Systems Protection Board.
    
        Authority: 38 U.S.C. 4301 et. seq., and 5 U.S.C. 8151.
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
    
    Sec. 353.101  Scope.
    
        The rights and obligations of employees and agencies in connection 
    with leaves of absence or restoration to duty following uniformed 
    service under 38 U.S.C. 4301 et. seq., and restoration under 5 U.S.C. 
    8151 for employees who sustain compensable injuries, are subject to the 
    provisions of this part. Subpart A covers those provisions that are 
    common to both of the above groups of employees. Subpart B deals with 
    provisions that apply just to uniformed service and subpart C covers 
    provisions that pertain just to injured employees.
    
    
    Sec. 353.102  Definitions.
    
        In this part:
        Agency means.
        (1) With respect to restoration following a compensable injury, any 
    department, independent establishment, agency, or corporation in the 
    executive branch, including the U.S. Postal Service and the Postal Rate 
    Commission, and any agency in the legislative or judicial branch; and
        (2) With respect to uniformed service, an executive agency as 
    defined in 5 U.S.C. 105 (other than an intelligence agency referred to 
    in 5 U.S.C. 2302(a)(2)(C)(ii), including the U.S. Postal Service and 
    Postal Rate Commission, a nonappropriated fund instrumentality of the 
    United States, or a military department as defined in 5 U.S.C. 102. In 
    the case of a National Guard technician employed under 32 U.S.C. 709, 
    the employing agency is the adjutant general of the State in which the 
    technician is employed.
        Fully recovered means compensation payments have been terminated on 
    the basis that the employee is able to perform all the duties of the 
    position he or she left or an equivalent one.
        Injury means a compensable injury sustained under the provisions of 
    5 U.S.C. chapter 81, subchapter 1, and includes, in addition to 
    accidental injury, a disease proximately caused by the employment.
        Leave of absence means military leave, annual leave, without pay 
    (LWOP), furlough, continuation of pay, or any combination of these.
        Military leave means paid leave provided to Reservists and members 
    of the National Guard under 5 U.S.C. 6323.
        Notice means any written or verbal notification of an obligation or 
    intention to perform service in the uniformed services provided to an 
    agency by the employee performing the service or by the uniformed 
    service in which the service is to be performed.
        Partially recovered means an injured employee, though not ready to 
    resume the full range of his or her regular duties, has recovered 
    sufficiently to return to part-time or light duty or to another 
    position with less demanding physical requirements. Ordinarily, it is 
    expected that a partially recovered employee will fully recover 
    eventually.
        Physically disqualified means that:
        (1)(i) For medical reasons the employee is unable to perform the 
    duties of the position formerly held or an equivalent one, or
        (ii) There is a medical reason to restrict the individual from some 
    or all essential duties because of possible incapacitation (for 
    example, a seizure) or because of risk of health impairment (such as 
    further exposure to a toxic substance for an individual who has already 
    shown the effects of such exposure).
        (2) The condition is considered permanent with little likelihood 
    for improvement or recovery.
        Reasonable efforts in the case of actions required by an agency for 
    a person returning from uniformed service means actions, including 
    training, that do not place an undue hardship on the agency.
        Service in the uniformed services means the performance of duty on 
    a voluntary or involuntary basis in a uniformed service under competent 
    authority and includes active duty, active duty for training, initial 
    active duty for training, inactive duty training, full-time National 
    Guard duty, and a period for which a person is absent from employment 
    for the purpose of examination to determine fitness to perform such 
    duty.
        Status means the particular attributes of a specific position. This 
    includes the rank or responsibility of the position, its duties, 
    working conditions, pay, tenure, and seniority.
        Undue hardship means actions taken by an agency requiring 
    significant difficulty or expense, when considered in light of--
        (1) The nature and cost of actions needed under this part;
        (2) The overall financial resources of the facility involved in 
    taking the action; the number of persons employed at the facility; the 
    effect on expenses and resources, or the impact otherwise of the action 
    on the operation of the facility; and
        (3) The overall size of the agency with respect to the number of 
    employees, the number, type, and location of its facilities and type of 
    operations, including composition, structure, and functions of the work 
    force.
        Uniformed services means the Armed Forces, the Army National Guard 
    and the Air National Guard when engaged in active duty for training, 
    inactive duty training, or full-time National Guard duty, the 
    Commissioned Corps of the Public Health Service, and any other category 
    of persons designated by the President in time of war or emergency.
    
    
    Sec. 353.103  Persons covered.
    
        (a) The provisions of this part pertaining to service in the 
    uniformed services cover each agency employee who enters into such 
    service. However, an employee serving under a time-limited appointment 
    completes any unexpired portion of his or her appointment upon return 
    from uniformed service.
        (b) The provisions of this part concerning employee injury cover a 
    civil officer or employee in any branch of the Government of the United 
    States, including an officer or employee of an instrumentally wholly 
    owned by the United States, who was separated or furloughed from an 
    appointment without time limitation, or from a temporary appointment 
    pending establishment of a register (TAPER) as a result of a 
    compensable injury; but do not include--
        (1) A commissioned officer of the Regular Corps of the Public 
    Health Service;
        (2) A commissioned officer of the Reserve Corps of the Public 
    Health Service on active duty; or
        (3) A commissioned officer of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
    Administration.
    
    
    Sec. 353.104  Notification of rights and obligations.
    
        When an agency separates, grants a leave of absence, restores or 
    fails to restore an employee because of uniformed service or 
    compensable injury, it shall notify the employee of his or her rights, 
    obligations, and benefits relating to Government employment, including 
    any appeal and grievance rights. However, regardless of notification, 
    an employee is still required to exercise due diligence in 
    
    [[Page 45654]]
    ascertaining his or her rights, and to seek reemployment within the 
    time limits provided by chapter 43 of title 38, United States Code, for 
    restoration after uniformed service, or as soon as he or she is able 
    after a compensable injury.
    
    
    Sec. 353.105  Maintenance of records.
    
        Each agency shall identify the position vacated by an employee who 
    is injured or leaves to enter uniformed service. It shall also maintain 
    the necessary records to ensure that all such employees are preserved 
    the rights and benefits granted by law and this part.
    
    
    Sec. 353.106  Personnel actions during employee's absence.
    
        (a) An employee absent because of service in the uniformed services 
    is to be carried on leave without pay unless the employee elects to use 
    other leave or freely and knowingly provides written notice of intent 
    not to return to a position of employment with the agency, in which 
    case the employee can be separated. (Note: A separation under this 
    provision affects only the employee's seniority while gone; it does not 
    affect his or her restoration rights.)
        (b) An employee absent because of compensable injury may be carried 
    on leave without pay or separated unless the employee elects to use 
    sick or annual leave.
        (c) Agency promotion plans must provide a mechanism by which 
    employees who are absent because of compensable injury or uniformed 
    service can be considered for promotion.
    
    
    Sec. 353.107  Service credit upon reemployment.
    
        Upon reemployment, an employee absent because of uniformed service 
    or compensable injury is generally entitled to be treated as though he 
    or she had never left. This means that a person who is reemployed 
    following uniformed service or full recovery from compensable injury 
    receives credit for the entire period of the absence for purposes of 
    rights and benefits based upon seniority and length of service, 
    including within-grade increases, career tenure, completion of 
    probation, leave rate accrual, and severance pay.
    
    
    Sec. 353.108  Effect of performance and conduct on restoration rights.
    
        The laws covered by this part do not permit an agency to circumvent 
    the protections afforded by other laws to employees who face the 
    involuntary loss of their positions. Thus, an employee may not be 
    denied restoration rights because of poor performance or conduct that 
    occurred prior to the employee's departure for compensable injury or 
    uniformed service. However, separation for cause that is substantially 
    unrelated to the injury or to the performance of uniformed service 
    negates restoration rights. Additionally, if during the period of 
    injury or uniformed service the employee's conduct is such that it 
    would disqualify him or her for employment under OPM or agency 
    regulations, restoration rights may be denied.
    
    
    Sec. 353.109  Transfer of function to another agency.
    
        If the function of an employee absent because of uniformed service 
    or compensable injury is transferred to another agency, and if the 
    employee would have been transferred with the function under part 351 
    of this chapter had he or she not been absent, the employee is entitled 
    to be placed in a position in the gaining agency that is equivalent to 
    the one he or she left. It shall also assume the obligation to restore 
    the employee in accordance with law and this part.
    
    
    Sec. 353.110  OPM placement assistance.
    
        (a) Employee returning from uniformed service. (1) OPM will offer 
    placement in the executive branch to the following categories of 
    employees upon notification by the agency and application by the 
    employee: (Such notification should be sent to the Associate Director 
    for Employment, OPM, 1900 E Street, NW., Washington, DC 20415.)
        (i) Executive branch employees (other than an employee of an 
    intelligence agency) when OPM determines that:
        (A) their agencies no longer exist and the functions have not been 
    transferred, or;
        (B) it is otherwise impossible or unreasonable for their former 
    agencies to place them;
        (ii) Legislative and judicial branch employees when their employers 
    determine that it is impossible or unreasonable to reemploy them;
        (iii) National Guard technicians when the Adjutant General of a 
    State determines that it is impossible or unreasonable to reemploy 
    them; and
        (iv) Employees of the intelligence agencies (defined in 5 U.S.C. 
    2302(a)(2)(C)(ii)) when their agencies determine that it is impossible 
    or unreasonable to reemploy them.
        (2) OPM will determine if a vacant position equivalent (in terms of 
    pay, grade, and status) to the one time the individual left exists, for 
    which the individual is qualified, in the commuting area in which he or 
    she was employed immediately before entering the uniformed services. If 
    such a vacancy exists, OPM will order the agency to place the 
    individual. If no such position is available, the individual may elect 
    to be placed in a lesser position in the commuting area, or OPM will 
    attempt to place the individual in an equivalent position in another 
    geographic location determined by OPM. If the individual declines an 
    offer of equivalent employment, he or she has no further restoration 
    rights.
        (b) Employee returning from compensable injury. OPM will provide 
    placement assistance to an employee with restoration rights in the 
    executive, legislative, or judicial branches who cannot be placed in 
    his or her former agency and who either has competitive status or is 
    eligible to acquire it under 5 U.S.C. 3304(C). If the employee's agency 
    is abolished and its functions are not transferred, or it is not 
    possible for the employee to be restored in his or her former agency, 
    OPM will provide placement assistance by enrolling the employee in 
    OPM's Interagency Placement Program (or its successor) under part 330 
    of this chapter. This paragraph does not apply to an employee serving 
    under a temporary appointment pending establishment of a register 
    (TAPER).
    
    Subpart B--Uniformed Service
    
    
    Sec. 353.201  Introduction.
    
        The Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 
    1994 revised and strengthened the existing Veterans' Reemployment 
    Rights law, made the Department of Labor responsible for investigating 
    employee complaints, required OPM to place certain returning employees 
    in other agencies, established a separate restoration rights program 
    for employees of the intelligence agencies, and altered the appeals 
    rights process. The new law applies to persons exercising restoration 
    rights on or after December 12, 1994.
    
    
    Sec. 353.202  Discrimination and acts of reprisal prohibited.
    
        A person who seeks or holds a position in the Executive branch may 
    not be denied hiring, retention in employment, or any other incident or 
    advantage of employment because of any application, membership, or 
    service in the uniformed services. Furthermore, an agency may not take 
    any reprisal against an employee for taking any action to enforce a 
    protection, assist or participate in an investigation, or exercise any 
    right provided for under chapter 43 of title 38, United States Code.
    
    [[Page 45655]]
    
    
    
    Sec. 353.203  Length of service.
    
        (a) Counting service after the effective date of USERRA (12/12/94). 
    To be entitled to restoration rights under this part, cumulative 
    service in the uniformed services while employed by the Federal 
    Government may not exceed 5 years. However, the 5-year period does not 
    include any service--
        (1) That is required beyond 5 years to complete an initial period 
    of obligated service;
        (2) During which the individual was unable to obtain orders 
    releasing him or her from service in the uniformed services before 
    expiration of the 5-year period, and such inability was through no 
    fault of the individual;
        (3) Performed as required pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 10147, under 32 
    U.S.C. 502(a) or 503, or to fulfill additional training requirements 
    determined and certified in writing by the Secretary of the military 
    department concerned to be necessary for professional development or 
    for completion of skill training or retraining;
        (4) Performed by a member of a uniformed service who is:
        (i) Ordered to or retained on active duty under sections 12301(a), 
    12301(g), 12302, 12304, 12305, or 688 of title 10, United States Code, 
    or under 14 U.S.C. 331, 332, 359, 360, 367, or 712;
        (ii) Ordered to or retrained on active duty (other than for 
    training) under any provision of law during a war or during a national 
    emergency declared by the President or the Congress;
        (iii) Ordered to active duty (other than for training) in support, 
    as determined by the Secretary of the military department concerned, of 
    an operational mission for which personnel have been ordered to active 
    duty under 10 U.S.C. 12304;
        (iv) Ordered to active duty in support, as determined by the 
    Secretary of the military department concerned, of a critical mission 
    or requirement of the uniformed services, or
        (iv) Called into Federal service as a member of the National Guard 
    under chapter 15 or under section 12406 of title 10, United States 
    Code.
        (b) Counting service prior to the effective date of USERRA. In 
    determining the 5-year total that may not be exceeded for purposes of 
    exercising restoration rights, service performed prior to December 12, 
    1994, is considered only to the extent that it would have counted under 
    the previous law (the Veterans' Reemployment Rights statute). For 
    example, the service of a National Guard technician who entered on an 
    Active Guard Reserve (AGR) tour under section 502(f) of title 32, 
    United States Code, was not counted toward the 4-year time limit under 
    the previous statute because it was specifically considered active duty 
    for training. However, title 32, section 502(f) AGR service is not 
    exempt from the cumulative time limits allowed under USERRA and service 
    after the effective date counts under USERRA rules. Thus, if a 
    technician was on a 32 U.S.C. 502(f) AGR tour on October 13, 1994, (the 
    date USERRA was signed into law), but exercised restoration rights 
    after December 11, 1994, (the date USERRA became fully effective), AGR 
    service prior to December 12 would not count in computing the 5-year 
    total, but all service beginning with that date would count.
        (c) Nature of Reserve service and resolving conflicts. An employee 
    who is a member of the Reserve or National Guard has a dual 
    obligation--to the military and to his or her employer. Given the 
    nature of the employee's service obligation, some conflict with job 
    demands is often unavoidable and a good-faith effort on the part of 
    both the employee and the agency is needed to minimize conflict and 
    resolve differences. Some accommodation may be necessary by both 
    parties. Most Reserve component members are required, as a minimum, to 
    participate in drills for 2 days each month and in 2 weeks of active 
    duty for training per year. But some members are required to 
    participate in longer or more frequent training tours. USERRA makes it 
    clear that the timing, frequency, duration, and nature of the duty 
    performed is not an issue so long as the employee gave proper notice, 
    and did not exceed the time limits specified. However, to the extent 
    that the employee has influence upon the timing, frequency, or duration 
    of such training or duty, he or she is expected to use that influence 
    to minimize the burden upon the agency. The employee is expected to 
    provide the agency with as much advance notice as possible whenever 
    military duty or training will interfere with civilian work. When a 
    conflict arises between the Reserve duty and the legitimate needs of 
    the employer, the agency may contact appropriate military authorities 
    to express concern. Where the request would require the employee to be 
    absent from work for an extended period, during times of acute need, or 
    when, in light of previous leaves, the requested leave is cumulatively 
    burdensome, the agency may contact the military commander of the 
    employee's military unit to determine if the military duty could be 
    rescheduled or performed by another member. If the military authorities 
    determine that the military duty cannot be rescheduled or cancelled, 
    the agency is required to permit the employee to perform his or her 
    military duty.
        (d) Mobilization authority. By law, members of the Selected Reserve 
    (a component of the Ready Reserve), can be called up under a 
    presidential order for purposes other than training for as long as 270 
    days. If the President declares a national emergency, the remainder of 
    the Ready Reserve--the Individual Ready Reserve and the Inactive 
    National Guard--may be called up. The Ready Reserve as a whole is 
    subject to as much as 24 consecutive months of active duty in a 
    national emergency declared by the President.
    
    
    Sec. 353.204  Notice to employer.
    
        To be entitled to restoration rights under this part, an employee 
    (or an appropriate officer of the uniformed service in which service is 
    to be performed) must give the employer advance written or verbal 
    notice of the service except that no notice is required if it is 
    precluded by military necessity or, under all relevant circumstances, 
    the giving of notice is otherwise impossible or unreasonable.
    
    
    Sec. 353.205  Return to duty and application for reemployment.
    
        Periods allowed for return to duty are based on the length of time 
    the person was performing service in the uniformed services, as 
    follows:
        (a) An employee whose uniformed service was for less than 31 days, 
    or who was absent for the purpose of an examination to determine 
    fitness for the uniformed services, is required to report back to work 
    not later than the beginning of the first regularly scheduled work day 
    on the first full calendar day following completion of the period of 
    service and the expiration of 8 hours after a period allowing for the 
    safe transportation of the employee from the place of service to the 
    employee's residence, or as soon as possible after the expiration of 
    the 8-hour period if reporting within the above period is impossible or 
    unreasonable through no fault of the employee.
        (b) If the service was for more than 30 but less than 181 days, the 
    employee must submit an application for reemployment with the agency 
    not later than 14 days after completing the period of service. (If 
    submitting the application is impossible or unreasonable through no 
    fault of the individual, it must be submitted the next full calendar 
    day when it becomes possible to do so.)
        (c) If the period of service was for more than 180 days, the 
    employee must submit an application for reemployment 
    
    [[Page 45656]]
    not later than 90 days after completing the period of service.
        (d) An employee who is hospitalized or convalescing from an injury 
    or illness incurred in, or aggravated during uniformed service is 
    required to report for duty at the end of the period that is necessary 
    for the person to recover, based on the length of service as discussed 
    in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section, except that the period 
    of recovery may not exceed 2 years (extended by the minimum time 
    required to accommodate circumstances beyond the employee's control 
    which make reporting within the period specified impossible or 
    unreasonable).
        (e) A person who does not report within the time limits specified 
    does not automatically forfeit restoration rights, but, rather, is 
    subject to whatever policy and disciplinary action the agency would 
    normally apply for a similar absence without authorization.
    
    
    Sec. 353.206  Documentation upon return.
    
        Upon request, a returning employee who was absent for more than 30 
    days, or was hospitalized or convalescing from an injury or illness 
    incurred in or aggravated during the performance of service in the 
    uniformed services, must provide the agency with documentation that 
    establishes the timeliness of the application for reemployment, and 
    length and character of service. If documentation is unavailable, the 
    agency must restore the employee until documentation becomes available.
    
    
    Sec. 353.207  Position to which restored.
    
        (a) Timing. An employee returning from the uniformed services 
    following an absence of more than 30 days is entitled to be restored as 
    soon as possible after making application, but in no event later than 
    30 days after receipt of the application by the agency.
        (b) Nondisabled. If the employee's uniformed service was for less 
    than 91 days, he or she must be employed in the position for which 
    qualified that he or she would have attained if continuously employed. 
    If not qualified for this position after reasonable efforts by the 
    agency to qualify the employee, he or she is entitled to be placed in 
    the position he or she left. For service of 91 days or more, the agency 
    has the option of placing the employee in a position of like seniority, 
    status, and pay. (Note: Upon reemployment, a term employee completes 
    the unexpired portion of his or her original appointment.) If 
    unqualified (for any reason other than disability incurred in or 
    aggravated during service in the uniformed services) after reasonable 
    efforts by the agency to qualify the employee for such position or the 
    position the employee left, he or she must be restored to any other 
    position of lesser status and pay for which qualified, with full 
    seniority.
        (c) Disabled. An employee with a disability incurred in or 
    aggravated during uniformed service and who, after reasonable efforts 
    by the agency to accommodate the disability, is entitled to be placed 
    in another position for which qualified that will provide the employee 
    with the same seniority, status, and pay, or the nearest approximation 
    consistent with the circumstances in each case. The agency is not 
    required to reemploy a disabled employee if, after making due efforts 
    to accommodate the disability, such reemployment would impose an undue 
    hardship on the agency.
        (d) Two or more persons entitled to restoration in the same 
    position. If two or more persons are entitled to restoration in the 
    same position, the one who left the position first has the prior right 
    to restoration in that position. The other employee(s) is entitled to 
    be placed in a position as described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section.
        (e) Relationship to an entitlement based on veterans' preference. 
    An employee's right to restoration under this part does not entitle the 
    person to retention, preference, or displacement rights over any person 
    with a superior claim based on veterans' preference.
    
    
    Sec. 353.208  Use of paid leave during uniformed service.
    
        An employee performing service with the uniformed services must be 
    6permitted, upon request, to use any accrued annual leave (or sick 
    leave, if appropriate), or military leave during such service. (Note, 
    however, that under 5 U.S.C. 6323, military leave cannot be used for 
    inactive duty, e.g., drills.)
    
    
    Sec. 353.209  Retention protections.
    
        (a) During uniformed service. An employee may not be demoted or 
    separated (other than military separation) while performing duty with 
    the uniformed services except for cause. (Reduction in force is not 
    considered ``for cause'' under this subpart.) He or she is not a 
    ``competing employee'' under Sec. 351.404 of this chapter. If the 
    employee's position is abolished during such absence, the agency must 
    reassign the employee to another position of like status, and pay.
        (b) Upon reemployment. Except in the case of an employee under 
    time-limited appointment who finishes out the unexpired portion of his 
    or her appointment upon reemployment, an employee reemployed under this 
    subpart may not be discharged, except for cause--
        (1) If the period of uniformed service was more than 180 days, 
    within 1 year; and
        (2) If the period of uniformed service was more than 30 days, but 
    less than 181 days, within 6 months.
    
    
    Sec. 353.210  Department of Labor assistance to applicants and 
    employees.
    
        USERRA requires the Department of Labor's Veterans' Employment and 
    Training Service (VETS) to provide employment and reemployment 
    assistance to any Federal employee or applicant who requests it. VETS 
    staff will attempt to informally resolve employment disputes brought to 
    them. If informal dispute resolution proves unsuccessful, VETS may ask 
    the Office of the Special Counsel to represent the individual in an 
    appeal before the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB).
    
    
    Sec. 353.211  Appeal rights.
    
        An individual who believes an agency has not complied with the 
    provisions of law and this part relating to the employment or 
    reemployment of the person by the agency may--
        (a) File a complaint with the Department of Labor, as noted in 
    Sec. 353.210, or
        (b) Appeal directly to MSPB if the individual chooses not to file a 
    complaint with the Department of Labor, or is informed by either Labor 
    or the Office of the Special Counsel that they will not pursue to the 
    case.
    
    Subpart C--Compensable Injury
    
    
    Sec. 353.301  Restoration rights.
    
        (a) Fully recovered within 1 year. An employee who fully recovers 
    from a compensable injury within 1 year from the date eligibility for 
    compensation began (or from the time compensable disability recurs if 
    the recurrence begins after the employee resumes regular full-time 
    employment with the United States), is entitled to be restored 
    immediately and unconditionally to his or her former position or an 
    equivalent one. Although these restoration rights are agencywide, the 
    employee's basic entitlement is to the former position or equivalent in 
    the local commuting area the employee left. If a suitable vacancy does 
    not exist, the employee is entitled to displace an employee occupying a 
    continuing position under temporary appointment or tenure group III. If 
    there is no such position in the local commuting area, the agency must 
    offer the employee a position (as described above) in another location. 
    This paragraph also applies when an injured employee accepts a lower-
    grade position 
    
    [[Page 45657]]
    in lieu of separation and subsequently fully recovers. A fully 
    recovered employee is expected to return to work immediately upon the 
    cessation of compensation.
        (b) Fully recovered after 1 year. An employee who separated because 
    of a compensable injury and whose full recovery takes longer than 1 
    year from the date eligibility for compensation began (or from the time 
    compensable disability recurs if the recurrence begins after the 
    injured employee resumes regular full-time employment with the United 
    States), is entitled to priority consideration, agencywide, for 
    restoration to the position he or she left or an equivalent one 
    provided he or she applies for reappointment within 30 days of the 
    cessation of compensation. Priority consideration is accorded by 
    entering the individual on the agency's reemployment priority list for 
    the competitive service or reemployment list for the excepted service. 
    If the individual cannot be placed in the former commuting area, he or 
    she is entitled to priority consideration for an equivalent position 
    elsewhere in the agency. (See parts 302 and 330 of this chapter for 
    more information on how this may be accomplished for the excepted and 
    competitive services, respectively.) This subpart also applies when an 
    injured employee accepts a lower-graded position in lieu of separation 
    and subsequently fully recovers.
        (c) Physically disqualified. An individual who is physically 
    disqualified for the former position or equivalent because of a 
    compensable injury, is entitled to be placed in another position for 
    which qualified that will provide the employee with the same status, 
    and pay, or the nearest approximation thereof, consistent with the 
    circumstances in each case. This right is agencywide and applies for a 
    period of 1 year from the date eligibility for compensation begins. 
    After 1 year, the individual is entitled to the rights accorded 
    individuals who fully or partially recover, as applicable.
        (d) Partially recovered. Agencies must make every effort to restore 
    in the local commuting area, according to the circumstances in each 
    case, an individual who has partially recovered from a compensable 
    injury and who is able to return to limited duty. At a minimum, this 
    would mean treating these employees substantially the same as other 
    handicapped individuals under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as 
    amended. (See 29 U.S.C. 791(b) and 794.) If the individual fully 
    recovers, he or she is entitled to be considered for the position held 
    at the time of injury, or an equivalent one. A partially recovered 
    employee is expected to seek reemployment as soon as he or she is able.
    Sec. 353.302  Retention protections.
    
        An injured employee enjoys no special protection in a reduction in 
    force. Separation by reduction in force or for cause while on 
    compensation means the individual has no restoration rights.
    
    
    Sec. 353.303   Restoration rights of TAPER employees.
    
        An employee serving in the competitive service under a temporary 
    appointment pending establishment of a register (TAPER) under 
    Sec. 316.201 of this chapter (other than an employee serving in a 
    position classified above GS-15), is entitled to be restored to the 
    position he or she left or an equivalent one in the same commuting 
    area.
    
    
    Sec. 353.304  Appeals to the Merit Systems Protection Board.
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, 
    an injured employee or former employee of an agency in the executive 
    branch (including the U.S. Postal Service and the Postal Rate 
    Commission) may appeal to the MSPB an agency's failure to restore, 
    improper restoration, or failure to return an employee following a 
    leave of absence. All appeals must be submitted in accordance with 
    MSPB's regulations.
        (b) An individual who fully recovers from a compensable injury more 
    than 1 year after compensation begins may appeal to MSPB as provided 
    for in parts 302 and 330 of this chapter for excepted and competitive 
    service employees, respectively.
        (c) An individual who is partially recovered from a compensable 
    injury may appeal to MSPB for a determination of whether the agency is 
    acting arbitrarily and capriciously in denying restoration. Upon 
    reemployment, a partially recovered employee may also appeal the 
    agency's failure to credit time spent on compensation for purposes of 
    rights and benefits based upon length of service.
    
    PART 870--BASIC LIFE INSURANCE
    
        2. The authority citation for part 870 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8716; section 870.202(c) also issued under 5 
    U.S.C. 7701(b)(2); subpart J is also issued under section 599C of 
    Pub. L. 101-513, 104 Stat. 2064, as amended.
    
        3. In Sec. 870.501, paragraph (d) is amended by adding a sentence 
    at the end to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 870.501  Termination and conversion of insurance coverage.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * * For the purpose of this paragraph, an individual who is 
    entitled to benefits under part 353 of this chapter is considered to be 
    an employee in nonpay status.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 890--FEDERAL EMPLOYEES HEALTH BENEFITS PROGRAM
    
        4. The authority citation for part 890 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8913; section 890.803 also issued under 50 
    U.S.C. 403p, 22 U.S.C. 4069c and 4069c-1; subpart L also issued 
    under sec. 599C of Pub. L. 101-513, 104 Stat. 2064, as amended.
    
        5. Section 890.303 is amended by adding a new paragraph (i) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 890.303  Contination of enrollment.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) Service in the uniformed services. The enrollment of an 
    individual who separates to enter the uniformed services under 
    conditions that entitle him or her to benefits under part 353 of this 
    chapter may continue for the 18-month period beginning on the date that 
    the absence to serve in the uniformed services begins, provided that 
    the individual continues to be entitled to benefits under part 353 of 
    this chapter. The enrollment of an employee who enters on military 
    furlough or is placed in nonpay status to serve in the uniformed 
    services may continue for the 18-month period beginning on the date 
    that the absence to serve in the uniformed services begins, provided 
    that the employee continues to be entitled to benefits under part 353 
    of this chapter. An employee in nonpay status is entitled to continued 
    coverage under paragraph (e) of this section if the employee's 
    entitlement to benefits under part 353 of this chapter ends before the 
    expiration of 365 days in nonpay status. The enrollment of an employee 
    who is on military furlough or in nonpay status in order to serve in 
    the uniformed services on October 13, 1994, may continue for the 18-
    month period beginning on the date that the absence to serve in the 
    uniformed services began, provided that the employee continues to be 
    entitled to continued coverage under part 353 of this chapter. If the 
    enrollment of such an employee had terminated due to the expiration of 
    365 days in nonpay status, it may be reinstated for the remainder of 
    the 18-month period beginning on the date that the absence to serve in 
    the uniformed services began, provided that the 
    
    [[Page 45658]]
    employee continues to be entitled to continued coverage under part 353 
    of this chapter.
        6. In Sec. 890.304 paragraph (a)(1) is amended by revising 
    paragraph (a)(1)(vi) and adding two new paragraphs (a)(1)(vii) and 
    (viii) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 890.304  Termination of enrollment.
    
        (a) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (vi) The day he or she is separated, furloughed, or placed on leave 
    of absence to serve in the uniformed services under conditions 
    entitling him or her to benefits under part 353 of this chapter for the 
    purpose of performing duty not limited to 30 days or less, provided the 
    employee elects, in writing to have the enrollment so terminated.
        (vii) For an employee who separates to serve in the uniformed 
    services under conditions entitling him or her to benefits under part 
    353 of this chapter for the purpose of performing duty not limited to 
    30 days or less, the date that is 18 months after the date that the 
    absence to serve in the uniformed services began or the date 
    entitlement to benefits under part 353 of this chapter ends, whichever 
    is earlier, unless the enrollment is terminated under paragraph 
    (a)(1)(vi) of this section.
        (viii) For an employee who is furloughed or placed on leave of 
    absence under conditions entitling him or her to benefits under part 
    353 of this chapter, the date that is 18 months after the date that the 
    absence to serve in the uniformed services began or the date 
    entitlement to benefits under part 353 of this chapter ends, whichever 
    is earlier, but not earlier than the date the enrollment would 
    otherwise terminate under paragraph (a)(1)(v) of this section.
    * * * * *
        7. In Sec. 890.305 paragraph (a) is revised to read as follows:
    Sec. 890.305  Reinstatement of enrollment after military service.
    
        (a) The enrollment of an employee or annuitant whose enrollment was 
    terminated under Sec. 890.304(a)(1)(vi), (vii) or (viii) or 
    Sec. 890.304(b)(4)(iii) is automatically reinstated on the day the 
    employee is restored to a civilian position under the provisions of 
    part 353 of this chapter or on the day the annuitant is separated from 
    the uniformed services, as the case may be.
     * * * * *
        8. In Sec. 890.501 paragraph (e) is revised and two new paragraphs 
    (f) and (g) are added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 890.501   Government contributions.
    
     * * * * *
        (e) Except as provided in paragraphs (f) and (g) of this section, 
    the employing office must make a contribution for an employee for each 
    pay period during which the enrollment continues.
    
        (f) Temporary employees enrolled under 5 U.S.C. 8906a must pay the 
    full subscription charge including the Government contribution. 
    Employees with provisional appointments under Sec. 316.403 are not 
    considered to be enrolled under 5 U.S.C. 8906a for the purpose of this 
    paragraph.
    
        (g) The Government contribution for an employee who enters the 
    uniformed services and whose enrollment continues under Sec. 890.303(i) 
    ceases after 365 days in nonpay status.
    
        9. In Sec. 890.502 paragraph (g) is revised to read as follows:
    
    Sec. 890.502  Employee withholdings and contributions.
    
     * * * * *
    
        (g) Uniformed services. (1) except as provided in paragraph (g)(2) 
    of this section, an employee whose coverage continues under section 
    890.303(i) is responsible for payment of the employee share of the cost 
    of enrollment for every pay period for which the enrollment continues 
    for the first 365 days of continued coverage as set forth under 
    paragraph (b) of this section. For coverage that continues after 365 
    days in nonpay status, the employee must pay, on a current basis, the 
    full subscription charge, including both the employee and Government 
    shares, plus an additional 2 percent of the full subscription charge.
    
        (2) Payment of the employee's share of the cost of enrollment is 
    waived for the first 365 days of continued coverage in the case of an 
    employee whose coverage continues under Sec. 890.303(e) following 
    furlough or placement on leave of absence under the provisions of part 
    353 of this chapter or under Sec. 890.303(i) if the employee was 
    ordered to active duty before September 1, 1995 under section 672, 
    673b, 674, 675, or 688 of title 10, United States Code, in support of 
    Operation Desert Storm.
    
     * * * * *
    
    
    [FR Doc. 95-21571 Filed 8-31-95; 8:45 am]
    
    BILLING CODE 6325-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/1/1995
Published:
09/01/1995
Department:
Personnel Management Office
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim regulations with request for written comments.
Document Number:
95-21571
Dates:
Effective: September 1, 1995. Comments must be received on or before November 30, 1995.
Pages:
45650-45658 (9 pages)
RINs:
3206-AG02: Restoration to Duty From Military Service or Compensable Injury
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3206-AG02/restoration-to-duty-from-military-service-or-compensable-injury
PDF File:
95-21571.pdf
CFR: (33)
5 CFR 890.304(b)(4)(iii)
5 CFR 316.201
5 CFR 353.101
5 CFR 353.102
5 CFR 353.103
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