FedSmith: Legislation Would Make Federal Employee Bonuses Public Information 51_bonus_transparency

March 21, 2018 12:01 PM
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By Ian Smith
 
Should performance bonuses handed out to federal employees be public information? One Congressman thinks so and has introduced legislation to make this happen.
 
Congressman Mark Sanford (R-SC) recently introduced the Federal Employee Bonus Disclosure Act (H.R. 5290), a bill that would make all federal employee bonuses publicly available and would require reports to Congress on any performance-based bonuses over $10,000.
 
According to the language of Sanford’s bill, starting with FY 2019, agency heads would be required to submit a report to OPM which lists each performance bonus awarded to an agency employee during the most recent fiscal year along with his or her name and the amount of the bonus. If the bonus is $10,000 or more, the report also has to include a detailed description of why the bonus was awarded and the metrics used to determine that such a bonus was appropriate. This report would then be published online.
 
Currently, union contracts prohibit release of performance bonuses to the American public, something Sanford says is wrong. He explained his reasoning in a recent editorial, noting that some agencies, such as the IRS, have been found to have given out bonuses to agency employees who had been disciplined for conduct or tax compliance problems.
 
"Transparency is especially crucial for federal agencies that have failed in the past," wrote Sanford in an editorial he co-authored with Adam Andrzejewski, CEO of OpenTheBooks.com. They said in the article that the bonus information should be the right of taxpayers to see.
 
The duo have been leading a charge to get the government to release additional salary data that the Office of Personnel Management has suddenly started to withhold even though it has not done so previously.
 
The situation has gained a lot of publicity in the last month or so, beginning with an editorial Andrzejewski wrote which brought the situation into the public spotlight. He explained that OpenTheBooks.com has been publishing salary data of federal employees online for 11 years now, but in its most recent request for the data, OPM had eliminated a lot of information that had never been withheld previously.
 
"For the first time, we found missing information throughout the federal payroll disclosures," wrote Andrzejewski. In total, he said that OPM withheld 255,000 federal salaries totaling $20 billion, something which he said "harms oversight."
 
The situation got the attention of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
 
Congressman Trey Gowdy (R-SC), the Committee’s Chairman, recently sent a letter to OPM seeking information on why OPM seems to have suddenly changed its policy on releasing federal employee salary data. For details, see Lawmakers Want to Know Why OPM is Suddenly Withholding Federal Employee Salary Data.
 
Read the original article, click here.  
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