U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here's how you know

Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A lock ( Lock A locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

  • A–Z Index
  • Operating Status

Search Button

Resources For

  • New / Prospective Employees
  • Federal Employees
  • HR Professionals

Summary of Reassignment

This summary of reassignment covers the following topics:

  • Learning About Reassignment
  • Definition of Reassignment
  • The Agency's Right to Reassign
  • Reassignment Without Regard to RIF Retention Standing
  • Separation After Declining Geographic Reassignment
  • Qualifications and Reassignment
  • Relocation Expense Allowances
  • Additional Information from the Agency
  • Additional Information from OPM

1. Learning About Reassignment

The reassignment regulations give an agency extensive flexibility in reassigning an employee to a different position.

This summary covers the procedures in the reassignment regulations. With this summary, employees, managers, union representatives, and others will have an overview of both the agency's and employees' rights in a reassignment situation.

The appropriate human resource office (HRO) in the agency can provide additional information on specific questions relating to reassignment policies, options, and entitlements.

2. Definition of Reassignment

The regulations published in section 335.102 of title 5, Code of Federal Regulations (5 CFR 335.102) cover reassignment of competitive service employees, while the regulations published in section 302.102(a) (5 CFR 302.102(a)) cover reassignment of excepted service employees.

Section 5 C.F.R. 210.102(b)(12) of the regulations defines reassignment as:

". . . a change of an employee, while serving continuously within the same agency, from one position to another without promotion or demotion."

Back to Top

3. The Agency's Right to Reassign

An agency may reassign an employee when:

The agency has a legitimate organizational reason for the reassignment; and

The vacant position is at the same grade, or rate of pay (i.e., if the movement is between pay systems such as from a General Schedule position to a Federal Wage System position), as the employee's present position.

The agency's right to direct reassignment includes the right to reassign an employee from a special rate position to a non-special rate position at the same grade, or to a position with less promotion potential than the present position. (Reassignment to a position with more promotion potential than the present position requires competition under the agency's merit staffing plan.) The position to which the agency reassigns an employee may be located in the same or a different geographic area (e.g., reassignment from Houston to Washington, DC).

4. Reassignment Without Regard to RIF Retention Standing

An agency may reassign an employee without regard to the employee's reduction in force retention standing, including an employee's veterans' preference status. A reassignment to a vacant position at the same grade is not a reduction in force action even if the agency abolishes the employee's former position

At its option, an agency may adopt a policy to select employees for reassignment on the basis of considerations such as retention standing, total service with the agency, length of time in a position or in the organization, etc. Again at its option, an agency may canvass its employees to determine whether an individual employee would prefer reassignment to a specific location, a new organization, and/or to a position with different duties and responsibilities.

5. Separation After Declining Geographic Reassignment

The agency must use the 5 CFR part 752 adverse action regulations when separating an employee who declines a directed reassignment to a position in a different geographic area.

An employee who is removed by adverse action for declining geographic relocation is potentially eligible for most of the benefits that are available to a displaced employee separated by reduction in force (e.g., intra- and interagency hiring priority, severance pay, discontinued service retirement, etc.).

An employee who declines reassignment to a position in the same geographic area as the present position (e.g., from an Atlanta position to a different Atlanta position) is not eligible for any career transition assistance or other benefits.

6. Qualifications and Reassignment

The agency's basic right to reassign an employee is based, in part, on the agency's determination that the employee is qualified for the position to which the employee will be reassigned.

An agency may also reassign an employee to a position if the agency modifies or waives qualifications for the vacant position, consistent with OPM's requirements for these actions.

7. Relocation Expense Allowances

An employee is generally eligible for relocation expense allowances for a directed reassignment that requires relocation to a different geographic area

The General Services Administration (GSA) publishes its Federal Travel Regulation (FTR) in 41 CFR subpart F. The complete FTR and other relocation-related information are available on GSA's website at  www.gsa.gov .

8. Additional Information from the Agency

The agency's human resources office (HRO) can provide both employees and managers with additional information on OPM's reassignment regulations. The HRO can also provide information on potential benefits, such as eligibility for:

  • Career transition assistance
  • Separation incentives (if available)
  • Rehiring selection priority
  • Severance pay
  • Unemployment compensation
  • Relocation allowances.

9. Additional Information from OPM

OPM provides additional restructuring information on the OPM website at  www.opm.gov .

  •  Newsletters
  •  Guides
  •  Reader Q&A
  •  Contribute
  •  Issue Briefs
  •  Webinars
  •  Search

Federal Careers

Be sure to document temporary federal assignments.

ask.fedweek.com document your temporary federal assignments

It is not uncommon for federal employees to be detailed to a higher grade or different position and then want to use that detail or temporary assignment as creditable experience when applying for a new position or a promotion, but you must document it properly in order to include in your application.

The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) assumes that employees gain experience by performing duties and responsibilities appropriate to their official position description, occupational series, and grade. If you want to be credited for experience outside your official position description, whether at a higher grade or in a different job series, your temporary work must be appropriately documented.

Such documentation could include a SF-52 or SF-50 that documents an official detail or assignment. It could also include a signed letter from the employee’s supervisor.

That letter must state the nature and length of the temporary assignment / detail, whether the duties performed were full- or part-time, and the percentage of time other duties were performed. The documentation should be included in an employee’s Official Personnel Folder (OPF).

Employees should submit the official documentation, along with their resume, when applying for positions where the temporary experience may be needed to support their application.

cover image for federal manager and supervisor handbook from fedweek.com

TSP Returns Summary

Source: TSP.gov

Temporary Reassignment

Please consult with Human Resources prior to completing this request.

Notice of Reassignment and Updated Position Description

At least 14 days prior to the effective date of the reassignment, the employee must be provided with:

  • Notice of Reassignment (Memo from HEERA Manager to Employee)
  • Updated Position Description. 

Sample - Notice of Reassignment memo

According to the CSUEU and APC contracts, an employee has the option to voluntarily waive the 14 day notice with submission of a signed memo.

  • Sample - 14 Day Waiver Memo

The lead supervisor and HEERA Manager should sign the Position Description.  The employee will sign the updated Position Description in Human Resources at the time they sign their appointment letter.

An employee may be temporarily reassigned to a lateral position when the duties are consistent with their current job classification.  A salary increase will   not  be given in this situation.

  • An employee who received a salary increase from a temporary reassignment is not eligible for an additional salary increase if the employee obtains the position through a recruitment.

The length of a temporary reassignment is limited in duration and is deterred by the classification’s applicable bargaining unit.

  • Unit 2, 5, 7, & 9 classifications:  6 months; may be extended up to an additional 12 months for a total of 18 months.
  • Unit 4 classification:  6 months; may be extended up to an additional 6 months for a total of 12 months.

An employee may be temporarily reassigned to a position in a higher classification when he/she is required to perform duties inconsistent with his/her current classification.

Upon completion of the temporary reassignment, the employee shall return to the classification and assignment they were working in prior to the temporary reassignment with the appropriate salary.

  • If a temporary reassignment is for a period of more than 6 months and the reassignment is from a non-exempt to an exempt position, the current Compensatory Time Off (CTO) balance must be paid out (or used) to the employee.  This applies to CSUEU Units 2, 5, 7, & 9 classifications only.

When moving to a higher classification, a typical salary increase of 5% or the minimum of the new salary range, whichever is greater.

A request to temporarily reassign an employee requires the approval of the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs.

Below you will find the required documents to complete a temporary reassignment.

1.  Cover Memorandum which includes the following information:

  • Indicate temporary reassignment request
  • Name of employee
  • Name of current College/Department and Classification
  • Name of reassigned College/Department and Classification
  • Brief paragraph outlining details of the reassignment

Click here for a sample memo

2.  Reassignment Request Form

  • Form requires approval signatures.  The HEERA Manager and AVP/Dean’s signatures must be obtained before submission to the Provost’s office.  If the HEERA manager and AVP/Dean is the same individual, please have that person sign in   both   boxes.

Click here for the Reassignment Request Form

3.  Copy of Notice of Reassignment Memo

4.  position description.

Include an updated Position Description which has been reviewed by Sandra Bufalini, Manager, Employment and Compensation.  The Provost’s Office will verify the following items on the position description. 

  • Box #2 is left blank
  • o If the individual is the same person, indicate the person’s name in both boxes. 
  • o If the individual is the same person, please have them sign on   both   lines.

5.  Organizational Chart

Include your current organization chart which must indicate the current administrators and staff personnel within the unit/area.  Also include this personnel change on the organization chart.

6.  Resume, if reassignment is to a higher job classification

For questions about the information requested above, please contact Rachna Vermani, Compensation & Classification Analyst at [email protected]

  • Organizational Units

Human Resources

  • Spouses & Partners
  • G-Type Visa Services
  • Benefits & Compensation
  • Obtain or Renew Driver's License Application

Stay Connected

Temporary assignment - start.

  • Letter Template
  • Employment Verification Letter Template

Template for letter of reassignment or transfer

Template for letter of reassignment or transfer page 1

Template Categories

  • Miscellaneous

Featured Categories

  • Doctors Note
  • Power of Attorney
  • Rental Application
  • Rent and Lease
  • Certificate
  • Business Proposal

About Dexform

  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy

U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A lock ( Lock A locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Instruction 300-3: Detail and Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) Assignments

Material transmitted:.

Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Instruction 300-3, Details and Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) Assignments, dated 01/18/2023.

HHS-69, Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) Agreement, dated 01/2023

Material Superseded:

HHS Instruction 300-3, Details and Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) Assignments, dated 07/22/2022

Background:

This policy updates HHS OpDiv/StaffDiv ethics responsibilities for details and IPA assignments and establishes a requirement to use form HHS-69, IPA Agreement (2023 or later), for all IPA assignments, extensions, or modifications to ensure IPA assignments meet federal laws and regulations, including the ethics and conflict of interest statutes and regulations.

This policy is effective immediately and must be carried out by OpDiv/StaffDiv HR Centers in accordance with applicable laws, regulations, collective bargaining agreements, and Departmental policy.

Dr. Kimberly A. Steide

W. Robert Leavitt Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Resources Chief Human Capital Officer

300-3-00 SECTIONS

300-3-10 Purpose 300-3-20 Coverage and Exclusions 300-3-30 References 300-3-40 Definitions 300-3-50 Responsibilities 300-3-60  Employee Details 300-3-70 Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) Assignments 300-3-80 Reimbursable and Non-reimbursable Agreements 300-3-90 Documentation and Accountability

300-3-10 Purpose

This Instruction implements the Department of Health and Human Services (Department or HHS) policy on employee details and Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) assignments.

When provisions of this policy differ from changes in applicable law or regulation, the changes in law or regulation apply.

300-3-20 Coverage and Exclusions

  • Coverage . This Instruction covers employees defined under 5 U.S.C. §2105, except for those excluded below or otherwise excluded by the rules governing details and IPAs.
  • Officers in the uniformed service of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corp (42 U.S.C. §204, et seq. )
  • Political appointees are ineligible to serve on IPAs (i.e., Presidential Appointees with Senate confirmation (PAS), Presidential Appointees without Senate confirmation (PA), Non-career Senior Executive Service (NCSES), and Schedule C).
  • PAS and PA appointees are ineligible to serve on details. (NCSES and Schedule C details are covered under Section 300-3-60 .)
  • Employees of non-federal organizations who are assigned to HHS under contractual agreements, i.e., contractors.
  • The provisions of this Instruction pertaining to conditions of employment of bargaining unit employees are fully negotiable in accordance with 5 U.S.C. Chapter 71, and such actions require notification to labor organizations when impacted employees are bargaining unit employees. When the provisions of this Instruction differ from the requirements contained in applicable collective bargaining agreement(s), the collective bargaining agreement takes precedence for bargaining unit employees.

300-3-30 References

  • 2 United States Code (U.S.C.) §4301(i), Committee Staffs
  • 3 U.S.C. §112, Details of Employees of Executive Departments
  • 5 U.S.C. §7106, Management Rights
  • 5 U.S.C. §2105, Employee
  • 5 U.S.C. §3341, Details within Executive or Military Departments
  • 5 U.S.C. §3343, Details to International Organizations
  • 5 U.S.C. §3344, Details, Administrative Law Judges
  • 5 U.S.C. §§3371-3376, Assignments To and From States (IPA)
  • 31 U.S.C. §1301, Application (of appropriations) (i.e., the Purpose Statute)
  • 31 U.S.C. §1535, Agency Agreements (i.e., the Economy Act)
  • 31 U.S.C. §1536, Crediting Payments Between Executive Agencies (i.e., the Economy Act)
  • 42 U.S.C. §215, Detail of Public Health Service Personnel
  • 5 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) §6.5, Assignment of Excepted Service Employees
  • 5 CFR Part 300, Subpart C, Detail of Employees
  • 5 CFR §317.903, Senior Executive Service (SES) Details
  • 5 CFR Part 334, Intergovernmental Personnel Act
  • 5 CFR §335.103, Agency Promotion Programs
  • 5 CFR §§352.301-306 and 314, Detail of Employees to International Organizations
  • Detail of Law Enforcement Agents to Congressional Committees , 12 Op. Office of Legal Counsel (O.L.C.) 184, 1988 WL 391014 (Sept. 13, 1988) (employee details to the Legislative Branch)
  • Reimbursement of the Internal Revenue Service for Investigative Services Provided to the Independent Counsel , 12 Op. O.L.C. 233, 1988 WL 391018 (Sept. 30 , 1988 ); see also Reimbursement for Detail of JAG Corps Personnel to US Attorney’s Office, 13 Op. O.L.C. 188, 1989 WL 595823 (June 27, 1989) (reimbursement for details)
  • OPM SES Desk Guide (details)
  • HHS Financial Management Directives and Guidance (interagency agreements)
  • HHS Travel Policy (payment of travel and transportation expenses)
  • Memo from HHS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Resources, Delegation of Human Resources Authorities , dated May 9, 2022.

300-3-40 Definitions

  • Agency . An Executive Department or Agency, as defined in 5 U.S.C. §§101 and 105 (i.e., HHS).
  • Days . Calendar days.
  • Detail . A temporary assignment to a different position for a specified period. A federal employee who is on detail continues to occupy their official position of record while on detail and continues to receive pay and federal benefits associated with their permanent position. At the expiration of a detail, federal employees return to their official position of record. See Section 300-3-60.
  • IPA . The Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) allows for the temporary assignment via a detail or temporary appointment of personnel between the federal government and state and local governments, colleges and universities, Indian tribal governments, federally funded research and development centers, and other eligible organizations defined in 5 U.S.C. §3371 and 5 CFR Part 334. At the end of an IPA assignment, federal employees return to their official position of record or are reassigned to a position of like pay and grade (5 CFR §334.107(b)). See Section 300-3-70.
  • Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR);
  • Office of Global Affairs (OGA);
  • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ);
  • Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR);
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC);
  • Food and Drug Administration (FDA);
  • Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA);
  • Indian Health Service (IHS);
  • National Institutes of Health (NIH); and
  • Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

300-3-50 Responsibilities

  • Immediate Office of the Secretary (IOS). HHS’ White House Liaison initiates details of Non- career SES and Schedule C political employees with OpDiv/StaffDiv HR Centers, adhering to the detail rules covered in this policy ( Section 300-3-60 ).
  • Establishes Department-wide HR policy and guidance consistent with HHS and OPM policy and guidance, and all applicable federal laws and regulations.
  • Submits for OPM approval requests to detail an excepted service employee to a competitive service position.
  • Submits for OPM approval requests for SES details exceeding 240 days if the detail is for either: a) A non-SES employee to an SES position that supervises other SES positions; or b) An SES employee to a position at the GS-15 or equivalent level or below.
  • Approves requests for details and extension of details to the White House and Congressional Committees, with the concurrence by the Assistant Secretary for Legislation, prior to the start date.
  • Submits for OPM approval a request of a federal employee to participate in the IPA program more than a total of six (6) years during their federal career.
  • Periodically reviews OpDiv/StaffDiv details and IPA assignments to assure conformance with HHS and OPM policy and guidance, and all applicable federal laws and regulations.
  • Reviews and gives concurrence/non-concurrence on detail and extension requests to Congressional Committees.
  • Notifies the Congressional Committee Chairman by letter of detail approvals.
  • Reviews and gives concurrence/non-concurrence on detail requests from an OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee to international organizations.
  • Obtains concurrence by the HHS Secretary to request Secretary of State approval to extend a detail to an international organization beyond five (5) years, in cases where the extension is in the national interest. If the HHS Secretary concurs, submits request to the Department of State for approval.
  • Obtains Dept. of State approval for international organizations not currently on the Dept. of State’s approved organization list, at the request of the OpDiv/StaffDiv Human Resources Center.
  • Comply with this Instruction, any HHS and OPM policy and guidance, and all applicable federal laws and regulations.
  • Ensure internal guidance or standard operating procedures on details and IPA assignments adhere to this policy.
  • Work with their servicing organizations to ensure funds for details and IPA assignments are only used for purposes authorized by appropriation (i.e., appropriations of the loaning OpDiv/StaffDiv can only be used to support programs/activities that have been authorized thru appropriation by Congress). See Section 300-3-80.
  • Ensure signed agreements are in place prior to the effective date of details and IPAs in accordance with the requirements under Sections 300-3-60 and 300-3-70.
  • Work with their servicing ethics office(s) to ensure: a) detailees and IPA participants complete a financial disclosure report, as required; b) detailees and IPA participants are counseled prior to the effective date of the detail or IPA assignment on applicable ethics statutes and regulations, including the criminal conflict of interest statutes and Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch; and for IPA assignments, c) the Deputy Ethics Counselor (DEC) or Ethics Coordinator (EC) of the servicing ethics office has certified, as required, that IPA participants have been so counseled and that there are no conflicts of interest with the duties and responsibilities of the proposed IPA assignment. See Sections 300-3-60 and 300-3-70.
  • Submit requests to [email protected] for OPM approval of details of certain excepted service employees to competitive service positions prior to the effective date. See Section 300-3-60.
  • Submit requests to [email protected] for OPM approval of SES details exceeding 240 days if the detail is for either: a) A non-SES employee to an SES position that supervises other SES positions; or b) An SES employee to a position at the GS-15 or equivalent level or below.
  • Submit detail and extension requests to the White House and Congressional Committees to [email protected] prior to the start date.
  • Submit requests to [email protected] for OPM approval of a federal employee to participate in the IPA program more than a total of (6) years during their federal career.

300-3-60 Employee Details

  • Management may utilize details to address emergency or temporary workforce needs; to offset temporary staffing or workload imbalances; or to address short-term special projects or studies, unless the law or regulation authorizing the detail specifies a different purpose (e.g., 42 U.S.C. §215). The decision to detail an HHS employee is discretionary and based on the ability of the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv to spare the employee’s services without detriment to the office’s work and without requiring it to hire additional staff. Details are not used to circumvent the competitive selection or classification process. For the Indian Health Service: Details are also not used to circumvent Indian Preference laws or regulations (25 U.S.C. §§5116, 5117 and 5129, and 42 CFR §§136.41-43). Input from the HHS employee should be considered before implementing a detail.
  • An employee may be detailed to a position with duties that are classified at a higher grade, a lower grade, or at the same grade level as the employee’s official position.
  • An employee is not required to meet time-in-grade or minimum qualification requirements of the position to which the employee is detailed, but must meet the education, licensure and certification requirements for the position to which detailed.
  • A detail may be to a position with unclassified duties, i.e., the duties to be performed on detail may or may not be duties described in an officially established position description (PD). A statement of duties must be prepared, prior to the detail, by the gaining office.
  • Employees remain in their official position of record while on detail including for the purposes of the computation of basic pay, promotion, retirement, benefits, bargaining unit status, compensation for injury or death, and military benefits. Service while on detail is credited for time-in-grade purposes at the grade of the position the employee officially holds.
  • An employee’s Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) exemption status may be affected when a detail exceeds 30 consecutive days and the temporary duties meet the criteria described in 5 CFR §551.211.
  • The employee’s permanent organization is responsible for ensuring the employee on detail receives appropriate consideration for promotions in their official position of record (5 CFR §335.103(b)(2)) and is kept informed of training opportunities.
  • Performance management and appraisal requirements must comply with HHS Instruction 430-1, Performance Management Appraisal Program, or HHS Instruction 430-6, SES Performance Management Program, as applicable.
  • All employees must meet the applicable personnel security requirements of the detail assignment prior to commencement of a detail.
  • Employees remain subject to applicable ethics statutes and regulations while on detail including: 18 U.S.C. §§ 201-227 – Criminal Conflicts of Interest; 5 U.S.C. app. – Ethics in Government Act of 1978; 5 U.S.C. §§ 7321-7326 and 5 C.F.R. Part 734 – Hatch Act and implementing Political Activities Regulation; 5 U.S.C. § 7342 – Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act; 5 U.S.C. § 7353 – Gifts to Federal Employees; 41 U.S.C. §§ 2101-2107 – Ethics provisions of the Procurement Integrity Act; 5 C.F.R. Part 735 – Employee Responsibilities and Conduct; 5 C.F.R. Part 2634 – Executive Branch Financial Disclosure and Related Requirements; 5 C.F.R. Part 2635 – Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch; 5 C.F.R. Part 5501 – HHS Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct; and 5 C.F.R. Part 5502 – HHS Supplemental Financial Disclosure Reporting Requirements. The servicing ethics office of the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv is responsible for communicating these requirements to their employee. Questions should be directed to the servicing Deputy Ethics Counselor and/or Ethics Coordinator, a list of whom can be found at https://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/ogc/contact-ogc/agency-deputy-ethics-counselors- and-ethics-coordinators/index.html.
  • Employees on detail remain subject to the provisions of 5 U.S.C. Chapter 73, which regulates employee suitability, security, and conduct, including restrictions on political activity, and agency standards of conduct regulations.
  • A detail ends upon the Not-To-Exceed (NTE) date documented on the Standard Form (SF) 50 or SF-52 unless an extension is approved. Requests for extending details must be made prior to the NTE date of the detail. See also Section 300-3-90, Documentation.
  • A detail may be terminated, at the discretion of the loaning or gaining organization, prior to the documented NTE date.
  • Employees return to their official position of record upon the detail’s NTE date or early termination of the detail.
  • Details within HHS must be reimbursable with few exceptions. For additional information, see Section 300-3-80, Reimbursable and Non-reimbursable Agreements.
  • Work Restriction. 5 U.S.C. §3341(a) does not allow an agency to detail employees who are required by law to be exclusively engaged in specific work. Accordingly, an HHS employee who is appointed by an authority that specifies the type of work to be performed cannot be detailed. This legal prohibition applies to all HHS employees, including politicals and employees appointed via a non-Title 5 hiring authority.
  • Details to a position at the same or lower grade level may be made without competition for up to 120 days and can be extended in no more than 120-day increments to meet the organizational needs of both the gaining and lending offices/divisions (5 U.S.C. §3341).
  • Details to a higher-graded position, or to a position with higher promotion potential , may be made without competition for up to 120 days. When computing the total time served on a detail, noncompetitive details to higher graded positions and noncompetitive time-limited promotions within the prior 12-month period count toward the 120-day total (5 CFR §335.103(c)(1)(ii)).
  • A detail more than 30 days but less than 120 days to a higher-graded supervisor or manager position should be rotated among eligible staff. Consideration should also be given to a time-limited promotion under 5 CFR §335.102(f).
  • Competitive service employees may be detailed to competitive service or excepted service positions.
  • Excepted service employees may be detailed to a position in the excepted service.
  • An excepted service employee hired via a Schedule A authority (i.e., a government-wide Schedule A authority under 5 CFR §213.3102 or an OpDiv/StaffDiv-specific Schedule A authority);
  • A Schedule B authority (under 5 CFR §213.3202);
  • A Schedule D authority (Pathways Programs under 5 CFR §213.3402(a-c)); or
  • A Veterans Recruitment Appointment (P.L. 107-288) may be detailed to a competitive service position without prior OPM approval.
  • Information on the excepted service position (appointment authority and employee’s position of record, including title, series, grade level, and organization);
  • Information on the competitive service position that will be filled (title, series, grade, and organization);
  • Purpose of the detail or the duties to be performed during the detail;
  • Reason why a competitive service employee cannot serve in the detail (e.g., special skills/competencies the excepted service employee will bring to the competitive service position); and
  • OpDiv/StaffDiv HR Director approval.
  • Details of an SES employee to a position classified at the SES-level may be made for up to 120 days and can be extended in no more than 120-day increments to meet the organizational needs of both the gaining and lending offices/divisions.
  • Details of an SES employee to unclassified duties may be made in no more than 120-day increments and cannot exceed 240 days. For details exceeding 240 days, the HR Center is required to determine if the unclassified duties are at the SES level. If at SES level, the HR Center must request an SES allocation at [email protected] to establish a SES position to continue the detail. If below the SES level, OPM approval is required for a detail extension to a position at the GS-15 or equivalent level or below (see (a)(v) immediately below for instructions).
  • An SES employee may not be detailed to a series of positions with unclassified duties, or a series of positions at the GS-15 or equivalent level, to ‘restart’ the 240-day clock.
  • Details of a non-SES employee to a SES position must be made in no more than 120-day increments and cannot exceed 240 days. Competitive procedures must be followed when the detail exceeds 240 days unless the employee is eligible for a noncompetitive career SES appointment (i.e., a SES Candidate Development Program graduate or a former SES Career employee with noncompetitive reinstatement eligibility). OpDiv/StaffDivs cannot intentionally create a break before 240 consecutive days to ‘restart’ the 240-day clock. Competition is not required to detail a different employee to the SES position.
  • OPM must approve details more than 240 days if the detail is either : a) A non-SES employee to an SES position that supervises other SES positions; or b) An SES employee to a position at the GS-15 or equivalent level or below. HR Centers must send such requests with the following information to [email protected]: a) A memorandum from the OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee requesting extension and approval of the detail; b) A detailed written justification outlining the circumstances requiring the extension, including proposed number of days up to a maximum of 120 days; c) A written description of how the position’s duties have been performed since vacant and alternatives the OpDiv/StaffDiv considered before making the extension request; and d) The OpDiv/StaffDiv organization chart, and name and appointment type of the official who supervises the employee on detail.
  • Details of SES employees cannot be used to circumvent the advance notice requirements for SES reassignments, or the 120-day moratorium on involuntary reassignments following the appointment of a new HHS Secretary or non-career supervisor (PAS, PA, NCSES).
  • Any SES employee or non-SES employee may be detailed to a SES General position.
  • Only a Career SES employee or a career-type non-SES employee (i.e., a Competitive or Excepted Service employee in Tenure Group 1 or 2, see OPM.gov/Data Standards/Tenure for definitions) may be detailed to an SES Career Reserved position.
  • A Non-career SES (NCSES) employee cannot be detailed to a competitive service position.
  • An SES Limited Term employee can be detailed to a different SES General position if the duties of the SES General position will expire at the end of three (3) years or less;
  • An SES Limited Emergency employee may be detailed to a different SES General position to meet an urgent, unanticipated bona-fide need; and
  • SES Limited employees cannot be detailed to a position that does not meet the same conditions that supported OPM’s approval of the SES Limited Term or SES Limited Emergency allocation. This does not prevent temporary ‘acting’ assignments, i.e., the short-term absence of another executive. (OPM SES Desk Guide)
  • Administrative Law Judges may be detailed in accordance with the rules described under 5 U.S.C. §3344 and 5 CFR §930.207.
  • Details to other agencies must be reimbursable with few exceptions. For additional information, see Section 300-3-80, Reimbursable and Non-reimbursable Agreements.
  • OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee may detail an employee to another federal agency with the agreement of the Secretary or organization head of the other agency when the detail supports the U.S. Government and appropriated funds are available.
  • Competitive and excepted service employees : a) Details to the same or lower grade may be made for up to 180 days and can be extended for periods that meet the organizational needs of both the gaining and lending agencies. b) Details to a higher-graded position, or to a position with higher promotion potential, can be made without competition for up to 120 days. When computing the total time served on a detail, all noncompetitive details to higher-graded positions and noncompetitive time-limited promotions within the prior 12-month period count toward the 120-day total (5 CFR §335.103(c)(1)(ii)). c) PHS employees detailed to other federal agencies via 42 U.S.C. §215 follow the rules in this Section under (C)(4) below.
  • SES employees : Details to a position classified at the SES-level may be made in no more than 120-day increments and can be extended for periods that meet the organizational needs of both the gaining and lending agencies. SES details are also limited by the rules described in this Section under (B)(4) above.
  • An OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee may authorize the detail of eligible employees (defined in (2)(c)) only to international organizations approved by the Department of State, with the concurrence of the Office of Global Affairs (OGA) prior to the effective date of the detail. Requests are submitted to OGA by the servicing HR Center at os-oga-hhs- [email protected].
  • Eligible international organizations approved by Dept. of State for details under 5 CFR Part 352, Subpart C, are at: https://iocareers.state.gov/Main/Content/Page/approved- international-organizations. Requests to obtain Dept. of State approval for organizations not on approved list, must be submitted to OGA at [email protected].
  • Eligible Employees . All employees are eligible for international details except the employees listed under 5 CFR §352.305, i.e., a person serving on a temporary appointment; an SES employee on a non-career, limited emergency, or limited term appointment; a Presidential appointment; or a Schedule C appointment.
  • Employees may serve on details to international organizations for up to five (5) consecutive years. The Secretary of State, upon the recommendation of the HHS Secretary, may approve an extension up to three (3) additional years if the detail extension is in the national interest. Extension requests are submitted by the HR Center to OGA at [email protected] no later than three (3) months before the expiration of the current detail, and must include a justification why the extension request is needed; the extension request from the international organization; and the finance agreement between the OpDiv/StaffDiv and the international organization, see Section 300-3-80.
  • Employees cannot serve longer than a total of eight (8) years on international details (or combination of details and transfers) during their entire federal career. (Transfers to international organizations are covered by 5 CFR §§352.307-314 and HHS Instruction 301-1, Overseas Employment.)
  • Details to international organizations via 5 CFR Part 352, Subpart C, may be reimbursable or non-reimbursable, in accordance with 5 U.S.C. §3343(d-e) and Section 300-3-80.
  • The Dept. of State foreign country clearance requirements apply to all U.S. government employees working overseas. See HHS Instruction 301-1, Overseas Employment, for requirements or consult OGA at [email protected].
  • An OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee may occasionally recommend one of their employees be detailed to an office listed in (3)(a) immediately above.
  • Details after the first 180 days must be reimbursable to the Department, except when the requirements described in Section 300-3-80(B)(5) are met.
  • When the employee is performing work that would otherwise by performed by WH staff, reimbursement for the salary of the HHS employee/detailee is required for any period occurring after the first 180 days after the employee is detailed during any fiscal year.
  • A detail to a WH office not listed in (3)(a) above who asserts it is not covered by 3 U.S.C. §112 and therefore not required to reimburse the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv is only permissible if the requirements described in Section 300-3-80(B)(5) are met.
  • Must be initiated by the Senate or House of Representatives, via the HHS Assistant Secretary for Legislation, by written invitation.
  • Require the written consent of the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate or the Committee on House Oversight of the House of Representatives prior to the effective date.
  • Must be carried out on a reimbursable basis ( Detail of Law Enforcement Agents to Congressional Committees , 12 Op. O.L.C. 184, 1988 WL 391014 (Sept. 13, 1988)).
  • Competitive and excepted service employees : a) Details to the same or lower grade may be made for up to 180 days and can be extended for periods that meet the organizational needs of both the WH or Congress and the employing HHS OpDiv/StaffDiv. b) Details to a higher-graded position, or to a position with higher promotion potential, can be made without competition for up to 120 days. When computing the total time served on a detail, all noncompetitive details to higher-graded positions and noncompetitive time-limited promotions within the prior 12-month period count toward the 120-day total (5 CFR §335.103(c)(1)(ii)). c) PHS employees detailed to Congressional committees via 42 U.S.C. §215 follow the rules in this Section under (C)(4) immediately below.
  • SES employees : Details to a position classified at the SES-level may be made in no more than 120-day increments and can be extended for periods that meet the organizational needs of both the WH or Congress and the employing HHS OpDiv/StaffDiv. SES details are additionally limited by the rules described in this Section under (B)(4) above.
  • Employee’s full name;
  • The WH or Congressional Committee Office;
  • Description of the duties that support HHS’ or the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv’s mission;
  • The proposed start date and duration of the detail;
  • A completed interagency agreement or MOU, as applicable (see Section 300-3-80 );
  • For Details to Congress (unless the detail is via 42 U.S.C. §215 explained in (C)(4) immediately below): A copy of the Congressional Committee’s written request for the employee’s services; and
  • For WH Offices who are not covered by 3 U.S.C. §112 : The statutory authority that explicitly authorizes the detail and explicitly says the WH office does not reimburse loaning agencies for details; or a description of the functions of the detail demonstrating the duties are directly related to the OpDiv/StaffDiv’s appropriations and the detail will assist the OpDiv/StaffDiv in accomplishing programs/activities authorized by appropriation.
  • Due to the substantial ethical concerns such details raise, recommendation and/or approval may be given only after a careful examination of the duties to be performed and consideration of any Departmental conflicts of interest that may arise from the detail assignment.
  • Another Executive Department, upon the request of that Department Head, to cooperate in or conduct work related to, the functions of the requesting Department or the PHS. See Section 300-3-40 , Definitions, or 5 U.S.C. §101.
  • State health or mental health authorities, upon the request of the State health authority, to assist the State, or a political subdivision of the State, in work related to the public health functions of the PHS. These details may only be made by the HHS Secretary or the Secretary’s designee, per 42 U.S.C. §§ 202, note and 215(b).
  • Congressional committees and non-profit educational, research, or other institutions engaged in health activities, for special studies of scientific problems and for the dissemination of information relating to public health. These details may only be made by the HHS Secretary or the Secretary’s designee, per 42 U.S.C. §§ 202, note and 215(c).
  • Approval . Details of PHS employees to the external organizations for the purposes described in (a) immediately above can be approved by the OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee consistent with the Memo from HHS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Resources, Delegation of Human Resources Authorities , dated May 9, 2022. Due to the substantial ethical concerns such details raise, recommendation and/or approval may be given only after a careful examination of the public health duties to be performed and consideration of any Departmental conflicts of interest that may arise from the detail assignment. Approvals must be in writing and include the purpose of the detail, consistent with the requirements in this subsection (C)(4).
  • Competitive and excepted service employee details to a higher-graded federal position, or to a position with higher promotion potential, can be made without competition for up to 120 days. (This restriction applies to the Executive Department and Congressional committee details described in (a)(i) and (iii) above.) When computing the total time served on a detail, all noncompetitive details to higher-graded positions and noncompetitive time-limited promotions within the prior 12-month period count toward the 120-day total (5 CFR §335.103(c)(1)(ii)).
  • SES details are additionally limited by the rules described in this Section under (B)(4) above.
  • Details to an overseas location (see (g) below).
  • An OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee may condition a detail to either (a)(ii) or (iii) above as reimbursable by the State, subdivision, or institution (42 U.S.C. §215(d)).
  • Salary and allowances of a PHS employee detailed to another Executive Department described in (a)(i) above are paid in accordance with 42 U.S.C. §215(a).
  • A PHS employee on a detail to either (a)(ii) or (iii) above is paid by PHS appropriations except when the employee is placed on leave without pay (LWOP), with the employee’s consent, and paid by the State, subdivision, or institution to which they are detailed (42 U.S.C. §215(d)). For Special Consultant employees appointed via 42 U.S.C. §209(f) , a LWOP arrangement may only be for a period NTE two (2) years but can be extended for additional periods NTE two (2) years each (42 CFR §22.5).
  • PHS employee details within HHS . 42 U.S.C §215 does not authorize details within HHS; therefore, details within HHS must follow the rules (including time limits, restrictions, and applicable OPM approvals to a competitive service position) in this Section under (B) above.
  • PHS employee details to the White House . Details to the WH are not authorized via 42 U.S.C. §215; therefore, WH details are made via 3 U.S.C. §112 and the rules described in this Section under (C)(3) above.
  • PHS employee details to International Organizations are made via 5 CFR Part 352, Subpart C, and the rules described in this Section under (C)(2) above. Overseas Location: Details to an overseas location of an Executive Department, state health authority, or institution described in (a) above can be made via 42 U.S.C. §215 and do not require Dept. of State organization approval. However, the Dept. of State foreign country clearance requirements apply to all U.S. government employees working overseas. Details to overseas locations additionally must adhere the other requirements in HHS Instruction 301-1, Overseas Employment, including tour of duty limits.
  • The general requirements for details in this Section (300-3-60(A)) and the rules for reimbursable and non-reimbursable agreements in Section 300-3-80 must be followed.
  • Pathways participants (with the exception of Intern NTE) may be detailed for one (1) to six (6) months in duration within their employing OpDiv/StaffDiv, or anywhere within HHS. Details do not need to be in same occupation in which the participant will likely convert; however, must be for the purposes of providing the participant with valuable knowledge, skills, and experiences; to broaden their perspective of the OpDiv/StaffDiv and/or HHS mission; and to aid in their retention. Such details may be used to give the participant knowledge, skills, or abilities in another area of the functional discipline of the participant’s occupation, or in another OpDiv/StaffDiv with similar occupations, for example.
  • Presidential Management Fellows (PMFs) may also be detailed to external organizations as part of their development, in accordance with 5 CFR §362.405(b)(4-5) and the rules described in HHS Instruction, 362-1, Pathways Programs.
  • All other employee rotational assignments (i.e., details) as part of a formal training or development program must follow the rules in this policy, unless the program is authorized by a law or regulation that specifies separate rules for such rotational assignments.

300-3-70 Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) Assignments

  • The Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPA) authorizes temporary assignments via detail or temporary appointment of permanent employees between the federal government and state and local governments, colleges and universities, Indian tribal governments, federally funded research and development centers and other eligible organizations (5 U.S.C. Chapter 33, Subchapter VI, and 5 CFR Part 334). The IPA program allows agencies to access expertise from outside the federal government and provide eligible federal employees with developmental opportunities.
  • IPA assignments are initiated by management and must be mutually beneficial to both the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv and the non-federal organization. Assignments are voluntary and must be agreed to by the employee. Each IPA assignment must be examined to ensure it supports the participating organizations’ mission. Cost sharing arrangements are negotiated between the two participating organizations adhering to the requirements in this Section and Section 300-3-80. The OpDiv/StaffDiv may agree to reimburse the non-federal organization for all, some, or none of the costs of the assignment. (Questions on miscellaneous expenses not covered in this policy should be directed to the HR Center’s servicing finance staff. See Section 300-3-80(G). )
  • Competitive Service Employees in Tenure Group 1 or 2;
  • Excepted Service Employees in Tenure Group 1 or 2 (including equivalent tenured non-Title 5 employees, and excluding Indefinite, time-limited, PA/PAS, and Schedule C excepted service appointments);
  • Career SES Employees (excludes Non-career, Limited Term or Limited Emergency SES); and
  • Individuals employed for at least 90 days in a career position with a State, local, or Indian tribal government, institution of higher education, or other eligible organization.
  • Eligible Organizations are State or local governments, colleges or universities, Indian tribal governments, or other organizations defined by 5 U.S.C. §3371 and described under 5 CFR §334.102. Organizations must be certified to participate in an IPA prior to assignment. HR Centers are responsible for verifying an organization’s eligibility and certifying the organization, if necessary, prior to the IPA assignment. Information listed under 5 CFR §334.103 is required from organizations requesting IPA certification. If an organization has previously been certified by a federal agency (or another OpDiv/StaffDiv), the certification is permanent. HR Centers may accept a copy of the federal agency’s or OpDiv/StaffDiv’s certification as proof of eligibility or require the organization to resubmit information to verify the organization still meets the criteria. The list of the National Science Foundation’s designated Federally Funded Research and Development Centers eligible for IPA participation can be found at NSF.gov.
  • Federal Employees : Detail. With the consent of the employee, IPA assignments may also be made by placing the employee on leave without pay.
  • Non-federal Employees : Detail or a temporary excepted service appointment.
  • Work schedule : IPA assignments may be intermittent, part-time, or full-time.
  • IPA assignments may be made for up to two (2) years and may be extended by the OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee for an additional two (2) years when the extension benefits both organizations.
  • IPA assignments of federal employees to Indian tribes or tribal organizations (defined at 5 U.S.C. §3371(2)(C)) may be made for up to two (2) years and may be extended for any length of time by the OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee when the continuation of the assignment will benefit both the OpDiv/StaffDiv and the Indian tribe or tribal organization. If the assigned employee fails to complete the period of assignment and there is another employee willing and available to do so, the OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee may assign the employee to complete the period of assignment and execute an agreement with the tribal organization with respect to the replacement employee. The new agreement may provide for a different period of assignment as agreed to by both the OpDiv/StaffDiv and the tribal organization. (5 U.S.C. §3372(a))
  • OpDivs/StaffDivs cannot send or receive an individual on an IPA assignment if the individual has served four (4) continuous years on a single IPA assignment without at least a 12-month return to duty with his/her official employer. Consecutive IPA assignments without a break of at least 60 days is regarded as continuous service under IPA. (Assignments to Indian tribes or tribal organizations excluded.)
  • Federal employees are prohibited from participating on IPA assignment(s) for more than a total of six (6) years during their federal career. HR Center requests to waive this provision must be submitted to [email protected] for OPM approval, consistent with 5 CFR §334.104. (Assignments to Indian tribes or tribal organizations excluded.)
  • Federal employees on IPA assignments remain employees of HHS (i.e., their employing OpDiv/StaffDiv), occupying their official position of record, including for the purposes of the computation of basic pay, promotion, retirement, benefits, bargaining unit status, compensation for injury or death, and military benefits. Service while on an IPA assignment is credited for time-in-grade purposes at the grade of the position the employee officially holds. Employees are required to fulfill any mandatory training requirements while on assignment, and supervisors must consider employees for promotion (5 CFR §335.103(b)(2)). Employees return to their official position of record upon completion of assignment or are reassigned to a position of like pay and grade (5 CFR §334.107(b)).
  • The rate of pay for a federal employee assigned to a federally funded research and development center may not exceed the rate of pay the employee would be paid for continued service in his/her HHS official position of record (5 U.S.C. §3372(e)(1)).
  • Entitled to receive supplemental pay from their employing OpDiv/StaffDiv, if the state or local government rate of pay is less than the rate of pay the employee would have received had he/she not agreed to the IPA assignment. Supplemental pay is in amount equal to the difference between their official rate of pay and the state or local government rate (5 U.S.C. §3373(c)(1)); and
  • Entitled to the continuation of federal health and life insurance as long as the employee continues to make employee contributions; and are entitled to credit for the period of the IPA assignment toward federal retirement and unemployment compensation as specified under 5 U.S.C. §3373(c)(3), except as limited therein.
  • Rules on the election and receipt of benefits due to compensable injury or death are described under 5 U.S.C. §3373(d).
  • See also OPM Fact Sheet: Effect of Extended LWOP on Federal Benefits and Programs.
  • Non-federal employees may be detailed to competitive, excepted, or SES General positions.
  • Non-federal employees detailed to a classified position earn the basic rate of pay, including locality, equal to the salary of the classified position. If the detailee’s non- federal salary is less than the minimum rate of pay of the classified position, the OpDiv/StaffDiv must supplement their non-federal salary to make up the difference. Supplemental pay cannot be paid in advance or in a lump sum and is not conditional on completion of the assignment. Supplemental pay may be paid directly to the detailee or reimbursed to the non-federal organization.
  • Non-federal employees detailed to unclassified duties continue to be paid directly by their non-federal organization at a rate of pay based on the individual’s non-federal job.
  • Non-federal employees detailed under IPA may supervise a project and perform certain team lead duties (e.g., set due dates, identify resources, track progress and the completion of work, etc.,); however, they cannot perform supervisory or team lead functions that impact an employee (e.g., assign roles, participate in performance reviews, recommend awards, take disciplinary action, approve/disapprove leave requests or personnel actions, etc.). In addition, non-federal employees cannot perform the inherently governmental functions as discussed in Public Law 105-270, Section 5, and Office of Federal Procurement Policy Letter 11-01, Performance and Management of Inherently Governmental and Critical Functions , (76 FR 56227-01) (Sept. 12, 2011), including but not limited to serving as a manager or supervisor; implementing or administering grants, contracts, policies; directly exerting control over appropriated funds; or signing personnel actions.
  • Detailees generally have the same workweek and hours of duty as federal employees in the OpDiv/StaffDiv to which they are assigned unless the workweek of the permanent employees is shorter than the federal workweek by law or local ordinance. Detailees are eligible to telework and participate in alternate work schedule arrangements of the OpDiv/StaffDiv, consistent with HHS Instruction 990-1, Workplace Flexibilities.
  • Non-federal employees detailed to HHS can receive recognition through letters of appreciation or commendation but are not eligible for incentive awards (5 U.S.C. Chapter 45) or Quality Step Increases (QSI).
  • Non-federal employees who are placed on a temporary excepted appointment are considered temporary federal employees for the duration of the appointment and must meet the OPM qualification requirements for the series and grade of the position they are appointed to.
  • Typically, a non-federal employee is appointed at the minimum rate of the grade being filled; however, if an OpDiv/StaffDiv wants to pay an advanced step rate for a position at GS-11 through GS-15 based on superior qualifications, it may do so in accordance with HHS Instruction 531-1, Setting Pay Based on Superior Qualifications or Special Needs.
  • Non-federal employees who are placed on temporary appointments are entitled to cost- of-living allowances and other pay differentials (5 CFR Part 550); are eligible for incentive awards (5 U.S.C. Chapter 45); and earn leave in the same manner as other federal employees.
  • Eligibility for within-grade increases (WGI) is dependent on the length of appointment; however, employees appointed to successive temporary appointments of one (1) year or less are not eligible for a WGI, even if the time under successive temporary appointments exceeds one (1) year.
  • Non-federal employees appointed to a temporary appointment are not eligible to enroll in the Federal Employees Health Benefits program unless their federal appointment results in the loss of coverage under the non-federal health benefits system (5 U.S.C. §3374).
  • Non-federal employees placed on temporary appointments under IPA are not covered by any retirement system for federal employees, or by the Federal Employee Group Life Insurance Program.
  • A non-federal employee placed on a temporary excepted service appointment under IPA may supervise HHS employees.
  • Consult 5 U.S.C. §3374 for information on compensation for personal injury while on duty; death benefits; and for instances where a state or local government fails to continue employer contributions to retirement or benefit plans.
  • Citizenship Requirement. The Consolidated Appropriations Act (i.e., the annual federal budget) prohibits federal agencies from compensating individuals who are not U.S. citizens or nationals for any federal position within the U.S., unless the agency has a statutory exemption to the ban. HHS does not have an exemption to compensate non-U.S. citizens in temporary appointments under IPA. OpDivs/StaffDivs who are considering appointing a non-U.S. citizen without pay to a temporary excepted service appointment under IPA or detailing a non-U.S. citizen to a federal position under IPA should consult the Office of the General Counsel prior to the effective date of the IPA assignment to ensure the action and any related payments are legally supportable with the Appropriations Act.
  • Prior to the effective date of an IPA assignment, the assigned employee and the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv, the State or local government, Indian tribal government, institution of higher education, or other eligible organization must sign an IPA agreement listing the conditions and obligations of both parties (5 CFR §334.106).
  • If the IPA assignment is reimbursable, a finance agreement must also be completed following the requirements in Section 300-3-80 of this policy.
  • Form HHS-69, IPA Agreement (2023 or later), must be completed for all HHS IPA assignments, extensions, or modifications. The form contains the information required by OPM for IPA assignments and by the HHS Designated Agency Ethics Official to ensure proposed assignments will not violate conflict of interest statutes. HHS-69 can be found on HHS Intranet Forms and must be completed and signed by all parties listed on the form prior to the effective date of the IPA assignment.
  • IPA agreements must be modified if there are significant changes to the agreement during the assignment (e.g., changes to employee's duties, responsibilities, salary, work assignment location, supervisory relationships, etc.). The servicing Deputy Ethics Counselor (DEC) or Ethics Coordinator (EC) must be consulted prior to implementing changes to the duties and responsibilities of an IPA assignment to ensure there are no conflicts of interest. A list of DECs and ECs can be found at https://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/ogc/contact-ogc/agency-deputy- ethics-counselors-and-ethics-coordinators/index.html.
  • Federal employees participating on an IPA assignment must agree to serve at HHS upon completion of the assignment for a period equal to the length of the IPA assignment. Employees are required to reimburse their employing OpDiv/StaffDiv for the cost of the assignment (not including salary and benefits) if the employee does not fulfill this agreement. The OpDiv/StaffDiv Head or written designee may waive this reimbursement requirement and reason(s) must be documented. (5 U.S.C. §3372 and 5 CFR §334.105)
  • All individuals on an IPA assignment, whether assigned to HHS or to a non-federal organization, are subject to applicable ethics statutes and regulations including: 18 U.S.C. §§ 201-227 – Criminal Conflicts of Interest; 5 U.S.C. app. – Ethics in Government Act of 1978; 5 U.S.C. §§ 7321-7326 and 5 C.F.R. Part 734 – Hatch Act and implementing Political Activities Regulation; 5 U.S.C. § 7342 – Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act; 5 U.S.C. § 7353 – Gifts to Federal Employees; 41 U.S.C. §§ 2101-2107 – Ethics provisions of the Procurement Integrity Act; 5 C.F.R. Part 735 – Employee Responsibilities and Conduct; 5 C.F.R. Part 2634 – Executive Branch Financial Disclosure and Related Requirements; 5 C.F.R. Part 2635 – Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch; 5 C.F.R. Part   5501 – HHS Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct; and 5 C.F.R. Part 5502 – HHS Supplemental Financial Disclosure Reporting Requirements. IPA assignees are responsible for notifying their employing OpDiv/StaffDiv of any additional Government work they are engaged in or become engaged in during the assignment (e.g., detail with another federal agency, service on a federal advisory committee (FACA), volunteer work at another federal agency, etc.), and for obtaining any requisite approvals or waivers before engaging in such additional work. The servicing ethics office of the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv is responsible for communicating these requirements to the IPA assignee. (This information is covered on form HHS-69, IPA Agreement. )
  • Non-federal employees on assignment to the federal government are subject to the provisions of 5 U.S.C. Chapter 73, which regulates employee suitability, security, and conduct, including restrictions on political activity, and agency standards of conduct regulations.
  • HR Centers must consult/work with their finance, personnel security, ethics and labor and employee relations staff, and the Office of the General Counsel to implement an IPA agreement, including ensuring the servicing ethics office provides counseling on applicable ethics statutes and regulations and assigns a financial disclosure report for completion by an assignee to HHS, as required.
  • An IPA assignment may be terminated at any time at the request of HHS or the non-federal organization. Where possible, the party requesting termination should provide a 30-day advance written notice to the other parties of the agreement.

300-3-80 Reimbursable and Non-reimbursable Agreements

  • Funds for details and IPA assignments can only be used for purposes authorized by appropriation, i.e., the appropriations of the loaning OpDiv/StaffDiv can only be used to support programs/activities that have been authorized thru appropriation by Congress (31 U.S.C. §1301(a)).
  • Details within HHS must be reimbursable. Exceptions to this rule are (5)(a) or (b) immediately below.
  • Details to another agency must be reimbursable. Exceptions to this rule are (5)(a) and (b) immediately below. See Section 300-1-40 for agency definition.
  • Details to Congressional committees under 2 U.S.C. §4301(f) must be reimbursable ( Detail of Law Enforcement Agents to Congressional Committees , 12 Op. O.L.C. 184, 1988 WL 391014 (Sept. 13, 1988)), see Section 300-3-60(C)(3). No exceptions.
  • Details after the first 180 days must be reimbursable to the Department, except when the requirements in (5)(b) immediately below are met.
  • A detail to a WH office not listed in (4) immediately above who asserts it is not covered by 3 U.S.C. §112 and therefore not required to reimburse the employing OpDiv/StaffDiv is only permissible if the requirements described in (5)(b) immediately below are met.
  • Details to international organizations via 5 CFR Part 352, Subpart C, may be reimbursable or non-reimbursable (5 U.S.C. §3343(d-e)).
  • PHS employee details to the external organizations listed in Section 300-3-60(C)(4) may be reimbursable or non-reimbursable (42 U.S.C. §215). For additional Title 42 reimbursement requirements, see Section 300-3-60(C)(4)(d). OR
  • The functions of the detail are related to the loaning agency’s/division’s appropriations and the detail will assist the loaning agency/division in accomplishing programs/activities authorized by appropriation. ( Reimbursement of the Internal Revenue Service for Investigative Services Provided to the Independent Counsel , 12 Op. O.L.C. 233, 1988 WL 391018 (Sept. 30 , 1988 ); see also Reimbursement for Detail of JAG Corps Personnel to US Attorney’s Office, 13 Op. O.L.C. 188, 1989 WL 595823 (June 27, 1989))
  • Cost sharing arrangements are negotiated between the two participating organizations following the requirements in this Section and Section 300-3-70. The OpDiv/StaffDiv may agree to reimburse the non-federal organization for all, some, or none of the costs of the assignment. (Questions on miscellaneous expenses not covered in this policy should be directed to the HR Center’s servicing finance staff. See (G) below.)
  • Pay, travel and transportation expenses for federal employees on an IPA assignment to state or local governments may be reimbursable or non-reimbursable (5 U.S.C. §3373(b)).
  • Travel and transportation expenses for individuals on an IPA assignment from federal, state, or local governments may be reimbursable or non-reimbursable (5 U.S.C. §3375).
  • Payment of travel and transportation expenses is made consistent with the HHS Travel Policy.
  • A federal employee may not receive pay in addition to the pay of their official position of record for performing the duties of another position (5 U.S.C. §5535(b)).
  • Required Finance Agreement for Reimbursable Details and IPA Assignments . Inter or Intra Agency Agreements (IAA) are either between two federal agencies (inter-agency) or two HHS OpDiv/StaffDivs (intra-agency). IAAs describe the services to be performed; identify the legal authority to transfer funds from one appropriation to another; and must be executed and recorded prior to the start of the detail or IPA assignment in accordance with HHS Financial Management   Directives and Guidance (FMD&G), Chapter 2 Interagency Agreement, using the Department of Treasury forms required by the FMD&G.
  • OpDiv/StaffDiv HR Centers should consult their division’s servicing finance staff on executing IAAs; how to document financial agreements with non-federal organizations ; and any questions on payment of expenses not covered in this policy. The legal and regulatory requirements covered in this policy regarding reimbursable and non-reimbursable expenses take precedence when there is a conflict with ASFR policy decisions. Per the FMD&G, HR Centers should notify their servicing finance officer of any such policy conflicts.
  • Non-reimbursable Agreements . Participating organizations should execute a MOU for non- reimbursable details to document the terms of the detail. MOU examples can be found on OPM.gov. Non-reimbursable IPAs are documented via the IPA agreement, see Section 300-3-70.
  • IPA Assignment : The service requirement is included on the IPA agreement, see Section 300-3-70, Required IPA Agreement.
  • Non-Reimbursable Detail (outside of IPA) : A service requirement, if applicable, is documented on a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), see H. immediately above.
  • Reimbursable Details (outside of IPA) : HR Centers should consult their servicing finance office on how to document a service requirement, e.g., whether to include the requirement on the IAA, attach the service agreement to the IAA, etc.

300-3-90 Documentation and Accountability

  • Chapter 11, Excepted Service Appointments . Temporary appointment of non-federal employees under IPA (5 U.S.C. §3374).
  • Chapter 14, Details . A SF-50 or SF-52 is used, depending on type of action, and retained on the permanent side of the employee’s official personnel folder. In cases where the GPPA says no documentation is required, a SF-52 is used consistent with 5 U.S.C. §3341 which requires details to be documented in writing and approved by an agency official. 42 U.S.C. §215 is cited as the legal authority for details of PHS personnel to external organizations listed in Section 300-3-60(C)(4).
  • Chapter 15, Placement on Non-Pay or Non-Duty Status . LWOP actions.
  • Special Government Employees .   Remark code E21 should be used for individuals who are designated special government employees (SGE) as defined under 18 U.S.C. §202. Questions regarding the SGE ethics designation should be directed to an OpDiv/StaffDiv’s servicing ethics office. A list of servicing Deputy Ethics Counselors and Ethics Coordinators can be found at https://www.hhs.gov/about/agencies/ogc/contact-ogc/agency-deputy-ethics-counselors-and-   ethics-coordinators/index.html.
  • Records, including IPA agreements (and any modifications), proof of IPA organization eligibility, financial agreements, and all documentation sufficient for third party reconstruction purposes, must be retained for a total of three (3) full years after completion of the detail or IPA assignment in accordance with this Instruction and 5 CFR §334.106(b). Records involved in litigation and grievance processes may be destroyed only after official notification is received from OPM, Department of Justice, courts, the Office of the General Counsel, etc. that the matter has been fully litigated, or resolved, and closed.
  • ASA/OHR Policy and Accountability Division (PAD) or OPM may conduct accountability reviews to ensure compliance with this Instruction, HHS and OPM policy and guidance, and all applicable federal laws and regulations.

American Postal Workers Union Logo

  • Officer Directory
  • APWU State and Local Links
  • APWU History
  • Vice President
  • Secretary-Treasurer
  • Industrial Relations
  • Legislative & Political
  • Organization
  • Research & Education
  • Human Relations
  • Health Plan
  • Maintenance
  • Motor Vehicle Service
  • Support Services
  • Central Region
  • Eastern Region
  • Northeast Region
  • Southern Region
  • Western Region
  • APWU Articles
  • Press Releases
  • Postal Wire
  • Win Respect for Postal Workers
  • Grand Alliance
  • Postal Banking
  • Stand Up For Safe Jobs
  • Save The Post Office
  • U.S. Mail is Not for Sale!
  • Members Only
  • Pay Information
  • Safety and Health
  • Career Employees
  • Postal Support Employees
  • Coronavirus Information for Members
  • Veterans Resources
  • Contract Database
  • Frequently Requested Resources
  • Stewards' Corner
  • USPS Handbooks and Manuals
  • AFL-CIO Affiliation
  • Dues, Mailing Lists & Membership
  • Election of Union Officers
  • Financial Issues for Local, State Union Officers
  • Merger Guidelines

American Postal Workers Union Logo

MOU: Temporary Assignment, Reassignment or Reemployment in APWU Crafts of Employees Injured on the Job (2012)

limited duty , light duty , excessing , injured on the job

return to Contract Database

temporary assignment memo

MOU restricts limited duty assignments in APWU represented crafts to residual vacancies or to uniquely created assignments consisting of duties that would otherwise be properly performed by non-career employees. Existing assignments in the Clerk Craft may remain in place until the employee in the assignment vacates the assignment or until the assignment is modified. Employees from other crafts must be returned to their own craft before excessing, Excessing is done by seniority regardless of light or limited duty status.

Document Type:  Memorandum of Understanding

Tags: limited duty , light duty , excessing , injured on the job

Related Documents

SHOW FILTERS ›

National Award Das: ELM 546 Changes based on Article 13 (2009)

March 20, 2009.

Document Type: National Arbitration

Arbitrator Name: Shyam

View › Download PDF ›

limited duty, light duty, rehabilitation assignments

Step 4 Agreement: Rural Carriers and Light Duty Assignments in the Clerk Craft (2009)

August 27, 2009.

Document Type: Step 4 Agreement

Craft: Clerk

APWU National Grievance Number: HQTC20092

cross craft, crossing craft, limited duty, light duty, rural carrier, rural carriers, accomodation, reassignment, ELM 546

MOU: Rehabilitation Issues (2011)

March 11, 2011.

Document Type: Memorandum of Understanding

light duty, limited duty, Department of Justice, Office of Legal Counsel, Temporary Assignment, reassignment, reemployment

MOU: Filling of Residual Vacancies (2014)

March 20, 2014.

Filling of Residual Vacancies MOU

residual, cross craft, Transfer, PSE, Vacancy, Pecking Order, Priority Transfer, excessing, part-time flexible, PTF, FTR, Full-Time Regular, Bid Posting, eReassign, Conversion, Impacted Installations, Postal Support Employees, reassignment, ADRP, residual mou, Residual Vacancies

MOU: Protesting Limited Duty Craft Assignments (1993)

January 27, 1973.

cross craft assignment, Jurisdiction, limited duty, job offer grievance, job offer, assignment offer

American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO 1300 L Street NW Washington DC 20005

© Copyright 2024 Privacy Policy

Finding the Right Compensation for Temporary Assignments

ANNOUNCEMENT - Thank you for your interest in WorldatWork.  We are currently experiencing a temporary issue with e-commerce.  Our team is working to resolve.  For immediate order placement, please contact our Customer Support Team -  email at  [email protected]  or Call U.S & Canada  1-877-951- 9191 , Outside U.S & Canada 1-480-951-9191.    We apologize for the inconvenience.

temporary assignment memo

  • Determine the criticalness of the assignment. There are various instances where an organization will need to temporarily fill a role, and how they go about compensating the employee assigned to the temporary role should be preset and determined on how critical it is to the business.  
  • Filling in for an employee on leave. In a scenario in which an employee goes on leave and a person is asked to take over their job responsibilities for a defined time, a compensation bump should be added as a premium in the form of a line item of pay with their typical paycheck. 
  • Put a formal process in place. Having an established process makes good business sense because when an employee takes on a new role for a period of time, exercising the same responsibilities as the employee on leave, they should have the same pay opportunity. 
  • Quick-fix scenarios. Some work scenarios are more difficult to formalize a compensation structure for temporary assignments, such as an employee in a call center not showing up for work for an extended period without notice. Employees who fill in when needed should receive other reward items such as free lunches or gift cards that say “thank you” for picking up the additional workload. 

Temporary assignments, or the assignment of duties to an employee outside their regular scope on a short-term basis, often come with an increase in direct compensation. 

But how should that amount be determined? 

It all depends on whether the assignment is for a new project or simply a fill-in for a missing employee, said Julian Pawlowski, senior principal at Mercer. 

“[Temporary assignments] are common practice in the context of a major project and typically involve an additional scope of responsibility,” he said. 

On the other hand, with constant organizational changes, such as a promotion or other employee transitions such as maternity/medical leave, organizations may need to assign an employee to a temporary role to both support that transition and any gaps in the workflow that a change creates. 

Webinar: 2023 In Review: Trends, Insights & Predictions to Inform Your H2 Strategy  

“Some roles have less influence on results and pay should be commensurate with that,” he said. 

Therefore, leaders must first determine the criticalness of the assignment to the business, Pawlowski said.  

“What will be the impact if someone’s not in place?” he said. “There really has to be a discussion about the risk if the project isn’t completed on time. What’s the risk if no one is covering that person’s responsibilities? Risk must be determined up front.” 

With core strategic projects, for example, there typically are very defined project plans with dependencies and outcomes so that organizations understand the scope of work that’s occurring and the employee understands the part of the workflow and outcome they are responsible for. 

From an administrative perspective, this should include an assignment letter, a plan document explaining the terms and conditions of the program, the award amount, timing and any actions that occur if a person leaves.  

“All that should be in place before the project begins so they are clear about what they are eligible for, how they earn it and when they earn it.”  

But the extra compensation — paid out at the completion of preset milestones — should not just be based on an individual’s performance, Pawlowski said.  

“There’s the participant’s support and input that should be measured individually, but also the team’s outcome,” he said. “So a composite score should determine that temporary assignment’s compensation range.” 

In a scenario in which an employee goes on leave and a person is asked to take over their job responsibilities for a defined  time, however, the compensation bump should be added as a premium — a line item of pay with their typical paycheck. 

“That way the person is recognized immediately for the time and work done, and reinforces the idea that the person is getting the opportunity and extra money immediately,” Pawlowski said. “It really helps with both employee motivation and retention.” 

Formalizing the Process 

For McKesson Canada and its 4,500 employees, temporary assignments that last a minimum of three months occur often enough that the company has a formal process in place. 

Isabelle Brissette, a McKesson Canada compensation consultant, noted the company had 29 temporary assignments for the past fiscal year. “Some of our maternity/parental leaves can last up to 18 months,” she said. 

Having a formal process in place makes good business sense, Brisette said, because when an employee takes on a new temporary role, exercising the same responsibilities as the employee on leave, they should have the same pay opportunity.  

McKesson Canada employees on temporary assignments receive a compensation package that al teast matches the new career grade’s minimum salary range, Brisette said. 

For roles in which the employee will take on new responsibilities for three months or more — sometimes up to 18 months to cover maternity/parental leaves — the employee will be placed in the new job code, with the new grade level and get the new bonus target associated with that role. 

Base pay, however, will not be increased.  

“We will put in a temporary bi-weekly premium as a percentage of base,” she said. “This bi-weekly premium usually ranges from 5% to 15%.”  

However, in light of new pay transparency standards , as well as because the employee will have access to the new salary range, McKesson ensures that the bi-weekly premium added to the base pay comes to at least the minimum of the new range. 

Member-Only Webinar: Pay Rate Disclosures in Job Postings: New Laws, Best Practices & Tips  

Once the assignment is over, the employee goes back into their regular position and grade level, and the bi-weekly premium stops.  

McKesson has another process for a temporary assignment for extra responsibilities, Brisette said.  

“This is where an employee would remain in their current role but take on responsibilities from a colleague or a superior who is on leave for an unknown period of time (short-term leave, jury duty, etc.).” 

In these cases, she said, compensation is simply made by a lump-sum payment. 

Other Scenarios 

Some work scenarios, however, are more difficult to formalize a compensation structure for temporary assignments, Mercer’s Pawlowski noted.  

“Maybe there’s an employee in a call center who doesn’t show up or leaves unexpectedly and the remaining team picks up the workload,” he said. “That’s fairly common and there needs to be consideration in other areas beside direct compensation.”  

Employees who fill in when needed should receive other reward items such as free lunches or gift cards that say “thank you” for picking up the additional workload. 

“That’s a really important detail,” Pawlowski said. “There are many cases where it’s not formalized and there are gaps in the work and workers still need to pick up the slack.” 

Editor’s Note: Additional Content 

For more information and resources related to this article see the pages below, which offer quick access to all WorldatWork content on these topics: 

  • Employee Compensation   
  • Organizational Performance   

Please try a different combination of filters or categories.

temporary assignment memo

Stay current on hot topics, research, upcoming events and more. Unsubscribe at any time; view our privacy policy .

 alt=

Please share your feedback!

Editable Temporary Appointment Letter

Editable Temporary Appointment Letter in Word, Google Docs, PDF

Download this Editable Temporary Appointment Letter Design in Word, Google Docs, PDF Format. Easily Editable, Printable, Downloadable.

A letter of appointment that is designed to inform someone of a temporary assignment. This template is free to download and perfect for making a formal and effective letter. It is easy to edit and fully customizable.

APPOINTMENT LETTER

Dear [RECIPIENT NAME],

On behalf of [YOUR COMPANY NAME], I am pleased to appoint you temporarily for the position of [POSITION] from [START DATE] to [END DATE]. You are expected to report to the office on Monday. 

Your salary will be [NUMBER] paid by check or direct deposit in bi-weekly increments of [NUMBER 1], excluding tax and other withholdings. Please do not hesitate to speak with the Human Resources Department if there is anything about the offer that you may want to discuss or amend.

If you find the proposed terms and conditions acceptable, please sign the attached documents. You may return the documents to the Human Resources Department by [DATE 1]. Failure to do so will automatically rescind the offer

Congratulations, and best wishes regarding the post.

[YOUR SIGNATURE]

[YOUR NAME]

Already a premium member?  Sign in

You may also like

Upgrade to Business

The Federal Register

The daily journal of the united states government, request access.

Due to aggressive automated scraping of FederalRegister.gov and eCFR.gov, programmatic access to these sites is limited to access to our extensive developer APIs.

If you are human user receiving this message, we can add your IP address to a set of IPs that can access FederalRegister.gov & eCFR.gov; complete the CAPTCHA (bot test) below and click "Request Access". This process will be necessary for each IP address you wish to access the site from, requests are valid for approximately one quarter (three months) after which the process may need to be repeated.

An official website of the United States government.

If you want to request a wider IP range, first request access for your current IP, and then use the "Site Feedback" button found in the lower left-hand side to make the request.

IMAGES

  1. MS WORD: Memo Assignment by MB Portfolio

    temporary assignment memo

  2. Sample Memo to Employees for late Coming Template

    temporary assignment memo

  3. Temporary Appointment Letter (8+ Samples and Writing Tips)

    temporary assignment memo

  4. business letter memo sample writing assignment navy template formal

    temporary assignment memo

  5. How to Write a Memo [Template & Examples]

    temporary assignment memo

  6. End-of-Temp-Assignment-1-49

    temporary assignment memo

COMMENTS

  1. 10 Free Temporary Appointment Letter Examples

    This letter of appointment may be revised, extended, or waived in any manner except both parties agree. All matters relating to this temporary appointment should be handled by the law of [insert your state]. This letter of appointment entails the entire agreement of all parties concerned. Employee Date. Director Date.

  2. Temporary Appointment Letter Samples (Writing Tips)

    A good temporary employment letter should contain all the following: 1.Name of employee. To ensure that it goes to the right person and that the qualified personnel gets the job. 2. Rank. States the position that they will be filling on a temporary basis. 3.Date of employment.

  3. Summary of Reassignment

    Summary of Reassignment. This summary of reassignment covers the following topics: 1. Learning About Reassignment. The reassignment regulations give an agency extensive flexibility in reassigning an employee to a different position. This summary covers the procedures in the reassignment regulations. With this summary, employees, managers, union ...

  4. Be sure to document temporary federal assignments

    That letter must state the nature and length of the temporary assignment / detail, whether the duties performed were full- or part-time, and the percentage of time other duties were performed.

  5. Temporary Reassignment

    A request to temporarily reassign an employee requires the approval of the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs. Below you will find the required documents to complete a temporary reassignment. 1. Cover Memorandum which includes the following information: Indicate temporary reassignment request.

  6. How To Write a Temporary Employment Offer Letter (With ...

    The letter's upper part should also include the date, the candidate's first and last name, as well as their full address. 2. Add a formal salutation and congratulate the potential employee. The best way to greet the letter's recipient is usually with "Dear," followed by their first and last name.

  7. Justifications

    More information is available in DGS HR Memorandum 20-034. Establish New Position: ... (OOC) assignments are temporary assignments utilized to fill a temporary staffing need when all other civil service staffing alternatives have been explored. OOC assignments must be requested in advance, in writing, advertised internally, and approved prior ...

  8. Temp-to-Hire Employment Agreement: How It Works and Example

    Here is an employment contract sample that includes the sections mentioned. Terms of Agreement. This temp-to-hire agreement is between the company (name) of (address and phone number) and the worker (name) of (address and phone number). The worker will start this temporary assignment on (date) and continue until (date), after which the worker ...

  9. PDF TEMPORARY WORK ASSIGNMENTS

    TEMPORARY WORK ASSIGNMENTS . This Memorandum of Understanding (hereinafter, "MOU") is entered into by and between the Southwestern Community College District (hereinafter, "District") and the California School Employees Association, and its Southwestern Chapter #524 (hereinafter, "CSEA") for temporary work assignments. 1.

  10. Temporary Assignment

    Temporary Assignments are assignments to a position/re-assignment in HQ, Satellite Office, or Country Office (CO) for more than 12 months and less than five years. ... Send the Temporary Assignment memo to the staff member upon receipt of medical clearance and benefits election. Action by Staff (Prior To Departure) 15.

  11. Template for letter of reassignment or transfer

    Download or preview 2 pages of PDF version of Template for letter of reassignment or transfer (DOC: 95.2 KB | PDF: 84.3 KB ) for free.

  12. PDF Sample Offer Letter

    A temporary assignment is a position established for a limited period of time to meet seasonal or short term workloads. In addition, all temporary employees are considered at will, and either UNMC or the temporary employee may terminate the temporary employment relationship upon giving notice. In accordance with the Fair Labor Standards

  13. PDF Memorandum of Understanding American Postal Workers Union, Afl-cio

    Patrick M. Devine Manager. Contract Administration (APWU) United States Postal Service Cliff Guffey' I c -- President American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO. Date: 9/10/12. APWU 2010-2015 CBA Questions and Answers (Q & A) Re: Temporary Assignment, Reassignment or Reemployment in APWU Represented Crafts of Employees Injured on the Job MOU.

  14. 300-3: Intergovernmental Personnel Act Assignments

    Memo from HHS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Resources, Delegation of Human Resources Authorities, dated May 9, 2022. 300-3-40 Definitions. Agency. An Executive Department or Agency, as defined in 5 U.S.C. §§101 and 105 (i.e., HHS). Days. Calendar days. Detail. A temporary assignment to a different position for a specified period. A ...

  15. MOU: Temporary Assignment, Reassignment or Reemployment in APWU Crafts

    Document Type: Memorandum of Understanding. View › Download PDF › light duty, limited duty, Department of Justice, Office of Legal Counsel, Temporary Assignment, reassignment, reemployment. MOU: Filling of Residual Vacancies (2014) March 20, 2014. Filling of Residual Vacancies MOU.

  16. Finding the Right Compensation for Temporary Assignments

    Isabelle Brissette, a McKesson Canada compensation consultant, noted the company had 29 temporary assignments for the past fiscal year. "Some of our maternity/parental leaves can last up to 18 months," she said. Having a formal process in place makes good business sense, Brisette said, because when an employee takes on a new temporary role ...

  17. PDF M-01827

    M-01827. M-01827. MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE AND THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF LETTER CARRIERS, AFL-CIO Re: City Carrier Assistants - Temporary Assignments to Other Post Offices The parties agree to the following regarding the temporary assignment of city carrier assistants (CCAs) outside their employing ...

  18. 6 In-Depth Memo Examples (With a Memo Template To Reference)

    In this article, we review how you can use memos, offer six in-depth memo examples and provide a template for reference. A memo, or memorandum, is a notice that communicates matters concerning the business, such as: Policy updates. Meeting or event reminders. Recognition of employee performance. Schedule changes.

  19. PDF SUBJECT: MCGEO Temporary Promotion and Assignment Processes

    Temporary Assignment Approval Form. Similar to the process for temporary promotions, this process requires the employee to meet the minimum qualifications in order to fill the position on a temporary basis and for a resume to be submitted alongside the form. Due to the shortened nature of this assignment and the expeditious need for approval in ...

  20. Editable Temporary Appointment Letter

    Download this Editable Temporary Appointment Letter Design in Word, Google Docs, PDF Format. Easily Editable, Printable, Downloadable. A letter of appointment that is designed to inform someone of a temporary assignment. This template is free to download and perfect for making a formal and effective letter. It is easy to edit and fully ...

  21. Change Job: Temporary Assignment HR/Manager

    Generate Temporary Assignment Letter - Compensation Partner 38. The Compensation Partner is responsible for generating the Temporary Assignment Agreement and will receive a Workday Action prompting them to do so. 39. Workday will default much of the information, but you should review the letter and adjust, entering specific data when necessary.

  22. 5 CFR Part 317 Subpart I -- Reassignments, Transfers, and Details

    In this section, transfer means a permanent assignment or appointment to another SES position in a different executive agency or military department. ( b) Requirements. Transfers are voluntary and cannot occur without the consent of the appointee and the gaining agency, except transfers connected with a transfer of functions to another agency.

  23. MOU on CCAs being temporarily assigned to other post offices

    NALC and the Postal Service have agreed on a new memorandum of understanding, Re: City Carrier Assistants - Temporary Assignments to Other Post Offices , that defines the process for temporarily assigning city carrier assistants (CCAs) to other post offices.