3 FAM 2330
HOURS OF WORK
(CT:PER-957; 08-30-2019)
(Office of Origin: HR/ER/WLD)
3 FAM 2331 GENERAL INFORMATION
3 FAM 2331.1 Authority
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA/USAID)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Authorities for this subchapter are:
(1) Chapter 61, Title 5, United States Code;
(2) 5 U.S.C. 5541(2) (xiv)-(xvi);
(3) The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (as amended),
Chapter 8, Title 29, United States Code;
(4) 5 CFR 550, 5 CFR 551, 5 CFR 610, and 5 CFR 630.
3 FAM 2331.2 Purpose
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA/USAID)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
These regulations establish the basic workweek and regular
administrative workweek, and the options for an irregular workweek and
alternative work schedules (including flexible and compressed work schedules),
for Foreign Service and Civil Service employees, including Foreign Service
officers (FSOs), Senior Foreign Service officers (SFS) who have not elected
presidential appointee pay, and part-time employees. SFS who are presidential
appointees and elect presidential appointee pay and Civil Service presidential
appointees under presidential appointee pay are excluded from these provisions
because they are paid by virtue of their position and not based on hours
worked.
3 FAM 2331.3 Definitions
(CT:PER-957; 08-30-2019)
(Uniform State/USAGM/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA/USAID)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Administrative workweek: Any
period of 7 consecutive 24-hour periods designated in advance by the head of
agency. For Department of State domestic offices and most posts abroad, the
administrative workweek extends from Sunday, 12:00 a.m., to Saturday, 11:59
p.m.
Basic workweek: For full-time
employees, the 40-hour workweek established in accordance with this section.
Unless otherwise altered under 3 FAM 2333 or 3 FAM 2335, an
employees basic workweek in Washington, DC, is Monday Friday, 8:15 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. with 45 minutes of noncompensated time for lunch. Bureaus also have discretion to establish a 30 or 60
minute lunch break for their Washington, DC offices (e.g. 8:15 a.m. to 4:45
p.m., 8:15 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.). An employees basic workweek in other
locations, domestic or abroad, will be established in accordance with the
guidance in 3
FAM 2333 and will include at least 30 minutes but no more than 1 hour for lunch. Bargaining unit employees are subject to the
workweek and lunch period provisions of their applicable collective bargaining
agreement.
Basic work requirement: The
number of hours, excluding overtime hours, an employee is required to work or
to account for by charging leave, credit hours, excused absence, holiday hours,
compensatory time off, or time off as an award. A full-time employee has a
basic work requirement of 80 hours in a pay period.
Core hours: The daily hours
when employees on a flexible work schedule must be present for work. Each
bureau/post must establish its own core hours. A bureau/post may choose the
Departments core hours of 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. or establish other core
hours. The band of core hours should be at least 5 consecutive hours long.
Core hours should not begin before 6:00 a.m. or extend past 6:00 p.m.
Credit hours: Those hours
within a flexible work schedule that an employee elects to work in excess of
his or her basic work requirement so as to vary the length of a workweek or
workday. Credit hours are not the same as overtime hours of work or
compensatory time off. Credit hours may only be worked by employees on a
flexible work schedule and require supervisor approval.
Fixed schedule: A work
schedule that once established remains the same from pay period to pay period.
Flexible hours: The band of
hours at the beginning and end of the workday during which an employee on a
flexible work schedule may choose to vary his or her time of arrival and
departure. Each bureau/post must establish its own flexible hours consistent
with the duties and requirements of the position. For example, if the core
hours are 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., flexible hours might be from 6:15 a.m. to
9:00 a.m. and from 3:00 p.m. to 5:45 p.m.
Holiday work: Nonovertime work
performed by an employee during a regularly scheduled daily tour of duty on a
holiday listed in 3 FAM 2338.1.
Irregular or occasional overtime work:
Overtime work that is not part of an employees regularly scheduled administrative
workweek; i.e., overtime work that is scheduled after the start of the
administrative workweek.
Night work: Regularly
scheduled nonovertime work performed by an employee between the hours of 6:00
p.m. and 6:00 a.m. An overseas post can establish a different start and end
time of night work based upon the customary hours of business at that location.
Overtime work: Subject to
certain exceptions and exclusions set forth by law or regulation, overtime work
generally includes work in excess of 8 hours in a day or in excess of 40 hours
in an administrative workweek.
Regularly scheduled administrative
workweek: For full-time employees, the period within an administrative
workweek when the employee is regularly scheduled to work. For part-time
employees, a regularly scheduled administrative workweek is the officially
prescribed days and hours within an administrative workweek during which the
employee is regularly scheduled to work. An employees regularly scheduled
administrative workweek includes the basic workweek plus any regularly
scheduled overtime work.
Regularly scheduled overtime work:
Overtime work that is part of an employees regularly scheduled administrative
workweek; i.e., overtime work that is scheduled in advance of the start of the
administrative workweek.
Regularly scheduled work: Work
that is scheduled in advance of the administrative workweek. Any work to which
availability pay applies is excluded from the definition of regularly scheduled
work.
Sunday work: Nonovertime work
performed by an employee during a regularly scheduled daily tour of duty when
any part of that daily tour of duty is on a Sunday. For any such tour of duty,
not more than 8 hours of work are Sunday work, unless the employee is on a
compressed work schedule, in which case the entire regularly scheduled daily
tour of duty constitutes Sunday work.
Tour of duty: The hours of a
day (a daily tour of duty) and the days of an administrative workweek (a weekly
tour of duty) that constitute an employees regularly scheduled administrative
workweek. For employees on a flexible work schedule, the tour of duty defines
the limits within which an employee must complete his or her basic work
requirement and is comprised of all hours and days for which flexible and core
hours have been designated.
3 FAM 2332 RESPONSIBILITIES
3 FAM 2332.1 Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary (PDAS)/Deputy Assistant Secretary (DAS)
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
In the Washington, DC metropolitan area, the bureau
principal deputy assistant secretary (PDAS)/deputy assistant secretary (DAS) is
responsible for approving a regular basic workweek in each bureau. Unless
altered by the PDAS or DAS, the regular basic workweek is Monday Friday, 8:15
a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with 45 minutes of noncompensated time for lunch.
3 FAM 2332.2 The Office of
Employee Relations (HR/ER)
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
The Office of Employee Relations (HR/ER) is responsible
for:
(1) Establishing policies and procedures for the
Departments alternative work schedules and part-time employment programs;
(2) Responding to inquiries from domestic bureaus
and/or posts abroad on these subjects; and
(3) Reviewing bureau plans, as needed, and providing
guidance on work schedules.
3 FAM 2332.3 Executive
Directors/Management or Principal Officers
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Executive directors/management or principal officers are
responsible for:
(1) Establishing a basic workweek of 40 hours for each
full-time employee in the bureau and/or post;
(2) Prescribing an irregular basic workweek of 40
hours for individual employees or groups of employees under that bureaus
authority as needs of the bureau require;
(3) Establishing a special tour of duty of not less
than 40 hours per administrative workweek to enable employees to take courses
in nearby colleges, universities, or other educational institutions that will
equip them for more effective work in the Department;
(4) Authorizing the use of flexible and compressed
work schedules provided it is determined that the use of such schedules has the
potential to improve productivity and/or provide greater service to the public;
(5) Identifying positions which must be excepted from
the provisions of this subchapter in order to carry out the mission of the
Department; and
(6) Administering part-time and job-share employment.
3 FAM 2332.4 Managers and
Supervisors
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Managers and supervisors are responsible for:
(1) Establishing irregular basic workweeks at domestic
locations and for employees abroad;
(2) Obtaining approval from the executive office prior
to implementation of flexible and/or compressed work schedules;
(3) Approving, in advance, a schedule for each
employee working an alternative work schedule;
(4) Ensuring that employees adhere to their basic
workweek schedules, and, where applicable, their alternative workweek
schedules;
(5) Scheduling overtime work as necessary to meet the
workload needs of the office and approving, in writing and in advance, all
regular and irregular/occasional overtime work; and
(6) Supporting requests for part-time and job-share
employment if such requests can be reasonably accommodated.
3 FAM 2332.5 Employees
Responsibilities
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Employees are responsible for:
(1) For alternate work schedules, requesting and
submitting their schedules, in writing, to their appropriate supervisor for
approval; and
(2) Working overtime only when approved, in writing,
by their supervisor in advance.
3 FAM 2333 ESTABLISHMENT OF A BASIC
WORKWEEK
3 FAM 2333.1 Establishing a
Regular Basic Workweek
3 FAM 2333.1-1 General Rules
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
A regular basic workweek will meet the following
requirements:
(1) The basic 40-hour workweek is scheduled on 5 days,
Monday through Friday, when possible, and the 2 days outside the basic workweek
are consecutive;
(2) The basic workday is in multiples of 15 minutes;
(3) Assignments to days and hours of duty are
scheduled in advance of an administrative workweek for periods of not less than
1 week;
(4) The working hours in each day in the basic workweek
are the same (except for employees on a first 40-hour workweek;
(5) The basic nonovertime workday should not exceed 8
hours;
(6) The occurrence of holidays does not affect the
designation of the basic workweek, and days and hours of duty cannot be rescheduled
either to permit or prevent the inclusion of holidays within the basic
workweek;
(7) Breaks in working hours of more than 1 hour may
not be scheduled in any basic workday; and
(8) No part of the lunch time can be substituted for
leave during the basic workday. The lunch break should not be taken during the
first or last 2 and 1/2 hours of the workday. Employees who are scheduled to
work less than 7 hours in a workday (part-time employees) have the option of
omitting the lunch break.
3 FAM 2333.1-2 Regular Basic
Workweek at Domestic Bureaus and Posts Abroad
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. Each domestic bureau and post abroad will establish
the basic workweek for its employees. When possible, the basic workweek will
be the same for all agencies at the same geographic location.
b. A basic workweek of 40 hours in length, which does
not extend over more than 6 of any 7 consecutive days, will be established for
each group of full-time employees.
c. Whenever it is impracticable to prescribe a regular
schedule of definite hours of duty for each workday, the first 40 hours of work
performed within a period of not more than 6 out of 7 consecutive days may be
established as the basic workweek. All work performed within the 40-hour
period is considered regularly scheduled work for hours of duty and premium pay
purposes. Additional hours of officially ordered or approved work within that
7-day period will be treated as overtime.
3 FAM 2333.1-3 Regular Basic
Workweek for Washington, DC
(CT:PER-957; 08-30-2019)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Services Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Unless modified in accordance with the authorities
provided for in this section, the regular basic workweek in the metropolitan
area of Washington, DC, is 8 hours a day, Monday through Friday, beginning at
8:15 a.m. and ending at 5:00 p.m. with 45 minutes of noncompensated time for
lunch. Bureaus also have discretion to establish
a 30 or 60 minute lunch break for their Washington, DC offices (e.g. 8:15 a.m.
to 4:45 p.m., 8:15 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.). Employees may not forfeit the
lunch break in order to arrive late or leave early from work. Bargaining unit employees are subject to the workweek
and lunch period provisions of their applicable collective bargaining
agreement.
3 FAM 2333.2 Authority to
Establish an Irregular Basic Workweek
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Services Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. Irregular basic workweeks may be established at
domestic bureaus or posts abroad whenever necessary because of:
(1) Extremes of climate;
(2) Local customs, traditions or practices;
(3) Differences in time zones; or
(4) Other factors requiring duty at irregular hours.
b. Irregular basic workweeks should conform to as many
of the requirements listed in 3 FAM 2333.1-1
as practicable. Irregular basic workweeks may not be scheduled on more than 6
out of 7 consecutive days in an administrative workweek.
c. Hours and days of work may not be rescheduled
either to permit or prevent the inclusion or exclusion of holidays within the
basic workweek.
d. The workday is in multiples of 15 minutes.
3 FAM 2333.3 Variation in Basic
Workweek for Educational Purposes
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Services Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. Each domestic bureau and post abroad may authorize
an irregular basic workweek of not less than 40 hours to permit an employee to
take one or more courses in a college, university, or other educational
institution when it is determined that:
(1) The courses being taken are not training under 5
U.S.C. 4101 through 5 U.S.C. 4118;
(2) The rearrangement of the employees basic workweek
will not appreciably interfere with the accomplishment of the employees
duties;
(3) Additional costs for personnel services will not
be incurred; and
(4) Completion of the course will equip the employee
for more effective performance.
b. The bureau/post may not pay the employee any premium
pay solely because the irregular workweek authorized under this section causes
the employee to work on a day, or at a time during the day, for which premium
pay would otherwise be payable.
3 FAM 2333.4 Hours of Work for
Foreign Service Officers (FSOs) and Senior Foreign Service (SFS)
3 FAM 2333.4-1 Basic Workweek
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
Applies to Foreign Service Employees only)
a. The basic workweek for Foreign Service officers
(FSO) and Senior Foreign Service (SFS), is a 40-hour week, with biweekly pay
periods derived from per annum salaries, during which employees accrue and
charge leave under chapters 3 FAM 3300, 3 FAM 3400, and 3 FAM 3500. NOTE: Senior FSOs who have opted for presidential appointee
pay are not covered by these provisions.
b. FSOs and SFSs are subject to working additional
hours over the 40 hours of the basic workweek as the needs of the Service
require.
c. Foreign Service employees are eligible to
participate in an alternative work schedule when approved by their supervisors.
3 FAM 2333.4-2 Additional
Compensation for Overtime Work
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service Employees Only)
Tenured and commissioned Foreign Service Officers (FSOs)
in the FS pay plan are not eligible to receive premium compensation for
overtime work. They can be granted special compensatory time off for
additional hours of work that have been ordered or approved pursuant to 3 FAM 3133.5.
SFS are not eligible for premium compensation or special compensatory time off.
3 FAM 2334 Authority to Establish and
Modify Alternative Work Schedules
3 FAM 2334.1 General
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/USDA-Foreign Service)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees Only)
a. Flexible and compressed work schedules may be
authorized for selected individuals, components of a bureau/post, or for all
employees.
b. Management may experiment with the use of these
schedules, and subject to appropriate collective bargaining obligations, may
revert to previous tours of duty if the determination is made that using such
schedules is not effective, efficient, or in the best interest of the
bureau/post.
c. Subject to applicable collective bargaining
agreements, and bargaining status, an employees alternative work schedule may
be altered or terminated when the employee is placed on leave restriction, when
there are conduct issues such as tardiness, poor performance or misconduct of a
serious nature, or when the alternative work schedule adversely affects the
employees work performance. The supervisor must document the adverse impact
of the alternative work schedule on the employees conduct or performance and
give the employee written notice at least 2 weeks in advance of the
administrative work week in which the change will take effect.
d. An employee may voluntarily terminate his or her
AWS, in writing to the supervisor. Changes will not be implemented until the
following pay period.
e. An alternative work schedule agreement is mandatory
including the days and work hours of a compressed work schedule, and signed by
the employee and supervisor. Form DS-1901 is available for this purpose.
3 FAM 2334.2 Obligation to
Negotiate
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Where employees have exclusive representation, the
establishment of flexible and compressed work schedules must be negotiated
before implementation.
3 FAM 2335 ALTERNATIVE WORK SCHEDULES
3 FAM 2335.1 General
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/USDA-Foreign Service)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees Only)
a. Alternative Work Schedules (AWS) include both
flexible work schedules and compressed work schedules and may be authorized in
accordance with the policies in 3 FAM 2335.
Each bureau/post must determine if an AWS will be made available to its
employees, subject to any obligation to negotiate with the exclusive
representatives of bargaining unit employees prior to implementation. Each
bureau/post must establish the flexible hours and core hours for the AWS and
notify all employees in writing of the established core and flexible hours.
Bureaus/posts are also responsible for ensuring that offices are complying with
the specific requirements in 3 FAM 2331.1.
b. Supervisors are responsible for tracking the hours
of work performed by their employees and may establish record-keeping
procedures to facilitate this.
c. For additional information on establishing and
using alternative work schedules, contact:
(1) StateBureau of Human Resources, Office of
Employee Relations;
(2) CommerceOffice of Foreign Service Human
Resources;
(3) USAIDOffice of Human Resources;
(4) USAGMOffice of Personnel, Operations and Benefits
Division; and
(5) USDAHuman Resources Division, PMBAB.
d. Additional information may be also obtained on the
OPM website (see OPMs Handbook on Alternative Work Schedules).
e. Work-Life Division, Office of Employee Relations
(HR/ER/WLD), in the Bureau of Human Resources, provides additional policy
guidance on alternative work schedules on their website.
3 FAM 2335.2 Types of Flexible and
Compressed Work Schedules
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Services and Civil Service Employees)
a. Flexible work schedules (FWS):
Schedules which consist of workdays with designated core hours when all
employees must be present at work, and flexible hours when employees may choose
to work in order to complete their basic (nonovertime) work requirement. The
following flexible work schedules may be available to eligible employees:
(1) Flexitour: A schedule in
which there are established core hours and a basic work requirement of 8 hours
each day and 40 hours in each week for a full-time employee (or a predetermined
daily and weekly schedule for a part-time employee), and the employee selects
arrival and departure times within a bureau/posts established flexible hours.
Once selected, the hours are fixed until the employing bureau/post provides an
opportunity to change arrival and departure times;
(2) Gliding schedule: A
schedule in which there are established core hours and a basic work requirement
of 8 hours each day and 40 hours in each week for a full-time employee (or a
predetermined daily and weekly schedule for a part-time employee), and the
employee may select arrival and departure times each day, and may change
arrival and departure times daily within the established flexible hours;
(3) Variable day schedule: A
schedule in which there are established core hours on each workday in the
workweek and a basic work requirement of 40 hours in each week of the biweekly
pay period for a full-time employee (or a predetermined weekly schedule for a
part-time employee), but in which an employee may vary the number of hours
worked in a given workday within the week within the limits established by the
employing bureau/post; and
(4) Variable week schedule: A
schedule in which there are established core hours on each workday in the
biweekly pay period and a basic work requirement of 80 hours for the biweekly
pay period for a full-time employee (or a predetermined biweekly schedule for a
part-time employee), but in which an employee may vary the number of hours
worked on a given workday or the number of hours each week within the limits
established by the bureau/post.
b. Compressed work schedules (CWS):
Fixed work schedules in which an employees basic work requirement of 80 hours
in a biweekly pay period is scheduled in less than 10 workdays. The following
compressed work schedules may be available to eligible employees:
(1) 4-day workweek: A fixed
schedule in which a full-time employee must work 10 hours per day for 4 days in
a workweek for a total of 40 hours per week, and 80 hours per biweekly pay
period. A part-time employee must complete the part-time weekly work
requirement in less than 5 days; and
(2) 5/4-9 plan: A fixed
schedule in which a full-time employee must work eight 9-hour days and one
8-hour day for a total of 80 hours in a biweekly pay period. A part-time
employee must work a fixed part-time biweekly work requirement in less than 10
days.
3 FAM 2335.3 Training and Official
Travel Duty
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
An employee on a flexible or compressed work schedule may
be required to convert to a traditional 40-hour workweek during pay periods in
which he or she has training or is on TDY status in order to conform to
operations at the temporary work site.
3 FAM 2335.4 Credit Hours
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. Eligibility:
(1) Subject to bureau/post approval, credit hours may
only be earned and used in conjunction with the flexible work schedules
outlined in 3
FAM 2335.2. Credit hours are not available to members of the Senior
Executive Service and Senior Foreign Service. Credit hours are available only
if adopted by the employing bureau/post and approved by the employees
supervisor. Every position may not be suitable for earning credit hours. For
example, there may not be sufficient work for more than 8 hours per day, work
may only be generated at certain times of the day, or the requirements for
office coverage may prevent a schedule that allows an employee to apply credit
hours to make up their basic work requirement. Employees on a compressed work
schedule are not eligible to earn credit hours; and
(2) Credit hours are worked at the election of the
employee consistent with agency policies and must be worked within an
employee's nonovertime tour of duty. Management cannot require an employee to
work credit hours for any purpose, including as a means of meeting the basic
work requirement.
b. Establishing credit hours as part
of a flexible work schedule:
(1) Bureau/post responsibility:
(a) Each bureau/post must determine if the earning and
use of credit hours will be permitted for employees on a FWS within the
bureau/post;
(b) Each bureau/post must establish flexible and core
hours which cover a minimum of 10 hours and 45 minutes each day in order to
permit an employee to work up to 2 credit hours in a day. In addition, at
least 8 hours and 45 minutes must fall between 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. so that
the bureau/post is not obligated to pay night differential for credit hours
worked before 6:00 a.m. or after 6:00 p.m.;
(b) When an employee uses credit hours, such hours are to
be counted as part of the basic work requirement to which they are applied.
The employee is entitled to his or her rate of basic pay for credit hours.
Credit hours may not be used by an employee to create an entitlement to
overtime pay. An employee may not be paid overtime pay, Sunday premium pay, or
holiday premium pay for credit hours; and
(c) A bureau/post may place a limit on the number of
credit hours an employee may earn during a biweekly pay period. A bureau/post
may also limit the number of credit hours an employee may earn on a daily or
weekly basis. Further, a time frame may be set by the bureau/post within which
employees must use credit hours after they have been earned. 5 U.S.C. 6126(a)
limits the number of credit hours an employee may carry over from 1 pay period
to another to 24 hours; and
(2) Employee responsibilities:
(a) A full-time employees biweekly work schedule must
provide for 80 hours in a biweekly pay period (or the basic work requirement
for a part-time employee) by including arrival and departure times within the
bureaus/post's established flexible hours; requested hours or days of annual
leave, sick leave (if known), compensatory time off, leave without pay, or use
of accumulated credit hours; and the days during which the employee intends to
work credit hours. All hours must be worked during the employees established
workweek;
(b) The employee must have his or her schedule approved
in advance by a supervisor on a biweekly basis, unless this requirement is
waived in writing by the supervisor. An employee may change the approved
credit hours he or she plans to work with supervisor approval;
(c) The employee must record arrival and departure times
daily on the Form DS-3073, Credit Hours Schedule Form, and sign it at the end
of each pay period; and
(d) The employee must adhere to all other requirements
of the FWS, including the core hours, regardless of whether credit hours are
worked every pay period; and
(3) Supervisor responsibilities:
(a) A supervisor must review and approve and/or
disapprove the employees proposed schedule of credit hours in advance. It may
be done on a biweekly basis, or less frequently, as determined by the
supervisor. The supervisor may limit the flexible hours established by the
bureau/post, if necessary, given the needs of the office and/or the schedules
of other employees. The supervisor may also limit an employees ability to
accumulate credit hours if the supervisor determines that there is insufficient
work or other compelling circumstances. In this event, the supervisor should
advise employees of this limitation as early as possible. A supervisor may
also amend an employees approved schedule of credit hours based on the needs
of the office. Advance approval by the supervisor is required before the
employee may use credit hours; and
(b) The supervisor must sign Form DS-3073 at the end of
each pay period for each employee who works credit hours, certifying that the
hours and leave recorded are accurate.
3 FAM 2335.5 Leave, Excused
Absence, and Impact of Holidays when Working a FWS with Credit Hours
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. Leave: An employee on a FWS
may use no more than 8 hours of sick or annual leave when absent on a workday.
However, an employee on a FWS may earn up to 2 credit hours by working part of
the day and using leave for part of the day if it results in a total number of
hours in excess of the employees basic work requirement for the day, week, or
biweekly schedule.
b. Excused absence: When an
employee is absent from work on pre-approved credit hours on a day which the
U.S. Government is officially closed due to hazardous weather, or other
administrative reasons, the employee will be charged for credit hours and not
granted excused absence.
c. Holiday: On a designated
holiday, a full-time employee on a FWS may receive credit for only 8 hours
towards the basic work requirement of 40 hours in a week. A part-time employee
may be credited only with that portion of the holiday that is within the
part-time employees regular work schedule, up to 8 hours. An employee may not
be charged credit hours for a holiday.
3 FAM 2335.6 Accumulating, Using,
and Losing Credit Hours
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. Accumulating credit hours:
(1) Full-time employees: A full-time employee may
work to earn up to 2 credit hours per workday in hourly increments. A maximum
of 10 credit hours may be worked each pay period. Unused credit hours may be
rolled over from 1 pay period to the next, provided that they do not exceed the
credit hour cap of 24 hours. Credit hours in excess of the cap that are not
used during the pay period in which they are worked are forfeited without
compensation. Credit hours may only be worked during the regularly scheduled
workweek. Credit hours may only be accumulated within an employees flexible
work schedule. Employees accumulating credit hours are not eligible to receive
overtime pay or compensatory time off for those credit hours. However,
full-time employees are eligible for overtime pay or compensatory time off for
work in excess of 8 hours in a day or 40 hours in a week that is officially
ordered in advance by the supervisor; and
(2) Part-time employees: A part-time employee may
work up to 2 credit hours per workday in hourly increments. A maximum of 8
credit hours may be worked per pay period. Unused credit hours that do not
total more than one-fourth of a part-time employees biweekly work requirement
may be rolled over to the succeeding pay period. Hours in excess of this
maximum which are not used in the pay period in which they are earned will be
forfeited. Credit hours may only be accumulated on a day included in the
part-time employees tour of duty (e.g., an employee whose tour of duty is
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday may not work credit hours on Wednesday).
b. Using credit hours: Subject
to the advance approval of a supervisor, a full-time or part-time employee may
use accumulated credit hours on an ad hoc basis or as part of a pre-established
regular schedule to meet the basic work requirement. Credit hours must be
worked before they can be used. Credit hours must be used in one-hour increments.
Credit hours do not expire.
c. Losing eligibility for credit
hours: An employee who leaves the Department or transfers to another
bureau/post that does not utilize credit hours in conjunction with flexible
work schedules should arrange to use any accumulated credit hours prior to the
employees departure or transfer. In the event that an employee has any
unused, accumulated credit hours remaining at the time of departure, the
employee will be paid for those credit hours, at the employees rate of basic
pay, at the time of his or her departure. A full-time employee will only be
paid for up to a total of 24 accumulated credit hours. A part-time employee
will only be paid for accumulated credit hours up to one-fourth of the
employees biweekly work requirement.
3 FAM 2335.7 Maintaining Credit
Hours Records
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
Each employee participating in a credit hours schedule
must sign in and sign out daily on an individual Form DS-3073. The DS-3073
identifies the number of regular hours and credit hours worked and/or used.
The employee and supervisor must certify the form at the end of each pay
period. It is important that it reflects accurate hours worked, leave taken,
etc. For planning and approval purposes, the supervisor may require that
biweekly schedules be submitted in advance of the pay period.
3 FAM 2336 PREMIUM PAY AND ALTERNATIVE
WORK SCHEDULES
3 FAM 2336.1 Overtime Pay and
Holiday Pay for Employees on Flexible and Compressed Work Schedules
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Services and Civil Service Employees)
a. Overtime for employees on
compressed work schedules:
(1) For employees on a CWS who are non-exempt under
the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), all hours of work performed for the
benefit of the agency in excess of the compressed work schedule is overtime
work, even if that work was not officially ordered or approved;
(2) For employees on a CWS who are exempt from the
FLSA, all hours of work performed for the benefit of the agency in excess of
the CWS that have been officially ordered or approved is overtime work; and
(3) For part-time employees, hours of work in excess
of the compressed work schedule for a day (but must be more than 8 hours) or
for a week (but must be more than 40 hours) is overtime work.
b. Holiday pay for employees on
compressed work schedules: If an employee on a CWS is scheduled by the
supervisor to perform nonovertime work on a designated holiday (or in lieu of
holiday), the employee is entitled to his or her rate of basic pay plus holiday
premium pay for the hours of the employees compressed work schedule for that
day.
c. Overtime for employees on
flexible work schedules:
(1) For employees on a FWS, all hours of work in
excess of 8 hours in a day or 40 hours in a week which are officially ordered
or approved in advance by management is overtime work. Employees on a FWS may
not earn overtime pay as a result of "suffered or permitted" hours of
work;
(2) An employee may not be paid overtime pay or
receive compensatory time off for work performed as credit hours. Thus, a
full-time employee on a FWS who elects to work in excess of 8 hours in a day or
40 hours in a week in order to earn credit hours is not eligible to receive
overtime pay or compensatory time off for that work. However, the full-time
employee is eligible for overtime pay or compensatory time off for work in
excess of 8 hours in a day or 40 hours in a week that is officially ordered in
advance by the supervisor; and
(3) Management may order an employee who is on a FWS
to work hours that are in excess of the number of hours the employee planned to
work on a specific day. If the hours ordered to be worked are not in excess of
8 hours in a day or 40 hours in a week at the time they are performed,
management, at its discretion, may permit or require the employee to:
(a) Take time off from work on a subsequent workday for
a period of time equal to the number of extra hours of work ordered; or
(b) Complete his or her basic work requirement as
scheduled and at his/her election count the extra hours of work as credit
hours.
d. Holiday pay for employees on
flexible work schedules:
(1) If a full-time employee on a FWS is scheduled by
the supervisor to perform nonovertime work on a designated holiday (or in lieu
of holiday), the employee is entitled to his or her rate of basic pay plus
holiday premium pay not to exceed a maximum of 8 hours;
(2) If a part-time employee on a FWS is scheduled by
the supervisor to perform nonovertime work on a designated holiday, the
employee is entitled to holiday premium pay only for work performed during his
or her basic work requirement on a holiday (not to exceed 8 hours);
(3) A full-time employee on a FWS who is relieved or
prevented from working on a day designated as a holiday (or an "in lieu
of" holiday) by Federal statute or Executive Order is entitled to his or
her rate of basic pay on that day for 8 hours;
(4) If a holiday falls on a day during the daily tour of
duty of a part-time employee on a FWS and the employee is relieved or prevented
from working on that day, the employee is entitled to his or her rate of basic
pay for the typical, average, or scheduled number of hours of work for that day
toward his or her basic work requirement (not to exceed 8 hours). If the
part-time employee has no typical schedule, the agency may average the number
of hours worked in prior weeks on days corresponding to the holiday to
determine an employee's pay entitlement for that holiday (not to exceed 8
hours); and
(5) A work schedule submitted in advance of the
administrative work week also may be used as the basis for determining the
number of hours to pay a part-time employee on a holiday. However, management
should ensure that there is no abuse of entitlement. For example, an employee
should not schedule more hours of work on a holiday than he or she has
scheduled in prior weeks on days corresponding to the holiday.
3 FAM 2336.2 Night Pay for
Employees on Flexible Work Schedules
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Services and Civil Service Employees)
If an employees daily tour of duty includes at least 8
hours and 45 minutes between 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m., the employee is not
entitled to night differential if he or she elects to work prior to 6:00 a.m.
or after 6:00 p.m.
3 FAM 2337 PART-TIME CAREER EMPLOYMENT
PROGRAM
3 FAM 2337.1 Policy
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Civil Service and Foreign Service Employees)
a. The Department operates a part-time employment
program consistent with its management responsibilities and the needs of its
employees. Part-time permanent employment benefits the Department by:
(1) Improving recruitment and retention of employees;
(2) Increasing productivity;
(3) Lowering turnover rates and absenteeism;
(4) Offering management more flexibility in meeting
work requirements and filling shortages in various occupations;
(5) Assisting older employees in the gradual
transition to retirement; and
(6) Providing career opportunities to individuals who
require a reduced workweek such as disabled employees, individuals with family
responsibilities, students, and those returning to the workforce.
b. Part-time career employment is employment of an
individual in the excepted or competitive service in a permanent position under
a part-time work schedule of 16 to 32 hours per week. Part-time employment is
not limited by grade or duties of a position, and may be used in professional,
administrative, technical, clerical, and blue-collar positions.
3 FAM 2337.2 Exceptions and
Exclusions
3 FAM 2337.2-1 Excluded
Positions
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Civil Service and Foreign Service Employees)
a. The following are excluded from the Departments
part-time career program:
(1) Positions in the Senior Executive Service (SES);
(2) Positions in the Senior Foreign Service (SFS); and
(3) Civil Service employees serving under time-limited
appointments or otherwise serving on a temporary or intermittent basis.
b. Employees in excluded positions may serve in a
part-time capacity but are not considered to be participants in the part-time
employment program.
3 FAM 2337.2-2 Mixed Positions
Excluded
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Civil Service Employees Only)
This subchapter does not apply to an employee on a mixed
tour of duty if that employee works no more than 6 pay periods per year on a
part-time schedule. A mixed tour is one in which the employee works part-time
during a portion of the year and full time and/or intermittent for the
remainder.
3 FAM 2337.3 Part-time Employment
Schedules, Leave, and Benefits
3 FAM 2337.3-1 Establishing a
Part-Time Schedule
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAID/USAGM/Commerce)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Services Employees)
a. A part-time permanent employee has a career or
career-conditional appointment (or a permanent appointment in the excepted
service), and works between 16 and 32 hours each week on a prearranged schedule.
b. A Form SF-50, Notification of Personnel Action, must
be executed which shows the employees biweekly part-time schedule. If the
schedule is changed or the employee is put on a full-time schedule, another
Form SF-50 must be requested by the employing bureau that reflects the change.
This ensures that the employee receives proper credit towards benefits,
including retirement.
c. A part-time employee must complete a part-time work
agreement signed by the employee, supervisor, and bureau executive director.
d. A part-time employee may work more hours than
scheduled if needed, and is eligible for compensation at his or her rate of
basic pay for the additional hours. The employees overtime rate is payable
for hours in excess of 8 hours in a day or 40 hours in a workweek.
e. A lunch break is not required if the employees
schedule is 7 hours or less in a workday.
3 FAM 2337.3-2 Leave and
Holidays
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAID/USAGM/Commerce)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Services Employees)
a. Annual leave accrual: A part-time employee earns
annual leave on a prorated basis depending on the number of hours worked per
pay period:
(1) With less than 3 years of service, he or she earns
1 hour of annual leave for each 20 hours worked;
(2) With 3 but less than 15 years of service, he or
she earns 1 hour of annual leave for each 13 hours worked; and
(3) With 15 or more years of service, he or she earns
1 hour of annual leave for each 10 hours worked.
b. Sick leave accrual: A part-time employee earns 1
hour of sick leave for each 20 hours worked, regardless of length of service.
c. Leave use:
(1) A part-time employee is charged sick and annual
leave based on the number of hours in his/her scheduled workday or workweek.
For example, an employee whose daily schedule is 6 hours will be charged 6
hours of leave for each full days absence;
(2) A part-time employee is also eligible for leave
without pay (LWOP), and leave under the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA). See 3 FAM 3510 and 3 FAM 3530,
respectively, for details; and
(3) A part-time career employee is also eligible for
court leave (see 3
FAM 3450) and certain other types of paid leave as set forth in 3 FAM 3460, as
well as military leave on a prorated basis (see 3 FAM 3440).
c. Holidays:
(1) If a holiday falls on a day the employee normally
works, the employee is paid for the number of hours he/she was scheduled to
work, not to exceed 8 hours, except for an employee on a compressed work
schedule; and
(2) A part-time employee is not entitled to a holiday
that falls on a day the employee is not normally scheduled to work.
3 FAM 2337.3-3 Benefits and
Service Credit
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAID/USAGM/Commerce)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Services Employees)
a. Retirement: Part-time service does not affect
retirement eligibility. Each year of part-time service counts as 1 full year
toward the length of service requirement. The annuity calculation for most
part-time employees is prorated to reflect the difference between full-time and
part-time service.
b. Health and life insurance: See 3 FAM 3610 and 3 FAM 3620.
c. A part-time employee earns a full year of service
for each calendar year worked (regardless of schedule) for the purpose of
computing dates for the following:
(1) Retirement eligibility;
(2) Career tenure;
(3) Completion of probationary period;
(4) Within-grade pay increases;
(5) Within-class pay increases;
(6) Change in leave accrual category;
(7) Time-in-grade restrictions on advancement;
(8) Time-in-class; and
(9) Selection board consideration and promotion.
d. Part-time work is prorated for determining
qualification requirements under Qualification Standards for General Schedule
Positions. For example, an employee who works 20 hours a week would receive
credit for 6 months of experience at the end of 12 months.
3 FAM 2337.4 Merit Promotion
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAID/USAGM/Commerce)
(Applies to Civil Service employees only)
Civil Service part-time employees are subject to merit
promotion principles and the Departments merit promotion program (see 3 FAM 2310).
3 FAM 2337.5 Job-Sharing
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAID/USAGM/Commerce)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. A job-share is two part-time employees, each of whom
work from 16 to 32 hours per week, and cover one full-time position. Part-time
employees in a job-share arrangement receive the same benefits and are subject
to the same limitations as other part-time employees. See 3 FAM 2337.3-1
through 3 FAM
2337.6 for further information.
b. Job-share agreement: Each employee participating in
a job-share must complete an agreement signed by the supervisor and the bureau
executive director. The agreement may be obtained from HR/ER/WLP, and, when
completed, must be forwarded to that office for the record.
c. Position description: Each employee participating
in a job-share must have a position description that accurately reflects
his/her duties and responsibilities.
d. Scheduling hours of work: Each job-share partner
cannot be regularly scheduled for less than 16 hours or more than 32 hours per
week. Generally, the combined total hours of both job-share partners should
not exceed 80 hours per pay period. However, in some circumstances, additional
hours may be worked on a regular schedule or on an ad hoc basis. For example,
the needs of the position may require the job-share partners to overlap hours,
or in the absence of one job-share partner, the other partner may work
additional hours.
e. Performance appraisal: Each job-share partner must
be appraised individually in accordance with 3 FAM 2810
(Foreign Service) or 3 FAM 2820
(Civil Service). The fact that the employee is part of a job-share is not
relevant in the appraisal process. The employee must be appraised only against
the standards established for him or her at the beginning of the appraisal
period.
3 FAM 2338 HOLIDAYS
3 FAM 2338.1 Holidays for Federal
Employees
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/USAID/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
LEGAL PUBLIC HOLIDAYS
|
New Years Day
|
January 1
|
Martin Luther King, Jr.s
Birthday
|
Third Monday in January
|
Washingtons Birthday
|
Third Monday in February
|
Memorial Day
|
Last Monday in May
|
Independence Day
|
July 4
|
Labor Day
|
First Monday in September
|
Columbus Day
|
Second Monday in October
|
Veterans Day
|
November 11
|
Thanksgiving Day
|
Fourth Thursday in November
|
Christmas Day
|
December 25
|
Holidays for Federal employees also include any other day
designated as a holiday by U.S. Federal statute or Executive Order.
3 FAM 2338.2 Determining Holidays
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
Uniform State/USAGM/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA/USAID)
Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
a. When a Federal holiday falls on one of the
employees regularly scheduled workdays in the basic workweek, that workday is
the employees holiday.
b. When a holiday falls on an employees nonworkday,
the employees holiday will depend on the day on which the holiday falls, the
employees basic workweek, and on the days designated as the employees
Saturday or Sunday, respectively.
c. For holidays designated by law to occur on Monday
(i.e., Birthdays of Martin Luther King, Jr. and George Washington, Memorial
Day, Labor Day, and Columbus Day), employees at a duty post outside the United
States whose basic workweek is other than Monday through Friday, and for whom
Monday is a regularly scheduled workday, the legal public holiday is the first
workday of the workweek in which the Monday designated for the observance of
such holiday falls.
3 FAM 2338.3 Determining "in
Lieu of" Holidays when Holidays Fall on Nonworkdays
(CT:PER-810; 04-12-2016)
(State Only)
(Applies to Foreign Services and Civil Service Employees)
a. Nonworkdays other than Sunday: If a holiday falls
on an employees nonworkday that is not a Sunday, the employee's preceding workday
will be the designated "in lieu of" holiday.
b. Sunday nonworkday: If the holiday falls on the
Sunday nonworkday of an employee, the subsequent workday will be the employee's
designated "in lieu of" holiday.
c. Part-time employees are not entitled to an "in
lieu of" holiday when a holiday falls on a nonworkday for the employee.
d. The bureau/post may determine that a different in
lieu of holiday is necessary to prevent an adverse agency impact (defined in
5 U.S.C. 6131(b)). For State, the Director General of the Foreign Service and
Director of Human Resources can designate an alternate in lieu of holiday.
3 FAM 2338.4 Local Holidays
(CT:PER-925; 09-24-2018)
(Uniform State/USAGM/Commerce/Foreign Service Corps-USDA/USAID)
(Applies to Foreign Service and Civil Service Employees)
See 3 FAM 3419.2
(Local Holidays) and 3 FAM
3464.1-1(8).
3 FAM 2339 UNASSIGNED