4 FAH-3 H-540
PAYROLL DEDUCTIONS AND
CONTRIBUTIONS
(CT:FMP-100; 05-30-2019)
(Office of Origin: CGFS/FPRA/FP)
4 FAH-3 H-541 GENERAL
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
This subchapter provides guidance related to mandatory and
voluntary deductions from employee salaries, contributions from employers, and
other payroll deductions.
4 FAH-3 H-541.1 Scope and
Applicability
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. This subchapter is applicable to U.S. citizen employees
and locally employed staff (LE staff). LE staff categories are defined in 3 FAM 7120.
b. Payroll deductions are those mandatory and voluntary
items that are reductions from the gross pay of an employee. Payroll
contributions are those payroll-related costs that are borne by the employer,
such as the Hospital Insurance (HIT) or Federal Insurance Contributions Act
(FICA) employer tax, the employers funding for the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP),
and the employer contributions to the retirement systems. Employees may also
make allotments of pay for authorized purposes.
4 FAH-3 H-541.1-1 Mandatory
Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Mandatory deductions for U.S. citizen employees
include:
(1) Withholding of U.S. Federal, State, and local
income taxes;
(2) Deduction for U.S. Social Security taxes, Foreign
Service retirement, Civil Service retirement, Federal Employees Group Basic
Life Insurance (FEGLI), Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB); and
(3) Court-ordered garnishments and bankruptcy
payments.
b. Mandatory deductions for U.S. citizen personal
services contractors (PSCs) include U.S. Federal, State, and local income taxes,
U.S. Social Security taxes, and court-ordered garnishments and bankruptcy
payments.
c. Mandatory deductions for the Civil Service
Retirement System (CSRS) are made from the salary of those LE staff enrolled in
that retirement system. U.S. Federal income tax and U.S. Social Security taxes
are withheld on LE staff employees and personal services contractors who are
U.S. permanent resident aliens (i.e., holders of green cards). Deductions are
mandatory for local retirement, life, health, or other benefits when coverage
is required by local law.
d. Payments to U.S. citizen employees are subject to
U.S. Federal income tax and U.S. Social Security taxes. Deductions are also
mandatory for local retirement, life, health, or other benefits when coverage
is required by local law.
4 FAH-3 H-541.1-2 Voluntary
Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Voluntary deductions from the pay of eligible U.S.
citizen employees are made in accordance with requests for investment in the Thrift
Savings Plan (TSP), repayment of TSP loans, FEGLI optional life insurance, The
Federal Flexible Spending Account Program (FSAFEDS), Federal Employees Dental
and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP), and Federal Long Term Care Insurance
Program (FLTCIP).
b. Voluntary deductions are made from the salaries of
LE staff employees, personal services contractors, and employees under a
personal services agreement (PSA) who participate in optional programs.
4 FAH-3 H-541.1-3 Other
Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
The payroll system makes deductions for indebtedness to
the United States. Deductions are made from the salaries and wages applicable
to all employees when determined to be legal and required or authorized by law
or regulations for reasons including, but not limited to:
(1) Repayment of overpayment of salary or erroneous
payment;
(2) Repayment of outstanding travel advances;
(3) Refunds of lump-sum payments; and
(4) Satisfaction of Federal income tax levies.
4 FAH-3 H-541.1-4 Prohibited
Deductions
(CT:FMP-93; 05-12-2016)
Foreign taxes or other assessments are not withheld from
the locally employed staff (LE staff), personal services contractors (PSCs), or
employees under personal services agreement (PSA) salaries except when required
under local law. See 4 FAH-3
H-541.1-1d and 3 FAM 7570. LE
staff, PSCs and PSA employees are individually responsible for the payment of
taxes imposed by the government of the host country. A post should not assume
any obligation or responsibility to withhold taxes levied by the host
government, except where, and in a manner, specifically approved by the
Department of State. In handling requests to withhold taxes post must not give
the impression the U.S. Government wishes to preclude or discourage its
employees from complying with the laws of their countries.
4 FAH-3 H-541.1-5 Allotments of
Pay
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
An employee may make allotments of pay for purchase of
prior years of CSRS service credit, TreasuryDirect savings (U.S. Savings
Bonds), Combined Federal Campaign (CFC) contribution, union dues, and other
purposes (see 4
FAH-3 H-548).
4 FAH-3 H-541.2 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Guidance for payroll deductions and contributions is based
on the following:
(1) Chapter 8 and section 408 of the Foreign Service
Act of 1980, as amended;
(2) 5 U.S.C. 5516; 5 U.S.C. 5517; 5 U.S.C. 5520; 5
U.S.C. 5525; 5 U.S.C. 8334; 5 U.S.C. 8422; 5 U.S.C. 8423; 5 U.S.C. 8432 - 5 U.S.C.
8440; 5 U.S.C. 8701 - 5 U.S.C. 8716; 5 U.S.C. 8901 - 5 U.S.C. 8913; 26 U.S.C.
3101 - 3121; 26 U.S.C. 3401 - 26 U.S.C. 3406; 26 U.S.C. 6331; and 42 U.S.C. 405;
(3) 5 CFR; 22 CFR; 26 CFR; 31 CFR; 48 CFR; and
(4) Treasury Financial Manual (TFM) - 1 TFM 3-3000
through 3-7000.
4 FAH-3 H-541.3 Definitions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
In addition to the definitions contained in the 3 FAM 7120, the
following definitions apply to this subchapter.
(1) Allotment of Pay: An
authorization by an employee for a recurring payroll deduction from salary or
wages, for a specified dollar amount, to be paid to a designated person or
organization, or credited to a financial institution designated by the
employee.
(2) Beneficiary: Person or
persons receiving a benefit or other payment under Federal law, other than a
payment of salary or wages.
(3) Compensation: Wages and
payment due an employee, a personal services contractor (PSC) or an employee
under a personal services agreement (PSA).
(4) Gross Pay: Total monetary
payment due an employee, PSC, or PSA, for services before any mandatory or
voluntary deductions are effected.
(5) Net Pay: The amount of
monetary payment paid to an employee, PSC, or PSA after all mandatory and
voluntary payroll deductions and any allotments of pay.
4 FAH-3 H-541.4 Order of Precedence
for Payroll Deductions
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
The following is the order of precedence under applicable
law and regulation for deductions when gross pay (earnings) of an employee is
not sufficient to permit all mandatory and voluntary deductions. It may be
changed if a bankruptcy court specifies otherwise under the bankruptcy laws of
the United States (see 11 U.S.C.) For additional guidance, refer to the Chief
Human Capital Officers Council PPM-2008-01, Order of Precedence When Gross Pay
is not Sufficient to Permit All Deductions:
(1) First grouping of deductions:
(a) Retirement deductions for defined benefit plan
(including Civil Service Retirement System/Federal Employees Retirement System
(CSRS/FERS) basic benefit or Foreign Service Retirement and Disability System/Foreign
Service Pension System (FSRDS/FSPS) basic benefit;
(b) Social security (OASDI) tax;
(c) Medicare tax;
(d) Federal income taxes authorized or required to be
withheld by the Internal Revenue Service regulations;
(e) Basic health insurance premium for the current pay
period, and up to one prior pay period (including Federal Employees Health
Benefits premiumpre-tax or post-taxor premium for similar benefit under
another authority);
(f) Basic life insurance premium (including Federal
Employees Group Life InsuranceFEGLIBasic premium or premium for similar
benefit under another authority);
(g) State income tax authorized or required by law to be
withheld; and
(h) Local (e.g., county or city) income tax authorized
or required by law to be withheld.
(2) Collection of debts owed to the U.S. Government
(e.g., tax debt, salary overpayment, levies by the Internal Revenue Service for
back Federal income taxes (except when a garnishment for support for minor
children ordered prior to a back tax levy takes priority over the back tax
levy));
(3) Indebtedness due the United States (see 4 FAM 490);
(4) Court-ordered collection/debt:
(a) Child support (may include attorney and other fees
as provided for in 5 CFR 581.102(d));
(b) Alimony (may include attorney and other fees as
provided for in 5 CFR 581.102(e));
(c) Bankruptcy; and
(d) Commercial garnishments.
(5) Optional benefits:
(a) Health Care/Limited-Expense Health Care Flexible
Spending Accounts (pre-tax benefit under FedFlex or equivalent cafeteria plan;
(b) Dental (pre-tax benefit under FedFlex or equivalent
cafeteria plan);
(c) Vision (pre-tax benefit under FedFlex or equivalent
cafeteria plan);
(d) Health Savings Account (pre-tax benefit under
FedFlex or equivalent cafeteria plan);
(e) Optional life insurance premiums (FEGLI optional
benefits or similar benefits under other authority);
(f) Long-term care insurance premiums;
(g) Dependent-Care Flexible Spending Accounts (pre-tax
benefit under FedFlex or equivalent cafeteria plan);
(h) Thrift Savings Plan (TSP):
(i) Loan payments;
(ii) Basic contributions; and
(iii) Catch-up contributions; and
(i) Other optional benefits.
(6) Voluntary deductions or allotments for such
purposes as provided by regulationsuch as the Combined Federal Campaign, dues
to a labor organization, voluntary alimony or child support payments, savings,
voluntary repayment of indebtedness to the United Statesand for other purposes
approved by the Department of State; and
(7) IRS paper levy.
4 FAH-3 H-542 RETIREMENT
4 FAH-3 H-542.1 Foreign Service
Retirement
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
There are two Foreign Service retirement systems: the
Foreign Service Retirement and Disability System (FSRDS) and the Foreign
Service Pension System (FSPS).
4 FAH-3 H-542.1-1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Chapter 8 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980, as
amended (22 U.S.C. 4041 - 22 U.S.C. 4071k); and
b. 3 FAM 6000, Retirement.
4 FAH-3 H-542.1-2 Rates
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. FSRDS employees pay and the employer contribute a
percent of basic pay into the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Fund.
The applicable percentages are found in 22 U.S.C. 4045 and 3 FAM 6130.
b. For employees in FSRDS-Offset (retirement codes G or
H), the FSRDS employee deduction rate that would otherwise be applicable to the
employee is reduced by the OASDI tax rate until wages each year reach the
social security contribution and benefit base. Then, the rate reverts to the
full FSRDS deduction rate for the remainder of the year. There is no reduction
in the employer contribution rate.
c. The deduction rate for FSPS employees is found in 22
U.S.C. 4071e. The employer contribution is the normal cost percentage, less
the percentage the employee pays. The employer contribution rate is determined
in accordance with 22 U.S.C. 4071f.
d. The employer contribution rate for the FSPS is based
on an actuarial valuation, conducted annually at the Departments request, to
determine the actuarial liability and the annual expense, including the
required disclosure information, for the Departments annual financial
statements in accordance with Statement of Federal Financial Accounting
Standards (SFFAS) No. 5, Accounting for Liabilities of the Federal Government
and SFFAS No. 33, Pensions, Other Retirement Benefits, and Other Postemployment
Benefits: Reporting the Gains and Losses from Changes in Assumptions and
Selecting Discount Rates and Valuation Dates. The steps for agency
contribution increases are:
(1) Annual report from the actuarial firm contracted
by the Department showing the valuation of the funds as of the end of the
applicable fiscal year accepted by stakeholders in the Bureau of Budget and
Planning (BP); the Office of the Principal Deputy Comptroller and Deputy Chief
Financial Officer (CGFS/DCFO); and the Office of Retirement (HR/RET);
(2) Meeting between all stakeholders to review
actuarial report (and draft decision memo to the Chief Financial Officer
(CFO)): BP; HR/RET; Comptroller and Assistant Secretary for Global Financial
Services (CGFS); CGFS/DCFO; and Office of the Legal Adviser (L);
(3) Once CFO approves, agency contribution rate change
will be effective for next budget request cycle;
(4) HR/RET contacts the Global Compensation
Directorate (CGFS/GC) payroll office; and
(5) CGFS/GC informs other agencies of rate changes.
e. For the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability
Fund (FSRDF), interest on the unfunded liability and the portion of annuities
reflecting military and naval service is credited annually to the fund by the
Secretary of the Treasury.
4 FAH-3 H-542.1-3 Compensation
Base for Determination of Foreign Service Retirement Employee Contribution
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The amount of FSRDS employee contributions is a
percentage of base pay inclusive of any locality-based comparability payments
under 5 U.S.C. 5304 or interim geographic adjustment or special law enforcement
adjustment under section 302 or 404, respectively, of the Federal Employees Pay
Comparability Act of 1990. All other payments such as awards, bonuses, regular
overtime, holiday pay, night differential, post differential, danger pay, and
lump-sum payment for annual leave are excluded.
b. The amount of FSPS employee contributions includes
the amount in 4 FAH-3
H-542.1-3, paragraph a, plus standby duty pay, administrative
uncontrollable overtime (AUO), law enforcement availability pay (LEAP),
physicians comparability allowance (PCA), and tropical differential on the
Isthmus of Panama. All other payments such as awards, bonuses, regular overtime,
holiday pay, night differential, post differential, danger pay, and lump-sum
payment for annual leave are excluded.
4 FAH-3 H-542.1-4 Accounting for
Foreign Service Retirement Deductions and Contributions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
The employer contribution is charged to the same
appropriation and allotment that funds the employees basic pay. All employer
contributions and employee deductions are transferred directly to the Foreign
Service Retirement and Disability Fund.
4 FAH-3 H-542.1-5 Coverage When
Detailed or Transferred to an International Organization
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The authority for the detail of a member of the
service to international organizations for a period not to exceed five years is
found in 5 U.S.C. 3343. The Secretary may extend such a detail up to an
additional three years if he or she determines this would be in the national
interest. While on detail to the international organization the employee is
deemed, for the purpose of preserving his allowances, privileges, rights,
seniority, and other benefits, an employee of the Department, and he/she is
entitled to pay, allowances, and benefits. (See 3 FAM 2420 and 3 FAH-1 H-2420.)
b. An employee transferred to an international
organization under 5 U.S.C. 3581 - 5 U.S.C. 3584 may elect to continue
retirement coverage under FSRDS or FSPS. However, to retain such coverage, the
employee must make the employees contributions during the entire period of the
transfer. FSPS employees must also make contributions to Social Security
taxes. If the employee fails to make such contributions, at least quarterly,
his or her benefits will be lost during the period of transfer to the
international organization. See 5 CFR 352.
4 FAH-3 H-542.1-6 Reemployed
Foreign Service Annuitant (FSRDS or FSPS)
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
When a Foreign Service annuitant is reemployed in the
Federal Government, the annuitant and the employer are responsible for
notifying the Retirement Division (HR/RET), Room H620, SA-1, Washington, DC
20520 of the reemployment in accordance with section 824(e) of the Foreign
Service Act, 22 U.S.C. 4064(e).
4 FAH-3 H-542.2 Civil Service
Retirement
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. There are two Civil Service retirement systems: the
Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) and the Federal Employees Retirement
System (FERS).
b. LE staff employees hired after December 31, 1983
could not enroll in CSRS. LE staff employees enrolled in CSRS prior to that
date may continue to participate. LE staff employees are not eligible to
participate in FERS or in the TSP.
c. Foreign Service and Civil Service retirement plans
are not applicable to LE staff.
4 FAH-3 H-542.2-1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. 5 U.S.C. 8301-8351 and 5 U.S.C. 8401-8480;
b. 5 CFR 831 - 5 CFR 841; and
c. 3 FAM 6000, Retirement.
4 FAH-3 H-542.2-2 Rates
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. CSRS employees pay and the employer contribute a
percent of basic pay into the CSRS. The percentages are applied in accordance
with 5 U.S.C. 8334. Law enforcement officers and firefighters (retirement
coverage code 6) pay a slightly higher rate.
b. For employees classified as CSRS-Offset employees
(retirement codes C or E) the CSRS employee deduction rate that would otherwise
be applicable to the employee is reduced by the OASDI tax rate until wages each
year reach the social security contribution and benefit base. The rate then
reverts to the full CSRS deduction rate for the remainder of the year. There
is no reduction in the employer contribution rate.
c. Under FERS, the employee deduction for most
employees (retirement code K) is applied in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 8422. Law
enforcement officers and fire fighters (retirement code M), air traffic
controllers (retirement code L), and reserve technicians (retirement code N)
pay a slightly higher rate. The OASDI rate is as if OASDI deductions were
being made even if OASDI deductions have ceased because of the amount of
earnings during the year, or are not made for any other reason. In other
words, the employee deduction remains at the rate in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
8422 less the OASDI rate regardless of whether the OASDI deductions are not
being made for the employee because the employee has reached the OASDI wage
base or for any other reason. See CSRS and FERS Handbook Chapter 30 for
examples.
d. The FERS rate for the employers contribution is the
normal cost percentage, determined actuarially periodically, less the
percentage the employee pays. The employer contribution rate is applied in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 8423.
4 FAH-3 H-542.2-3 Compensation
Base for Civil Service Retirement Computation
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The compensation upon which the rates in 4 FAH-3
H-542.2-2 are applied for General Schedule employees is the sum of base
pay, standby duty pay, administrative uncontrollable overtime (AUO), law
enforcement availability pay (LEAP), physicians comparability allowance (PCA),
and tropical differential on the Isthmus of Panama. For Federal Wage Schedule
employees, the compensation upon the rates applied also includes night
differential, environmental differential and Guam recruitment differential.
Payments such as awards, bonuses, regular overtime and holiday pay, night
differential for General Schedule employees, post differential, danger pay, and
lump-sum leave are excluded. See CSRS and FERS Handbook Chapter 30 Section
30A1.1-2 Basic Pay.
b. The compensation upon which the CSRS rates are
applied for LE staff employees is normally the basic compensation rate of pay
unless otherwise specified in the local compensation plan.
4 FAH-3 H-542.2-4 Accounting for
Civil Service Retirement Deductions and Contributions
(CT:FMP-93; 05-12-2016)
a. Employer contributions and employee deductions for
Civil Service retirement are paid to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) receipt account 24X8135.8 on the biweekly payroll voucher. A Journal
Voucher and Form SF-2812, Report of Withholdings and Contributions for Health
Benefits Life Insurance and Retirement is transmitted electronically to the OPM
to be received on or before the payroll due date.
b. The LE staff payroll offices pay in a like manner
the U.S. dollar equivalent of contributions and deductions for LE staff that
are in the CSRS.
4 FAH-3 H-542.2-5 Reemployed
Civil Service Annuitant (CSRS or FERS)
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
According to 5 U.S.C. 8344(a) and 5 U.S.C. 8468, an amount
equal to the annuity allocable to the period of reemployment must be deducted
from the pay of a reemployed CSRS or FERS annuitant whose annuity continues
during reemployment. This applies to an annuitant serving in an appointive or
elective position unless exempted by OPM for exceptional employment needs or
emergency. See 5 CFR 553 for additional guidance regarding reemployment of
civilian retirees to meet exceptional employment needs. These deducted amounts
are deposited into the U.S. Treasury for the Civil Service Retirement Fund,
24X8135.8, and reported on Form SF-2812.
4 FAH-3 H-543 TAXES
4 FAH-3 H-543.1 Employment Tax
4 FAH-3 H-543.1-1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) tax
consists of the Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) referred
to as social security and Federal Hospital Insurance referred to as FHI,
HI, HIT, or Medicare. The authorities are as follows:
(1) 26 U.S.C. 3101 - 26 U.S.C. 3121;
(2) 26 CFR Part 31 Subpart B (26 CFR 31.3101-1 - 26
CFR 31.3121); and
(3) 1 TFM 3-4000.
b. Any request by a host government for levy of an
employment tax should immediately be brought to the attention of the Bureau of
Human Resources Office of Overseas Employment (HR/OE) and the Office of the
Legal Adviser.
4 FAH-3 H-543.1-2 Payments
Subject to FICA Tax
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Base pay and the following kinds of payments made in a
calendar year to persons eligible under 4 FAH-3
H-543.1-3 and 4 FAH-3
H-543.1-4 are subject to FICA tax. OASDI tax is applicable only up to the
OASDI wage ceiling (for current employee and employer withholding rates and
wage ceiling see IRS Publication 15). There is no wage ceiling for HI tax.
(1) Other types of compensation:
(a) Charge pay;
(b) Overtime;
(c) Holiday, night, and Sunday pay;
(d) Standby duty;
(e) Administratively uncontrollable overtime work;
(f) Special differential for substantial amounts of
extra work;
(g) Post (hardship) differential;
(h) Service need differential;
(i) Physicians comparability allowance;
(j) Danger pay;
(k) Language incentive differential;
(l) Retention allowance;
(m) Recruitment bonus; and
(n) Relocation bonus.
(2) All cash awards and lump-sum leave payments.
(3) Certain fringe benefits (e.g., local commuting
transportation, fringe benefit parking).
(4) The unpaid salary, unused annual leave and other
compensation of a deceased employee within the ceiling specified, if paid in
the same calendar year in which death occurred. If paid after the year of
death, FICA taxes are not applicable. (See 26 CFR 31.3121(a)(14)-1).
(5) All payments made to locally employed staff (LE
staff) employees and personal services contractors (PSCs) who hold green
cards. The exemption of various allowances provided by 26 U.S.C. 912 is not
applicable to LE staff or PSCs permanent residence aliens (PRA) paid under the
local compensation plan.
(6) All payments made to U.S. citizens locally
employed. The exemption for various allowances provided by 26 U.S.C. 912 is
not applicable to U.S. citizens paid under the local compensation plan.
(7) An exception may arise when an employee
participates in health benefit premium conversion. Deductions from pay for
participation in health benefit premium conversion reduce the amount of
compensation on which FICA tax is withheld.
(8) An exception may arise when an employee enrolls in
a flexible spending account (i.e., health care and/or dependent care).
Deductions from pay for enrollment in a flexible spending account reduce the
amount of compensation on which FICA tax is withheld.
4 FAH-3 H-543.1-3 Personnel
Subject to Full FICA Tax
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Payments made to the following personnel are subject to
full FICA tax (i.e., both the OASDI and the HI components):
(1) U.S. citizen employees not covered by the Civil
Service Retirement System (CSRS) or the Foreign Service Retirement and
Disability System (FSRDS);
(2) U.S. citizen employees termed CSRS-offset
employees described in 4 FAH-3
H-542.2-2, paragraph b and FSRDS-offset employees described in 4 FAH-3
H-542.1-2, paragraph b;
(3) U.S. citizen personal services contractors;
(4) Locally employed staff (LE staff) who are U.S.
permanent resident aliens (PRAs) and who do not participate in the Civil
Service Retirement System (CSRS). The post personnel officer should check
bilateral social security totalization agreements for any possible exception;
(5) Personal services contractors (PSCs) who are U.S.
permanent resident aliens (PRAs). The post personnel officer should check
bilateral social security totalization agreements for any possible exception;
and
(6) For U.S. citizens employees hired abroad, post
personnel offices should check bilateral social security totalization
agreements for possible exception.
4 FAH-3 H-543.1-4 Personnel
Subject to HI Tax
(CT:FMP-71; 04-23-2013)
Payments made to the following persons are subject to only
the HI portion of FICA:
(1) U.S. citizen employees who have continuously
performed service since December 31, 1983, covered by the CSRS or the FSRDS.
Service is considered continuous if any break in service did not exceed 365
consecutive days.
(2) LE staff employees who are U.S. permanent resident
aliens (PRAs) who have continuously performed service since December 31, 1983
covered by the CSRS. Check bilateral social security totalization agreements
for possible exception.
4 FAH-3 H-543.1-5 FICA Tax
Withholding Rates
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
The employer is responsible to withhold the proper
employment tax from employees pay and to make the prescribed employers
contribution as stated in 26 U.S.C. 3101 (a) and (b). Both the rates and the
wage ceiling are published in Publication 15, Circular E: Employers Tax Guide
that can be found at the Internal Revenue Service website.
4 FAH-3 H-543.1-6 Accounting for
FICA Deductions and Contributions
(CT:FMP-95; 07-27-2017)
The FICA taxes and any withheld income tax usually must be
sent to the IRS through FEDTAX II, if Treasury disburses the funds; or the
Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS), if Treasury does not disburse
the funds. If authorized, a completed Federal Tax Deposit Coupon should
accompany payment to the Federal Reserve Banks (FRB) to assure proper
identification and posting. LE staff payroll offices pay the appropriate
Federal Reserve Bank the U.S. dollar equivalent of contributions and deductions
of LE staff/Permanent resident aliens (PRA) and U.S. citizen employees hired
abroad. Deductions are also reported annually on employees Form W-2, Wage and
Tax Statement.
4 FAH-3 H-543.2 U.S. Federal Income
Tax Withholding
4 FAH-3 H-543.2-1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. 26 U.S.C. 3401 - 26 U.S.C. 3405.
b. 1 TFM 3-4000.
4 FAH-3 H-543.2-2 Personnel
Subject to Withholding
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Every employee, personal services contractor, or any other
individual providing services who meets IRSs common-law rules on
employer-employee relationship and falls into one of the following categories
is subject to tax withholding rules:
(1) U.S. citizens, including dual nationals;
(2) Nonresident aliens working in the United States;
(3) Resident aliens performing service in or outside
the United States.
(See Publication 15, Circular E: Employers Tax
Guide that can be found at the Internal Revenue Service website)
4 FAH-3 H-543.2-3 Payments
Subject to Withholding
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Payments subject to FICA taxes are, generally, also
subject to U.S. Federal income tax withholding. However, the following are
three exceptions not subject to FICA taxes or Federal income tax withholdings:
(1) An employee invests in the Thrift Savings Plan
(TSP);
(2) An employee participates in health benefit premium
conversion (pre-tax health benefits); and/or
(3) An employee enrolls in a flexible spending
account.
b. Deductions from pay for investment in the TSP,
participation in health benefit premium conversion, and/or enrollment in a
flexible spending account reduce the amount of compensation on which Federal
income tax is withheld.
4 FAH-3 H-543.2-4 Payments Exempt
From Withholding
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The payroll office will not deduct and withhold U.S.
Federal income tax from employee salaries and wages when the employee certifies
exempt status (i.e., that no income tax liability was incurred the preceding
year nor is anticipated for the current year). Such employee must file a new
Form W-4, Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate, each year by February
15.
b. Allowances paid to U.S. citizens employees through
the American payroll system that are exempt from FICA are generally also exempt
from income tax withholding (see Department of State Standardized Regulations (DSSR))
including the following:
(1) Temporary quarters subsistence allowance and
overseas quarters allowance;
(2) Post allowance; and
(3) Separate maintenance allowance.
c. Other payments such as unpaid salary and unused
annual leave of deceased employees are not subject to income tax withholding.
(See 4
FAH-3 H-543.1-2 (4) for the social security rules).
4 FAH-3 H-543.2-5 U.S. Federal
Income Tax Withholding Certificate
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Each individual who is subject to U.S.
income tax is required to complete and submit a Form W-4 to the employer.
b. Until such time as Form W-4 is received, tax
will be withheld on the basis of zero allowances at the rate applicable to a
single person. A withholding deduction based on a new or revised Form W-4 becomes
effective at the beginning of the pay period following receipt of the form.
Changes in withholding deductions are not effective retroactively.
c. If an employee expects to owe more income tax for
the year than will be withheld by claiming the number of withholding allowances
as indicated by the Form W-4 work sheet, the employee may increase the
withholding by claiming a smaller number of withholding allowances on Form W-4.
See IRS Withholding Calculator.
d. Withholding requested in excess of the amount
produced by zero allowances may be indicated on the Form W-4 in multiples
of $5.
4 FAH-3 H-543.2-6 Tax Withholding
Computation
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The Internal Revenue Code allows a number of
different methods for figuring tax withholding. The payroll system calculates
withholding by the percentage method.
b. When a payment of regular salary is being made for
two or more pay periods, tax withholdings are computed individually for each
pay period.
c. Tax withholding deductions from large one-time
payments such as awards are at a flat percentage rate unless the employee is
exempt. The tax withholding deduction rate is found in Publication 15,
Circular E: Employer's Tax Guide that can be found at the Internal Revenue
Service website.
4 FAH-3 H-543.3 State Income Tax
Withholding
4 FAH-3 H-543.3-1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. 5 U.S.C. 5516 - 5 U.S.C. 5517.
b. 1 TFM 3-5000.
4 FAH-3 H-543.3-2 Employees
Declaration of State Tax Withholding
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. Each employee or personal services contractor (PSC)
hired in the United States, regardless of where stationed, must have on file
with the Office of American Pay Processing (CGFS/GC/PPR) a certification which
currently identifies their obligation, or absence thereof, for state income tax
withholding.
b. As withholding rules may vary from state to state
and with the individuals particular circumstances, the employee must ascertain
his or her proper filing status. In the Washington, DC area with the three
taxing entities Virginia, Maryland, and DC, the taxing entity is where the
employee resides. Note that Foreign Service officers resident in the District
of Columbia (DC) can no longer claim the non-domiciliary exemption as they
could prior to 1988.
c. Employees are alerted that change in residence or
assignment may require the filing of a new state income tax certificate.
d. State income taxes will be withheld from
compensation in accordance with each individuals certification. If a
certification is not filed in accordance with 4 FAH-3
H-543.3-2, paragraph a, tax must be withheld at the maximum rate applicable
to the individuals last known U.S. address.
4 FAH-3 H-543.3-3 Payments
Subject to Withholding
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Generally, the same elements of compensation subject to
Federal income tax withholding (see 4 FAH-3
H-543.2-3) are subject to state income tax withholding. However, the
States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey do not exclude employees investment
deductions for the TSP as the Federal Government and other States do. The
State of New Jersey and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico do not allow for the
reduction of taxable income for FEHB deductions under health benefit premium
conversion.
4 FAH-3 H-543.3-4 Tax Withholding
Computation
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Withholding is calculated at the prescribed rates of the
individual states. State tax withholding on large one-time payments such as
awards is at a flat 5 percent rate unless the employee is exempt or there is no
state tax.
4 FAH-3 H-543.4 Local Income Tax
Withholding
(TL:FMP-4; 06-15-1995)
City or county withholding is made for any employee who is
subject to a local tax and:
(1) Whose regular place of employment is within the
boundaries of the county or city; or
(2) Is a resident of the city or county.
If the residence and place of employment are not both
within the state in which the city or county is located, withholding is at the
option of the employee. The employee should complete a withholding certificate
accordingly. Tax withholding on large one-time payments such as awards is at a
flat 2 percent rate if there is a local tax.
4 FAH-3 H-544 FEDERAL EMPLOYEES GROUP
LIFE INSURANCE (FEGLI)
4 FAH-3 H-544.1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. 5 U.S.C. 8701 - 5 U.S.C. 8716.
b. 5 CFR 870.
c. 3 FAM 3620.
4 FAH-3 H-544.2 Basic Life
Insurance
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
The cost of basic insurance is shared between the insured
individual and the government. The employee pays two-thirds of the cost, and
the government pays one-third.
4 FAH-3 H-544.2-1 Employee
Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
For eligible employees who have not waived automatic Basic
Life Insurance coverage on Form SF-2817, Life Insurance Election-Federal
Employees' Group Life Insurance Program, deductions for Basic Life Insurance
are made from the employee's pay on a biweekly basis as of the first day that
the employee is in a pay status. The biweekly rate can be found in the FEGLI
Handbook.
4 FAH-3 H-544.2-2 Employer
Contributions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
For each pay period in which an employee is insured, the
employing agency contributes an amount equal to one-half of the amount withheld
from the employee's pay. The employer contribution comes from the fund used to
pay the employee's pay.
4 FAH-3 H-544.3 Optional Insurance
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Deductions for Optional Life Insurance (Option A
(Standard Optional), Option B (Additional Optional), and Option C (Family
Optional)) are made from the employee's pay biweekly as of the first day that
the employee is in a pay status. The biweekly rate can be found in the FEGLI
Handbook. The employing agency does not contribute any amount towards the
premium.
b. The total premium cost for the optional life
insurance coverage is deducted from the employee's pay.
4 FAH-3 H-544.4 Employees in
Non-Pay or Other Status
(CT:FMP-71; 04-23-2013)
a. An employee in a non-pay status retains insurance
coverage without cost to the employee or the agency for up to twelve months,
after which the insurance terminates. See FEGLI pamphlet RI 76-12 for guidance
on the conversion right to a private non-group contract.
b. An employee transferred to an international
organization under 5 U.S.C. 3582 may continue life insurance coverage by paying
the employee's share of the premium to the Federal agency at least quarterly.
c. If you separate from service to enter the military,
you are considered to be in a nonpay status for FEGLI Purposes. As long as you
have reemployment rights under the Uniformed Services Employment and
Reemployment Rights Act (implementing rules are at 20 CFR 1002), you can keep
your FEGLI coverage for up to 12 months or until 90 days after your military
service ends, whichever date comes first. This coverage is free. At the end
of 12 months (or 90 days after the military service ends), the coverage
terminates. You also get a 31-day extension of coverage after the termination
date. This extension does not include accidental death and dismemberment
coverage. You are entitled to convert your coverage to an individual policy.
4 FAH-3 H-544.5 Termination of Life
Insurance Coverage
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
An insured employee may cancel basic life insurance at any
time by executing and filing the waiver section of Form SF-2817 to discontinue
life insurance coverage and deductions. An individual who cancels basic
insurance automatically cancels all forms of optional insurance. The waiver is
effective; the insurance stops; and employee deductions cease at the end of the
pay period in which the waiver is properly filed.
4 FAH-3 H-544.6 Life Insurance
After Retirement
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
For eligible retirees, the retiree's portion of the
premium for Basic insurance is deducted from the monthly annuity and the
premium amount will depend on the reduction election you made at the time you
retired. OPM pays the government's contribution. See FEGLI Handbook Chapter
on Cost of Insurance.
4 FAH-3 H-545 FEDERAL EMPLOYEES HEALTH
BENEFITS (FEHB)
4 FAH-3 H-545.1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. 5 U.S.C. 8901 - 5 U.S.C. 8913.
b. 5 CFR 890.
c. 3 FAM 3610.
4 FAH-3 H-545.2 Employee Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
For eligible employees, deductions for FEHB are made from
the employees pay at the biweekly rate applicable to the employees elected
health plan in the Schedule of Subscription Charges. The employee deduction is
made automatically on a pre-tax basis through premium conversion, unless the
employee elects to waive participation. The deduction made on a pre-tax basis
reduces taxable income by the amount of the FEHB deduction and reduces the
amount of Federal taxes, FICA, and, if applicable, state and/or local taxes withheld.
4 FAH-3 H-545.3 Employer
Contributions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
The employing agency contributes the amount determined by
the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
4 FAH-3 H-545.4 Employees on Leave
Without Pay (LWOP) or Other Status
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. Employees on LWOP:
(1) FEHB coverage may continue for an employee on LWOP
for up to one year unless it is canceled by submitting Form SF-2809, Health
Benefits Election Form. An employee entering on LWOP must execute a statement
in writing for the employing agency whether to continue coverage or terminate
it. State employees should contact the Office of American Pay Processing
(CGFS/GC/PPR) on how the employee's premium will be paid. Payments made
outside of the payroll system (i.e., by personal check) may not reduce taxable
income;
(2) If the employee does not sign and returns the
statement canceling the benefits, coverage is terminated (see LWOP statement).
Any outstanding indebtedness for health benefit premiums will be deducted on a
pre-tax basis, unless waived participation in premium conversion (after-tax),
from salary upon return to pay status or recovered from any lump sum payable or
other sources available for recovery of indebtedness due the United States
(contact HR/ER/WLD for additional guidance);
(3) Before expiration of the one year, an employee may
complete the reverse side of Form SF-2810, Notice of Change in Health Benefits
Enrollment, for conversion to a private insurance contract; and
(4) The employee may request cancellation of coverage
at anytime by completing Form SF-2809.
b. Employees in Other Status:
(1) An employee serving with an international
organization under 5 U.S.C. 3343 or 5 U.S.C. 3581 - 5 U.S.C. 3584 may elect to
continue FEHB coverage by paying the Federal agency the employees premium at
least quarterly;
(2) An employee called to military duty, may continue
coverage for up to 24 months or elect to have it terminate. FEHB law gives the
agency authority to continue coverage and pay the employee share of his/her
premiums if he/she is called or ordered to active duty on or after September
14, 2001, and the employee is:
(a) Enrolled in an FEHB plan;
(b) A member of a reserve component of the armed forces;
(c) Called or ordered to active duty in support of a
contingency operation (as defined in section 101(a)(13) of title 10);
(d) Placed on leave without pay or separated from
service to perform active duty; and
(e) Serving on active duty for a period of more than 30
consecutive days;
(3) If the employee does not meet all of the above
requirements of FEHB law, the authority for continuation of FEHB coverage comes
from the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA),
now codified at 38 U.S.C. 4317. Under USERRA the agency does not have
authority to pay the employee premiums while he/her is on military duty. The
employee is responsible for his/her premium during the first 12 months, and the
agency will pay its share. For the continued FEHB coverage of up to 12 months,
the employee is responsible for paying both the employee and agency shares of
the premium, plus an additional 2 percent administrative fee.
4 FAH-3 H-545.5 Others Eligible for
FEHB Coverage
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. An annuitants FEHB premium is deducted from the
monthly annuity. OPM funds the Governments contribution. Premium conversion
has no tax implication for annuitants.
b. Former spouses of employees or former employees
eligible for continued FEHB coverage under Section 832 or 833 of the Foreign
Service Act, as amended, must arrange to pay both the employee and agency share
of the premium. If the insured is not entitled to annuity or apportionment
payments, he or she must remit premiums monthly to the CGFS/GC/PPR Retirement
Accounts Division.
c. Temporary continuation of FEHB coverage for 18
months or 36 months is provided under Public Law 100-654 to certain separated
employees, children, and former spouses. The program is called FEHB 18/36
TCC and participants must pay the full premium (the employee and government
portions) plus a two percent surcharge. In the Department of State this
program is managed by the Retirement Division (HR/RET), from eligibility to
collection of funds.
d. Re-employed annuitants in positions that convey FEHB
eligibility and whose enrollment code has been transferred to the employing
agency will automatically participate in premium conversion unless they waive
participation. The employing agency must pay the government contribution.
4 FAH-3 H-546 THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN (TSP)
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) is a retirement
savings and investment plan for Federal employees and members of the uniformed
services, including the Ready Reserve. It was established by Congress in the
Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986 and offers the same types of
savings and tax benefits that many private corporations offer their employees
under 401(k) plans.
b. TSP consists of several investment funds. Eligible
employees may direct their TSP deductions and any employer contributions into
these funds. The investment fund options can be found at the Thrift Savings
Plan Web site.
4 FAH-3 H-546.1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. 5 U.S.C. 8432 - 5 U.S.C. 8440.
b. 5 CFR 1600 - 5 CFR 1690.
4 FAH-3 H-546.2 Definitions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Basic Pay: Compensation upon
which TSP deduction and contribution are computed is base pay inclusive of any
locality-based comparability under 5 U.S.C. 5304 or interim geographic
adjustment or special law enforcement adjustment under section 302 or 404 of
the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990, respectively. Also
include any standby pay, administratively uncontrollable overtime (AUO), law
enforcement availability pay (LEAP), physicians comparability allowance (PCA),
tropical differential on the Isthmus of Panama, and for Federal Wage Schedule
(FWS) employees night differential, environmental differential, and Guam
recruitment differential. Basic pay for TSP purposes is the same amount used
to determine the mandatory retirement deductions.
Open Season: Under Public Law
No. 108-469, signed into law on December 21, 2004, TSP open seasons were
eliminated. Effective July 1, 2005, employees may elect to begin, stop, or
change their TSP investment deductions at any time.
4 FAH-3 H-546.3 Eligibility
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
For the latest guidance on who is eligible to participate
in the TSP, see TSP: Participant Eligibility.
4 FAH-3 H-546.4 Enrolling, Changing
or Stopping Investment
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. For guidance on starting, changing, or stopping
investments, see TSP: Starting, Changing, and Stopping Your Contributions. In
addition, these actions may be done electronically through the Employee Express
Web site.
b. TSP participants who make in-service,
financial-hardship withdrawals may not make TSP contributions for a 6-month
period following the withdrawal. These participants may also not make catch-up
contributions to their TSP accounts for a 6-month period. If you are a FERS or
FSPS employee that means you will also not receive any matching contributions
during this time. See TSP: In-Service Withdrawal Basics.
4 FAH-3 H-546.5 Employee Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The employee may elect to invest either a percentage
of basic pay (i.e., 1 to 100 percent) or a specified dollar amount per pay
period.
b. Total employee investment in a tax year may not
exceed the ceiling limitation set in the U.S. tax code (26 U.S.C. 402(g)(1)).
This limitation is published in the Thrift Savings Plan for Federal Employees
and may change annually. See TSP: Current Limits and Rates, specifically
"Annual Limit on Elective Deferrals." This annual ceiling on
tax-deferred investment is inclusive of any retroactive payments made during
the year.
c. Under Public Law 106-554, effective January 2006,
contribution limits were eliminated. The total amount that an employee may
contribute to the TSP each year is capped by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
elective deferral limit. See 401(k) Resource Guide - Plan Participants -
Limitation on Elective Deferrals.
d. When the annual ceiling for employee investment is
reached, employee deductions and employer matching contributions are suspended
for the remainder of the tax year.
e. With the enactment of Public Law No. 107-304, TSP
participants who are 50 years of age or older may make tax-deferred
"catch-up" contributions from their basic pay to their TSP accounts.
These contributions are a supplement to the participant's regular employee
contributions and do not count against the IRS elective deferral limit.
However, the catch-up contributions have their own annual limit and eligibility
criteria. Also, to be eligible to make catch-up contributions participants
must be contributing the maximum amount of employee contributions.
Participants must make a new election for each calendar year. For additional
information on catch-up contributions, see TSP: Types of Contributions.
4 FAH-3 H-546.6 Partial Deductions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. If a participant elects a whole
dollar amount and the net pay available in a pay period is less than the
elected whole dollar amount, no TSP employee deduction will be made for the pay
period.
b. If a participant elects a
percentage of pay and the net pay available in a pay period is less than
the amount computed based on the elected TSP percentage of basic pay the
resulting net pay is the TSP employee contribution, subject to the Internal
Revenue Code limits.
4 FAH-3 H-546.7 Employer
Contributions
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. For FERS and FSPS employees, your agency will
contribute an amount equal to one percent of your basic pay each pay date to
your TSP account. These are called agency automatic (1 percent)
contributions. There is no waiting period and you do not need to be making
employee contributions to receive them (see TSP: Types of Contributions.)
b. Agency automatic (1 percent) contributions are
subject to vesting rules. You are vested in (entitled to keep) all of your
agency automatic (1 percent) contributions, as well as any earnings that they
accrue, after a certain period of Federal service. Most FERS and FSPS
employees become vested after having completed 3 years of service. The agency
1 percent automatic contribution continues throughout the tax year, even after
a high-salaried employees investment deductions reach the tax code annual
limitation discussed in 4 FAH-3
H-546.5.
c. As a FERS or FSPS participant, you receive matching
contributions on the first 5 percent of pay that you contribute each pay
period. As the table below shows, the first 3 percent of pay that you
contribute will be matched dollar-for-dollar; the next 2 percent will be
matched at 50 cents on the dollar. Contributions above 5 percent of your pay
will not be matched.
Illustration:
When Employee Invests
|
Agency Automatic Contribution
|
Agency Matching Contribution
|
0%
|
1%
|
0%
|
1%
|
1%
|
1%
|
2%
|
1%
|
2%
|
3%
|
1%
|
3%
|
4%
|
1%
|
3.5%
|
5%
|
1%
|
4%
|
> 5%
|
1%
|
4%
|
d. CSRS and FSRDS Employees. Employees in the CSRS and
the FSRDS are not eligible for the agency automatic 1 percent contribution or
the agency matching contributions.
4 FAH-3 H-546.8 Taxability of
Employees Deductions for TSP
(CT:FMP-71; 04-23-2013)
Employee investments in the TSP are tax-deferred for U.S.
Federal income tax (i.e., they are deducted from pay before U.S. Federal income
tax is computed). These payments are also tax-deferred for State income tax
except in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. However, TSP deductions are subject to
FICA taxes.
4 FAH-3 H-546.9 Loans
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
If the employee obtains a loan from his/her TSP account,
the payroll office will facilitate repayment through recurring deductions from
biweekly pay to the TSP in accordance with the Loan Agreement.
4 FAH-3 H-546.10 TSP Account
Statements
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Employees' TSP Participant Statements are available
on the Thrift Savings Plan Web site. Upon request, an employee will receive in
the mail a TSP Participant Statement four times a year directly from the TSP
Office at the National Finance Center (NFC). Employees should review his or
her biweekly earnings and leave statement and the TSP statement to ensure
accurate deductions and any agency contributions are reflected.
b. If an employee has a TSP loan, information about the
loan is included on the employee's TSP Participant Statement, rather than on a
separate quarterly loan statement.
4 FAH-3 H-546.11 Interfund
Transfer or Change of Fund
(CT:FMP-95; 07-27-2017)
a. An employee may transfer some or all of his or her
existing TSP account balance among the TSP investment funds. The allocation of
funds for future biweekly investment deductions and government contributions
may also be changed. These can be made at any time electronically on the Thrift
Savings Plan website.
b. Interfund Transfer (IFT) Limits: You can make an
Interfund Transfer (IFT) at any time, but there are some important limitations:
(1) The first two IFTs of any calendar month may
redistribute money in your account among any or all of the TSP funds, including
moving your entire balance into the Government Securities Investment (G) Fund;
and
(2) Subsequent IFTs in the same calendar month can
only move money into the Government Securities Investment (G) Fund. See TSP:
Interfund Transfers.
4 FAH-3 H-546.12 Correction of
Agency Administrative Error
4 FAH-3 H-546.12-1 Administrative
Error
(CT:FMP-100; 05-30-2019)
a. An employee may present a claim for retroactive
correction of an act or omission by the employing agency that was not in
accordance with applicable statutes, regulations or administrative procedures.
b. The claim must be submitted within the time
limitations described on 5 CFR 1605.16 (Claims for correction of employing
agency errors; time limitations):
(1) Employees of other agencies should address their
claim to their personnel office; and
(2) If any Department of State employee believes that
an error has occurred, the employee must make a formal claim to the Director of
the Office of Pay Processing, CGFS/GC/PPR, Department of State, 2010 Bainbridge Avenue, North Charleston, SC 29405.
The employee must make the claim in writing and include the employees social
security number, a complete description of the claim, and include all
supporting documentation.
c. The Director must issue the employee a written decision
regarding the claim within 30 days of receipt of the employees written claim.
The Director must review each claim as to validity in order to seek appropriate
resolution.
d. If the claim is denied in whole or in part, the
written decision of the Director must contain the determination of the claim
(approval or denial). In the case of a denial, the notification must contain:
(1) A determination on the claim;
(2) The reasons for denial;
(3) All appropriate references to applicable statutes
or regulations;
(4) Any additional material or information that would
enable the Director to grant the employees claim (if applicable);
(5) An opportunity for employee to perfect the case;
(6) A description of the employees appeal rights;
(7) The name and address of the appeal officer; and
(8) The appeal time limits (30 days from date of
receipt).
e. Within 30 days of receipt of the decision denying
the claim, the employee may appeal the decision. The appeal must be in writing
and submitted to the Managing Director, Global Compensation Directorate, CGFS/GC,
Department of State, 2010 Bainbridge Avenue,
North Charleston, SC 29405.
The employee must include any appeal documents or information
that the employee deems relevant to the claim, which may enable the Managing
Director to grant the appeal
f. The Managing Director must issue the employee a
written decision within 30 days of receipt of the employees request regarding
the appeal. If the appeal is denied in whole or in part, the written decision
of the Managing Director must contain the determination of the appeal (approval
or denial). In the case of denial, the notification of the appeal decision
must contain:
(1) A determination on the appeal;
(2) The reasons for denial;
(3) All appropriate references to applicable statutes
or regulations;
(4) Any additional material or information that would
enable the Managing Director to grant the employees claim (if applicable);
(5) An opportunity for employee to perfect the case;
(6) A description of the employees appeal rights;
(7) The name and address of the appeal officer; and
(8) The appeal time limits (30 days from date of
receipt).
g. Within 30 days of receipt of the written decision
denying the appeal, the employee may make a written appeal to the Comptroller
and Assistant Secretary for Global Financial Services, CGFS, Department of
State, 2010 Bainbridge Avenue, North Charleston,
SC 29405. The employee must submit any additional material that would
enable the Deputy Assistant Secretary to perfect the appeal.
h. The Assistant Secretary must issue the employee a
written decision within 30 days of receipt of the appeal. The Assistant
Secretary is the final resolution authority and must provide a written decision
to the employee (including citations to any applicable statutes, regulations or
procedures). In the event of a denied appeal, the employee will be deemed to
have exhausted his or her administrative remedy and will be eligible to file
suit against the employing agency under 5 U.S.C. 8477. There is no
administrative appeal to the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board of a
final agency decision.
i. Consult 5 CFR 1605, Correction of Administrative
Errors, for additional details of employee claims for lost earnings.
4 FAH-3 H-546.12-2 Lost Earnings
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. For guidance in processing earnings adjustments for
deposit in a Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) participants account, which replicates
earnings that would have accrued had the agency not erred in reporting
contributions to the account, see TSP Bulletin 05-12, Earnings Adjustments to Thrift
Savings Plan Accounts Requested by Employing Agencies. In addition, see 5 CFR
1605, Correction of Administrative Errors, and 5 U.S.C. 8432a, Payment of Lost
Earnings.
b. The Department of State may pay lost earnings when
authorized regardless of whether an employee submits a claim. Lost earnings
must be addressed consistent with 5 CFR 1605.
c. Claims for lost earnings must be made and will be
decided consistent with the procedures outlined in 4 FAH-3
H-546.12-1 (b) through (i).
4 FAH-3 H-546.12-3 Accounting
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
The TSP record keeper charges lost earnings or investment
loss to the submitting payroll office. American Pay Processing (CGFS/GC/PPR) will
pass the charge to the appropriation/allotment that funds the employees basic
pay and the allottee will receive a manually prepared Form SF-1081, Voucher and
Schedule of Withdrawals and Credits, with detailed information. As with other
CAPPS payments, the recipient agency should not enter Form SF-1081 on its
Statement of Transactions as CAPPS will complete the transfer on its own Form SF-224,
Statement of Transactions.
4 FAH-3 H-547 OTHER DEDUCTIONS
4 FAH-3 H-547.1 Pay Adjustments
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Upon determination of overpayment, an adjustment is
usually made in the next pay period, or a check is requested, or a recurring
deduction is initiated, depending on the particular circumstances and the
amount involved.
b. Immediate deduction from pay may be made for
adjustments to pay arising out of an employees election of coverage or a
change in coverage under a Federal benefits program or ministerial adjustments
in pay if the amount to be recovered was accumulated over four pay periods or
less.
c. Employee indebtedness incurred while in non-pay
status for the employee share of health insurance premiums should be recovered
promptly upon employees return to duty. The employee should be advised of the
amount due and given an opportunity to establish a reasonable payment plan.
The agency may deduct the indebtedness from pay without the employees consent
provided the deduction rate does not exceed 25 percent of the employees
disposable pay (unless it is the employees final check).
d. In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 5514, collection of a
debt an employee owes the U.S. Government may be made by offset from salary
without the employees consent provided proper notification and opportunity to
exercise administrative rights have been made. The amount of the offset may
not exceed 15 percent of the employees disposable pay. If employment ends
before salary offset is completed, the remaining debt will be liquidated by an
offset from payment of any nature due the employee.
e. For provisions for waiving overpayments see 4 FAM 490, Debt
Collection.
4 FAH-3 H-547.2 Delinquent Travel
Advances
(TL:FMP-4; 06-15-1995)
A delinquent travel advance may be collected though offset
against accrued pay (5 U.S.C. 5705). The amount deducted for any pay period
may not exceed 15 percent of disposable pay unless it is the employees final
check.
4 FAH-3 H-547.3 Garnishment
(CT:FMP-93; 05-12-2016)
a. Child Support or AlimonyThe
maximum part of aggregate disposable earnings subject to garnishment for child
support or alimony must not exceed 50 percent to 65 percent as detailed in 5
CFR 581.402. An order by a court of competent jurisdiction within any State,
territory, or possession of the United States or the District of Columbia or a
court of competent jurisdiction in any foreign country with which the United
States has entered into an agreement that requires the United States to honor
such process will be recognized.
b. CommercialCommercial
garnishment by order of a court of competent jurisdiction within any State,
territory, or possession of the United States or the District of Columbia is
limited to not more than 25 percent of disposable earnings (see 5 CFR 582.402(a)(1)
and 5 U.S.C. 5520a).
c. The Department's administrative costs in executing
commercial garnishment action may be added to the garnishment and the
Department of State may retain costs recovered as offsetting collections.
d. State or local taxGarnishment
of disposable earnings for a state or local tax obligation will not exceed 25 percent.
Garnishment by order of a court in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy case has no
percentage or earnings limit.
e. A request for payments pursuant to court-ordered
garnishments for Department of State employees and personal services
contractors must be submitted to the Executive Director (L-H/EX), Office of the
Legal Adviser (L), Department of State, SA-17, 600 19th Street, NW, Suite
5.600, Washington DC 20036.
4 FAH-3 H-547.4 Levy for U.S. Taxes
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Levy may be made upon salary or wages of any employee or
elected or appointed official of the United States by serving a notice of levy
on the employer of the delinquent taxpayer. Biweekly wages exempt from levy
are equal to the sum of the taxpayers standard deductions, any additional standard
deductions due to blindness or age, and personal exemptions divided by 26.
Also exempt from levy are amounts necessary to comply with judgments for
support of minor children, if the legal process was entered prior to the date
of the levy (26 CFR 301.6331 - 26 CFR 301.6334).
4 FAH-3 H-547.5 Judgment Offsets
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
Where a court determines an employee is indebted to the United States, collection of debt by deduction is made in reasonable amounts from the
current pay account of the employee. The maximum amount deducted for any
period ordinarily may not exceed 25 percent of the net disposable pay from
which the deduction is made unless deduction of a greater amount is necessary
to make collection within the expected period of employment. At a minimum, the
amount deducted must equal at least 15 percent of the net disposable pay from
which the deduction is made.
4 FAH-3 H-548 ALLOTMENTS OF PAY
4 FAH-3 H-548.1 Authorities
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. The authorities are as follows:
(1) 5 U.S.C. 5525;
(2) 5 CFR 550.301 - 5 CFR 550.371; and
(3) 1 TFM 3-1000.
b. Making an allotment of pay is a voluntary act by an
employee that carries no corresponding obligations on the part of the U.S.
Government and requires no administrative adjudication to become effective.
c. Allotments are revocable at the will of the
allotter and invest no property rights in the allottee unless and until they
have been paid to the allottee. Allotment records are for official use only
and their disclosure is protected by the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a).
4 FAH-3 H-548.2 Certain Specified
Purposes
4 FAH-3 H-548.2-1 Combined
Federal Campaign Allotments
(TL:FMP-4; 06-15-1995)
Under 5 CFR 550.341 an employee may make an allotment for
contribution to the Combined Federal Campaign if the employee is employed in an
area in which a Combined Federal Campaign authorized by OPM is established.
The allotment will be an equal amount deducted each pay period for a term of
one year beginning with the first pay period which begins in January and ending
the last pay period which begins in December. The minimum biweekly amount is
$1 and the amount of the allotment may not be changed. The employee may discontinue
the allotment at any time.
4 FAH-3 H-548.2-2 U.S. Savings
Bonds (TreasuryDirect)
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. On September 30, 2010, the Department of the
Treasury, Bureau of the Public Debt discontinued the issuance of definitive
(paper) savings bonds through payroll savings plans for Federal employees.
Effective October 1, 2010, Federal employees (payroll savers) are encouraged to
continue their purchases of United States savings bonds and/or other government
securities through TreasuryDirect. See TreasuryDirect.
b. What is TreasuryDirect? It is a Web-based system that allows investors to
establish accounts to purchase, hold, and conduct transactions in Treasury
securities online. Employees (investors) can purchase Series EE and I bonds,
Treasury bills, notes, bonds, and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities
(TIPS) through TreasuryDirect. Paper savings bonds are not sold through TreasuryDirect.
See 31 CFR 351 and 31 CFR 359.
c. Employees Who are Eligible.
TreasuryDirect is provided to U.S. citizen employees and personal services
contractors payrolled through American Pay Processing (CGFS/GC/PPR). The LE
staff payroll system does not handle deductions for TreasuryDirect.
d. Initiation request for TreasuryDirect. Requests by an employee to enroll in the Voluntary Payroll
Savings Plan for the initial deduction must be submitted to the payroll office
on Form SF-1199-A, Direct Deposit Sign-Up Form, a FAST START Direct Deposit
Sign-Up Form, or electronically through Employee Express.
e. Direct deposit instructions.
The employee must provide the following information when submitting information
to the payroll office:
(1) For "Receiving Bank Name", use the
word: TREASURYDIRECT;
(2) Show the ABA/RTN number as: 051736158;
(3) For the account number, the employee uses the TreasuryDirect
account number provided to him or her, followed by the letter "P" and
without hyphens if using the Payroll Savings Plan. (For example: A123456789P); and
(4) For the type of account, the employee can choose
either a checking or savings account; either type of account works for the TreasuryDirect
system.
NOTE: Adding the letter
"P" to your TreasuryDirect account number flags it as a Payroll
Savings Plan deposit. If you have not established a payroll plan, the
transaction will be rejected. If the employee provides his/her account number
without the P, funds will be deposited into the C or I account you use for TreasuryDirect
payroll savings of marketable securities and savings bonds.
f. Available Bond Denominations.
Electronic savings bonds are not sold by denomination. The minimum purchase
amount for a savings bond in TreasuryDirect is $25 and the maximum is $5,000.
Employees can purchase any amount between $25 and $5,000. Five thousand
dollars is the annual limit per savings bond series per person.
g. Amount of payroll deduction.
There is no minimum. An employee can request a direct deposit for as little as
a dollar. The amount of the allotment need not be a fractional part of the
purchase price of a bond.
h. What is the issue date established
on savings bonds bought in TreasuryDirect?
Savings bonds purchased in TreasuryDirect are posted to the employees account
one business day after they are purchased. The issue date of the savings bond
is the first day of the month in which the savings bond is posted.
i. Cancellation of payroll deduction.
Once initiated, payroll deductions will continue, providing gross pay is
adequate, until the employee cancels the deduction by submitting a memo to the
Office of American Pay Processing (CGFS/GC/PPR) authorizing the cancellation.
In addition, the employee may process the cancellation electronically through
the Employee Express website.
NOTE: For additional
guidance, see Individual - The Payroll Savings Options in TreasuryDirect.
4 FAH-3 H-548.2-3 Labor/Management
Organization Dues
(CT:FMP-95; 07-27-2017)
a. Authority for labor/management
organization membership dues deductions. Dues withholding for
associations of management officials and/or supervisors is covered by 5 CFR
550.331. The Department may provide for the allotment of dues for
organizations representing Department employees under 5 CFR 550.321. See also 3 FAM 5310,
Department Relationships with Employee Organizations.
b. Request for dues withholding.
Form SF-1187, Request for Payroll Deductions for Labor Organization Dues, is
used for requesting and authorizing the withholding of membership dues and
payment to the appropriate organization. The employee completes the form
except for Section A and sends it to the labor/management organization that
completes Section A and forwards it in accordance with the agreement. The
labor/management organization will provide the payroll office with a list of
officials authorized to certify Form SF-1187.
c. Deduction of dues by the payroll
office. Withholding will commence with the first full pay period after
the payroll office receives the Form SF-1187. There will be no retroactive
withholding by the payroll office except to correct errors it makes.
d. Discontinuance of membership dues
withholding.
(1) Employee revocation. An
employee who has authorized the withholding of organization dues may request
revocation of such authorization by submitting a completed Form SF-1188,
Cancellation of Payroll Deductions for Labor Organization Dues, or a memorandum
in accordance with the agreement. Cancellation will not be effective until the
pay period beginning on or after the next established cancellation date.
(2) Loss of recognition by an
organization. Should an organization lose its right to exclusive
representation of the employees of an agency under Executive Order 12292, it is
the responsibility of the agency union representative to notify the payroll
office. The payroll office will cease withholding membership dues upon receipt
of such notification.
(3) Discontinuance due to removal
from agencys payroll. Removal from an agencys payroll, such as in the
case of termination of employment by that agency, will automatically terminate
employee organization dues withholding.
4 FAH-3 H-548.3 Other Allotments
(TL:FMP-4; 06-15-1995)
In addition to the allotments specified in 4 FAH-3
H-548.2, employees may make general purpose allotments.
4 FAH-3 H-548.3-1 Purposes for
Which Allotments May Be Made
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. Employees in the United States may make an allotment
for voluntary child support and/or alimony payments, for credit to savings
accounts with financial institutions, and for purchase of retirement credit for
prior years service (except where prohibited by OPM). (See 5 CFR 550.311 and 5
CFR 550.312.)
b. Employees assigned to an overseas post payrolled
through American Pay Processing (CGFS/GC/PPR) may make allotments for:
(1) The support of relatives or dependents of the
allotters including voluntary child support and/or alimony;
(2) Fixed amounts to checking and savings accounts (other
than net pay to banks);
(3) Payment of insurance premiums;
(4) Installment payments on the purchase of an
automobile;
(5) Payment to the State Department Federal Credit
Union and the Lafayette Federal Credit Union;
(6) Payment to lawfully appointed attorneys; and
(7) The purchase of retirement credit for prior years
service (except where prohibited by OPM).
c. LE staff may make allotments allowed under the
local compensation plan and for:
(1) Checking and savings accounts;
(2) The support of relatives or dependents of the
allotter;
(3) Group insurance in a private company underwritten
by a U.S. insurance company;
(4) Group insurance in a private company not
underwritten by a U.S. insurance company, when approved by the post management
officer;
(5) Purchase of prior years of service credit under
the Civil Service Retirement System;
(6) Help meeting income and related tax obligations to
the host government; and
(7) For any purpose approved jointly by the heads of
agencies in a country and authorized jointly by the agencies headquarters
participating in the interagency compensation agreement.
d. Department of State policy is to pay LE staff and
PSCs in the currency of the country where employed. Accordingly, allotments
are paid in the currency in which the local compensation plan is stated except
as provided in 4
FAH-3 H-550.
4 FAH-3 H-548.3-2 Purposes for
Which Allotments May Not Be Made
(CT:FMP-99; 08-30-2018)
a. U.S. citizen employees hired in the U.S. and
payrolled through American Pay Processing (CGFS/GC/PPR) may not make allotments
for:
(1) Contributions to charities except through the
Combined Federal Campaign;
(2) Dues to civic, fraternal, or other organizations,
except to labor organizations or associations of management officials and
supervisors, with which the agency has agreed in writing to deduct members
dues;
(3) Payment of indebtedness, except as specifically
provided in 4 FAH-3
H-548.3-1, paragraph b; and
(4) Any other purpose for which a payroll deduction is
prohibited.
b. LE staff may not make allotments for:
(1) Contribution to charities;
(2) Dues to civic, fraternal, or other similar
organizations;
(3) Indebtedness, except as specifically provided in 4 FAH-3
H-548.3-1, paragraph c; and
(4) Any purpose for which a payroll deduction is
prohibited.
4 FAH-3 H-548.3-3 Limitations on
Allotments
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. Employees within the United States may have up to
four allotments, of which not more than three may be for credit to savings
accounts with financial institutions. The number of allotments for U.S. citizen employees stationed overseas may not exceed four, one of which may be made
toward the support of dependents or relatives.
b. The number of allotments for LE staff may not exceed
three, one of which may be made toward the support of dependents or relatives.
c. Allotments must be made on a pay period basis only.
d. An allotment must be stated in a fixed dollar (or
other unit of currency) amount unless it is an allotment of net pay.
e. An employee may not have more than one allotment of
pay payable to the same allottee at the same time.
f. Allotment of pay may be denied or restricted for
U.S. citizen temporary employees or personal services contractors.
4 FAH-3 H-548.3-4 Initiation,
Change or Discontinuance of an Allotment of Pay
(CT:FMP-65; 08-29-2011)
a. An allotment of pay may be initiated by submitting
Form SF-1199-A, Direct Deposit Sign-Up Form, a FAST START Direct Deposit
Sign-Up Form, or electronically through Employee Express. Employees are
responsible for making the necessary arrangements with their banks or other
financial institutions for the disposition of allotment payments prior to the
submission of Form SF-1199-A. Form DS-1992, Allotment of Pay-Application and
Authorization to Make, Change or Discontinue, is used to request an allotment
of pay to an individual or other instance not permitting payment by electronic
funds transfer. All attempts should be made to issue discretionary allotments
using direct deposit/electronic funds transfer.
b. An allotment is discontinued on:
(1) The written request of the allotter;
(2) The retirement, death, or separation from the
service of the allotter; or
(3) Instructions from the Department of State, other
agency, or the principal officer of the applicable agency or when conditions
under which allotment was permitted no longer exist.
4 FAH-3 H-549 UNASSIGNED