NORD/NC V AGREEMENTS
Memorandum of Understanding on the Reopening of the
National Agreement
I.
Introduction. This Memorandum of Understanding (M0U), entered into by
and between the Internal Revenue Service (the Service) and the National Treasury
Employees Union (the Union), is intended to amend and/or supplement the
Parties’ existing NORD and NC agreements. In consideration thereof, the
Parties hereby waive their right under Article 52, Section 4, to reopen and
otherwise modify those NORD and NC V agreements for their duration. To the
extent that this Memorandum amends those NORD and NC V agreements, or any other
collective bargaining agreement(s), memoranda of understanding or letter(s) of
commitment negotiated between the National Parties (hereafter, the Parties), the
provisions of this Memorandum shall prevail, where the provisions expressly
cover the particular issues addressed by this Memorandum.
II.
Amendment to Article 18— AWARDS
A.
Awards Funding. With respect to Section 1A of Article 18, the Service
has determined that for performance
awards for FY 2001 performance, it will fund the appropriate
awards “pools” for bargaining unit and non-bargaining unit employees
at a rate of 1.42% of their aggregate base pay in the appropriate fiscal year.
In this regard, as an express modification to
Section 1A of this Article, the Union acknowledges and agrees that the
Service has a right, within the framework of the funding formula established
herein, to redistribute non-bargaining unit awards pool monies among various
groups of non-bargaining unit employees as it sees fit, and that any such
redistribution shall not affect the overall funding formula for bargaining unit
awards, as set forth above. Section 1A of this Article, as modified by this
agreement, does not apply to any increase in the base salaries of any individual
or group of employees, bargaining unit or otherwise, and the Parties agree that
any such change in base salaries shall not impact the calculation of awards pool
funding percentages in any way. The above agreement is made without
precedent or prejudice to any future negotiations (including interest
arbitration) concerning Section 1 .A of this article and its application to
non-bargaining unit employees covered by an alternative pay system.
B.
Service-Wide Awards Agreement. With respect to Sections 2 and 3 of
this article, the Parties agree that beginning on October 1, 2001, all local
awards agreements (and practices) will be replaced by a single, standardized
Service-wide performance awards agreement. For all performance awards granted on
and after that date (that is, for awards based on performance ratings after
September 30, 2001), the Parties will implement a system which pays awards to a
fixed percentage of the most highly rated bargaining unit employees in each
organizational unit, as defined by the joint implementation bargaining team
described below. Unless the Parties agree otherwise, that fixed percentage will
be set at 60%. Thus, the top-performing 60% of all bargaining unit employees in
a particular organizational unit, as determined by the order of their
individual overall average appraisal scores, will receive a performance
award. If two or more bargaining unit employees are tied in that regard (that
is, they have identical overall average appraisal scores), the Parties will
establish procedures, as provided below, to insure that no more than 60% of the
bargaining unit employees in the organizational unit receive performance awards.
1.
Performance Award Shares. Performance awards shall be paid from July to
August of each calendar year. Each organizational unit, as defined by the joint
implementation bargaining team described below, shall have an overall awards
“pool” or budget derived by adding the annual salaries of all bargaining
unit employees in that organizational unit, and then multiplying that total by
the Service’s overall bargaining unit awards funding percentage (currently set
by the Service at 1.42% of bargaining unit base pay). Pursuant to the current
Agreement, eighty percent (8 0%) of the overall awards pool shall be paid as
performance awards, and twenty percent (20%) as Special Act awards, unless
otherwise mutually agreed. The amount of an individual’s performance award
within the organizational unit’s budget shall be based on a “share”
system. Under that system, the shares for each individual bargaining unit
employee in a particular organizational unit will be determined by multiplying
that employee’s General Schedule grade by his or her overall average appraisal
score. The shares accorded each individual employee in the organizational unit
will then be added together to determine the total number of shares in that
organizational unit. Thereafter, the monetary value of each individual employee
share will be determined by dividing the organizational unit’s total
performance awards budget by the total number of shares in that organizational
unit. See attached example.
2. Joint Implementation Bargaining Team. In
order to develop implementing procedures for the Service-wide performance awards
system described above, the Parties agree to assemble a joint implementation
bargaining team, comprised in accordance with the Parties’ Midterm Re-opener
Ground Rules. That team will be chartered to examine pertinent data regarding
the current performance awards system(s), and to develop joint recommendations
to the Parties with regard to implementation of the above agreement. In
addition, the team will make recommendations as to (a) the definition of the
appropriate “organizational unit” for purposes of establishing awards pools
and share calculations; (b) whether the 60% performance awards distribution
formula set forth in paragraph II B above should be continued or modified for FY
2003; (c) whether performance awards should be distributed on some basis other
than organizational unit; and (d) whether employees should continue to be given
credit for performance awards in the merit promotion process, and if so how.
3.
Implementation Bargaining Team Schedule. The team’s labor and management
co-chairs will establish a schedule of meetings, such that the team will
complete its review and submit its recommendations to the Parties by January 15,
2001. Official time, travel, and per diem expenses for the Union’s
representatives shall be in accordance with the Parties’ Midterm Ground Rules.
The Parties may mutually agree to adopt any or all of team’s
recommendations. Absent mutual agreement by the national Parties to the
contrary, the basic Service-wide awards agreement described in Paragraph II
above (governing Service-wide uniformity, performance awards distribution, and
awards funding) will become effective as scheduled; however, within the confines
of that basic agreement, either Party may invoke the mediation-arbitration
procedures outlined in the Parties’ Midterm Ground Rules to address
outstanding implementation issues unresolved at the conclusion of the
implementation bargaining process referenced in paragraph IIB(2) above.
III. Addition
to Article 1 - COVERAGE AND DEFINITIONS.
The Parties agree that effective October 1, 2001, an employee’s Enter on Duty
(EOD) date will be based on total IRS service. Thus, wherever these Agreements
require the use of an employee’s IRS EOD date, the Parties will use the
employee’s most recent EOD date, modified to include any prior IRS service.
For example, if an employee’s most recent EOD date is January 1, 1998,
and that employee had four additional years of previous IRS service (prior to a
break in his or her IRS employ), that employee’s new EOD date would be
adjusted to January 1, 1994. The IRS EOD date will not be adjusted for time
spent outside IRS in Federal service. Prior to the effective date of this
provision, the Service will announce a 90-day period for submission of
appropriate documentation of prior IRS service; any employee who fails to submit
official documentation during that period will not have his or her EOD date
adjusted.
IV. Additions
to Article 12- PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
A.
New Article 12, Section 4R - The fact that an employee assumes new tasks, receives
new Critical Job Elements (CJEs), changes positions, is a trainee, and/or gets
promoted to a new position does not create a presumption that his or her
performance is only “fully successful.”
Rather, an employee’s performance rating will be based strictly on his
or her performance against those Critical Job Elements that apply during the
appropriate performance rating cycle.
B.
New Article 12, Section 9E - When a review of a particular employee’s work performance is
specifically made by a manager above the employee’s immediate (or first line)
supervisor, and that review produces any negative feedback with respect to that
particular employee’s performance, the procedural requirements set forth in
Sections 9A and 9B apply. Wherever
possible, the employee will be given the opportunity to meet and/or discuss the
matter with the higher-level
manager who provided the evaluative comments.
V. Addition to
Article 13— PROMOTIONS. The Parties
agree that during the life of this agreement, the Service will not use
“Behavioral Event Interviewing” with respect to the staffing of any
bargaining unit position, without an express agreement from the Union.
VI. Addition to
Article 9, New Section 411(5) - STEWARDS
AND OFFICIAL TIME. For the period
October 1, 2000 to July 1, 2001 each chapter will be given a supplemental appropriation
of bank time equal to 15% of the amount of time they received for the bank time
year that began before October 1, 2000. In most cases that will be July 1, 2000.
This supplement will be a one-time grant.
VII. Amendment
to Article 36- ADMINISTRATIVE TIME.
A. New Section 3D. When an emergency condition forces the closure of an IRS
facility and employees thereof are
granted administrative leave as a result, an employee of that same facility (a)
who is working at home on an approved Flexiplace program and (b) who is
prevented from accomplishing work because of that same emergency condition (for
example, where a power outage forces the closure of an office, and that same
power outage prevents a Flexiplace employee from completing his or her work
assignments at home), that Flexiplace employee will be provided the same amount
of administrative leave granted employees who were working in the closed
facility. A Flexiplace employee claiming administrative leave under this
provision is responsible for providing appropriate documentation in support of
that claim.
B.
New Section 3E. If the
President, the Office of Personnel Management, or other appropriate
authority declares a natural disaster area, employees who are faced with a
personal emergency caused by that natural disaster will be eligible for a
reasonable amount of administrative leave, based on the facts and circumstances
of the personal emergency. An employee requesting administrative leave under
this Section may be required to provide an explanation and/or documentation in
support of his or her claim.
VIII. Addition
to Article 23, Section 2 - HOURS OF WORK (AWS). Except as set forth below,
all terms and conditions of Alternative Work Schedule (AWS) agreements will
remain in effect unless the Parties mutually agree to renegotiate (or mutually
agree to authorize their local representatives to renegotiate) said local
agreements. In this regard, the Parties agree that any negotiations over changes
in AWS will occur pursuant to Article 47, as revised. Further, to the extent
that the Parties authorize any local AWS negotiations, such negotiations may
invoke the impasse procedures contained in Article 47 with the concurrence of
the Parties (in this case, the Service’s Director of Workforce Relations and
the Union’s Director of Negotiations). Finally, absent mutual agreement to do
otherwise, where there are negotiations over which AWS schedule
should apply to newly created jobs, the Parties agree to use the
schedules that were available to employees in the closest local predecessor
position. Thus, Taxpayer Resolution Representatives (TRRs) would have available
to them the local schedules available to former Taxpayer Service Specialists;
and Tax Compliance Officers (TCOs) would have available to them the local
schedules available to former Tax Auditors.
IX. Amendment
to Article 50, Section 2 - FLEXIPLACE. Except
as set forth below, all terms and conditions of Flexiplace agreements will
remain in effect unless the Parties mutually agree to renegotiate (or mutually
agree to authorize their local representatives to renegotiate) said local
agreements. In this regard, the Parties agree that any negotiations over changes
in Flexiplace will occur pursuant to Article 47, as revised. Further, to the
extent that the national Parties authorize any local Flexiplace negotiations,
such negotiations may invoke the impasse procedures contained in Article 47 with
the concurrence of the Parties (in this case, the Service’s Director of
Workforce Relations and the Union’s Director of Negotiations). Finally, absent
voluntary agreement to do otherwise, where there are negotiations over which
Flexiplace schedule should apply to newly created jobs, the Parties agree to use
the schedules that were available to employees in the closest local predecessor
position. Thus, Taxpayer Resolution Representatives (TRRs) would have available
to them the local schedules available to former Taxpayer Service Specialists;
and Tax Compliance Officers (TCO5) would have available to them the local
Flexiplace schedules available to former Tax Auditors.
X.
Duration and Effective Date. This Memorandum shall become effective thirty-one (31)
calendar days following its execution, or upon agency head approval, whichever
comes first. It shall remain in effect until modified or replaced as a result of
negotiations over the Parties’ National Agreement VI, or other mutual
agreement.
This Memorandum
is entered into by the Parties on November 3, 2000.
For the Union
For the Service
_____/s/________
______/s/_______
Colleen M.
Kelley
Bob Wenzel, IRS
NTEU National President
Deputy Commissioner
_____/s/_________
_____/s/________
Frank Ferris,
NTEU
David A. Mader, IRS
National Executive Vice President
Assistant Deputy Commissioner
____/s/__________
_____/s/________
Michael B.
Filler, NTEU
Ronald P. Sanders, IRS
Director of Negotiations`
Chief Human Resource Officer