Follow us! >

USPS OIG – Processing of Retroactive Pay

Background

As of September 30, 2022, 92 percent of Postal Service’s 635,250 employees were members of labor organizations (unions), whose terms of employment are covered by collective bargaining agreements (labor contracts). In fiscal year (FY) 2022, three of the eight Postal Service unions ratified new labor contracts, resulting in the Postal Service owing retroactive pay to approximately 394,000 employees. Inconveniences due to prolonged processing of retroactive pay affect employees and directly impact the Postal Service’s relationship with its unions, and its Delivering for America goal of being an “employer of choice” that retains the most capable and diverse employees.

What We Did

Our objective was to assess the United States Postal Service’s processes and systems over retroactive pay. To accomplish our objective, we reviewed timelines for three collective bargaining agreements (labor contracts) from contract ratification to issuing retroactive payments to affected employees.

What We Found

The Postal Service has robust steps to process retroactive pay. However, opportunities exist to improve the timeliness of payments. For the three contracts reviewed, the Postal Service took between eight and eleven months to issue retroactive pay. We found the most significant contributing factors affecting timeliness included the challenges in code development due to the outdated system used to process payroll, competing priorities with scheduled payroll system changes and projects, and the lack of formal policies and procedures. Processing retroactive payments requires coordination among five Postal Service functional areas. Each functional area must work around other existing or unanticipated projects planned for the systems required for processing payroll to reach an agreed upon implementation date. Finally, the Postal Service lacks formal procedures around processing retroactive pay, though functional areas do have processes and responsibilities in place.

Recommendations

We recommended management require the new payroll system be able to execute retroactive pay’s complex processing when assessing, reviewing, and selecting a new vendor, and document procedures that include responsibilities for functional areas involved in the process, scheduling guidelines, and timeframes to implement contract requirements.

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hot this week

Legislation would make it a federal crime to steal packages from commercial carriers, not just USPS

Rep. Josh Gottheimer, of New Jersey, said he's reintroducing a 2022 bill, the Porch Pirates Act, that would expand penalties for theft of packages from USPS to commercial carriers like UPS, FedEx and Amazon.

Fly flags at half-staff to honor National Guard specialist

President Donald Trump has ordered U.S. flags flown at half-staff to honor West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom, who was fatally shot Nov. 26 in Washington, DC.

Does a flexible spending account make sense for you?

Flexible spending accounts, or FSAs, can help Postal Service employees reduce their taxable income and save on yearly health or dependent care costs like copays, prescriptions, over-the-counter medications and childcare costs

When Online PSHB Enrollment Fails: A Backup Plan for Postal Employees

For many USPS employees, this Open Season has been less about choosing a health plan and more about wrestling with technology.

When slower mail becomes a health risk

Delivery speed and reliability are both essential to medication access. USPS has emphasized that the RTO initiative is intended to improve reliability, even as other elements of the DFA lengthens average delivery times.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x