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entitled 'Federal Law Enforcement Retirement: Information on Enhanced 
Retirement Benefits for Law Enforcement Personnel' which was released 
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[Note: This document was revised on March 18, 2010. Table 9 on page 56 
of the report contained some inaccurate information in the column that 
lists Average.] 

Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

July 2009: 

Federal Law Enforcement Retirement: 

Information on Enhanced Retirement Benefits for Law Enforcement 
Personnel: 

GAO-09-727: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-727, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

From fiscal years 2000 through 2008, the number of persons employed by 
federal agencies who perform various law enforcement functions and 
receive either special pay or enhanced retirement benefits, in the form 
of a faster-accruing pension, has increased by 55 percent. In addition, 
as of September 2008, approximately 51,000 personnel were employed in 
law enforcement-related occupations that could seek enhanced retirement 
benefits in the future. GAO was asked to conduct a review of the 
retirement benefits provided to law enforcement personnel. This report 
addresses (1) the processes used to grant enhanced retirement benefits 
to federal law enforcement personnel, (2) the rationales and potential 
costs for extending benefits to additional occupations, and (3) the 
extent to which federal agencies used human capital tools to retain law 
enforcement and other related personnel. GAO reviewed relevant laws, 
regulations, and other documentation, such as agency reports describing 
the processes used to grant enhanced benefits, and interviewed 
officials from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Internal 
Revenue Service (IRS) because these entities employed approximately 84 
percent of all law enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel in 
fiscal year 2008. In commenting on a draft of this report, DHS, DOJ and 
OPM generally concurred with the report. IRS stated that it had no 
comments on the report. 

What GAO Found: 

In order for certain employees to receive enhanced retirement benefits, 
agencies generally determine that a certain group of employees meets 
the statutory and regulatory definitions of a Law Enforcement Officer 
(LEO)—which includes such activities as conducting investigations—and 
submit the determination to OPM. As of the end of fiscal year 2008, 
about half of federal employees receiving enhanced retirement benefits 
met the statutory and regulatory definitions. In recent years, several 
employee groups and unions representing law enforcement personnel whose 
agencies and OPM have determined that they do not meet the LEO 
definitions have sought such benefits directly through legislation. 
Currently, about half of law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced 
benefits have obtained these benefits directly through legislation. 

Law enforcement-related employee groups that sought enhanced retirement 
benefits directly through legislation have cited a number of rationales 
to justify receiving these benefits, including high attrition rates. 
The provision of such retirement benefits may result in additional 
costs to the agency and federal government because these costs are 
generally higher than providing retirement benefits to regular federal 
employees. GAO’s analysis of available data showed that attrition for 
law enforcement-related personnel not receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits was higher than law enforcement personnel receiving such 
benefits but not as high as all other federal employees. While 
attrition data are available, when asked to provide such data, the 
employee groups and unions seeking enhanced retirement benefits did not 
consistently provide it to us. Analyzing attrition data alone may not 
fully indicate why personnel are leaving a particular agency because a 
variety of organizational and economic factors, as well as 
compensation, influence separation decisions. GAO’s analysis also 
showed that such benefits increase agency short-term costs and could 
increase the government’s long-term pension liability. Finally, 
providing such benefits to some groups but not others has created 
perceived inequities and DHS and DOJ acknowledge that it could affect 
their strategic workforce planning. 

Federal agencies have the authority to use human capital tools, such as 
retention incentives, to assist with their efforts to address specific 
retention challenges. Some department and agency officials to whom we 
spoke said these tools are effective for retaining law enforcement 
personnel, while others maintained they need enhanced retirement 
benefits to effectively retain law enforcement-related personnel. The 
targeted use of these tools may present a cost-efficient alternative 
for retaining law enforcement-related personnel. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-727]. For more 
information, contact Eileen Larence at (202) 512-5555 or 
larencee@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Enhanced Retirement Benefits Have Been Granted through OPM and Agency 
Administrative Processes as Well as through Separate Legislation for 
Select Employee Groups: 

Employee Groups Cite Various Rationales for Seeking Enhanced Retirement 
Benefits through Legislation; Considering Supporting Data for 
Rationales, Additional Costs, and Other Implications Could Inform 
Decisions: 

Using Human Capital Tools Could Offer A More Cost Efficient Alternative 
Than Granting Enhanced Retirement Benefits For Retaining Select Law 
Enforcement Related Personnel: 

Concluding Observations: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Definition of "Law Enforcement Officer" for Retirement 
Purposes: 

Appendix III: Annuity Computation Information: 

Appendix IV: Selected Non Standard Pay Plans: 

Appendix V: Attrition Data: 

Appendix VI: Federal Retention Incentives Utilization as Reported to 
OPM and Congress: 

Appendix VII: Comments from the Office of Personnel Management: 

Appendix VIII: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Retirement Benefits--LEO and Non-LEO Retirees Under CSRS and 
FERS with Voluntary Retirement--Fiscal Year 2008: 

Table 2: Select Employee Groups That Have Been Found to Meet the LEO 
Definitional Criteria and Receive Enhanced Retirement Benefits through 
OPM's Administrative Process: 

Table 3: Select Employee Groups' Currently Receiving Enhanced 
Retirement Benefits Directly through Legislation by Occupation Series, 
Fiscal Year 2008 Population, and Year of Legislation: 

Table 4: Differences in Agency and Employee Contributions to Retirement 
Funds for Regular Federal Employees versus Law Enforcement Personnel: 

Table 5: Human Capital Tools and Special Pay Utilized by DHS, DOJ, and 
the IRS to Retain Law Enforcement and Law Enforcement Related 
Personnel: 

Table 6: Annuity Accrual Rates: 

Table 7: Selected Non Standard Pay Plans: 

Table 8: Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement Personnel Receiving 
Enhanced Retirement Benefits for Fiscal Year 2004 through Fiscal Year 
2008: 

Table 9: Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement-Related Personnel Not 
Receiving Enhanced Retirement Benefits for Fiscal Year 2004 through 
Fiscal Year 2008: 

Table 10: Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement Personnel-Related 
Receiving Special Pay but Not Receiving Enhanced Retirement Benefits 
for Fiscal Year 2004 through Fiscal Year 2008: 

Table 11: Attrition Rates for Other Personnel Not Employed in Law 
Enforcement or Related Occupations for Fiscal Year 2004 through Fiscal 
Year 2008: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Governmentwide Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement and 
Related Personnel, Fiscal Years 2004 through 2008 by Retirement 
Category: 

Figure 2: Governmentwide Moves among Law Enforcement-Related Personnel 
Not Receiving Enhanced Retirement Benefits, Fiscal Years 2004 through 
2007 by Retirement Category: 

Abbreviations: 

ATF: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives: 

CBP: U.S. Customs and Border Protection: 

COPRA: Customs Officer Pay Reform Act: 

CPDF: Central Personnel Data File: 

CSRS: Civil Service Retirement System: 

DEA: Drug Enforcement Administration: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 

DOJ: Department of Justice: 

EHRI: Enterprise Human Resources Integration program: 

EOUSA: Executive Office for United States Attorneys: 

FBI: Federal Bureau of Investigation: 

FERS: Federal Employees Retirement System: 

GS: General Schedule: 

IRS: Internal Revenue Service: 

JMD: Justice Management Division: 

LEO: law enforcement officer: 

MSPB: Merit Systems Protection Board: 

OMB: Office of Management and Budget: 

OPM: Office of Personnel Management: 

TSA: Transportation Security Administration: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 30, 2009: 

The Honorable Robert A. Brady: 
Chairman: 
Committee on House Administration: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Stephen F. Lynch: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Danny K. Davis: 
Member: 
Subcommittee on Federal Workforce, Postal Service, and the District of 
Columbia: 
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: 
House of Representatives: 

From fiscal years 2000 through 2008, the number of persons employed by 
federal agencies who perform various law enforcement functions and 
receive either special pay or enhanced retirement benefits--including a 
faster-accruing pension--has increased by 55 percent, from 
approximately 82,000 in September of 2000 to approximately 127,000 in 
September of 2008.[Footnote 1] In addition, approximately 51,000 
persons were employed in law enforcement-related occupations as of 
September of 2008.[Footnote 2] Federal law enforcement personnel might 
be provided with enhanced retirement benefits in different ways. First, 
enhanced retirement benefits are provided to those law enforcement 
personnel who are covered under the applicable Civil Service Retirement 
System (CSRS) or Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) statutory 
and regulatory definitions of a "law enforcement officer" (LEO). 
Coverage under CSRS and FERS LEO definitional criteria generally 
include those personnel whose duties have been determined by the 
employing agency and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) through 
an administrative process to be primarily the investigation, 
apprehension, or detention of individuals suspected or convicted of 
offenses against the criminal laws of the United States. The FERS 
definition, however, also provides that a LEO position must be 
sufficiently rigorous that it is required to be filled only by young 
and physically vigorous individuals.[Footnote 3] Second, over the 
years, other specific occupational groups that have not been determined 
to meet the LEO definitional criteria under the administrative process, 
such as U.S. Park Police within the Department of Interior, have been 
explicitly added to the CSRS or FERS statutory LEO definitions so that 
they are considered LEOs for retirement purposes and provided similar 
retirement benefits. Third, certain other law enforcement personnel 
groups, whose duties have not been determined by OPM and their 
employing agency to be within the scope of the definitional criteria of 
a "law enforcement officer" or explicitly added by amending the 
statutory LEO definitions, have been provided enhanced retirement 
benefits similar to that of LEOs directly through legislation. For 
example, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 authorized specified 
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Officer positions to receive 
enhanced retirement benefits comparable to those received by LEOs. 
[Footnote 4] 

With increasing numbers of law enforcement-related personnel being 
added to agency ranks who may seek enhanced retirement benefits and 
other employee groups presently seeking enhanced retirement benefits, 
you asked us to conduct a review of the retirement benefits provided to 
law enforcement personnel and the processes by which these benefits are 
provided. This report addresses the following questions: 

* What processes are being used to grant enhanced retirement benefits 
to federal law enforcement personnel? 

* What are the rationales and potential costs for extending such 
benefits to additional occupations or employee groups? 

* To what extent have federal agencies used human capital tools, such 
as retention incentives, to retain both law enforcement and other 
related personnel? 

To answer these questions, we reviewed relevant laws, regulations, and 
reports by OPM, the Congressional Budget Office, and the Congressional 
Research Service that describe the current processes by which enhanced 
retirement benefits are provided, as well as six different pieces of 
legislation introduced in the 110th Congress that would have provided 
enhanced benefits to specified employee groups. We also reviewed CBP 
legislation that was enacted into law. As agreed upon with your office, 
our review focused on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), 
Department of Justice (DOJ), and Department of the Treasury's Internal 
Revenue Service (IRS) because these federal entities employed 
approximately 84 percent of all law enforcement and law enforcement- 
related personnel in fiscal year 2008.[Footnote 5] For the purposes of 
this report, we are defining the term "law enforcement personnel" in a 
manner that is broader in scope than the statutory and regulatory "law 
enforcement officer" definitions. Specifically, when we refer to "law 
enforcement personnel" in this report, we are including those employed 
in occupations that currently receive LEO or similar enhanced benefits. 
[Footnote 6] In addition, we are defining "law enforcement-related 
personnel" as (1) those employed in occupations that do not currently 
receive LEO or similarly enhanced retirement benefits, but who perform 
some law enforcement-related job functions, including but not limited 
to, having arrest authority, carrying a weapon, or participating in 
some investigative or inspection capacity or (2) those who have 
previously expressed interest in obtaining enhanced retirement benefits 
directly through legislation. We did not include other specialized non 
law enforcement related annuity recipients, such as federal air traffic 
controllers and firefighters, in the scope of our review. 

We obtained information on the benefits provided to law enforcement 
personnel from DHS, DOJ, and IRS, as well as OPM and select employee 
organizations and unions, and analyzed this information to determine 
the extent to which the benefits granted to employee groups and 
occupations vary. In addition, we analyzed data from OPM's Central 
Personnel Data File (CPDF) for the population of law enforcement and 
law enforcement-related personnel within DHS, DOJ, and the Department 
of the Treasury as well as on a governmentwide basis.[Footnote 7] We 
have previously reported that government-wide data from CPDF for most 
of the key variables used in this study (agency, position occupied, 
retirement plan, work schedule, and occupation) were at least 99 
percent accurate, and thus concluded that the data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of this study.[Footnote 8] Our analysis of 
the CPDF data separates these personnel into four different groups: (1) 
law enforcement personnel receiving LEO or similarly-enhanced 
retirement benefits, (2) law enforcement-related personnel not 
receiving enhanced retirement benefits or special pay, (3) law 
enforcement-related personnel receiving special pay but not receiving 
enhanced retirement benefits,[Footnote 9] and (4) all other federal 
personnel. We used CPDF data for fiscal years 2004 through 2008 to 
determine the attrition rates (defined as resignations and transfers 
from one agency to another) for law enforcement and law enforcement- 
related personnel.[Footnote 10] Further, we analyzed CPDF data for 
fiscal years 2004 through 2007 to determine whether law enforcement- 
related personnel not receiving LEO or similarly enhanced retirement 
benefits were moving to other federal positions that offered the 
benefits.[Footnote 11] We also reviewed and analyzed information 
provided to OPM on the extent to which federal agencies were utilizing 
human capital tools, such as retention incentives, to assist with 
retaining law enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel. In 
addition, we reviewed our previous reports that discuss the use and 
potential effectiveness of human capital tools to retain federal 
employees. 

During this review we interviewed officials from OPM on their roles and 
responsibilities related to providing enhanced retirement benefits to 
personnel who perform law enforcement-related duties. We also met with 
representatives from six unions and other employee organizations who 
have advocated for enhanced retirement benefits for their respective 
groups to discuss the current process for qualifying for enhanced 
benefits, as well as the rationales that law enforcement-related 
personnel are using to seek enhanced benefits similar to those received 
by LEOs. Further, we discussed potential effects of providing enhanced 
retirement benefits to additional employee groups, such as potential 
costs and possible reductions in attrition if providing such benefits 
to other groups with DHS, DOJ, IRS, and OPM officials. We also reviewed 
our reports that discuss fiscal stewardship. In addition, we met with 
staff from the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB), the federal board 
that adjudicates federal employees' appeals of personnel actions, such 
as appeals from employees who believe they are entitled to LEO 
coverage, to discuss their views and opinions on the current criteria 
used to determine which federal personnel meet the statutory and 
regulatory LEO definitions. However, as agreed upon with your offices, 
we did not review the appropriateness of the statutory and regulatory 
definitions relating to LEOs nor did we determine criteria for 
evaluating the definitions or the determinations derived by the 
processes used by various agencies in implementing the definitions. 
Finally, we also discussed the use of human capital tools to retain law 
enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel and the statutory and 
regulatory definitions of a law enforcement officer with DHS, DOJ, and 
IRS human capital officials. More detailed information on our scope and 
methodology is contained in appendix I. 

We conducted this performance audit from January 2008 through July 
2009, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

Enhanced Retirement Benefits Have Been Extended to Various Groups over 
Time: 

Enhanced retirement benefits for certain law enforcement personnel 
began in 1947, when legislation was enacted into law providing the 
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agents with a change in 
qualification for retirement benefits to help the FBI better manage its 
workforce.[Footnote 12] In 1948, legislation was enacted that expanded 
the provision of enhanced retirement benefits to certain other federal 
officers whose duties were primarily the investigation, apprehension, 
or detention of persons suspected or convicted of offenses against the 
criminal laws of the United States and to certain law enforcement 
personnel who moved to a supervisory or administrative position. 
[Footnote 13] In 1956, the enhanced retirement benefits definition was 
amended to specifically include within the term "detention" the duties 
of certain federal correctional employees, such as those in the Bureau 
of Prisons.[Footnote 14] In 1974, legislation was enacted into law that 
provided a statutory definition of a LEO for retirement purposes within 
CSRS. This legislation also increased the accelerated annuity 
multiplier and contained mandatory retirement provisions.[Footnote 15] 
The enhanced benefits attempted to provide a LEO with a retirement plan 
whereby it is economically feasible to retire at an earlier age with 
fewer years of service than regular civil service employees. Such 
benefits were also intended to assist the federal government with 
encouraging the maintenance of a young and vigorous law enforcement 
workforce through youthful career entry, continuous service, and early 
separation. According to OPM actuaries, as of April 2009, one out of 
five federal employees were covered by CSRS. At the end of fiscal year 
2008, about 1.6 million persons were on the rolls of CSRS as retired 
and approximately 42,500 (about 3 percent) were receiving LEO 
retirement benefits. 

In 1986, a new retirement system for federal employees, the Federal 
Employees Retirement System (FERS), was established which, among other 
things, included provisions relating to LEOs, such as a different 
pension accrual formula, a mandatory LEO retirement age, and a related 
requirement limiting LEO coverage to only those positions that are 
physically demanding. More specifically, while the definition of a LEO 
under FERS generally mirrors the definition under CSRS, the FERS 
definition introduced and currently includes a rigorous duty standard. 
This provides that LEO positions be limited to those positions that are 
sufficiently rigorous that employment opportunities must be limited to 
young and physically vigorous individuals, as determined by the 
Director of OPM considering the recommendations of the employing 
agency.[Footnote 16] In 1988, the FERS LEO definition was amended to 
include two employee groups not determined by OPM to be covered by the 
definition, the Department of Interior Park Police and the U.S. Secret 
Service Uniformed Division. In general, neither the CSRS nor FERS LEO 
definitions have been interpreted by OPM to cover federal police 
officers.[Footnote 17] Implementing OPM regulations for CSRS and FERS 
provide that the respective LEO regulatory definitions, in general, do 
not include an employee whose primary duties involve maintaining order, 
protecting life and property, guarding against or inspecting for 
violations of law, or investigating persons other than those who are 
suspected or convicted of offenses against the criminal laws of the 
United States. At the end of fiscal year 2008, about 312,000 federal 
employees were retired and receiving benefits covered by FERS, with 
about 7,500 of them receiving LEO retirement benefits. Further 
elaboration on the history of the LEO definition can be found in 
appendix II. 

Retirement Benefits Provided to Law Enforcement Personnel: 

Generally, the retirement benefits received by federal LEO and other 
law enforcement personnel receiving similar benefits are greater than 
those provided to most other federal employees, albeit over a shorter 
period of time due to mandatory retirement age. Under both CSRS and 
FERS, the law provides for a faster accruing pension for LEOs than that 
provided for most other federal employees. For example, CSRS LEO 
pension benefits accrue at 2.5 percent times the number of years of 
service for the first 20 years (50 percent) compared to an average of 
less than 2 percent per year (36.25 percent for regular federal 
employees) for that same 20 year period. At age 50 with 20 years of 
service, a CSRS LEO's annuity is about 38 percent higher than the 
annuity of a regular federal CSRS employee.[Footnote 18] Under FERS, 
LEO benefits accrue at 1.7 percent per year for the first 20 years 
compared to 1 percent per year for regular federal employees (34 
percent versus 20 percent).[Footnote 19] Thus, for those under FERS, 
the total defined benefit is 70 percent higher for LEOs than for other 
federal employees at 20 years of service. See appendix III for 
additional information on the accrual rates of LEOs and regular federal 
employees. 

The greater retirement benefits received by federal LEO and other law 
enforcement personnel receiving similar benefits may be because as a 
group, LEO occupations are higher graded than the more occupationally 
diverse regular civil service employee occupations. They also may get 
additional credit toward basic pay for annuity computation from special 
pay provisions. For example, as shown in table 1 below, for those 
persons retiring in fiscal year 2008, the estimated typical annuity of 
an average LEO employee under FERS was over $17,000 more (more than 
double) than that of an average non-LEO FERS annuitant. 

Table 1: Retirement Benefits--LEO and Non-LEO Retirees Under CSRS and 
FERS with Voluntary Retirement--Fiscal Year 2008: 

Employee type: LEO FERS[B]; 
Number retiring: 1,266; 
Average age when retiring: 53.3; 
Average years of service: 24.5; 
Estimated average annuity[A]: $33,264. 

Employee type: Non-LEO FERS; 
Number retiring: 15,141; 
Average age when retiring: 63.2; 
Average years of service: 20.9; 
Estimated average annuity[A]: $15,754. 

Employee type: LEO CSRS; 
Number retiring: 881; 
Average age when retiring: 53.6; 
Average years of service: 29.8; 
Estimated average annuity[A]: $59,910. 

Employee type: Non-LEO CSRS; 
Number retiring: 27,266; 
Average age when retiring: 60.1; 
Average years of service: 34.4; 
Estimated average annuity[A]: $54,750. 

Source: GAO analysis of OPM CPDF data. 

[A] We computed estimated using CPDF average age, average years of 
service, average 2008 salary data for fiscal year 2008 retirees and an 
estimated average high-3 salary calculated by adjusting the 2008 salary 
based on average cost of living increases for 2007 and 2006. Locality 
cost of living increases were not included in the estimates. On 
average, LEO CSRS retirees had salaries about $1,760 higher than Non- 
LEO CSRS retirees. On average, LEO FERS retirees had salaries about 
$18,400 higher than Non-LEO FERS retirees. FERS retirees also receive 
income from their Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) accounts and Social 
Security benefits that are not included in the estimated average 
annuity. CSRS retirees do not receive Social Security benefits for 
their federal service. The TSP is a retirement savings plan for 
civilians who are employed by the United States government and members 
of the uniformed services. CSRS retirees might have income from a TSP 
account but the federal government does not match contributions to TSP 
for CSRS employees. LEO annuities are understated because we did not 
have data on availability pay and uncontrollable overtime to use when 
estimating the annuity. 

[B] Some LEOs retiring under FERS may also have time served under CSRS 
with a higher annuity accrual rate that is not reflected in the 
estimated annual annuity. 

[End of table] 

Along with the more rapid pension accrual, benefits are also generally 
available to LEOs earlier than other employees with no penalties for 
early retirement compared to the average federal employee under the 
same retirement system; and more favorable treatment of cost of living 
adjustments (under FERS). 

LEO Enhanced Benefits Include Mandatory Retirement Provisions under 
CSRS and FERS: 

LEOs under both CSRS and FERS are subject to mandatory retirement 
provisions, whereas most other federal civilian employees are not. 
Specifically, as a means to maintain a youthful and vigorous workforce, 
a law enforcement officer is subject to mandatory retirement when the 
officer becomes 57 years of age or, in some cases, older than 57 if 
needed to complete 20 years of service as a LEO. Both CSRS and FERS 
personnel receiving LEO benefits may be retained for a short time 
beyond the mandatory retirement age under certain circumstances. 
[Footnote 20] 

While allowing for an individual to obtain the full 20 years of 
coverage needed to qualify for LEO benefits, agencies also set maximum 
entry age requirements for LEOs based on the age and service 
requirements for LEO mandatory retirement. Thus, maximum entry age is 
typically 37 because it allows an employee to achieve 20 years of LEO 
service at age 57. Some agencies have extended their maximum hiring age 
for LEOs to around 40 to facilitate the hiring of certain highly- 
skilled armed services veterans who have completed a military career. 
For example, CBP has implemented a maximum entry age of 40 for its 
Border Patrol Agent positions.[Footnote 21] 

Special Pay Provisions Provided to LEOs and Law Enforcement-Related 
Personnel: 

In addition to retirement benefits, the pay of law enforcement 
personnel also varies. In general, federal white-collar jobs are 
assigned a General Schedule (GS) grade. Grades represent level of 
difficulty, responsibility, and qualifications required of the person 
who fills that job. Pay varies within a grade level on the basis of 10 
steps; employees receive step increases within a grade if they perform 
acceptably and have satisfied the waiting period requirement 
established for each step. LEOs within the GS system are entitled to 
higher rates of basic pay at grades GS-3 through GS-10, which increase 
pay by 3 to 23 percent above the normal federal government general 
schedule depending on grade level[Footnote 22]. Some LEOs are also 
entitled to law enforcement availability pay or administratively 
uncontrollable overtime pay. Availability pay is a regular supplement 
equal to 25 percent of the recipient's adjusted rate of basic pay, 
subject to premium pay limitation[Footnote 23]s. It is compensation 
generally fixed at 25 percent of the rate of basic pay for the position 
for the first 2 overtime hours on a regular workday and for additional 
irregular overtime hours. At agency discretion, certain employees may 
receive administratively uncontrollable overtime pay equal to 10 
percent to 25 percent of their basic pay, with most recipients 
receiving a rate of 25 percent based on working an average of at least 
9 hours of irregular overtime hours per week. Both availability pay and 
administratively uncontrollable overtime pay are to be counted as basic 
pay for computation of annuities, and as a result can increase the 
dollar value of an individual's highest 3 earning years which are used 
to compute the annuity benefit amounts. 

In 2003, OPM established special rates for many GS police officers not 
considered to be LEOs by definition, because their primary duties 
involved maintaining order and protecting life and property as opposed 
to primarily involving the investigation, apprehension, or detention of 
individuals suspected or convicted of offenses against the criminal 
laws of the United States, which is a criterion in the definition. 
These special rates provide large increases at lower grades similar to 
the LEO special rates. At some grades and locations, the police special 
rates exceed the locality adjusted rates for LEOs at grades GS-3 
through GS-10. As of fiscal year 2008, there were approximately 2,800 
law enforcement personnel receiving special pay rates, without 
receiving enhanced retirement benefits. For additional information on 
some of the various pay systems that cover law enforcement personnel, 
see appendix IV. 

Enhanced Retirement Benefits Have Been Granted through OPM and Agency 
Administrative Processes as Well as through Separate Legislation for 
Select Employee Groups: 

Before a group of employees may receive enhanced retirement benefits 
through the administrative process, agencies must make an 
administrative determination whether this group meets the statutory and 
regulatory definitions relating to a LEO and submit it for OPM's 
determination. In recent years, several employee groups and unions 
representing law enforcement-related personnel who have not been found 
by their employing agencies and OPM to meet the applicable LEO 
definitions have sought to obtain enhanced retirement benefits directly 
through separate legislation. 

Under the Administrative Process, Agencies and OPM Determine Which 
Employee Groups Meet the Statutory and Regulatory LEO Definitions and 
Are to Receive Enhanced Retirement Benefits: 

As part of the administrative process, agencies with law enforcement 
missions determine which occupations or employee groups are necessary 
for accomplishing their missions, taking into account the agency's 
overall authorized level of resources and appropriations. As part of 
this determination, an agency head decides whether a particular 
position should be approved for LEO retirement coverage.[Footnote 24] 
If an agency determines the need for new positions that meet the 
statutory and regulatory definitions relating to a LEO (and therefore 
could receive enhanced retirement benefits, special pay, or salary 
provisions, and be subject to a mandatory retirement age), the agency 
sends a notice to OPM.[Footnote 25] This notice is to consist of, for 
example, the title of the position, the number of incumbents, whether 
the position is a supervisory or administrative position, whether it is 
a rigorous position, and the maximum entry age of the position. With 
certain exceptions, OPM may, at its discretion, review the position 
description to determine if it meets certain aspects of the statutory 
LEO definition. According to OPM officials, there is no requirement for 
a discussion between the agency head and OPM prior to an agency head's 
decision and the issuance of a notice about such an administrative 
determination to OPM. OPM officials also stated that OPM has received 
hundreds of LEO retirement coverage notices covering probably thousands 
of positions over the last 10 years, reviewing about six position 
descriptions a month. OPM officials stated that OPM rarely overrules an 
agency head's decision, but maintains the authority to do so. OPM 
officials noted a case in the late 1990s in which they had reviewed the 
Secretary of Energy's decision to grant Nuclear Materials Couriers LEO 
status and accompanying benefits and overturned the Secretary's 
decision because these positions did not meet the applicable LEO 
definitions.[Footnote 26] OPM officials, however, could not provide us 
with data on how often OPM overrules an agency head's decision for 
granting LEO status and retirement benefits. As of fiscal year 2008, 
approximately half of federal employees receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits have been found to meet the applicable LEO definitions and are 
accruing such benefits as a result of the administrative process. 
Select employee groups that have been found to meet the LEO definitions 
and receive enhanced retirement benefits through agency determinations 
and OPM's administrative process are shown in table 2. 

Table 2: Select Employee Groups That Have Been Found to Meet the LEO 
Definitional Criteria and Receive Enhanced Retirement Benefits through 
OPM's Administrative Process: 

Employee group[A]: Border Patrol Agents; 
Department: DHS; 
Agency: CBP; 
Occupation series: 1896; 
September 2008 total: 17,300. 

Employee group[A]: FBI Special Agents; 
Department: DOJ; 
Agency: FBI; 
Occupation series: 1811; 
September 2008 total: 12,700. 

Employee group[A]: Immigration Enforcement Agents and Detention/ 
Deportation Officers; 
Department: DHS; 
Agency: Immigration and Customs Enforcement; 
Occupation series: 1801,1811; 
September 2008 total: 11,600. 

Employee group[A]: Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Special 
Agents; 
Department: DOJ; 
Agency: DEA; 
Occupation series: 1811; 
September 2008 total: 4,900. 

Employee group[A]: U.S. Marshals; 
Department: DOJ; 
Agency: U.S. Marshals Service; 
Occupation series: 0082,1811,1802; 
September 2008 total: 3,500. 

Employee group[A]: U.S. Secret Service Special Agents; 
Department: DHS; 
Agency: U.S. Secret Service; 
Occupation series: 1811; 
September 2008 total: 3,300. 

Employee group[A]: IRS Special Agents; 
Department: Department of the Treasury; 
Agency: IRS; 
Occupation series: 1811; 
September 2008 total: 2,600. 

Employee group[A]: U.S. Park Rangers[B]; 
Department: Department of the Interior; 
Agency: National Park Service; 
Occupation series: 0025; 
September 2008 total: 1,300. 

Employee group[A]: Federal Air Marshals; 
Department: DHS; 
Agency: Transportation Security Administration; 
Occupation series: 1801; 
September 2008 total: Sensitive Security Information. 

Source: GAO analysis of OPM's CPDF data. 

[A] The list of these employee groups is not comprehensive. 

[B] Not all U.S. Park Rangers meet the statutory definition of a LEO. 

[End of table] 

If individual employees feel that they have been wrongly excluded from 
LEO retirement provisions, the employee may, for example, appeal the 
final decision of an agency denying an individual's request for 
approval of a position as rigorous, to the MSPB. [Footnote 27] 
According to MSPB officials, they periodically review employee appeals 
related to LEO coverage but noted that the number of such appeals has 
decreased in the last couple of years. The employee may also appeal the 
final decisions of MSPB to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal 
Circuit. 

Overall, at the department level, DHS and DOJ human capital officials, 
as well as IRS officials, supported the use of the administrative 
process for determining who meets the LEO definitions and who receives 
LEO retirement benefits because they felt this process worked well and 
met the needs of their departments. 

Employee Groups Have Sought Enhanced Retirement Benefits Directly 
through Legislation: 

Employee groups who have not been determined to meet the definitions of 
a LEO but believe they deserve similar benefits have sought these 
benefits directly through legislative action.[Footnote 28] For example, 
as noted above, Nuclear Materials Couriers were denied LEO status by 
OPM but, with support from the Department of Energy, were eventually 
provided with enhanced retirement benefits similar to those received by 
LEOs directly through legislation.[Footnote 29] In most cases, the 
recent efforts of those employee groups seeking enhanced retirement 
benefits have been led by unions or other organizations representing 
the interested employee groups, not the employing agencies. The 
employing departments and agencies generally have determined that the 
groups seeking LEO benefits through direct legislation do not meet the 
LEO definitions and do not qualify for the benefits. For example, 
various pieces of legislation were introduced in the 110th Congress 
that would have provided such benefits to approximately 25,000 
additional employees. These employees include certain federal police 
who have not been found to meet the statutory LEO definition, Assistant 
U.S. Attorneys, CBP Agriculture Inspectors, and IRS Revenue Officers. 
[Footnote 30] 

In discussions with DHS human resource officials about their views on 
additional employee groups seeking enhanced retirement benefits 
directly through legislation, they expressed concern regarding such 
proposals. Human resources officials of the Justice Management Division 
(JMD) of DOJ stated that they found such proposals problematic due to 
high, unfunded costs and the fact that the positions do not meet the 
statutory definition of law enforcement officer. Specifically, in 
reference to proposed legislation that would have provided enhanced 
retirement benefits to Assistant U.S. Attorneys, these officials stated 
that the duties of Assistant U.S. Attorney positions are not primarily 
the investigation, apprehension, or detention of individuals nor 
related to the protection of officials of the United States against 
threats to personal safety. DOJ JMD officials added that Assistant U.S. 
Attorney duties also do not require young and vigorous personnel which 
is essential to a law enforcement officer workforce[Footnote 31]. As of 
fiscal year 2008, approximately half of law enforcement personnel 
receiving enhanced retirement benefits did not receive these benefits 
through the application of the LEO definitional criteria from their 
employing agency and OPM via the administrative process, but received 
these benefits directly through legislation that either (1) provided 
benefits similar to those received by LEOs or (2) added their 
occupation to the statutory LEO definition. Select employee groups 
receiving enhanced retirement benefits through these two ways are 
listed in table 3. 

Table 3: Select Employee Groups' Currently Receiving Enhanced 
Retirement Benefits Directly through Legislation by Occupation Series, 
Fiscal Year 2008 Population, and Year of Legislation: 

Employee group: Bureau of Prisons Correction Institute Staff; 
Department: DOJ; 
Agency: Bureau of Prisons; 
Occupation series: Multiple; 
Year authority for benefits provided: 1956; 
September 2008 population: 35,500. 

Employee group: U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division; 
Department: DHS; 
Agency: U.S. Secret Service; 
Occupation series: 0083; 
Year authority for benefits provided: 1988; 
September 2008 population: 1,250. 

Employee group: Park Police; 
Department: Dept. of Interior; 
Agency: National Park Service; 
Occupation series: 0083; 
Year authority for benefits provided: 1987; 
September 2008 population: 500. 

Employee group: Nuclear Materials Couriers; 
Department: Dept. of Energy; 
Agency: [Empty]; 
Occupation series: 0084; 
Year authority for benefits provided: 1998; 
September 2008 population: 360. 

Employee group: CBP Officers[A]; 
Department: DHS; 
Agency: CBP; 
Occupation series: 1896; 
Year authority for benefits provided: 2008; 
September 2008 population: 19,600. 

Source: GAO analysis of OPM's CPDF data and GAO legal analysis. 

Note: U.S. Capitol Police and U.S. Supreme Court Police (occupation 
series 0083) received enhanced retirement benefits through legislation 
in 1990 and 2000, respectively. However, data on these groups are not 
found within the CPDF (which covers executive branch personnel) and, 
therefore, are not included in this analysis. 

[A] Prior to the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008, some CBP 
Officers were classified under occupation series 1811 and, therefore, 
were considered LEOs and received enhanced retirement benefits. The 
number of these officers is not reflected in table 3. 

[End of table] 

Employee Groups Cite Various Rationales for Seeking Enhanced Retirement 
Benefits through Legislation; Considering Supporting Data for 
Rationales, Additional Costs, and Other Implications Could Inform 
Decisions: 

Law enforcement-related employee groups that sought enhanced retirement 
benefits directly through legislation have cited the reduction of high 
attrition rates as a primary rationale for granting such benefits to 
those not currently receiving them. Other reasons cited include the 
need to provide equitable benefits to groups performing similar duties 
and how changing duties may have put the employees at more risk. 
Although data exist that could provide some insight into attrition in 
the federal workforce as a means to inform decisions on retirement 
benefits, the groups requesting these benefits have not consistently 
provided this data to us. The additional short-term costs to a federal 
agency for providing enhanced retirement benefits for LEOs under FERS 
is higher than the costs of providing benefits to regular federal 
employees, raising questions about the ability of agencies to cover 
increased costs if additional employee groups receive such benefits. In 
addition, while the long-term costs to the federal government of 
providing enhanced LEO or similar retirement benefits for CSRS-covered 
staff are important, such costs are not included in the Congressional 
Budget Office scoring process.[Footnote 32] Finally, providing enhanced 
retirement benefits to certain employee groups directly through 
legislation has created perceived inequities across certain law 
enforcement-related occupations and some agencies report that future 
action to provide enhanced retirement benefits to certain employee 
groups could affect their strategic workforce planning. 

Limited Evidence Is Provided to Support the Primary Rationale of the 
Additional Employee Groups Seeking Enhanced Retirement Benefits because 
Various Factors Influence Attrition: 

In their petitions seeking benefits outside of OPM's administrative 
process, organizations have cited a number of rationales for providing 
enhanced retirement benefits to the employees they represent. The 
primary rationale used by additional groups seeking benefits is that 
law enforcement-related personnel have high rates of attrition because 
they are not currently receiving enhanced retirement benefits. However, 
when we asked the employee groups and unions seeking enhanced 
retirement benefits for those they represent for data to substantiate 
this rationale, they did not consistently provide these data. To 
examine the validity of this rationale, we analyzed attrition rates by 
law enforcement status governmentwide to determine if a relationship 
between attrition rates and enhanced retirement benefits exists. 
[Footnote 33] According to our analysis of CPDF data, law enforcement-
related personnel not receiving enhanced retirement benefits typically 
have higher attrition rates than those law enforcement personnel 
receiving LEO or similarly enhanced retirement benefits, but lower than 
the attrition rates for general federal government employees. 
Specifically, the average government-wide attrition rate from fiscal 
years 2004 through 2008 for law enforcement-related personnel not 
receiving enhanced retirement benefits was 4.7 percent, compared to 3.2 
percent for law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits and 3.5 percent for law enforcement-related personnel who 
received special pay and no enhanced retirement benefits.[Footnote 34] 
The average governmentwide attrition rate for all other federal 
personnel (those not employed in law enforcement or related 
occupations) was 5.4 percent, higher than all of the governmentwide 
averages for law enforcement and related personnel. Figure 1, below, 
illustrates these comparative trends. 

Figure 1: Governmentwide Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement and 
Related Personnel, Fiscal Years 2004 through 2008 by Retirement 
Category: 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2004; 
Attrition rate, LEO Retire: 2.6%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related: 4.5%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related Pay: 2.5%; 
Attrition rate, Other Personnel: 6%. 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Attrition rate, LEO Retire: 2.5%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related: 4.2%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related Pay: 2.5%; 
Attrition rate, Other Personnel: 4.8%. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Attrition rate, LEO Retire: 3.2%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related: 4.3%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related Pay: 3.7%; 
Attrition rate, Other Personnel: 5.2%. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Attrition rate, LEO Retire: 3.9%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related: 4.8%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related Pay: 3.4%; 
Attrition rate, Other Personnel: 5.5%. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
Attrition rate, LEO Retire: 3.8%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related: 5.5%; 
Attrition rate, Law-Related Pay: 5.6%; 
Attrition rate, Other Personnel: 5.2%. 			 

Source: GAO analysis of OPM data. 

Note: LEO retire refers to law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced 
retirement benefits; Law-related refers to law-enforcement related 
personnel not receiving enhanced retirement benefits; Law-related pay 
refers to law-enforcement related personnel receiving special pay and 
not enhanced retirement benefits; and Other personnel refers to all 
other federal personnel that are not employed in law enforcement or 
related occupations. 

[End of figure] 

Further, our analysis revealed the following: 

* Attrition rates vary by department and are influenced by type of 
occupation, challenging work conditions, and other factors. For 
example, the average attrition rates from fiscal years 2004 through 
2008 for law enforcement-related personnel not receiving enhanced 
retirement benefits for DHS and DOJ were 4.1 percent and 3.5 percent, 
respectively, while the average attrition rates for law enforcement 
personnel receiving such benefits for DHS and DOJ were 4.8 percent and 
2.2 percent, respectively.[Footnote 35] This difference in the average 
attrition rates for those law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced 
retirement benefits may be attributed to the types of occupations and 
their associated law enforcement-related functions. For example, DHS 
officials attributed some of the attrition within one of its component 
agencies, CBP, to the challenging work of some personnel, especially 
those stationed at remote U.S. border locations. In comparison, DOJ 
officials reported a high degree of employee satisfaction in the FBI 
Special Agent occupation, but some attrition challenges in relocating 
agents to high-cost urban areas or other undesirable areas. However, 
the FBI Police, consisting of approximately 250 officers, has 
experienced relatively high level of attrition in comparison to the 
department. Specifically, the average attrition rate of FBI Police in 
fiscal year 2008 was approximately 17 percent, which is more than 5 
times higher than DOJ's average.[Footnote 36] Meanwhile, the Department 
of the Treasury's law enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel 
have lower average attrition rates than similar personnel groups within 
DHS and DOJ. For example, the average attrition rate from fiscal years 
2004 through 2008 for law enforcement-related personnel not receiving 
enhanced retirement benefits was 2.0 percent while the average 
attrition rate for law enforcement personnel receiving such benefits 
was 1.7 percent. For more information on the attrition rates by year 
and by department, see appendix V. 

* Attrition was higher for those law enforcement and law enforcement- 
related personnel with fewer years of service. For example, 
governmentwide, the attrition rate for federal personnel with less than 
5 years of service was 11.1 percent and the attrition rate for those 
with 5 or more years of service was 3.8 percent for fiscal year 2008. 
This trend remains consistent across law enforcement and related 
personnel and those departments employing the majority of these 
personnel. Law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits with less than 5 years of service had a 10.4 percent attrition 
rate, while those with 5 or more years of service had a 2.2 percent 
attrition rate for fiscal year 2008. Because the attrition rates are 
consistently higher for those with less than 5 years of service, the 
percentage of these personnel within a workforce may also affect the 
overall attrition rates. For example, in fiscal year 2008 personnel 
with less than 5 years of service accounted for approximately 34 
percent and 17 percent of total personnel within the DHS and DOJ, 
respectively. The DHS-wide rate of attrition may be higher than the DOJ-
wide rate of attrition for all personnel because DHS has a higher 
percentage of personnel with less than 5 years of service than does DOJ 
and those with less service have higher attrition. Both DHS and DOJ 
officials at the department level were aware that they have higher 
attrition among groups of employees with less than 5 years of service, 
but neither DHS nor DOJ officials indicated that this attrition was 
hindering their ability to meet their mission. 

* The majority of law enforcement-related personnel moving to other 
agencies are not receiving enhanced retirement benefits as a result of 
that move. For example, from fiscal years 2004 through 2007, 
approximately 6,500 law enforcement-related personnel moved between 
federal agencies. As shown in figure 2, 54 percent remained in federal 
law enforcement-related occupations that do not receive enhanced 
retirement benefits, 18 percent moved into law enforcement occupations 
that do garner such benefits, and 27 percent moved into non-law 
enforcement-related occupations.[Footnote 37] 

Figure 2: Governmentwide Moves among Law Enforcement-Related Personnel 
Not Receiving Enhanced Retirement Benefits, Fiscal Years 2004 through 
2007 by Retirement Category: 

[Refer PDF for image: pie-chart] 

To law enforcement-related with special pay: 1.4%; 
To LEO with enhanced retirement benefits: 17.7%; 
To non-law enforcement or related: 27.2%; 
To other law enforcement-related: 53.8%. 

Source: GAO analysis of OPM data. 

Note: The percentages in this figure do not add to 100 percent due to 
rounding. 

[End of figure] 

Overall, our analysis shows that the attrition rates vary when analyzed 
by different categories and factors (governmentwide, departmentwide, 
and by years of service). However, our analysis could not link 
attrition levels with the presence or absence of enhanced retirement 
benefits. This is consistent with what we reported with respect to 
metropolitan D.C. federal police forces. Specifically, in June 2003 we 
reported that no clear pattern existed regarding turnover among D.C. 
police forces receiving federal law enforcement retirement benefits and 
those receiving traditional retirement benefits.[Footnote 38] Also, 
analyzing the trends in data alone does not determine whether the 
attrition rates for law-enforcement personnel are too high or 
problematic for the agencies or whether the rates are acceptable and 
manageable through the use of human capital tools. 

However, for current and future data analysis, OPM has recently 
developed and implemented a new tool, the Enterprise Human Resource 
Integration (EHRI) program, which involves a standardized and 
centralized collection of federal personnel data that can be queried 
and analyzed for specific personnel. Using the analytic tools 
accompanying EHRI, executive branch departments and agencies can 
analyze their own data on attrition or seek OPM's assistance in 
providing such analysis.[Footnote 39] However, analyzing attrition data 
alone may not fully indicate why personnel are leaving a particular 
agency because, as we have previously reported, a variety of 
organizational, personal, and economic factors, in addition to 
compensation, influence separation decisions.[Footnote 40] 

Two additional rationales offered by organizations advocating for 
enhanced retirement benefits for law enforcement related employees are 
that (1) employees are performing duties that are similar to those of 
law enforcement employee groups receiving enhanced retirement benefits; 
or (2) employees are performing high-risk duties related to homeland 
security activities, such as guarding the northern and southern borders 
from those illegally trying to enter the U.S. For example, 
representatives from DOJ's Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys stated 
that, in addition to addressing retention challenges, Assistant U.S. 
Attorneys should be afforded enhanced retirement benefits similar to 
those received by LEOs because of the risks they encounter working with 
defendants that are in pretrial status as well as convicted criminals. 
In addition, officials from the Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys 
noted that Assistant U.S. Attorneys work closely with law enforcement 
personnel who already receive such benefits. We did not address the 
validity of these rationales because we did not do a detailed analysis 
and comparison of the duties of the wide variety of different groups of 
employees who perform law enforcement-related functions across various 
agencies. 

Costs of Providing Enhanced Retirement Benefits to Law Enforcement 
Personnel are Generally Higher Than Those for Regular Federal 
Employees: 

Overall, the short-term costs to a federal agency for providing 
enhanced retirement benefits for law enforcement personnel under FERS 
are higher than providing retirement benefits to regular federal 
employees. As illustrated in Table 4 below, the mandatory agency 
contribution to the retirement fund for a LEO under FERS is 13.7 
percent of basic pay more than for a regular FERS employee and 0.5 
percent more for a LEO under CSRS than for a regular CSRS employee. 
[Footnote 41] 

Table 4: Differences in Agency and Employee Contributions to Retirement 
Funds for Regular Federal Employees versus Law Enforcement Personnel: 

Retirement contributions-employee; 
CSRS regular employee: 7 percent of basic pay; 
CSRS law enforcement personnel: 7.5 percent of basic pay; 
FERS regular employee: 0.8 percent of basic pay; 
FERS law enforcement personnel: 1.3 percent of basic pay. 

Retirement contributions-agency; 
CSRS regular employee: 7 percent of basic pay; 
CSRS law enforcement personnel: 7.5 percent of basic pay; 
FERS regular employee: 11.2 percent of basic pay[A]; 
FERS law enforcement personnel: 24.9 percent of basic pay[A]. 

Source: GAO analysis of OPM information. 

[A] Agencies also pay the employer portion of Social Security as well 
as a Thrift Savings match. 

[End of table] 

According to DHS and DOJ officials, if enhanced retirement benefits are 
provided directly through legislation, the department or component 
agencies may not have the resources immediately available to cover 
their increased contributions, and could likely seek additional funds 
for this purpose. For example, when CBP Officers were granted enhanced 
retirement benefits directly through legislation in CBP's fiscal year 
2008 appropriations act,[Footnote 42] congressional appropriators 
directed $50 million for fiscal year 2008 to help the agency implement 
the legislation.[Footnote 43] In addition, congressional appropriators 
directed an additional $200 million for fiscal year 2009 to cover the 
increased agency contributions to the retirement system.[Footnote 44] 
This results in approximately $10,000 more per position for fiscal year 
2009.[Footnote 45] In addition to the agency contribution costs, CBP 
officials stated that they incurred other expenses during the 
conversion process, including staffing and training costs. In 
subsequent years, CBP officials stated that they plan to include these 
increased costs in their annual budget requests. Specifically, for the 
fiscal year 2010 budget request, CBP's Office of Finance included $225 
million for the additional retirement benefits for that year. In 
contrast, 2002 legislation was enacted into law providing that the 
Director of the FBI may establish a permanent police force, with 
enhanced retirement benefits, to be known as the FBI Police.[Footnote 
46] However, according to the FBI, due, in part, to lack of funding to 
support this action, the FBI has not implemented these provisions and 
these benefits have not been provided. [Footnote 47] 

The majority of those personnel who may seek enhanced retirement 
benefits in the future are covered under FERS and, therefore, would 
have most of the costs of their enhanced benefits covered by increased 
agency contributions.[Footnote 48] However, there are potential, 
unfunded long-term costs to the pension system of providing such 
benefits to any additional law enforcement personnel who are covered 
under CSRS. At the end of fiscal year 2008, approximately 51,000 
federal personnel performing some law enforcement-related activities 
were not receiving enhanced retirement benefits. During the 110th 
Congress, at least six pieces of legislation were introduced, but not 
enacted into law, which would have extended enhanced retirement 
benefits to approximately 25,000 additional employees. Specifically, 
these various pieces of legislation would have provided enhanced 
retirement benefits similar to those received by LEOs to thousands of 
federal police not currently receiving LEO or similarly enhanced 
retirement benefits, as well as Assistant U.S. Attorneys and others. 
The cost for providing enhanced retirement benefits to the groups 
covered by CSRS and FERS under these pieces of legislation would have 
been approximately $250 million for 1 fiscal year.[Footnote 49] The 
long-term costs to the federal government for providing FERS employee 
pensions would be accounted for in higher agency contributions by the 
employing agency (and an additional 0.5 percent from individuals). 
However, this is not the case for CSRS employees and the long-term 
costs to the federal government of providing enhanced LEO or similar 
retirement benefits for CSRS staff are not acknowledged directly by the 
Congressional Budget Office process, or the requesting groups that 
sought additional benefits. 

According to OPM's actuaries, they do, upon request, provide estimates 
of the effects of retirement coverage changes on the Civil Service 
Retirement and Disability Fund.[Footnote 50] Specifically, as table 4 
illustrates, agencies pay an additional 0.5 percent contribution for 
CSRS-covered LEO staff over regular federal employees (7.5 percent 
versus 7 percent) and LEO staff make a similarly increased contribution 
as well. However, the cost to the government of CSRS retirement 
benefits is greater than those combined agency and staff contributions. 
[Footnote 51] Each CSRS position represents an unfunded liability to 
Treasury and CSRS LEOs represent a greater unfunded liability than 
regular employees because the contributions do not meet the costs 
associated with benefits. 

In January 2007 and again in December 2007 we reported on the 
importance of making policy decisions that take into consideration the 
need for fiscal stewardship.[Footnote 52] Specifically, at that time we 
reported on the challenge facing Congress in making fiscally 
responsible policy decisions given our nation's growing fiscal 
imbalance. Although there is no question that law enforcement and 
related personnel play an invaluable role in securing this nation, 
granting enhanced retirement benefits to additional employee groups may 
or may not be the most cost-efficient solution for retaining this 
population. The federal government has many human capital tools that 
can be used to address attrition, which we discuss later in this 
report. 

Awarding Retirement Benefits Directly through Legislation Has Potential 
Implications on Federal Agencies and Other Employee Groups Performing 
Law Enforcement-Related Duties: 

While providing enhanced retirement benefits to additional employee 
groups directly through legislation has been used as an alternative to 
OPM's administrative process, doing so has also resulted in some 
perceived inequities across certain federal occupations. For example, 
under OPM implementing regulations, federal police officers are 
generally excluded from the regulatory definition of a LEO to receive 
enhanced retirement benefits.[Footnote 53] However, four federal agency 
police departments were provided with enhanced retirement benefits 
directly through legislation (Park Police, U.S. Secret Service 
Uniformed Division, Capitol Police, and Supreme Court Police)[Footnote 
54] while others do not receive such benefits (e.g. Veterans Affairs 
Police). DOJ officials at the department level expressed concern about 
the potential disparity in benefits provided to their personnel when 
other employee groups are provided with enhanced retirement benefits 
directly through legislation. In addition, some Detection Enforcement 
Officers within CBP Air and Marine Air Interdiction who do not receive 
enhanced retirement benefits told us that they are not being treated 
fairly in relationship to their co-workers who seemingly perform 
similar mission critical duties and are exposed to similar risks, but 
who receive enhanced retirement benefits. 

Providing additional employee groups with enhanced retirement benefits 
could also affect an agency's strategic workforce planning. In the 
past, we have called on agencies to develop a long-term strategic 
workforce plan that considers the unique number, type, and competency 
levels of employees needed for the agency to meet its mission in the 
long run and the strategies it will use to recruit, hire, train, and 
retain these employees.[Footnote 55] As part of this planning process, 
agencies are to determine tools they will, and can afford to, use to 
achieve their plan. Strategic workforce planning also focuses on 
developing long-term strategies for acquiring, developing, and 
retaining an organization's total workforce to meet the needs of the 
future. In 2002, we reported that each agency needs to ensure that its 
human capital program capitalizes on its workforce's strengths and 
addresses related challenges in a manner that is clearly linked to 
achieving the agency's mission and goals.[Footnote 56] Thus, it is 
through its strategic workforce planning that an agency would determine 
the number, types, and duties of law enforcement personnel needed to 
perform its mission; whether it has any challenges recruiting or 
retaining personnel for these positions and, if so, what are the most 
cost-efficient tools it can use to address these challenges, such as 
retention incentives; and how to manage all of this within the agency's 
available budget. 

When unions or employee groups seek legislation for enhanced retirement 
benefits outside of an agency's strategic workforce planning process, 
it could, according to DHS and DOJ human resource officials, affect the 
workforce strategies and resources an agency has devised. Individuals 
who become LEOs can also qualify for certain special pay provisions, 
availability pay, or administratively uncontrollable overtime pay. 
[Footnote 57] Such provisions may affect other payroll and matching 
benefit costs not accounted for in agencies' workforce plans. According 
to DHS and DOJ human resource officials, whose departments represent 
the majority of law enforcement and related personnel, their 
departments' strategic workforce planning may be affected if additional 
employee groups were provided with enhanced retirement benefits 
directly through legislation, especially if the departments were not 
allocated additional funds. 

Using Human Capital Tools Could Offer A More Cost Efficient Alternative 
Than Granting Enhanced Retirement Benefits For Retaining Select Law 
Enforcement Related Personnel: 

Federal agencies, including those that employ law enforcement and law 
enforcement-related personnel, such as DOJ, DHS, and Treasury, can use 
a variety of human capital tools, such as student loan reimbursements 
and monetary retention incentives, to retain such personnel. However, 
DOJ and DHS officials at the department level stated that these tools 
are currently used to a limited extent due to a lack of sustained and 
available funding. Because such tools were specifically designed to 
address retention issues, these tools could provide a cost-efficient 
alternative to granting enhanced retirement benefits for those employee 
groups that seek such benefits directly through legislation and cite 
retention as the primary rationale. 

In June 2004, we defined human capital tools as the policies and 
practices that an agency can implement in managing its workforce to 
accomplish its mission.[Footnote 58] These tools can relate to 
recruitment, retention, compensation, position classification, 
incentive awards, training, performance management, and work-life 
policies, among others. For example, a federal agency may award a 
recruitment incentive to attract new employees or provide a relocation 
incentive to a current employee moving to a different geographic 
location to accept a position that the employing agency has deemed hard 
to fill.[Footnote 59] In addition, an agency may pay a retention 
incentive to keep a current employee if the agency determines that the 
employee is has unusually high or unique qualifications or if the 
agency has a special need for the employee's services, making retention 
of the employee essential, and if the employee would be likely to leave 
the federal service in the absence of the incentive.[Footnote 60] Table 
5 below provides details on key human capital tools officials from DHS, 
DOJ, and the IRS told us they use to retain law enforcement and law 
enforcement-related personnel. 

Table 5: Human Capital Tools and Special Pay Utilized by DHS, DOJ, and 
the IRS to Retain Law Enforcement and Law Enforcement Related 
Personnel: 

Retention tool or benefit: Retention incentives; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: Continuing (i.e., biweekly 
or lump sum) payments of up to 25 percent of basic pay that an agency 
may pay to help retain an employee. In return, the employee must sign a 
service agreement with the agency if paid in other than biweekly 
payments. The eligible employee must have unusually high or unique 
qualifications or the agency must have a special need for the 
employee's service and the employee must be likely to leave the federal 
service. 

Retention tool or benefit: Relocation incentives; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: Payments an agency may pay 
to a current employee who must relocate to accept a position in a 
different geographic location that would otherwise be difficult to 
fill. In return, the employee must sign a service agreement with the 
agency. Incentive payments cannot exceed 25 percent of annual basic pay 
multiplied by the number of years in a service period (not to exceed 4 
years). 

Retention tool or benefit: Student loan reimbursement; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: The federal student loan 
repayment program permits agencies to repay federally insured student 
loans for candidates or current employees of the agency. 

Retention tool or benefit: Foreign language award; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: A monetary award paid for 
law enforcement agents with foreign language skills. 

Retention tool or benefit: Special rate or critical position pay; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: A special rate is a rate 
of basic pay for employees in hard to fill or hard to retain 
occupations nationwide or in specific locations. Critical position pay 
is a rate of pay greater than would otherwise be payable for the 
employee's position because the position has been designated critical. 

Retention tool or benefit: Alternative work schedules or job sharing; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: Agencies may establish 
hours of work and scheduling flexibilities to replace the traditional 
schedules of 8 hours per day and 40 hours per week, such as full-time 
and part-time, overtime hours, and flexible work schedules. Job sharing 
is a form of part-time employment in which one position is filled with 
two or more part-time employees. 

Retention tool or benefit: Administratively uncontrollable overtime; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: As previously noted, 
certain employees may receive administratively uncontrollable overtime 
pay equal to 10 percent to 25 percent of their basic pay. Most 
recipients receive a rate of 25 percent based on working an average of 
at least 9 hours of irregular overtime hours per week. 

Retention tool or benefit: Availability pay; 
Description of retention tools and benefits: Criminal investigators and 
certain similar law enforcement employees generally are entitled to 
receive law enforcement availability pay equal to 25 percent of their 
rate of basic pay. Availability pay is compensation for (1) all 
irregular overtime hours, (2) any regularly scheduled overtime hours 
that are part of the first 2 overtime hours on any regular workday, and 
(3) certain nonwork hours during which an employee is placed in 
availability status. 

Source: GAO analysis of information provided by OPM, DHS, DOJ, and 
Treasury. 

[End of table] 

Officials in some DHS and DOJ component agencies as well as the IRS 
that employ LEOs report that they use human capital tools to retain 
personnel effectively. For example, according to officials from DOJ's 
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), they use a 
variety of human capital tools, such as a Foreign Language Award 
Program and Health Improvement Program,[Footnote 61] with some success 
to retain their agents already receiving enhanced retirement benefits. 
Officials from the IRS's Criminal Investigation Division, whose 
employees receive LEO retirement benefits, stated that they use 
retention incentives to retain corporate knowledge and expertise with 
some success. In addition, within DHS, the U.S. Secret Service provides 
retention and foreign language bonuses to retain LEOs. 

Officials from some DHS and DOJ component agencies that employ law 
enforcement-related personnel also stated that they used human capital 
tools to retain such staff. However, these officials stated that they 
are continuing to experience some retention challenges for certain 
types of these personnel, even though they are utilizing human capital 
tools, to varying degrees, in an effort to retain them. Specifically, 
according to FBI Police officials, they are facing difficulties 
retaining their police force of 241 officers (as of August 2008), 
despite their use of human capital tools, such as student loan 
reimbursements. FBI Police officials noted that their agency loses a 
number of police officers to other positions within the FBI, 
particularly to the Special Agent position, which provides enhanced 
retirement benefits. FBI Police officials also said that it takes 
approximately 7 to 9 months to bring on a new police officer due to the 
detailed testing and background check required. Therefore, even a small 
amount of attrition would have an impact on the FBI Police's ability to 
meet its mission. Similarly, according to the Director of DOJ's 
Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys (EOUSA), the office is using 
retention incentives, student loan reimbursements, and monetary rewards 
up to $7,500, but acknowledged that it is a challenge to retain their 
approximately 5,300 Assistant U.S. Attorneys, especially mid-career- 
level attorneys who could earn more money in the private sector, 
particularly in some major metropolitan areas. Officials from the FBI 
Police and EOUSA stated that they believe providing such personnel with 
enhanced retirement benefits may be an option for addressing their 
current retention challenges. 

Although some DOJ component agency officials cited challenges retaining 
their staff, DOJ JMD human resource officials stated that they do not 
feel that they face challenges retaining law enforcement-related 
personnel and would not support these personnel seeking enhanced 
retirement benefits directly through legislation. DOJ JMD human 
resource officials highlighted the fact that the department's average 
overall attrition rate from fiscal years 2004 through 2008 for law 
enforcement-related personnel (3.5 percent) is lower than average for 
all of the federal government (4.7 percent). In addition, DHS human 
resource officials acknowledged the department's difficulty in 
retaining some staff, but noted that this may be because the department 
is relatively new and, therefore, some higher than average attrition is 
to be expected. 

According to OPM officials, enhanced retirement benefits are not 
intended to be a tool for retaining personnel and, thus, may not be 
appropriate in addressing the cited and related retention challenges. A 
possible option for addressing the retention challenges cited by some 
DOJ component agencies and DHS human resource officials is the use of 
human capital tools for these groups. According to our analysis of 
OPM's annual reports to Congress on agencies' use of retention 
incentives for calendar years 2006 and 2007, DHS and DOJ use human 
capital tools to retain their personnel to a lesser extent than other 
federal departments.[Footnote 62] Specifically, DHS awarded an average 
of $2,241 retention incentives to approximately 0.6 percent of all DHS 
employees (law enforcement and related personnel as well as other 
personnel), while DOJ awarded an average of $3,279 to approximately 0.9 
percent of all DOJ employees and Department of the Treasury awarded an 
average of $13,467 to approximately 0.1 percent of all its employees 
for fiscal years 2006 and 2007.[Footnote 63] In comparison, OPM 
reported that other reporting departments awarded an average retention 
incentive of $5,629 to approximately 3.6 percent of its employees 
during the same time frame.[Footnote 64] For additional information on 
the use of human capital tools during calendar years 2006 and 2007, as 
reported to OPM, see appendix VI. 

We have also previously reported on the effectiveness of providing cash 
incentives, such as retention incentives and special pay, to retain 
federal personnel.[Footnote 65] Specifically, in July 2005, we reported 
that some deferred benefits, such as retirement, are not valued as 
highly as cash compensation (basic pay or special pay and monetary 
retention incentives) and that cash compensation is generally accepted 
as a far more efficient tool than deferred benefits for retaining 
certain personnel. Cash compensation has been used for various groups 
of law enforcement-related personnel. For example, what is known as the 
Customs Officer Pay Reform Act (COPRA) of 2003 and its implementing 
regulations provided revised and enhanced overtime compensation and 
premium pay provisions to a number of customs inspectors and 
supervisors.[Footnote 66] In addition, our analysis of fiscal years 
2004 through 2008 CPDF data indicated that the attrition rates for 
those law enforcement-related personnel receiving special pay were 
similar to those personnel receiving enhanced retirement benefits and 
were lower than those law enforcement-related personnel receiving 
neither enhanced pay nor enhanced retirement benefits. Specifically, 
the average governmentwide attrition rate for law enforcement-related 
personnel not receiving enhanced retirement benefits was 4.7 percent, 
compared to 3.2 percent for law enforcement personnel receiving 
enhanced retirement benefits and 3.5 percent for law enforcement- 
related personnel who received special pay and no enhanced retirement 
benefits. The use of special pay could therefore also be an option for 
addressing some of the retention challenges reported by some agencies 
employing law enforcement-related personnel not receiving enhanced 
retirement benefits. 

If sustainable funding were available, agencies using human capital 
tools in a targeted manner for law enforcement related personnel could 
be a cost-efficient option (considering their relatively low cost to a 
federal agency when compared to enhanced retirement benefits). For 
example, as noted above, our analysis of CPDF data found that all 
federal employees, including law enforcement and law enforcement- 
related personnel, with less than 5 years of service had higher 
attrition rates than those with 5 or more years of service. 
Specifically, law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits with less than 5 years of service had a 10.4 percent attrition 
rate while those with 5 or more years of service had a 2.2 percent 
attrition rate for fiscal year 2008. For those law enforcement-related 
personnel with less than 5 years of service, targeted use of human 
capital tools or the use of special pay could be a more meaningful 
option for addressing their attrition. 

According to DOJ officials, they do not currently have plans to target 
their use of human capital tools toward any specific personnel because 
they did not feel their department faces retention challenges. These 
officials also noted that these tools are available for all of their 
employees. DHS human resource officials acknowledged that the 
department faces challenges in retaining its employees, including those 
in law enforcement-related positions with less than 5 years of service 
and noted that they have a number of efforts under way to address 
attrition for this specific population. For example, they have 
implemented a program that seeks to retain employees by allowing them 
to explore different career paths within DHS rather than leaving the 
department altogether. 

While the costs of providing retention incentives and special pay are 
not insignificant, they pose less of a potential financial liability to 
the federal government than providing enhanced retirement benefits. For 
example, according to OPM, the average annual retention incentive 
provided to federal employees in calendar year 2007 was $5,573. We 
estimated that the average cost to CBP, for example, for providing 
increased agency contributions to fund enhanced retirement benefits to 
the approximately 20,000 CBP Officers, was about $10,000 per position 
for fiscal year 2009--and these costs are expected to continue for the 
rest of each individual's career as a CBP Officer. Moreover, when we 
spoke to human resource officials from DHS, they stated that providing 
special pay, which is higher than that of a regular federal employee, 
may be a less costly option for addressing retention challenges than 
providing enhanced retirement benefits to additional employee groups. 

Concluding Observations: 

Currently, there are approximately 51,000 federal law enforcement- 
related personnel who have not received enhanced retirement benefits 
because they have not been determined to meet the statutory and 
regulatory definitions relating to a LEO or have not been provided such 
benefits directly through legislation. Employees in several occupations 
have expressed interest in obtaining LEO or similar enhanced retirement 
benefits, and they will most likely seek them directly through 
legislation. Law enforcement-related personnel who have previously 
obtained or are seeking enhanced retirement benefits directly through 
legislation have used various rationales to justify their request, 
including high attrition rates, equity considerations, and the 
assertion that they are now performing more homeland-security-related 
functions than they had previously. However, in those instances where 
employee groups are seeking enhanced retirement benefits directly 
through separate legislation, data are not always provided to support 
the various rationales. Our analysis of available attrition data showed 
that while law enforcement-related personnel without enhanced 
retirement benefits generally have higher attrition rates than those 
with enhanced retirement benefits or special pay, their attrition rates 
are actually lower than the overall average for other federal 
employees. Therefore, it may be useful to evaluate such data when 
determining whether to provide expensive, enhanced retirement benefits 
in response to assertions of retention challenges. 

In addition, our analysis indicates that considering the costs to 
agencies, and to the pension system as a whole, of providing these 
enhanced retirement benefits is important because it is a long-term 
commitment and may affect agency strategic workforce planning options. 
OPM's actuaries can provide estimates of the long-term costs to the 
government for the increased pensions, but if additional employee 
groups are granted enhanced retirement benefits directly through 
legislation, agencies may need short-term supplemental funding as well 
as longer-term additional funding to cover increased agency 
contributions to the retirement fund. Furthermore, assessing the impact 
of potentially unfunded liabilities to the treasury and the retirement 
system related to providing enhanced retirement benefits to employees 
still under CSRS may also be important when determining whether to 
provide enhanced retirement benefits to additional employee groups. 
Soliciting agencies' perspectives on their personnel needs, challenges, 
and available budgets would help to inform these benefit decisions as 
well, especially given that legislative requests for such benefits 
typically are not brought by agencies, but by unions or employee group 
representatives. Agencies' possible use of human capital tools in a 
targeted fashion (such as cash bonuses or special pay) are another 
potentially more cost-efficient means for addressing the human capital 
issues cited for law enforcement personnel than awarding enhanced 
retirement benefits, which may also result in unintended consequences 
such as perceptions of inequity: 

Finally, information on attrition, costs, agencies' strategic workforce 
plans and budgets, and other issues can help to inform whether requests 
for enhanced retirement benefits directly through legislation are 
justifiable, affordable, and cost-efficient. These are some of the 
challenges facing both agencies and Congress in making fiscally 
responsible policy decisions, especially given our nation's growing 
fiscal imbalance. 

Agency Comments: 

We requested comments on a draft of this report from DHS, DOJ, IRS, and 
OPM. On July 24, 2009, we received written comments from OPM on the 
draft report, which are reproduced in full in appendix VII. OPM 
generally concurred with the report. DHS and DOJ did not provide 
written comments, but in e-mails received July 27, 2009 and July 28, 
2009, DOJ and DHS liaisons stated that the departments generally agreed 
with the report. OPM, DHS, and DOJ also provided technical comments, 
which we have incorporated where appropriate. In an e-mail received 
July 24, 2009, the IRS liaison stated that IRS had no comments on the 
draft report. 

We will provide copies of this report to the Attorney General, the 
Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, the Secretary of the 
Treasury, the Director of OPM, selected congressional committees, and 
other interested parties. In addition, the report will be available at 
no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

Please contact Eileen R. Larence at (202) 512-6510 if you or your staff 
has any questions concerning this report. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix VIII. 

Signed by: 

Eileen R. Larence: 
Director, Homeland Security and Justice Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

This report addresses the following questions: (1) What processes are 
being used to grant enhanced retirement benefits to federal law 
enforcement personnel? (2) What are the rationales and potential costs 
for extending such benefits to additional occupations or employee 
groups? (3) To what extent have federal agencies used human capital 
tools, such as retention incentives, to retain both law enforcement and 
other related personnel? 

As agreed upon with your offices, our review focused on the Department 
of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Justice (DOJ), and Department 
of the Treasury because these federal entities employed approximately 
84 percent of all law enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel 
in fiscal year 2008.[Footnote 67] For the purposes of this report, we 
are defining the term law enforcement personnel in a manner that is 
broader in scope than the statutory and regulatory law enforcement 
officer (LEO) definitions and we are not including other specialized 
non-law enforcement related annuity recipients, such as federal air 
traffic controllers and firefighters. 

To identify the processes that have been used to grant enhanced 
retirement benefits to federal law enforcement personnel, we reviewed 
relevant laws, regulations, as well as legislation introduced in the 
110th Congress that would have provided such benefits to additional 
employee groups. We also reviewed reports by the Office of Personnel 
Management (OPM), the Congressional Budget Office, and the 
Congressional Research Service that describe the current processes by 
which such benefits are provided. Also, we obtained information on the 
specific benefits provided to law enforcement personnel from DHS, DOJ, 
and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) within the Department of the 
Treasury, as well as OPM and select employee organizations and unions. 
During this review, we also obtained information from OPM on its role 
and responsibilities related to providing enhanced retirement benefits 
to personnel who perform law enforcement-related duties. 

We also met with representatives from six unions and other employee 
organizations who have advocated for enhanced retirement benefits, to 
discuss the current process for obtaining enhanced benefits. In 
addition, we met with staff from the Merit System Protection Board 
(MSPB), which adjudicates federal employees' appeals of personnel 
actions such as appeals from employees who believe they are entitled to 
LEO coverage, to discuss their views and opinions on the current 
criteria used to determine which federal personnel meet the statutory 
and regulatory LEO definitions. We did not, however, review the 
appropriateness of the statutory and regulatory definitions relating to 
LEOs nor did we determine criteria for evaluating the definitions or 
the processes used by various agencies in implementing the definition. 

To identify the rationales and potential costs for extending enhanced 
retirement benefits to additional occupations or employee groups, we 
met with representatives from six unions and employee organizations who 
have advocated for enhanced retirement benefits to discuss the 
rationales that law enforcement-related personnel are using to seek 
enhanced benefits similar to those received by LEOs. We also discussed 
potential effects of providing enhanced retirement benefits to 
additional employee groups that may be beneficial to consider, such as 
potential costs, when providing such benefits to others groups with 
DHS, DOJ, IRS, and OPM officials. Further, we reviewed previous GAO 
reports that discuss the importance of making policy decisions that 
take into consideration the need for fiscal stewardship. We also 
obtained information on the extent to which granting such benefits may 
affect other employees and agencies' workforce planning. During this 
review, we interviewed officials from DHS, DOJ, IRS, and OPM on the 
potential workforce planning effects of providing enhanced retirement 
benefits directly through legislation to those additional employee 
groups seeking such benefits. 

Because one of the primary rationales provided was that law enforcement-
related personnel not receiving enhanced retirement benefits exhibit 
high attrition, including moving to occupations that provide such 
benefits, we analyzed data from OPM's Central Personnel Data File 
(CPDF) for fiscal years 2004 through 2008 to calculate the attrition 
rates and to determine the extent to which these rationales can be 
substantiated with existing data.[Footnote 68] Our analysis focused on 
DHS, DOJ, and Treasury; however, we also analyzed these data on a 
governmentwide basis. Regarding CPDF, we have previously reported that 
governmentwide data from CPDF for most of the key variables used in 
this study (agency/sub-element, position occupied, retirement plan, 
work schedule, and occupation) were at least 99 percent accurate and 
thus concluded that the data were sufficiently reliable for the 
purposes of this study.[Footnote 69] Our analysis of CPDF data included 
personnel that were: 

* identified as permanent employees of all work schedules. 

* identified as having separated from their agency of employment 
through resignation or transfer from one agency to another agency. 

For the purpose of our analysis, we divided personnel into four 
different groups by LEO status. The first group, referred to as law 
enforcement personnel, included personnel that were: 

* identified as having LEO enhanced retirement, and: 

* identified as personnel receiving enhanced retirement benefits 
similar to LEOs through separate legislation. 

The second group, referred to as law enforcement-related personnel, 
included personnel that were: 

* identified as personnel that have not been found to meet the LEO 
definition by their employing agency and OPM nor have they been 
provided with similar enhanced retirement benefits. 

* identified as potentially performing certain law enforcement-related 
duties including but not limited to carrying a weapon, having arrest 
authority, or participating in some investigative capacity. Occupations 
frequently thought of as being law enforcement-related may include 
personnel in the following occupations (if not covered by LEO): 0006, 
0007, 0025, 0080, 0082, 0083, 0084, 1801, 1802, 1810, 1811, 1812, 1816, 
1854, 1881, 1884, 1890, 1895, 1896, and 1899. 

* Identified as having previously expressed interest in receiving such 
benefits through legislation. The following occupations were added to 
the law enforcement-related group because they have previously lobbied 
for passage of a bill to give them retirement benefits similar to LEO 
retirement: CBP Agricultural Inspectors (0401), Assistant U.S. 
Attorneys (0905), and IRS Revenue Officers (1169). 

The third group, referred to as law enforcement-related personnel 
receiving special pay, also included those who have not been found to 
meet the LEO definition and are performing certain law enforcement- 
related duties but receive special pay.[Footnote 70] The fourth group, 
referred to as other federal personnel, include those who do not 
function in a law enforcement capacity and do not perform law 
enforcement-related duties. 

To calculate the rates of attrition for each fiscal year, we divided 
the total number of resignations and transfers from one agency to 
another by the average of the number of permanent employees. The 
average number of employees for a given fiscal year was calculated 
using the number of employees at the beginning and the end of each 
fiscal year. We calculated the rates of attrition for each of the 
previously described personnel groups on a governmentwide basis as well 
as on a departmentwide basis for DHS, DOJ, and the Department of the 
Treasury. We focused our analysis on these Departments because they 
employ 84 percent of federal law enforcement and law enforcement- 
related personnel. To calculate the average attrition rates from fiscal 
year 2004 through 2008, we added the total of each group's attrition 
rate for each fiscal year multiplied by the average population of the 
group and divided it by the total population of the 5 year time frame. 
We calculated the average rates of attrition for each of the previously 
described personnel groups on a governmentwide basis as well as on a 
departmentwide basis for DHS, DOJ, and the Department of the Treasury. 

Further, we analyzed CPDF data to determine whether law enforcement- 
related personnel not receiving LEO or similarly-enhanced retirement 
benefits were moving to other federal positions that offered these 
benefits (because such moves were another rationale from those unions 
and employee groups seeking enhanced retirement benefits). We totaled 
the number of employees that moved from a law enforcement-related 
occupation not receiving enhanced retirement benefits on a 
governmentwide basis from fiscal year 2004 through fiscal year 2007. 
[Footnote 71] Then, we calculated the percentage of those employees who 
moved to a law enforcement occupation receiving such benefits under the 
same parameters. 

To determine the extent to which federal agencies have used human 
capital tools to retain both law enforcement and law enforcement- 
related personnel, we reviewed and analyzed information reported to OPM 
on the extent to which DHS, DOJ, and Treasury were using retention 
incentives. We also obtained information on the use of human capital 
tools to retain law enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel 
from DHS, DOJ, and IRS human capital officials, various component 
agency officials, and union and employee representatives. In addition, 
we reviewed previous GAO reports that discuss the use and potential 
effectiveness of human capital tools to retain federal employees. 
[Footnote 72] 

We conducted this performance audit from January 2008 through July 
2009, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Definition of "Law Enforcement Officer" for Retirement 
Purposes: 

The current definition of "law enforcement officer" can be traced back 
to as early as 1948. In 1948, legislation was enacted into law that, in 
general, provided enhanced retirement benefits to certain federal 
officers whose duties were primarily the investigation, apprehension, 
or detention of persons suspected or convicted of offenses against the 
criminal laws of the United States. This legislation expanded the 
coverage of enhanced retirement benefits governmentwide beyond the 
limited scope of legislation enacted 1 year earlier in 1947 covering 
only FBI agents. In comments on the then pending 1948 legislation, the 
Civil Service Commission noted that it was "not in favor of special 
legislation for individual groups of employees, but inasmuch as 
Congress has approved special legislation for the investigatory 
personnel of the Federal Bureau of Investigation it would not oppose 
benefits for similar groups of employees." Committee report language 
noted that the "committee believes it is only fair to grant such 
retirement benefits as are provided for under the bill to law- 
enforcement agents in all parts of the Government at an earlier age, 
because it is physically impossible to carry on the necessary strenuous 
activities after reaching 50 years of age." 

Currently, law enforcement personnel performing certain specified types 
of duties can fall within the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) 
[Footnote 73] and Federal Employee Retirement System (FERS)[Footnote 
74] statutory and regulatory retirement-related definitions of the term 
"law enforcement officer" (LEO) and thus be eligible for enhanced 
retirement benefits under the respective retirement plans. LEO 
retirement coverage does not depend on the classification of a position 
within an occupational series (e.g., Police Officer GS-0083) or the law 
enforcement mission of a particular agency. 

For CSRS purposes, a LEO is defined in statute as an employee whose 
primary duties are the "investigation, apprehension, or detention 
[Footnote 75] of individuals suspected or convicted of offenses against 
the criminal laws of the United States, including an employee engaged 
in this activity who is transferred to a supervisory or administrative 
position." OPM's implementing regulations provide additional 
definitions. The term "primary duties", for example, is defined, in 
part, as "those duties of a position that - (1) are paramount in 
influence or weight; that is, constitute the basic reasons for the 
existence of the position; (2) occupy a substantial portion of the 
individual's working time over a typical work cycle; and (3) are 
assigned on a regular and recurring basis." The implementing 
regulations further provide, for example, that the definition of a LEO 
"does not include an employee whose primary duties involve maintaining 
law and order, protecting life and property, guarding against or 
inspecting for violations of law, or investigating persons other than 
persons who are suspected or convicted of offenses against the criminal 
laws of the United States." 

The main statutory provision of the FERS LEO definition generally 
parallels the CSRS LEO definition. Like the CSRS provision, the 
statutory FERS LEO definition includes an employee whose primary duties 
are the "investigation, apprehension, or detention[Footnote 76] of 
individuals suspected or convicted of offenses against the criminal 
laws of the United States." The statutory FERS LEO definition 
additionally includes an employee whose primary duties are the 
protection of officials of the United States against threats to 
personal safety. Like the CSRS definition, the FERS definition also 
includes employees primarily performing such duties who transfer to 
supervisory and administrative positions. However, the statutory FERS 
definition of a "law enforcement officer" is more restrictive than the 
CSRS LEO definition in that it expressly includes a rigorous duty 
standard. With respect to those employees described above, the 
statutory FERS LEO definition additionally requires, in general, that 
the duties of such positions be "sufficiently rigorous that employment 
opportunities should be limited to young and physically vigorous 
individuals."[Footnote 77] As with CSRS, OPM implementing regulations 
provide additional FERS LEO-related definitions. The term "rigorous 
position", for example, is defined under OPM FERS regulations to mean, 
in pertinent part, "a position the duties of which are so rigorous that 
employment opportunities should, as soon as reasonably possible, be 
limited (through establishment of a maximum entry age and physical 
qualifications) to young and physically vigorous individuals whose 
primary duties are investigating, apprehending, or detaining 
individuals suspected or convicted of offenses against the criminal 
laws of the United States or protecting the personal safety of United 
States officials." 

The statutory FERS definition of "law enforcement officer" also 
specifically includes certain employees of the U.S. Park Police and 
members of the U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division. OPM implementing 
regulations provide that the term "rigorous position" is deemed to 
include such positions in the Park Police and Secret Service Uniformed 
Division. 

The CSRS and FERS implementing regulations relating to the definition 
of a LEO generally exclude an "employee whose primary duties involve 
maintaining law and order, protecting life and property, guarding 
against or inspecting for violations of law, or investigating persons 
other than persons who are suspected or convicted of offenses against 
the criminal laws of the United States." In this regard, groups that 
are generally excluded from the CSRS and FERS definitions of "law 
enforcement officer" are police officers, guards, and inspectors. 

Legislative Actions Related to the Definition of LEO: 

As discussed above, federal uniformed police typically do not have LEO 
retirement coverage because they are generally excluded from the CSRS 
and FERS definitions relating to a "law enforcement officer." 
Legislation has been enacted into law, however, that extends enhanced 
retirement benefits to certain federal uniformed police groups within 
the broader law enforcement community. 

For example, Congress has extended enhanced retirement benefits to 
certain employees of the U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division 
officers, U.S. Park Police, U.S. Capitol Police, and U.S. Supreme Court 
Police. The officers of the U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division and 
the U.S. Park Police were added in 1988 when legislation amended the 
statutory FERS LEO definition. Committee report language accompanying 
the 1988 legislation provided that "although these individuals are 
commonly thought to be law enforcement officers, the Office of 
Personnel Management says they do not meet the FERS definition of 'law 
enforcement officer' under section 8401(17) and thus do not qualify for 
FERS law enforcement officer benefits."[Footnote 78] In comparison, 
rather than amending the statutory LEO definition, legislation in 1990 
and 2000 provided the U.S. Capitol Police and U.S. Supreme Court 
Police, respectively, with enhanced retirement benefits similar to 
those received by LEOs.[Footnote 79] 

Administrative and Judicial Appeal Actions Related to Coverage Under 
the Definition of LEO: 

Both MSPB and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, for 
example, have issued decisions that affect, on an individual basis, 
which employees receive LEO. An individual employee asserting that his 
or her position duties are primarily the investigation, apprehension, 
or detention of individuals suspected or convicted of offenses against 
the criminal laws of the United States, may, for example, appeal an 
agency's final decision to the MSPB.[Footnote 80] An employee may also 
appeal a final decision of the MSPB to the U.S. Court of Appeals for 
the Federal Circuit. 

As discussed earlier, in general, in order to qualify for LEO coverage, 
an employee must show that the duties of his or her position are 
primarily the investigation, apprehension, or detention of individuals 
suspected or convicted of crimes against the criminal laws of the 
United States. FERS has the additional statutory requirement that LEO 
positions are to be those that are sufficiently rigorous that 
employment opportunities should be limited to young and physically 
vigorous individuals, as determined by the Director of OPM considering 
the recommendations of the employing agency.[Footnote 81] 

OPM regulations set out a three-prong test to determine whether duties 
are considered primary duties of a particular position: (1) whether the 
duties are paramount in influence or weight, that is, constitute the 
basic reasons for the existence of the position; (2) whether the duties 
occupy a substantial portion of the individual's working time over a 
typical work cycle; and (3) whether the duties are assigned on a 
regular and recurring basis. Under OPM regulations, in general, if an 
employee spends at least 50 percent of his or her time performing a 
duty or group of duties, they are his or her primary duties. In 
addition, duties that are of an emergency, incidental, or temporary 
nature cannot be considered "primary" even if they meet the substantial 
portion of time criterion, according to the OPM regulations. 

In determining whether an employee meets the LEO definitional criteria 
for coverage, under pertinent case law, MSPB must examine all relevant 
evidence, including the position description.[Footnote 82] The U.S. 
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit clarified its approach to law 
enforcement officer cases in a 2001 decision, Watson v. Department of 
the Navy, 262 F.3d 1292, 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2001), noting a legislative 
mandate for a position-oriented approach in cases of requests for law 
enforcement officer credit by requiring the "basic reasons" for the 
existence of the position must be the performance of law enforcement 
officer duties.[Footnote 83] Under this approach, if the position was 
not created for the purpose of investigation, apprehension, or 
detention, then the incumbent of the position would not be entitled to 
law enforcement officer credit.[Footnote 84] 

The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit set out six factors, 
called the Bingaman factors, in a 1997 decision, Bingaman v. Department 
of the Treasury, 127 F.3d 1431 (Fed. Cir. 1997), that MSPB applies to 
an overall evaluation of the three OMB criteria for identifying primary 
duties.[Footnote 85] Under this approach, MSPB considers whether the 
employee commonly (1) has frequent direct contact with criminal 
suspects, (2) is authorized to carry a firearm, (3) interrogates 
witnesses and suspects, (4) works for long periods of time without 
breaks, (5) is on call 24 hours a day, and (6) is required to maintain 
a level of physical fitness.[Footnote 86] No single Bingaman factor is 
considered determinative and satisfaction of the Bingaman factors alone 
is insufficient to establish entitlement to LEO coverage because the 
Bingaman factors do not address the reason for the existence of the 
position, as required by the regulations.[Footnote 87] The MSPB and the 
Federal Circuit Court have held that the most probative factors for 
determining whether a federal officer or law enforcement officer is 
eligible for early retirement credit are (1) whether the officer is 
merely guarding life and property, or whether he is instead more 
frequently pursuing or detaining criminals, (2) whether there is an 
early mandatory retirement age, (3) whether there is a youthful maximum 
entry age for the position, (4) whether the job is physically demanding 
so as to require a youthful workforce, and (5) whether the officer is 
exposed to hazard or danger.[Footnote 88] In addition, determination of 
eligibility for LEO retirement coverage is strictly construed because 
the program is "more costly to the government than more traditional 
retirement plans and often results in the retirement of important 
people at a time when they would otherwise have continued to work for a 
number of years."[Footnote 89] 

A 2005 decision of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit Court, 
Crowley v. United States, 398 F.3d 1329, 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2005), noted 
that two factors predominate over all others in determining primary 
duties. The Crowley court noted that the most important consideration 
in its position-oriented approach of LEO determination is the physical 
vigorousness required by the position in question, followed by the 
hazardousness of a position.[Footnote 90] The Crowley court stated 
that, while hazardousness was also important, it was secondary to 
physical vigorousness because the legislative history of the LEO 
statute emphasized physical vigor to a greater extent.[Footnote 91] 

The Crowley court stated that physical vigorousness is the "sine qua 
non" of LEO status determinations and that absent a showing of a 
position's requirement of physical vigorousness, an employee cannot 
successfully show LEO status.[Footnote 92] The Crowley court noted that 
the relevant considerations are whether or not the position contains 
(in order of importance) (1) strenuous physical fitness requirements, 
(2) age requirements (such as a mandatory retirement age or maximum 
entry age), or (3) a requirement that an employee be on call 24-hours a 
day.[Footnote 93] The Crowley court explained that these sub-factors 
should be evaluated by applying the facts of a given case to the law to 
determine which sub-factors, if any, have been satisfied.[Footnote 94] 
If the position in question is found to be vigorous, then the second 
major factor necessary to establish LEO status--hazardousness--must be 
considered.[Footnote 95] 

The second important consideration in LEO determinations cited by the 
Crowley court is the hazardousness of a position. To determine 
hazardousness, the Crowley court, in general, provided that a court 
should consider whether the position (in order of importance) requires 
frequent and consistent contact with criminal suspects on the part of 
the employee (including interrogation of suspects and pursuit or 
detention of criminals), or whether it authorizes the employee to carry 
a firearm.[Footnote 96] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Annuity Computation Information: 

An individual working in a position designated as a "law enforcement 
officer" position is typically covered either under special rules for 
CSRS or FERS. Under CSRS, LEOs pay a higher retirement contribution 
rate (7.5 percent of pay) for more generous retirement benefits and 
have the ability to retire at age 50 after 20 years of law enforcement 
officer-covered or other eligible service.[Footnote 97] The benefits 
are to be computed based on 2.5 percent of the high three average 
salary for each of the first 20 years of covered service, and 2 percent 
per year of service (covered or not) thereafter. An individual is 
subject to mandatory retirement upon reaching the age of 57 or the 
completion of 20 years of covered service. Under FERS, there are also 
special benefits, but the rules are different. Like CSRS, the 
individual's contribution rate is one-half percent more than for 
regular benefits. FERS also has different rules for when an individual 
may retire: at age 50 with 20 years of covered service (like CSRS), or 
with 25 years of covered service without a minimum age. Under FERS, the 
special benefit formula is 1.7 percent of the high three average salary 
for each of the first 20 covered years of FERS service, and 1 percent 
of pay per year of service thereafter. The FERS Cost of Living 
Adjustment is to begin at retirement instead of age 62, the age for 
regular retirees. In addition, law enforcement officer retirees are to 
receive the FERS Special Retirement Supplement until age 62, but the 
earnings test is not to be applied to the Special Retirement Supplement 
until the Minimum Retirement Age is reached. An individual is subject 
to mandatory retirement upon reaching the age of 57 or the completion 
of 20 years of covered service, if then over that age. The table below 
shows the annuity accrual rates. 

Table 6: Annuity Accrual Rates: 

Years of service: 1; 
CSRS: Any age: [Empty]; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0100; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: [Empty]; 
FERS: LEO: 0.0170. 

Years of service: 2; 
CSRS: Any age: [Empty];
FERS: Any age: 0.0200; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: [Empty]; 
FERS: LEO: 0.0340. 

Years of service: 3; 
CSRS: Any age: [Empty]; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0300; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: [Empty]; 
FERS: LEO: 0.0510. 

Years of service: 4; 
CSRS: Any age: [Empty]; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0400; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: [Empty]; 
FERS: LEO: 0.0680. 

Years of service: 5; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.0750; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0500; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.1250; 
FERS: LEO: 0.0850. 

Years of service: 6; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.0925; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0600; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.1500; 
FERS: LEO: 0.1020. 

Years of service: 7; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.1100; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0700; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.1750; 
FERS: LEO: 0.1190. 

Years of service: 8; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.1275; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0800; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.2000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.1360. 

Years of service: 9; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.1450; 
FERS: Any age: 0.0900; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.2250; 
FERS: LEO: 0.1530. 

Years of service: 10; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.1625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1000; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.2500; 
FERS: LEO: 0.1700. 

Years of service: 11; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.1825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1100; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.2750; 
FERS: LEO: 0.1870. 

Years of service: 12; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.2025; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1200; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.3000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.2040. 

Years of service: 13; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.2225; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1300; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.3250; 
FERS: LEO: 0.2210. 

Years of service: 14; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.2425; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1400; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.3500; 
FERS: LEO: 0.2380. 

Years of service: 15; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.2625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1500; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.3750; 
FERS: LEO: 0.2550. 

Years of service: 16; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.2825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1600; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.4000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.2720. 

Years of service: 17; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.3025; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1700; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.4250; 
FERS: LEO: 0.2890. 

Years of service: 18; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.3225; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1800; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.4500; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3060. 

Years of service: 19; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.3425; 
FERS: Any age: 0.1900; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: [Empty]; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.4750; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3230. 

Years of service: 20; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.3625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2000; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2200; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.5000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3400. 

Years of service: 21; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.3825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2100; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2310; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.5200; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3500. 

Years of service: 22; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.4025; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2200; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2420; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.5400; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3600. 

Years of service: 23; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.4225; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2300; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2530; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.5600; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3700. 

Years of service: 24; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.4425; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2400; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2640; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.5800; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3800. 

Years of service: 25; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.4625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2500; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2750; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.6000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.3900. 

Years of service: 26; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.4825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2600; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2860; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.6200; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4000. 

Years of service: 27; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.5025; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2700; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.2970; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.6400; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4100. 

Years of service: 28; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.5225; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2800; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3080; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.6600; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4200. 

Years of service: 29; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.5425; 
FERS: Any age: 0.2900; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3190; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.6800; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4300. 

Years of service: 30; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.5625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3000; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3300; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.7000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4400. 

Years of service: 31; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.5825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3100; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3410; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.7200; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4500. 

Years of service: 32; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.6025; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3200; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3520; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.7400; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4600. 

Years of service: 33; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.6225; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3300; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3630; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.7600; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4700. 

Years of service: 34; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.6425; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3400; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3740; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.7800; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4800. 

Years of service: 35; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.6625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3500; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3850; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.4900. 

Years of service: 36; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.6825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3600; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.3960; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5000. 

Years of service: 37; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.7025; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3700; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.4070; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5100. 

Years of service: 38; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.7225; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3800; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.4180; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5200. 

Years of service: 39; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.7425; 
FERS: Any age: 0.3900; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.4290; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5300. 

Years of service: 40; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.7625; 
FERS: Any age: 0.4000; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.4400; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5400. 

Years of service: 41; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.7825; 
FERS: Any age: 0.4100; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.4510; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5500. 

Years of service: 42; 
CSRS: Any age: 0.8000; 
FERS: Any age: 0.4200; 
FERS: Age 62 and 20 or more years service: 0.4620; 
CSRS: LEO: 0.8000; 
FERS: LEO: 0.5600. 

Source: OPM. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Selected Non Standard Pay Plans: 

The table below reflects selected information from Appendix C of the 
Office of Personnel Management's (OPM) July 2004 report to Congress 
entitled, Federal Law Enforcement Pay and Benefits. The information 
pertains to selected non-standard pay plans provided to various law 
enforcement and law enforcement-related personnel as set out in OPM's 
report. 

Table 7: Selected Non Standard Pay Plans: 

Description of basic pay system: Capitol Police Pay Plan; By law, the 
basic pay plan for Capitol Police is established and maintained by the 
Capitol Police Board. The plan covers police officers (all ranks). The 
pay schedule for Capitol police is significantly higher than that for 
GS police officers and is higher than the schedules for Secret Service 
Uniformed Division (SSUD) and Park Police officers; 
Statutory and regulatory citations: 40 U.S.C. 207b(a)[A]. 

Description of basic pay system: DOD - Defense Protective Service (DPS) 
Pay Plan The DPS police protect the Pentagon and surrounding areas. DPS 
police officers (AD-0083) are covered by a special pay system 
administered by the Secretary of Defense. (See section 1101 of Public 
Law 107-107, December 28, 2001.) DOD has administratively adopted the 
same pay plan that applies to SSUD officers; 
Statutory and regulatory citations: 10 U.S.C. 2674(b). 

Description of basic pay system: Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) 
General Salary Schedule and Senior-Level (SN) Salary Schedule The NRC 
General Salary Schedule is applicable to GS-equivalent NRC employees, 
including criminal investigator positions (GG-1811). The NRC General 
Salary Schedule is generally identical to the governmentwide General 
Schedule; 
Statutory and regulatory citations: Section 161.d of the Atomic Energy 
Act of 1954, Public Law 83-703, August 30, 1954. 

Description of basic pay system: Park Police Pay System The Park Police 
Pay System is identical to the SSUD officer pay system; 
Statutory and regulatory citations: DC Code § 5-545.01 § 5-563.02. 

Description of basic pay system: Secret Service Uniformed Division 
(SSUD) Pay System The SSUD officer pay system is established in the 
D.C. Code. (Same pay system applies to Park Police officers in the 
Department of the Interior.) Covers police officers (LE-0083) ranked 
from private to chief; 
Statutory and regulatory citations: DC Code § 5-545.01 § 5-563.02. 

Description of basic pay system: Supreme Court Police Pay Plan The 
Supreme Court Police pay plan covers its police officers. The pay plan 
is identical to the pay plan for Capitol Police (comparing common 
ranks); 
Statutory and regulatory citations: 28 U.S.C. 672(b). 

Description of basic pay system: Transportation Security Administration 
(TSA) Pay Plans Core Compensation Plan - This plan covers an 
unspecified number of Air Marshals (1801) and criminal investigators 
(SV-1811) in a specialized law enforcement job category with a specific 
banding structure; 
Statutory and regulatory citations: TSA law & administrative action 
under that law. 

Source: Appendix C of OPM's 2004 report to Congress, entitled Federal 
Law Enforcement Pay and Benefits. Given that the information is from 
OPM's 2004 report, we did not verify the information and it does not 
reflect any subsequent programmatic changes or amendments to the legal 
citations. 

[A] Revisions to the U.S. Code in 2002 transferred 40 U.S.C. 207b to 2 
U.S.C. 1923 which relates to unified schedules of rates of basic pay 
and a leave system for the Capitol Police. Section 1921a of Title 2 
pertains to Capitol Police Board and Chief of the Capitol Police pay 
system authority for members of the Capitol Police. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Attrition Data: 

The following tables relate to attrition at the departmental level for 
Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Justice (DOJ), and 
Department of the Treasury as well as government-wide for law 
enforcement, law enforcement-related, law enforcement special pay, and 
all other personnel from the Office of Personnel Management's (OPM) 
Central Personnel Data File (CPDF). For the purposes of this report, 
attrition is defined as resignations and transfers from the department 
of employment. The average attrition rates for each fiscal year were 
calculated by dividing the sum of the resignations and transfers for a 
given year by the mean number of employees on the first and last pay 
period of that fiscal year. The overall average attrition rate was 
calculated by multiplying the sum of each fiscal year's average 
attrition rate by each fiscal year's mean number of employees and 
dividing that number by the sum of each fiscal year's mean number of 
employees. 

Table 8: Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement Personnel Receiving 
Enhanced Retirement Benefits for Fiscal Year 2004 through Fiscal Year 
2008: 

Attrition rates (%): law enforcement personnel receiving enhanced 
retirement benefits: 

All: 
FY 2004: 2.6; 
FY 2005: 2.5; 
FY 2006: 3.2; 
FY 2007: 3.9; 
FY 2008: 3.8; 
Average: 3.2. 

DHS: 
FY 2004: 3.4; 
FY 2005: 2.8; 
FY 2006: 4.8; 
FY 2007: 6.3; 
FY 2008: 5.8; 
Average: 4.8. 

DOJ: 
FY 2004: 1.8; 
FY 2005: 2.1; 
FY 2006: 2.3; 
FY 2007: 2.4; 
FY 2008: 2.3; 
Average: 2.2. 

Treasury: 
FY 2004: 2.0; 
FY 2005: 1.3; 
FY 2006: 1.7; 
FY 2007: 1.5; 
FY 2008: 2.1; 
Average: 1.7. 

Source: GAO analysis of CPDF data. 

[End of table] 

Table 9: Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement-Related Personnel Not 
Receiving Enhanced Retirement Benefits for Fiscal Year 2004 through 
Fiscal Year 2008: 

Attrition rates (%): law enforcement-related personnel not receiving 
enhanced retirement benefits: 

All: 
FY 2004: 4.5; 
FY 2005: 4.2; 
FY 2006: 4.3; 
FY 2007: 4.8; 
FY 2008: 5.5; 
Average: 4.7. 

DHS: 
FY 2004: 3.7; 
FY 2005: 3.7; 
FY 2006: 3.7; 
FY 2007: 4.3; 
FY 2008: 4.7; 
Average: 4.1. 

DOJ: 
FY 2004: 2.7; 
FY 2005: 3.7; 
FY 2006: 3.3; 
FY 2007: 4.2; 
FY 2008: 3.8; 
Average: 3.5. 

Treasury: 
FY 2004: 1.6; 
FY 2005: 1.8; 
FY 2006: 1.8; 
FY 2007: 2.3; 
FY 2008: 2.3; 
Average: 2.0. 

Source: GAO analysis of CPDF data. 

[End of table] 

Table 10: Attrition Rates for Law Enforcement Personnel-Related 
Receiving Special Pay but Not Receiving Enhanced Retirement Benefits 
for Fiscal Year 2004 through Fiscal Year 2008: 

Attrition rates (%): law enforcement-related personnel receiving 
special pay but not receiving enhanced retirement benefits: 

All: 
FY 2004: 2.5; 
FY 2005: 2.5; 
FY 2006: 3.7; 
FY 2007: 3.4; 
FY 2008: 5.6; 
Average: 3.5. 

DHS: 
FY 2004: 0.8; 
FY 2005: 1.2; 
FY 2006: 3.1; 
FY 2007: 3.4; 
FY 2008: 4.7; 
Average: 2.8. 

DOJ[A]: 
FY 2004: [Empty]; 
FY 2005: [Empty]; 
FY 2006: [Empty]; 
FY 2007: [Empty]; 
FY 2008: [Empty]; 
Average: [Empty]. 

Treasury: 
FY 2004: 3.5; 
FY 2005: 2.8; 
FY 2006: 2.7; 
FY 2007: 1.6; 
FY 2008: 3.0; 
Average: 2.7. 

Source: GAO analysis of CPDF data. 

[A] Although FBI Police receive special pay rates, DOJ does not employ 
any law enforcement-related personnel receiving special base pay who 
were the focus of our analyses of special pay. 

[End of table] 

Table 11: Attrition Rates for Other Personnel Not Employed in Law 
Enforcement or Related Occupations for Fiscal Year 2004 through Fiscal 
Year 2008: 

Attrition rates (%): law enforcement-related personnel receiving 
special pay but not receiving enhanced retirement benefits: 

All: 
FY 2004: 6.0; 
FY 2005: 4.8; 
FY 2006: 5.2; 
FY 2007: 5.5; 
FY 2008: 5.2; 
Average: 5.4. 

DHS: 
FY 2004: 7.0; 
FY 2005: 5.6; 
FY 2006: 8.1; 
FY 2007: 7.3; 
FY 2008: 5.8; 
Average: 6.7. 

DOJ: 
FY 2004: 2.8; 
FY 2005: 2.9; 
FY 2006: 3.0; 
FY 2007: 3.7; 
FY 2008: 3.4; 
Average: 3.2. 

Treasury: 
FY 2004: 5.1; 
FY 2005: 5.3; 
FY 2006: 4.8; 
FY 2007: 5.7; 
FY 2008: 5.7; 
Average: 5.3. 

Source: GAO analysis of CPDF data. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: Federal Retention Incentives Utilization as Reported to 
OPM and Congress: 

Agency and OPM Authority: 

The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is required to submit an 
annual report to certain congressional committees on agencies' use of 
the retention incentives (as well as recruitment and relocation 
incentives) authorized in Sections 5753 and 5754 of title 5, United 
States Code.[Footnote 98] OPM requested that agencies not only submit a 
report on their use of retention incentives in each calendar year but 
also requested comments on any barriers faced in using theses 
incentives.[Footnote 99] 

Under Section 5754, with OPM authorization an agency may provide a 
retention incentive to certain eligible employees currently in the 
federal service if the agency either deems that the employee's 
unusually high or unique qualifications or the agency's special need 
for the employee's services make the employee's retention essential and 
that the employee would likely leave the federal service in the absence 
of the incentive. The retention incentive may not exceed 25 percent of 
the employee's annual rate of basic pay (may not exceed 10 percent if 
authorized for a group or category of employees). With OPM approval and 
critical agency need, the incentive may reach up to 50 percent. For 
most payment options, including an initial lump-sum payment, 
installments during the service period, a final lump-sum payment, or in 
some combination, the employee must sign a service agreement.[Footnote 
100] 

Incentives: All Reporting Agencies 2006 through 2007: 

OPM reports that in 2007, 41 of the 97 responding agencies paid a total 
of 22,794 retention incentives that valued over $127.0 million with an 
average incentive of $5,573. In 2006, 47 of the 95 responding agencies 
paid a total of 17,803 retention incentives that valued over $95.9 
million with an average incentive of $5,388.[Footnote 101] 

Incentives: Department of Homeland Security, 2006 through 2007: 

OPM reports that in 2007, DHS paid a total of 656 retention incentives 
that valued over $500,000 with an average incentive of $885. In 2006, 
DHS paid a total of 1,098 retention incentives that valued over $3.3 
million with an average incentive of $3,051. For both calendar years 
2006 and 2007, DHS's average incentives awarded were lower than the 
average incentives awarded for all reporting agencies. 

Incentives: Department of Justice, 2006 through 2007: 

OPM reports that in 2007, DOJ paid a total of 1,528 incentives that 
valued over $3.9 million with an average incentive of $2,554, which was 
lower than the average incentive awarded for all reporting agencies. In 
2006, DOJ paid a total of 281 incentives that valued over $2.0 million 
with an average incentive of $7,219, which was higher than the average 
incentive awarded for all reporting agencies. 

Incentives: Department of Treasury, 2006 through 2007: 

OPM reports that in 2007, the Department of the Treasury paid a total 
of 118 incentives that valued over $1.8 million with an average 
incentive of $15,280. In 2006, Department of the Treasury paid a total 
of 95 incentives that valued over $1.0 million with an average 
incentive of $11,215. For both calendar years 2006 and 2007, Treasury's 
average incentives awarded were higher than the average incentives 
awarded for all reporting agencies. 

Agency Incentive Utilization: 

Along with the submission of incentive usage data, OPM asked that 
agencies describe how they used the incentives and to discuss any 
perceived barriers to using retention incentives. In general, OPM 
reports that the agencies used the incentives most often to target 
specific occupations that present particular retention challenges 
(highly competitive market), to resolve retention challenges present in 
specific locations, and to meet a highly specified staffing challenge. 
Specifically, DOJ reported to OPM for calendar year 2007 that the 
Executive Office of United States Attorneys (EOUSA) has found that 
retention incentives are effective in addressing attrition and 
shortages in EOUSA key positions. 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: Comments from the Office of Personnel Management: 

United States Office Of Personnel Management: 
The Director: 
Washington, DC 20115: 
[hyperlink, http://www.opm.gov] 

July 24, 2009: 

Ms. Eileen R. Larence: 
Director, Homeland Security and Justice: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Larence: 

Thank you for providing the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) 
the opportunity to comment on the Government Accountability Office 
draft report titled "Federal Law Enforcement Retirement: Information on 
Enhanced Law Enforcement Benefits for Law Enforcement Personnel," GAO 
09-727. It was a pleasure working with your staff during their 
research. We appreciate the opportunity to provide comments on the 
report on the results of their investigation. 

We believe that this report will provide extremely useful information 
to decision makers reviewing the various human resource management 
tools available to the Government to effectively manage this essential 
segment of the Federal workforce. While many groups have sought 
extension of the law enforcement officer retirement provisions, doing 
so is both expensive and may not even have the intended effects. We 
strongly support your conclusion that the use of other human resource 
management tools "may present a cost-effective alternative for 
retaining law enforcement-related personnel." 

Technical comments to the draft report are enclosed. Unless otherwise 
noted, the suggested revisions are meant to provide technical accuracy 
and conform to terminology applicable to the Federal service. 

Please contact Mr. David Cushing on (202) 606-4660 should your office 
require additional information. 

Again, my thanks to your office for providing this opportunity to 
comment on the draft report. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

John Berry: 
Director: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VIII: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Eileen R. Larence, (202) 512-6510: 

Acknowledgements: 

In addition to the contact named above, Steve D. Morris, Assistant 
Director, managed this assignment. Elizabeth Dunn, George Erhart, and 
Meg Ullengren made significant contributions to the work. Geoffrey 
Hamilton provided significant legal support and analysis. Gregory 
Wilmoth provided significant assistance with design and methodology, as 
well as the data analysis from OPM's Central Personnel Data File. Adam 
Vogt provided assistance in report preparation, and Ryan D'Amore made 
contributions to the work during the preliminary phase of the review. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Enhanced retirement benefits refers to provisions governing early 
retirement, faster accruing pension benefits, and post-retirement 
benefits received by certain law enforcement personnel. 

[2] For the purposes of this report, we use a broad definition of the 
term "law enforcement related" that includes those who have already 
requested or those whose advocates told us that they may request 
enhanced retirement benefits or special pay in the future. In addition 
to the 51,000 personnel performing law enforcement-related duties who 
do not currently receive enhanced retirement benefits, there are also 
approximately 51,000 Transportation Security Officers who may seek 
enhanced retirement benefits in the future. 

[3] OPM implementing regulations further provide details on various 
aspects of the LEO definition. Job activities where primary duties 
involve maintaining order, protecting life and property, guarding 
against or inspecting for violations of law, or investigating persons 
other than those who are suspected or convicted of offenses against the 
criminal laws of the United States are generally not included in OPM's 
regulatory LEO definition. 

[4] See Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2003, Pub. L. No. 110-161, 121 
Stat. 1844 (2007). About 20,000 CBP Officers received enhanced 
retirement benefits directly through legislation via the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2008. These enhanced benefits were not retroactive. 
Rather, CBP Officers began receiving these benefits in July 2008. 

[5] DHS, DOJ, and Department of the Treasury employed approximately 91 
percent of all federal law enforcement personnel receiving LEO 
retirement benefits or similarly enhanced retirement benefits in fiscal 
year 2008, approximately 75 percent of personnel employed in law 
enforcement-related occupations not receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits, and approximately 51 percent of personnel employed in law 
enforcement-related occupations receiving special pay but not receiving 
enhanced retirement benefits. Special pay refers to the nonstandard 
basic pay system applied to certain law enforcement-related personnel 
that do not currently receive enhanced retirement benefits. 

[6] LEO coverage can also pertain to those individuals who have been 
promoted to a management position or a supervisory or administrative 
position. 

[7] CPDF is a comprehensive federal personnel database that is 
maintained by OPM. We queried CPDF by department, agency, subagency, 
occupation series, and retirement plan as well as many other personnel 
variables to meet the needs of our analysis of law enforcement and law 
enforcement-related personnel. National security and intelligence 
agencies such as the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the National 
Security Agency (NSA) do not submit personnel data to OPM's CPDF and, 
thus, law enforcement personnel in these agencies are not included in 
the total number of federal law enforcement personnel used in this 
report. 

[8] GAO, OPM's Central Personnel Data File: Data Appears Sufficiently 
Reliable to Meet Most Customer Needs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-98-199] (Washington, D.C.: 
September 30, 1998). Also, in a document dated February 28, 2008, an 
OPM official confirmed that OPM continues to follow the CPDF data 
quality standards and procedures contained in our 1998 report. 

[9] We defined special pay as receiving pay through a non-General 
Schedule (GS) pay plan. We did not include those staff receiving 
special rates under a GS pay plan because these rates vary by location 
rather than covering an entire LEO group such as job series 0083 
(police). Special rates do not change the rate of base pay. 

[10] For the purposes of this review, we analyzed CPDF data beginning 
with fiscal year 2004 because this was the first full fiscal year to 
include DHS personnel. Also, we analyzed CPDF data ending with fiscal 
year 2008 because this was the most recent fiscal year available. 

[11] Fiscal year 2007 data were the latest available when we analyzed 
the moves from positions with enhanced retirement benefits to positions 
without enhanced retirement benefits. 

[12] See Pub. L. No. 80-168, 61 Stat. 307 (1947). 

[13] See Pub. L. No. 80-879, 62 Stat. 1221 (1948). 

[14] This definition includes those personnel, such as those in the 
Bureau of Prisons whose duties, in connection with detention of persons 
suspected or convicted of offenses against the criminal laws of the 
United States, require frequent contact with such persons in the 
detention, direction, supervision, inspection, training, employment, 
care, transportation, or rehabilitation of such persons. 

[15] The provision included mandatory retirement for law enforcement 
officers under CSRS upon reaching the age of 55 or the completion of 20 
years of service if already over that age. Subsequent legislation 
raised the mandatory retirement age for LEOs to 57. 

[16] The 1986 FERS legislation also contained language including those 
positions that are (1) primarily for the protection of officials of the 
United States against threats to personal safety, and (2) sufficiently 
rigorous that employment opportunities be limited to young and 
physically vigorous individuals, as determined by the Director of OPM 
considering the recommendations of the employing agency. 

[17] Implementing OPM regulations for CSRS and FERS generally provide 
that the LEO definition does not include an employee whose primary 
duties involve maintaining order, protecting life and property, 
guarding against or inspecting for violations of law, or investigating 
persons other than those who are suspected or convicted of offenses 
against the criminal laws of the United States. 

[18] This is a hypothetical example for illustrative purposes only. A 
non-LEO federal employee under CSRS is not eligible to retire until he 
or she has reached age 55 and has 30 years of creditable service. 

[19] The percentages for the defined benefit under both CSRS and FERS 
are applied to an individual's highest 3 earning years to compute the 
benefit amount. 

[20] First, if an agency head judges that the public interest so 
requires, that agency head may exempt such an employee from mandatory 
separation until that employee becomes 60 years of age. In addition, 
the President, by executive order, may exempt an employee (other than a 
member of the Capitol Police or Supreme Court Police) from mandatory 
separation if the President determines the public interest so requires. 
5 U.S.C. §§ 8335(b), (e); 5 U.S.C. §§ 8425(b), (e). 

[21] A recent MSPB case also affects agencies' hiring of preference 
eligible veterans beyond an agency's maximum entry age for a position. 
In Isabella v. Department of State and Office of Personnel Management, 
109 M.S.P.R. 453 (2008), the MSPB held, in general, that a federal 
agency is required to waive a maximum entry age rule for a preference- 
eligible veteran unless the agency can establish that the entry age 
rule is essential to the performance of the duties of the position. 

[22] Under certain circumstances, OPM also has the authority to 
establish higher minimum rates of basic pay, otherwise know as "special 
rates," for GS employees to address recruitment or retention problems. 
Such employees are entitled to the higher of the special rate or the 
applicable GS locality-adjusted rate of pay. According to OPM, only a 
small percentage of LEOs receive such OPM-established special rates, 
most of which are medical personnel working at correctional 
institutions. All FBI Police receive a special rate. 

[23] Premium pay is subject to both biweekly and annual caps imposed by 
5 U.S.C. 5547 (i.e., the biweekly or annual locality rate for GS-15, 
step 10, in most cases). 

[24] Under FERS, for example, an employing agency makes a determination 
whether the duties of a position are (1) primarily the investigation, 
apprehension, or detention of individuals suspected or convicted of 
offenses against the criminal laws of the United States, and (2) 
sufficiently rigorous that employment opportunities are required to be 
limited to young and physically vigorous individuals. Terms such as 
"primary duties" and "rigorous position" are defined in OPM 
regulations. 

[25] 5 C.F.R. §§ 831.911(a) and 842.808(a). 

[26] Nuclear Materials Couriers are responsible for performing or 
supervising the safe and secure transportation of sensitive nuclear 
materials owned or controlled by the Department of Energy. 

[27] MSPB's statutory functions include (1) providing for independent 
adjudication of appeals of personnel actions for federal employees, and 
(2) conducting studies of Federal merit systems and related issues. 
According to MSPB, it serves as an independent, bipartisan guardian of 
the merit systems under which Federal employees work. 

[28] For example, bills introduced in previous sessions of Congress 
which, if enacted, would have provided law enforcement retirement 
coverage for (1) certain IRS employees whose duties are primarily the 
collection of delinquent taxes and the securing of delinquent returns, 
(2) federal employees not otherwise covered by the term "law 
enforcement officer" whose duties include the investigation or 
apprehension of suspected or convicted individuals and who are 
authorized to carry a firearm, and (3) Assistant U. S. Attorneys. 

[29] See the Strom Thurmond National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 1999 Pub. L. No. 105-261, 112 Stat. 1920 (1998). With 
agency support, this legislation made Nuclear Materials Couriers 
eligible for immediate retirement after completing 25 years of 
qualifying service (or 20 years of qualifying service upon reaching 50 
years of age), like the U.S. Capitol Police, the Supreme Court Police, 
firefighters, and "law enforcement officers." Among other provisions, 
the legislation also made Nuclear Materials Couriers subject to (1) the 
annuity computation formula now also applicable to the U.S. Capital 
Police, the Supreme Court Police, firefighters, and "law enforcement 
officers" and (2) mandatory separation provisions. 

[30] See, e.g., H.R. 750, H.R. 2878, S. 1729, H.R. 1073, and S. 1354 
from the 110th Congress. 

[31] Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys views on this subject are 
discussed later in this report. 

[32] The Congressional Budget Office provides Congress with analysis to 
aid in economic and budgetary decisions for those programs covered by 
the federal budget. Interagency transfers and long-term costs to the 
government for bills beyond 10 years are not acknowledged directly in 
proposed bill scoring. 

[33] As previously stated, attrition consists of resignations and 
transfers from one federal agency to another. For more information on 
how we calculated attrition rates, see appendix I. 

[34] The government-wide population of law enforcement-related 
personnel receiving special pay is approximately 2 percent of the total 
law enforcement and related population and totals approximately 2,800. 

[35] Although not included in the governmentwide or DHS-wide analyses 
of attrition in law enforcement-related personnel, the Transportation 
Security Administration's Transportation Security Officer position 
accounted for approximately 51,000 employees in fiscal year 2008 and 
had an average attrition rate of 15.1 percent from fiscal years 2004 
through 2008. 

[36] According to the FBI, in fiscal year 2008, the FBI Police 
experienced a loss of 41 employees from the Unit. Of these 41 
employees, 24 left for other Bureau positions, 4 left to receive a 
Special Agent position, 15 were promoted to other Bureau positions, and 
the remaining 5 went to positions in different career paths. 

[37] Percentages presented above do not add up to 100 percent due to 
rounding. 

[38] GAO, Federal Uniformed Police: Selected Data on Pay, Recruitment, 
and Retention at 13 Police Forces in the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan 
Area, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-658] (Washington, 
D.C.: June 13, 2003). 

[39] The EHRI is one of five OPM-led e-Government initiatives designed 
to leverage the benefits of information technology in line with the 
President's Management Agenda, which was announced in the summer of 
2001. In support of this agenda, The Office of Management and Budget 
has mandated that all executive branch agencies eliminate paper 
personnel folders by October 2010. OPM's CPDF is to be phased out and 
completely replaced with EHRI by the end of fiscal year 2009, but plans 
are for EHRI to house the last 5 fiscal years of archived CPDF data. 
Legislative and judicial branch agencies also have the option of 
participating in EHRI. 

[40] GAO, Federal Workforce: Pay, Recruitment, and Retention of Federal 
Employees, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-87-37] 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 10 1987). 

[41] OPM periodically updates the "normal" actuarial costs and agency 
contributions necessary to cover pension costs. According to OPM 
actuaries, the actuarial costs and agency contributions were last 
updated in 2007 and the next update is scheduled to occur for fiscal 
year 2011. 

[42] See Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-161, 
121 Stat. 1844, 2075-78 (2007). 

[43] H.Comm. on Appropriations, 110th Cong., Committee Print on H.R. 
2764/Public Law 110-161, Division E - Department of Homeland Security 
Appropriations Act at 1031 (2008), accompanying the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2008. 

[44] H.Comm. on Appropriations, 110th Cong., Committee Print on H.R. 
2638/Public Law 110-329, Division D - Department of Homeland Security 
Appropriations Act at 627 (2008), accompanying the Consolidated 
Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing Appropriations Act, 2009. 

[45] Approximately 94 percent of the approximately 20,000 CBP Officers 
provided enhanced retirement benefits in fiscal year 2008 were under 
FERS and the remaining 6 percent were under CSRS. Although CBP Officers 
were provided enhanced retirement benefits beginning in July 2008, some 
employee groups have previously been legislatively provided with such 
benefits retroactively, which would be at a greater cost to the 
employing agency. 

[46] 21st Century Department of Justice Appropriations Authorization 
Act (Pub. L. No. 107-273, 116 Stat. 1758, 1830 (2002)). 

[47] There is a class action lawsuit, King v. United States of America, 
No. 07-589 C, currently pending in the United States Court of Federal 
Claims, regarding these provisions. The complaint alleges, among other 
things, that the 2002 act increased the plaintiffs' pay and benefits 
that the defendant has failed to provide. In its motion to dismiss, the 
defendant asserted, in general, that the 2002 act conveyed 
discretionary authority to establish such a permanent police force and 
that the FBI has not yet established such a permanent police force. The 
defendant's motion to dismiss further provides, in part, that the FBI 
determined that implementation would not be feasible given the 
potential fiscal impact that the retirement system issues created. 

[48] According to OPM actuaries, as of April 2009, four out of five 
federal employees were covered by FERS. 

[49] This figure was calculated using fiscal year 2008 population data 
and assumed that approximately 25,000 personnel would have been granted 
enhanced retirement benefits if these pieces of legislation had passed. 
We also assumed that the employing agency would have had to contribute 
an additional $10,000 for each position based on the funding 
appropriated for CBP Officer retirement benefits in fiscal year 2009. 

[50] The Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund is a trust fund 
covering the defined benefit components of CSRS and FERS. 

[51] According to OPM actuaries, as of September 2007, the Civil 
Service Retirement and Disability Fund had net assets of $706.4 billion 
available for benefit payments under both CSRS and FERS, as well as 
accrued liability under the plans of $634.5 billion. In May 2009, OPM 
actuaries stated that the fund is not in danger of becoming insolvent 
and projected there is no point over the next 75 years at which the 
fund will become exhausted. 

[52] GAO, Fiscal Stewardship: A Critical Challenge Facing our Nation, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-362SP] (Washington, 
D.C.: Jan. 31, 2007) and A Call for Stewardship: Enhancing the Federal 
Government's Ability to Address Key Fiscal and Other 21st Century 
Challenges, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-93SP], 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 17 2007). 

[53] OPM implementing regulations for employees covered by FERS 
generally provide, in part, that the definition of the term "law 
enforcement officer" does not include an employee whose primary duties 
involve maintaining order, protecting life and property, guarding 
against or inspecting for violations of law, or investigating persons 
other than those who are suspected or convicted of offenses against the 
criminal laws of the United States. 5 C.F.R. § 842.802. 

[54] In addition, as discussed earlier, in 2002, the 21st Century 
Department of Justice Appropriations Authorization Act provided that 
the Director of the FBI may establish a permanent police force, with 
specified enhanced retirement benefits, to be known as the FBI Police. 

[55] GAO, Human Capital: Key Principles for Effective Strategic 
Workforce Planning, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-39] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 11 2003). 

[56] GAO, A Model of Strategic Human Capital Management, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-373SP] (Washington, D.C.: March 15, 
2002). 

[57] At agency discretion, certain employees may receive 
administratively uncontrollable overtime pay equal to 10 percent to 25 
percent of their basic pay. 

[58] GAO, FBI Transformation: Human Capital Strategies May Assist the 
FBI in Its Commitment to Address Top Priorities, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-817T] (Washington, D.C.: June 3, 
2004). 

[59] Accompanying some of these monetary incentives are service 
agreements for specified time periods and requirements that the 
incentive not exceed 25 percent of the employee's annual rate of basic 
pay multiplied by the number of years (including fractions of a year) 
in the service period (not to exceed 4 years). With OPM approval, this 
cap may be increased to 50 percent, based on a critical agency need, as 
long as the total incentive does not exceed 100 percent of the 
employee's annual rate of basic pay. A recruitment or relocation 
incentive may be paid as an initial lump-sum payment at the beginning 
of the service period, in installments throughout the service period, 
as a final lump-sum payment upon completion of the service period, or 
in a combination of these methods. 

[60] In May 2009, the Director of OPM issued a memorandum requesting 
that department and agency heads review their use of recruitment, 
relocation, and retention incentives to ensure that ongoing and new 
authorizations for payments to employees are used only when necessary 
to support their mission and program needs. The memorandum further 
stated that the cost of using any of these pay flexibilities should be 
weighed against the benefits to be gained. In July 2009, the Director 
of OPM issued a second memo that, among other things, requests agencies 
to review, and if necessary, update their use of recruitment, 
relocation, and retention incentives. The memo also states that OPM is 
conducting a detailed review on the use of recruitment, relocation, and 
retention incentives in the agencies where the incentives are paid most 
often to identify ways to strengthen the effectiveness of the program. 

[61] According to ATF, the bureau recognizes the contributions of its 
law enforcement covered personnel who conduct a substantial amount of 
their duties and responsibilities using foreign languages with monetary 
awards. As part of the Health Improvement Program, the agency maintains 
a fully-equipped fitness center at the National Headquarters Building 
and it partially funds the enrollment of employees stationed in other 
locations in local fitness centers. Employees covered by the law 
enforcement provisions are allowed to participate in physical fitness 
activities for up to 4 hours each week during their official duty 
hours. Non-law enforcement covered personnel can participate in 
physical fitness activities for up to 3 hours per week. 

[62] OPM, Report to Congress: Recruitment, Retention, and Relocation 
Incentives Calendar Year 2007 (September 2008) and OPM, Report to 
Congress: Recruitment, Retention, and Relocation Incentives Calendar 
Year 2006 (September 2007). 

[63] For calendar year 2007, DHS's submission to OPM included data on 
the number of retention incentives paid in calendar year 2007 to GS- 
0080 (security specialists) and GS-0083 (police officers) for services 
performed in calendar year 2006. However, these incentives were 
terminated effective January 6, 2007. 

[64] The other departments that reported their use of retention 
incentives in OPM's Recruitment, Retention, and Relocation Incentives 
reports for 2006 and 2007 included the Departments of Agriculture, 
Commerce, Defense, Education, Health and Human Services, Housing and 
Urban Development, Interior, Labor, State, Transportation, and Veterans 
Affairs. To compare DHS, DOJ, and Treasury's use of retention 
incentives to the other reporting departments, we used the average 
incentive awarded as reported to OPM and we compared the percentage of 
personnel awarded the incentives during fiscal years 2006 and 2007, 
based on our calculations. 

[65] GAO, Military Personnel: DOD Needs to Improve the Transparency and 
Reassess the Reasonableness, Appropriateness, Affordability, and 
Sustainability of Its Military Compensation System, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-798] (Washington, D.C.: July 19, 
2005). 

[66] Section 13811 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 
(Pub. L. No. 103-66, 107 Stat. 312, 668-70 (1993)), as amended, is 
commonly referred to as the Customs Officer Pay Reform Act (COPRA) but 
has also been referred to as the Customs Officers Pay Reform Amendments 
(COPRA), and the Customs Overtime Pay Reform Act (COPRA). 

[67] DHS, DOJ, and Department of the Treasury employed approximately 91 
percent of all federal law enforcement personnel receiving LEO 
retirement benefits or similarly enhanced retirement benefits in fiscal 
year 2008, approximately 75 percent of personnel employed in law 
enforcement-related occupations not receiving enhanced retirement 
benefits, and approximately 51 percent of personnel employed in law 
enforcement-related occupations receiving special pay but not receiving 
enhanced retirement benefits. Special pay refers to the nonstandard 
basic pay system applied to certain law enforcement-related personnel 
that do not currently receive enhanced retirement benefits such as U.S. 
Secret Service Police (occupation series 0083). 

[68] For the purposes of this review, we analyzed CPDF data beginning 
with fiscal year 2004 because this was the first full fiscal year to 
include DHS personnel. Also, we analyzed CPDF data ending with fiscal 
year 2008 because this was the most recent fiscal year available. 

[69] GAO, OPM's Central Personnel Data File: Data Appears Sufficiently 
Reliable to Meet Most Customer Needs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-98-199] (Washington, D.C.: 
September 30, 1998). Also, in a document dated February 28, 2008, an 
OPM official confirmed that OPM continues to follow the CPDF data 
quality standards and procedures contained in our 1998 report. 

[70] See appendix IV for more details regarding special pay. 

[71] Fiscal year 2007 data were the latest available when we analyzed 
the moves from positions with enhanced retirement benefits to positions 
without enhanced retirement benefits. 

[72] GAO, FBI Transformation: Human Capital Strategies May Assist the 
FBI in Its Commitment to Address Top Priorities, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-817T] (Washington, D.C.: June 3, 
2004).and Military Personnel: DOD Needs to Improve the Transparency and 
Reassess the Reasonableness, Appropriateness, Affordability, and 
Sustainability of Its Military Compensation System, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-798] (Washington, D.C.: July 19, 
2005). 

[73] The statutory definition of "law enforcement officer" for Civil 
Service Retirement System (CSRS) purposes is set out at 5 U.S.C. 
8331(20). OPM's implementing regulations are found at 5 C.F.R. Part 
831, Subpart I. 

[74] The Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) definition of "law 
enforcement officer" is set out in 5 U.S.C. 8401(17). OPM's 
implementing regulations are found at 5 C.F.R. Part 842, Subpart H. 

[75] The CSRS LEO definition additionally provides that the term 
"detention" includes the duties of certain specified prison support 
staff, such as employees of the Bureau of Prisons, whose duties in 
connection with individuals in detention suspected or convicted of 
specified criminal offenses "require frequent (as determined by the 
appropriate administrative authority with the concurrence of the Office 
[OPM]) direct contact with these individuals in their detention, 
direction, supervision, inspection, training, employment, care, 
transportation, or rehabilitation." 

[76] Similar to the CSRS provisions, the FERS LEO provisions include 
the duties of certain specified prison support staff. Included under 
the FERS LEO provisions are certain specified prison support staff, 
such as employees of the Bureau of Prisons, whose duties in connection 
with individuals in detention suspected or convicted of specified 
criminal offenses require frequent direct contact with such 
individuals, and are sufficiently rigorous that employment 
opportunities should be limited to young and physically vigorous 
individuals, as determined by the head of the employing agency. 

[77] Generally, under the FERS statutory provisions, this determination 
is to be made by the Director of OPM considering the recommendations of 
the employing agency. 

[78] H.R. Rep. No. 100-374 at 21 (1987). 

[79] In addition, the CSRS and FERS definitions, in general, have been 
amended to include the duties of certain federal correctional 
employees, such as those in the Bureau of Prisons, whose duties in 
connection with persons in detention suspected or convicted of offenses 
against the criminal laws of the U.S. require frequent direct contact 
with such persons. The FERS provisions include the previously mentioned 
rigorous duty standard. 

[80] The MSPB's statutory functions include (1) providing for 
independent adjudication of appeals of personnel actions for federal 
employees, and (2) conducting studies of federal merit systems and 
related issues. According to MSPB, it serves as an independent, 
bipartisan guardian of the merit systems under which federal employees 
work. 

[81] A 2007 MSPB decision, Haut v. Department of the Interior, 2007 
MSPB 1366 (2007), notes that through case law, this "young and 
physically vigorous" requirement also applies to employees seeking law 
enforcement officer retirement credit under CSRS (citing Houck, et al., 
v. Department of the Navy, 82 M.S.P.R. 7, 10 (1999); Bingaman v. 
Department of the Treasury, 127 F.3d 1431, 1435 (Fed. Cir. 1997)). 

[82] See, Ferrier v. Office of Personnel Management, 60 M.S.P.R. 342, 
345 (1994). 

[83] Watson v. Department of the Navy, 262 F.3d 1292, 1299 (Fed. Cir. 
2001) (citing S. Rep. No. 93-948, at 2 (1074), reprinted in 
U.S.C.C.A.N. 3698, 3699), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 1083 (2002). 

[84] Watson v. Department of the Navy, 86 M.S.P.R. 318, 321 (2000). 

[85] Cole v. Department of the Interior, 2007 MSPB LEXIS 4819 (2007). 

[86] Bingaman, 127 F.3d at 1436. 

[87] Cole, 2007 MSPB LEXIS 4819 (2007). 

[88] Watson, 262 F.3d at 1303. 

[89] Bingaman, 127 F.3d 1431, 1435 (quoting Morgan v. Office of Pers. 
Mgmt., 773 F.2d 282, 286-87 (Fed. Cir. 1985)). 

[90] Crowley v. United States, 398 F.3d 1329, 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2005). 

[91] Id. 

[92] Id. 

[93] Id. at 1339. 

[94] Id. 

[95] Id. 

[96] Id. 

[97] For example, under CSRS, an employee who is separated from the 
service after becoming 50 years of age and completing 20 years of 
service as a law enforcement officer, firefighter, Nuclear Materials 
Courier, or Customs and Border Patrol officer, or any combination of 
such service totaling at least 20 years, is entitled to an annuity. 

[98] Section 101(c) of the Federal Workforce Flexibility Act of 2004 
(Pub. L. No. 108-411, 118 Stat. 2305 (2004)) requires OPM to submit an 
annual report to specified committees of the House and Senate during 
calendar years 2005 through 2009. The act also requires that OPM 
include agencies' use of recruitment or relocation incentives; however, 
the scope of our analysis does not include these incentives. 

[99] 5 U.S.C. §§ 5753 and 5754 use the term "bonus"; however, OPM uses 
the term "incentive" to differentiate the monetary incentive for an 
individual or group to accept a new position or to remain employed in 
the current position from the payments which are used to reward 
individual, or group, for quality of performance (the usual connotation 
of "bonus"). 

[100] Authorized under 5 U.S.C. 5754 and 5CFR, part 575, subpart C. 

[101] Because the new incentive authorities were not implemented until 
May 2005, the reporting period for the incentive use does not cover the 
entire 2005 calendar year. Therefore, valid comparisons of 2005 to 2006 
and 2007 cannot be made and are thus not included in this appendix. 

[End of section] 

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Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470: 

Congressional Relations: 

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Chuck Young, Managing Director, youngc1@gao.gov: 
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U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
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Washington, D.C. 20548: