Collapse to view only § 532.245 - Selection of payline and issuance of wage schedules.
- § 532.201 - Definitions.
- § 532.203 - Structure of regular wage schedules.
- § 532.205 - The use of Federal, State, and local minimum wage requirements in determining prevailing rates.
- § 532.207 - Time schedule for wage surveys.
- § 532.209 - Lead agency.
- § 532.211 - Criteria for establishing appropriated fund wage areas.
- § 532.213 - Industries included in regular appropriated fund wage surveys.
- § 532.215 - Establishments included in regular appropriated fund surveys.
- § 532.217 - Appropriated fund survey jobs.
- § 532.219 - Criteria for establishing nonappropriated fund wage areas.
- § 532.221 - Industries included in regular nonappropriated fund surveys.
- § 532.223 - Establishments included in regular nonappropriated fund surveys.
- § 532.225 - Nonappropriated fund survey jobs.
- § 532.227 - Agency wage committee.
- § 532.229 - Local wage survey committee.
- § 532.231 - Responsibilities of participating organizations.
- § 532.233 - Preparation for full-scale wage surveys.
- § 532.235 - Conduct of full-scale wage survey.
- § 532.237 - Review by the local wage survey committee.
- § 532.239 - Review by the lead agency.
- § 532.241 - Analysis of usable wage survey data.
- § 532.243 - Consultation with the agency wage committee.
- § 532.245 - Selection of payline and issuance of wage schedules.
- § 532.247 - Wage change surveys.
- § 532.249 - Minimum rates for hard-to-fill positions.
- § 532.251 - Special rates.
- § 532.253 - Special rates or rate ranges for leader, supervisory, and production facilitating positions.
- § 532.254 - Special schedules.
- § 532.255 - Regular appropriated fund wage schedules in foreign areas.
- § 532.257 - Regular nonappropriated fund wage schedules in foreign areas.
- § 532.259 - Special appropriated fund wage schedules for U.S. insular areas.
- § 532.261 - Special wage schedules for leader and supervisory schedules for leader and supervisory wage employees in the Puerto Rico wage area.
- § 532.263 - Special wage schedules for production facilitating positions.
- § 532.265 - Special wage schedules for apprentices and shop trainees.
- § 532.267 - Special wage schedules for aircraft, electronic, and optical instrument overhaul and repair positions in Puerto Rico.
- § 532.269 - Special wage schedules for Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army navigation lock and dam employees.
- § 532.271 - Special wage schedules for National Park Service positions in overlap areas.
- § 532.273 - Special wage schedules for United States Information Agency Radio Antenna Rigger positions.
- § 532.277 - Special wage schedules for U.S. Navy positions in Bridgeport, California.
- § 532.281 - Special wage schedules for divers and tenders.
- § 532.283 - Special wage schedules for nonappropriated fund tipped employees classified as waiter/waitress.
- § 532.285 - Special wage schedules for supervisors of negotiated rate Bureau of Reclamation employees.
- § 532.287 - Special wage schedules for nonappropriated fund automotive mechanics.
- § 532.289 - Special wage schedules for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers flood control employees of the Vicksburg District in Mississippi.
- APPENDIX Appendix A - Appendix A to Subpart B of Part 532—Nationwide Schedule of Appropriated Fund Regular Wage Surveys
- APPENDIX Appendix B - Appendix B to Subpart B of Part 532—Nationwide Schedule of Nonappropriated Fund Regular Wage Surveys
- APPENDIX Appendix C - Appendix C to Subpart B of Part 532—Appropriated Fund Wage and Survey Areas
- APPENDIX Appendix D - Appendix D to Subpart B of Part 532—Nonappropriated Fund Wage and Survey Areas
§ 532.201 - Definitions.
For the purposes of this part:
Full-scale survey means a survey conducted at least every 2 years in which data are collected from a current sampling of establishments in the private sector by personal visit of data collectors. With the unanimous consent of the members of a Local Wage Survey Committee, data may also be obtained from a private sector establishment or establishments during a full-scale wage survey by telephone, mail, or electronic means.
Host activity is the local Federal activity designated by the lead agency to obtain employment statistics from other Federal activities in the wage area and to provide support facilities and clerical assistance for the wage survey.
Lead agency means the agency designated by the Office of Personnel Management to plan and conduct wage surveys, analyze wage survey data, and determine and issue required wage schedules for a wage area.
Survey area means that part of the wage area where the private enterprise establishments included in the wage survey are located.
Wage area means that geographic area within which a single set of regular wage schedules is applied uniformly by Federal installations to covered occupations.
Wage change survey means a survey in which rate change data are collected from the same establishments and for the same establishment occupations represented in the full-scale survey. These data may be collected by telephone, mail, electronic means, or personal visit.
§ 532.203 - Structure of regular wage schedules.
(a) Each nonsupervisory and leader regular wage schedule shall have 15 grades, which shall be designated as follows:
(1) WG means an appropriated fund nonsupervisory grade;
(2) WL means an appropriated fund leader grade;
(3) NA means a nonappropriated fund nonsupervisory grade; and
(4) NL means a nonappropriated fund leader grade.
(b) Each supervisory regular wage schedule shall have 19 grades, which shall be designated as follows:
(1) WS means an appropriated fund supervisory grade; and
(2) NS means a nonappropriated fund supervisory grade.
(c) The step 2 or payline rate for each grade of a leader regular wage schedule shall be equal to 110 percent of the rate for step 2 of the corresponding grade of the nonsupervisory regular wage schedule for the area.
(d) The step 2 or payline rate for each grade of an appropriated fund supervisory regular wage schedule shall be:
(1) For grades WS-1 through WS-10, equal to the rate for step 2 of the corresponding grade of the nonsupervisory regular wage schedule for the area, plus 30 percent of the rate for step 2 of WG-10;
(2) For grades WS-11 through WS-18, the second rate of WS-10, plus 5, 11.5, 19.6, 29.2, 40.3, 52.9, 67.1, and 82.8 percent, respectively, of the difference between the step 2 rates of WS-10 and WS-19; and
(3) For grade WS-19, the third rate in effect for General Schedule grade GS-14 at the time of the area wage schedule adjustment. The WS-19 rate shall include any cost of living allowance payable for the area under 5 U.S.C. 5941.
(e) The step 2 or payline rate for each grade of a nonappropriated fund supervisory regular wage schedule shall be:
(1) For grades NS-1 through NS-8, equal to the rate for step 2 of the corresponding grade of the nonsupervisory regular wage schedule for the area, plus 20 percent of the rate for step 2 of NA-8;
(2) For grades NS-9 through NS-15, equal to 120 percent of the rate for step 2 of the corresponding grade of the nonsupervisory regular wage schedule for the area;
(3) For grades NS-16 through NS-19, the rates will be 25, 30, 35 and 40 percent, respectively, above the step 2 rate of NA-15;
(f) The number of within-grade steps and the differentials between steps for each nonsupervisory grade on a regular wage schedule shall be established in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 5343(e)(1). Each grade on a leader and supervisory regular wage schedule shall have 5 within-grade steps with step 2 set according to paragraphs (c), (d), or (e) of this section, as appropriate, and—
(1) Step 1 set at 96 percent of the step 2 rate;
(2) Step 3 set at 104 percent of the step 2 rate;
(3) Step 4 set at 108 percent of the step 2 rate; and
(4) Step 5 set at 112 percent of the step 2 rate.
§ 532.205 - The use of Federal, State, and local minimum wage requirements in determining prevailing rates.
(a) Wage schedules, including special schedules, shall not include any rates of pay less than the higher of:
(1) The minimum rate prescribed by section 6(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended, or
(2) The highest State or local minimum wage rate in the local wage area which is applicable to the private industry counterparts of the single largest Federal industry/occupation in the wage area.
(b) Wage data below the minimum wage rates prescribed by section 6(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended, shall not be used in determining prevailing rates.
(c) Adjustments to regular wage schedules to comply with the minimum wage rate determined to be applicable under paragraph (a) of this section shall be computed as follows:
(1) The step 2 rate of grade 1 of the nonsupervisory wage schedule shall be set at a rate which, upon application of the 4 percent step-rate differential, provides a step 1 rate which is equal to the applicable minimum wage rate.
(2) An intergrade differential shall be determined as 5 percent of the rate established as the step 2 rate of grade 1, rounded to the nearest whole cent. This intergrade differential shall be added to the step 2 rate of each grade, beginning with grade 1, to determine the step 2 rate for the succeeding grade until the grade is reached at which the step 2 rate established through the wage survey process equals or exceeds the rate determined under this procedure. Rates of all grades above that point shall be computed in accordance with § 532.221(b) of this subpart.
(3) Steps 1, 3, 4, and 5 of each grade adjusted under paragraph (c) of this section shall be set at 96, 104, 108, and 112 percent of the step 2 rate, respectively.
(4) The leader and supervisory wage schedule grades corresponding to each nonsupervisory grade adjusted under paragraph (c) of this section shall be constructed in accordance with the procedures of § 532.203 of this subpart, on the basis of the step 2 rates established under this paragraph for the nonsupervisory wage schedule grades.
(d) All wage schedule adjustments made under this section shall be effective on the effective date of the applicable minimum wage rate.
§ 532.207 - Time schedule for wage surveys.
(a) Wage surveys shall be conducted on a 2-year cycle at annual intervals.
(b) A full-scale survey shall be made in the first year of the 2-year cycle and shall include development of a current sample of establishments and the collection of wage data by visits to establishments. With the unanimous consent of the members of a Local Wage Survey Committee, data may also be obtained from a private sector establishment or establishments during a full-scale wage survey by telephone, mail, or electronic means.
(c) A wage-change survey shall be made every other year using only the same employers, occupations, survey jobs, and establishment weights used in the preceding full-scale survey. Data may be collected by telephone, mail, electronic means, or personal contact.
(d) Scheduling of surveys shall take into consideration the following criteria:
(1) The best timing in relation to wage adjustments in the principal local private enterprise establishments;
(2) Reasonable distribution of workload of the lead agency;
(3) The timing of surveys for nearby or selected wage areas; and
(4) Scheduling relationships with other pay surveys.
(e) The Office of Personnel Management may authorize adjustments in the normal cycle as requested by the lead agency and based on the criteria in paragraph (d) of this section or to accommodate special studies or adjustments consistent with determining local prevailing rates.
(f) The beginning month of appropriated and nonappropriated fund wage surveys and the fiscal year during which full-scale surveys will be conducted are set out as appendices A and B to this subpart and are incorporated in and made part of this section.
§ 532.209 - Lead agency.
(a) The Office of Personnel Management shall select a lead agency for each appropriated and nonappropriated fund wage area based on the number of agency employees covered by the regular wage schedule for that area and the capability of the agency in providing administrative and clerical support at the local level necessary to conduct a wage survey.
(b) OPM may authorize exceptions to these criteria where this will improve the administration of the local wage survey.
(c) The listing in appendix A to this subpart shows the lead agency for each appropriated fund wage area. The Department of Defense is the lead agency for each nonappropriated fund wage area.
§ 532.211 - Criteria for establishing appropriated fund wage areas.
(a) Each wage area shall consist of one or more survey areas along with nonsurvey areas, if any.
(1) Survey area: A survey area is composed of the counties, parishes, cities, or townships in which survey data are collected. Except in very unusual circumstances, a wage area that includes a Metropolitan Statistical Area shall have the Metropolitan Statistical Area as the survey area or part of the survey area.
(2) Nonsurvey area: Nonsurvey counties, parishes, cities, or townships may be combined with the survey area(s) to form the wage area through consideration of the criteria in paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(b) Wage areas shall include wherever possible a recognized economic community such as a Metropolitan Statistical Area or a political unit such as a county. Two or more economic communities or political units, or both, may be combined to constitute a single wage area; however, except in unusual circumstances and as an exception to the criteria, an individually defined Metropolitan Statistical Area or county shall not be subdivided for the purpose of defining a wage area.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (a) of this section, wage areas shall be established when:
(1) There is a minimum of 100 wage employees of one agency subject to the regular schedule and the agency involved indicates that its local installation has the capacity to do the survey; and
(2) There is, within a reasonable commuting distance of the concentration of Federal employment;
(i) A minimum of either 20 establishments within survey specifications having at least 50 employees each; or 10 establishments having at least 50 employees each, with a combined total of 1,500 employees; and
(ii) The total private enterprise employment in the industries surveyed in the survey area is at least twice the Federal wage employment in the survey area.
(d)(1) Adjacent economic communities or political units meeting the separate wage area criteria in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section may be combined through consideration of:
(i) Distance, transportation facilities, and geographic features;
(ii) Commuting patterns; and
(iii) Similarities in overall population, employment, and the kinds and sizes of private industrial establishments.
(2) Generally, the criteria listed in paragraph (d)(1) of this section are considered in the order listed.
(3) When two wage areas are combined, the survey area of either or both may be used, depending on the concentrations of Federal and private employment and locations of establishments, the proximity of the survey areas to each other, and the extent of economic similarites or differences as indicated by relative levels of wage rates in each of the potential survey areas.
(e) Appropriated fund wage and survey area definitions are set out as appendix C to this subpart and are incorporated in and made part of this section.
(f) A single contiguous military installation defined as a Joint Base that would otherwise overlap two separate wage areas shall be included in only a single wage area. The wage area of such a Joint Base shall be defined to be the wage area with the most favorable payline based on an analysis of the simple average of the 15 nonsupervisory second step rates on each one of the regular wage schedules applicable in the otherwise overlapped wage areas.
§ 532.213 - Industries included in regular appropriated fund wage surveys.
(a) The lead agency must include the industries in the following North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes in all regular appropriated fund wage surveys:
2022 NAICS codes | 2022 NAICS industry titles | 311 through 339 (except 323) | All manufacturing classes except printing and related support activities (NAICS 323). | 221 | Utilities. | 481 | Air transportation. | 482 | Rail transportation. | 484 | Truck transportation. | 485 (except 4853) | Transit and ground passenger transportation except taxi and limousine service (NAICS 4853). | 487 (except 4872) | Scenic and sightseeing transportation except scenic and sightseeing transportation, water (NAICS 4872). | 488 (except 4883 and 4884) | Support activities for transportation except support activities for water transportation (NAICS 4883) and support activities for road transportation (NAICS 4884). | 492 | Couriers and messengers. | 493 | Warehousing and storage. | 516 | * Broadcasting and content providers. | 517 | Telecommunications. | 5621 | Waste collection. | 5622 | Waste Treatment and Disposal. | 423 | Merchant wholesalers, durable goods. | 424 | Merchant wholesalers, nondurable goods. |
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(b) A lead agency may add other industry classes to a regular survey in an area where these industries account for significant proportions of local private employment of the kinds and levels found in local Federal employment.
(c) Specifically excluded from all wage surveys for regular wage schedules are food service and laundry establishments and industries having peculiar employment conditions that directly affect the wage rates paid and that are the basis for special wage surveys.
§ 532.215 - Establishments included in regular appropriated fund surveys.
(a) All establishments having a total employment of 50 or more employees in the prescribed industries within a survey area shall be included within the survey universe. On rare occasions and as an exception to the rule, OPM may authorize lower minimum size levels based on a recommendation of the lead agency for the wage area.
(b) Establishments to be covered in surveys shall be selected under standard probability sample selection procedures. In areas with relatively few establishments, surveys shall cover all establishments within the prescribed industry and size groups.
(c) A lead agency may not delete from a survey an establishment properly included in an establishment list drawn under statistical sampling procedures.
§ 532.217 - Appropriated fund survey jobs.
(a) A lead agency shall survey the following required jobs:
Job title | Job grade | Janitor (Light) | 1 | Janitor (Heavy) | 2 | Material Handler | 2 | Maintenance Laborer | 3 | Packer | 4 | Warehouse Worker | 5 | Forklift Operator | 5 | Material Handling Equipment Operator | 5 | Truckdriver (Medium) | 6 | Truckdriver (Heavy) | 7 | Machine Tool Operator II | 8 | Machine Tool Operator I | 9 | Carpenter | 9 | Electrician | 10 | Automotive Mechanic | 10 | Sheet Metal Mechanic | 10 | Pipefitter | 10 | Welder | 10 | Machinist | 10 | Electronics Mechanic | 11 | Toolmaker | 13 |
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(b) A lead agency may not omit a required survey job from a regular schedule wage survey.
(c) A lead agency may survey the following jobs on an optional basis:
Job title | Job grade | Aircraft Structures Assembler B | 7 | Aircraft Structures Assembler A | 9 | Aircraft Mechanic | 10 | Electrician, Ship | 10 | Pipefitter, Ship | 10 | Shipfitter | 10 | Shipwright | 10 | Machinist, Marine | 10 | Cable Splicer (Electric) | 10 | Electrical Lineman | 10 | Electrician (Powerplant) | 10 | Telephone Installer-Repairer | 9 | Central Office Repairer | 11 | Heavy Mobile Equipment Mechanic | 10 | Heavy Mobile Equipment Operator | 10 | Air Conditioning Mechanic | 10 | Rigger | 10 | Trailer Truck Driver | 8 | Tool Crib Attendant | 6 | Painter (Finish) | 9 | Light Vehicle Operator | 5 | Helper (Trades) | 5 | Boiler Plant Operator | 10 | Meat Cutter | 8 | Equipment Mechanic | 10 | Boom Crane Operator | 9 | Boom Crane Operator (Precision) | 11 | Tool and Parts Attendant | 4 | Painter (Rough) | 7 | Electronic Industrial Controls Mechanic | 11 | Electronic Test Equipment Repairer | 11 | Electronic Computer Mechanic | 11 | Television Station Mechanic | 11 | Maintenance Mechanic | 10 |
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(d) A lead agency may add the following survey jobs to the survey when the Hospital industry is included in the survey:
Job title | Job grade | Laundry Worker | 1 | Food Service Worker | 2 | Cook | 8 |
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(e) A lead agency must obtain prior approval of OPM to add a job not authorized under paragraph (a), (c), or (d) of this section.
§ 532.219 - Criteria for establishing nonappropriated fund wage areas.
(a) Each wage area shall consist of one or more survey areas along with nonsurvey areas, if any, having nonappropriated fund employees.
(1) Survey area: A survey area is composed of the counties, parishes, cities, or townships in which survey data are collected.
(2) Nonsurvey area: Nonsurvey counties, parishes, or townships may be combined with the survey area to form the wage area through consideration of the criteria in paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) Wage areas shall be established when:
(1) There is a minimum of 26 NAF wage employees in the survey area and local activities have the capability to do the survey; and
(2) There is within the survey area a minimum of 1,800 private enterprise employees in establishments within survey specifications.
(c)(1) Two or more counties may be combined to constitute a single wage area through consideration of:
(i) Proximity of largest activity in each county;
(ii) Transportation facilities and commuting patterns; and
(iii) Similarities of the counties in:
(A) Overall population;
(B) Private employment in major industry categories; and
(C) Kinds and sizes of private industrial establishments.
(2) Generally, the criteria listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this section are considered in the order listed.
(d) The nonappropriated fund wage and survey area definitions are set out as appendix D to this subpart and are incorporated in and made part of this section.
§ 532.221 - Industries included in regular nonappropriated fund surveys.
(a) The lead agency must include the following North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes in all regular nonappropriated fund wage surveys:
2022 NAICS codes | 2022 NAICS industry titles | 42312 | Motor vehicle supplies and new parts merchant wholesalers. | 4232 | Furniture and home furnishing merchant wholesalers. | 42362 | Electrical and electronic appliance, television, and radio set merchant wholesalers. | 42369 | Other electronic parts and equipment merchant wholesalers. | 42371 | Hardware merchant wholesalers. | 42391 | Sporting and recreational goods and supplies merchant wholesalers. | 42399 | Other miscellaneous durable goods merchant wholesalers. | 4241 | Paper and paper product merchant wholesalers. | 42421 | Drugs and druggists' sundries merchant wholesalers. | 4243 | Apparel, piece goods, and notions merchant wholesalers. | 42445 | Confectionery merchant wholesalers. | 4247 | Petroleum and petroleum products merchant wholesalers. | 4249 | Miscellaneous nondurable goods merchant wholesalers. | 44134 | Tire dealers. | 44411 | Home centers. | 449210 | Electronics and appliance retailers. | 4551 | Department stores. | 4552 | Warehouse clubs, supercenters, and other general merchandise retailers. | 45611 | Pharmacies and drug stores. | 4571 | Gasoline stations. | 45811 | Clothing and clothing accessories retailers. | 45941 | Office supplies and stationery retailers. | 71391 | Golf courses and country clubs. | 71395 | Bowling centers. | 72111 | Hotels (except casino hotels) and motels. | 7224 | Drinking places (alcoholic beverages). | 7225 | Restaurants and other eating places. |
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(b) A lead agency may add other industry classes from within the wholesale, retail, and service industry divisions in an area where these industries account for significant proportions of local private employment of the kinds and levels found in local NAF employment.
(c) Additional industries shall be defined in terms of entire industry classes (fourth digit breakdown).
§ 532.223 - Establishments included in regular nonappropriated fund surveys.
(a) All establishments having 20 or more employees in the prescribed industries within a survey area must be included in the survey universe. Establishments in NAICS codes 4571, 71391, and 71395 must be included in the survey universe if they have eight or more employees.
(b) Establishment selection procedures are the same as those prescribed for appropriated fund surveys in paragraphs (b) and (c) of § 532.213 of this subpart.
§ 532.225 - Nonappropriated fund survey jobs.
(a) A lead agency shall survey the following required jobs:
Job title | Job grade | Janitor (Light) | 1 | Food Service Worker | 1 | Food Service Worker | 2 | Fast Food Worker | 2 | Janitor | 2 | Laborer (Light) | 2 | Laborer (Heavy) | 3 | Service Station Attendant | 3 | Stock Handler | 4 | Short Order Cook | 5 | Materials Handling Equipment Operator | 5 | Warehouseman | 5 | Service Station Attendant | 5 | Truck Driver (Light) | 5 | Truck Driver (Medium) | 6 | Truck Driver (Heavy) | 7 | Cook | 8 | Carpenter | 9 | Painter | 9 | Automotive Mechanic | 10 | Electrician | 10 |
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(b) A lead agency may not omit a required survey job from a regular schedule wage survey.
(c) A lead agency may survey the following jobs on an optional basis:
Job title | Job grade | Service Station Attendant | 1 | Groundskeeper | 4 | Grill Attendant | 4 | Tractor Operator | 6 | Bowling Equipment Mechanic | 7 | Building Maintenance Worker | 7 | Vending Machine Mechanic | 8 | Building Maintenance Worker | 8 | Air Conditioning Equipment Mechanic | 8 | Truck Driver (Trailer) | 8 | Air Conditioning Equipment Mechanic | 10 |
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(d) A lead agency must obtain prior approval of OPM to add a job not listed under paragraph (a) or (c) of this section.
§ 532.227 - Agency wage committee.
(a) Each lead agency shall establish an agency wage committee for the purpose of considering matters relating to the conduct of wage surveys, the establishment of wage schedules and making recommendations thereon to the lead agency.
(b) The Agency Wage Committee shall consist of five members, with the chairperson and two members designated by the head of the lead agency, and the remaining two members designated as follows:
(1) For the Department of Defense Wage Committee, one member shall be designated by each of the two labor organizations having the largest number of wage employees covered by exclusive recognition in the Department of Defense; and
(2) For other lead agencies, two members shall be designated by the labor organization having the largest number of wage employees by exclusive recognition in the agency.
(c) Recommendations of agency wage committees shall be developed by majority vote. Any member of an agency wage committee may submit a minority report to the lead agency along with the recommendations of the committee.
§ 532.229 - Local wage survey committee.
(a)(1) A lead agency shall establish a local wage survey committee in each wage area for which it has lead agency responsibility and in which a labor organization represents, by exclusive recognition, wage employees subject to the wage schedules for which the survey is conducted.
(2) The local wage survey committee shall assist the lead agency in the conduct of wage surveys and make recommendations to the lead agency thereon.
(b)(1) Local wage survey committees shall consist of three members, with the chairperson and one member recommended by Federal agencies and designated by the lead agency, and one member recommended by the labor organization having the largest number of wage employees under the regular wage schedule who are under exclusive recognition in the wage area.
(2) All members of local wage survey committees for appropriated fund surveys shall be Federal employees appointed by their employing agencies.
(3) Members for nonappropriated fund surveys shall be nonappropriated fund employees appointed by their employing agencies.
(4) The member recommended by the labor organization must be an employee of a Federal activity for appropriated fund surveys or nonappropriated fund activity for nonappropriated fund surveys who is covered by one of the regular wage schedules in the wage area in which the activity is located.
(5) In selecting and appointing employees recommended by labor organizations and by Federal agencies to serve as committee members, consideration shall be given to the requirement in the prevailing rate law for labor and agency representatives to participate in the wage survey process, the qualifications of the recommended employees, the need of the employees' work units for their presence on the job, and the prudent management of available financial and human resources. Employing agencies and activities shall cooperate and appoint the recommended employees unless exceptional circumstances prohibit their consideration. When the recommended employees cannot be appointed to serve as local wage survey committee members, the responsible lead agency or labor organization shall provide additional recommendations expeditiously to avoid any delay in the survey process.
(6) Employers shall cooperate and release appointed employees for committee proceedings unless the employers can demonstrate that exceptional circumstances directly related to the accomplishment of the work units' missions require their presence on their regular jobs. Employees serving as committee members are considered to be on official assignment to an interagency function, rather than on leave.
(c) A local wage survey committee shall be established before each full-scale wage survey. Responsibility for providing members shall remain with the same agency and the same labor organization until the next full-scale survey.
(d) Recommendations of local wage survey committees shall be developed by majority vote. Any member of a local wage survey committee may submit a minority report to the lead agency relating to any local wage survey committee majority recommendation.
(e) The lead agency shall establish the type of local wage survey organization it considers appropriate in a wage area which does not qualify for a local wage survey committee under paragraph (a) of this section.
§ 532.231 - Responsibilities of participating organizations.
(a) The Office of Personnel Management:
(1) Defines the boundaries of wage and survey areas;
(2) Prescribes the required industries to be surveyed;
(3) Prescribes the required job coverage for surveys;
(4) Designates a lead agency for each wage area;
(5) Establishes, jointly with lead agencies, a nationwide schedule of wage surveys;
(6) Arranges for technical services with other Government agencies;
(7) Considers recommendations of the national headquarters of any agency or labor organization relating to the Office of Personnel Management's responsibilities for the Federal Wage System; and
(8) Establishes wage schedules and rates for prevailing rate employees who are United States citizens outside of the United States, District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone, the Territories and Possessions of the United States, and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
(b) Federal Prevailing Rate Advisory Committee. This committee functions in accordance with the requirements set forth under section 5347 of title 5, United States Code.
(c) Employing agencies—(1) Heads of agencies. The head of an agency is responsible, within the policies and procedures of the Federal Wage System, for authorizing application of wage schedules developed by a lead agency and fixing and administering rates of pay for wage employees of his/her organization.
(2) Heads of local activities. The head of each activity in a wage area is responsible for providing employment information, wage survey committee members, the prescribed number of data collectors, and any other assistance needed to conduct local wage survey committee functions.
(d) Lead agencies are responsible for:
(1) Planning and conducting the wage survey for that area;
(2) Developing survey specifications and providing or arranging for the identification of establishments to be surveyed;
(3) Officially ordering wage surveys;
(4) Establishing wage schedules, applying wage schedules authorized by the head of the agency; and
(5) Referring pertinent matters to the agency wage committee and the Office of Personnel Management.
(e) Agency wage committees. As appropriate, agency wage committees consider and make recommendations to the lead agency on wage schedules and any matters involving survey specifications for full-scale surveys if the lead agency chooses not to accept recommendations of the local wage survey committee or those in a minority report filed by a local wage survey committee member.
(f) Local wage survey committees. The local wage survey committee plans and conducts the wage survey in the designated wage area.
§ 532.233 - Preparation for full-scale wage surveys.
(a) The local wage survey committee, prior to each full-scale survey:
(1) Shall hold a public hearing to receive recommendations from interested parties concerning the area, industries, establishments and jobs to be covered in the wage survey.
(2) Shall prepare a summary of the hearings and submit it to the lead agency together with the committees' recommendations concerning the survey specifications prescribed in paragraph (c) of this section.
(3) May make any other recommendations concerning the local wage survey which it considers appropriate.
(b) The lead agency shall consider the local wage survey committee's report if:
(1) The lead agency proposes not to accept the recommendations of the local wage survey committee concerning the specifications of the local wage survey; or
(2) The local wage survey committee's report is accompanied by a minority report.
(c) The lead agency shall develop survey specifications after taking into consideration the reports and recommendations received from the local wage survey committee and, if applicable, the agency wage committee. The survey specifications shall include:
(1) The counties to be surveyed;
(2) The industries to be surveyed;
(3) The standard minimum size of establishments to be surveyed;
(4) Establishments to be surveyed with certainty; and
(5) The survey jobs.
(d) A list of establishments to be surveyed shall be prepared through use of statistical sampling techniques in accordance with the specifications developed by the lead agency. A copy of this list shall be forwarded to the local wage survey committee.
(e) Selection and appointment of data collectors. (1) The local wage survey committee, after consultation with the lead agency, shall determine the number of regular and alternate data collectors needed for the survey based upon the estimated number and location of establishments to be surveyed.
(2) Wage data for appropriated fund surveys shall be collected by teams consisting of one local Federal Wage System employee recommended by the committee member representing the qualifying labor organization and one Federal employee recommended by Federal agencies. The data collectors shall be selected and appointed by their employing agency.
(3) Wage data for nonappropriated fund surveys shall be collected by teams, each consisting of one local nonappropriated fund employee recommended by the committee member representing the qualifying labor organization and one nonappropriated fund employee recommended by nonappropriated fund activities. The data collectors shall be selected and appointed by their employing agency.
(4) The local wage survey committee shall provide employers with the names of employees recommended by labor organizations and by Federal agencies to serve as data collectors and shall indicate the number of regular and alternate data collectors to be selected and appointed by the employers.
(5) In selecting and appointing employees recommended by labor organizations and by Federal agencies to serve as data collectors, consideration shall be given to the requirement in the prevailing rate law for labor and agency representatives to participate in the wage survey process, the qualifications of the recommended employees, the need of the employees' work units for their presence on the job, and the prudent management of available financial and human resources. Employing agencies and activities shall cooperate and appoint the recommended employees unless exceptional circumstances prohibit their consideration. When the required number of employees cannot be appointed to serve as data collectors from among those recommended, the local wage survey committee shall obtain additional recommendations expeditiously to avoid any delay in the survey process.
(6) Employers shall cooperate and release appointed employees to serve as data collectors throughout the duration of the data collection period unless the employers can demonstrate that exceptional circumstances directly related to the accomplishment of the work units' missions require their presence on their regular jobs. Employees serving as data collectors are considered to be on official assignment to an interagency function, rather than on leave.
(f)(1) Each member of a local wage survey committee, each data collector, and any other person having access to data collected must retain this information in confidence, and is subject to disciplinary action by the employing agency or activity if the employee violates the confidence of data secured from private employers.
(2) Any violation of the above provision by a Federal employee must be reported to the employing agency and, in the case of a participant designated by a labor organization, to the recognized labor organization and its headquarters, and shall be cause for the lead agency immediately to remove the offending person from participation in the wage survey function.
§ 532.235 - Conduct of full-scale wage survey.
(a) Wage survey data shall not be collected before the date the survey is ordered by the lead agency.
(b) Data collection for a full-scale wage survey shall be accomplished by personal visit to private sector establishments. With the unanimous consent of the members of a Local Wage Survey Committee, data may also be obtained from a private sector establishment or establishments during a full-scale wage survey by telephone, mail, or electronic means. The following required data shall be collected:
(1) General information about the size, location, and type of product or service of the establishment sufficient to determine whether the establishment is within the scope of the survey and properly weighted, if the survey is a sample survey;
(2) Specific information about each job within the establishment that is similar to one of the jobs covered by the survey, including a brief description of the establishment job, the number of employees in the job, and their rate(s) of pay to the nearest mill (including any cost-of-living adjustments required by contract or that are regular and customary and monetary bonuses that are regular and customary); and
(3) Any other information the lead agency believes is appropriate and useful in determining local prevailing rates.
(c) The data collectors shall submit the data they collect to the local wage survey committee together with their recommendations about the use of the data.
§ 532.237 - Review by the local wage survey committee.
(a) The local wage survey committee shall review all establishment information and survey job data collected in the wage survey for completeness and accuracy and forward all of the data collected to the lead agency together with a report of its recommendations concerning the use of the data. The local wage survey committee may make any other recommendations concerning the wage survey which it considers appropriate.
§ 532.239 - Review by the lead agency.
(a) The lead agency shall review all material and wage survey data forwarded by the local wage survey committee to:
(1) Assure that the survey was conducted within the prescribed procedures and specifications;
(2) Consider matters included in the local wage survey committee report and recommendations;
(3) Exclude unusable data;
(4) Resolve questionable job matching and wage rate data; and
(5) Verify all computations reported on wage data collection forms.
(b) The lead agency shall determine whether the usable data collected in the wage survey are adequate for computing paylines, according to the following criteria:
(1) The wage survey data collected in an appropriated fund wage survey are adequate if the unweighted job matches include at least one survey job in the WG-01 through 04 range, one survey job in the WG-05 through 08 range, and two survey jobs in the WG-09 and above range, each providing at least 20 samples; and at least six other survey jobs, each providing at least 10 samples.
(2) The wage survey data collected in a nonappropriated fund wage survey are adequate if the unweighted job matches include at least two survey jobs in the NA-01 through 04 range providing 10 samples each, one survey job in the NA-01 through 04 range and three survey jobs in the NA-05 through 15 range providing five samples each; two other survey jobs, each providing at least five samples, and at least 100 unweighted samples for all survey jobs combined are used in the computation of the final payline.
(c)(1) If the wage survey data do not meet the adequacy criteria in paragraph (b) of this section, the lead agency shall analyze the data, construct lines and wage schedules, submit them to the agency wage committee for its review and recommendations and issue wage schedules, in accordance with the requirements of this subpart, as if the adequacy criteria were met.
(2) The lead agency may determine such a wage area to be adequate if the quantity of data obtained is large enough to construct paylines even though it was obtained for fewer than the prescribed number of jobs, or at different grade levels, or in different combinations than prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) The lead agency may not determine a nonappropriated fund wage area to be adequate if fewer than 100 usable unweighted job matches were used in the final payline computation.
(d) If the lead agency determines a wage area to be inadequate under paragraph (c) of this section, it shall promptly refer the problem to OPM for resolution. OPM shall:
(1) Authorize the lead agency to continue to survey the area if the lead agency believes the survey is likely to be adequate in the next full-scale survey;
(2) Authorize the lead agency to expand the scope of the survey; or
(3) Abolish the wage area and establish it as part of one or more other wage areas.
§ 532.241 - Analysis of usable wage survey data.
(a)(1) The lead agency shall compute a weighted average rate for each appropriated fund survey job having at least 10 unweighed matches and for each nonappropriated fund job having at least 5 unweighed matches. The weighted average rates shall be computed using the survey job data collected in accordance with §§ 532.235 and 532.247 and the establishment weight.
(2)(i) Incentive and piece-work rates shall be excluded when computing weighted average rates if, after establishment weights have been applied, 90 percent or more of the total usable wage survey data reflect rates paid on a straight-time basis only.
(ii) When sufficient incentive and piece-work rate data are obtained, the full incentive rate shall be used in computing the job weighted average rate when it is equal to or less than the average nonincentive rate. If the full incentive rate is greater than the average nonincentive rate, the incentive rate shall be discounted by 15 percent. The discounted incentive rate shall be compared with the guaranteed minimum rate and the average nonincentive rate, and the highest rate shall be used in computing the job weighted average rate.
(b) The lead agency shall compute paylines using the weighted average rates computed under paragraph (a) of this section.
(1) The lead agency shall compute unit and frequency paylines using the straight-line, least squares regression formula: Y = a + bx, where Y is the hourly rate, x is grade, a is the intercept of the payline with the Y-axis, and b is the slope of the payline.
(i) The unit payline shall be computed using a weight of one for each of the usable survey jobs and the weighted average rates identified and computed under paragraph (a) of this section.
(ii) The frequency payline shall be computed using a weight equal to the number of weighted matches for each of the usable survey jobs and the weighted average rates identified and computed under paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) Either or both of the lines computed according to paragraph (b)(1) of this section may be recomputed after eliminating survey job data that cause distortion in the lines.
(3) The lead agency may compute midpoint paylines using the following formula: Y = (a
(4) The lead agency may compute other paylines for the purpose of instituting changes in the scope of the survey.
(c) Usable data obtained from a particular establishment may not be modified or deleted in order to reduce the effect of an establishment's rates on survey findings, i.e., data will not be deleted or modified to avoid establishment domination.
§ 532.243 - Consultation with the agency wage committee.
(a) The lead agency shall submit to the agency wage committee:
(1) The data collected in the wage survey;
(2) The report and recommendations of the local wage survey committee concerning the use of data;
(3) The lead agency's analysis of the data; and
(4) The lines computed from the data.
(b) After considering the information available to it, the agency wage committee shall report to the lead agency its recommendation for a proposed wage schedule derived from the data.
§ 532.245 - Selection of payline and issuance of wage schedules.
(a) The lead agency shall select a payline and construct wage schedules therefrom for issuance as the regular wage schedules for the wage area, after considering all of the information, analysis, and recommendations made available to it pursuant to this subpart.
(b)(1) The lead agency shall prepare and maintain a record of all of the analysis and deliberations made under this subpart, documenting fully the basis for its determination under paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) The lead agency shall include in the record all of the wage survey data obtained and the recommendations and reports received from the local wage survey committee and the agency wage committee.
(c)(1) The lead agency shall issue the nonsupervisory, leader, and supervisory regular wage schedules for the local wage area, showing the rates of pay for all grades and steps.
(2) The wage schedules shall have a single effective date for all employees in the wage area, determined by the lead agency in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 5344.
(d) The head of each agency having employees in the local wage area to whom the regular wage schedules apply shall authorize the application of the wage schedules issued under paragraph (c) of this section to those employees, effective on the date specified by the lead agency.
§ 532.247 - Wage change surveys.
(a) Wage change surveys shall be conducted in each wage area in years during which full-scale wage surveys are not conducted.
(b) Data shall be collected in wage change surveys only from establishments which participated in the preceding full-scale survey. Information concerning pay adjustments of general application in effect for jobs matched in each establishment which participated in the preceding full-scale survey shall be obtained.
(c) Data may be obtained in wage change surveys by telephone, mail, electronic means, or personal visit. The chairperson of the local wage survey committee shall determine the manner in which establishments will be contacted for collection of data. Data may be collected by the local wage survey committee members or by data collectors appointed and assigned to two member teams in accordance with § 532.233(e) of this subpart.
(d) Wage change survey data may not be collected before the date ordered by the lead agency.
(e) The local wage survey committee shall review all wage change survey data collected and forward the data to the lead agency. Where appropriate, the committee shall also forward to the lead agency a report of unusual circumstances surrounding the survey.
(f) The lead agency shall review the wage change survey data and, if applicable, the report filed by the local wage survey committee.
(g)(1) The lead agency shall recompute the line selected under § 532.245(a) of this subpart in the preceding full-scale survey using the wage change survey data and shall construct wage schedules therefrom in accordance with § 532.203 and, if appropriate, § 532.205 of this subpart.
(2) The lead agency shall consult with the agency wage committee in accordance with § 532.243 of this subpart.
(3) Records of this process shall be maintained in accordance with § 532.245(b) of this subpart.
(h) The wage schedules shall be issued and authorized in accordance with § 532.245 (c) and (d) of this subpart.
§ 532.249 - Minimum rates for hard-to-fill positions.
(a) The lead agency for a wage area may establish the rate of the second, third, fourth, or fifth step of one or more grades of an occupation as the mandatory minimum rate or rates payable by any agency for the occupation at one or more locations within a wage area based on findings that:
(1) The hiring rates prevailing for an occupation in private sector establishments in the wage area are higher than the rate of the first step of the grade or grades of the occupation; and
(2) Federal installations and activities in the wage area are unable to recruit qualified employees at the rate of the first step of the grade or grades of the occupation.
(b) Any authorizations made under paragraph (a) of this section shall be indicated on the regular wage schedule for the wage area.
(c) Any authorizations made under paragraph (a) of this section shall be terminated with the issuance of a new regular wage schedule unless the conditions that warrant the authorizations continue and the new regular wage schedule continues that authorization.
(d) The lead agency, prior to terminating any authorization made under paragraph (a) of this section, shall require the appropriate official or officials at all installations or activities to which the authorization applies to discuss the termination with the appropriate official or officials of exclusively recognized employee organizations representing employees in the affected occupation. The agency officials shall report the results of these discussions to the lead agency.
(e) No employee shall have his/her pay reduced because of cancellation of an authorization made under paragraph (a) of this section.
§ 532.251 - Special rates.
(a) A lead agency, with the approval of OPM, may establish special rates for use within all or part of a wage area for a designated occupation or occupational specialization and grade, in lieu of rates on the regular schedule. OPM may authorize special rates to the extent it considers necessary to overcome existing or likely significant handicaps in the recruitment or retention of well-qualified personnel when these handicaps are due to any of the following circumstances:
(1) Rates of pay offered by private sector employers for an occupation or occupational specialization and grade are significantly higher than those paid by the Federal Government within the competitive labor market;
(2) The remoteness of the area or location involved; or
(3) Any other circumstances that OPM considers appropriate.
(b) In authorizing special rates, OPM shall consider—
(1) The number of existing or likely vacant positions and the length of time they have been vacant, including evidence to support the likelihood that a recruitment problem will develop if one does not already exist;
(2) The number of employees who have or are likely to quit, including the number quitting for higher pay positions and evidence to support the likelihood that employees will quit;
(3) The number of vacancies employing agencies tried to fill and the number of hires and offers made;
(4) The nature of the existing labor market;
(5) The degree to which employing agencies have considered or used increased minimum rates for hard-to-fill positions;
(6) The degree to which employing agencies have considered relevant non-pay solutions to the staffing problem, such as conducting an aggressive recruiting program, using appropriate appointment authorities, redesigning jobs, establishing training programs, and improving working conditions;
(7) The impact of the staffing problem on employers' missions;
(8) The level of private sector rates paid for comparable positions; and
(9) As appropriate, the extent to which the use of unrestricted rates authorized under § 532.801 of this part was considered.
(c) In determining at what level to set special rates, OPM shall consider—
(1) The level of rates it believes necessary to recruit or retain an adequate number of well-qualified persons;
(2) The offsetting costs that will be incurred if special rates are not authorized; and
(3) The level of private sector rates paid for comparable positions.
(d) No one factor or combination of factors specified in paragraphs (b) or (c) of this section requires special rates to be established or to be adjusted to any given level. Each request to establish special rates shall be judged on its own merits, based on the extent to which it meets these factors. Increased minimum rates are not a prerequisite to the establishment of special rates under this section.
(e) Special rates shall be based on private sector wage data, or a percentage thereof, as specified by OPM at the time the special rates are authorized. The private sector data shall be calculated as a weighted average or payline, as appropriate. A single rate shall be used when this represents private sector practice, and five rates shall be used when rate ranges are used by the private sector. When a five-step rate range is used, the differentials between steps shall be set in accordance with § 532.203(f) of this subpart.
(f) Once approved by OPM, special rates may be adjusted by the lead agency on the same cycle as the applicable regular schedule to the extent deemed necessary to ensure the continued recruitment or retention of well-qualified personnel. The amount of the special rate adjustment may be up to the percentage (rounded to the nearest one-tenth of 1 percent) by which the market rate has changed since the last adjustment. Special rates may not exceed the percentage of market rates initially approved by OPM unless a request for higher special rates is made and approved under paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section.
(g) Any special rates established under paragraph (a) of this section shall be shown on the regular schedule or published as an amendment to the regular schedule and shall indicate the wage area (or part thereof) and each occupation or occupational specialization and grade for which the rates are authorized. These rates shall be paid by all agencies having such positions in the wage area (or part thereof) specified.
(h) The scheduled special rate payable under this section may not, at any time, be less than the unrestricted (uncapped) rate otherwise payable for such positions under the applicable regular wage schedule.
(i) If a special rate is terminated under paragraph (f) of this section, the lead agency shall provide written notice of such termination to OPM.
(j) Employers using special rates shall maintain current recruitment and retention data for all authorized special rates. Such data shall be made available to the lead agency prior to the wage area regular schedule adjustment date for the purpose of determining whether there is a continuing need for special rates and the amount of special rate adjustment necessary to recruit or retain well-qualified employees.
§ 532.253 - Special rates or rate ranges for leader, supervisory, and production facilitating positions.
(a) When special rates or rate ranges are established for nonsupervisory positions, a lead agency also shall establish special rates for leader, supervisory, and production facilitating positions, classified to the same occupational series and title, that lead, supervise, or perform production facilitating work directly relating to the nonsupervisory jobs covered by the special rates.
(b) The step rate structure shall be the same as that of the related nonsupervisory special rate or rate range.
(c) The following formulas shall be used to establish a special rate or rate range:
(1) A single rate shall equal the top step of the appropriate leader, supervisory, or production facilitating grade on the regular schedule, plus the cents per hour difference between the top step of the appropriate nonsupervisory grade on the regular schedule and the special nonsupervisory rate.
(2) For a multiple rate range, the step 2 rate shall equal the step 2 rate of the appropriate leader, supervisory, or production facilitating grade on the regular schedule, plus the cents per hour difference between the prevailing rate of the appropriate nonsupervisory grade on the regular schedule and the prevailing rate of the special rate position. Other required step rates shall be computed in accordance with the formula established in § 532.203 of this subpart.
§ 532.254 - Special schedules.
(a) A lead agency, with the approval of OPM, may establish special schedules for use within an area for specific occupations that are critical to the mission of a Federal activity based on findings that—
(1) Unusual prevailing pay practices exist in the private sector that are incompatible with regular schedule practices, and serious recruitment or retention problems exist or will likely develop if employees are paid from the authorized regular schedule; or
(2) Administrative considerations require the establishment of special schedules to address unique agency missions or other unusual circumstances that OPM considers appropriate.
(b) An OPM authorization for a special schedule shall include instructions for its construction, application, and administration.
(c) Unless otherwise specified, positions covered by special schedules shall be subject to the general provisions of this part and to other applicable rules and regulations of OPM.
§ 532.255 - Regular appropriated fund wage schedules in foreign areas.
(a) The Department of Defense shall establish and issue regular appropriated fund wage schedules for U.S. citizens who are employees in foreign areas. These wage schedules shall provide rates of pay for nonsupervisory, leader, supervisory, and production facilitating employees.
(b) Schedules shall be—
(1) Computed on the basis of a simple average of all regular appropriated fund wage area schedules in effect on December 31; and
(2) Effective on the first day of the first pay period that begins on or after January 1 of the succeeding year.
(c) Step 2 rates for each nonsupervisory grade shall be derived by computing a simple average of each step 2 rate for each of the 15 grades of all nonsupervisory wage rate schedules designated in paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) Through the use of the step 2 rates derived under the schedule averaging process, the step rates for each of the 15 grades of the nonsupervisory schedule and all scheduled pay rates for leaders and supervisors shall be developed by using the standard formulas established in 5 CFR 532.203, Structure of regular wage schedules.
(e) Pay schedules for production facilitating positions shall be established in accordance with the table in § 532.263(c) of this subpart.
§ 532.257 - Regular nonappropriated fund wage schedules in foreign areas.
(a) The Department of Defense shall establish and issue regular nonappropriated fund wage schedules for U.S. citizens who are wage employees in foreign areas. These schedules will provide rates of pay for nonsupervisory, leader, and supervisory employees.
(b) Schedules will be—
(1) Computed on the basis of a simple average of all regular nonappropriated fund wage area schedules defined for the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia in effect on the first Sunday in January; and
(2) Effective on the first Sunday in January of each year.
(c) Step 2 rates for each nonsupervisory grade will be derived by computing a simple average of each step 2 rate for each of the 15 grades of all nonsupervisory wage rate schedules designated in paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) Through the use of the step 2 rates derived under the schedule averaging process, the step rates for each of the 15 grades of the nonsupervisory schedule and all scheduled pay rates for leaders and supervisors will be developed by using the standard formulas established in 5 CFR 532.203, Structure of regular wage schedules.
§ 532.259 - Special appropriated fund wage schedules for U.S. insular areas.
(a) The lead agency shall establish and issue special wage schedules for U.S. civil service wage employees in certain U.S. insular areas. The Department of Defense is the lead agency for American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, Midway, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. These schedules shall provide rates of pay for nonsupervisory, leader, supervisory, and production facilitating employees.
(b) Special schedules shall be established at the same time and with rates identical to the foreign area appropriated fund wage schedules established under § 532.255 of this subpart.
(c) Wage employees recruited from outside the insular area where employed, who meet the same eligibility requirements as those specified for General Schedule employees in § 591.209 of subpart B of part 591, are also paid as a part of basic pay a differential for recruitment and retention purposes. The differential rate shall be that established for General Schedule employees in appendix B of subpart B of part 591 and shall be adjusted effective concurrently with the special schedules.
§ 532.261 - Special wage schedules for leader and supervisory schedules for leader and supervisory wage employees in the Puerto Rico wage area.
(a) The Department of Defense shall establish special wage schedules for leader and supervisory wage employees in the Puerto Rico wage area.
(b) The step 2 rate for each grade of the leader wage schedule shall be equal to 120 percent of the rate for step 2 of the corresponding grade of the nonsupervisory regular wage schedule for the Puerto Rico wage area.
(c) The step 2 rate for the supervisory wage schedule shall be:
(1) For grades WS-1 through WS-10, equal to the rate for step 2 of the corresponding grade of the nonsupervisory regular wage schedule for the Puerto Rico wage area, plus 60 percent of the rate for step 2 of WG-10;
(2) For grades WS-11 through WS-18, the second rate of WS-10 plus 5, 11.5, 19.6, 29.2, 40.3, 52.9, 67.1, and 82.8 percent, respectively, of the difference between the step 2 rates of WS-10 and WS-19; and
(3) For grade WS-19, the third rate in effect for General Schedule grade GS-14 at the time of the area wage schedule adjustment. The WS-19 rate shall include any cost of living allowance payable for the area under 5 U.S.C. 5941.
(d) Step rates shall be developed by using the formula established in § 532.203 of this subpart.
§ 532.263 - Special wage schedules for production facilitating positions.
(a) The lead agency in each FWS wage area shall establish special nonsupervisory and supervisory production facilitating wage schedules for employees properly allocable to production facilitating positions under applicable Federal Wage System job grading standards.
(b) Nonsupervisory schedules shall have 11 pay levels, and supervisory schedules shall have 9 pay levels.
(c) Pay levels and rates of pay for nonsupervisory (WD) schedules and supervisory (WN) schedules shall be identical to the pay levels and rates of pay for the corresponding grades on the local FWS regular supervisory wage schedule. Pay levels shall be determined in accordance with the following table:
WN supervisory level | WS grade | WD nonsupervisory Level: | 1 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 6 | 2 | 8 | 7 | 3 | 9 | 8 | 4 | 10 | 9 | 5 | 11 | 10 | 6 | 12 | 11 | 7 | 13 | 8 | 14 | 9 | 15 |
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(d) Special production facilitating wage schedules shall be effective on the same date as the regular wage schedules in the FWS wage area.
§ 532.265 - Special wage schedules for apprentices and shop trainees.
(a) Agencies may establish special wage schedules for apprentices and shop trainees who are included in:
(1) Formal apprenticeship programs involving training for journeyman level duties in occupations that are recognized as apprenticeable by the Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training, U.S. Department of Labor; or
(2) Formal shop trainee programs involving training for journeyman level duties in nonapprenticeable occupations that require specialized trade or craft skill and knowledge.
(b) Special schedules shall consist of a single wage rate for each training period. Wage rates shall be determined as follows:
(1) Rates shall be based on the current second step rate of the target journeyman grade level on the regular nonsupervisory wage schedule for the area where the apprentice or trainee is employed.
(2) The entrance rate shall be computed at 65 percent of the journeyman level, step 2, rate, or the WG-1, step 1, rate, whichever is greater.
(3) When the WG-1, step 1, rate is used, the apprentice rate shall be increased by a minimum of 5 cents per hour for each succeeding increment interval until the rate obtained by this method equals the rate computed under the formula. No increase shall be less then 5 cents per hour.
(c) Advancement to higher increments shall be at 26-week intervals, regardless of the total length of the training period. Intermediate rates shall be established by subtracting the entrance rate from the journeyman level, step 2 rate, and dividing the difference by the number of 26-week periods of the particular training term. The resulting quotient equals the increment for each succeeding rate.
(d) Agencies may hire at advanced rates or accelerate progression through scheduled wage rates if prescribed by approved agency training standards or programs.
(e) If the employee is promoted to the target job or to a job at the same grade level, the promotion shall be to the second step rate. If the employee is assigned to a job at a grade level that is less than the grade level of the target job, existing pay fixing rules shall be followed.
§ 532.267 - Special wage schedules for aircraft, electronic, and optical instrument overhaul and repair positions in Puerto Rico.
(a) The Department of Defense shall conduct special industry surveys and establish special wage schedules for wage employees in Puerto Rico whose primary duties involve the performance of work related to aircraft, electronic equipment, and optical instrument overhaul and repair.
(b) Except as provided in this section, regular appropriated fund wage survey and wage-setting procedures are applicable.
(c) Special survey specifications are as follows:
(1) Surveys must, at a minimum, include the air transportation and electronics industries in the following North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes:
2022 NAICS codes | 2022 NAICS industry titles | 333310 | Commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing. | 3341 | Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing. | 33422 | Radio and television broadcasting and wireless communications equipment manufacturing. | 33429 | Other communications equipment manufacturing. | 3343 | Audio and video equipment manufacturing. | 334412 | Bare printed circuit board manufacturing. | 334413 | Semiconductor and related device manufacturing. | 334418 | Printed circuit assembly (electronic assembly) manufacturing. | 334419 | Other electronic component manufacturing. | 334511 | Search, detection, navigation, guidance, aeronautical, and nautical system and instrument manufacturing. | 334515 | Instrument manufacturing for measuring and testing electricity and electrical signals. | 334610 | Manufacturing and reproducing magnetic and optical media. | 42342 | Office equipment merchant wholesalers. | 42343 | Computer and computer peripheral equipment and software merchant wholesalers. | 4811 | Scheduled air transportation. | 4812 | Nonscheduled air transportation. | 4879 | Scenic and sightseeing transportation, other. | 4881 | Support activities for air transportation. | 4921 | Couriers and express delivery services. | 56172 | Janitorial services. | 62191 | Ambulance services. | 81142 | Reupholstery and furniture repair. |
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(2) Surveys shall cover all establishments in the surveyed industries.
(3) Surveys shall, as a minimum, include all the following jobs:
Job titles | Job grades | Aircraft Cleaner | 3 | Fleet Service Worker | 5 | Aircraft Mechanic | 10 | Industrial Electronic Controls Repairer | 10 | Aircraft Instrument Mechanic | 11 | Electronic Test Equipment Repairer | 11 | Electronics Mechanic | 11 | Electronic Computer Mechanic | 11 | Television Station Mechanic | 11 |
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(d) The data collected in a special wage survey shall be considered adequate if there are as many weighted matches used in computing the nonsupervisory payline as there are employees covered by the special wage rate schedules.
(e) Each survey job used in computing the nonsupervisory payline must include a minimum of three unweighted matches.
(f) Special schedules shall have three step rates with the payline fixed at step 2. Step 1 shall be set at 96 percent of the payline rate, and step 3 shall be set at 104 percent of the payline rate.
(g) The waiting period for within-grade increases shall be 26 weeks between steps 1 and 2 and 78 weeks between steps 2 and 3.
(h) Special wage schedules shall be effective on the same date as the regular wage schedules for the Puerto Rico wage area.
§ 532.269 - Special wage schedules for Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army navigation lock and dam employees.
(a) The Department of Defense shall establish special wage schedules for nonsupervisory, leader, and supervisory wage employees of the Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army, who are engaged in operating lock and dam equipment or who repair and maintain navigation lock and dam operating machinery and equipment.
(b) Employees shall be subject to one of the following pay provisions:
(1) If all navigation lock and dam installations under a District headquarters office are located within a single wage area, the employees shall be paid from special wage schedules having rates identical to the regular wage schedule applicable to that wage area.
(2) If navigation lock and dam installations under a District headquarters office are located in more than one wage area, employees shall be paid from a special wage schedule having rates identical to the regular wage schedule authorized for the headquarters office.
(c) Each special wage schedule shall be effective on the same date as the regular schedule on which it is based.
§ 532.271 - Special wage schedules for National Park Service positions in overlap areas.
(a)(1) The Department of the Interior shall establish special schedules for wage employees of the National Park Service whose duty station is located in one of the following NPS jurisdictions:
(i) Blue Ridge Parkway;
(ii) Natchez Trace Parkway; and
(iii) Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
(2) Each of these NPS jurisdictions is located in (i.e., overlaps) more than one FWS wage area.
(b) The special overlap wage schedules in each of the NPS jurisdictions shall be based on a determination concerning which regular nonsupervisory wage schedule in the overlapped FWS wage areas provides the most favorable payline for the employees.
(c) The most favorable payline shall be determined by computing a simple average of the 15 nonsupervisory second step rates on each one of the regular schedules authorized for each wage area overlapped. The highest average obtained by this method will identify the regular schedule that produces the most favorable payline.
(d) Each special schedule shall be effective on the same date as the regular schedule on which it is based.
(e) If there is a change in the identification of the most favorable payline, the special scheule for the current year shall be issued on its normal effective date. The next special scheule shall be issued on the effective date of the next regular schedule that produced the most favorable payline for the NPS jurisdiction in the previous year.
§ 532.273 - Special wage schedules for United States Information Agency Radio Antenna Rigger positions.
(a) The United States Information Agency shall establish special wage schedules for Radio Antenna Riggers employed at transmitting and relay stations in the United States.
(b) The wage rate shall be the regular wage rate for the appropriate grade for Radio Antenna Rigger for the wage area in which the station is located, plus 25 percent of that rate.
(c) The 25 percent differential shall be in lieu of any environmental differential that would otherwise be payable.
(d) The special schedules shall be effective on the same date as the regular wage schedules for the wage area in which the positions are located.
§ 532.277 - Special wage schedules for U.S. Navy positions in Bridgeport, California.
(a) The Department of Defense shall establish special wage schedules for prevailing rate employees at the United States Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center in Bridgeport, California.
(b) Schedules shall be established by increasing the step 2 rates on the Reno, Nevada, regular wage schedule by 10 percent.
(c) Step rates shall be developed by using the standard formulas established in § 532.203 of this subpart.
(d) The special wage schedules shall be effective on the same date as the regular wage schedules applicable to the Reno, Nevada, wage area.
§ 532.281 - Special wage schedules for divers and tenders.
(a) Agencies are authorized to establish special schedule payments for prevailing rate employees who perform diving and tending duties.
(b) Employees who perform diving duties shall be paid 175 percent of the locality WG-10, step 2, rate for all payable hours of the shift.
(c) Employees who perform tending duties shall be paid at the locality WG-10, step 2, rate for all payable hours of the shift.
(d) Employees whose regular scheduled rate exceeds the diving/tending rate on the day they perform such duties shall retain their regular scheduled rate on that day.
(e) An employee's diving/tending rate shall be used as the basic rate of pay for computing all premium payments for a shift.
(f) Employees who both dive and tend on the same shift shall receive the higher diving rate as the basic rate for all hours of the shift.
§ 532.283 - Special wage schedules for nonappropriated fund tipped employees classified as waiter/waitress.
(a) Tipped employees shall be paid from the regular nonappropriated fund (NAF) schedule applicable to the employee's duty station.
(b) A tip offset may be authorized for employees classified as Waiter/Waitress. For purposes of this section, a tipped employee is one who is engaged in an occupation in which he or she customarily and regularly receives more than $30 a month in tips, and a tip offset is the amount of money by which an employer, in meeting legal minimum wage standards, may reduce a tipped employee's cash wage in consideration of the receipt of tips.
(c) A tip offset may be established, abolished, or adjusted by NAF instrumentalities on an annual basis and at such additional times as new or revised minimum wage statutes require. The amount of any tip offset may vary within a single instrumentality based on location, type of service, or time of service.
(d) If tipped employees are represented by a labor organization holding exclusive recognition, the employing NAF instrumentality shall negotiate with such organization to arrive at a determination as to whether, when, and how much tip offset shall be applied. Changes in tip offset practices may be made more frequently than annually as a result of collective bargaining agreement.
(e) Tip offset practices shall be governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act, as amended, or the applicable statutes of the State, possession or territory where an employee works, whichever provides the greater benefit to the employee. In locations where tip offset is prohibited by law, the requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section do not apply.
§ 532.285 - Special wage schedules for supervisors of negotiated rate Bureau of Reclamation employees.
(a) The Department of the Interior shall establish and issue special wage schedules for wage supervisors of negotiated rate wage employees in the Bureau of Reclamation. These schedules shall be based on annual special wage surveys conducted by the Bureau of Reclamation in each special wage area. Survey jobs representing Bureau of Reclamation positions at up to four levels will be matched to private industry jobs in each special wage area. Special schedule rates for each position will be based on prevailing rates for that particular job in private industry.
(b) Each supervisory job shall be described at one of four levels corresponding to the four supervisory situations described in Factor I and four levels of Subfactor IIIA of the FWS Job Grading Standard for Supervisors. They shall be titled in accordance with regular FWS practices, with the added designation of level I, II, III, or IV. The special survey and wage schedule for a given special wage area includes only those occupations and levels having employees in that area. For each position on the special schedule, there shall be three step rates. Step 2 is the prevailing rate as determined by the survey; step 1 is 96 percent of the prevailing rate; and step 3 is 104 percent of the prevailing rate.
(c) For each special wage area, the Bureau of Reclamation shall designate and appoint a special wage survey committee, including a chairperson and two other members (at least one of whom shall be a supervisor paid from the special wage schedule), and one or more two-person data collection teams (each of which shall include at least one supervisor paid from the special wage schedule). The local wage survey committee shall determine the prevailing rate for each survey job as a weighted average. Survey specifications are as follows for all surveys:
(1) Based on Bureau of Reclamation activities and types of supervisory positions in the special wage area, the Bureau of Reclamation must survey private industry companies, with no minimum employment size requirement for establishments, in the following North American Industry Classification System code subsectors:
2022 NAICS codes | 2022 NAICS industry titles | 211 | Oil and gas extraction. | 212 | Mining (except oil and gas). | 213 | Support activities for mining. | 221 | Utilities. | 333 | Machinery manufacturing. | 334 | Computer and electronic product manufacturing. | 335 | Electrical equipment, appliance, and component manufacturing. | 484 | Truck transportation. | 492 | Couriers and messengers. | 493 | Warehousing and storage. | 516 | Broadcasting and content providers. | 517 | Telecommunications. | 562 | Waste management and remediation services. | 811 | Repair and maintenance. |
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(2) Each local wage survey committee shall compile lists of all companies in the survey area known to have potential job matches. For the first survey, all companies on the list will be surveyed. Subsequently, companies shall be removed from the survey list if they prove not to have job matches, and new companies will be added if they are expected to have job matches. Survey data will be shared with other local wage survey committees when the data from any one company is applicable to more than one special wage area.
(3) For each area, survey job descriptions shall be tailored to correspond to the position of each covered supervisor in that area. They will be described at one of four levels (I, II, III, or IV) corresponding to the definitions of the four supervisory situations described in Factor I and four levels of Subfactor IIIA of the FWS Job Grading Standard for Supervisors. A description of the craft, trade, or labor work supervised will be included in each supervisory survey job description.
(d) Special wage area boundaries shall be identical to the survey areas covered by the special wage surveys. The areas of application in which the special schedules will be paid are generally smaller than the survey areas, reflecting actual Bureau of Reclamation worksites and the often scattered location of surveyable private sector jobs. Special wage schedules shall be established in the following areas:
The Great Plains Region Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Montana: All counties except Lincoln, Sanders,Lake, Flathead, Mineral, Missoula, Powell, Granite, and Ravalli Wyoming: All counties except Lincoln, Teton, sublette, Uinta, and Sweetwater Colorado: All counties except Moffat, Rio Blanco, Garfield, Mesa, Delta, Montrose, San Miguel, Ouray, Delores, San Juan, Montezuma, La Plata, and Archuleta North Dakota: All counties South Dakota: All counties Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Montana: Broadwater, Jefferson,Lewis and Clark, Yellowstone, and Bighorn Counties Wyoming: All counties except Lincoln, Teton, Sublette, Uinta, and Sweetwater Colorado: Boulder, Chaffee, Clear Creek, Eagle, Fremont, Gilpin, Grand, Lake, Larimer, Park, Pitkin, Pueblo, and Summitt Beginning month of survey: August The Mid-Pacific Region Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) California: Shasta, Sacramento, Butte, San Francisco, Merced, Stanislaus Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) California: Shasta, Sacramento, Fresno, Alameda, Tehoma, Tuolumne, Merced Beginning month of survey: February Green Springs Power Field Station Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Oregon: Jackson Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Oregon: Jackson Beginning month of survey: April Pacific NW. Region Drill Crew Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Montana: Flathead, Missoula Oregon: Lane, Bend, Medford, Umatilla, Multnomah Utah: Salt Lake Idaho: Ada, Canyon, Adams Washington: Spokane, Grant, Lincoln, Okanogan Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Oregon: Deschutes, Jackson, Umatilla Montana: Missoula Idaho: Ada Washington: Grant, Lincoln, Douglas, Okanogan, Yakima Beginning month of survey: April Snake River Area Office (Central Snake/Minidoka) Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Idaho: Ada, Caribou, Bingham, Bannock Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Idaho: Gem, Elmore, Bonneville, Minidoka, Boise, Valley, Power Beginning month of survey: April Hungry Horse Project Office Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Montana: Flathead, Missoula, Cascade, Sanders, Lake Idaho: Bonner Washington: Pend Oreille Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Montana: Flathead Beginning month of survey: March Grand Coulee Power Office (Grand Coulee Project Office) Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Oregon: Multnomah Washington: Spokane, King Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Washington: Grant, Douglas, Lincoln, Okanogan Beginning month of survey: April Upper Columbia Area Office (Yakima) Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Washington: King, Yakima Oregon: Multnomah Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Washington: Yakima Oregon: Umatilla Beginning Month of Survey: September Colorado River Storage Project Area Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Arizona: Apache, Coconino, Navajo Colorado: Moffat, Montrose, Routt, Gunnison, Rio Blanco, Mesa, Garfield, Eagle, Delta, Pitkin, San Miguel, Delores, Montezuma, La Plata, San Juan, Ouray, Archuleta, Hindale, Mineral Wyoming: Unita, Sweetwater, Carbon, Albany, Laramie, Goshen, Platte, Niobrara, Converse, Natrona, Fremont, Sublette, Lincoln Utah: Beaver, Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Davis, Duchesne, Emery, Garfield, Grand, Iron, Juab, Kane, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, Salt Lake, San Juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Summit, Tooele, Uintah, Utah, Wasatch, Washington, Wayne, Weber Special Survey Area of Application (Counties) Arizona: Coconino Colorado: Montrose, Gunnison, Mesa Wyoming: Lincoln Utah: Daggett Beginning month of survey: March Elephant Butte Area Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) New Mexico: Grant, Hidalgo, Luna, Donña Ana, Otero, Eddy, Lea, Roosevelt, Chaves, Lincoln, Sierra, Socorro, Catron, Cibola, Valencia, Bernalillo, Torrance, Guadalupe, De Baca, Curry, Quay Texas: El Paso, Hudspeth, Culberson, Jeff Davis, Presido, Brewster, Pecos, Reeves, Loving, Ward, Winkler Arizona: Apache, Greenlee, Graham, Cochise Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) New Mexico: Sierra Beginning month of survey: June Lower Colorado Dams Area Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Nevada: Clark California: Los Angeles Arizona: Maricopa Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Nevada: Clark California: San Bernardino Arizona: Mohave Beginning month of survey: August Yuma Projects Area Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) California: San Diego Arizona: Maricopa, Yuma Note:Bureau of Reclamation may add other survey counties for dredge operator supervisors because of the uniqueness of the occupation and difficulty in finding job matches.)
Special Wage Area of Application (Counties) Arizona: Yuma Beginning month of survey: November (Maintenance) and April (Dredging) Bureau of Reclamation, Denver, CO, Area Special Wage Survey Area (Counties) Colorado: Jefferson, Denver, Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Larimer Special Wage Survey Area of Application (Counties) Colorado: Jefferson Beginning month of survey: February(e) These special schedule positions will be identified by pay plan code XE, grade 00, and the Federal Wage System occupational codes will be used. New employees shall be hired at step 1 of the position. With satisfactory or higher performance, advancement between steps shall be automatic after 52 weeks of service.
(f)(1) In the first year of implementation, all special areas will have full-scale surveys.
(2) Current employees shall be placed in step 2 of the new special schedule, or, if their current rate of pay exceeds the rate for step 2, they shall be placed in step 3. Pay retention shall apply to any employee whose rate of basic pay would otherwise be reduced as a result of placement in these new special wage schedules.
(3) The waiting period for within-grade increases shall begin on the employee's first day under the new special schedule.
§ 532.287 - Special wage schedules for nonappropriated fund automotive mechanics.
(a) The Department of Defense (DOD) will establish a flat rate pay system for nonappropriated fund (NAF) automotive mechanics. This flat rate pay system will take into account local prevailing rates, the mechanic's skill level, and the standard number of hours required to complete a particular job.
(b) DOD will issue special wage schedules for NAF automotive mechanics who are covered by the flat rate pay system. These special schedules will provide rates of pay for nonsupervisory, leader, and supervisory employees. These special schedule positions will be identified by pay plan codes XW (nonsupervisory), XY (leader), and XZ (supervisory), grades 8-10, and will use the Federal Wage System occupational code 5823.
(c) DOD will issue special wage schedules for NAF automotive mechanics based on annual special flat rate surveys of similar jobs conducted in each special schedule wage area.
(1) The survey area for these special surveys will include the same counties as the regular NAF survey area.
(2) The survey jobs used will be Automotive Worker and Automotive Mechanic.
(3) The special surveys will include data on automotive mechanics that are paid under private industry flat rate pay plans as well as those paid by commission.
(4) In addition to all standard North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes currently used on the regular surveys, the industries surveyed will include—
2022 NAICS Codes | 2022 NAICS Industry titles | 441110 | New car dealers. | 811111 | General automotive repair. | 811191 | Automotive oil change and lubrication shops. |
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(5) The surveys will cover establishments with a total employment of eight or more.
(6) The special schedules for NAF automotive mechanics will be effective on the same dates as the regular wage schedules in the NAF FWS wage area.
(d) New employees will be hired at step 1 of the position under the flat rate pay system. Current employees will be moved to these special wage schedules on a step-by-step basis. Pay retention will apply to any employee whose rate of basic pay would otherwise be reduced as a result of placement in these new special schedules.
§ 532.289 - Special wage schedules for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers flood control employees of the Vicksburg District in Mississippi.
(a)(1) The Department of Defense will establish special wage schedules for wage employees of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers who work at flood control dams (also known as reservoir projects) and whose duty station is located in one of the lakes that comprise the Vicksburg District of the Mississippi Valley Division.
(2) These special wage schedules will provide rates of pay for nonsupervisory, leader, and supervisory employees. These special schedule positions will be identified by pay plan codes XR (nonsupervisory), XT (leader), and XU (supervisory).
(b) The Vicksburg District of the Mississippi Valley Division is comprised of the following four lakes:
(1) Grenada Lake in Grenada County, MS (2) Enid Lake in Yalobusha County, MS (3) Sardis Lake in Panola County, MS (4) Arkabutla Lake in Tate County, MS(c) Special wage schedules shall be established at the same time and with rates identical to the Memphis, TN, appropriated fund wage schedule.
Appendix A - Appendix A to Subpart B of Part 532—Nationwide Schedule of Appropriated Fund Regular Wage Surveys
This appendix shows the annual schedule of wage surveys. It lists all States alphabetically, each State being followed by an alphabetical listing of all wage areas in the State. Information given for each wage area includes—
(1) The lead agency responsible for conducting the survey;
(2) The month in which the survey will begin; and
(3) Whether full-scale surveys will be done in odd or even numbered fiscal years.
State | Wage area | Lead agency | Beginning month of survey | Fiscal year of full-scale survey odd or even | Alabama | Anniston-Gadsden | DoD | April | Even. | Birmingham | DoD | January | Even. | Dothan | DoD | July | Odd. | Huntsville | DoD | April | Even. | Alaska | Alaska | DoD | July | Even. | Arizona | Northeastern Arizona | DoD | March | Odd. | Phoenix | DoD | March | Odd. | Tucson | DoD | March | Odd. | Arkansas | Little Rock | DoD | August | Even. | California | Fresno | DoD | February | Odd. | Los Angeles | DoD | September | Even. | Sacramento | DoD | February | Odd. | Salinas-Monterey | DoD | February | Even. | San Bernardino-Riverside-Ontario | DoD | September | Even. | San Diego | DoD | September | Odd. | San Francisco | DoD | September | Odd. | Santa Barbara | DoD | September | Even. | Stockton | DoD | February | Odd. | Colorado | Denver | DoD | January | Odd. | Southern Colorado | DoD | January | Even. | Connecticut | New Haven-Hartford | DoD | April | Odd. | New London | DoD | September | Even. | Delaware | Wilmington | DoD | November | Even. | District of Columbia | Washington, D.C | DoD | August | Odd. | Florida | Cocoa Beach-Melbourne | DoD | October | Even. | Jacksonville | DoD | January | Odd. | Miami | DoD | January | Odd. | Panama City | DoD | September | Even. | Pensacola | DoD | September | Odd. | Tampa-St. Petersburg | DoD | April | Even. | Georgia | Albany | DoD | August | Odd. | Atlanta | DoD | May | Odd. | Augusta | DoD | June | Odd. | Columbus | DoD | August | Odd. | Macon | DoD | June | Odd. | Savannah | DoD | May | Odd. | Hawaii | Hawaii | DoD | June | Even. | Idaho | Boise | DoD | July | Odd. | Illinois | Central Illinois | DoD | September | Odd. | Chicago | DoD | September | Even. | Indiana | Bloomington-Bedford-Washington | DoD | October | Odd. | Fort Wayne-Marion | DoD | October | Odd. | Indianapolis | DoD | October | Odd. | Iowa | Cedar Rapids-Iowa City | DoD | July | Even. | Davenport-Rock Island-Moline | DoD | October | Even. | Des Moines | DoD | September | Odd. | Kansas | Topeka | DoD | November | Even. | Wichita | DoD | November | Even. | Kentucky | Lexington | DoD | February | Even. | Louisville | DoD | February | Odd. | Louisiana | Lake Charles-Alexandria | DoD | April | Even. | New Orleans | DoD | November | Odd. | Shreveport | DoD | May | Even. | Maine | Augusta 1 | DoD | May | Even. | Central and Northern Maine | DoD | June | Even. | Maryland | Baltimore | DoD | September | Odd. | Hagerstown-Martinsburg-Chambersburg | DoD | January | Even. | Massachusetts | Boston | DoD | August | Even. | Central and Western Massachusetts | DoD | June | Even. | Michigan | Detroit | DoD | January | Odd. | Northwestern Michigan | DoD | August | Odd. | Southwestern Michigan 1 | DoD | October | Even. | Minnesota | Duluth | DoD | June | Odd. | Minneapolis-St. Paul | DoD | March | Odd. | Mississippi | Biloxi | DoD | November | Even. | Northern Mississippi | DoD | February | Even. | Jackson | DoD | February | Odd. | Meridian | DoD | February | Odd. | Missouri | Kansas City | DoD | October | Odd. | St. Louis | DoD | October | Odd. | Southern Missouri | DoD | October | Odd. | Montana | Montana | DoD | July | Even. | Nebraska | Omaha | DoD | October | Odd. | Nevada | Las Vegas | DoD | September | Even. | Reno | DoD | March | Even. | New Hampshire | Portsmouth | DoD | September | Even. | New Mexico | Albuquerque | DoD | April | Odd. | New York | Albany-Schenectady-Troy | DoD | March | Odd. | Buffalo 1 | DoD | September | Odd. | New York | DoD | January | Even. | Northern New York | DoD | March | Odd. | Rochester | DoD | February | Even. | Syracuse-Utica-Rome | DoD | March | Even. | North Carolina | Asheville | DoD | June | Even. | Central North Carolina | DoD | May | Even. | Charlotte | DoD | August | Odd. | Southeastern North Carolina | DoD | January | Odd. | North Dakota | North Dakota | DoD | March | Even. | Ohio | Cincinnati | DoD | January | Odd. | Cleveland | DoD | April | Odd. | Columbus | DoD | January | Odd. | Dayton | DoD | January | Even. | Oklahoma | Oklahoma City | DoD | August | Odd. | Tulsa | DoD | August | Odd. | Oregon | Portland | DoD | August | Even. | Southwestern Oregon | DoD | June | Even. | Pennsylvania | Harrisburg | DoD | January | Even. | Philadelphia | DoD | October | Even. | Pittsburgh | DoD | July | Odd. | Scranton-Wilkes-Barre | DoD | August | Odd. | Puerto Rico | Puerto Rico | DoD | July | Odd. | Rhode Island | Narragansett Bay | DoD | January | Odd. | South Carolina | Charleston | DoD | July | Even. | Columbia | DoD | May | Even. | South Dakota | Eastern South Dakota 1 | DoD | October | Even. | Tennessee | Eastern Tennessee | DoD | February | Odd. | Memphis | DoD | February | Even. | Nashville | DoD | February | Even. | Texas | Austin | DoD | June | Even. | Corpus Christi | DoD | June | Even. | Dallas-Fort Worth | DoD | October | Odd. | El Paso | DoD | April | Even. | Houston-Galveston-Texas City | DoD | March | Even. | San Antonio | DoD | June | Odd. | Texarkana | DoD | April | Odd. | Waco | DoD | May | Odd. | Western Texas | DoD | May | Odd. | Wichita Falls-Southwestern Oklahoma | DoD | August | Even. | Utah | Utah | DoD | July | Odd. | Virginia | Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News-Hampton | DoD | May | Even. | Richmond | DoD | November | Odd. | Roanoke | DoD | November | Even. | Washington | Seattle-Everett-Tacoma | DoD | September | Even. | Southeastern Washington-Eastern Oregon | DoD | June | Odd. | Spokane | DoD | July | Odd. | West Virginia | West Virginia | DoD | March | Odd. | Wisconsin | Madison | DoD | July | Even. | Milwaukee | DoD | June | Odd. | Southwestern Wisconsin | DoD | June | Even. | Wyoming | Wyoming | DoD | January | Even. |
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1 The revised fiscal year entries are scheduled to begin for Augusta, Maine, in fiscal year 1996; for Buffalo, New York, and Southwestern Michigan in fiscal year 1997; and for Eastern South Dakota in fiscal year 1998.
Appendix B - Appendix B to Subpart B of Part 532—Nationwide Schedule of Nonappropriated Fund Regular Wage Surveys
This appendix shows the annual schedule of NAF wage surveys. It lists all States alphabetically, each State being followed by an alphabetical listing of all wage areas in the State. Information given for each wage area includes—
(1) The lead agency responsible for conducting the survey;
(2) The month in which the survey will begin; and
(3) Whether full-scale surveys will be conducted in odd or even numbered calendar years.
State | Wage area | Beginning month of
survey | Calendar year of full-scale survey odd or even | Alabama | Calhoun | April | Even. | Madison | April | Even. | Montgomery | April | Odd. | Alaska | Anchorage | June | Even. | Arizona | Maricopa | October | Even. | Pima | October | Even. | Yuma | October | Even. | Arkansas | Pulaski | April | Odd. | California | Kern | September | Odd. | Los Angeles | September | Even. | Monterey | September | Odd. | Orange | September | Even. | Riverside | September | Even. | Sacramento | February | Odd. | San Bernardino | September | Even. | San Diego | September | Odd. | San Joaquin | February | Odd. | Santa Barbara | September | Even. | Solano | September | Odd. | Ventura | September | Even. | Colorado | Arapahoe-Denver | July | Even. | El Paso | July | Even. | Connecticut | New London | July | Even. | Delaware | Kent | August | Odd. | District of Columbia | Washington, DC | August | Even. | Florida | Bay | January | Even. | Brevard | January | Odd. | Miami-Dade | January | Odd. | Duval | January | Odd. | Escambia | January | Even. | Hillsborough | January | Odd. | Monroe | January | Odd. | Okaloosa | January | Even. | Orange | January | Even. | Georgia | Chatham | March | Odd. | Cobb | June | Odd. | Columbus | June | Odd. | Dougherty | March | Odd. | Houston | April | Odd. | Lowndes | March | Odd. | Richmond | April | Odd. | Guam | Guam | September | Even. | Hawaii | Honolulu | May | Even. | Idaho | Ada-Elmore | July | Odd. | Illinois | Lake | April | Even. | St. Clair | April | Even. | Kansas | Leavenworth-Jackson-Johnson | April | Even. | Sedgwick | April | Odd. | Kentucky | Christian-Montgomery | February | Even. | Hardin-Jefferson | March | Even. | Louisiana | Bossier-Caddo | March | Odd. | Orleans | June | Odd. | Rapides | March | Odd. | Maine | York | October | Odd. | Maryland | Anne Arundel | August | Even. | Charles-St. Mary's | August | Even. | Frederick | August | Even. | Harford | May | Even. | Montgomery-Prince George's | August | Even. | Massachusetts | Hampden | October | Odd. | Middlesex | October | Odd. | Michigan | Macomb | May | Odd. | Minnesota | Hennepin | July | Odd. | Mississippi | Harrison | March | Even. | Lauderdale | March | Odd. | Lowndes | March | Odd. | Montana | Cascade | July | Odd. | Nebraska | Douglas-Sarpy | April | Even. | Nevada | Churchill-Washoe | January | Even. | Clark | January | Even. | New Jersey | Burlington | August | Odd. | Morris | August | Odd. | New Mexico | Bernalillo | February | Odd. | Curry | June | Odd. | Dona Ana | February | Odd. | New York | Jefferson | May | Odd. | Kings-Queens | October | Even. | Niagara | May | Odd. | Orange | May | Odd. | North Carolina | Craven | March | Even. | Cumberland | March | Even. | Onslow | February | Even. | Wayne | March | Even. | North Dakota | Grand Forks | July | Odd. | Ward | July | Odd. | Ohio | Greene-Montgomery | April | Odd. | Oklahoma | Comanche | March | Even. | Oklahoma | March | Even. | Pennsylvania | Allegheny | May | Odd. | Cumberland | May | Even. | York | May | Even. | Puerto Rico | Guaynabo-San Juan | February | Even. | Rhode Island | Newport | July | Even. | South Carolina | Charleston | February | Even. | Richland | March | Even. | South Dakota | Pennington | June | Even. | Tennessee | Shelby | February | Even. | Texas | Bell | June | Odd. | Bexar | June | Even. | Dallas | June | Even. | El Paso | February | Odd. | McLennan | May | Odd. | Nueces | June | Even. | Tarrant | June | Even. | Taylor | June | Odd. | Tom Green | June | Odd. | Wichita | March | Even. | Utah | Davis-Salt Lake-Weber | July | Odd. | Virginia | Alexandria-Arlington-Fairfax | August | Even. | Chesterfield-Richmond | August | Odd. | Hampton-Newport News | May | Even. | Norfolk-Portsmouth-Virginia Beach | May | Even. | Prince William | August | Even. | Washington | Kitsap | June | Even. | Pierce | July | Even. | Snohomish | July | Even. | Spokane | July | Odd. | Wyoming | Laramie | July | Even. |
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Appendix C - Appendix C to Subpart B of Part 532—Appropriated Fund Wage and Survey Areas
This appendix lists the wage area definitions for appropriated fund employees. With a few exceptions, each area is defined in terms of county units, independent cities, or, in the New England States, of entire township or city units. Each wage area definition consists of:
(1) Wage area title. Wage areas usually carry the title of the principal city in the area. Sometimes, however, the area title reflects a broader geographic area, such as Wyoming or Eastern Tennessee.
(2) Survey area definition. Lists each county, independent city, or township in the survey area.
(3) Area of application definition. Lists each county, independent city, or township which, in addition to the survey area, is in the area of application.
Definitions of Wage and Wage Survey Areas Alabama Anniston-Gadsden Survey Area Alabama: Calhoun Etowah Talladega Area of Application. Survey area plus: Alabama: Cherokee Clay Cleburne De Kalb Randolph Birmingham Survey Area Alabama: Jefferson St. Clair Shelby Tuscaloosa Walker Area of Application. Survey area plus: Alabama: Bibb Blount Chilton Cullman Fayette Greene Hale Lamar Marengo Perry Pickens Dothan Survey Area Alabama: Dale Houston Georgia: Early Area of Application. Survey area plus: Alabama: Barbour Coffee Geneva Henry Georgia: Clay Miller Seminole Huntsville Survey Area Alabama: Limestone Madison Marshall Morgan Area of Application. Survey area plus: Alabama: Colbert Franklin Jackson Lauderdale Lawrence Marion Winston Tennessee: Franklin Giles Lawrence Lincoln Moore Wayne Alaska Survey Area Alaska: Anchorage Fairbanks Juneau (and the areas within a 24-kilometer (15-mile) radius of their corporate city limits) Area of Application.Appendix D - Appendix D to Subpart B of Part 532—Nonappropriated Fund Wage and Survey Areas
This appendix lists the wage area definitions for NAF employees. With a few exceptions, each area is defined in terms of county units or independent cities. Each wage area definition consists of:
(1) Wage area title. Wage areas usually carry the title of the county or counties surveyed.
(2) Survey area definition. Lists each county or independent city in the survey area.
(3) Area of application definition. Lists each county or independent city which, in addition to the survey area, is in the area of application.
Definitions of Wage Areas and Wage Area Survey AreasAlabama: | Madison | Alabama: | Jefferson | Tennessee: | Coffee | Davidson | Hamilton | Rutherford | Alabama: | Montgomery | Alabama: | Dale | Dallas | Macon | Alaska: (borough) | Anchorage | Alaska: (boroughs and census areas) | Fairbanks North Star | Juneau | Kenai Peninsula | Ketchikan Gateway | Kodiak Island | Sitka | Southeast Fairbanks | Valdez-Cordova | Yukon-Koyukuk | Arizona: | Maricopa | Arizona: | Coconino | Yavapai | Arizona: | Pima | Arizona: | Cochise | Arizona: | Yuma | California: | Imperial | Arkansas: | Pulaski | Arkansas: | Jefferson | Sebastian | Washington | California: | Kern | California: | Fresno | Kings | California: | Los Angeles | California: | Monterey | California: | San Mateo | Santa Clara | California: | Orange | California: | Riverside | California: | Sacramento | California: | Yuba | Oregon: | Jackson | Klamath | California: | San Bernardino | California: | San Diego | California: | San Joaquin | California: | Santa Barbara | California: | San Luis Obispo | California: | Solano | California: | Alameda | Contra Costa | Marin | Napa | San Francisco | Sonoma | California: | Ventura | Colorado: | Arapahoe | Colorado: | Mesa | Colorado: | El Paso | Colorado: | Bent | Otero | Pueblo | Connecticut: | New London | Connecticut: | New Haven | Delaware: | Kent | Delaware: | Sussex | Maryland: | Kent | District of Columbia: | Washington, DC | West Virginia: | Berkeley | Florida: | Bay | Florida: | Brevard | Florida: | Duval | Florida: | Alachua | Clay | Columbia | Georgia: | Camden | Florida: | Escambia | Florida: | Santa Rosa | Florida: | Hillsborough | Florida: | Lee | Pinellas | Polk | Florida: | Miami-Dade | Florida: | Broward | Palm Beach | Florida: | Monroe | Florida: | Okaloosa | Florida: | Walton | Florida: | Orange | Georgia: | Chatham | Georgia: | Glynn | Liberty | South Carolina: | Beaufort | Georgia: | Cobb | Alabama: | Calhoun | Georgia: | Bartow | De Kalb | Fulton | Georgia: | Columbus | Georgia: | Chattahoochee | Georgia: | Dougherty | Georgia: | Houston | Georgia: | Laurens | Georgia: | Lowndes | Florida: | Leon | Georgia: | Richmond | South Carolina: | Aiken | Guam | Hawaii: | Honolulu | Hawaii (counties): | Hawaii | Kauai | Maui | Pacific Islands: | Midway Islands | Johnston Atoll | American Samoa | Idaho: | Ada | Elmore | Illinois: | Lake | Illinois: | Cook | Rock Island | Vermilion | Indiana: | St. Joseph | Iowa: | Johnson | Michigan: | Dickinson | Marquette | Wisconsin: | Brown | Dane | Milwaukee | Illinois: | St. Clair | Illinois: | Madison | Williamson | Indiana: | Vanderburgh | Missouri: (city) | St. Louis | Missouri: (counties) | Jefferson | Pulaski | Kansas: | Leavenworth | Missouri: | Jackson | Johnson | Kansas: | Shawnee | Missouri: | Boone | Camden | Cass | Greene | Kansas: | Sedgwick | Kansas: | Geary | Saline | Kentucky: | Christian | Tennessee: | Montgomery | Kentucky: | Hardin | Jefferson | Indiana: | Jefferson | Johnson | Martin | Kentucky: | Fayette | Madison | Warren | Louisiana: (parishes) | Bossier | Caddo | Texas: | Bowie | Louisiana: (parish) | Orleans | Louisiana: (parish) | Plaquemines | Louisiana: (parish) | Rapides | Louisiana: (parish) | Vernon | Maine: | York | Maine: | Cumberland | Kennebec | Penobscot | New Hampshire: | Rockingham | Vermont: | Windsor | Maryland: | Anne Arundel | Maryland: (city) | Baltimore | Maryland: (counties) | Baltimore | Frederick | Maryland: | Charles | St. Mary's | Maryland: | Calvert | Virginia: | King George | Harford | Maryland: | Harford | West Virginia: | Berkeley | Maryland: | Harford | Maryland: | Cecil | Maryland: | Montgomery | Prince George's | Massachusetts: | Hampden | Connecticut: | Hartford | Massachusetts: | Hampshire | Massachusetts: | Middlesex | Massachusetts: | Norfolk | Plymouth | Suffolk | New Hampshire: | Hillsborough | Michigan: | Macomb | Michigan: | Alpena | Calhoun | Crawford | Grand Traverse | Huron | Iosco | Kent | Leelanau | Ottawa | Saginaw | Washtenaw | Wayne | Ohio: | Cuyahoga | Lucas | Ottawa | Minnesota: | Hennepin | Minnesota: | Morrison | Murray | Ramsey | Stearns | St. Louis | Wisconsin: | Juneau | Monroe | Polk | Mississippi: | Harrison | Alabama: | Mobile | Mississippi: | Forest | Hancock | Jackson | Mississippi: | Lauderdale | Mississippi: | Hinds | Rankin | Warren | Mississippi: | Lowndes | Alabama: | Tuscaloosa | Montana: | Cascade | Montana: | Fergus | Flathead | Hill | Lewis and Clark | Valley | Yellowstone | Nebraska: | Douglas | Sarpy | Iowa: | Marion | Polk | Woodbury | Nebraska: | Hall | Lancaster | Saunders | South Dakota: | Minnehaha | Nevada: | Churchill | Washoe | California: | Lassen | Mono | Nevada: | Mineral | Nevada: | Clark | New Jersey: | Burlington | Delaware: | New Castle | New Jersey: | Atlantic | Cape May | Monmouth | Ocean | Salem | Pennsylvania: | Chester | Montgomery | Philadelphia | New Jersey: | Morris | New Jersey: | Somerset | Pennsylvania: | Luzerne | Monroe | New Mexico: | Bernalillo | New Mexico: | McKinley | New Mexico: | Curry | Texas: | Lubbock | Potter | New Mexico: | Dona Ana | New Mexico: | Chaves | Otero | New York: | Jefferson | New York: | Albany | Oneida | Onondaga | Ontario | Saratoga | Schenectady | Steuben | New York: | Kings | Queens | New Jersey: | Essex | Hudson | New York: | Bronx | Nassau | New York | Richmond | Suffolk | New York: | Niagara | New York: | Erie | Genesee | Ohio: | Trumbull | Pennsylvania: | Erie | New York: | Orange | New York: | Dutchess | Westchester | North Carolina: | Craven | North Carolina: | Carteret | Dare | North Carolina: | Cumberland | North Carolina: | Durham | Forsyth | Rowan | North Carolina: | Onslow | North Carolina: | New Hanover | North Carolina: | Wayne | North Carolina: | Halifax | Pitt | North Dakota: | Grand Forks | North Dakota: | Cass | Cavalier | Pembina | Steele | North Dakota: | Ward | North Dakota: | Divide | Ohio: | Greene | Montgomery | Indiana: | Allen | Grant | Marion | Miami | Ohio: | Clinton | Franklin | Hamilton | Licking | Ross | West Virginia: | Raleigh | Wayne | Oklahoma: | Comanche | Oklahoma: | Cotton | Jackson | Oklahoma: | Oklahoma | Oklahoma: | Garfield | Muskogee | Pittsburg | Tulsa | Pennsylvania: | Cumberland | Pennsylvania: | Allegheny | Blair | Butler | Franklin | Pennsylvania: | York | Pennsylvania: | Lebanon | Puerto Rico: | Guaynabo | San Juan | Puerto Rico: | Aguadilla | Bayamon | Mayaguez | Ponce | Salinas | Rhode Island: | Newport | Massachusetts: | Barnstable | Nantucket | Rhode Island: | Providence | Washington | South Carolina: | Charleston | South Carolina: | Berkeley | Horry | South Carolina: | Richland | North Carolina: | Buncombe | Mecklenburg | South Carolina: | Sumpter | Tennessee: | Washington | South Dakota: | Pennington | Montana: | Custer | South Dakota: | Fall River | Meade | Wyoming: | Sheridan | Tennessee: | Shelby | Missouri: | Butler | Texas: | Bell | Texas: | Burnet | Coryell | Falls | Texas: | Bexar | Texas: | Comal | Kerr | Travis | Val Verde | Texas: | Dallas | Texas: | Angelina | Fannin | Galveston | Harris | Texas: | El Paso | Texas: | McLennan | Texas: | Nueces | Texas: | Bee | Calhoun | Cameron | Kleberg | San Patricio | Webb | Texas: | Tarrant | Texas: | Cooke | Palo Pinto | Texas: | Taylor | Texas: | Tom Green | Texas: | Howard | Texas: | Wichita | Utah: | Davis | Salt Lake | Weber | Utah: | Box Elder | Tooele | Uintah | Virginia (city): | Alexandria | Virginia (counties): | Arlington | Fairfax | Virginia: (city) | Richmond | Virginia: (county) | Chesterfield | Virginia: (cities) | Bedford | Charlottesville | Salem | Virginia: (counties) | Caroline | Nottoway | Prince George | West Virginia: | Pendleton | Virginia: (cities) | Hampton | Newport News | Virginia: (city) | Williamsburg | Virginia: (county) | York | Virginia: (cities) | Norfolk | Portsmouth | Virginia Beach | North Carolina: | Pasquotank | Virginia: (cities) | Chesapeake | Suffolk | Virginia: (counties) | Accomack | Northampton | Virginia: | Prince William | Virginia: | Fauquier | West Virginia: | Harrison | Washington: | Kitsap | Washington: | Clallam | Jefferson | Washington: | Pierce | Oregon: | Clatsop | Coos | Douglas | Lane | Multnomah | Tillamook | Washington: | Clark | Grays Harbor | Washington: | Snohomish | Washington: | Island | King | Yakima | Washington: | Spokane | Washington: | Adams | Walla Walla | Wyoming: | Laramie |