HR 1364 · 115th Congress · Government Operations and Politics

Official Time Reform Act of 2017

Introduced 2017-03-06· Sponsored by Rep. Hice, Jody B. [R-GA-10]· House

Bill Progress

Introduced
2
Committee
3
House Vote
4
Senate
5
Enacted
Latest: Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 23 - 17.(2017-03-10)

Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Official Time Reform Act of 2017 This bill prohibits the granting of official time to an employee who would otherwise be in a duty status for purposes of engaging in any political activity, including lobbying activity. Official time is time off from assigned duties granted to a federal employee for purposes of representing a union or its bargaining unit employees. Under the Civil Service Retirement System and the Federal Employees Retirement System: (1) an employee may not be allowed retirement credit for any day of service spent principally on official time that is in excess of 365 days in the aggregate, (2) an employee is deemed to have spent a day principally on official time if it is at least 80% of the time such employee would otherwise be in a duty status, and (3) any such service spent principally on official time for which an employee is not allowed credit shall be treated as credible service for purposes of calculating the employee's average pay.…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

H.R. 1364, Official Time Reform Act of 2017

Nov 30, 2018

As ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on March 10, 2017

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office

Cosponsors (1)

1 Republican