INOUYE ANNOUNCES FINAL SENATE PASSAGE OF TWO YEAR EXTENSION OF COST OF LIVING ALLOWANCE


Wednesday, October 1, 1997


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- United States Senator Daniel K. Inouye announced that the Senate approved the House-Senate Conference Report to the Fiscal Year 1998 Department of Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government Appropriations Bill. The bill contains an extension of the Cost-of-Living Allowance (COLA) rates for Alaska, Hawaii, and the U.S. territories to the Year 2000. The COLA rates help an estimated 17,000 federal employees in the State of Hawaii.

"I am pleased that my colleagues in the Congress are sensitive to the additional needs of federal employees in Hawaii, Alaska, and the U.S. territories," stated Senator Inouye.

As a result of controversies and litigation surrounding the COLA program for federal employees in Alaska, Hawaii and U.S. territories outside the 48 contiguous States, the 1992 Treasury, Postal Service and General Government Appropriations Act directed the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to conduct a study of the new methodology used to set COLAs, and while the study was underway, it barred any reduction of existing COLA rates.

In 1996, the Treasury, Postal Service and General Government Appropriations Act extended the deadline for the expiration of the bar on COLA reductions to December 31, 2000. Because the study required more research and data, the Fiscal Year 1998 Appropriations Bill extends the deadline to March 1, 2000.

The authority for the Hawaii COLA stems from Executive Order 10,000 signed by President Truman in 1948 to provide additional compensation for federal employees outside the continental United States. President Truman deemed such additional incentives necessary to ensure that qualified federal employees would accept positions in remote areas to perform necessary government functions. The criterion for this additional compensation was, and continues to be, that living costs are substantially higher than in the District of Columbia. While the Executive Order had been amended over time, its basic intent remains the same.

The provision will now be transmitted to the White House to await President Clinton's signature.


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