Travel Things
Q & A Session – Travel Comp Time Questions
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the Lawyer received the following question (paraphrased for easier reading and
clarity) from a reader on a legal matter that might be of interest to the
entire audience.
Q:
I
have three questions related to compensatory time for travel. My normal tour of
duty is 0730-1700, Monday through Thursday with alternating Fridays off. I
travel overseas often for my work. My questions are as follows:
First,
after our supervisor took his position, he told us that we should all forfeit
our compensatory time off for travel. Our previous supervisors had directed us
to submit a log of travel comp time to them rather than enter it on our time
cards; we submitted our time in accordance with office policy. Our new
supervisor thinks this method was improper and thus our compensatory time off
for travel should be forfeited. Can he cancel our compensatory time off for
travel that easily?
Second,
I was recently required to travel to Korea for business. I left the USA at 0730
and arrived at 0715 the next day USA time (2115 Korea time). When I arrived in
Korea, I went to my hotel and went to bed – even though the work day was just
beginning in the United States, it was not normal business hours in Korea. I
calculated my travel time and then deducted the nine hours which were part of
my normal tour of duty to arrive at my compensatory time off for travel. My
boss says that since I went to bed instead of working the day of my arrival, I
had to deduct another nine hours from my comp time. Is he correct?
Third,
my boss says that when I am at a temporary duty station and there is no work to
be done on what is, for me, a normal work day, I am required to take leave. For
instance, if I go to a particular country where my foreign partners do not wish
to conduct business with me on a Wednesday, my boss says I must take leave on that
Wednesday. Is that right? Can he require me to take leave in that fashion?
Please
help with these questions. I want to follow the rules, but I need to know the
rules first.
A:
I
will assume for the purposes of answering your questions that you are a federal
employee.
As
to your first question, no, your supervisor cannot simply require you to
forfeit all of your compensatory time. If hours were improperly logged, you
should contact your human resources office or timekeeper and have your logs
amended appropriately. Your supervisor may feel that you “should” forfeit the
time, but you are not required to if you earned your compensatory time off. See
5 CFR § 550, subpart N.
As
to your second question, you were not entitled to continue earning compensatory
time off for travel once you arrived at your temporary duty station in Korea,
and your work schedule the next day is irrelevant as to the calculation. You
should simply calculate the amount of time which you were in a travel status,
and then subtract any time for which you were otherwise compensated during the
travel. You and your boss may have arranged for a schedule adjustment or other
modifications in light of the time change, but that is a separate matter from
the calculation of your compensatory time off for travel. Your travel time
appears to have only been interrupted by 9 hours, not 18 hours, of regular
compensation.
As
to your third question, I am aware of no provisions in the Federal Travel
Regulations which requires you to take leave simply because your foreign
partners do not work on a certain day or because there is little work to be
done on a given day. There are some provisions which require an employee to
take leave if his or her actions have precluded them from working, but none
which I am aware of which penalize an employee for a foreign government’s
inability to meet with the employee. It may be possible that your schedule is
temporarily rearranged while you are on travel so as to elongate and shorten
your hours as appropriate and fitting to the agency’s needs, or that you could
be required to attend to other duties when foreign officials cannot meet with
you, but I do not believe you are not required to take annual leave.
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