Defense Postpones First Phase of NSPS

The Department of Defense has announced it will miss its

scheduled July 1 start date for the first phase of its

National Security Personnel System –Spiral One – and

instead roll it out “later in the fiscal year,” likely to

be September.

Pentagon officials have long maintained that the

implementation of the system would be “event driven”

rather than deadline driven.

DoD plans to work with the Office of Personnel Management

in the mean time to adjust the system’s regulations in

response to public comments and the on-going meet-and-confer

process — it was extended beyond the 30-day minimum time

frame to allow for further consideration but now is over.

In late May, toward the end of the first 30-days of the

meet-and-confer, a group of six employee unions — out of

a total of 42 participating — walked out of the talks,

calling them a “sham.” DoD is at odds with unions over

labor-management relations, collective bargaining and

other provisions that they say strip too many employee

protections.

Revisions to the system are to be published in the

Federal Register later in the summer, likely followed 30

days later with the system’s implementation, provided

instructions are in place and training is under way,

according to defense officials.

Initially, NSPS plans to implement the labor-relations

aspect of the program for 60,000 employees, then later

expand to include 300,000, followed by the implementation

of the performance management system early next year.

Full implementation for all of DoD’s 700,000 civilian

employees is expected to take two to three years.

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