Fedweek

Search and Rescue Soldiers and Airmen attached to Hawaii National Guard's Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high-yield Explosive (CBRNE) Enhanced Response Force Package (CERFP) unit assisted Maui County and State officials in the search and recovery efforts of Lahaina, August 10, 2023. Around 50 Guardsmen were mobilized on August 9th after the wildfire stuck Maui and assisted in the sweep of the affected area which will need to be completed before access can be restored to the few unaffected properties. Image: US National Guard media by Master Sgt. Andrew Jackson

OPM has authorized emergency leave transfer programs for federal employees affected by the fires in Hawaii.

In those programs, employees may donate unused annual leave for transfer to employees of the same or other agencies who are affected by a major disaster or emergency, either directly or through adversely affected family members, and who need additional time off from work without having to use their own paid leave.

As is standard with such announcements, OPM left it up to agencies to operate the program, including informing employees of its availability; determining which employees qualify for leave and how much they are eligible for; the period during which leave may be accepted for distribution; and the actual distribution of leave.

Employees seeking to become emergency leave recipients must apply in writing to their agencies personally or through a personal representative; employees who wish to donate leave must contact their agencies to determine how to do so.

“Agencies should contact OPM for assistance in receiving additional donated annual leave from other agencies only if several internal solicitations for leave donations do not result in sufficient amounts of donated annual leave to meet the needs of emergency leave recipients within the agency. Based on the demand for donated leave, OPM will solicit and coordinate the transfer of donated annual leave among federal agencies,” says a memo on chcoc.gov.

Ruling on CFPB Job Cuts Could Affect Challenges to Other RIFs and Reorgs

OPM Calls Off Viewpoint Survey; Next Edition to be Revised

Several Federal Agencies Disavow Union Contracts, with More Likely to Follow

‘Only High Performers’ Should Receive Awards, Agencies Told

See also,

Should I be Shooting for a $1M TSP Balance? Depends

What to Know About the New Federal Application Process

Attorney Schnitzer:
How to Challenge a Federal Reduction in Force (RIF) in 2025

Attorney Schnitzer:
A Pre-RIF Checklist for Every Federal Employee, From a Federal Employment Attorney

Top 10 Provisions in the Big Beautiful Bill of Interest to Federal Employees

Primer: Early out, buyout, reduction in force (RIF)

2023 Federal Employees Handbook