Guest guest Posted September 17, 2006 Report Share Posted September 17, 2006 ajc.com > Metro > Atlanta Large CDC bonuses go frequently to financial staff, administrative managers http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/atlanta/stories/2006/09/16/091 7meshcdcash.html By ALISON YOUNG The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Published on: 09/17/06 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention employees receiving the most frequent large cash awards and performance bonuses are not scientists, but mostly budget analysts, accountants, computer experts and other administrative managers, according to an analysis of the awards by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. As the CDC faces morale problems and the loss of key scientific leaders, the distribution of the Atlanta-based agency's awards and bonuses provides evidence, critics say, that the agency is becoming more focused on agency management and bureaucracy and less on its public health mission. RELATED • CDC chief's memo to employees about bonuses --------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------- THE STORY SO FAR • Exodus, morale shake CDC • Issues facing the CDC • Voices inside the CDC • Brain drain? • Director cites 'brain gain' The 72 CDC employees who received five or more awards of at least $2,500 from 2000 through July 21, primarily work in non-science jobs. Some got $30,000, $50,000 and in one case more than $140,000 in cumulative bonus cash beyond their salaries, according to the CDC's awards data, obtained by the Journal-Constitution under the Freedom of Information Act. The CDC has about 9,000 employees, and 4,200 of them are considered scientific staff. Among the agency's senior executives, the highest individual annual performance bonus paid so far this year was $27,000 to a manager of a scientific division, the data show. CDC Director Gerberding was unavailable for comment Friday and Saturday. Other CDC officials said the agency is examining its system of awarding employees for fairness, appropriateness and transparency. " We want to make sure that the system we have in place is equitable and that it rewards everyone, if in fact they are eligible for the award and if in fact they're deserving of it, " said spokesman Tom Skinner. " We are looking at the system and anything we can do to make it better. " Low morale and an exodus of key leaders and scientists from CDC since 2004 has caused significant concern among several of the agency's former directors and drawn the attention of a Congressional committee. The fear is that turmoil within the agency may be harming its ability to handle public health emergencies — from bioterrorism attacks, to an influenza pandemic to the toll of obesity, the Journal-Constitution reported last Sunday. By the end of this year, all but two of the directors of CDC's eight primary scientific centers will have left the agency. Other high- profile departures include world experts in several diseases. The agency's cash awards program is one tool in its arsenal that can be used to improve morale and stem departures. Yet the distribution of frequent large cash awards mainly to budget and administrative staff and managers, is an example of how the agency has become increasingly enamored with its non-scientific staff, said three current CDC employees, who declined to speak publicly for this article. Last year a CDC poll of its employees, called Pulse Check, found that one of their top concerns was the " loss of public health focus/mission in exchange for inappropriate business focus. " Awards based on several factors Giving cash awards and performance bonuses is a longstanding practice in the federal government, though it has received increased emphasis in recent years. " The government is trying hard to move to a performance-sensitive compensation system, " said Palguta, vice president of the Partnership for Public Service, an independent nonprofit Washington- based group that specializes in federal work force issues. " The notion is that employees should be compensated not for breathing, but rather for what they contribute to the organization and their level of performance. " Skinner and other CDC officials said there may be several reasons that frequent, large awards are skewed in favor of financial staff and administrative managers. One theory is that not all front-line managers may be aware of or regularly use the awards. Another theory is that the President's Management Agenda for all federal agencies has stressed improving the performance of budget systems, technology and the like. " There wasn't a parallel big initiative on the science side, " said Glen Nowak, another CDC spokesman. " That probably is a contributing factor here. " Another factor, agency officials said, is that about 800 of the CDC's 4,200 scientific employees are members of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, a uniformed service that operates under a different personnel system and is not eligible for the awards. A group of about 600 " distinguished " scientists are in another employee classification that did not become eligible for annual performance awards until last fall, they said. Cash awards given to CDC and other federal employees break into two general categories: special act cash awards that reward an individual or a group for specific accomplishment or activity; and annual performance bonuses, tied to an employee's overall performance rating and involve a percentage of the person's salary that varies in size and availability depending on how the employee is classified. The CDC distributed about 2,500 special act and performance awards worth at least $2,500 since 2000 to about 1,450 individuals. About 560 employees received two or more of these awards, and 72 of them received five or more awards, according to the CDC data. Three employees — a financial systems branch chief, a deputy director of budget and management, and another budget official — received the most checks, at 10 awards each. Their cumulative awards totaled $35,000, $34,326 and $32,000 respectively. Five employees — people working in facilities operations, budget, accounting and technical information — received nine awards each. Their cumulative totals ranged from $25,326 to $50,565. Of 16 employees receiving seven or eight awards, one is a health science supervisor. The rest are financial managers, accounting staff, or work in security or other administrative positions. Most of these checks were special act cash awards. And some of them have received three or four such checks in a single year. Palguta said it seemed unusual for employees to receive multiple cash awards for acts that are supposed to be " above and beyond " their normal duties. " Sometimes employees may see one over a five-year period. If they're really exceptional, maybe they'll see one for every two or three years, " he said. " But if somebody were to receive two cash awards a year and each year for a five year period, that would be higher than average I'd say. " Despite requests for more details on the awards, CDC officials did not release copies of the award nomination and justification forms for the most frequent recipients of high awards. The newspaper also sought the information in its Freedom of Information Act request filed on July 3. Gerberding has received two $5,000 special act cash awards since becoming director of the agency in July 2002: one in February 2005 and the other in December 2005. A CDC spokesman said he did not have details of those awards. Bill Gimson, CDC's Chief Operating Officer, said he didn't know whether CDC's practice of giving multiple special act cash awards to some of its employees is unusual. But he said the agency will be looking into that question. " We are constantly attempting to reevaluate and evaluate how equitable " the awards are, he said. " The CDC budget and accounting staff for the last four years have been implementing a major $60 million accounting system, " Gimson said, which may explain why so many of those employees have been frequent recipients of special act cash awards. Biggest checks go to top execs The highest single checks in most years have been in the form of annual performance bonuses to CDC staff who are part of an elite federal employee classification, called the senior executive service. There are about 30 such employees at CDC, including Gimson and Gerberding. These executives, as in all agencies, can qualify for an annual performance bonus of up to 12 percent of their base salaries, which at CDC range from $109,808 to $165,200. Across all federal agencies, about 55 percent of senior executives receive some level of annual performance award. Carol Bonosaro, president of the Senior Executives Association, which represents career federal executives in all agencies, said the performance bonus system is meant to ensure government can attract and retain top talent. " The people who do the work these executives do in the private sector and even the nonprofit world can earn at least 150 percent of what these people earn in government, " she said. " Having said that, they don't come into government because of the pay. " In 2005, eight of CDC's senior executives received annual performance bonuses of $15,000 or more. Another eight received bonuses of $11,000 to $15,000. A handful of these CDC senior executives have qualified, based on their performance evaluation and nomination by committees at CDC and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, for prestigious Presidential Rank Awards. Just 1 percent of all federal senior executives each year receive one of these awards for " distinguished " service – a prize check that is written for 35 percent of their salary. Five percent of all federal senior executives each year receive one of these awards for " meritorious " service, and it comes with a check for 20 percent of the individual's salary. An employee can receive each of these awards only once, and Gimson, has done that – helping make him one of the agency's most frequent and highest recipients of various cash awards. Since July 2002 he has received seven awards over $2,500 of various types totaling $147,863. Gimson received his first Presidential Rank Award in 2002 for $24,740 and another last fall for $55,368. The first award recognized his work in CDC's financial management office; the second his leadership at Chief Operating Officer in helping CDC to achieve top ratings on aspects of the President's Management Agenda. " I really feel that it's extremely important to recognize all of out top performing employees, " Gimson said. And that means staff that work in science, programs, management and administrative areas, he said. Since they became eligible for annual performance awards in October 2005, CDC employees who are classified as " distinguished " scientists started receiving some large individual checks beginning this spring. Dr. received a performance bonus in March, for $27,000 for his outstanding performance as director of CDC's division of sexually transmitted disease prevention. " I think it's incredibly important in an organizational environment to be appreciated, " said . He said that as a manager, cash awards of varying types help make sure employees know their hard work is being recognized. " Some of our biggest awards have been to people who stepped into acting positions and are basically doing a job and a half or two jobs. I can't pay them two salaries. ly, some of them deserve it. " At least 19 CDC employees like who are classified as " distinguished " scientists have received performance bonuses of $10,000 or more so far this year; and six of them received between $20,000-$27,000 each. The CDC spends about $865 million on salaries and benefits in a year. Last year, the agency paid out about $15 million in awards of all types and amounts. Awards and performance bonuses have consistently represented about 1.6 percent of CDC's salary and benefits costs since 2000, said Nowak, the CDC spokesman. Nowak said about 56 percent of all awards of $2,500 or more go toward the agency's scientific staff. CDC officials, however, did not respond to the newspaper's requests for details of how they arrived at that number given that the agency's database doesn't clearly deliniate between the categories and some staff titles are ambiguous. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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