[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 5, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 5CFR1330.404]

[Page 174-175]
 
                    TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL
 
              CHAPTER III--OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
 
PART 1330_HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT--Table of Contents
 
     Subpart D_Performance Appraisal Certification for Pay Purposes
 
Sec.  1330.404  Certification criteria.

    (a) To be certified, an agency's applicable appraisal system(s) for 
senior executives or senior professionals must make meaningful 
distinctions based on relative performance and meet the other 
requirements of 5 U.S.C. chapter 43, as applicable, in addition to the 
particular criterion cited here (i.e., consultation). Such system(s) 
must provide for the following:
    (1) Alignment, so that the performance expectations for individual 
senior employees derive from, and clearly link to, the agency's mission, 
GPRA strategic goals, program and policy objectives, and/or annual 
performance plans and budget priorities;
    (2) Consultation, so that the performance expectations for senior 
employees meet the requirements of 5 CFR part 430, subparts B and C, as 
applicable, and/or other applicable legal authority; are developed with 
the input and involvement of the individual senior employees who are 
covered thereby; and are communicated to them at the beginning of the 
applicable appraisal period, and/or at appropriate times thereafter;
    (3) Results, so that the performance expectations for individual 
senior employees apply to their respective areas of responsibility; 
reflect expected agency and/or organizational outcomes and outputs, 
performance targets or metrics, policy/program objectives, and/or 
milestones; identify specific programmatic crosscutting, external, and 
partnership-oriented goals or objectives, as applicable; and are stated 
in terms of observable, measurable, and/or demonstrable performance;
    (4) Balance, so that in addition to expected results, the 
performance expectations for individual senior employees include 
appropriate measures or indicators of employee and/or customer/
stakeholder feedback; quality, quantity, timeliness, and cost 
effectiveness, as applicable; and those technical, leadership and/or 
managerial competencies or behaviors that contribute to and are 
necessary to distinguish outstanding performance;
    (5) Appropriate assessments of the agency's performance--overall and 
with respect to each of its particular missions, components, programs, 
policy areas, and support functions--such as reports of the agency's 
GPRA goals, annual performance plans and targets, program performance 
measures, and other appropriate indicators, as well as evaluation 
guidelines based, in part, upon those assessments, that are communicated 
by the agency head, or an individual specifically designated by the 
agency head for such purpose, to senior employees, appropriate senior 
employee rating and reviewing officials, and PRB members. These 
assessments and guidelines are to be provided at the conclusion of the 
appraisal period but before individual senior employee performance 
ratings are recommended, so that they may serve as a basis for 
individual performance evaluations, as appropriate. The guidance

[[Page 175]]

provided may not take the form of quantitative limitations on the number 
of ratings at any given rating level, and must conform to 5 CFR part 
430, subpart B or C, as applicable;
    (6) Oversight by the agency head or the individual specifically 
designated under paragraph (a)(5) of this section, who certifies, for a 
particular senior employee appraisal system, that--
    (i) The senior employee appraisal process makes meaningful 
distinctions based on relative performance;
    (ii) The results of the senior employee appraisal process take into 
account, as appropriate, the agency's assessment of its performance 
against program performance measures, as well as other relevant 
considerations; and
    (iii) Pay adjustments, cash awards, and levels of pay based on the 
results of the appraisal process accurately reflect and recognize 
individual performance and/or contribution to the agency's performance;
    (7) Accountability, so that final agency head decisions and any PRB 
recommendations regarding senior employee ratings consistent with 5 CFR 
part 430, subparts B and C, individually and overall, appropriately 
reflect the employee's performance expectations, relevant program 
performance measures, and such other relevant factors as the PRB may 
find appropriate; in the case of supervisory senior employees, ratings 
must reflect the degree to which performance standards, requirements, or 
expectations for individual subordinate employees clearly link to 
organizational mission, GPRA strategic goals, or other program or policy 
objectives and take into account the degree of rigor in the appraisal of 
their subordinate employees;
    (8) Performance differentiation, so that the system(s) includes at 
least one summary level of performance above fully successful, including 
a summary level that reflects outstanding performance, as defined in 
Sec.  1330.402, and so that its annual administration results in 
meaningful distinctions based on relative performance that take into 
account the assessment of the agency's performance against relevant 
program performance measures, as described in paragraph (a)(6) of this 
section, employee performance expectations, and such other relevant 
factors as may be appropriate. Relative performance does not require 
ranking senior employees against each other; such ranking is prohibited 
for the purpose of determining performance ratings. For equivalent 
systems that do not use summary ratings, the appraisal system must 
provide for clear differentiation of performance at the outstanding 
level; and
    (9) Pay differentiation, so that those senior employees who have 
demonstrated the highest levels of individual performance and/or 
contribution to the agency's performance receive the highest annual 
summary ratings or ratings of record, as applicable, as well as the 
largest corresponding pay adjustments, cash awards, and levels of pay, 
particularly above the rate for level III of the Executive Schedule. 
Agencies must provide for transparency in the processes for making pay 
decisions, while assuring confidentiality.
    (b) Consistent with the requirements in section 3(a) of the 
Inspector General Act of 1978, an agency's Inspector General or an 
official he or she designates must perform the functions listed in 
paragraphs (a)(5) and (6) of this section for senior employees in the 
Office of the Inspector General.