[Federal Register: May 3, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 86)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 22339-22348]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr03my02-1]
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Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
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[[Page 22339]]
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
5 CFR Part 591
RIN 3206-AJ40 and 3206-AJ41
Cost-of-Living Allowances (Nonforeign Areas); Methodology Changes
AGENCY: Office of Personnel Management.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is making wide-
ranging changes in the methodology used to determine nonforeign area
cost-of-living allowances (COLAs). OPM is implementing these changes
pursuant to the settlement of litigation regarding the COLA program.
These regulations also incorporate the changes OPM implemented in
interim rules published last year. In addition, the regulations include
other changes that improve their clarity and ease of use but do not
change their meaning.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 3, 2002.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donald L. Paquin, (202) 606-2838; fax:
(202) 606-4264; or email: COLA@opm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 5941 of title 5, United States Code,
authorizes the payment of cost-of-living allowances (COLAs) to
employees of the Federal Government stationed in certain nonforeign
areas outside the contiguous 48 States whose rates of basic pay are
fixed by statute. Executive Order 10000, as amended, delegates to the
Office of Personnel Management (OPM) the authority to administer
nonforeign area COLAs and prescribes certain operational features of
the program. The Government pays nonforeign area COLAs to General
Schedule, U.S. Postal Service, and certain other Federal employees in
Alaska, Hawaii, Guam and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands (CNMI), Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
OPM published proposed regulations in the November 9, 2001, Federal
Register (at 66 FR 56741) that would modify significantly the current
COLA methodology consistent with the agreement made by the parties in
the settlement of Caraballo, et al. v. United States, No. 1997-0027
(D.V.I), August 17, 2000. In the same issue of the Federal Register,
OPM published an interim rule (66 FR 56751) to implement recent
amendments to Executive Order 10000 regarding the COLA program. Both
the proposed regulations published on November 9, 2001, and these final
regulations incorporate the changes required by the amendments to
Executive Order 10000. Therefore, this final rule makes that interim
rule final. OPM received no comments on the interim rule and six
written comments in response to the proposed regulations. We discuss
the comments we received below.
This final rule also incorporates part of an interim rule published
on December 11, 2001 (66 FR 63909), which added administrative appeals
judges paid under 5 U.S.C. 5372b to the list of pay plans covered under
these regulations. This change is incorporated at 5 CFR 591.204(a)(8).
In addition, this rule corrects an error we discovered in the
proposed rule. In Sec. 591.215(b) of the proposed rule, we stated that
OPM would average the price indexes for each of the three survey areas
in the Washington, DC area. That is incorrect. OPM does not compute
price indexes for the DC area because the DC area is the base or
reference area and the price indexes are 100. Instead of averaging
price indexes, OPM averages prices, and we have corrected that
regulation, which is now codified at Sec. 591.216(a).
Finally, these regulations incorporate several changes that improve
their clarity and ease of use but do not change their meaning. The
following table shows the sections where OPM made a change and the
nature of the change:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section Nature of change
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Sec. 591.210(b)(1).......... Added clarifying language.
Sec. 591.211(b) and (c)..... Added and revised language for clarity.
Sec. 591.212(c)............. Revised language for clarity.
Sec. 591.215, 216, and 217.. 1. Moved what was Sec. 591.215(b) to
Sec. 591.216, made a correction, and
added and revised language for clarity.
2. Redesignated Sec. 591.215(c) as (b)
and revised language for clarity.
3. Moved what was Sec. 591.217 to Sec.
591.215 (c) and added and revised
language for clarity.
4. Redesignated what was Sec. 591.216 as
Sec. 591.217.
Sec. 591.221................ Added and revised language for clarity.
Sec. 591.222(a)............. Added clarifying language.
Sec. 591.228(c)............. Added clarifying language.
Sec. 591.232................ Added clarifying language.
Secs. 591.235 and 236....... Added clarifying language in section
headings.
Sec. 591.237(a)............. Added and revised language for clarity.
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Discussion of Comments
An office within one agency suggested that OPM address commissary
and exchange privileges for civilian employees in nonforeign areas. The
agency noted that OPM's regulations currently state that eligibility
for commissary and exchange privileges ``is determined by the
appropriate military department,'' but that the proposed regulations
did not address the issue.
OPM believes it is no longer appropriate to reference commissary
and exchange shopping privileges in the
[[Page 22340]]
regulations. Last year, the President amended Executive Order 10000 to
remove the requirement that OPM take into consideration commissary and
exchange shopping privileges in setting the COLA rates. Therefore,
commissary and exchange shopping privileges and COLA rates are no
longer related. Since OPM has no jurisdiction over access to
commissaries and exchanges, employees should contact their employing
agency, which can contact the appropriate military department if
necessary.
A commenter from Alaska was concerned that OPM might not take into
consideration seasonal temperature variations in computing home energy
requirements and requested that OPM not use average temperatures
reported at the Anchorage International Airport as the sole method for
determining utility cost for Anchorage. As described in the
supplementary information accompanying the proposed rule, OPM will use
a utility function model to compute the energy usage of a standard home
and the relative cost of maintaining an ambient temperature in that
home in the COLA areas relative to the Washington, DC, area. OPM will
publish details about how it computes energy requirements for a
particular area in the survey results for the area. At present, OPM
anticipates using hourly or daily average temperatures as reported by
the National Weather Service for the area. OPM believes these
temperatures are representative for the area. OPM does not believe it
would be practical to use an approach that required average annual
temperature readings for several locations within a COLA area.
The same commenter noted the cost of long distance travel from
Alaska to areas in the continental United States and that, in many
cases, driving is not a feasible alternative to flying. The commenter
requested that OPM consider time, distance, and excessive travel
expenses in setting COLA rates. The new COLA methodology will take
travel expenses into account in two ways. First, as in the past, OPM
will compare the cost of air travel from the various COLA areas to
common destinations in the continental U.S. with the cost of air travel
from the DC area to those same destinations. In previous surveys, OPM
has found such travel to be relatively more expensive from the COLA
areas than from the Washington, DC, area. Second, as provided in
Sec. 591.227, OPM will add to the overall price index for the COLA area
an adjustment factor that reflects differences in need, access to and
availability of goods and services, and quality of life in the COLA
area relative to the DC area. This adjustment factor is designed to
address such considerations as the difficulty of traveling long
distances by road in Alaska.
The same commenter and three other commenters noted that COLA area
employees do not receive locality pay under the Federal Employees Pay
Comparability Act of 1990 (FEPCA). The commenters noted that as
locality payments have increased, the relative difference between
Federal pay in the COLA areas and in the Washington, DC, area has
decreased even though COLA rates have remained the same or increased.
The commenters also noted that locality pay is included in base pay for
retirement purposes, while COLAs are not included. One of these
commenters noted that locality payments are subject to Federal income
taxes, while COLAs are not, and the commenter said it might be
appropriate to tax COLAs if they were included in retirement
calculations. Another commenter also noted that because COLAs are not
considered taxable income, they are not used in the computation of
Social Security benefits. Two of the commenters said that not
considering COLAs in retirement calculations creates a disincentive to
retire in a COLA area. All of the commenters believe OPM should
investigate and address these issues.
OPM is aware that employees in the COLA areas do not receive
locality payments under FEPCA. Sections 5304(c)(4)(B) and 5304(f)(1)(A)
of title 5, United States Code, limit locality payments to Federal
employees stationed in the continental United States. OPM also is aware
that COLAs are not included in Federal retirement calculations. Under 5
U.S.C. 8331(3) and 8401(4), allowances are excluded from base pay for
Federal retirement purposes. Furthermore, OPM is aware that because
COLAs are excluded from income under 26 U.S.C. 912(2), COLAs are not
subject to Federal income or Social Security taxes and, therefore, are
not used in the computation of Social Security benefits. It would take
changes in the law to extend locality payments to Federal employees in
the COLA areas, to include COLAs in base pay for Federal retirement
purposes, or to make COLAs subject to Federal income or Social Security
taxes. Therefore, these issues are outside the scope of these
regulations.
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Review
The Office of Management and Budget has reviewed this rule in
accordance with Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
I certify that these regulations will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because they
will affect only Federal agencies and employees.
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 591
Government employees, Travel and transportation expenses, Wages.
Office of Personnel Management.
Kay Coles James,
Director.
Accordingly, the Office of Personnel Management revises subpart B
of 5 CFR part 591 to read as follows:
PART 591--ALLOWANCES AND DIFFERENTIALS
Subpart B--Cost-of-Living Allowance and Post Differential--Nonforeign
Areas
Sec.
591.201 Definitions.
Cost-of-Living Allowances and Post Differentials
591.202 Why does the Government pay COLAs?
591.203 Why does the Government pay post differentials?
591.204 Who can receive COLAs and post differentials?
591.205 Which areas are nonforeign areas?
Cost-of-Living Allowances
591.206 How does OPM establish COLA areas?
591.207 Which areas are COLA areas?
591.208 How does OPM establish COLA rates?
591.209 What is a price index?
591.210 What are weights?
591.211 What are the categories of consumer expenditures?
591.212 How does OPM select survey items?
591.213 What prices does OPM collect?
591.214 How does OPM collect prices?
591.215 Where does OPM collect prices in the COLA and DC areas?
591.216 How does OPM combine survey data for the DC area and for
COLA areas with multiple survey areas?
591.217 In which outlets does OPM collect prices?
591.218 How does OPM compute price indexes?
591.219 How does OPM compute shelter price indexes?
591.220 How does OPM calculate energy utility cost indexes?
591.221 How does OPM compute the consumer expenditure weights it
uses to combine price indexes?
591.222 How does OPM use the expenditure weights to combine price
indexes?
591.223 When does OPM conduct COLA surveys?
591.224 How does OPM adjust price indexes between surveys?
591.225 Which CPIs does OPM use?
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591.226 How does OPM apply the CPIs?
591.227 What adjustment factors does OPM add to the price indexes?
591.228 How does OPM convert the price index plus adjustment factor
to a COLA rate?
591.229 How does OPM inform agencies and employees of COLA rate
changes?
Post Differentials
591.230 When does OPM establish post differential areas?
591.231 Which areas are post differential areas?
591.232 How does OPM establish and review post differentials?
591.233 Who can receive a post differential?
591.234 Under what circumstances may people recruited locally
receive a post differential?
Program Administration
591.235 When do COLA and post differential payments begin?
591.236 When do COLA and post differential payments end?
591.237 Under what circumstances may employees on leave or travel
receive a COLA and/or post differential?
591.238 How do agencies pay COLAs and post differentials?
591.239 How do agencies treat COLAs and post differentials for the
purpose of overtime pay and other entitlements?
591.240 How are agency and employee representatives involved in the
administration of the COLA and post differential programs?
591.241 What are the key activities of the COLA Advisory
Committees?
591.242 What is the tenure of a COLA Advisory Committee?
591.243 How many members are on each COLA Advisory Committee?
591.244 How does OPM select COLA Advisory Committee members?
Appendix A of Subpart B--Places and Rates at Which Allowances Are
Paid
Appendix B of Subpart B--Places and Rates at Which Differentials Are
Paid
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5941; E.O. 10000, 3 CFR, 1943-1948 Comp., p.
792; and E.O. 12510, 3 CFR, 1985 Comp., p. 338.
Subpart B--Cost-of-Living Allowance and Post Differential--
Nonforeign Areas
Sec. 591.201 Definitions.
In this subpart--
Agency means an Executive agency as defined in section 105 of title
5, United States Code, but does not include Government-controlled
corporations.
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) means the Bureau of Labor
Statistics of the Department of Labor.
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) means the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, which is part of the
Guam/CNMI COLA area.
Consumer Expenditure Survey (CES) means the BLS survey of consumers
and their expenditures.
Consumer Price Index (CPI) means the BLS survey of the change of
consumer prices over time.
Cost-of-living allowance (COLA) means an allowance that the Office
of Personnel Management (OPM) establishes under 5 U.S.C. 5941 at a
location in a nonforeign area where living costs are substantially
higher than in the Washington, DC, area.
Cost-of-living allowance area means a geographic area for which OPM
has authorized a COLA. COLA areas are listed in Sec. 591.207.
Detailed Expenditure Category (DEC) means the lowest level of
expenditure shown in tabulated nationwide CES data.
Major Expenditure Group (MEG) means one of the nine major groups
into which OPM categorizes expenditures. These categories are food,
shelter and utilities, clothing, transportation, household furnishings
and supplies, medical, education and communication, recreation, and
miscellaneous.
Nonforeign area means one of the areas listed in Sec. 591.205.
Office of Personnel Management (OPM) means the Office of Personnel
Management.
Official duty station means the duty station for an employee's
position of record as indicated on his or her most recent notification
of personnel action. For an employee who is authorized to receive
relocation allowances under 5 U.S.C. 5737 in connection with an
extended assignment, the temporary duty station associated with that
assignment is the employee's official duty station. Exception: A new
duty station assignment that is followed within 3 working days by a
reduction in force that results in the employee's separation before the
employee is required to report for duty at the new location is not an
official duty station.
Post differential means an allowance OPM establishes under 5 U.S.C.
5941 at a location in a nonforeign area where conditions of environment
differ substantially from conditions of environment in the contiguous
United States and warrant its payment as a recruitment incentive.
Post differential area means a geographic area for which OPM
authorizes a post differential. Post differential areas are listed in
Sec. 591.231.
Primary Expenditure Group (PEG) means one of approximately 40
expenditure groups into which OPM categorizes expenditures. A PEG is
the first level of categorization under the MEG.
Rate of basic pay means the rate of pay fixed by statute for the
position held by an individual before any deductions and exclusive of
additional pay of any kind, such as overtime pay, night differential,
extra pay for work on holidays, or other allowances and differentials.
For firefighters covered by 5 U.S.C. 5545b (as provided in
Sec. 550.1305(b) of this chapter), straight-time pay for regular
overtime hours is basic pay.
Washington, DC, area or DC area means the District of Columbia;
Montgomery County, MD; Prince Georges County, MD; Arlington County, VA;
Fairfax County, VA; Prince William County, VA; and the independent
cities of Alexandria, Fairfax, Falls Church, Manassas, and Manassas
Park, Virginia.
Cost-of-Living Allowances and Post Differentials
Sec. 591.202 Why does the Government pay COLAs?
The Government pays COLAs as additional compensation to certain
civilian Federal employees in specified nonforeign areas in
consideration of higher living costs in the local area compared with
living costs in the Washington, DC, area.
Sec. 591.203 Why does the Government pay post differentials?
The Government pays post differentials to certain civilian Federal
employees in specified nonforeign areas as a recruitment incentive
based on conditions of environment in the local area compared with
conditions in the continental United States. Post differentials are
designed to attract persons from outside the area to work for the
Federal Government in the post differential area.
Sec. 591.204 Who can receive COLAs and post differentials?
(a) Agencies pay COLAs and post differentials authorized under this
subpart to civilian Federal employees whose rates of basic pay are
fixed by statute. The following pay plans are covered by this subpart:
(1) General Schedule,
(2) Veterans Health Administration (Department of Veterans
Affairs),
(3) Foreign Service (including the Senior Foreign Service),
(4) Postal Service (where applicable under title 39, United States
Code),
(5) Administrative law judges paid under 5 U.S.C. 5372,
(6) Senior Executive Service (including the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and Drug Enforcement Administration Senior Executive
Service),
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(7) Senior-level and scientific or professional positions paid
under 5 U.S.C. 5376, and
(8) Administrative appeals judges paid under 5 U.S.C. 5372b.
(b) At its sole discretion and consistent with the intent of 5
U.S.C. 5941, an agency may apply this subpart to other positions
authorized by specific law.
(c) Agencies pay COLAs to employees covered by paragraphs (a) or
(b) of this section and whose official duty station is in a COLA area
as defined in Sec. 591.207.
(d) Agencies pay post differentials to employees covered by
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section whose official duty station or
detail to temporary duty is in a post differential area as defined in
Sec. 591.231 and who are eligible to receive a post differential under
Sec. 591.233.
Sec. 591.205 Which areas are nonforeign areas?
(a) The nonforeign areas are States, commonwealths, territories,
and possessions of the United States outside the 48 contiguous United
States and any additional areas the Secretary of State designates as
being within the scope of Part II of Executive Order 10000, as amended.
(b) The following areas are nonforeign areas:
(1) State of Alaska;
(2) State of Hawaii;
(3) American Samoa (including the island of Tutuila, the Manua
Islands, and all other islands of the Samoa group east of longitude 171
degrees west of Greenwich, together with Swains Island);
(4) Commonwealth of Puerto Rico;
(5) Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands;
(6) Howland, Baker, and Jarvis Islands;
(7) Johnston Atoll;
(8) Kingman Reef;
(9) Midway Atoll;
(10) Navassaa Island;
(11) Palmyra Atoll;
(12) Territory of Guam;
(13) United States Virgin Islands;
(14) Wake Atoll;
(15) Any small guano islands, rocks, or keys that, in pursuance of
action taken under the Act of Congress, August 18, 1856, are considered
as pertaining to the United States; and
(16) Any other islands outside of the contiguous 48 states to which
the U.S. Government reserves claim.
Cost-of-Living Allowances
Sec. 591.206 How does OPM establish COLA areas?
(a) OPM designates, within nonforeign areas, areas where agencies
pay employees a COLA by virtue of living costs that are substantially
higher than those in the Washington, DC, area. In establishing the
boundaries of COLA areas, OPM considers--
(1) The existence of a well-defined economic community,
(2) The availability of consumer goods and services,
(3) The concentration of Federal employees covered by this subpart,
and
(4) Unique circumstances related to a specific location.
(b) If a department or agency wants OPM to consider establishing or
revising the definition of a COLA area, the head of the department or
agency or his or her designee must submit a request in writing to OPM.
Sec. 591.207 Which areas are COLA areas?
OPM has established the following COLA areas:
(a) City of Anchorage, AK, and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road, as measured from the Federal courthouse;
(b) City of Fairbanks, AK, and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by
road, as measured from the Federal courthouse;
(c) City of Juneau, AK, and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road,
as measured from the Federal courthouse;
(d) Rest of the State of Alaska;
(e) City and County of Honolulu, HI;
(f) County of Hawaii, HI;
(g) County of Kauai, HI;
(h) County of Maui (including Kalawao County), HI;
(i) Commonwealth of Puerto Rico;
(j) Territory of Guam and Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands; and
(k) U.S. Virgin Islands.
Sec. 591.208 How does OPM establish COLA rates?
OPM establishes COLA rates based on price differences between the
COLA area and the Washington, DC, area, plus an adjustment factor. OPM
expresses price differences as indexes.
(a) OPM computes price indexes for various categories of consumer
expenditures.
(b) OPM combines the price indexes using Consumer expenditure
weights to produce an overall price index for the COLA area.
(c) To combine overall price indexes for COLA areas with multiple
survey areas, OPM uses employment weights to combine overall price
indexes by survey area for COLA areas. The COLA areas that have
multiple survey areas are listed in Sec. 591.215(b).
(d) OPM adds an adjustment factor to the overall price index for
the COLA area.
Sec. 591.209 What is a price index?
(a) The price index is the COLA area price divided by the DC area
price and multiplied by 100.
(b) Example:
COLA Area Average Price for Item A = $1.233
DC Area Average Price for Item A = $1.164
Computation:
$1.233/$1.164 = 1.0592783
1.0592783 x 100 = 105.92783.
(c) In the case of the final index, OPM rounds the index to two
decimal places.
Sec. 591.210 What are weights?
(a) A weight is the relative importance or share of a subpart of a
group compared with the total for the group. A weight is frequently
expressed as a percentage. For example, in a pie chart, each wedge has
a percentage that represents its relative importance or the size of the
wedge compared with the whole pie.
(b) OPM uses two kinds of weights: Consumer expenditure weights and
employment weights.
(1) Consumer expenditure weights. The consumer expenditure weight
for a category of expenditures (e.g., Food) is the relative importance
or share (often expressed as a percentage) of that category in terms of
total consumer expenditures. OPM derives consumer expenditure weights
from the tabulated results of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Consumer Expenditure Survey (CES).
(2) Employment weights. The employment weight is the relative
employment population of the survey area compared with the employment
population of the COLA area as a whole. OPM uses the number of General
Schedule employees in the survey area to compute employment weights.
OPM uses these employment weights as described in Sec. 591.216(b).
Sec. 591.211 What are the categories of consumer expenditures?
OPM uses three different types of categories: Major expenditure
groups, primary expenditure groups, and detailed expenditure
categories.
(a) Major expenditure groups. OPM groups expenditures into nine
major expenditure groups (MEGs). These categories are food, shelter and
utilities, clothing, transportation, household furnishings and
supplies, medical, education and communication, recreation, and
miscellaneous.
(b) Primary expenditure groups. OPM subdivides each MEG into
primary expenditure groups (PEGs). There are approximately 40 PEGs.
(c) Detailed expenditure categories. OPM further subdivides each
PEG into
[[Page 22343]]
other categories down to the detailed expenditure categories (DECs),
which are generally equivalent to the most detailed level of tabulated
CES categories. OPM classifies each DEC into one of the PEGs to
aggregate DECs with similar demand and cost characteristics into PEGs.
Alternatively, OPM may remove the DEC entirely from the list of
expenditures. Therefore, the classification of the DECs into PEGs and
sub-PEGs does not necessarily follow that used in published CES tables.
Sec. 591.212 How does OPM select survey items?
(a) OPM selects a sufficient number of items to represent PEGs and
reduce overall price index variability. In selecting these items, OPM
applies the following guidelines. The item should be--
(1) Relatively important (i.e., represent a DEC with a relatively
large weight) within the PEG;
(2) Relatively easy to find in both COLA and DC areas;
(3) Relatively common, i.e., what people typically buy;
(4) Relatively stable over time, e.g., not a fad item; and
(5) Subject to similar supply and demand functions.
(b) To the extent practical, the items OPM surveys in the COLA area
must be identical to the items that OPM surveys in the DC area or be of
closely similar quality and quantity, with quantity adjustments as
necessary. An example of a quantity adjustment is converting prices for
10 and 12 oz. packages to a price per pound.
(c) Within any DEC, OPM may specify items that differ in quality
and quantity from other items specified for the same DEC. However, when
OPM compares prices for such items between the COLA area and the DC
area, OPM compares prices of like products.
Sec. 591.213 What prices does OPM collect?
(a) OPM surveys the price charged to the consumer at the time of
the survey. The price includes any sales, excise, or general business
tax passed on to the consumer at the time of sale and any discounts,
mark-downs, or ``sales'' in progress at the time the price was
collected.
(b) Exceptions:
(1) OPM does not collect coupon prices, going-out-of-business
prices, or area-wide distress sale prices.
(2) OPM prices automobiles at dealers and obtains the sticker (i.e.
non-negotiated) price for the model and specified options. The prices
are the manufacturer's suggested retail price (including options),
destination charges, additional shipping charges, appropriate dealer-
added items or options, dealer mark-up, and taxes.
(3) OPM estimates prices for selected items, such as health
insurance and K-12 education, based on employee usage of the item. For
example, OPM estimates health insurance prices based on the employee's
share of the premium costs and weights reflecting Federal enrollment,
as reported in OPM's Central Personnel Data File, in the various plans
available to Federal employees in each area.
Sec. 591.214 How does OPM collect prices?
(a) OPM collects most prices by visiting or calling retail outlets
in each survey area and observing or verbally obtaining the item
prices.
(b) OPM prices some items by catalog, Internet, or a similar
source. Other items, not normally sold within an area, may be priced in
a different area. In either case, the price of such items includes any
applicable taxes, shipping, and handling charges. When an item is
normally sold within an area but is not available at the time of
survey, OPM may, on a case-by-case basis, use the price of the item in
a neighboring survey or COLA area.
Sec. 591.215 Where does OPM collect prices in the COLA and DC areas?
(a) Survey areas. Each COLA area has one survey area, except Hawaii
County, HI, and the U.S. Virgin Islands COLA areas. Hawaii County has
two survey areas: the City of Hilo and the Kailua-Kona area. The U.S.
Virgin Islands also has two survey areas: the Island of St. Croix and
the Islands of St. Thomas and St. John. The Washington, DC, area has
three survey areas: the District of Columbia, the Maryland suburbs of
the District of Columbia, and the Virginia suburbs of the District of
Columbia. OPM collects non-housing data throughout the survey area. OPM
may collect housing data throughout the survey area or in specific
housing data collection areas. The following table shows the survey
areas:
Survey and Data Collection Areas
------------------------------------------------------------------------
COLA areas & reference areas Survey area
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anchorage.................... City of Anchorage.
Fairbanks.................... City of Fairbanks.
Juneau....................... Juneau, Mendenhall.
Rest of Alaska............... See paragraph (c) of this section.
Honolulu..................... City and County of Honolulu.
Hawaii County................ City of Hilo, Kailua-Kona area.
Kauai........................ Kauai Island.
Maui......................... Maui Island.
Guam & CNMI.................. Guam.
Puerto Rico.................. San Juan area.
U.S. Virgin Islands.......... St. Croix, St. Thomas, St. John (housing
data only).
Washington, DC-DC............ District of Columbia.
Washington, DC-MD............ Montgomery County and Prince Georges
County.
Washington, DC-VA............ Arlington County, Fairfax County, Prince
William County, City of Alexandria, City
of Fairfax, City of Falls Church, City
of Manassas, and City of Manassas Park.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Rest of the State of Alaska COLA area. OPM may collect survey
data onsite, use alternative indicators of relative living costs (e.g.,
price and cost information published by the University of Alaska), or
both. If the use of alternative indicators would result in a COLA rate
reduction, OPM will conduct onsite surveys in one or more locations in
the Rest of the State of Alaska COLA area, before making a reduction,
to ensure that the reduction is warranted.
(c) Determining Survey Coverage. To aid OPM in determining survey
coverage, OPM may from time to time conduct surveys of Federal
employees in the COLA areas and/or the Washington, DC, area to
determine
[[Page 22344]]
where employees shop and what they spend on certain goods or services
and to collect other information related to the price surveys and the
calculation of price indexes.
Sec. 591.216 How does OPM combine survey data for the DC area and for
COLA areas with multiple survey areas?
(a) Washington, DC, area. For each survey item except shelter, OPM
averages separately the prices collected in each of the DC survey areas
identified in Sec. 591.215(a) and then averages these average prices
together using equal weights to compute an overall average by item for
the DC area.
(b) COLA areas with multiple survey areas. OPM computes weighted
average indexes at the PEG, MEG, and overall level by using the
corresponding indexes and Federal employment weights from each survey
area within the COLA area.
Sec. 591.217 In which outlets does OPM collect prices?
OPM collects prices in popular outlets in each survey area. OPM
selects these outlets based on their proximity to the housing data
collection areas, accessibility by road, physical size, advertising,
and other characteristics that reflect sales volume. To the extent
practical, OPM prices like items in the same types of outlets in the
COLA areas and the Washington, DC, area. As warranted, OPM also may
conduct point-of-purchase surveys and select outlets based on the
results of those surveys.
Sec. 591.218 How does OPM compute price indexes?
Except for shelter and energy utilities, OPM averages by item the
prices collected in each survey area. For the Washington, DC, area, OPM
computes a simple average for each item based on the average prices
from each DC survey area. On an item-by-item basis, OPM divides the
COLA survey area average price by the DC average price and produces a
price index.
Sec. 591.219 How does OPM compute shelter price indexes?
(a) In addition to rental and rental equivalence prices and/or
estimates, OPM obtains for each unit surveyed information about the
important characteristics of the unit, such as size, number of
bathrooms, and other amenities that reflect the quality of the unit.
(b) OPM then uses these characteristics and rental prices and/or
estimates in hedonic regressions (a type of multiple regression) to
compute for each COLA area the price index for rental and/or rental
equivalent units of comparable quality and size between the COLA survey
area and the Washington, DC, area.
Sec. 591.220 How does OPM calculate energy utility cost indexes?
(a) OPM calculates energy utility cost indexes based on the
relative cost of maintaining a standard size dwelling in each area at a
given ambient temperature and the cost of other energy uses. Although
the dwelling size may vary from one COLA survey area to another, OPM
compares the utility cost for the same size dwelling in the COLA survey
area and the Washington, DC, area.
(b) OPM applies the following six-step process to compute a cost
index(es) for heating and cooling a standard home to a given ambient
temperature and to combine the cost index(es) by energy type (e.g.,
electricity and natural gas) with cost indexes for other energy uses.
(1) Step 1. OPM obtains technical information about the
requirements by major energy type for heating and cooling a standard
size dwelling, built according to current local building practices and
codes in each area, given local climatic conditions (e.g., seasonal
temperature and humidity). OPM also obtains similar information for use
of energy types in other household operations (e.g., hot water,
cooking, cleaning, recreation).
(2) Step 2. OPM obtains from the shelter survey, a survey of
Federal employees, or other appropriate sources, information on
dwelling size and the types and prevalence of heating and cooling
equipment and energy types (e.g., electricity, gas, and oil) in each
area.
(3) Step 3. OPM computes estimates of total home energy
requirements by energy type attributable to heating and cooling plus
all other household energy uses for the COLA survey area and the
Washington, DC, area.
(4) Step 4. OPM surveys utility prices for each major energy type
appropriate to the area.
(5) Step 5. OPM combines the above data to produce for each COLA
survey area the cost of maintaining the standard size dwelling at a
given ambient temperature and the cost of other household energy uses.
(6) Step 6. OPM compares the COLA survey area cost with the DC area
cost to produce a price index.
Sec. 591.221 How does OPM compute the consumer expenditure weights it
uses to combine price indexes?
OPM uses the following ten-step process to compute consumer
expenditure weights:
(a) Step 1. OPM obtains the latest BLS tabulated CES data
nationwide and for the Washington, DC, area.
(b) Step 2. In both the nationwide and DC area tabulated data, OPM
replaces the homeowners' expenditures for shelter with estimated rental
values of owned homes that are available elsewhere in tabulated CES
data. Note: These replacements are consistent with the rental
equivalence approach described in Sec. 591.219.
(c) Step 3. OPM selects the central income groups in the nationwide
CES tabulation.
(d) Step 4. OPM calculates the expenditure shares (i.e.,
percentages) for each central income group by dividing each of its DEC
expenditures by total expenditures for the income group. OPM also
calculates expenditure shares for total nationwide expenditures by
dividing each nationwide DEC expenditure by total nationwide
expenditures.
(e) Step 5. OPM computes a democratic distribution of expenditure
shares by averaging the central income groups' shares at each DEC and
higher level of aggregation.
(f) Step 6. OPM computes a set of ratios by dividing each
expenditure share of the nationwide democratic distribution by the
corresponding expenditure share of the total national distribution.
(g) Step 7. OPM computes estimated expenditures for Washington DC
for each DC DEC and higher level of aggregation that BLS reported by
multiplying the reported expenditure by the corresponding ratio derived
in Step 6.
(h) Step 8. For each DC DEC and higher level of aggregation that
BLS did not report, OPM computes expenditures for DC by distributing
the DC expenditure calculated in step 7 using the distribution of
expenditure shares derived in step 5.
(i) Step 9. As described in Sec. 591.211(c), OPM classifies each
DEC and aggregate into PEGs.
(j) Step 10. OPM computes expenditure weights by dividing each DEC
or aggregate by the total expenditure derived from the DC expenditure
computed in step 8. Therefore, the sum of the MEGs, PEGs, and DECs,
will separately total 100, i.e., so that all consumer expenditures in
the original tabulation are accounted for.
Sec. 591.222 How does OPM use the expenditure weights to combine price
indexes?
OPM uses a three-step process to combine price indexes.
(a) Step 1. For each DEC represented by one or more items for which
OPM
[[Page 22345]]
could make valid price comparisons (e.g., OPM was able to collect
representative prices in both the COLA and DC areas), OPM computes the
unweighted geometric average (the nth root of the product of n numbers)
of the price index(es) of all item(s) representing the DEC.
(b) Step 2. OPM multiplies the price index for each DEC by its
expenditure weight, sums the cross products, and divides by the sum of
the weights used in the calculation. This produces a price index for
the level of aggregation (e.g., PEG or sub-PEG) in which the DEC is
categorized.
(c) Step 3. OPM repeats the process described in step 2 at each
level of aggregation within the PEG to produce a price index for the
PEG, at the PEG level to produce an index for the MEG, and at the MEG
level to produce the overall price index for the survey area.
Sec. 591.223 When does OPM conduct COLA surveys?
(a) OPM conducts a survey in each COLA area once every 3 years on a
rotational basis and surveys the Washington, DC, area concurrently with
each COLA area survey. The order of the COLA area surveys is as
follows:
(1) Year 1. All COLA areas in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and
the U.S. Virgin Islands.
(2) Year 2. All COLA areas in the State of Alaska, except as
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(3) Year 3. All COLA areas in the State of Hawaii and the Territory
of Guam and CNMI.
(b) Exceptions:
(1) Nothing in this subpart precludes OPM from conducting interim
surveys or implementing some other change in response to conditions
caused by a natural disaster or similar emergency, provided OPM
publishes a notice or rule in the Federal Register explaining the
change and the reason(s) for it.
(2) As provided in Sec. 591.215(c), OPM does not conduct surveys in
the Rest of the State of Alaska COLA area unless COLA rate reductions
appear warranted.
Sec. 591.224 How does OPM adjust price indexes between surveys?
(a) OPM adjusts price indexes between the triennial surveys in each
COLA area that is not surveyed in that year. To do this, OPM uses the
annual or biennial change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the
COLA area relative to the annual or biennial change in the CPI for the
Washington, DC, area. OPM uses the annual change for those areas
surveyed the preceding year. OPM uses the biennial change for those
areas surveyed 2 years before.
(b) This section applies beginning with the effective date of the
results of the second survey conducted in Puerto Rico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands under these regulations.
Sec. 591.225 Which CPIs does OPM use?
OPM uses the following CPIs:
(a) For the Washington, DC, area--the BLS Consumer Price Index, All
Urban Consumers (CPI-U);
(b) For all COLA areas in the State of Alaska--the BLS CPI-U for
Anchorage, AK;
(c) For all COLA areas in the State of Hawaii and for Guam and the
CNMI--the BLS CPI-U for Honolulu, HI; and
(d) For Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands--the Puerto Rico
CPI as produced by the Puerto Rico Department of Work and Human
Resources.
Sec. 591.226 How does OPM apply the CPIs?
(a) OPM uses a three-step process to adjust price indexes by
relative annual or biennial changes in the CPIs. For steps 1 and 2, OPM
computes the annual change by dividing the CPI from 1 year after the
survey by the CPI from the time of the survey. OPM computes the
biennial change by dividing the CPI from 2 years after the survey by
the CPI from the time of the survey.
(1) Step 1. OPM computes the annual or biennial CPI change for the
COLA area.
(2) Step 2. OPM computes the annual or biennial CPI change for the
DC area.
(3) Step 3. OPM multiplies the COLA area price index from the last
survey by the COLA area CPI change computed in step 1 divided by the DC
area CPI change computed in step 2. The adjusted price index is rounded
to the second decimal place.
(b) Example:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2008 2009
------------------------------------------------------------------------
COLA Area CPI......................................... 172.2 174.7
DC Area CPI........................................... 159.7 161.9
COLA Area Survey Index................................ 117.33 (1)
COLA Area CPI Adjusted Index.......................... (2) 117.42
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ No survey.
\2\ N/A
Computation:
117.33 x (174.7/172.2)/(161.9/159.7) = 117.4159, which would round to
117.42.
Sec. 591.227 What adjustment factors does OPM add to the price
indexes?
OPM adds to the price index an adjustment factor that reflects
differences in need, access to and availability of goods and services,
and quality of life in the COLA area relative to the DC area. The
following table shows the adjustment factor for each area:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
COLA area Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anchorage, AK................................................. 7.0
Fairbanks, AK................................................. 9.0
Juneau, AK.................................................... 9.0
Rest of the State of Alaska................................... 9.0
City and County of Honolulu, HI............................... 5.0
Hawaii County, HI............................................. 7.0
Kauai County, HI.............................................. 7.0
Maui County, HI............................................... 7.0
Guam and CNMI................................................. 9.0
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico................................... 7.0
U.S. Virgin Islands........................................... 9.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Amount added to the price index.
Sec. 591.228 How does OPM convert the price index plus adjustment
factor to a COLA rate?
(a) OPM converts the price index plus the adjustment factor to a
COLA rate as shown in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
COLA rate subject to paragraph (b)
Price index plus adjustment factor of this section
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equal to or greater than 124.50.... 25 percent.
Equal to or greater than 102.00 but Price index plus the adjustment
less than 124.50. factor, minus 100, expressed to
the nearest whole percent.
Less than 102.00................... 0 percent.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) This section is applicable on an area-by-area basis beginning
with the effective date of the results of the first survey conducted in
each area.
(c) OPM may reduce the COLA rate in any area by no more than 1
percentage point in any 12-month period. Any reduction in the COLA rate
for any COLA area cannot be effective until the effective date of the
first survey conducted in Hawaii and Guam and CNMI under these
regulations.
Sec. 591.229 How does OPM inform agencies and employees of COLA rate
changes?
OPM publishes COLA area survey summary reports, MEG and PEG
indexes, and COLA rates in the Federal Register. OPM makes survey data
and
[[Page 22346]]
other information available to the public to the extent authorized by
the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act.
Post Differentials
Sec. 591.230 When does OPM establish post differential areas?
(a) OPM establishes post differential areas in response to agency
requests when--
(1) Conditions of environment within the post differential area
differ substantially from conditions of environment in the continental
United States, and
(2) The major Federal employers within the area believe payment of
a post differential is warranted as a recruitment incentive to attract
candidates from outside the post differential area to work for the
Government in the post differential area.
(b) If a department or agency wants OPM to consider establishing or
revising the definition of a post differential area, the head of the
department or agency or his or her designee must submit a request in
writing to OPM.
Sec. 591.231 Which areas are post differential areas?
OPM has established the following post differential areas:
(a) American Samoa as defined in Sec. 591.205,
(b) Territory of Guam,
(c) Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands,
(d) Johnston Atoll (including Sand Island),
(e) Midway Atoll, and
(f) Wake Atoll.
Sec. 591.232 How does OPM establish and review post differentials?
(a) OPM establishes a post differential by rulemaking if Government
agencies require it for recruitment purposes and if one or more of the
following conditions exist:
(1) Extraordinarily difficult living conditions,
(2) Excessive physical hardship, and/or
(3) Notably unhealthful conditions.
(b) OPM periodically reviews with Federal agencies whether
conditions of environment have changed in the post differential areas
and whether payment of the post differential continues to be warranted
as a recruitment incentive.
Sec. 591.233 Who can receive a post differential?
An employee must meet all of the following conditions to be
eligible to receive a post differential:
(a) The employee must be a citizen or national of the United
States,
(b) The employee's official duty station or detail to temporary
duty must be in the post differential area, and
(c) Immediately prior to being assigned to duty in the post
differential area, the employee must have maintained his or her actual
place(s) of residence outside the post differential area for an
appropriate period of time (generally at least 1 year or more), except
as provided in Sec. 591.234.
Sec. 591.234 Under what circumstances may people recruited locally
receive a post differential?
(a) Current residents of the area qualify for a post differential
if they were originally recruited from outside the differential area
and have been in substantially continuous employment by the United
States or by U.S. firms, interests, or organizations.
(b) Examples of persons recruited locally but eligible to receive a
post differential include, but are not limited to--
(1) Those who were originally recruited from outside the area and
have been in substantially continuous employment by other Federal
agencies, contractors of Federal agencies, or international
organizations in which the U.S. Government participates and whose
conditions of employment provide for their return transportation to
places outside the post differential area,
(2) Those who are temporarily present in the post differential area
for travel or formal study at the time they are hired and have
maintained actual places of residence outside the area for an
appropriate period of time, and
(3) Those who are discharged from U.S. military service in the
differential area to accept employment with a Federal agency and have
maintained actual places of residence outside the differential area for
an appropriate period of time.
Program Administration
Sec. 591.235 When do COLA and post differential payments begin?
(a) Agencies begin paying an employee a COLA or post differential
on the effective date of the change in the employee's official duty
station to a duty station within the COLA or post differential area or,
in the case of local recruitment, on the effective date of the
appointment.
(b) For an employee detailed to temporary duty in a post
differential area and who is otherwise eligible for a post
differential, agencies must begin paying a post differential after 42
consecutive calendar days of temporary duty in the post differential
area.
Sec. 591.236 When do COLA and post differential payments end?
Subject to Sec. 591.237(a), agencies stop paying an employee a COLA
or post differential on--
(a) Separation,
(b) The effective date of assignment or transfer to a new official
duty station outside the COLA or post differential area, or
(c) In the case of an employee on detail to temporary duty in a
post differential area, the ending date of the detail.
Sec. 591.237 Under what circumstances may employees on leave or travel
receive a COLA and/or post differential?
(a) An employee on leave or travel may receive a COLA or post
differential only if the agency anticipates that the employee will
return to duty in the area. Exceptions: If the employee does not return
to duty in the area, the agency may still pay a COLA and/or a post
differential for the period of leave or travel, subject to paragraph
(b) of this section, if the agency determines that--
(1) It is in the public interest not to return the employee to the
duty station, or
(2) The employee will not return because of compelling personal
reasons or circumstances over which the employee has no control.
(b) Post differentials. Agencies may pay a post differential to an
employee only during the employee's first 42 consecutive calendar days
of absence from the post differential area.
Sec. 591.238 How do agencies pay COLAs and post differentials?
(a) Agencies pay COLAs and post differentials as a percentage of an
employee's hourly rate of basic pay, including a retained rate of pay
under 5 U.S.C. 3594(c) or 5363, for those hours during which the
employee receives basic pay. This includes all periods of paid leave,
detail, or travel status outside the COLA or post differential area.
(b) Agencies pay employees eligible for both a COLA and a post
differential the full amount of the COLA, plus so much of the post
differential as will not cause the combined total of the COLA and post
differential to exceed 25 percent of the hourly rate of basic pay.
Sec. 591.239 How do agencies treat COLAs and post differentials for
the purpose of overtime pay and other entitlements?
(a) Agencies include COLAs in the employee's straight time rate of
pay and include COLAs and post differentials in an employee's regular
rate of pay for computing overtime pay entitlements for nonexempt
employees under the
[[Page 22347]]
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended.
(b) Agencies may not include a COLA or post differential as part of
an employee's rate of basic pay for the purpose of computing
entitlements to overtime pay, retirement, life insurance, or any other
additional pay, COLA, or post differential under title 5, United States
Code.
(c) Payment of a COLA or post differential is not an equivalent
increase in pay within the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 5335.
Sec. 591.240 How are agency and employee representatives involved in
the administration of the COLA and post differential programs?
(a) OPM may establish a COLA Advisory Committee in each COLA survey
area. The committees are composed of agency and employee
representatives from the COLA survey area and one or more
representatives from OPM.
(b) To the extent practical, the COLA Advisory Committees
coordinate and work with the Survey Implementation Committee
established pursuant to Caraballo, et al. v. United States, No. 1997-
0027 (D.V.I).
Sec. 591.241 What are the key activities of the COLA Advisory
Committees?
(a) The COLA Advisory Committees may--
(1) Advise and assist OPM in planning living-cost surveys;
(2) Provide or arrange for observers for data collection during
living-cost surveys;
(3) Advise and assist OPM in the review of survey data;
(4) Advise OPM on its administration of the COLA program, including
survey methodology; and
(5) Assist OPM in disseminating information to affected employees
about the living-cost surveys and the COLA program.
(b) The committees also may advise OPM on special situations or
conditions, such as hurricanes and earthquakes, as they relate to OPM's
authority under Sec. 591.223(b) to conduct interim surveys or implement
some other change in response to conditions caused by a natural
disaster or similar emergency.
Sec. 591.242 What is the tenure of a COLA Advisory Committee?
OPM may establish a COLA Advisory Committee in each area prior to
each living-cost survey conducted in that area. OPM will appoint
committee members for 3-year renewable terms. To the extent practical,
the committee will continue to exist between surveys, but OPM may
periodically review with the committee whether there is a continuing
need for the committee.
Sec. 591.243 How many members are on each COLA Advisory Committee?
A COLA Advisory Committee has up to 12 members composed of OPM
representatives and other agency and employee representatives, unless
OPM determines that the committee should be larger. In determining the
number of committee members, OPM considers the amount of work the
committee is likely to be requested to do (based on the size and
complexity of the local living-cost survey) and the availability of
employee and agency representatives to participate as committee
members.
Sec. 591.244 How does OPM select COLA Advisory Committee members?
(a) In establishing a COLA Advisory Committee, OPM invites local
agencies and employee organizations to nominate committee members. OPM
also invites COLA Defense Corporations and the local Federal Executive
Board or Federal Executive Association each to nominate committee
members. Subject to Sec. 591.243, OPM selects committee members from
these nominations in a manner designed to achieve a balanced
representation that is reflective of agencies and employee
organizations in the area. In consultation with the committee, OPM may
select additional nominees to serve as alternates to the primary
committee members. OPM designates not more than two OPM representatives
to serve on each committee.
(b) Each Executive agency, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 105, must
cooperate and release appointed employees for committee proceedings and
activities unless the agency can demonstrate that exceptional
circumstances directly related to accomplishing the mission of the
employee's work unit require his or her presence on the job. Executive
agency employees serving as committee members are considered to be on
official assignment to an interagency function, rather than on leave,
and are eligible to receive reimbursement for authorized travel
expenses from their respective agencies.
Appendix A of Subpart B--Places and Rates at Which Allowances Are Paid
This appendix lists the places approved for a cost-of-living
allowance and shows the authorized allowance rate for each. The
allowance percentage rate shown is paid as a percentage of an
employee's rate of basic pay. The rates are subject to change based
on the results of future surveys.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allowance rate
Geographic coverage (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
State of Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius 25.00
by road...........................................
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius 25.00
by road...........................................
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by 25.00
road..............................................
Rest of the State.................................. 25.00
State of Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu........................ 25.00
County of Hawaii................................... 16.50
County of Kauai.................................... 23.25
County of Maui and County of Kalawao............... 23.75
Territory of Guam and Commonwealth of the Northern 25.00
Mariana Islands.......................................
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico............................ 11.50
U.S. Virgin Islands.................................... 22.50
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appendix B of Subpart B--Places and Rates At Which Differentials
Are Paid
This appendix lists the places where a post differential has
been approved and shows the differential rate to be paid to eligible
employees. The differential percentage rate shown is paid as a
percentage of an employee's rate of basic pay.
[[Page 22348]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Geographic coverage differential
rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
American Samoa (including the island of Tutuila, the 25.0
Manua Islands, and all other islands of the Samoa
group east of longitude 171 deg. west of Greenwich,
together with Swains Island)..........................
Johnston Atoll......................................... 25.0
Midway Atoll........................................... 25.0
Territory of Guam and Commonwealth of the Northern 20.0
Mariana Islands.......................................
Wake Atoll............................................. 25.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 02-10871 Filed 5-2-02; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325-39-P