Leave - Military
Military leave applies to an eligible employee who is a member of the
National Guard or a Reserve Component of the Armed Forces of the United
States. Military leave is granted for active duty, active duty for training,
inactive duty training (usually weekend drills), and military aid to enforce
the law. An eligible employee includes a full-time employee, part-time
career employee (working 16 to 32 hours per week), a temporary appointment
pending establishment of a register (TAPER) employee, term employee, or
temporary employee on an appointment of one year or more. A temporary
employee on an appointment of less than one year, not-to-exceed one year, or
on an intermittent work schedule is NOT entitled to military leave.
- 5 U.S.C. 6323 (a) provides 15 days per fiscal year for
active duty, active duty training, and inactive duty training. An
employee can carry over a maximum of 15 days into the next fiscal year.
- 5 U.S.C. 6323 (b) provides 22 workdays per calendar year
for emergency duty as ordered by the President, the Secretary of
Defense, or a State Governor. This leave is provided for an employee who
performs military duties in support of civil authorities in the
protection of life and property or who performs full-time military
service as a result of a call or order to active duty in support of a
contingency operation as defined in section 101(a)(13) of title 10,
United States Code.
- 5 U.S.C. 6323(c) provides unlimited military leave to a member of
the National Guard of the District of Columbia for certain types of duty
ordered or authorized under title 39 of the District of Columbia Code.
- 5 U.S.C. 6323(d) provides that a Reserve and National Guard
Technician is entitled to 44 workdays of military leave for duties
overseas under certain conditions.
- An employee should request military leave as far in advance as
possible to allow his/her supervisor to accommodate the absence. A copy
of the military order and evidence of service should be provided upon
the employee's return to duty. The minimum charge to military leave is 1
hour. Where the absence for military duty is continuous, any
holidays or non-workdays that fall wholly within the leave period is not
charged military leave. If an employee has exhausted his/her military leave, annual
leave or LWOP should be granted for the duration of the absence.
- Military leave for active duty, active duty training, or inactive
duty training is to be distinguished from military furlough when an
employee is ordered to extended active duty for general service with the
Armed Forces. Typically, an employee on military furlough is placed on
extended leave without pay or separated from Federal service with
reinstatement rights upon separation from active duty service.
- A full-time employee working a 40-hour workweek will accrue 120
hours (15 days x 8 hours) of military leave in a fiscal year, or the
equivalent of three 40-hour workweeks. Military leave under 6323(a) will
be prorated for a part-time employee and for an employee on an uncommon
tour of duty based proportionally on the number of hours in the
employee's regularly-scheduled biweekly pay period.
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