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A bill to place limitations on excepting positions from the competitive service, and for other purposes.
1/31/2025, 11:56 AM
Summary of Bill S 134
The bill seeks to limit the number of positions that can be exempted from the competitive service process, in order to increase transparency and accountability in federal hiring practices. It also includes provisions to ensure that positions exempted from the competitive service process are truly necessary and justified.
Additionally, the bill includes measures to strengthen protections for federal employees who report violations of the competitive service hiring process, in order to prevent retaliation and ensure that employees feel safe coming forward with concerns. Overall, the Competitive Service Act aims to promote fairness and integrity in federal hiring practices, and to ensure that positions within the federal government are filled based on merit and qualifications.
Congressional Summary of S 134
Saving the Civil Service Act
This bill generally prohibits changes to the classification of positions in the competitive service and excepted service unless certain conditions are met. (Competitive service positions are subject to competitive examination while excepted service positions are appointed under one of five schedules. Competitive service positions have notice and appeal requirements for adverse actions that are not applicable to most excepted positions, including those of a confidential, policy-determining, policy-making, or policy-advocating character under Schedule C.)
On October 21, 2020, President Donald Trump issued an executive order that placed executive agency positions that are of a confidential, policy-determining, policy-making, or policy-advocating character, and that are not normally subject to change as a result of a presidential transition, under a new Schedule F in the excepted service. The order was subsequently revoked by President Joe Biden.
The bill prohibits executive agency positions in the competitive service from being placed in the excepted service, unless such positions are placed in a schedule in the excepted service as in effect on September 30, 2020. The bill also prohibits positions in the excepted service from being placed in any schedule other than the aforementioned schedules.
Additionally, agencies may not (1) transfer occupied positions from the competitive or excepted service into Schedule C without the consent of the Office of Personnel Management, or (2) transfer employees in the excepted service to another schedule or transfer employees in the competitive service to the excepted service without employee consent.
Current Status of Bill S 134
Bipartisan Support of Bill S 134
Total Number of Sponsors
4Democrat Sponsors
4Republican Sponsors
0Unaffiliated Sponsors
0Total Number of Cosponsors
76Democrat Cosponsors
68Republican Cosponsors
0Unaffiliated Cosponsors
8Policy Area and Potential Impact of Bill S 134
Primary Policy Focus
Alternate Title(s) of Bill S 134
Comments

Edward Horton
10 months ago
I don't get why they wanna do this. It seems like it's gonna mess things up for a lot of people. Who's really gonna benefit from this?

Luella Arnold
10 months ago
I support this bill, but not sure how it will impact me in the long run.





