HR-1426-116
Received in the Senate. Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 610.
What it does
This bill would allow the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to set pay for its employees outside of the standard federal civil service pay rules when it determines that existing compensation is not sufficient. FERC would be required to consult with the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) before making any such pay adjustments. The bill does not specify a dollar amount or cap for the adjusted compensation.
Who benefits
Current and future FERC employees who would receive higher pay under the new authority. FERC as an agency, which could more easily recruit and retain specialized technical and legal staff. Energy companies, utilities, and other entities regulated by FERC, who could benefit from a more fully staffed and expert regulatory body that processes applications and rulings more efficiently.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers, who would bear the cost of any pay increases above current civil service levels. Other federal agencies that compete for the same pool of specialized workers (e.g., economists, engineers, attorneys) but do not receive the same pay flexibility, potentially putting them at a competitive disadvantage. Federal employees at other agencies who may view this as inequitable treatment within the civil service system.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that FERC regulates highly complex energy markets and infrastructure — including natural gas pipelines, electricity transmission, and hydropower — that require staff with deep technical and financial expertise. Because private-sector energy firms pay significantly more for the same skills, FERC struggles to hire and keep qualified personnel, which slows the review of critical infrastructure projects. Granting FERC targeted pay flexibility, with an OPM consultation requirement as a guardrail, would allow the agency to compete for talent and fulfill its statutory mission more effectively. Faster, better-staffed reviews would ultimately benefit consumers and the broader economy that depends on reliable energy infrastructure.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a pay carve-out for one agency undermines the uniformity and fairness of the federal civil service system, which exists to ensure consistent, merit-based treatment of government workers. They contend that if FERC's workload or staffing is genuinely insufficient, Congress should address it through the normal appropriations and workforce planning process rather than bypassing civil service protections. Critics also raise concerns that the bill provides no explicit cap on compensation increases, giving FERC broad discretion with limited oversight. Additionally, granting one agency special pay authority could set a precedent that leads to a fragmented federal pay system, making it harder to manage the government workforce as a whole.