Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 81— - CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES › § 1586
Lets Defense set up rotation programs so civilian employees who are sent to work outside the United States can come back to U.S. jobs. The Secretary of Defense and each military department secretary may create these programs. They cover career-conditional or career competitive civil service employees who are sent abroad at the department’s request, finish that overseas duty, and ask to return within 30 days after finishing. The President can decide that a tour in Alaska or Hawaii counts as overseas for this rule. Employees who get the right to return keep their seniority, job status, and job protections. Once they are ready to come back, they must be placed within 30 days. They go back to their old job if it still exists. If not, they get a vacant or new continuing job in the same area, at the same grade and pay and with the same benefits. If none exists, a temporary job will be created for up to 90 days with pay and grade at least equal to their old job. If a permanent matching job appears in those 90 days, they move into it. If no job is found, they are reassigned or separated under Office of Personnel Management rules that carry out sections 3501–3503 of title 5. Anyone displaced by a returning employee gets similar protection and pay. The Secretary of Defense can apply these rules to DoD hires who live in Guam, the Virgin Islands, or Puerto Rico as if those places were “the United States.” Rotation means the send-out and return; grade means the employee’s pay grade (GS or prevailing rate).
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1586
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73