Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER CXXIII— - LAND BETWEEN THE LAKES PROTECTION › Part Part C— - Transfer Provisions › § 460lll–47
The Secretary may hire, fire, and pay staff to run the Recreation Area, and pay them at levels like other National Forest units. For at least the first 5 months after the transfer to the Forest Service, eligible TVA employees will stay employed by TVA but be detailed to the Secretary. During that time the Secretary must direct them and pay TVA back for their basic pay and other compensation. The Secretary must give any eligible employee at least 60 days’ written notice before ending their detail, and the Secretary can still fire someone for cause during that period. Eligible employees can apply for Forest Service jobs, and the Secretary must follow Department of Agriculture rules when filling jobs, but must tell eligible employees about openings first and consider their applications before others. The Secretary may also hire eligible employees without using the usual competitive process, and time worked for TVA will count for probation, tenure, time-in-grade, and leave. TVA must likewise tell eligible employees about TVA job openings before telling others. The Secretary, the Office of Personnel Management, TVA, and the TVA Retirement System must make a written agreement to handle retirement and benefit transitions and must consult employees. Employees who move to other TVA units or who are hired by the Forest Service must not lose health, retirement, leave, or other benefits. Employees hired by the Forest Service join the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) Offset Plan and may switch to the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) within six months; they can get credit for their TVA service under the usual rules. If an eligible employee is laid off as excess and does not take a Forest Service job, the agreement parties can provide benefits similar to past TVA reductions. At minimum, such an employee may choose one severance option: $1,000 times years of service (not less than $15,000 and not more than $25,000), 26 weeks’ pay, or adding 5 years to age and service; they also get 15 months of health benefits for themselves and dependents, 1 week of pay per year of service as set by the TVA Retirement System, payment for unused annual leave, unemployment coverage under state law, pension benefits from the TVA Retirement System, and retraining help. If those benefits would hurt the TVA Retirement System, TVA must cover any funding shortfalls.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 460lll–47
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73