Title 5 › Part PART III— - EMPLOYEES › Subpart Subpart C— - Employee Performance › Chapter CHAPTER 43— - PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 4302
Each agency must create one or more performance review systems. The systems must give regular job reviews, let employees help set performance standards, and use review results for training, rewards, reassignments, promotions, reductions in grade, keeping, or removing employees. The agency head, working with the Director of OPM and the Special Counsel, must set criteria that become a key part of supervisors’ job expectations and that protect whistleblowers. Those criteria must look at how supervisors respond when employees make protected disclosures, how they try to resolve those disclosures, whether they make employees feel safe reporting problems, and whether the agency ever made agreements with people who alleged a supervisor committed a prohibited personnel practice and how often. Under rules OPM writes, the systems must use objective, job-related standards, tell employees their standards and main job elements as soon as possible and by October 1, 1981 for first appraisals and at the start of each appraisal period after that, evaluate employees on those standards, reward good work, help fix poor work, and reassign or remove employees only after giving them a chance to improve. Agencies may run these systems electronically under OPM rules. Definitions: agency — an employer covered by the whistleblower rules in 2302(b)(8) and (9); prohibited personnel practice — the actions listed in 2302(a)(1); supervisory employee — someone who would be a supervisor under section 7103(a); whistleblower — an employee who makes a disclosure described in 2302(b)(8).
Full Legal Text
Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
5 U.S.C. § 4302
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73