Treasury Decision 9227 |
November 7, 2005 |
Balanced System for Measuring Organizational and
Employee Performance Within the
Internal Revenue Service
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury
ACTION: Final and temporary regulations.
This document contains final and temporary regulations relating to the
balanced system for measuring organizational and employee performance within
the IRS. The temporary regulations prospectively amend the existing final
regulations in 26 CFR Part 801 to clarify when quantity measures, which are
not tax enforcement results, may be used in measuring organizational and employee
performance. The portions of this document that are final regulations provide
necessary cross-references to the temporary regulations. These regulations
affect internal operations of the IRS and the systems it employs to evaluate
the performance of organizations within the IRS. The text of the temporary
regulations also serves as the text of proposed regulations (REG-114444-05)
set forth in this issue of the Bulletin.
Effective Date: These regulations are effective
on October 17, 2005.
Applicability Date: For dates of applicability,
see §§801.7 and 801.8T.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Neil Worden, (202) 283-7900 (not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
This document amends final regulations in 26 CFR Part 801 (the Final
Regulations) that implement the Balanced System for Measuring Organizational
and Employee Performance within the IRS. The Final Regulations were published
in the Federal Register on August 6, 1999
(T.D. 8830, 1999-2 C.B. 430 [64 FR 42834-42837]). The Final Regulations emanated
from section 1201 of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform
Act of 1998, Public Law 105-206, 112 Stat. 685, 713 (1998) (the Act), which
required the IRS to establish a performance management system for those employees
covered by 5 U.S.C. 4302 that, among other things, establishes “goals
or objectives for individual, group, or organizational performance (or any
combination thereof), consistent with the IRS’ performance planning
procedures, including those established under the Government Performance and
Results Act of 1993, division E of the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1966 . . ., Revenue
Procedure 64-22 . . ., and taxpayer service surveys.” Section 1201 further
required the IRS to use “such goals and objectives to make performance
distinctions among employees or groups of employees,” and to use “performance
assessments as a basis for granting employee awards, adjusting an employee’s
rate of basic pay, and other appropriate personnel actions . . . .”
In addition, section 1201 of the Act required that the IRS performance
management system comply with section 1204, which prohibits the use of “records
of tax enforcement results” (ROTERs) in the evaluation of IRS employees
or to suggest or impose production goals for such employees. Section 1204,
however, does not prohibit the use of quantity measures in evaluating organizational
and employee performance. The temporary regulations in this document amend
the existing regulations in part 801 to clarify when quantity measures may
be used in measuring organizational and employee performance.
Explanation of Provisions
The final regulations provide guidance and direction for the establishment
of a balanced performance measurement system for the IRS. The three elements
of this balanced measurement system are (1) customer satisfaction measures,
(2) employee satisfaction measures and (3) business results measures. These
organizational measures may be used to evaluate the performance of, or to
impose or suggest production goals for, any organizational unit.
The temporary regulations contained in this document relate primarily
to the business results measures. Business results are measured through quality
measures and quantity measures. Quality measures are based on reviews of a
statistically valid sample of cases handled by certain organizational units
such as examination, collection and Automated Collection System units. The
quality review of other work units is determined according to criteria established
by the Commissioner or his delegate.
The IRS and Treasury Department have determined that the provisions
of the existing Part 801 regulations that limit the use of quantity measures
in evaluating organizational units and imposing or suggesting production goals
for employees restrict the IRS’ ability to monitor program performance
and track effectiveness of operations, and have caused confusion as to what
types of data or measures may be discussed between managers and employees
and reflected in manager and employee goals. These temporary regulations remove
the limitations on the use of quantity measures in evaluating the performance
of, or imposing or suggesting goals for organizational units. These temporary
regulations also remove the limitations on the use of quantity measures to
impose or suggest goals for employees. The regulations continue to provide
that performance measures based on quantity measures will not be used to evaluate
the performance of such employees. The temporary regulations do not affect
the continuing prohibition on the use of ROTERS to evaluate employee performance
or to impose or suggest production quotas or goals for any employee.
It has been determined that this is not a significant regulatory action
as defined in Executive Order 12866. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is
not required. It also has been determined that section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act ( 5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to these regulations.
For applicability of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, please refer to the cross-reference
notice of proposed rulemaking published elsewhere in this Bulletin. Pursuant
to section 7805(f) of the Internal Revenue Code, these temporary regulations
will be submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on its impact on small business.
Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR Part 801 is amended as follows:
PART 801—BALANCED SYSTEM FOR MEASURING ORGANIZATIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL
PERFORMANCE WITHIN THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for Part 801 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 9501 * * *
Par. 2. Section 801.1 is amended by:
1. Adding the new center heading.
2. Removing and reserving paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
REGULATIONS APPLICABLE BEFORE OCTOBER 17, 2005
§801.1 Balanced performance measurement system; in
general.
* * * * *
Par. 3. Section 801.7 is added to read as follows:
The provisions of §§801.1 through 801.6 apply before October
17, 2005. For the applicable provisions on or after October 17, 2005, see
§§801.1T through 801.7T.
Par. 4. Sections 801.1T through 801.8T and a new center heading are
added to read as follows:
REGULATIONS APPLICABLE ON OR AFTER OCTOBER 17, 2005
§801.1T Balanced performance measurement system; in
general (temporary).
(a) In general. (1) The regulations in this part
801 implement the provisions of sections 1201 and 1204 of the Internal Revenue
Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-106, 112 Stat.
685, 715-716, 722) (the Act) and provide rules relating to the establishment
by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of a balanced performance measurement
system.
(2) Modern management practice and various statutory and regulatory
provisions require the IRS to set performance goals for organizational units
and to measure the results achieved by those units with respect to those goals.
To fulfill these requirements, the IRS has established a balanced performance
measurement system, composed of three elements: Customer Satisfaction Measures;
Employee Satisfaction Measures; and Business Results Measures. The IRS is
likewise required to establish a performance evaluation system for individual
employees.
(b) [Reserved].
§801.2T Measuring organizational performance (temporary).
The performance measures that comprise the balanced measurement system
will, to the maximum extent possible, be stated in objective, quantifiable,
and measurable terms and will be used to measure the overall performance of
various operational units within the IRS. In addition to implementing the
requirements of the Act, the measures described here will, where appropriate,
be used in establishing performance goals and making performance evaluations
established, inter alia, under Division E, National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1996 (the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996) (Public
Law 104-106, 110 Stat. 186, 679); the Government Performance and Results Act
of 1993 (Public Law 103-62, 107 Stat. 285); and the Chief Financial Officers
Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-576, 108 Stat. 2838). Thus, organizational measures
of customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction, and business results (including
quality and quantity measures as described in §801.6T) may be used to
evaluate the performance of or to impose or suggest production goals for,
any organizational unit.
§801.3T Measuring employee performance (temporary).
(a) In general. All employees of the IRS will be
evaluated according to the critical elements and standards or such other performance
criteria as may be established for their positions. In accordance with the
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 4312, 4313, and 9508 and section 1201 of the Act,
the performance criteria for each position as are appropriate to that position,
will be composed of elements that support the organizational measures of Customer
Satisfaction, Employee Satisfaction, and Business Results; however, such organizational
measures will not directly determine the evaluation of individual employees.
(b) Fair and equitable treatment of taxpayers.
In addition to all other criteria required to be used in the evaluation of
employee performance, all employees of the IRS will be evaluated on whether
they provided fair and equitable treatment to taxpayers.
(c) Senior Executive Service and special positions.
Employees in the Senior Executive Service will be rated in accordance with
the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 4312 and 4313 and employees selected to fill
positions under 5 U.S.C. 9503 will be evaluated pursuant to workplans, employment
agreements, performance agreements, or similar documents entered into between
the IRS and the employee.
(d) General workforce. The performance evaluation
system for all other employees will—
(1) Establish one or more retention standards for each employee related
to the work of the employee and expressed in terms of individual performance;
(2) Require periodic determinations of whether each employee meets or
does not meet the employee’s established retention standards;
(3) Require that action be taken in accordance with applicable laws
and regulations, with respect to employees whose performance does not meet
the established retention standards;
(4) Establish goals or objectives for individual performance consistent
with the IRS’s performance planning procedures;
(5) Use such goals and objectives to make performance distinctions among
employees or groups of employees; and
(6) Use performance assessments as a basis for granting employee awards,
adjusting an employee’s rate of basic pay, and other appropriate personnel
actions, in accordance with applicable laws and regulations.
(e) Limitations. (1) No employee of the IRS may
use records of tax enforcement results (as described in §801.6T) to evaluate
any other employee or to impose or suggest production quotas or goals for
any employee.
(i) For purposes of the limitation contained in this paragraph (e), employee has
the meaning as defined in 5 U.S.C. 2105(a).
(ii) For purposes of the limitation contained in this paragraph (e), evaluate includes
any process used to appraise or measure an employee’s performance for
purposes of providing the following:
(A) Any required or requested performance rating.
(B) A recommendation for an award covered by Chapter 45 of Title 5;
5 U.S.C. 5384; or section 1201(a) of the Act.
(C) An assessment of an employee’s qualifications for promotion,
reassignment, or other change in duties.
(D) An assessment of an employee’s eligibility for incentives,
allowances, or bonuses.
(E) Ranking of employees for release/recall and reductions in force.
(2) Employees who are responsible for exercising judgment with respect
to tax enforcement results in cases concerning one or more taxpayers may be
evaluated on work done on such cases only in the context of their critical
elements and standards.
(3) Performance measures based in whole or in part on quantity measures
(as described in §801.6T) will not be used to evaluate the performance
of any non-supervisory employee who is responsible for exercising judgment
with respect to tax enforcement results (as described in §801.6T).
§801.4T Customer satisfaction measures (temporary).
The customer satisfaction goals and accomplishments of operating units
within the IRS will be determined on the basis of information gathered through
various methods. For example, questionnaires, surveys and other types of information
gathering mechanisms may be employed to gather data regarding customer satisfaction.
Information to measure customer satisfaction for a particular work unit will
be gathered from a statistically valid sample of the customers served by that
operating unit and will be used to measure, among other things, whether those
customers believe that they received courteous, timely, and professional treatment
by the IRS personnel with whom they dealt. Customers will be permitted to
provide information requested for these purposes under conditions that guarantee
them anonymity. For purposes of this section, customers may include individual
taxpayers, organizational units, or employees within the IRS and external
groups affected by the services performed by the IRS operating unit.
§801.5T Employee satisfaction measures (temporary).
The employee satisfaction numerical ratings to be given operating units
within the IRS will be determined on the basis of information gathered through
various methods. For example, questionnaires, surveys, and other information
gathering mechanisms may be employed to gather data regarding satisfaction.
The information gathered will be used to measure, among other factors bearing
upon employee satisfaction, the quality of supervision and the adequacy of
training and support services. All employees of an operating unit will have
an opportunity to provide information regarding employee satisfaction within
the operating unit under conditions that guarantee them anonymity.
§801.6T Business results measures (temporary).
(a) In general. The business results measures will
consist of numerical scores determined under the quality measures and the
quantity measures described elsewhere in this section.
(b) Quality measures. Quality measures will be
determined on the basis of a review by a specially dedicated staff within
the IRS of a statistically valid sample of work items handled by certain functions
or organizational units determined by the Commissioner or his delegate such
as the following:
(1) Examination and collection units and Automated Collection
System Units (ACS). The quality review of the handling of cases
involving particular taxpayers will focus on such factors as whether IRS personnel
devoted an appropriate amount of time to a matter, properly analyzed the facts,
and complied with statutory, regulatory, and IRS procedures, including timeliness,
adequacy of notifications, and required contacts with taxpayers.
(2) Toll-free telephone sites. The quality review
of telephone services will focus on such factors as whether IRS personnel
provided accurate tax law and account information.
(3) Other work units. The quality review of other
work units will be determined according to criteria prescribed by the Commissioner
or his delegate.
(c) Quantity measures. Quantity measures will consist
of outcome-neutral production and resource data that does not contain information
regarding the tax enforcement result reached in any case that involves particular
taxpayers. Examples of quantity measures include, but are not limited to—
(1) Cases started;
(2) Cases closed;
(3) Work items completed;
(4) Customer education, assistance, and outreach efforts completed;
(5) Time per case;
(6) Direct examination time/out of office time;
(7) Cycle time;
(8) Number or percentage of overage cases;
(9) Inventory information;
(10) Toll-free level of access; and
(11) Talk time.
(d) Definitions—(1) Tax enforcement
results. A tax enforcement result is the outcome produced by an
IRS employee’s exercise of judgment in recommending or determining whether
or how the IRS should pursue enforcement of the tax laws. Examples of tax
enforcement results include a lien filed, a levy served, a seizure executed,
the amount assessed, the amount collected, and a fraud referral. Examples
of data that are not tax enforcement results include a quantity measure and
data derived from a quality review or from a review of an employee’s
or a work unit’s work on a case, such as the number or percentage of
cases in which correct examination adjustments were proposed or appropriate
lien determinations were made.
(2) Records of tax enforcement results. Records
of tax enforcement results are data, statistics, compilations of information
or other numerical or quantitative recordations of the tax enforcement results
reached in one or more cases. Such records may be used for purposes such as
forecasting, financial planning, resource management, and the formulation
of case selection criteria. Records of tax enforcement results may be used
to develop methodologies and algorithms for use in selecting tax returns to
audit. Records of tax enforcement results do not include tax enforcement results
of individual cases when used to determine whether an employee exercised appropriate
judgment in pursuing enforcement of the tax laws based upon a review of the
employee’s work on that individual case.
§801.7T Examples (temporary).
(a) The rules of §801.3T are illustrated by the following examples:
Example 1. (i) Each year Division A’s Examination
and Collection functions develop detailed workplans that set goals for specific
activities (e.g., number of audits or accounts closed)
and for other quantity measures such as cases started, cycle time, overage
cases, and direct examination time. These quantity measure goals are developed
nationally and by Area Office based on budget allocations, available resources,
historical experience, and planned improvements. These plans also include
information on measures of quality, customer satisfaction, and employee satisfaction.
Results are updated monthly to reflect how each organizational unit is progressing
against its workplan, and this information is shared with all levels of management.
(ii) Although specific workplans are not developed at the Territory
level, Headquarters management expects the Area Directors to use the information
in the Area plans to guide the activity in their Territories. For 2005, Area
Office 1’s workplan has a goal to close 1,000 examinations of small
business corporations and 120,000 taxpayer delinquent accounts (TDAs), and
there are 10 Exam Territories and 12 Collection Territories in Area Office
1. While taking into account the mix and priority of workload, and available
staffing and grade levels, the Examination Area Director communicates to the
Territory Managers the expectation that, on average, each Territory should
plan to close about 100 cases. The Collection Area Director similarly communicates
to each Territory the expectation that, on average, they will close about
10,000 TDAs, subject to similar factors of workload mix and staffing.
(iii) Similar communications then occur at the next level of management
between Territory Managers and their Group Managers, and between Group Managers
and their employees. These communications will emphasize the overall goals
of the organization and each employee’s role in meeting those goals.
The communications will include expectations regarding the average number
of case closures that would have to occur to reach those goals, taking into
account the fact that each employee’s actual closures will vary based
upon the facts and circumstances of specific cases.
(iv) Setting these quantity measure goals, and the communication of
those goals, is permissible because case closures are a quantity measure.
Case closures are an example of outcome-neutral production data that does
not specify the outcome of any specific case such as the amount assessed or
collected.
Example 2. In conducting a performance evaluation,
a supervisor is permitted to take into consideration information the supervisor
has developed showing that the employee failed to propose an appropriate adjustment
to tax liability in one of the cases the employee examined, provided that
information is derived from a review of the work done on the case. All information
derived from such a review of individual cases handled by the employee, including
time expended, issues raised, and enforcement outcomes reached should be considered
and discussed with the employee and used in evaluating the employee.
Example 3. When assigning a case, a supervisor
is permitted to discuss with the employee the merits, issues, and development
of techniques of the case based upon a review of the case file.
Example 4. A supervisor is not permitted to establish
a goal for proposed adjustments in a future examination.
(b) [Reserved].
§801.8T Effective dates (temporary).
(a) The provisions of §§801.1T through 801.7T apply on or
after October 17, 2005.
(b) The applicability of §§801.1T through 801.7T expires on
or before October 14, 2008.
Mark E. Matthews, Deputy
Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
Approved October 3, 2005.
Eric Solomon, Acting
Deputy Assistant Secretary (Tax Policy).
Note
(Filed by the Office of the Federal Register on October 14, 2005, 8:45
a.m., and published in the issue of the Federal Register for October 17, 2005,
70 F.R. 60214)
The principal author of these regulations is Karen F. Keller, Office
of Associate Chief Counsel (General Legal Services). However, other personnel
from the IRS participated in their development.
* * * * *
Internal Revenue Bulletin 2005-45
SEARCH:
You can either: Search all IRS Bulletin Documents issued since January 1996, or Search the entire site. For a more focused search, put your search word(s) in quotes.
2005 Document Types | 2005 Weekly IRBs
IRS Bulletins Main | Home
|
|
|