Home Leave Determinations Chart
| Home leave regulations are found in Title 5 United States Code 6304[b], 6305; Title 5 Code of Federal Regulations Part 630 Subpart F; Human Resources Desk Guide (HRDG) Subchapter 4630, Absence and Leave; and various Comptroller General (CG) and Office of Personnel Management (OPM) decisions. These regulations and decisions state that: In order to take home leave, you must be working abroad (outside of the 50 states) and eligible to earn 45 days of annual leave. In addition to using the guidance found in HRDG Subchapter 4630, Absence and Leave, Section I, supervisors may use the chart below when making home leave determinations: If the employee's permanent residence is: | And s/he is recruited to work in: | And s/he is | Then s/he: | U.S. - stateside, excluding Puerto Rico (P. R.) | P. R. | Eligible to accrue 45 days annual leave | Is entitled to home leave back to the U.S. - stateside. | U.S. - stateside | Guam, Virgin Islands, Europe etc. | Eligible to accrue 45 days annual leave | Is entitled to home leave back to the U.S. - stateside. | P. R. | P. R. | NOT eligible to accrue 45 days annual leave | Is NOT entitled to home leave. | P. R. | Guam, Virgin Islands, Europe etc. | Eligible to accrue 45 days annual leave | Is entitled to home leave back to P. R. | P. R. | The U.S. - stateside | NOT eligible to accrue 45 days annual leave | Is NOT entitled to home leave back to P. R. |
In order to be eligible for home leave, you must qualify for the maximum annual leave accumulation of 45 days under the provisions of 5 U. S. C. 6304(b) (See Civilian Personnel Law Manual, Chapter 5:05, March 1996). Once this data is verified, a determination must be made on residency status. In making the determination, please note that nothing precludes you from establishing a residence in another location. (For travel determinations see: 72 FPBR 1067 [CG B-175378; 51 CG 828 dtd 6/19/1972].)
Example: You were born and raised in Puerto Rico. You worked the last 10 years in New York City and established permanent residency in New York. If you went to work in Germany, you would be entitled to home leave. When requesting to use home leave, your supervisor may request documentation to support residency status. Example: Using the same scenario above, if you instead went to work in Puerto Rico, you would be entitled to home leave because of having established residency in New York. When requesting to use home leave, your supervisor may request documentation to support residency status. Residency determinations must include consideration of these factors as well as any other supportive documentation: Circumstances surrounding the hiring of the employee, The employee's work history, The chronological record of individual or family associations with the claimed place of residence, Official Personnel Folder forms (e.g., TSP form, FEGLI form, FEBHA form, Designation of Beneficiary), Application for Employment, showing place of residence, Place of birth, Place of education, Voter registration, State to which income and/or personal property taxes are paid, Place where children, if any, were born, raised, and educated, Family ties, and/or, Any other written documentation establishing declared place of residence.
The above list is not all inclusive. It is used to illustrate the areas supervisors may consider when making residency determinations upon initial recruitment or transfer. Ultimately, supervisors must ensure that their determination is consistent and not arbitrary, capricious, or contrary to law. Management is responsible for determining your actual residence after obtaining guidance from the servicing human resources office, using the above chart and reviewing any documentation that you provide. Home leave eligibility is determined when recruited or transferred into a position that is both abroad and eligible to earn 45 days of annual leave. You, as an employee, are responsible for providing information establishing place of residence when hired (recruited) or transferred into a position that is eligible to earn home leave. Falsification of this information may lead to disciplinary action up to, and including, removal from Federal service. |