Chapter 77 of the Acts of 2005 extends the law protecting public employees
from pay loss while serving in the military. Without the passage of this bill,
the law would have expired on September 11, 2005. It allows eligible employees
to be paid their regular base salary as a public employee for each pay period
of such military leave of absence, reduced by any amount received from the United
States as base pay for military service performed during the same pay period.
For example, if the salary for an individual enlisted in the military is $32,000
and their state salary is $50,000, the individual would be compensated for $18,000
to help ease the burden of paying bills while serving the nation.
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Under a change to the underlying lawwhich it extends past the September
11 deadlinethe bill also allows state employees to receive more of their
regular pay. Currently, Massachusetts deducts allowances employees receive from
the military for family separation, food, or cost of living from their state
pay. Under the new law, the state will no longer subtract these allowances from
an individual's paycheck. The law also protects public employees on active
military duty from loss of seniority, accrued vacation leave, sick leave, personal
leave, compensation time, or earned overtime. Municipal employers such as cities
and towns may elect to make up the financial difference of their municipal employee's
regular pay.