§ 60j. Longevity compensation
(a)
Eligible employees
This section shall apply to—
(1)
each employee of the Senate whose compensation is paid from the appropriation for Salaries, Officers and Employees under the following headings:
(A)
Office of the Secretary, including individuals employed under authority of section
74b of this title;
(b)
Rate of compensation; limitation on increases; computation of service; effective date of payment
(1)
Except as provided in paragraph (2), an employee to whom this section applies shall be paid, during any period of continuous creditable service, additional annual compensation (hereinafter referred to as “longevity compensation”) at the rate of $482 for
(B)
each two years of creditable service performed during the twenty-year period following the first five years.
(2)
The amount of longevity compensation which may be paid to an employee, when added to his regular annual compensation, shall not exceed the maximum annual compensation which may be paid to Senate employees generally as prescribed by law or orders of the President pro tempore issued under authority of section
60a–1 of this title.
(3)
For purposes of this section—
(A)
creditable service includes
(ii)
service performed as a member of the Capitol Police or as an employee of the United States Capitol Telephone Exchange while compensation therefor is disbursed by the Clerk of the House of Representatives, and
(B)
in computing length of continuous creditable service, only creditable service performed subsequent to August 31, 1957, shall be taken into account, except that, in the case of service as an employee employed under authority of section
74b of this title, only creditable service performed subsequent to January 2, 1971, shall be taken into account; and
(C)
continuity of creditable service shall not be deemed to be broken by separations from service of not more than thirty days, by the performance of service as an employee (other than an employee subject to the provisions of this section) whose compensation is disbursed by the Secretary of the Senate or the Clerk of the House of Representatives, or by the performance of active military service in the armed forces of the United States, but periods of such separations and service shall not be creditable service.
[1] See References in Text note below.