ST - SGB - .2018.1 - Staff Regs and Rules of The UN - 227
ST - SGB - .2018.1 - Staff Regs and Rules of The UN - 227
ST - SGB - .2018.1 - Staff Regs and Rules of The UN - 227
ST/S
GB/2
018/1
United Nations
Secretary-General’s bulletin
Staff Regulations and Rules
Under the Charter of the United Nations, the General Assembly provides staff
regulations which set out the broad principles of human resources policy for the
staffing and administration of the Secretariat and the separately administered funds
and programmes. The Secretary-General is required by the staff regulations to
provide and enforce such staff rules, consistent with these principles, as he
considers necessary.
The Secretary-General promulgates the following with respect to the Staff
Regulations and Rules of the United Nations, established by the General Assembly
in accordance with Article 101 of the Charter:
Section 1
Revised edition of the Staff Regulations and Rules
1.1 By its resolution 72/254, the General Assembly approved the following
amendments to the Staff Regulations and annexes thereto:
(a) Regulation 3.2 (a) is amended to revise the criteria covering
post-secondary education to make the education grant payable up to the
end of the school year in which the child completes four years of post-
secondary studies or attains a first post-secondary degree, whichever
comes first, subject to the upper age limit of 25 years, as approved by the
General Assembly in section III, paragraph 26, of its resolution 70/244. In
accordance with section III, paragraphs 27 and 28, of the same resolution,
the reference to the amount of the grant based on 75 per cent of
admissible expenses is replaced by the sliding scale of reimbursement of
admissible expenses consisting of tuition, including tuition in the mother
tongue, and enrolment-related fees actually incurred. The reference to
additional education grant travel at designated duty stations is deleted;
(b) Regulation 3.2 (b) relating to additional assistance with boarding costs at
designated duty stations is deleted. A new paragraph (b) is added to
reflect the decision of the General Assembly to limit assistance with
boarding-related expenses to staff serving in field duty stations whose
children are boarding to attend school outside the duty station and to
provide flexibility for the Secretary-General to establish conditions under
which boarding assistance would exceptionally be granted to staff
members serving at headquarters duty stations (resolution 70/244, sect.
III, para. 29);
(c) Regulation 3.2 (e) is deleted; as stepchildren and adopted children are
already covered by the definition of “child” in staff rule 3.6 (a) (ii), that
provision is not needed;
(d) Regulation 9.2 is amended to reflect the increase in the mandatory age of
separation to 65 years for all staff members, including those appointed
prior to 1 January 2014, as endorsed by the General Assembly in
section I of its resolution 70/244.
1.2 The General Assembly noted the amendments to staff rules 3.9, 4.14, 4.16, 7.2,
9.6, 10.4 and 11.5, the new staff rule 13.13 and the amendments to appendices B
and D to the Staff Rules, subject to the provisions of the same resolution.
1.3 The revised text of the Staff Regulations and Rules incorporating the
amendments referred to above is attached to the present bulletin.
1.4 Articles 8, 97, 100, 101 and 105 of the Charter of the United Nations, which
relate to the service of the staff, are included in the introductory part of the
present edition of the Staff Regulations and Rules, on page 6.
1.5 In the present edition, each article of the Staff Regulations of the United
Nations precedes each chapter of the related Staff Rules.
Section 2
Final provisions
2.1 In accordance with staff regulations 12.1, 12.2, 12.3 and 12.4, the revised Staff
Regulations and Rules are effective as from 1 January 2018.
2.2 The present bulletin abolishes Secretary-General’s bulletin ST/SGB/2017/1
and ST/SGB/2017/1/Corr.1.
Article 8
The United Nations shall place no restrictions on the eligibility of men and
women to participate in any capacity and under conditions of equality in its
principal and subsidiary organs.
Article 97
The Secretariat shall comprise a Secretary-General and such staff as the
Organization may require. The Secretary-General shall be appointed by the General
Assembly upon the recommendation of the Security Council. He shall be the chief
administrative officer of the Organization.
Article 100
1. In the performance of their duties, the Secretary-General and the staff
shall not seek or receive instructions from any Government or from any other
authority external to the Organization. They shall refrain from any action which
might reflect on their position as international officials responsible only to the
Organization.
2. Each Member of the United Nations undertakes to respect the
exclusively international character of the responsibilities of the Secretary-General
and the staff and not to seek to influence them in the discharge of their
responsibilities.
Article 101
1. The staff shall be appointed by the Secretary-General under regulations
established by the General Assembly.
2. Appropriate staffs shall be permanently assigned to the Economic and
Social Council, the Trusteeship Council, and, as required, to other organs of the
United Nations. These staffs shall form a part of the Secretariat.
3. The paramount consideration in the employment of the staff and in the
determination of the conditions of service shall be the necessity of securing the
highest standards of efficiency, competence, and integrity. Due regard shall be paid
to the importance of recruiting the staff on as wide a geographical basis as possible.
Article 105
1. The Organization shall enjoy in the territory of each of its Members such
privileges and immunities as are necessary for the fulfilment of its purposes.
2. Representatives of the Members of the United Nations and officials of
the Organization shall similarly enjoy such privileges and immunities as are
necessary for the independent exercise of their functions in connection with the
Organization.
3. The General Assembly may make recommendations with a view to
determining the details of the application of paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article or
may propose conventions to the Members of the United Nations for this purpose.
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The General Assembly established the Staff Regulations of the United Nations
according to Article 101 of the Charter by resolution 590 (VI) of 2 February 1952
and amended them thereafter by resolutions 781 (VIII) and 782 (VIII) of
9 December 1953, resolution 882 (IX) of 14 December 1954, resolution 887 (IX) of
17 December 1954, resolution 974 (X) of 15 December 1955, resolution 1095 (XI)
of 27 February 1957, resolutions 1225 (XII) and 1234 (XII) of 14 December 1957,
resolution 1295 (XIII) of 5 December 1958, resolution 1658 (XVI) of 28 November
1961, resolution 1730 (XVI) of 20 December 1961, resolution 1929 (XVIII) of
11 December 1963, resolution 2050 (XX) of 13 December 1965, resolution 2121
(XX) of 21 December 1965, resolution 2369 (XXII) of 19 December 1967,
resolutions 2481 (XXIII) and 2485 (XXIII) of 21 December 1968, resolution 2742
(XXV) of 17 December 1970, resolution 2888 (XXVI) of 21 December 1971,
resolution 2990 (XXVII) of 15 December 1972, resolution 3008 (XXVII) of
18 December 1972, resolution 3194 (XXVIII) of 18 December 1973, resolutions
3353 (XXIX) and 3358 B (XXIX) of 18 December 1974, resolution 31/141 B of
17 December 1976, resolution 32/200 and decision 32/450 B of 21 December 1977,
resolution 33/119 of 19 December 1978, decision 33/433 of 20 December 1978,
resolution 35/214 of 17 December 1980, decision 36/459 of 18 December 1981,
resolution 37/126 of 17 December 1982, resolution 37/235 C of 21 December 1982,
resolution 39/69 of 13 December 1984, resolutions 39/236 and 39/245 of
18 December 1984, decision 40/467 of 18 December 1985, resolutions 41/207 and
41/209 of 11 December 1986, resolutions 42/221 and 42/225 of 21 December 1987,
resolution 43/226 of 21 December 1988, resolution 44/185 of 19 December 1989,
resolution 44/198 of 21 December 1989, resolutions 45/241 and 45/251 of
21 December 1990, resolution 45/259 of 3 May 1991, resolution 46/191 of
20 December 1991, resolution 47/216 of 12 March 1993, resolution 47/226 of
30 April 1993, resolutions 48/224 and 48/225 of 23 December 1993, resolutions
49/222 and 49/223 of 23 December 1994, resolution 49/241 of 6 April 1995,
resolution 51/216 of 18 December 1996, resolution 52/216 of 22 December 1997,
resolution 52/225 of 4 February 1998, resolution 52/252 of 8 September 1998,
resolution 54/238 and decision 54/460 of 23 December 1999, resolution 55/223 of
23 December 2000, resolution 55/258 of 14 June 2001, resolution 56/244 of
24 December 2001, resolution 57/285 of 20 December 2002, resolution 57/310 of
18 June 2003, resolution 58/265 of 23 December 2003, resolution 59/268 of
23 December 2004, resolutions 60/238 and 60/248 of 23 December 2005, resolution
61/239 of 22 December 2006, resolution 62/227 of 22 December 2007, resolution
63/271 of 7 April 2009, resolution 65/248 of 23 December 2010, resolutions 67/254
A and 67/255 of 12 April 2013, resolutions 68/252 and 68/253 of 27 December
2013, resolution 70/244 of 23 December 2015, resolution 70/256 of 1 April 2016,
resolution 71/263 of 23 December 2016 and resolution 72/254 of 24 December
2017.
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Contents
Article or
Chapter Title Regulations Rules Page
Annex
I. Salary scales and related provisions....................................................................................... 92
II. Letters of appointment............................................................................................................. 96
III. Termination indemnity............................................................................................................ 97
IV. Repatriation grant.................................................................................................................... 99
Appendix
A.Pensionable remuneration for staff in the Professional and higher categories and
salary scales and pensionable remuneration for staff in the Field Service
category............................................................................................................................................ 100
B. Education grant entitlements.............................................................................................................
104
C. Arrangements relating to military service......................................................................................... 105
D.Rules governing compensation in the event of death, injury or illness
attributable to the performance of official duties on behalf of the United
Nations 107
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Staff Regulations of the United Nations
Scope and purpose
The Staff Regulations embody the fundamental conditions of service and the
basic rights, duties and obligations of the United Nations Secretariat. They represent
the broad principles of human resources policy for the staffing and administration of
the Secretariat. For the purposes of these Regulations, the expressions “United
Nations Secretariat”, “staff members” or “staff” shall refer to all the staff members
of the Secretariat, within the meaning of Article 97 of the Charter of the United
Nations, whose employment and contractual relationship are defined by a letter of
appointment subject to regulations promulgated by the General Assembly pursuant
to Article 101, paragraph 1, of the Charter. The Secretary-General, as the chief
administrative officer, shall provide and enforce such staff rules consistent with
these principles as he or she considers necessary.
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Article I
Duties, obligations and privileges
Regulation 1.1
Status of staff
(a) Staff members are international civil servants. Their responsibilities as
staff members are not national but exclusively international;
(b) Staff members shall make the following written declaration witnessed by
the Secretary-General or his or her authorized representative:
“I solemnly declare and promise to exercise in all loyalty, discretion and
conscience the functions entrusted to me as an international civil servant of the
United Nations, to discharge these functions and regulate my conduct with the
interests of the United Nations only in view, and not to seek or accept
instructions in regard to the performance of my duties from any Government
or other source external to the Organization.
“I also solemnly declare and promise to respect the obligations
incumbent upon me as set out in the Staff Regulations and Rules.”
(c) The Secretary-General shall ensure that the rights and duties of staff
members, as set out in the Charter and the Staff Regulations and Rules and in the
relevant resolutions and decisions of the General Assembly, are respected;
(d) The Secretary-General shall seek to ensure that the paramount
consideration in the determination of the conditions of service shall be the necessity
of securing staff of the highest standards of efficiency, competence and integrity;
(e) The Staff Regulations apply to all staff at all levels, including staff of the
separately funded organs, holding appointments under the Staff Rules;
(f) The privileges and immunities enjoyed by the United Nations by virtue
of Article 105 of the Charter are conferred in the interests of the Organization.
These privileges and immunities furnish no excuse to the staff members who are
covered by them to fail to observe laws and police regulations of the State in which
they are located, nor do they furnish an excuse for non-performance of their private
obligations. In any case where an issue arises regarding the application of these
privileges and immunities, the staff member shall immediately report the matter to
the Secretary-General, who alone may decide whether such privileges and
immunities exist and whether they shall be waived in accordance with the relevant
instruments.
Regulation 1.2
Basic rights and obligations of staff
Core values
(a) Staff members shall uphold and respect the principles set out in the
Charter, including faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the
human person and in the equal rights of men and women. Consequently, staff
members shall exhibit respect for all cultures; they shall not discriminate against
any individual or group of individuals or otherwise abuse the power and authority
vested in them;
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Conflict of interest
(m) A conflict of interest occurs when, by act or omission, a staff member’s
personal interests interfere with the performance of his or her official duties and
responsibilities or with the integrity, independence and impartiality required by the
staff member’s status as an international civil servant. When an actual or possible
conflict of interest does arise, the conflict shall be disclosed by staff members to
their head of office, mitigated by the Organization and resolved in favour of the
interests of the Organization;
(n) All staff members at the D-1 level and above shall be required to file
financial disclosure statements on appointment and at intervals thereafter as
prescribed by the Secretary-General, in respect of themselves, their spouses and
their dependent children, and to assist the Secretary-General in verifying the
accuracy of the information submitted when so requested. The financial disclosure
statements shall include certification that the assets and economic activities of the
staff members, their spouses and their dependent children do not pose a conflict of
interest with their official duties or the interests of the United Nations. The financial
disclosure statements will remain confidential and will only be used, as prescribed
by the Secretary-General, in making determinations pursuant to staff regulation 1.2
(m). The Secretary-General may require other staff to file financial disclosure
statements as he or she deems necessary in the interest of the Organization;
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(r) Staff members must respond fully to requests for information from staff
members and other officials of the Organization authorized to investigate the
possible misuse of funds, waste or abuse.
Regulation 1.3
Performance of staff
(a) Staff members are accountable to the Secretary-General for the proper
discharge of their functions. Staff members are required to uphold the highest
standards of efficiency, competence and integrity in the discharge of their functions.
Their performance will be appraised periodically to ensure that the required
standards of performance are met;
(b) The whole time of staff members shall be at the disposal of the
Secretary-General for the performance of official functions. The Secretary-General
shall establish a normal working week and shall establish official holidays for each
duty station. Exceptions may be made by the Secretary-General as the needs of the
service may require, and staff members shall be required to work beyond the normal
tour of duty when requested to do so.
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Chapter I
Duties, obligations and privileges
Rule 1.1
Status of staff
(a) The declaration made by a staff member on appointment pursuant to staff
regulation 1.1 (b) shall be placed in his or her official status file. A new declaration
shall be made after a break in service that exceeds three months.
(b) The declaration administered under staff regulation 1.1 (b) shall not
prevent the close collaboration of staff with a Government pursuant to an agreement
between the Government and the United Nations.
Rule 1.2
Basic rights and obligations of staff
General
(a) Staff members shall follow the directions and instructions properly
issued by the Secretary-General and by their supervisors.
(b) Staff members must comply with local laws and honour their private
legal obligations, including, but not limited to, the obligation to honour orders of
competent courts.
(c) Staff members have the duty to report any breach of the Organization’s
regulations and rules to the officials whose responsibility it is to take appropriate
action and to cooperate with duly authorized audits and investigations. Staff
members shall not be retaliated against for complying with these duties.
(d) Disciplinary procedures set out in article X of the Staff Regulations and
chapter X of the Staff Rules may be instituted against a staff member who fails to
comply with his or her obligations and the standards of conduct set out in the
Charter of the United Nations, the Staff Regulations and Rules, the Financial
Regulations and Rules and administrative issuances.
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the ability of other staff members to discharge their official functions. Staff
members shall not threaten, retaliate or attempt to retaliate against such individuals
or against staff members exercising their rights and duties under the present Rules.
(h) Staff members shall not intentionally misrepresent their functions,
official title or the nature of their duties to Member States or to any entities or
persons external to the United Nations.
(i) Staff members shall not intentionally alter, destroy, falsify or misplace or
render useless any official document, record or file entrusted to them by virtue of
their functions, which document, record or file is intended to be kept as part of the
records of the Organization.
(j) Staff members shall not seek to influence Member States, principal or
subsidiary organs of the United Nations or expert groups in order to obtain a change
from a position or decision taken by the Secretary-General, including decisions
relating to the financing of Secretariat programmes or units, or in order to secure
support for improving their personal situation or the personal situation of other staff
members or for blocking or reversing unfavourable decisions regarding their status
or their colleagues’ status.
(k) Staff members shall neither offer nor promise any favour, gift,
remuneration or any other personal benefit to another staff member or to any third
party with a view to causing him or her to perform, fail to perform or delay the
performance of any official act. Similarly, staff members shall neither seek nor
accept any favour, gift, remuneration or any other personal benefit from another
staff member or from any third party in exchange for performing, failing to perform
or delaying the performance of any official act.
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Conflict of interest
(q) A staff member whose personal interests interfere with the performance
of his or her official duties and responsibilities or with the integrity, independence
and impartiality required by the staff member’s status as an international civil
servant shall disclose any such actual or possible interest to the head of office and,
except as otherwise authorized by the Secretary-General, formally excuse himself or
herself from participating with regard to any involvement in that matter which
might give rise to a conflict of interest situation.
(r) Pursuant to staff regulation 1.2 (n), the Secretary-General shall establish
procedures for the filing and utilization of financial disclosure statements.
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or other private source may receive from that organizing entity accommodation,
travel and subsistence allowance generally in line with those payable by the United
Nations. In such cases the daily subsistence allowance that may otherwise be
payable by the United Nations shall be reduced as envisaged by staff rule 7.10 (a).
Rule 1.3
Performance of staff
(a) Staff members shall be evaluated for their efficiency, competence and
integrity through performance appraisal mechanisms that shall assess the staff
member’s compliance with the standards set out in the Staff Regulations and Rules
for purposes of accountability.
(b) The Secretary-General shall seek to ensure that appropriate learning and
development programmes are available for the benefit of staff.
(c) Performance reports shall be prepared regularly for all staff members,
including at the Assistant Secretary-General level and above, in accordance with
procedures promulgated by the Secretary-General.
Rule 1.4
Hours of work and official holidays
(a) The Secretary-General shall set the normal number of working hours per
week for each duty station. Exceptions may be made by the Secretary-General as the
needs of service may require. A staff member may be required to work beyond the
normal number of working hours whenever requested to do so.
(b) The number of official holidays at each duty station shall be 10 days in
each calendar year, including those official holidays mandated by the General
Assembly, which shall be observed at all duty stations. When an official holiday
falls on a non-working day, the preceding or following working day which is closest
to the holiday shall be observed as an official holiday.
(c) The official holidays not mandated by the General Assembly shall be
determined by the Secretary-General at Headquarters, and by the head of office or
mission at other duty stations, after staff consultation.
Rule 1.5
Notification by staff members and obligation to supply information
(a) Staff members shall be responsible for supplying the Secretary-General
with relevant information, as required, both during the application process and on
subsequent employment, for the purpose of determining their status under the Staff
Regulations and Rules as well as for the purpose of completing administrative
arrangements in connection with their employment. Staff members shall be held
personally accountable for the accuracy and completeness of the information they
provide.
(b) Staff members shall also be responsible for promptly notifying the
Secretary-General, in writing, of any subsequent changes affecting their status under
the Staff Regulations or Staff Rules.
(c) A staff member who intends to acquire permanent residence status in any
country other than that of his or her nationality or who intends to change his or her
nationality shall notify the Secretary-General of that intention before the change in
residence status or the change in nationality becomes final.
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(d) A staff member who has been arrested, charged with an offence other
than a minor traffic violation or summoned before a court as a defendant in a
criminal proceeding, or who has been convicted, fined or imprisoned for any
offence other than a minor traffic violation shall immediately report the fact to the
Secretary-General.
(e) A staff member may at any time be required by the Secretary-General to
supply information concerning facts anterior to his or her appointment and relevant
to his or her suitability or concerning facts relevant to his or her integrity, conduct
and service as a staff member.
Rule 1.6
Staff member’s beneficiaries
(a) At the time of appointment, each staff member shall nominate a
beneficiary or beneficiaries in writing in a form prescribed by the Secretary-
General. It shall be the responsibility of the staff member to notify the Secretary-
General of any revocations or changes of beneficiaries.
(b) In the event of the death of a staff member, all amounts due to the staff
member will be paid to his or her nominated beneficiary or beneficiaries, subject to
application of the Staff Rules and of the Regulations of the United Nations Joint
Staff Pension Fund. Such payment shall afford the United Nations a complete
release from all further liability in respect of any sum so paid.
(c) If a nominated beneficiary does not survive, or if a designation of
beneficiary has not been made or has been revoked, the amount due to the staff
member will, upon the staff member’s death, be paid to his or her estate.
Rule 1.7
Financial responsibility
Staff members shall exercise reasonable care in any matter affecting the
financial interests of the Organization, its physical and human resources, property
and assets.
Rule 1.8
Liability insurance
In accordance with General Assembly resolution 22 E (I) of 13 February 1946,
staff members who own or drive motor cars shall carry public liability and property
damage insurance in an amount adequate to insure them against claims arising from
injury or death to other persons or from damage to the property of others caused by
their cars.
Rule 1.9
Proprietary rights
All rights, including title, copyright and patent rights, in any work performed
by a staff member as part of his or her official duties shall be vested in the United
Nations.
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Article II
Classification of posts and staff
Regulation 2.1
In conformity with principles laid down by the General Assembly, the
Secretary-General shall make appropriate provision for the classification of posts
and staff according to the nature of the duties and responsibilities required.
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Chapter II
Classification of posts and staff
Rule 2.1
Classification of posts
(a) Posts other than those of Under-Secretary-General and Assistant
Secretary-General shall be classified in categories and level by a competent United
Nations body according to standards promulgated by the Secretary-General and
related to the nature of the duties, the level of responsibilities and the qualifications
required.
(b) Each post shall be assigned to a suitable level in any of the following
categories: Professional and higher categories, Field Service category, General
Service and related categories, including but not limited to National Professional
Officers, Trades and Crafts and Security Service categories.
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Article III
Salaries and related allowances
Regulation 3.1
Salaries of staff members shall be fixed by the Secretary-General in
accordance with the provisions of annex I to the present Regulations.
Regulation 3.2
(a) The Secretary-General shall establish terms and conditions under which
an education grant shall be available to a staff member residing and serving outside
his or her recognized home country whose dependent child is in full-time attendance
at a school, university or similar educational institution of a type that will, in the
opinion of the Secretary-General, facilitate the child’s reassimilation in the staff
member’s recognized home country. The grant shall be payable in respect of the
child up to the end of the school year in which the child completes four years of
post-secondary studies or attains a first post-secondary degree, whichever comes
first, subject to the upper age limit of 25 years. Admissible expenses actually
incurred shall be reimbursed based on a sliding scale, subject to a maximum grant as
approved by the General Assembly. Under conditions established by the Secretary-
General, travel costs for the child of a staff member in receipt of assistance with
boarding expenses and attending school at the primary and secondary levels may
also be paid for an outward and return journey once in each scholastic year between
the educational institution and the duty station. Such travel shall be by a route
approved by the Secretary-General but not in an amount exceeding the cost of such
a journey between the home country and the duty station;
(b) Under conditions established by the Secretary-General, assistance for
boarding-related expenses shall be provided to staff members serving in duty
stations other than those classified as headquarters duty stations and whose children
are boarding to attend school outside the duty station at the primary and secondary
levels, at an amount approved by the General Assembly. The Secretary-General may
establish conditions under which boarding assistance may exceptionally be granted
to staff members serving at headquarters duty stations whose children are boarding
to attend school outside the duty station at the primary and secondary levels;
(c) The Secretary-General shall also establish terms and conditions under
which an education grant shall be available to a staff member serving in a country
whose language is different from his or her own and who is obliged to pay tuition
for the teaching of the mother tongue to a dependent child attending a local school
in which the instruction is given in a language other than his or her own;
(d) The Secretary-General shall also establish terms and conditions under
which an education grant shall be available to a staff member whose child is unable,
by reason of physical or mental disability, to attend a normal educational institution
and therefore requires special teaching or training to prepare him or her for full
integration into society or, while attending a normal educational institution, requires
special teaching or training to assist him or her in overcoming the disability. The
amount of this grant per year for each disabled child shall be equal to 100 per cent
of the education expenses actually incurred, up to a maximum amount approved by
the General Assembly.
Regulation 3.3
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(a) An assessment at the rates and under the conditions specified below shall
be applied to the salaries and such other emoluments of staff members as are
computed on the basis of salary, excluding post adjustments, provided that the
Secretary-General may, where he or she deems it advisable, exempt from the
assessment the salaries and emoluments of staff members engaged at locality rates;
(b) (i) The assessment shall be calculated at the following rates for staff
members whose salary rates are set forth in paragraphs 1 and 3 of annex I to
the present Regulations:
Assessment
Staff assessment
rates for purposes of
pensionable
remuneration and
Total assessable payments pensions
(United States dollars) (percentage)
(ii) The assessment shall be calculated at the following rates for staff
members whose salary rates are established under paragraph 7 of annex I to
the present Regulations:
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(iv) In the case of staff members whose salary scales are established in
currencies other than United States dollars, the relevant amounts to which the
assessment applies shall be fixed at the local currency equivalent of the above-
mentioned dollar amounts at the time the salary scales of the staff member
concerned are approved;
(c) In the case of a person who is not employed by the United Nations for
the whole of a calendar year or in cases where there is a change in the annual rate of
payments made to a staff member, the rate of assessment shall be governed by the
annual rate of each such payment made to him or her;
(d) The assessment computed under the foregoing provisions of the present
regulation shall be collected by the United Nations by withholding it from
payments. No part of the assessment so collected shall be refunded because of
cessation of employment during the calendar year;
(e) Revenue derived from staff assessment not otherwise disposed of by
specific resolution of the General Assembly shall be credited to the Tax
Equalization Fund established by General Assembly resolution 973 A (X);
(f) Where a staff member is subject both to staff assessment under this plan
and to national income taxation in respect of the salaries and emoluments paid to
him or her by the United Nations, the Secretary-General is authorized to refund to
him or her the amount of staff assessment collected from him or her provided that:
(i) The amount of such refund shall in no case exceed the amount of his or
her income taxes paid and payable in respect of his or her United Nations
income. The amount of such refund shall not include tax credits applied to
income taxes paid and payable in respect of his or her United Nations income;
(ii) If the amount of such income taxes exceeds the amount of staff
assessment, the Secretary-General may also pay to the staff member the
amount of such excess;
(iii) Payments made in accordance with the provisions of the present
regulation shall be charged to the Tax Equalization Fund;
(iv) A payment under the conditions prescribed in the three preceding
subparagraphs is authorized in respect of dependency benefits and post
adjustments, which are not subject to staff assessment but may be subject to
national income taxation.
Regulation 3.4
Staff members whose salary rates are set forth in paragraphs 1 and 3 of annex I
to the present Regulations shall be entitled to receive a dependent spouse allowance
in the amount of 6 per cent of net base salary plus post adjustment, under conditions
established by the Secretary-General.
Regulation 3.5
Staff members without a spouse whose salary rates are set forth in paragraphs 1
and 3 of annex I to the present Regulations shall be entitled to a single parent
allowance in respect of the first dependent child in the amount of 6 per cent of net
base salary plus post adjustment, under conditions established by the Secretary-
General.
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Regulation 3.6
(a) Staff members whose salary rates are set forth in paragraphs 1 and 3 of
annex I to the present Regulations shall be entitled to receive dependency
allowances for a dependent child, for a disabled child and for a secondary dependant
at rates approved by the General Assembly as follows:
(i) The staff member shall receive an allowance for each dependent child,
except that the allowance shall not be paid in respect of the first dependent child
if the staff member receives a single parent allowance under regulation 3.5;
(ii) The staff member shall receive a special allowance for each disabled
child. However, if the staff member is entitled to the single parent allowance
under regulation 3.5 in respect of a disabled child, the allowance shall be the
same as the allowance for a dependent child in subparagraph (i) above;
(iii) Where there is no dependent spouse, a single annual allowance shall be
paid for a secondary dependant in respect of either a dependent parent, a
dependent brother or a dependent sister;
(b) If both husband and wife are staff members, one may claim, for
dependent children, under subparagraph (a) (i) and (ii) above, in which case the
other may claim only under subparagraph (a) (iii) above, if otherwise entitled;
(c) With a view to avoiding duplication of benefits and in order to achieve
equality between staff members who receive dependency benefits under applicable
laws in the form of governmental grants and staff members who do not receive such
dependency benefits, the Secretary-General shall prescribe conditions under which
the dependency allowance for a child specified in subparagraph (a) (i) above and
regulation 3.5 shall be payable only to the extent that the dependency benefits
enjoyed by the staff member or his or her spouse under applicable laws amount to
less than such a dependency allowance;
(d) Staff members whose salary rates are set by the Secretary-General under
paragraph 6 or paragraph 7 of annex I to the present Regulations shall be entitled to
receive dependency allowances at rates and under conditions determined by the
Secretary-General, due regard being given to the circumstances in the locality in
which the office is located;
(e) Claims for dependency allowances shall be submitted in writing and
supported by evidence satisfactory to the Secretary-General. A separate claim for
dependency allowances shall be made each year.
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Chapter III
Salaries and related allowances
Rule 3.1
Salary scales
(a) The Secretary-General shall publish the salary scales, pensionable
remuneration and conditions of salary increments for staff members appointed in the
Professional category and in the Field Service category.
(b) The Secretary-General shall publish the salary scales, pensionable
remuneration and conditions of salary increments applicable to each duty station for
staff members appointed in the General Service and related categories, including but
not limited to National Professional Officers, the Trades and Crafts category, the
Security Service, language teachers and personnel specifically recruited for service
with a mission from within the general area of the mission.
(c) The Secretary-General may establish special conditions of employment
applicable to language staff in the Professional category appointed for specific
temporary assignments.
Rule 3.2
Staff assessment
(a) In application of the staff assessment plan under staff regulation 3.3:
(i) Salaries for staff members in the Professional and higher categories and
in the Field Service category shall be subject to the assessment rates specified
in subparagraph (b) (i) of that regulation;
(ii) Salaries for staff members in the General Service and related categories
shall be subject to the assessment rates specified in subparagraph (b) (ii) of
that regulation.
(b) The transitional measures governing the salary scales and pensionable
remuneration are subject to the provisions of staff rule 13.12.
Rule 3.3
Salary increments
(a) Satisfactory service for the purpose of awarding a salary increment shall
be defined, unless otherwise decided by the Secretary-General in any particular
case, by satisfactory service performance and conduct of staff members in their
assignments as evaluated by their supervisors.
(b) Salary and wage increments shall be effective on the first day of the pay
period in which the service requirements are completed, provided that the period of
service may be shortened to meet the requirements of staff rule 3.4 (b) and that such
increments shall not be effective earlier than the first day of the pay period in which
a staff member returns to pay status from a period of leave without pay. No
increment shall be paid in the case of staff members whose services will cease
during the month in which the increment would otherwise have been due.
(c) If a staff member with satisfactory service is changed to a lower salary
level, the period of service since the last increment shall be credited towards the
next increment within the lower level. If a staff member whose service has not been
satisfactory is changed to a lower salary level, the staff member’s eligibility for
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salary increment in the lower level will be based on satisfactory service at the lower
level.
Rule 3.4
Salary policy
(a) On appointment, a staff member shall normally be placed at the first step
of the level of his or her post, unless otherwise decided by the Secretary-General.
(b) On promotion, a staff member who holds a fixed-term or a continuing
appointment shall be placed at the lowest step of the level to which he or she has
been promoted that provides an increase in net base salary equal to at least the
amount that would have resulted from the granting of two steps at the lower level.
Rule 3.5
Pensionable remuneration
(a) The definition of pensionable remuneration is set out in article 51 of the
Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund.
(b) The pensionable remuneration of staff members in the Field Service
category shall be established in the same manner as for staff in the Professional and
higher categories.
(c) Where a promotion of a staff member from the General Service and
related categories to the Professional category would result in a reduction of the
pensionable remuneration used for computing the final average remuneration, the
level of pensionable remuneration reached prior to the promotion shall be
maintained until it is surpassed by that applicable to the staff member’s grade and
step in the Professional category. Contributions payable in accordance with article 25
of the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund shall be based on
either:
(i) The pensionable remuneration of the staff member used to determine
such contributions at the time of promotion; or
(ii) The pensionable remuneration applicable to the staff member’s grade and
step in the Professional category;
whichever is higher.
Rule 3.6
Dependency allowances
Definitions
(a) For the purposes of the Staff Regulations and Rules:
(i) A “dependent spouse” is a spouse whose earnings, if any, do not exceed
the lowest entry level of the United Nations General Service gross salary
scales in force on 1 January of the year concerned for the duty station in the
country of the spouse’s place of work. In the case of staff in the Professional
and higher categories and in the Field Service category, the entry level amount
referenced shall not at any duty station be less than the equivalent of the
lowest entry level salary at the base of the salary system (G-2, step I, for New
York);
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(ii) A “child” is any of the following children for whom the staff member
provides main and continuing support:
a. A staff member’s natural or legally adopted child; or
b. A staff member’s stepchild who is residing with the staff member; or
c. A child who cannot be legally adopted, for whom the staff member
has legal responsibility and who is residing with the staff member;
(iii) A “dependent child” is a child for whom the staff member provides main
and continuing support and who meets one of the following criteria:
a. The child is under the age of 18 years;
b. The child is between the ages of 18 and 21 years and attends
university or its equivalent full-time; the requirement of residing with the staff
member does not apply in this case;
c. The child is of any age and has a disability that is permanent or for
a period that is expected to be long-term that prevents substantial gainful
employment;
(iv) A staff member claiming a child as a dependant must certify that he or
she provides main and continuous support. This certification must be
supported by documentary evidence satisfactory to the Secretary-General, if a
child:
a. Does not reside with the staff member;
b. Is married; or
c. Is recognized as a dependant under subparagraph (a) (iii) c. above;
(v) A father, mother, brother or sister of a staff member shall be considered
as a secondary dependant if the staff member provides such a person with not
less than half of that person’s financial resources, and in any case with not less
than twice the amount of the dependency allowance. The conditions regarding
age, school attendance and disability are the same for a brother or sister as
those applicable to a staff member’s child in subparagraph (iii) above.
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parent allowance in respect of the first dependent child shall not be eligible for
payment of a child allowance for that child;
(iii) Dependent child allowance: eligible staff members shall receive a
dependent child allowance for each recognized dependent child, under
conditions established by the Secretary-General. Subject to the provisions of
staff regulations 3.5 and 3.6 (a), the full amount of the dependency allowance
provided under those regulations and under the Staff Rules in respect of a
dependent child shall be payable, except where the staff member or his or her
spouse receives a direct governmental grant in respect of the same child.
Where such a governmental grant is made, the dependent child allowance or
single parent allowance payable under this rule shall be the approximate
amount by which the governmental grant is less than the dependent child
allowance or single parent allowance set out under the Staff Regulations and
Rules. No dependency allowance is payable if the governmental grant is equal
to or exceeds the rate set out under the Staff Regulations and Rules;
(iv) Secondary dependent allowance: a secondary dependency allowance
shall be paid in respect of not more than one secondary dependent and such
payment shall not be made when a payment is being made for a dependent
spouse. Staff members in the General Service and related categories shall
receive a dependency allowance with respect to a secondary dependant when
local conditions and/or the practices of comparator employers call for the
establishment of such an allowance, under conditions established by the
Secretary-General.
(c) Staff members shall be responsible for notifying the Secretary-General in
writing of claims for dependency allowance and may be required to support such
claims by documentary evidence satisfactory to the Secretary-General. Staff
members shall be responsible for reporting to the Secretary-General any change in
the status of a dependant that may affect the payment of this allowance.
Rule 3.7
Post adjustment and rental subsidy
(a) Post adjustment is an amount paid to staff members serving in the
Professional and higher categories and in the Field Service category, in accordance
with annex I, paragraph 9, of the Staff Regulations, to ensure equity in purchasing
power of staff members across duty stations.
(b) While the salary of a staff member is normally subject to the post
adjustment of his or her duty station during assignments for one year or more,
alternative arrangements may be made by the Secretary-General under the following
circumstances:
(i) When a staff member is assigned to a duty station whose post adjustment
classification is lower than that of his or her previous duty station, he or she
may continue to receive for up to six months the post adjustment applicable to
the previous duty station while at least one member of his or her immediate
family (spouse and children) remains at that duty station;
(ii) When a staff member is assigned to a duty station for less than one year,
the Secretary-General shall decide at that time whether to apply the post
adjustment applicable to the duty station and, if appropriate, to pay a settling-
in grant under staff rule 7.14, the mobility incentive under staff rule 3.13 if
applicable and hardship allowance and non-family service allowance under
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staff rules 3.14 and 3.15 or, in lieu of the above, to authorize appropriate
subsistence payments;
(iii) When a staff member is assigned to a United Nations field mission for a
period of three months or less, the Secretary-General shall decide at that time
whether to apply the post adjustment applicable to the duty station and, if
appropriate, to pay a settling-in grant under staff rule 7.14, the mobility
incentive under staff rule 3.13 if applicable and hardship allowance and
non-family service allowance under staff rules 3.14 and 3.15 or, in lieu of the
above, to authorize appropriate subsistence payments.
(c) At duty stations where the average rental cost used in calculating the post
adjustment index is based on the cost of housing provided by the United Nations, by
a Government or by a related institution, eligible staff members who have to rent
housing accommodation at substantially higher commercial rates will be paid a
supplement to the post adjustment in the form of a rental subsidy under conditions
established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 3.8
Language allowance
(a) A staff member in the General Service, Security Service or Trades and
Crafts category, or in the Field Service category up to and including level FS-5,
holding a fixed-term or a continuing appointment may be entitled to a pensionable
language allowance, under rates and conditions determined by the Secretary-
General, provided that he or she has demonstrated proficiency in two United
Nations official language as follows:
(i) If the staff member’s mother tongue is one of the official languages of
the United Nations, he or she must successfully pass the prescribed test in any
other official United Nations language, which may be the language in which
proficiency is required for the purpose of his or her appointment;
(ii) If the staff member’s mother tongue is not one of the official United
Nations languages, he or she must successfully pass the prescribed test in any
official United Nations language other than the one in which proficiency is
required for the purpose of his or her appointment.
(b) A staff member already in receipt of a language allowance under staff
rule 3.8 (a) shall be entitled to receive a second such pensionable allowance, equal
to half of the amount of the first, provided that he or she has demonstrated
proficiency by passing the prescribed test in a third official language.
(c) The language allowance shall be taken into account in determining
United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund, medical and group insurance
contributions; overtime and night differential compensation; and payments and
indemnities on separation.
Rule 3.9
Education grant
Definitions
(a) For the purposes of the present rule:
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(i) “Child” means a child of a staff member who is dependent on the staff
member for main and continuing support as defined in staff rule 3.6 (a) (ii) and
3.6 (a) (iii);
(ii) “Child with a disability” means a child who is unable, by reasons of
physical or mental disability, to attend a regular educational institution and
who requires special teaching or training to prepare him or her for full
integration into society or, while attending a regular educational institution,
who requires special teaching or training to assist him or her in overcoming
the disability;
(iii) “Home country” means the country of home leave of the staff member
under staff rule 5.2. If both parents are eligible staff members, “home country”
means the country of home leave of either parent;
(iv) “Duty station” means the country, or area within commuting distance
notwithstanding national boundaries, where the staff member is serving.
Eligibility
(b) Subject to conditions established by the Secretary-General, a staff
member who holds a fixed-term or a continuing appointment shall be entitled to an
education grant in respect of each child, provided that:
(i) The staff member is regarded as an international recruit under staff
rule 4.5 and resides and serves at a duty station which is outside his or her
home country; and
(ii) The child is in full-time attendance at a school, university or similar
educational institution.
(c) If a staff member eligible under paragraph (b) above is reassigned to a
duty station within his or her home country in the course of a school year, he or she
may receive the education grant for the balance of that school year.
Duration
(d) (i) The grant shall be payable up to the end of the school year in which
the child completes four years of post-secondary studies or attains a first post-
secondary degree, whichever comes first;
(ii) The grant will not normally be payable beyond the school year in which
the child reaches the age of 25 years. If the child’s education is interrupted for
at least one school year by national service, illness or other compelling
reasons, the period of eligibility shall be extended by the period of
interruption.
Amount of grant
(e) The amount to which a staff member may be entitled under the grant are
set out in appendix B to the present Rules.
(f) The amount of the grant to be paid when the staff member’s period of
service or the child’s school attendance does not cover the full school year shall be
prorated under conditions to be defined by the Secretary-General. If a staff member
in receipt of the education grant dies while in service at the beginning of the school
year, the full entitlement for that particular school year shall be granted.
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Travel
(g) A staff member to whom boarding assistance is payable under
paragraph (ii) or (iii) of appendix B to the present Rules in respect of the child’s
attendance at an educational institution at the primary or secondary level shall be
entitled to travel expenses for the child of one return journey each scholastic year
between the educational institution and the duty station, under conditions
established by the Secretary-General. If travel to the duty station by the child is not
possible, return travel by the staff member or spouse may be authorized in lieu of
travel by the child, under conditions established by the Secretary-General.
Claims
(j) Claims for education grant shall be made in accordance with conditions
established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 3.10
Special post allowance
(a) Staff members shall be expected to assume temporarily, as a normal part
of their customary work and without extra compensation, the duties and
responsibilities of higher level posts.
(b) Without prejudice to the principle that promotion under staff rule 4.15
shall be the normal means of recognizing increased responsibilities and demonstrated
ability, a staff member holding a fixed-term or continuing appointment who is called
upon to assume the full duties and responsibilities of a post at a clearly recognizable
higher level than his or her own for a temporary period exceeding three months
may, in exceptional cases, be granted a non-pensionable special post allowance from
the beginning of the fourth month of service at the higher level.
(c) In the case of a staff member holding a fixed-term or continuing
appointment who is assigned to serve in a mission, or when a staff member in the
General Service category is required to serve in a higher level post in the
Professional category, or when a staff member in any category holding a fixed-term
or continuing appointment is required to serve in a post which is classified more
than one level above his or her level, the allowance may be paid immediately when
the staff member assumes the higher duties and responsibilities.
(d) The amount of the special post allowance shall be equivalent to the
salary increase (including post adjustment and dependency allowances, if any)
which the staff member would have received had the staff member been promoted to
the next higher level.
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Rule 3.11
Overtime and compensatory time off
(a) A staff member in the General Service, Security Service or Trades and
Crafts category, or in the Field Service category up to and including level FS-5, who
is required to work in excess of the working week established for this purpose shall
be given compensatory time off or may receive additional payment, under
conditions established by the Secretary-General.
(b) Should the exigencies of service permit, and subject to the prior approval
of the Secretary-General, occasional compensatory time off may be granted to staff
members serving in the Professional and higher categories who have been required
to work substantial or recurrent periods of overtime.
Rule 3.12
Night differential
(a) A staff member who is assigned to regularly scheduled night-time tours
of duty shall receive a night differential at a rate and under conditions established
by the Secretary-General.
(b) Unless otherwise specifically prescribed by the Secretary-General, night
differential shall not be paid for the same work for which overtime payment or
compensatory time off is allowed or for any hours when the staff member is on
leave or in travel status.
Rule 3.13
Mobility incentive
(a) A non-pensionable mobility incentive may be paid under conditions
established by the Secretary-General to staff members in the Professional and higher
categories, in the Field Service category, and to internationally recruited staff in the
General Service category pursuant to staff rule 4.5 (c), provided that they:
(i) Hold a fixed-term or continuing appointment; and
(ii) Are on an assignment of one year or more to a new field duty station and
are installed at the new duty station; and
(iii) Have served five years or more of continuous service on a fixed-term or
continuing appointment in the United Nations common system of salaries and
allowances.
The mobility incentive shall be discontinued upon five continuous years at the same
duty station. In the exceptional case of staff members who remained at the same
duty station for more than five years at the explicit request of the Organization or
for compelling humanitarian reasons, the mobility incentive shall be payable for one
additional year, but in no case for more than a total of six years.
(b) The amount of the mobility incentive, if any, and the conditions under
which it will be paid, shall be determined by the Secretary-General taking into
account the length of the staff member’s continuous service in the United Nations
common system of salaries and allowances, the number of duty stations at which he
or she has previously served for a period of one year or longer and the hardship
classification of the new duty station to which the staff member is assigned.
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Rule 3.14
Hardship allowance
(a) Staff in the Professional and higher categories and in the Field Service
category, and staff in the General Service category considered internationally
recruited pursuant to staff rule 4.5 (c) who are appointed or reassigned to a new duty
station may be paid a non-pensionable hardship allowance.
(b) The amount of this allowance, if any, and the conditions under which it
will be paid shall be determined by the Secretary-General taking into account the
degree of difficulty of life and work at each duty station as per the classification of
duty stations established by the International Civil Service Commission.
Rule 3.15
Non-family service allowance
(a) When a duty station has been designated as non-family, the presence of
eligible dependants of the staff member shall not be authorized at the duty station,
unless exceptionally approved by the Secretary-General.
(b) Staff in the Professional and higher categories and in the Field Service
category and staff in the General Service category considered internationally
recruited pursuant to staff rule 4.5 (c) who are appointed or reassigned to a
non-family duty station may be paid a non-pensionable non-family service
allowance. The amount and conditions under which the allowance will be paid shall
be determined by the Secretary-General. In no event shall the allowance be payable
if the Secretary-General has exceptionally approved the presence of eligible
dependants of the staff member at the duty station pursuant to staff rule 3.15 (a).
Rule 3.16
Salary advances
(a) Salary advances may be made to staff members under the following
circumstances and conditions:
(i) Upon departure on extended official travel or on approved leave
involving absence from duty for 17 or more calendar days, including the
end-month pay day in the amount that would fall due for payment during the
anticipated pay period(s) occurring during the staff member’s absence;
(ii) In cases where staff members have not received their regular pay,
through no fault of their own, in the amount due;
(iii) Upon separation from service, where final settlement of pay accounts
cannot be made at the time of departure, subject to the advance not exceeding
80 per cent of the estimated final net payments due;
(iv) In cases where new staff members arrive without sufficient funds, in
such amount as the Secretary-General may deem appropriate;
(v) Upon change of official duty station, in such amounts as the Secretary-
General may deem appropriate.
(b) The Secretary-General may, in exceptional and compelling circumstances,
and if the request of the staff member is supported by a detailed justification in
writing, authorize an advance for any reason other than those enumerated above.
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(c) Salary advances other than those referred to in subparagraphs (a) (i), (ii)
and (iii) above shall be liquidated at a constant rate as determined at the time the
advance is authorized, in consecutive pay periods, commencing not later than the
period following that in which the advance is made.
Rule 3.17
Retroactivity of payments
A staff member who has not been receiving an allowance, grant or other
payment to which he or she is entitled shall not receive retroactively such
allowance, grant or payment unless the staff member has made written claim:
(i) In the case of the cancellation or modification of the staff rule governing
eligibility, within three months following the date of such cancellation or
modification;
(ii) In every other case, within one year following the date on which the staff
member would have been entitled to the initial payment.
Rule 3.18
Deductions and contributions
(a) Staff assessment shall be deducted, each pay period, from the total
payments due to each staff member, at the rates and subject to the conditions
prescribed in staff regulation 3.3 and staff rule 3.2.
(b) Contributions of staff members who are participating in the United
Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund shall be deducted, each pay period, from the total
payments due to them.
(c) Deductions from salaries and other emoluments may also be made for:
(i) Contributions, other than to the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund,
for which provision is made under the present Rules;
(ii) Indebtedness to the United Nations;
(iii) Indebtedness to third parties when any deduction for this purpose is
authorized by the Secretary-General;
(iv) Lodging provided by the United Nations, by a Government or by a
related institution;
(v) Contributions to a staff representative body established pursuant to staff
regulation 8.1, provided that each staff member has the opportunity to
withhold his or her consent to or at any time to discontinue such deduction, by
notice to the Secretary-General.
Rule 3.19
Repatriation grant
Purpose
(a) The purpose of the repatriation grant provided by staff regulation 9.4 is
to facilitate the relocation of expatriate staff members to a country other than the
country of the last duty station, provided that they meet the conditions contained in
annex IV to the Staff Regulations and in this rule.
Definitions
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Eligibility
(c) Staff members who are considered internationally recruited pursuant to
staff rule 4.5 shall be eligible for payment of the repatriation grant in accordance
with annex IV to the Staff Regulations provided that they meet the following
conditions:
(i) The Organization had the obligation to repatriate the staff member upon
separation after qualifying service as defined in staff rule 3.19 (b) (v);
(ii) The staff member resided outside his or her home country and
recognized country of nationality while serving at the last duty station;
(iii) The staff member has not been dismissed or separated from service on
grounds of abandonment of post;
(iv) The staff member has not been locally recruited under staff rule 4.4;
(v) The staff member does not have permanent resident status in the country
of the duty station at the time of separation.
Evidence of relocation
(d) Payment of the repatriation grant after separation of an eligible staff
member shall require submission of documentary evidence satisfactory to the
Secretary-General that the former staff member has relocated away from the country
of the last duty station.
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for repatriation grant shall be adjusted so that the number of months, weeks or days
of salary to be paid at the time of the separation after the new appointment, when
added to the number of months, weeks or days paid for prior periods of service,
does not exceed the total of months, weeks or days that would have been paid had
the service been continuous.
(g) When both spouses are staff members and each is entitled to payment of
a repatriation grant on separation from service, the amount of the grant paid to each
shall be calculated in accordance with terms and conditions established by the
Secretary-General.
Rule 3.20
Recruitment incentive
An incentive payment for the recruitment of experts in highly specialized
fields in instances in which the Organization was unable to attract suitably qualified
personnel may be made under conditions to be prescribed by the Secretary-General.
The amount of the recruitment incentive shall not exceed 25 per cent of the annual
net base salary for each year of the agreed appointment.
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Article IV
Appointment and promotion
Regulation 4.1
As stated in Article 101 of the Charter, the power of appointment of staff
members rests with the Secretary-General. Upon appointment, each staff member,
including a staff member on secondment from government service, shall receive a
letter of appointment in accordance with the provisions of annex II to the present
Regulations and signed by the Secretary-General or by an official in the name of the
Secretary-General.
Regulation 4.2
The paramount consideration in the appointment, transfer or promotion of the
staff shall be the necessity of securing the highest standards of efficiency,
competence and integrity. Due regard shall be paid to the importance of recruiting
the staff on as wide a geographical basis as possible.
Regulation 4.3
In accordance with the principles of the Charter, selection of staff members
shall be made without distinction as to race, sex or religion. So far as practicable,
selection shall be made on a competitive basis.
Regulation 4.4
Subject to the provisions of Article 101, paragraph 3, of the Charter, and
without prejudice to the recruitment of fresh talent at all levels, the fullest regard
shall be had, in filling vacancies, to the requisite qualifications and experience of
persons already in the service of the United Nations. This consideration shall also
apply, on a reciprocal basis, to the specialized agencies brought into relationship
with the United Nations. The Secretary-General may limit eligibility to apply for
vacant posts to internal candidates, as defined by the Secretary-General. If so, other
candidates shall be allowed to apply, under conditions to be defined by the
Secretary-General, when no internal candidate meets the requirements of Article 101,
paragraph 3, of the Charter as well as the requirements of the post.
Regulation 4.5
(a) Appointment of Under-Secretaries-General and of Assistant Secretaries-
General shall normally be for a period of up to five years, subject to prolongation or
renewal. Other staff members shall be granted either a temporary, fixed-term or
continuing appointment under such terms and conditions consistent with the present
Regulations as the Secretary-General may prescribe;
(b) A temporary appointment does not carry any expectancy, legal or
otherwise, of renewal. A temporary appointment shall not be converted to any other
type of appointment;
(c) A fixed-term appointment does not carry any expectancy, legal or
otherwise, of renewal or conversion, irrespective of the length of service;
(d) The Secretary-General shall prescribe which staff members are eligible
for consideration for continuing appointments.
Regulation 4.6
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Chapter IV
Appointment and promotion
Rule 4.1
Letter of appointment
The letter of appointment issued to every staff member contains expressly or
by reference all the terms and conditions of employment. All contractual
entitlements of staff members are strictly limited to those contained expressly or by
reference in their letters of appointment.
Rule 4.2
Effective date of appointment
The appointment of a staff member shall take effect from the date on which he
or she enters into official travel status to assume his or her duties or, if no official
travel is involved, from the date on which the staff member reports for duty.
Rule 4.3
Nationality
(a) In the application of the Staff Regulations and Rules, the United Nations
shall not recognize more than one nationality for each staff member.
(b) When a staff member has been legally accorded nationality status by
more than one State, the staff member’s nationality for the purposes of Staff
Regulations and the Staff Rules shall be the nationality of the State with which the
staff member is, in the opinion of the Secretary-General, most closely associated.
Rule 4.4
Staff in posts subject to local recruitment
(a) All staff in the General Service and related categories, except as
stipulated in staff rule 4.5 (c) below, shall be recruited in the country or within
commuting distance of each office, irrespective of their nationality and of the length
of time they may have been in the country. The allowances and benefits available to
staff members in the General Service and related categories shall be published by
the Secretary-General for each duty station.
(b) National Professional Officers shall be of the nationality of the country
where the office concerned is located.
(c) A staff member subject to local recruitment under this rule shall not be
eligible for the allowances or benefits indicated under staff rule 4.5 (a).
Rule 4.5
Staff in posts subject to international recruitment
(a) Staff members other than those regarded under staff rule 4.4 as having
been locally recruited shall be considered as having been internationally recruited.
Depending on their type of appointment, the allowances and benefits available to
internationally recruited staff members, may include: payment of travel expenses
upon initial appointment and on separation for themselves and their spouses and
dependent children; relocation shipment; home leave; education grant; and
repatriation grant.
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(b) Staff recruited locally at a duty station for posts in the Professional and
higher categories at that specific duty station are considered internationally
recruited but would generally not be entitled to some or all of the allowances and
benefits mentioned in paragraph (a) above as determined by the Secretary-General.
(c) Under special circumstances and conditions determined by the Secretary-
General, staff who have been recruited to serve in posts in the General Service and
related categories may be considered internationally recruited.
(d) A staff member who has changed his or her residential status in such a
way that he or she may, in the opinion of the Secretary-General, be deemed to be a
permanent resident of any country other than that of his or her nationality may lose
entitlement to home leave, education grant, repatriation grant and payment of travel
expenses upon separation for the staff member and his or her spouse and dependent
children and relocation shipment, based upon place of home leave, if the Secretary-
General considers that the continuation of such entitlement would be contrary to the
purposes for which the allowance or benefit was created. Conditions governing
entitlement to benefits for internationally recruited staff in the light of residential
status shall be set by the Secretary-General as applicable to each duty station.
Rule 4.6
Geographical distribution
Recruitment on as wide a geographical basis as possible, in accordance with
the requirements of staff regulation 4.2, shall not apply to posts in the General
Service and related categories.
Rule 4.7
Family relationships
(a) An appointment shall not be granted to a person who is the father,
mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of a staff member.
(b) The spouse of a staff member may be appointed provided that he or she
is fully qualified for the post for which he or she is being considered and that the
spouse is not given any preference by virtue of the relationship to the staff member.
(c) A staff member who bears to another staff member any of the
relationships specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) above:
(i) Shall not be assigned to serve in a post which is superior or subordinate
in the line of authority to the staff member to whom he or she is related;
(ii) Shall not participate in the process of reaching or reviewing an
administrative decision affecting the status or entitlements of the staff member
to whom he or she is related.
(d) The marriage of one staff member to another shall not affect the
contractual status of either spouse, but their entitlements and other benefits shall be
modified as provided in the relevant Staff Regulations and Rules. The same
modifications shall apply in the case of a staff member whose spouse is a staff
member of another organization participating in the United Nations common system
of salaries and allowances. Where both spouses are staff members and maintain
separate households because they are assigned to different duty stations, the
Secretary-General may decide to maintain such separate entitlements and benefits,
provided that this is not inconsistent with any staff regulation or other decision of
the General Assembly.
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Rule 4.8
Change of official duty station
(a) A change of official duty station shall take place when a staff member is
assigned from one duty station to another for a period exceeding six months or
when a staff member is transferred for an indefinite period.
(b) A change of official duty station shall take place when a staff member is
assigned from a duty station to a United Nations field mission for a period
exceeding three months.
(c) Assignment of a staff member from his or her official duty station for a
conference shall not constitute a change of official duty station within the meaning
of the Staff Rules.
Rule 4.9
Inter-organization movements
(a) Inter-organization movements are defined in and shall be governed by an
inter-organization agreement among the organizations applying the United Nations
common system of salaries and allowances.
(b) The Secretary-General may allow a staff member to serve in a
specialized agency or other intergovernmental organization, provided that such
movement in no way diminishes the rights or entitlements of the staff member under
his or her letter of appointment with the United Nations.
Rule 4.10
Internal candidates and internal vacancies
For the purpose of staff regulation 4.4, the expression “internal candidates”
means staff members recruited under staff rules 4.15 and 4.16. Vacancies for which
eligibility to apply is restricted to such internal candidates shall be referred to as
“internal vacancies”. The conditions under which persons other than internal
candidates may apply for vacancies shall be defined by the Secretary-General.
Rule 4.11
Types of appointment
A staff member may be granted a temporary, fixed-term or continuing
appointment under staff rules 4.12, 4.13 and 4.14 below.
Rule 4.12
Temporary appointment
(a) A temporary appointment shall be granted for a period of less than one
year to meet seasonal or peak workloads and specific short-term requirements,
having an expiration date specified in the letter of appointment.
(b) The appointment of a staff member who has served for the maximum
period as described in paragraph (a) above may be renewed for up to one additional
year when warranted by surge requirements and operational needs related to field
operations and special projects with finite mandates under circumstances and
conditions established by the Secretary-General.
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Rule 4.13
Fixed-term appointment
(a) A fixed-term appointment may be granted for a period of one year or
more, up to five years at a time, to persons recruited for service of a prescribed
duration, including persons temporarily seconded by national Governments or
institutions for service with the United Nations, having an expiration date specified
in the letter of appointment.
(b) A fixed-term appointment may be renewed for any period up to five
years at a time.
(c) A fixed-term appointment does not carry any expectancy, legal or
otherwise, of renewal or conversion, irrespective of the length of service, except as
provided under staff rule 4.14 (b).
Rule 4.14
Continuing appointment
(a) A continuing appointment is an open-ended appointment.
(b) Staff members recruited in the Professional category upon successful
completion of a competitive examination pursuant to staff rule 4.16 shall be granted
a continuing appointment after two years on a fixed-term appointment, subject to
satisfactory service.
(c) The Secretary-General shall prescribe the criteria determining staff
members’ eligibility for consideration for continuing appointments.
Rule 4.15
Senior review bodies and central review bodies
Senior review bodies
(a) Senior review bodies shall be established by the Secretary-General to
review and provide advice on recommendations for the selection and managed
mobility of senior staff. The Secretary-General shall decide on the membership and
shall publish the rules of procedure of the senior review bodies.
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Rule 4.16
Competitive examinations
(a) Boards of examiners established by the Secretary-General shall ensure
the regularity of the competitive examinations administered in accordance with
conditions established by the Secretary-General.
(b) Boards of examiners shall make recommendations to the Secretary-
General in respect of the following:
(i) Appointment: appointment to P-1 and P-2 posts that are subject to the
system of desirable ranges and to posts in the Professional category requiring
special language competence at the United Nations Secretariat shall be made
exclusively through competitive examination;
(ii) Recruitment to the Professional category of staff from the General
Service and related categories in the United Nations Secretariat: recruitment to
the Professional category at the United Nations Secretariat of staff from the
General Service and related categories having successfully passed the
appropriate competitive examinations shall be made within the limits
established by the General Assembly. Such recruitment shall be made
exclusively through competitive examination.
(c) Staff members appointed to the Professional category after a competitive
examination shall be subject to mandatory reassignment, under conditions
established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 4.17
Re-employment
(a) A former staff member who is re-employed under conditions established
by the Secretary-General shall be given a new appointment unless he or she is
reinstated under staff rule 4.18.
(b) The terms of the new appointment shall be fully applicable without
regard to any period of former service. When a staff member is re-employed under
the present rule, the service shall not be considered as continuous between the prior
and new appointments.
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(c) When a staff member receives a new appointment in the United Nations
common system of salaries and allowances less than 12 months after separation, the
amount of any payment on account of termination indemnity, repatriation grant or
commutation of accrued annual leave shall be adjusted so that the number of
months, weeks or days of salary to be paid at the time of the separation after the
new appointment, when added to the number of months, weeks or days paid for
prior periods of service, does not exceed the total of months, weeks or days that
would have been paid had the service been continuous.
Rule 4.18
Reinstatement
(a) A former staff member who held a fixed-term or continuing appointment
and who is re-employed under a fixed-term or a continuing appointment within
12 months of separation from service may be reinstated if the Secretary-General
considers that such reinstatement would be in the interest of the Organization.
(b) On reinstatement the staff member’s services shall be considered as
having been continuous, and the staff member shall return any monies he or she
received on account of separation, including termination indemnity under staff rule
9.8, repatriation grant under staff rule 3.19 and payment for accrued annual leave
under staff rule 9.9. The interval between separation and reinstatement shall be
charged, to the extent possible, to annual leave, with any further period charged to
special leave without pay. The staff member’s sick leave credit under staff rule 6.2
at the time of separation shall be re-established; the staff member’s participation, if
any, in the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund shall be governed by the
Regulations of the Fund.
(c) If the former staff member is reinstated, it shall be so stipulated in his or
her letter of appointment.
Rule 4.19
Medical examination
(a) A staff member may be required from time to time to satisfy the United
Nations Medical Director or Medical Officer designated by the United Nations
Medical Director, by medical examination, that he or she is free from any ailment
likely to impair the health or safety of others.
(b) A staff member may also be required to undergo such medical
examinations and receive such inoculations as may be required by the United
Nations Medical Director or Medical Officer designated by the United Nations
Medical Director before going on or after returning from mission service.
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Article V
Annual and special leave
Regulation 5.1
Staff members shall be allowed appropriate annual leave.
Regulation 5.2
Special leave may be authorized by the Secretary-General in exceptional
cases.
Regulation 5.3
Eligible staff members shall be granted home leave once in every 24 months.
However, the Secretary-General may grant home leave once in every 12 months to
eligible staff members in duty stations having the most difficult conditions of life
and work under specific conditions, as approved by the General Assembly. A staff
member whose home country is either the country of his or her official duty station
or the country of his or her normal residence while in United Nations service shall
not be eligible for home leave.
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Chapter V
Annual and special leave
Rule 5.1
Annual leave
(a) A staff member who holds a temporary appointment shall accrue annual
leave while in full pay status at the rate of 1 1/2 days per month, subject to the
provisions of staff rule 5.3 (e) unless otherwise provided by the Secretary-General.
No leave shall accrue while a staff member is receiving compensation equivalent to
salary and allowances under staff rule 6.4.
(b) A staff member who holds a temporary appointment may accumulate and
carry forward up to 18 working days of annual leave by 1 April of any year or such
other date as the Secretary-General may set for a duty station, subject to staff
rule 4.12 (b).
(c) A staff member who holds a fixed-term or a continuing appointment shall
accrue annual leave while in full pay status at the rate of 2 1/2 days per month,
subject to the provisions of staff rule 5.3 (c). No leave shall accrue while a staff
member is receiving compensation equivalent to salary and allowances under staff
rule 6.4.
(d) A staff member who holds a fixed-term or a continuing appointment may
accumulate and carry forward up to 60 working days of annual leave by 1 April of
any year or such other date as the Secretary-General may set for a duty station.
(e) (i) Annual leave may be taken in units of days and half-days;
(ii) Leave may be taken only when authorized. If a staff member is absent
from work without authorization, payment of salary and allowances shall
cease for the period of unauthorized absence. However, if, in the opinion of
the Secretary-General, the absence was caused by reasons beyond the staff
member’s control and the staff member has accrued annual leave, the absence
will be charged to that leave;
(iii) All arrangements as to leave shall be subject to the exigencies of service,
which may require that leave be taken by a staff member during a period
designated by the Secretary-General. The personal circumstances and
preferences of the individual staff member shall, as far as possible, be
considered.
(f) A staff member may, in exceptional circumstances, be granted advance
annual leave up to a maximum of 10 working days, provided that his or her service
is expected to continue for a period beyond that necessary to accrue the leave so
advanced.
Rule 5.2
Home leave
(a) Internationally recruited staff members, as defined under staff rule
4.5 (a) and not excluded from home leave under staff rule 4.5 (b), who are residing
and serving outside their home country and who are otherwise eligible shall be
entitled once in every 24 months of qualifying service to visit their home country at
United Nations expense for the purpose of spending in that country a reasonable
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period of annual leave. Leave taken for this purpose and under the terms and
conditions set forth in this rule shall hereinafter be referred to as home leave.
(b) A staff member shall be eligible for home leave provided that the
following conditions are fulfilled:
(i) While performing his or her official duties:
a. The staff member continues to reside in a country other than that of
which he or she is a national; or
b. In the case of a staff member who is a native of a non-metropolitan
territory of the country of the duty station and who maintained his or her
normal residence in such non-metropolitan territory prior to appointment, he
or she continues to reside, while performing his or her official duties, outside
such territory;
(ii) The staff member’s service is expected by the Secretary-General to
continue:
a. At least six months beyond the date of his or her return from any
proposed home leave; and
b. In the case of the first home leave, at least six months beyond the
date on which the staff member will have completed 24 months of qualifying
service;
(iii) In the case of home leave following the return from a family visit travel
under staff rule 7.1 (a) (vii), normally not less than nine months of continuous
service have elapsed since the return from the family visit travel.
(c) Staff members whose eligibility under paragraph (b) above is established
at the time of their appointment shall begin to accrue service credit towards home
leave from that date. Staff members who become eligible for home leave subsequent
to appointment shall begin to accrue such service credits from the effective date of
their becoming eligible.
(d) The country of home leave shall be the country of the staff member’s
recognized nationality, subject to the following terms, conditions and exceptions:
(i) The place of home leave of the staff member within his or her home
country shall be, for purposes of travel and transportation entitlements, the
place with which the staff member had the closest residential ties during the
period of his or her most recent residence in the home country. In exceptional
circumstances, a change in the place in the country of home leave may be
authorized, under conditions established by the Secretary-General;
(ii) A staff member who has served with another public international
organization immediately preceding his or her appointment shall have the
place of home leave determined as though his or her entire previous service
with the other international organization had been with the United Nations;
(iii) The Secretary-General may authorize:
a. A country other than the country of nationality as the home country,
for the purposes of this rule, in exceptional and compelling circumstances. A
staff member requesting such authorization will be required to satisfy the
Secretary-General that the staff member maintained normal residence in such
other country for a prolonged period preceding his or her appointment, that the
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staff member continues to have close family and personal ties in that country
and that the staff member’s taking home leave there would not be inconsistent
with the purposes and intent of staff regulation 5.3;
b. Home leave travel to a country other than the home country, subject
to conditions established by the Secretary-General. In such a case, the travel
expenses borne by the United Nations shall not exceed the cost of travel to the
home country.
(e) (i) A staff member’s home leave shall fall due upon completion of
24 months of qualifying service;
(ii) After falling due, home leave may be taken within 12 months, subject to
the exigencies of service.
(f) A staff member may be granted advance home leave, provided that
normally not less than 12 months of qualifying service have been completed or that
normally not less than 12 months of qualifying service have elapsed since the date
of return from his or her last home leave. The granting of advance home leave shall
not advance the eligibility for, or the due date of, the next home leave. The granting
of advance home leave shall be subject to the conditions for the entitlement being
subsequently met. If these conditions are not met, the staff member will be required
to reimburse the costs paid by the Organization for the advance travel.
(g) If a staff member delays taking his or her home leave beyond the 12-
month period after which it falls due, such delayed leave may be taken without
altering the time of his or her next and succeeding home leave entitlements,
provided that normally not less than 12 months of qualifying service elapse between
the date of the staff member’s return from the delayed home leave and the date of
his or her next home leave departure.
(h) A staff member may be required to take his or her home leave in
conjunction with travel on official business or change of official duty station, due
regard being paid to the interests of the staff member and his or her family.
(i) Subject to the conditions specified in chapter VII of the present Rules, a
staff member shall be entitled to claim, in respect of authorized travel on home
leave, expenses for himself or herself and eligible family members for the outward
and return journeys between the official duty station and the place of home leave. A
staff member may also claim travel time in respect of authorized travel on home
leave.
(j) If both spouses are staff members who are eligible for home leave, and
taking into account staff rule 4.7 (d), each staff member shall have the choice either
of exercising his or her own home leave entitlement or of accompanying the spouse.
A staff member who chooses to accompany his or her spouse shall be granted travel
time appropriate to the travel involved. Dependent children whose parents are staff
members, each of whom is entitled to home leave, may accompany either parent.
The frequency of travel shall not exceed the established periodicity of the home
leave both with regard to staff members and to their dependent children, if any.
(k) A staff member travelling on home leave shall be required to spend no
less than seven calendar days, exclusive of travel time, in his or her home country.
The Secretary-General may request a staff member, on his or her return from home
leave, to furnish satisfactory evidence that this requirement has been fully met.
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Rule 5.3
Special leave
(a) (i) Special leave may be granted at the request of a staff member
holding a fixed-term or continuing appointment for advanced study or research
in the interest of the United Nations, in cases of extended illness, for childcare
or for other important reasons for such period of time as the Secretary-General
may prescribe;
(ii) Special leave is normally without pay. In exceptional circumstances,
special leave with full or partial pay may be granted;
(iii) Subject to conditions established by the Secretary-General, family leave
may be granted as follows:
a. As special leave with full pay in the case of adoption of a child;
b. As special leave without pay for a period of up to two years for a
staff member who is the mother or father of a newly born or adopted child,
with a possibility of extension for up to an additional two years in exceptional
circumstances. The right of a staff member to be reabsorbed after the end of
such special leave without pay shall be fully protected;
c. As special leave without pay for a reasonable period, including
necessary travel time, upon the death of a member of the immediate family of
the staff member or in case of serious family emergency.
(b) Special leave shall not be authorized for governmental service in a
political office, in a diplomatic or other representational post or for the purpose of
performing any functions that are incompatible with the staff member’s continued
status as an international civil servant. In exceptional circumstances, special leave
without pay may be granted to a staff member who is requested by his or her
Government to render temporary services involving functions of a technical nature.
(c) Subject to conditions established by the Secretary-General, a staff
member who has successfully completed the competitive examination and
completed one year of service under a fixed-term appointment or who holds a
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continuing appointment and who is called upon to serve in the armed forces of the
State of which the staff member is a national, whether for training or active duty,
may be granted special leave without pay for the duration of such military service,
in accordance with terms and conditions set forth in appendix C to the present
Rules.
(d) The Secretary-General may authorize special leave without pay for
pension purposes to protect the pension benefits of staff who are within 2 years of
reaching the applicable qualifying age for an early retirement benefit under article
29 of the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund and 25 years
of contributory service, or who are over that age and within 2 years of 25 years of
contributory service.
(e) Staff members holding a temporary appointment may exceptionally be
granted special leave, with full or partial pay or without pay, for compelling reasons
for such period as the Secretary-General deems appropriate.
(f) In exceptional cases, the Secretary-General may, at his or her initiative,
place a staff member on special leave with full or partial pay or without pay if he or
she considers such leave to be in the interest of the Organization.
(g) Continuity of service shall not be considered broken by periods of
special leave with or without pay. However, staff members shall not accrue service
credits towards sick, annual and home leave, salary increment, seniority, termination
indemnity and repatriation grant during periods of special leave with partial pay or
without pay exceeding one month. Periods of special leave with partial pay or
without pay exceeding one month shall not be counted towards accrued years of
service for eligibility requirements for a continuing appointment.
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Article VI
Social security
Regulation 6.1
Provision shall be made for the participation of staff members in the United
Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund in accordance with the regulations of that Fund.
Regulation 6.2
The Secretary-General shall establish a scheme of social security for the staff,
including provisions for health protection, sick leave, maternity and paternity leave,
and reasonable compensation in the event of illness, accident or death attributable to
the performance of official duties on behalf of the United Nations.
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Chapter VI
Social security
Rule 6.1
Participation in the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund
Staff members whose appointments are for six months or longer or who
complete six months of service under shorter appointments without an interruption
of more than 30 calendar days shall become participants in the United Nations Joint
Staff Pension Fund, provided that participation is not excluded by their letters of
appointment.
Rule 6.2
Sick leave
(a) Staff members who are unable to perform their duties by reason of illness
or injury or whose attendance at work is prevented by public health requirements
will be granted sick leave. All sick leave must be approved on behalf of, and under
conditions established by, the Secretary-General.
Maximum entitlement
(b) A staff member’s maximum entitlement to sick leave shall be determined
by the nature and duration of his or her appointment in accordance with the
following provisions:
(i) A staff member who holds a temporary appointment shall be granted sick
leave at the rate of two working days per month;
(ii) A staff member who holds a fixed-term appointment and who has
completed less than three years of continuous service shall be granted sick
leave of up to 3 months on full salary and 3 months on half salary in any
period of 12 consecutive months;
(iii) A staff member who holds a continuing appointment, or who holds a
fixed-term appointment for three years or who has completed three years or
more of continuous service shall be granted sick leave of up to nine months on
full salary and nine months on half salary in any period of four consecutive
years.
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(e) When sickness of more than five working days in any seven-day period
occurs while a staff member is on annual leave, including home leave, sick leave
may be approved subject to appropriate medical certification.
Obligations of staff members
(f) Staff members shall inform their supervisors as soon as possible of
absences due to illness or injury. They shall promptly submit any medical certificate
or medical report required under conditions to be specified by the Secretary-
General.
(g) A staff member may be required at any time to submit a medical report
as to his or her condition or to undergo a medical examination by the United
Nations medical services or a medical practitioner designated by the United Nations
Medical Director. When, in the opinion of the United Nations Medical Director, a
medical condition impairs a staff member’s ability to perform his or her functions,
the staff member may be directed not to attend the office and requested to seek
treatment from a duly qualified medical practitioner. The staff member shall comply
promptly with any direction or request under this rule.
(h) A staff member shall immediately notify a United Nations medical
officer of any case of contagious disease occurring in his or her household or of any
quarantine order affecting the household. In such a case, or in the case of any other
condition that may affect the health of others, the United Nations Medical Director
shall decide whether the staff member should be excused from attendance at the
office. If so, the staff member shall receive full salary and other emoluments for the
period of authorized absence.
(i) A staff member shall not, while on sick leave, leave the duty station
without the prior approval of the Secretary-General.
Rule 6.3
Maternity and paternity leave
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Rule 6.4
Compensation for death, injury or illness attributable to service
Staff members shall be entitled to compensation in the event of death, injury
or illness attributable to the performance of official duties on behalf of the United
Nations, in accordance with the rules set forth in appendix D to the present Rules.
Rule 6.5
Compensation for loss or damage to personal effects attributable to service
Staff members shall be entitled, within the limits and under terms and
conditions established by the Secretary-General, to reasonable compensation in the
event of loss or damage to their personal effects determined to be directly
attributable to the performance of official duties on behalf of the United Nations.
Rule 6.6
Medical insurance
Staff members may be required to participate in a United Nations medical
insurance scheme under conditions established by the Secretary-General.
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Article VII
Travel and relocation expenses
Regulation 7.1
Subject to conditions and definitions prescribed by the Secretary-General, the
United Nations shall in appropriate cases pay the travel expenses of staff members,
their spouses and dependent children.
Regulation 7.2
Subject to conditions and definitions prescribed by the Secretary-General, the
United Nations shall in appropriate cases pay relocation shipment for staff
members.
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Chapter VII
Travel and relocation expenses
Rule 7.1
Official travel of staff members
(a) Subject to conditions established by the Secretary-General, the United
Nations shall pay the travel expenses of a staff member under the following
circumstances:
(i) On initial appointment, provided that the staff member is considered to
have been internationally recruited under staff rule 4.5;
(ii) When required to travel on official business;
(iii) On change of official duty station, as defined in staff rule 4.8;
(iv) On separation from service, as defined by article IX of the Staff
Regulations and chapter IX of the Staff Rules, except in cases of abandonment
of post, and in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (b) below;
(v) On travel authorized for medical, safety or security reasons or in other
appropriate cases, when, in the opinion of the Secretary-General, there are
compelling reasons for paying such expenses;
(vi) On home leave, in accordance with the provisions of staff rule 5.2;
(vii) On family visit.
(b) Under subparagraph (a) (iv) above, the United Nations shall pay the
expenses of a staff member to travel to the place of recruitment. However, if the
staff member had an appointment for a period of two years or longer or had
completed not less than two years of continuous service, the United Nations shall
pay his or her expenses to travel to the place recognized as his or her home for the
purpose of home leave under staff rule 5.2. Should a staff member, on separation,
wish to go to any other place, the travel expenses borne by the United Nations shall
not exceed the maximum amount that would have been payable for the return of the
staff member to the place of recruitment or home leave, as applicable.
(c) The Secretary-General may reject any claim for payment or
reimbursement of travel or relocation shipment expenses which are incurred by a
staff member in contravention of any provision of the Staff Rules.
Rule 7.2
Official travel of eligible family members
(a) Eligible family members, for the purposes of official travel, shall be
deemed to comprise a spouse and those children recognized as dependants under
staff rule 3.6 (a) (iii).
(b) The United Nations shall not pay the travel expenses of family members
of staff members holding a temporary appointment.
(c) The United Nations shall not install family members in, or pay their
travel expenses to, non-family duty stations.
(d) The United Nations shall pay the travel expenses of eligible family
members as defined under paragraph (a) above of a staff member holding a fixed-
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Rule 7.3
Loss of entitlement to return travel expenses
(a) A staff member holding a fixed-term or continuing appointment who
resigns before completing one year of service or within six months following the
date of his or her return from travel on home leave or family visit, or within three
months for a staff member assigned to designated duty stations, shall not be entitled
to payment of return travel expenses for himself or herself and family members
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unless the Secretary-General determines that there are compelling reasons for
authorizing such payment.
(b) A staff member holding a temporary appointment who resigns before
completing the full term of his or her appointment shall not be entitled to payment
of return travel expenses for himself or herself unless the Secretary-General
determines that there are compelling reasons for authorizing such payment.
(c) Entitlement to return travel expenses shall cease if travel has not
commenced within two years of the date of separation. However, in accordance with
staff rule 4.7 (d), where both spouses are staff members and the spouse who
separates first is entitled to return travel expenses, his or her entitlement shall not
cease until two years after the date of separation of the other spouse.
Rule 7.4
Authorization to travel
Before travel is undertaken, it shall be authorized in writing. In exceptional
cases, staff members may be authorized to travel on oral orders, but such oral
authorization shall require written confirmation. A staff member shall be responsible
for ascertaining that he or she has the proper authorization before commencing
travel.
Rule 7.5
Travel expenses
Travel expenses that shall be paid or reimbursed by the United Nations under
the relevant provisions of the Staff Rules include:
(i) Transportation expenses;
(ii) Terminal expenses;
(iii) Daily subsistence allowance;
(iv) Miscellaneous expenses.
Rule 7.6
Mode, dates, route and standard of travel
(a) Official travel shall, in all instances, be by a mode, route and standard of
travel approved in advance by the Secretary-General.
(b) Travel expenses and other entitlements, including travel time, shall be
limited to the amount allowable for a journey by the approved mode, dates, route
and standard of travel. Staff members who wish, for reasons of personal preference
or convenience, to make travel arrangements that vary from the approved mode,
dates, route or standard of travel must obtain permission to do so in advance and
assume the responsibility for all changes, including payment of any additional costs
thus incurred above the entitlement authorized by the United Nations.
Mode of travel
(c) The normal mode of travel for all official travel shall be by air. An
alternative mode of travel may be approved when the Secretary-General determines
that its use is in the best interest of the United Nations.
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Standard of travel
(g) For all official travel by air, staff members and their eligible family
members shall be provided with economy class transportation in accordance with
the most economical route available, subject to paragraph (f) above.
(h) Under conditions established by the Secretary-General, staff members
and their eligible family members may be granted a standard of travel immediately
below first class.
(i) In exceptional cases, a higher standard of travel may be approved by the
Secretary-General.
(j) Children, including those under 2 years of age, travelling by air shall be
provided with a ticket entitling them to a seat.
(k) For all official travel by train or commercial ground transportation
approved under paragraph (c) above, staff members and their eligible family
members shall be granted regular first-class travel or an equivalent standard.
(l) For all official water travel approved under paragraph (c) above, staff
members and their eligible family members shall be granted a standard of travel to
be determined by the Secretary-General, appropriate to the circumstances of the
case.
(m) If a staff member or eligible family member travels using a more
economical standard than the one approved, the United Nations shall pay only for
the standard actually used at the rate paid by the traveller.
Rule 7.7
Travel by motor vehicle
Staff members who are authorized to travel by motor vehicle shall be
reimbursed by the United Nations at rates and under conditions established by the
Secretary-General.
Rule 7.8
Purchase of tickets
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All tickets for official travel of staff members and eligible family members
shall be purchased by the United Nations in advance of the actual travel. A staff
member may be authorized to purchase his or her own tickets under conditions
established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 7.9
Terminal expenses
(a) For all official travel to or from the duty station, a staff member is
entitled to payment of terminal expenses at rates and under conditions established
by the Secretary-General. Terminal expenses shall be deemed to cover all
expenditures for transportation and incidental charges between the airport or other
point of arrival or departure and the hotel or other place of dwelling in respect of the
staff member and each family member authorized to travel at United Nations
expense.
(b) No terminal expenses shall be paid in respect of an intermediate stop
that:
(i) Is not authorized;
(ii) Does not involve leaving the terminal;
(iii) Is exclusively for the purpose of making an onward connection on the
same day.
Rule 7.10
Daily subsistence allowance
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (g) below, a staff member authorized to
travel at United Nations expense shall receive an appropriate daily subsistence
allowance in accordance with a schedule of rates established from time to time.
Such established rates shall be subject to the provisions of paragraph (d) below and
to reductions in cases where lodging or meals are provided free of charge by the
United Nations, a Government or a related institution.
(b) Daily subsistence allowance shall comprise the total contribution of the
United Nations towards such charges as meals, lodging, gratuities and other such
payments made for services rendered.
(c) The Secretary-General may, in exceptional and compelling circumstances,
authorize a reasonable increase in the daily subsistence allowance to be paid to a
staff member who is required to accompany a senior official and whose official
duties while in travel status require that his or her additional living expenses be set
at a rate substantially higher than the established rate.
(d) The Secretary-General may establish a special rate for daily subsistence
allowance in cases where he or she deems it appropriate, including in the event of
staff members being assigned to conferences or other extended periods of duty away
from their official duty station.
(e) When the spouse or dependent children of a staff member are authorized
to travel at United Nations expense, the staff member shall be paid an additional
daily subsistence allowance for each such family member at half the rate applicable
to the staff member.
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Rule 7.11
Miscellaneous travel expenses
Necessary additional expenses incurred by a staff member in connection with
official business or in the performance of authorized travel shall be reimbursed by
the United Nations after the completion of travel, provided that the necessity and
nature of the expenses are satisfactorily explained and supported by proper receipts,
which shall normally be required for any expenditures in excess of 30 United States
dollars or as established by the Secretary-General. Such expenses, for which
advance authorization shall be obtained to the extent practicable, shall normally be
limited to:
(i) Local transportation other than that provided for under staff rule 7.9;
(ii) Telephone and other forms of communication required for official
business;
(iii) Space, equipment and services required for official use;
(iv) Transportation or storage of authorized baggage or property used for
conducting official business.
Rule 7.12
Travel advances
Staff members authorized to travel shall secure advance funds sufficient to
cover all expenses. An advance of 100 per cent of daily subsistence allowance and
terminal expenses payable under the Staff Rules may be made on the basis of an
estimate and certification.
Rule 7.13
Illness or accident during travel on official business
The United Nations shall pay or reimburse reasonable hospital and medical
expenses, insofar as they are not covered by other arrangements, which may be
incurred by staff members who become ill or are injured while in travel status on
official business.
Rule 7.14
Settling-in grant
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Eligibility
(d) A staff member holding a temporary appointment who travels at United
Nations expense pursuant to staff rule 7.1 (a) (i) above shall be paid only the daily
subsistence allowance portion of the settling-in grant, for himself or herself only, as
specified in subparagraph (b) (i) above.
(e) A staff member holding a fixed-term or continuing appointment who
travels at United Nations expense to a duty station for an assignment expected to be
for one year or more shall be paid a settling-in grant in accordance with
paragraphs (b) and (c) above.
(f) If a change of official duty station or a new appointment involves a
return to a place at which the staff member was previously stationed, the full
amount of the settling-in grant shall not be payable unless the staff member has
been absent from that place for at least one year. In the case of a shorter absence,
the amount payable shall normally be that proportion of the full grant that the
completed months of absence bear to one year.
Rule 7.15
Excess baggage and unaccompanied shipments
Excess baggage
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(a) For the purpose of the Staff Rules, “excess baggage” shall mean any
accompanied baggage not carried free of charge by transportation companies.
(b) Staff members travelling by air shall be entitled to reimbursement of the
cost of excess baggage for themselves and, for staff members holding fixed-term
and continuing appointments, their eligible family members up to a maximum
amount established by the Secretary-General.
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than six months beyond the proposed date of arrival of the personal effects and
household goods in line with staff rule 7.17 (b).
Rule 7.16
Relocation shipment
Eligibility
(a) An entitlement to relocation shipment for full removal of personal effects
and household goods, as defined in staff rule 7.15 (c), shall arise with respect to
internationally recruited staff members holding a fixed-term or continuing
appointment under the following circumstances and in accordance with conditions
established by the Secretary-General:
(i) On initial appointment, provided that the staff member is expected to
serve at the new duty station for a period of two years or longer;
(ii) On change of duty station, provided that the staff member is expected to
serve at the new duty station for a period of two years or longer;
(iii) On separation from service, provided that the staff member had an
appointment for a period of two years or longer or had completed not less than
two years of continuous service, and:
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Maximum entitlements
(e) (i) Payment by the United Nations of relocation shipment shall be on
the basis of maximum entitlements established by the Secretary-General;
(ii) The normal costs of packing, crating and lift vans, cartage, unpacking
and uncrating shall be reimbursed. Storage and demurrage charges shall not be
reimbursed unless the Secretary-General determines that they are directly
incidental to the transportation of the consignment;
(iii) Transportation of personal effects and household goods shall be by the
most economical means at rates and under conditions established by the
Secretary-General.
(f) Relocation shipment shall be on the basis of shipment from and to the
following destinations:
(i) On appointment, from the place of recruitment or the place recognized as
the staff member’s home for purposes of home leave under staff rule 5.2 to the
official duty station;
(ii) Upon separation from service, from the official duty station to any one
place to which the staff member is entitled to be returned in accordance with
the provisions of staff rule 7.1;
(iii) Relocation shipment from or to a place other than those specified may be
authorized under terms and conditions defined by the Secretary-General. No
expenses shall be paid for removing a staff member’s personal effects and
household goods from one residence to another at the same duty station.
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Adjustments to entitlements
(h) Where both spouses are staff members and each is entitled to relocation
shipment or unaccompanied shipment under the present rule, and taking into
account staff rule 4.7 (d), the maximum entitlement to relocation shipment for both
spouses shall be that provided for a staff member with a spouse or dependent child
residing at the official duty station.
(i) In cases where, for reasons not attributable to the Organization, the staff
member does not complete the period of service in respect of which the United
Nations has paid relocation shipment, these costs may be adjusted proportionately
and recovery made under conditions established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 7.17
Loss of entitlement to unaccompanied shipment or relocation shipment
(a) A staff member who resigns before completing two years of service shall
not normally be entitled to payment of relocation shipment under staff rule 7.16.
(b) Entitlement to relocation shipment under staff rule 7.16 (a) shall
normally cease if the relocation shipment has not commenced within two years of
the date on which the staff member became entitled to relocation shipment or if the
staff member’s services are not expected to continue for more than six months
beyond the proposed date of arrival of the personal effects and household goods.
(c) On separation from service, entitlement to unaccompanied shipment
expenses under staff rule 7.15 (h) and (i) or relocation shipment under staff rule
7.16 shall cease if the shipment has not commenced within two years of the date of
separation. However, in accordance with staff rule 4.7 (d), where both spouses are
staff members and the spouse who separates first is entitled to unaccompanied
shipment or relocation shipment, his or her entitlement shall not cease until two
years after the date of separation of the other spouse.
Rule 7.18
Transportation of decedents
In the event of the death of a staff member or his or her spouse or dependent
child, the United Nations shall pay the expenses for transportation of the body from
the official duty station or, in the event of death having occurred while in travel
status, from the place of death to a place to which the deceased was entitled to
return transportation under staff rule 7.1 or 7.2 under conditions established by the
Secretary-General.
Rule 7.19
Insurance
(a) Staff members shall not be reimbursed for the cost of personal accident
insurance or insurance of accompanied personal baggage. However, compensation
may be paid, under arrangements in force under staff rule 6.5, in respect of loss of
or damage to such baggage determined to be directly attributable to the performance
of official duties on behalf of the United Nations.
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(b) In the case of shipments authorized under staff rule 7.15, except for staff
members on home leave, family visit or education grant travel, and of the shipment
and storage of personal effects and household goods under staff rule 7.16, insurance
coverage will be provided by the Organization up to a maximum amount established
by the Secretary-General.
(c) The United Nations shall not be responsible for the loss of or damage to
unaccompanied shipments.
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Article VIII
Staff relations
Regulation 8.1
(a) The Secretary-General shall establish and maintain continuous contact
and communication with the staff in order to ensure the effective participation of the
staff in identifying, examining and resolving issues relating to staff welfare,
including conditions of work, general conditions of life and other human resources
policies;
(b) Staff representative bodies shall be established and shall be entitled to
initiate proposals to the Secretary-General for the purpose set forth in paragraph (a)
above. They shall be organized in such a way as to afford equitable representation to
all staff members, by means of elections that shall take place at least biennially
under electoral regulations drawn up by the respective staff representative body and
agreed to by the Secretary-General.
Regulation 8.2
The Secretary-General shall establish joint staff-management machinery at
both local and Secretariat-wide levels to advise him or her regarding human
resources policies and general questions of staff welfare as provided in regulation
8.1.
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Chapter VIII
Staff relations
Rule 8.1
Staff representative bodies and staff representatives
Definitions
(a) The term “staff representative bodies”, as used in the present chapter of
the Staff Rules, shall be deemed to include staff associations, unions or other
corresponding staff representative bodies established in accordance with staff
regulation 8.1 (b).
(b) Staff representative bodies may be established for a duty station or for a
group of duty stations. Staff members serving in duty stations where no staff
representative body exists may seek representation through a staff representative
body at another duty station.
(c) Each member of the staff may participate in elections to a staff
representative body, and all staff serving at a duty station where a staff
representative body exists shall be eligible for election to it, subject to any
exceptions as may be provided in the statutes or electoral regulations drawn up by
the staff representative body concerned and meeting the requirements of staff
regulation 8.1 (b).
(d) Polling officers selected by the staff shall conduct the election of the
members of each staff representative body, on the basis of the electoral regulations
of the staff representative body concerned, in such a way as to ensure the complete
secrecy and fairness of the vote. The polling officers shall also conduct other
elections of staff members as required by the Staff Regulations and Rules.
(e) No staff member shall threaten, retaliate against or attempt to retaliate
against a staff representative exercising his or her functions under the present
chapter.
(f) The staff representative bodies shall be entitled to effective participation,
through their duly elected executive committees, in identifying, examining and
resolving issues relating to staff welfare, including conditions of work, general
conditions of life and other human resources policies, and shall be entitled to make
proposals to the Secretary-General on behalf of the staff.
(g) In accordance with the principle of freedom of association, staff
members may form and join associations, unions or other groupings. However,
formal contact and communication on the matters referred to in paragraph (f) above
shall be conducted at each duty station through the executive committee of the staff
representative body, which shall be the sole and exclusive representative body for
such purpose.
(h) General administrative instructions or directives on questions within the
scope of paragraph (f) above shall be transmitted in advance, unless emergency
situations make it impracticable, to the executive committees of the staff
representative bodies concerned for consideration and comment before being placed
in effect.
Rule 8.2
Joint staff-management machinery
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Article IX
Separation from service
Regulation 9.1
Staff members may resign from service upon giving the Secretary-General the
notice required under the terms of their appointment.
Regulation 9.2
Staff members shall not be retained in active service beyond the age of
65 years. The Secretary-General may, in the interest of the Organization, retain staff
members in service beyond this age limit in exceptional cases.
Regulation 9.3
(a) The Secretary-General may, giving the reasons therefor, terminate the
appointment of a staff member who holds a temporary, fixed-term or continuing
appointment in accordance with the terms of his or her appointment or for any of the
following reasons:
(i) If the necessities of service require abolition of the post or reduction of
the staff;
(ii) If the services of the staff member prove unsatisfactory;
(iii) If the staff member is, for reasons of health, incapacitated for further
service;
(iv) If the conduct of the staff member indicates that the staff member does
not meet the highest standards of integrity required by Article 101, paragraph
3, of the Charter;
(v) If facts anterior to the appointment of the staff member and relevant to
his or her suitability come to light that, if they had been known at the time of
his or her appointment, should, under the standards established in the Charter,
have precluded his or her appointment;
(vi) In the interest of the good administration of the Organization and in
accordance with the standards of the Charter, provided that the action is not
contested by the staff member concerned;
(b) In addition, in the case of a staff member holding a continuing
appointment, the Secretary-General may terminate the appointment without the
consent of the staff member if, in the opinion of the Secretary-General, such action
would be in the interest of the good administration of the Organization, to be
interpreted principally as a change or termination of a mandate, and in accordance
with the standards of the Charter;
(c) If the Secretary-General terminates an appointment, the staff member
shall be given such notice and such indemnity payment as may be applicable under
the Staff Regulations and Rules. Payments of termination indemnity shall be made
by the Secretary-General in accordance with the rates and conditions specified in
annex III to the present Regulations;
(d) The Secretary-General may, where the circumstances warrant and he or
she considers it justified, pay to a staff member whose appointment has been
terminated, provided that the termination is not contested, a termination indemnity
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payment not more than 50 per cent higher than that which would otherwise be
payable under the Staff Regulations.
Regulation 9.4
The Secretary-General shall establish a scheme for the payment of repatriation
grants in accordance with the maximum rates and under the conditions specified in
annex IV of these Regulations.
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Chapter IX
Separation from service
Rule 9.1
Definition of separation
Any of the following shall constitute separation from service:
(i) Resignation;
(ii) Abandonment of post;
(iii) Expiration of appointment;
(iv) Retirement;
(v) Termination of appointment;
(vi) Death.
Rule 9.2
Resignation
(a) A resignation, within the meaning of the Staff Regulations and Rules, is a
separation initiated by a staff member.
(b) Unless otherwise specified in their letters of appointment, three months’
written notice of resignation shall be given by staff members holding continuing
appointments, 30 calendar days’ written notice by those holding fixed-term
appointments and 15 calendar days’ written notice by those holding temporary
appointments. The Secretary-General may, however, accept resignations on shorter
notice.
(c) The Secretary-General may require the resignation to be submitted in
person in order to be acceptable.
Rule 9.3
Abandonment of post
Abandonment of post is a separation initiated by the staff member other than
by way of resignation. Separation as a result of abandonment of post shall not be
regarded as a termination within the meaning of the Staff Rules.
Rule 9.4
Expiration of appointments
A temporary or fixed-term appointment shall expire automatically and without
prior notice on the expiration date specified in the letter of appointment.
Rule 9.5
Retirement
Retirement under article 28 of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund
Regulations shall not be regarded as a termination within the meaning of the Staff
Regulations and Rules.
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Rule 9.6
Termination
Definitions
(a) A termination within the meaning of the Staff Regulations and Rules is a
separation from service initiated by the Secretary-General.
(b) Separation as a result of resignation, abandonment of post, expiration of
appointment, retirement or death shall not be regarded as a termination within the
meaning of the Staff Rules.
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When the suitable posts available are subject to the principle of geographical
distribution, due regard shall also be given to nationality in the case of staff
members with less than five years of service and in the case of staff members who
have changed their nationality within the preceding five years.
(f) The provisions of paragraph (e) above insofar as they relate to staff
members in the General Service and related categories shall be deemed to have been
satisfied if such staff members have received consideration for suitable posts
available within their parent organization at their duty stations.
(g) Staff members specifically recruited for service with the United Nations
Secretariat or with any programme, fund or subsidiary organ of the United Nations
that enjoys a special status in matters of appointment under a resolution of the
General Assembly or as a result of an agreement entered by the Secretary-General
have no entitlement under this rule for consideration for posts outside the organ for
which they were recruited.
Rule 9.7
Notice of termination
(a) A staff member whose continuing appointment is to be terminated shall
be given not less than three months’ written notice of such termination.
(b) A staff member whose fixed-term appointment is to be terminated shall
be given not less than 30 calendar days’ written notice of such termination or such
written notice as may otherwise be stipulated in his or her letter of appointment.
(c) A staff member whose temporary appointment is to be terminated shall
be given not less than 15 calendar days’ written notice of such termination or such
written notice as may otherwise be stipulated in his or her letter of appointment.
(d) In lieu of the notice period, the Secretary-General may authorize
compensation equivalent to salary, applicable post adjustment and allowances
corresponding to the relevant notice period at the rate in effect on the last day of
service.
(e) No termination notice or compensation in lieu thereof shall be given in
case of dismissal.
Rule 9.8
Termination indemnity
(a) Payment of termination indemnity under staff regulation 9.3 and
annex III to the Staff Regulations shall be calculated:
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(i) For staff in the Professional and higher categories, on the basis of the
staff member’s gross salary less staff assessment according to the schedule of
rates set forth in staff regulation 3.3 (b) (i);
(ii) For staff in the Field Service category, on the basis of the staff member’s
gross salary less staff assessment according to the schedule of rates set forth in
staff regulation 3.3 (b) (i), plus language allowance, if any;
(iii) For staff in the General Service and related categories, on the basis of the
staff member’s gross salary, including language allowance, if any, less staff
assessment, according to the schedule of rates set forth in staff
regulation 3.3 (b) (ii) applied to the gross salary alone.
(b) Length of service shall be deemed to comprise the total period of a staff
member’s full-time continuous service on fixed-term or continuing appointments.
Continuity of such service shall not be considered as broken by periods of special
leave. However, service credits shall not accrue during periods of special leave with
partial pay or without pay of one full month or more.
(c) Termination indemnity shall not be paid to any staff member who, upon
separation from service, will receive a retirement benefit under article 28 of the
Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund or compensation for
total disability under staff rule 6.4.
(d) Upon application of a staff member who is to be separated as a result of
an agreed termination of appointment or because of abolition of post or reduction in
staff and who is within 2 years of age 55 years and 25 years of contributory service
in the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund or who is over that age and within
2 years of 25 years of contributory service, the Secretary-General may place such
staff member on special leave without pay for pension purposes pursuant to staff
rule 5.3 (d) under conditions to be established by the Secretary-General.
(e) The Organization will, on the written request of the staff member prior to
being placed on special leave pursuant to the preceding paragraph, pay the pension
contribution of the Organization and/or the staff member during the period of
special leave. The total amount of these contributions will be deducted from the
termination indemnity otherwise payable.
(f) A staff member selecting the option of special leave described in staff
rule 9.8 (d) shall sign an undertaking acknowledging that his or her status on special
leave is solely for pension purposes and that his or her entitlements and those in
respect of any dependants to all other emoluments and benefits under the Staff
Regulations and Rules are determined as final as at the date of commencement of
such special leave.
Rule 9.9
Commutation of accrued annual leave
(a) If, upon separation from service a staff member has accrued annual
leave, he or she shall be paid a sum of money in commutation of the period of such
accrued leave up to a maximum of 18 working days for staff holding a temporary
appointment and up to a maximum of 60 working days for staff holding a fixed-term
or continuing appointment, in accordance with staff rules 4.17 (c), 4.18 and 5.1. The
payment shall be calculated:
(i) For staff in the Professional and higher categories, on the basis of the
staff member’s net base salary plus post adjustment;
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(ii) For staff in the Field Service category, on the basis of the staff member’s
net base salary plus post adjustment;
(iii) For staff in the General Service and related categories, on the basis of the
staff member’s gross salary, including language allowance, if any, less staff
assessment according to the schedule of rates set forth in staff
regulation 3.3 (b) (ii) applied to the gross salary alone.
(b) No payment in commutation of the period of accrued annual leave shall
be made to a staff member who is dismissed under staff rule 10.2 (a) (ix) for sexual
exploitation or sexual abuse in violation of staff rule 1.2 (e).
Rule 9.10
Restitution of advance annual and sick leave
On separation, a staff member who has taken advance annual or sick leave
beyond that which he or she has subsequently accrued shall make restitution for
such advance leave by means of a cash refund or an offset against monies due to the
staff member from the United Nations, equivalent to the remuneration received,
including allowances and other payments, in respect of the advance leave period.
The Secretary-General may waive this requirement if in his or her opinion there are
exceptional or compelling reasons for doing so.
Rule 9.11
Last day for pay purposes
(a) When a staff member is separated from service, the date on which
entitlement to salary, allowances and benefits shall cease shall be determined
according to the following provisions:
(i) In the case of resignation, the date shall be either the date of expiration
of the notice period under staff rule 9.2 or such other date as the Secretary-
General accepts. A staff member will be expected to perform his or her duties
during the period of notice of resignation, except when the resignation takes
effect upon the completion of maternity or paternity leave or following sick or
special leave. Annual leave will be granted during the period of notice only for
brief periods;
(ii) In the case of abandonment of post, the date shall be the date of the
decision by the Assistant Secretary-General for Human Resources
Management to terminate the appointment or the expiry date specified in the
letter of appointment, whichever is earlier;
(iii) In the case of expiration of a temporary or fixed-term appointment, the
date shall be the date specified in the letter of appointment;
(iv) In the case of retirement, the date shall be the date approved by the
Secretary-General for retirement;
(v) In the case of termination, the date shall be the date provided in the
notice of termination;
(vi) In the case of dismissal, the date shall be the date on which the staff
member is notified in writing of the decision to dismiss him or her;
(vii) In the case of death, the date on which entitlement to salary, allowances
and benefits shall cease shall be the date of death, unless there is a surviving
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3 or less 3
4 4
5 5
6 6
7 7
8 8
9 or more 9
The months of salary referenced above may be made in a lump sum as soon as
the pay accounts and related matters can be closed. Such payment shall be
made only to the surviving spouse and dependent children. For staff in the
Professional and higher categories, the payment shall be calculated on the
basis of the staff member’s gross salary less staff assessment according to the
schedule of rates set forth in staff regulation 3.3 (b) (i). For staff in the Field
Service category, the payment shall be calculated on the basis of the staff
member’s gross salary less staff assessment according to the schedule of rates
set forth in staff regulation 3.3 (b) (i), plus language allowance, if any. For
staff in the General Service and related categories, the payment shall be
calculated on the basis of the staff member’s gross salary, including language
allowance, if any, less staff assessment according to the schedule of rates set
forth in staff regulation 3.3 (b) (ii) applied to the gross salary alone. All other
entitlements and accrual of benefits shall cease as at the date of death, except
as provided by staff rule 3.9 (f) for payment of education grant when the staff
member dies while in service after the beginning of a school year.
(b) When an internationally recruited staff member has an entitlement to
return travel under staff rule 7.1 (a) (iv), this shall not affect the determination of
the last day for pay purposes in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (a)
above. In the case of resignation, expiration of temporary or fixed-term
appointment, termination or retirement, the staff member shall be paid, on
separation, an additional amount for days of authorized travel estimated on the basis
of uninterrupted travel by an approved route, mode and standard of travel from the
duty station to the place of entitlement to return travel. Such amount shall be
calculated as is done for the commutation of accrued annual leave under staff rule
9.9 above.
Rule 9.12
Certification of service
Any staff member who so requests shall, on leaving the service of the United
Nations, be given a statement relating to the nature of his or her duties and the
length of service. On the staff member’s written request, the statement shall also
refer to the quality of his or her work and his or her official conduct.
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Article X
Disciplinary measures
Regulation 10.1
(a) The Secretary-General may impose disciplinary measures on staff
members who engage in misconduct;
(b) Sexual exploitation and sexual abuse constitute serious misconduct.
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Chapter X
Disciplinary measures
Rule 10.1
Misconduct
(a) Failure by a staff member to comply with his or her obligations under the
Charter of the United Nations, the Staff Regulations and Rules or other relevant
administrative issuances or to observe the standards of conduct expected of an
international civil servant may amount to misconduct and may lead to the institution
of a disciplinary process and the imposition of disciplinary measures for misconduct.
(b) Where the staff member’s failure to comply with his or her obligations or
to observe the standards of conduct expected of an international civil servant is
determined by the Secretary-General to constitute misconduct, such staff member
may be required to reimburse the United Nations either partially or in full for any
financial loss suffered by the United Nations as a result of his or her actions, if such
actions are determined to be wilful, reckless or grossly negligent.
(c) The decision to launch an investigation into allegations of misconduct, to
institute a disciplinary process and to impose a disciplinary measure shall be within
the discretionary authority of the Secretary-General or officials with delegated
authority.
Rule 10.2
Disciplinary measures
(a) Disciplinary measures may take one or more of the following forms only:
(i) Written censure;
(ii) Loss of one or more steps in grade;
(iii) Deferment, for a specified period, of eligibility for salary increment;
(iv) Suspension without pay for a specified period;
(v) Fine;
(vi) Deferment, for a specified period, of eligibility for consideration for
promotion;
(vii) Demotion with deferment, for a specified period, of eligibility for
consideration for promotion;
(viii) Separation from service, with notice or compensation in lieu of notice,
notwithstanding staff rule 9.7, and with or without termination indemnity
pursuant to paragraph (c) of annex III to the Staff Regulations;
(ix) Dismissal.
(b) Measures other than those listed under staff rule 10.2 (a) shall not be
considered to be disciplinary measures within the meaning of the present rule. These
include, but are not limited to, the following administrative measures:
(i) Written or oral reprimand;
(ii) Recovery of monies owed to the Organization;
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(iii) Administrative leave with full or partial pay or without pay pursuant to
staff rule 10.4.
(c) A staff member shall be provided with the opportunity to comment on the
facts and circumstances prior to the issuance of a written or oral reprimand pursuant
to subparagraph (b) (i) above.
Rule 10.3
Due process in the disciplinary process
(a) The Secretary-General may initiate the disciplinary process where the
findings of an investigation indicate that misconduct may have occurred. No
disciplinary measure may be imposed on a staff member following the completion
of an investigation unless he or she has been notified, in writing, of the formal
allegations of misconduct against him or her and has been given the opportunity to
respond to those formal allegations. The staff member shall also be informed of the
right to seek the assistance of counsel in his or her defence through the Office of
Staff Legal Assistance, or from outside counsel at his or her own expense.
(b) Any disciplinary measure imposed on a staff member shall be
proportionate to the nature and gravity of his or her misconduct.
(c) A staff member against whom disciplinary or non-disciplinary measures,
pursuant to staff rule 10.2, have been imposed following the completion of a
disciplinary process may submit an application challenging the imposition of such
measures directly to the United Nations Dispute Tribunal, in accordance with
chapter XI of the Staff Rules.
(d) An appeal against a judgment of the United Nations Dispute Tribunal by
the staff member or by the Secretary-General may be filed with the United Nations
Appeals Tribunal in accordance with chapter XI of the Staff Rules.
Rule 10.4
Administrative leave pending investigation and the disciplinary process
(a) A staff member may be placed on administrative leave, subject to
conditions specified by the Secretary-General, at any time after an allegation of
misconduct and pending the completion of a disciplinary process. Administrative
leave may continue until the completion of the disciplinary process.
(b) A staff member placed on administrative leave pursuant to paragraph (a)
above shall be given a written statement of the reason(s) for such leave and its
probable duration.
(c) Administrative leave shall be with full pay except (i) in cases in which
there is probable cause that a staff member has engaged in sexual exploitation and
sexual abuse, or (ii) when the Secretary-General decides that exceptional
circumstances exist which warrant the placement of a staff member on
administrative leave with partial pay or without pay.
(d) Placement on administrative leave shall be without prejudice to the rights
of the staff member and shall not constitute a disciplinary measure. If administrative
leave is without pay and either the allegations of misconduct are subsequently not
sustained or it is subsequently found that the conduct at issue does not warrant
dismissal or separation, any pay withheld shall be restored without delay.
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(e) A staff member who has been placed on administrative leave may
challenge the decision to place him or her on such leave in accordance with
chapter XI of the Staff Rules.
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Article XI
Appeals
Regulation 11.1
There shall be a two-tier formal system of administration of justice:
(a) The United Nations Dispute Tribunal shall, under conditions prescribed
in its statute and rules, hear and render judgment on an application from a staff
member alleging non-compliance with his or her terms of appointment or the
contract of employment, including all pertinent regulations and rules;
(b) The United Nations Appeals Tribunal shall, under conditions prescribed
in its statute and rules, exercise appellate jurisdiction over an appeal of a judgment
rendered by the United Nations Dispute Tribunal submitted by either party.
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Chapter XI
Appeals
Rule 11.1
Informal resolution
(a) A staff member who considers that his or her contract of employment or
terms of appointment have been violated is encouraged to attempt to have the matter
resolved informally. To that end, a staff member who wishes to pursue informal
channels should approach the Office of the Ombudsman without delay, without
prejudice to the right to pursue the matter formally in accordance with the
provisions of the present chapter.
(b) Both the staff member and the Secretary-General may initiate informal
resolution, including mediation, of the issues involved at any time before or after
the staff member chooses to pursue the matter formally.
(c) The conduct of informal resolution by the Office of the Ombudsman,
including mediation, may result in the extension of the deadlines applicable to
management evaluation and to the filing of an application with the United Nations
Dispute Tribunal, as specified in staff rules 11.2 (c) and (d) and 11.4 (c) below.
(d) An application shall not be receivable by the United Nations Dispute
Tribunal if the dispute arising from a contested decision has been resolved by an
agreement reached through mediation. However, a staff member may submit an
application directly with the Dispute Tribunal to enforce the implementation of an
agreement reached through mediation within 90 calendar days of the deadline for
implementation as specified in the mediation agreement or, when the mediation
agreement is silent on the matter, within 90 calendar days of the thirtieth calendar
day from the date on which the agreement was signed.
Rule 11.2
Management evaluation
(a) A staff member wishing to formally contest an administrative decision
alleging non-compliance with his or her contract of employment or terms of
appointment, including all pertinent regulations and rules pursuant to staff
regulation 11.1 (a), shall, as a first step, submit to the Secretary-General in writing a
request for a management evaluation of the administrative decision.
(b) A staff member wishing to formally contest an administrative decision
taken pursuant to advice obtained from technical bodies, as determined by the
Secretary-General, or of a decision taken at Headquarters in New York to impose a
disciplinary or non-disciplinary measure pursuant to staff rule 10.2 following the
completion of a disciplinary process is not required to request a management
evaluation.
(c) A request for a management evaluation shall not be receivable by the
Secretary-General unless it is sent within 60 calendar days from the date on which
the staff member received notification of the administrative decision to be
contested. This deadline may be extended by the Secretary-General pending efforts
for informal resolution conducted by the Office of the Ombudsman, under
conditions specified by the Secretary-General.
(d) The Secretary-General’s response, reflecting the outcome of the
management evaluation, shall be communicated in writing to the staff member
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within 30 calendar days of receipt of the request for management evaluation if the
staff member is stationed in New York, and within 45 calendar days of receipt of the
request for management evaluation if the staff member is stationed outside of New
York. The deadline may be extended by the Secretary-General pending efforts for
informal resolution by the Office of the Ombudsman, under conditions specified by
the Secretary-General.
Rule 11.3
Suspension of action
(a) Neither the submission of a request for a management evaluation nor the
filing of an application with the United Nations Dispute Tribunal shall have the
effect of suspending the implementation of the contested administrative decision.
(b) However, where a management evaluation of an administrative decision
is required:
(i) A staff member may submit an application requesting the United Nations
Dispute Tribunal to suspend the implementation of the contested
administrative decision until the management evaluation has been completed
and the staff member has received notification of the outcome. In accordance
with article 2, paragraph 2, of its statute, the Dispute Tribunal may suspend the
implementation of a decision where the decision appears prima facie to be
unlawful, in cases of particular urgency and where its implementation would
cause irreparable damage. The Dispute Tribunal’s decision on such an
application is not subject to appeal;
(ii) In cases involving separation from service, a staff member may opt to
first request the Secretary-General to suspend the implementation of the
decision until the management evaluation has been completed and the staff
member has received notification of the outcome. The Secretary-General may
suspend the implementation of a decision where he or she determines that the
contested decision has not yet been implemented, the decision appears prima
facie to be unlawful, in cases of particular urgency and where its
implementation would cause irreparable damage to the staff member’s rights.
If the Secretary-General rejects the request, the staff member may then submit
a request for suspension of action to the Dispute Tribunal under subparagraph
(b) (i) above.
Rule 11.4
United Nations Dispute Tribunal
(a) A staff member may file an application against a contested administrative
decision, whether or not it has been amended by any management evaluation, with
the United Nations Dispute Tribunal within 90 calendar days from the date on which
the staff member received the outcome of the management evaluation or from the
date of expiration of the deadline specified under staff rule 11.2 (d), whichever is
earlier.
(b) Where a staff member is not required to request a management
evaluation, pursuant to staff rule 11.2 (b), he or she may file an application directly
with the United Nations Dispute Tribunal within 90 calendar days from the date on
which the staff member received notification of the contested administrative
decision.
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(c) Where mediation has been pursued by either party within the deadline for
filing an application with the United Nations Dispute Tribunal specified in staff
rule 11.4 (a) or (b) and the mediation is deemed to have failed in accordance with
the rules of procedure of the Mediation Division of the Office of the Ombudsman,
the staff member may file an application with the Dispute Tribunal within 90
calendar days of the end of the mediation.
(d) A staff member shall have the assistance of counsel through the Office of
Staff Legal Assistance if he or she so wishes, or may obtain outside counsel at his or
her expense, in the presentation of his or her case before the United Nations Dispute
Tribunal.
(e) A staff association may request permission from the United Nations
Dispute Tribunal to submit a friend-of-the-court brief in relation to an application
filed by a staff member.
(f) A staff member who is entitled to appeal the same administrative
decision that is the subject of an application brought by another staff member may
request permission from the United Nations Dispute Tribunal to intervene in the
matter.
(g) In accordance with article 2, paragraph 1, of its statute, the United
Nations Dispute Tribunal has jurisdiction over applications filed by staff members:
(i) To appeal an administrative decision that is alleged to not be in
compliance with a staff member’s contract of employment or terms of
appointment, including all pertinent regulations and rules and relevant
administrative issuances in force at the time of the alleged non-compliance;
(ii) To appeal an administrative decision imposing a disciplinary measure;
(iii) To enforce the implementation of an agreement reached through
mediation.
(h) The competence of the United Nations Dispute Tribunal, as set forth in
its statute, includes the authority:
(i) To suspend proceedings in a case at the request of the parties for a time
to be specified by it in writing;
(ii) To order, at any time during the proceedings, an interim measure, which
is not subject to appeal, to provide temporary relief to either party where the
contested decision appears prima facie to be unlawful, in cases of particular
urgency, and where its implementation would cause irreparable damage. Such
temporary relief may include suspension of the implementation of the
contested administrative decision, except in cases of appointment, promotion
or termination;
(iii) To refer, at any time during its deliberations, a matter to mediation with
the consent of both parties.
Rule 11.5
United Nations Appeals Tribunal
(a) In accordance with article 2, paragraph 1, of its statute, the United
Nations Appeals Tribunal shall have jurisdiction over an appeal against a judgment
of the United Nations Dispute Tribunal alleging that the Dispute Tribunal has:
(i) Exceeded its jurisdiction or competence;
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Article XII
General provisions
Regulation 12.1
The present Regulations may be supplemented or amended by the General
Assembly, without prejudice to the acquired rights of staff members.
Regulation 12.2
Such staff rules and amendments as the Secretary-General may make to
implement the present Regulations shall be provisional until the requirements of
regulations 12.3 and 12.4 below have been met.
Regulation 12.3
The full text of provisional staff rules and amendments shall be reported
annually to the General Assembly. Should the Assembly find that a provisional rule
and/or amendment is inconsistent with the intent and purpose of the Regulations, it
may direct that the rule and/or amendment be withdrawn or modified.
Regulation 12.4
The provisional rules and amendments reported by the Secretary-General,
taking into account such modifications and/or deletions as may be directed by the
General Assembly, shall enter into full force and effect on 1 January following the
year in which the report is made to the Assembly.
Regulation 12.5
Staff rules shall not give rise to acquired rights within the meaning of
regulation 12.1 while they are provisional.
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Chapter XII
General provisions
Rule 12.1
Applicability
Staff rules 1.1 to 13.12 are applicable to all staff members appointed by the
Secretary-General.
Rule 12.2
Gender of terms
(a) In the text of the Staff Rules, reference to staff members in the masculine
gender shall apply to staff members of both sexes, unless it is clearly inappropriate
from the context to do so.
(b) In the text of the Staff Rules, reference to the Secretary-General in the
masculine gender shall apply to Secretaries-General of both sexes, unless it is
clearly inappropriate from the context to do so.
Rule 12.3
Amendments of and exceptions to the Staff Rules
(a) Subject to staff regulations 12.1, 12.2, 12.3, 12.4 and 12.5, the Staff
Rules may be amended by the Secretary-General in a manner consistent with the
Staff Regulations.
(b) Exceptions to the Staff Rules may be made by the Secretary-General,
provided that such exception is not inconsistent with any Staff Regulation or other
decision of the General Assembly and provided further that it is agreed to by the
staff member directly affected and is, in the opinion of the Secretary-General, not
prejudicial to the interests of any other staff member or group of staff members.
Rule 12.4
Effective date and authentic texts of rules
Except as otherwise indicated and subject always to the provisions of staff
regulations 12.1, 12.2, 12.4 and 12.5, staff rules 1.1 to 13.13 as published in the
present bulletin shall be effective on 1 January 2018. The English and French texts
of the Staff Rules are equally authoritative.
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Chapter XIII
Transitional measures
Rule 13.1
Permanent appointment
(a) A staff member holding a permanent appointment as at 30 June 2009 or
who is granted a permanent appointment under staff rules 13.3 (e) or 13.4 (b) shall
retain the appointment until he or she separates from the Organization. Effective 1
July 2009, all permanent appointments shall be governed by the terms and conditions
applicable to continuing appointments under the Staff Regulations and the Staff Rules,
except as provided under the present rule.
(b) (i) The central review bodies shall review recommendations for the
termination of permanent appointments for unsatisfactory service under staff
regulation 9.3 (a) (ii) and staff rule 9.6 (c) (ii);
(ii) No termination under staff rule 9.6 (c) (v) shall take place until the
matter has been considered and reported on by a special advisory board
appointed for that purpose by the Secretary-General. The special advisory
board shall be composed of a Chairman appointed by the Secretary-General on
the nomination of the President of the International Court of Justice and four
members appointed by the Secretary-General in agreement with the Staff
Council.
(c) Staff regulation 9.3 (b) and staff rule 9.6 (d) do not apply to permanent
appointments.
(d) If the necessities of service require abolition of a post or reduction of the
staff and subject to the availability of suitable posts for which their services can be
effectively utilized, staff members with permanent appointments shall be retained in
preference to those on all other types of appointments, provided that due regard
shall be given in all cases to relative competence, integrity and length of service.
Due regard shall also be given to nationality in the case of staff members with no
more than five years of service and in the case of staff members who have changed
their nationality within the preceding five years when the suitable posts available
are subject to the principle of geographical distribution.
(e) The provisions of paragraph (d) above insofar as they relate to staff
members in the General Service and related categories shall be deemed to have been
satisfied if such staff members have received consideration for suitable posts
available within their parent organization at their duty station.
(f) Staff members specifically recruited for service with the United Nations
Secretariat or with any programme, fund or subsidiary organ of the United Nations
that enjoys a special status in matters of appointment under a resolution of the
General Assembly or as a result of an agreement entered by the Secretary-General
have no entitlement under paragraph (e) above for consideration for posts outside
the organ for which they were recruited.
Rule 13.2
Indefinite appointment
(a) A staff member holding an indefinite appointment as at 30 June 2009 shall
retain the appointment until he or she separates from the Organization. Effective 1
July 2009, the staff member’s indefinite appointment shall be governed by the terms
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and conditions applicable to continuing appointments under the Staff Regulations and
the Staff Rules, except as provided under the present rule.
(b) Staff members holding an indefinite appointment may resign by giving
30 days’ written notice.
(c) The Secretary-General may at any time terminate the appointment of a
staff member who holds an indefinite appointment if in his or her opinion such
action would be in the interest of the United Nations. Staff regulation 9.3 (b) and
staff rule 9.6 (d) do not apply to indefinite appointments.
Rule 13.3
Probationary appointment
(a) A staff member holding a probationary appointment as at 30 June 2009
shall continue to serve his or her period of probationary service under such
appointment, which shall normally be two years. In exceptional circumstances, the
period of probationary service may be reduced or extended by not more than one
year.
(b) Effective 1 July 2009, probationary appointments shall be governed by
the terms and conditions applicable to fixed-term appointments under the Staff
Regulations and the Staff Rules, except as provided under the present rule.
(c) Without prejudice to the provisions of staff rule 4.13 (c), the Secretary-
General may in appropriate cases reduce or waive the required period of
probationary service following an equivalent period of continuous service on a 100-
series fixed-term appointment.
(d) The Secretary-General may at any time terminate the appointment of a
staff member who holds a probationary appointment if in his or her opinion such
action would be in the interest of the United Nations.
(e) If the necessities of service require abolition of a post or reduction of the
staff and subject to the availability of suitable posts in which their services can be
effectively utilized, staff members with probationary appointments shall be retained
in preference to those on fixed-term or indefinite appointments, provided that due
regard shall be given in all cases to relative competence, integrity and length of
service. Due regard shall also be given to nationality in the case of staff members
with no more than five years of service and in the case of staff members who have
changed their nationality within the preceding five years when the suitable posts
available are subject to the principle of geographical distribution.
(f) At the end of his or her probationary service, a staff member who holds a
probationary appointment shall either be granted a permanent appointment or be
separated from service.
(g) The central review bodies shall review the suitability for permanent
appointment of staff members holding a probationary appointment to ensure that
they have fully demonstrated their suitability as international civil servants and have
shown that they meet the highest standards of efficiency, competence and integrity
established by the Charter of the United Nations. The central review bodies may
recommend conversion to permanent appointment, extension of the probationary
period for one additional year or separation from service.
Rule 13.4
100-series fixed-term appointment
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Rule 13.5
200-series appointment
A staff member holding a 200-series short-term, intermediate or long-term
appointment as at 30 June 2009 shall continue to serve the period of the
appointment until the expiration date specified in his or her letter of appointment.
Effective 1 July 2009, 200-series appointments shall be governed by the terms and
conditions applicable to fixed-term appointments under the Staff Regulations and
the Staff Rules and under conditions established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 13.6
300-series appointment
A staff member holding a 300-series short-term appointment as at 30 June
2009 shall continue to serve the period of the appointment until the expiration date
specified in his or her letter of appointment. Effective 1 July 2009, 300-series short-
term appointments shall be governed by the terms and conditions applicable to
temporary appointments under the Staff Regulations and the Staff Rules.
Rule 13.7
Mission appointment
Staff members serving as Field Service Officers will be subject to the original
conditions of employment applicable to that category of staff until 30 June 2011,
including those relating to deployment at short notice to any duty station, subject to
conditions established by the Secretary-General.
Rule 13.8
Non-resident allowance
Pursuant to annex I to the Staff Regulations, staff members who were in
receipt of a non-resident allowance on 31 August 1983 may continue, while eligible,
to receive the non-resident allowance at the rate and in accordance with the
provisions in effect at that time.
Rule 13.9
Internal system of justice
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Rule 13.10
Repatriation grant
A staff member who was eligible for a repatriation grant under staff rule 3.19
in effect on 30 June 2016, but who is no longer eligible for such grant under the
present staff rule 3.19, shall be paid a repatriation grant in accordance with the
schedule set out in annex IV to the Staff Regulations in effect on 30 June 2016 for
the number of years of qualifying service accrued as at 30 June 2016.
Rule 13.11
Dependency allowances
(a) A staff member in the Professional and higher categories or in the Field
Service category, who is not in receipt of the single parent allowance but was in
receipt of the dependent rate of salary in respect of a first dependent child as at
31 December 2016, shall be eligible for a transitional allowance in the amount of
6 per cent of net base salary plus post adjustment in respect of that child, effective
1 January 2017.
(b) While in receipt of the transitional allowance, no concurrent payment of
the dependent child allowance under staff regulation 3.6 (a) shall be paid in respect
of that child, except where the child qualifies for a special dependency allowance
for a disabled child under staff regulation 3.6 (a) (ii).
(c) The amount of the transitional allowance shall be reduced by one
percentage point every 12 months thereafter, until the amount of the transitional
allowance is equal or less than the amount of the dependent child allowance
provided for under staff regulation 3.6 (a), at which time the dependent child
allowance shall be payable instead.
(d) The transitional allowance shall be discontinued earlier if the first
dependent child in respect of whom the transitional allowance is payable is no
longer recognized as a dependent child.
Rule 13.12
Salary scales
(a) The salary levels of staff members in the Professional and higher
categories and in the Field Service category that were higher than those at the
maximum step of their grade upon conversion to the unified salary scale on
1 January 2017 shall be maintained as a pay protection measure, until such time as
the staff member is promoted or separated from service.
(b) Such salaries shall be adjusted for any consolidation of post adjustment
to base salaries as approved by the General Assembly. Pensionable remuneration at
those steps shall be maintained and shall be adjusted corresponding to those salaries
when the pensionable remuneration scale is adjusted.
Rule 13.13
Acquired right to normal retirement age
(a) Staff members have an acquired right to their normal retirement age as
defined under article 1 (n) of the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff
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Pension Fund. The normal age of retirement for staff members who became
participants in the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund prior to 1 January 1990
is 60 years. For staff members whose participation commenced or recommenced
between 1 January 1990 and 31 December 2013, the normal age of retirement is 62
years. These staff members may choose to separate from service at their normal age
of retirement, or anytime thereafter, before the age of 65.
(b) Staff members who wish to exercise their acquired right as described in
staff rule 13.13 (a) above and separate from service at their normal age of retirement
or anytime thereafter before the age of 65 shall give written notice of three months
if holding a continuing appointment, or 30 calendar days if holding a fixed-term
appointment. The Secretary-General may, however, accept shorter notice.
(c) The mandatory age of separation of a staff member who reaches the age
of 60 or 62 on or prior to 31 December 2017 shall not be reset to 65, including if
that staff member is exceptionally retained in service beyond the mandatory age of
separation of 60 or 62, as applicable, beyond 1 January 2018.
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relative costs of living, standards of living and related factors at the office
concerned as compared to New York. Such post adjustments shall not be subject to
staff assessment.
10. No salary shall be paid to staff members in respect of periods of unauthorized
absence from work unless such absence was caused by reasons beyond their control
or duly certified medical reasons.
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Annex II
Letters of appointment
(a) The letter of appointment shall state:
(i) That the appointment is subject to the provisions of the Staff Regulations
and of the Staff Rules applicable to the category of appointment in question
and to changes which may be duly made in such regulations and rules from
time to time;
(ii) The nature of the appointment;
(iii) The date at which the staff member is required to enter upon his or her
duties;
(iv) The period of appointment, the notice required to terminate it and the
period of probation, if any;
(v) The category, level, commencing rate of salary and, if increments are
allowable, the scale of increments, and the maximum attainable;
(vi) Any special conditions which may be applicable;
(vii) That a temporary appointment does not carry any expectancy, legal or
otherwise, of renewal. A temporary appointment shall not be converted to any
other type of appointment;
(viii) That a fixed-term appointment does not carry any expectancy, legal or
otherwise, of renewal or conversion, irrespective of the length of service;
(b) A copy of the Staff Regulations and the Staff Rules shall be transmitted
to the staff member with the letter of appointment. In accepting appointment the
staff member shall state that he or she has been acquainted with and accepts the
conditions laid down in the Staff Regulations and in the Staff Rules;
(c) The letter of appointment of a staff member on secondment from
government service signed by the staff member and by or on behalf of the
Secretary-General, and relevant supporting documentation of the terms and
conditions of secondment agreed to by the Member State and the staff member, shall
be evidence of the existence and validity of secondment from government service to
the Organization for the period stated in the letter of appointment.
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Annex III
Termination indemnity
Staff members whose appointments are terminated shall be paid an indemnity
in accordance with the following provisions:
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b), (c), (d) and (e) below and in
regulation 9.3, the termination indemnity shall be paid in accordance with the
following schedule:
Comple
ted
years
of Temporary appointments Fixed-term Continuing
service exceeding six months appointments appointments
............
Less One week for each month of O Not applicable
than 1. uncompleted service subject ne
1.......... to a minimum of six weeks’ we Not applicable
and a maximum of three ek
2.......... months’ indemnity pay fo 3
3.......... r 3
ea
ch
m
on
th
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Comple
ted
years
of Temporary appointments Fixed-term Continuing
service exceeding six months appointments appointments
............
4.......... 4
5.......... 5
6.......... 3 6
7.......... 5 7
8.......... 7 8
9.......... Not applicable 9 9
10....... 9.5 9.5
11........ 10 10
12....... 10.5 10.5
13....... 11 11
14....... 11.5 11.5
15 or 12
more... 12
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Annex IV
Repatriation grant
In principle, the repatriation grant shall be payable to staff members who have
completed at least five years of qualifying service, whom the Organization is
obligated to repatriate and who at the time of separation are residing, by virtue of
their service with the United Nations, outside their country of nationality. The
repatriation grant shall not, however, be paid to a staff member who is dismissed.
Eligible staff members shall be entitled to a repatriation grant only upon relocation
outside the country of the duty station. Detailed conditions and definitions relating
to eligibility and requisite evidence of relocation shall be determined by the
Secretary-General.
Gener
al
Years of Professio Servic
qualifyi Staff member with a nal and e
ng spouse or dependent child higher ca catego
service at time of separation tegories ry
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Appendices to the Staff Rules
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Appendix A
Pensionable remuneration for staff in the Professional and higher categories and salary scales
and pensionable remuneration for staff in the Field Service category
Pensionable remuneration for staff in the Professional and higher categories
Steps
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Salary scale for staff in the Field Service category, showing annual gross salaries and net equivalents after application
of staff assessment
* * * * * *
FS-7 Gross 88 707 90 863 93 017 95 161 97 312 99 462 101 754 104 084 106 423 108 757 111 093 113 431 115 770
Net 70 917 72 556 74 193 75 822 77 457 79 091 80 728 82 359 83 996 85 630 87 265 88 902 90 539
* * * * * *
FS-6 Gross 73 713 75 688 77 671 79 645 81 620 83 596 85 576 87 562 89 534 91 512 93 492 95 468 97 443
Net 59 522 61 023 62 530 64 030 65 531 67 033 68 538 70 047 71 546 73 049 74 554 76 056 77 557
* * * * * *
FS-5 Gross 63 338 65 022 66 711 68 395 70 086 71 774 73 463 75 149 76 841 78 528 80 214 81 904 83 587
Net 51 637 52 917 54 200 55 480 56 765 58 048 59 332 60 613 61 899 63 181 64 463 65 747 67 026
* * * * * *
FS-4 Gross 55 451 56 859 58 259 59 657 61 059 62 458 63 857 65 262 66 661 68 063 69 464 70 820 72 266
Net 45 643 46 713 47 777 48 839 49 905 50 968 52 031 53 099 54 162 55 228 56 293 57 323 58 422
* * * * * *
FS-3 Gross 48 684 49 781 50 947 52 137 53 326 54 522 55 711 56 903 58 097 59 280 60 472 61 666 62 861
Net 40 408 41 318 42 220 43 124 44 028 44 937 45 840 46 746 47 654 48 553 49 459 50 366 51 274
* * * * * *
FS-2 Gross 43 254 44 218 45 184 46 146 47 111 48 072 48 995 50 001 51 055 52 107 53 158 54 207 55 257
Net 35 901 36 701 37 503 38 301 39 102 39 900 40 666 41 501 42 302 43 101 43 900 44 697 45 495
* * * * * *
FS-1 Gross 38 506 39 354 40 199 41 046 41 892 42 745 43 592 44 435 45 284 46 130 46 976 47 820 48 666
Net 31 960 32 664 33 365 34 068 34 770 35 478 36 181 36 881 37 586 38 288 38 990 39 691 40 393
*
The normal qualifying period for in-grade movement between consecutive steps is one year up to step VII; starting with step VIII, a two-year period at the preceding step is
required.
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Pay protection measures for staff in the Field Service category whose salaries are
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higher than the maximum salaries on the base/floor salary scales, with effect from
1 January 2018, showing annual gross salaries and net equivalents after application of
staff assessment
Effective 1 January 2018
(United States dollars)
1
FS-4 Gross 73 666 75 064
Net 59 486 60 549
FS-3 Gross 64 050 65 239
Net 52 178 53 082
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Steps
FS-7 144 773 148 576 152 381 156 178 159 982 163 567 167 594 171 393 175 197 178 999 182 803 186 610 190 410
FS-6 120 434 123 629 126 831 130 019 133 216 136 414 139 603 142 834 146 320 149 815 153 311 156 798 159 665
FS-5 103 676 106 396 109 125 111 852 114 581 117 303 120 033 122 757 125 488 128 214 130 941 133 664 136 392
FS-4 90 942 93 208 95 469 97 732 99 993 102 257 104 519 106 786 109 045 111 309 113 572 115 759 118 096
FS-3 79 808 81 737 83 662 85 587 87 505 89 434 91 361 93 280 95 208 97 121 99 048 100 973 102 904
FS-2 70 313 71 930 73 636 75 333 77 033 78 731 80 357 82 130 83 830 85 535 87 232 88 931 90 609
FS-1 62 587 63 967 65 345 66 717 68 092 69 476 70 855 72 316 73 811 75 300 76 573 77 975 79 378
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Appendix B
Education grant entitlements
Admissible expenses
(i) Admissible expenses shall include tuition, tuition in the mother tongue and
enrolment-related fees. Non-reimbursable capital assessment fees shall be
reimbursed outside the education grant scheme, under conditions established by the
Secretary-General. Admissible expenses actually incurred shall be reimbursed at the
rates indicated in the sliding scale below.
0–11 600 86
11 601–17 400 81
17 401–23 200 76
23 201–29 000 71
29 001–34 800 66
34 801–40 600 61
40 601 and above –
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the amount of 5,000 United States dollars, equivalent to the lump sum for boarding
assistance.
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Appendix C
Arrangements relating to military service
(a) In accordance with section 18 (c) of the Convention on Privileges and
Immunities of the United Nations, staff members who are nationals of those
Member States which have acceded to that Convention shall be “immune from
national service obligations” in the armed services of the country of their
nationality.
(b) Any requests to Governments which have not acceded to the Convention
to defer or exempt staff members from military service by reason of their
employment with the United Nations shall be made by the Secretary-General and
not by the staff member concerned.
(c) Staff members who have successfully passed a competitive examination
and have completed one year of satisfactory service under a fixed-term appointment
or who have a continuing appointment may, if called by a Member Government for
military service, whether for training or active duty, be placed on special leave
without pay for the duration of their required military service. Other staff members,
if called for military service, shall be separated from the Secretariat according to the
terms of their appointments.
(d) A staff member called for military service who is placed on special leave
without pay shall have the terms of appointment maintained as they were on the last
day of service before the staff member went on leave without pay. The staff
member’s re-employment in the Secretariat shall be guaranteed, subject only to the
normal rules governing necessary reductions in force or abolition of posts.
(e) In the interpretation of staff rule 9.6 (e) the period of special leave
without pay for military service shall be counted for the purpose of establishing
seniority.
(f) A staff member on special leave without pay for military service shall be
required to advise the Secretary-General within 90 days after release from military
service if the staff member wishes to be restored to active duty with the Secretariat.
The staff member shall also be required to submit a certificate of completion of
military service.
(g) If a staff member, after the period of required military service, elects to
continue such service or if the staff member fails to obtain a certified release
therefrom, the Secretary-General will determine, on the merits of the particular
case, whether further special leave without pay will be granted and whether re
employment rights shall be maintained.
(h) If the staff member’s absence on special leave without pay appears likely
to last six months or more, the United Nations will pay, if so requested, for
transporting the staff member’s spouse and dependent children to the staff member’s
place of entitlement and for their return travel after the staff member’s return to
active duty with the Secretariat, provided that the expenses involved will be counted
as travel expenses related to the next home leave entitlement of the staff member.
(i) The United Nations shall not continue its contribution to the United
Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund on behalf of the staff member during the staff
member’s absence on special leave without pay for military service.
(j) The provisions of staff rule 6.4 relating to death, injury or illness
attributable to the performance of official duties on behalf of the United Nations
shall not be applicable during periods of military service.
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Appendix D
Rules governing compensation in the event of death, injury
or illness attributable to the performance of official duties
on behalf of the United Nations
Section I
Scope and general provisions
Article 1.1
Purpose and scope
The present rules provide for compensation for death, injury or illness
attributable to the performance of official duties on behalf of the United Nations, as
set out below. Compensation shall be provided solely to staff members and their
dependants, in accordance with the terms and conditions contained in the present
rules.
Article 1.2
Exclusiveness of remedy; non-assignment
Compensation or other forms of recourse provided under the present rules
constitute the sole remedy for service-incurred death, injury or illness. The United
Nations will not accept, consider or provide compensation or benefits for service-
incurred death, injury or illness except under the present rules. Except as set forth
below, compensation and rights shall not be assignable to third parties.
Article 1.3
Terminology
The following terminology applies for the purposes of the present rules:
(a) Claimant: the staff member or dependant, as defined below, bringing a
claim under these rules.
(b) Dependant: the spouse, dependent child, or secondary dependant as set
forth in the Staff Rules. Compensation payable on the basis of or benefit payable to
a dependent child or secondary dependent sibling ceases on the day the dependent
child or secondary dependent sibling reaches the age of 18, or 21 if he or she is
attending university or its equivalent full-time. This restriction does not apply where
and as long as the dependent child or secondary dependent sibling has a disability
that is permanent or for a period that is expected to be long-term that prevents
gainful employment.
(c) Minor: an individual under the age of 18, or the age of majority under the
laws of the country of residence of such individual, if the age of majority in the
individual’s country of residency is less than 18 years of age.
(d) Illness: a deterioration in health as confirmed by a physician authorized
to practise medicine by a competent authority.
(e) Injury: a physiological impairment as confirmed by a physician
authorized to practise medicine by a competent authority.
(f) Incident: an event causing the death, injury or illness underlying a claim.
(g) Commute or commuting: travel by reasonable means of transportation
and on a direct route, by time or distance, between place of work and residence. A
direct route is deemed to commence upon departure from, or be terminated on
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arrival at, United Nations premises or the property line at the designated place of
work or the property line of the staff member’s place of residence, such residence
including yards, lawns, driveways, garages, stairways, entrances, elevators,
basements, hallways or common areas, without deliberate deviation from such
route.
(h) Reasonable means of transportation: a generally accepted means of
transportation under the circumstances. Transportation by a particularly hazardous
means is not considered a reasonable means of transportation for the purposes of the
present rules.
(i) Service-incurred death, injury or illness: a death, injury or illness where
the death, injury or illness is directly attributable to the performance of official
duties on behalf of the United Nations under the terms and conditions set out in the
present rules.
(j) Pensionable remuneration: the definition of pensionable remuneration is
set out in article 51 of the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension
Fund. If the staff member was not a participant in the Fund at the date of his or her
death, injury or illness, remuneration shall be that which, had the staff member been
a participant, would have been considered his or her pensionable remuneration at
that date.
(k) Last pensionable remuneration: the pensionable remuneration at the time
of (i) the incident, in the case of permanent disfigurement or permanent loss of
function; (ii) the separation from service, in the case of total disability; or (iii) the
date of death, in the case of death. If the staff member was not a participant in the
United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund at the date of the staff member’s death,
injury or illness, the remuneration shall be that which, had the staff member been a
participant, would have been considered his or her pensionable remuneration at that
date.
(l) United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund benefits: the definition of Fund
benefits is set out in article 3.7 below, on the relation to benefits under the United
Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund.
(m) Lump sum: a one-time payment of compensation.
(n) Pre-existing medical condition: an illness, injury or impairment that
exists prior to the incident resulting in the service-incurred death, injury or illness.
(o) Total disability: incapacity for further work reasonably compatible with
the claimant’s abilities, in which such incapacity is due to a service-incurred injury
or illness that is likely to be long-term or permanent. The resulting incapacity must
have a significant adverse impact on the claimant’s actual earnings, as determined
by the Secretary-General under the Staff Rules. A determination of total disability
under the Staff Rules shall be independent of a finding of disability under the
Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund.
Article 1.4
Advisory Board on Compensation Claims
(a) The Secretary-General has established the Advisory Board on
Compensation Claims to consider claims for compensation arising from a service-
incurred death, injury or illness and to make recommendations thereon to the
Secretary-General.
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Article 1.5
Secretary of the Advisory Board on Compensation Claims
(a) The Secretary of the Advisory Board on Compensation Claims shall be
designated by the Secretary-General or other authorized official. The Secretary may
not, at the same time, be a member of the Board.
(b) The Secretary of the Board is responsible for preparing claims submitted
under the present rules for consideration by the Board or the official with delegated
authority to consider de minimis claims, as set forth in article 1.6 below. In
discharging his or her functions and responsibilities under these rules, the Secretary
will seek to obtain sufficient and relevant documentary evidence from appropriate
sources.
Article 1.6
De minimis claims
If it is determined that: (a) the potential cumulative cost to the United Nations
of a claim is less than an amount determined by the Secretary-General or officials
with delegated authority; and (b) the claim is solely for reimbursement of medical
expenses, funeral expenses, compensation for permanent disfigurement or loss of
function, or granting of sick leave credit, the official with delegated authority to
consider such de minimis claims may make determinations on the compensability of
a claim, without the consideration of the Advisory Board on Compensation Claims.
If the official with delegated authority to consider de minimis claims makes a
determination on a claim, and the claim later exceeds the amount for de minimis
claims, the claim shall be presented to the Board for new consideration.
Article 1.7
Role of the Medical Services Division
(a) The Medical Services Division shall make a medical determination for
consideration by the Advisory Board on Compensation Claims or the official with
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Article 1.8
General obligations of claimant
(a) The claimant must provide the evidence necessary to fully support a
claim for compensation in accordance with these rules.
(b) The claimant must fully and promptly comply with any request by the
United Nations in connection with a claim, or the recovery of payments from third
parties pursuant to section IV of the present rules.
(c) In accordance with article 3.8 below, the claimant must inform the
Advisory Board on Compensation Claims of any compensation under governmental,
institutional, industrial or other workers’ compensation schemes or insurance for
which the claimant may be eligible in connection with the death, injury or illness
underlying a claim.
(d) The claimant must inform the Secretary of the Board of any changes
relevant to a claim, including any changes in medical condition.
(e) The claimant shall provide, as requested, periodic attestation of
continued eligibility to receive periodic compensation under the present rules.
Article 1.9
Fraud, misrepresentation and omission of material fact
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Section II
Requirements and conditions for coverage
Article 2.1
Procedural requirement for the filing of a claim
Notice
(a) As soon as practicable after the incident, a claimant should submit to the
relevant human resources or executive or administrative officer in writing the
following information:
(i) The staff member’s and claimant’s name, addresses and staff
identification number;
(ii) The date of death or of the onset or diagnosis of an injury or illness;
(iii) A description of the incident, including its date, time and location.
Claim
(b) Within one year of the relevant date, as established below in article
2.1 (c), a claimant shall submit a signed Advisory Board on Compensation Claims
claim form, together with the following information, as applicable:
(i) For claims involving injury or illness: a. a description of the injury or
illness; b. a description of the relation of the injury or illness to the incident;
c. a diagnosis; and d. a prognosis. Such information must be provided in
writing by the staff member’s physician. The claimant must also submit the
results of all relevant medical tests;
(ii) For claims for reimbursement of medical expenses: a. a completed
Advisory Board on Compensation Claims medical expense form; b. all related
medical bills; and c. proof of payment of such bills.
All required forms and supporting documentation may be submitted through a
national mail service provider, other international courier service or electronically
by e-mail or by other designated tool and are deemed received only upon actual
receipt.
Effective dates
(c) The time limitations for submission of the required forms and supporting
documentation above will be determined on the basis of the following:
(i) Injury or illness: the date of the incident shall be either the event or the
period over which an exposure occurred. It shall be the date of the incident for
cases where symptoms are apparent immediately or the date on which the staff
member becomes aware, or reasonably should have been aware, of such injury
or illness, whichever is earlier;
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(ii) Death: the date of death shall be established by a duly issued certificate
of death.
(d) A determination on whether the claimant has complied with the time
limitations for the filing of a claim, or other such procedural requirements, shall be
made by the Board or the official with delegated authority to consider de minimis
claims.
(e) The deadline for the filing of a claim, including all necessary supporting
documentation, may be waived on an exceptional basis by the Board or the official
with delegated authority to consider de minimis claims, in consultation with the
Medical Services Division, in cases in which the claimant demonstrates that the
delay was the result of incapacity. If a waiver is made, the claim must be submitted
within the deadlines set out in article 2.1 (b) above, as applicable, the time frame for
which will begin from the date of the cessation of the incapacity.
Article 2.2
Eligibility for coverage
(a) To be eligible to receive compensation under the present rules, the death,
injury or illness underlying a claim must be service-incurred, as assessed in
accordance with article 2.2 (d) below.
(b) The Advisory Board on Compensation Claims will assess whether the
death, injury or illness is service-incurred and provide its recommendation on a
claim to the Secretary-General. For de minimis claims, the official with delegated
authority to consider de minimis claims will assess whether the death, injury or
illness is service-incurred and take a decision on the claim on behalf of the
Secretary-General.
(c) Such an assessment will be based on the claimant’s submissions, and, as
appropriate, the recommendations of the Medical Services Division, technical
advice from ex officio members of the Board and any other relevant documentary or
other evidence.
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Article 2.3
Excluded claims
(a) Claims shall not be compensable under the present rules if compensation
is expressly excluded under conditions established by the Secretary-General, or
where the death, injury or illness is the direct result of any of, but not limited to the
following:
(i) Misconduct, recklessness or gross negligence by the staff member,
including, but not limited to, an act or omission with the intent to cause harm
or death to himself or herself or others;
(ii) Disregard by the staff member of security instructions provided or made
reasonably accessible to the staff member;
(iii) Failure by the staff member to use appropriate safety devices or medical
prophylaxis provided by the United Nations, unless and only to the extent that
the death, injury or illness would have happened even with the use of such
device or prophylaxis;
(iv) Physical confrontation or other violence by the staff member, unless
reasonably required by the circumstances or as part of the staff member’s
official duties;
(v) Medical condition or other factors unrelated to the performance of
official duties of the staff member, including, without limitation, pre-existing
medical conditions, as defined in article 1.3.
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Section III
Compensation
Article 3.1
Injury or illness
In the event of a service-incurred injury or illness, the following provisions
shall apply:
Expenses
(a) The United Nations shall pay all medical expenses which are found by
the Medical Services Division to be:
(i) Directly related to a service-incurred injury or illness;
(ii) Reasonably medically necessary for the treatment or services provided;
and
(iii) At a reasonable cost for the treatment or services provided.
Sick leave
(b) Initial authorized absences in connection with a service-incurred injury
or illness shall be charged to the staff member’s sick leave entitlement under staff
rule 6.2 until such entitlement is exhausted or the staff member returns to active
duty. Subject to meeting all requirements, article 3.9 may apply.
Article 3.2
Total disability
In the event of total disability, upon the exhaustion of the sick leave
entitlements pursuant to article 3.1 (b) above and upon the cessation of salary and
allowances payable under the applicable Staff Regulations and Rules, the staff
member shall receive annual compensation equivalent to 66.66 per cent of his or her
last pensionable remuneration or, if the staff member has a dependent child, 75 per
cent of the last pensionable remuneration. Such compensation shall be payable at
periodic intervals for the duration of the disability and in addition to compensation
payable under article 3.1 (a), as applicable.
Article 3.3
Death
In the event of the service-incurred death of a staff member, the following
provisions shall apply:
Funeral costs
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(a) The United Nations shall pay a reasonable amount for the preparation of
the remains and for funeral expenses, but no more than three times the monthly G-2,
step I, pensionable remuneration applicable at the time of death for the country
where the funeral takes place, or, where there is no pensionable remuneration scale
for the country where the funeral takes place, the pensionable remuneration scale
for Headquarters in New York.
Expenses
(b) The United Nations shall pay medical expenses incurred prior to the date
and time of a death which is found by the Medical Services Division to be:
(i) Directly related to a service-incurred injury or illness;
(ii) Reasonably medically necessary for the treatment or services provided;
and
(iii) At a reasonable cost for the treatment or services provided.
Article 3.4
Survivor dependants
Maximum compensation
(a) In the event of a service-incurred death of a staff member, the United
Nations shall pay the compensation provided below to the staff member’s spouse or
other eligible dependant(s), provided that the total annual compensation payable
shall not exceed 75 per cent of the last pensionable remuneration of the deceased
staff member.
Spouse
(b) A spouse shall receive annual compensation payments, payable at
periodic intervals, equal to 50 per cent of the deceased staff member’s last
pensionable remuneration. In the event of multiple spouses, such compensation
shall be divided equally among the spouses. Upon the death of a spouse, his or her
share shall be divided among any remaining spouses.
Dependent child
(c) (i) Each dependent child shall receive annual compensation, payable at
periodic intervals in accordance with article 3.5 below, equal to 12.5 per cent of the
deceased staff member’s last pensionable remuneration. If there are two or more
dependent children, the compensation payable shall not exceed the maximum set out
in article 3.4 (a) and shall be divided equally among such dependent children.
(ii) If there is no surviving spouse, then in lieu of the compensation provided
under article 3.4 (c) (i), a dependent child shall receive annual compensation,
payable at periodic intervals and in accordance with article 3.5, equivalent to
the amount provided under article 3.4 (b) for one dependent child in addition
to an annual compensation, payable at periodic intervals and in accordance
with article 3.5, equal to the amount provided under article 3.4 (c) (i) for all
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Secondary dependants
(d) If there is neither a spouse nor a dependent child and there is a secondary
dependant, the following compensation shall be paid:
(i) To a dependent parent, annual compensation, payable at periodic
intervals, equivalent to 50 per cent of the staff member’s last pensionable
remuneration;
(ii) To a dependent sibling, annual compensation, payable at periodic
intervals and in accordance with article 3.5 below, equal to 12.5 per cent of the
staff member’s last pensionable remuneration.
Article 3.5
Payments to minors
Payment of any compensation under the present rules to a minor shall be made
to the minor’s parent or legal guardian. All such compensation must be used in its
entirety for the sole benefit of the minor.
Article 3.6
Permanent disfigurement or loss of function
(a) In the case of a service-incurred injury or illness resulting in permanent
disfigurement or loss of function, a lump sum shall be paid to the staff member in
the amount obtained by multiplying three times the staff member’s pensionable
remuneration at the time of the incident by the percentage of the degree of loss of
function attributable to the service-incurred injury or illness pursuant to guidelines
approved by the Medical Services Division for such a determination.
(b) Regardless of duty station, the staff member’s pensionable remuneration
utilized in the immediately preceding calculation may not exceed the pensionable
remuneration of a P-4, step VI, and may not be less than the pensionable
remuneration of a G-2, step I, at Headquarters in New York applicable at the time of
the incident:
(i) In the event that the staff member’s pensionable remuneration exceeds
the pensionable remuneration of a P-4, step VI, the pensionable remuneration
utilized in the immediately preceding calculation shall be that of a P-4, step
VI;
(ii) In the event that the staff member’s pensionable remuneration is less than
the pensionable remuneration of a G-2, step I, at Headquarters in New York,
the pensionable remuneration utilized in the immediately preceding calculation
shall be that of a G-2, step I, at Headquarters in New York.
Article 3.7
Relation to benefits under the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund
Compensation awarded pursuant to the provisions set out below is intended to
supplement the benefits under the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff
Pension Fund in accordance with the following provisions:
(a) Any compensation otherwise payable under articles 3.2 or 3.4 above
shall be reduced by the amount of the claimant’s disability benefit or a survivor’s
benefit under the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund.
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Deductions made under the present rules shall in no case have the effect of reducing
the compensation otherwise payable to less than 10 per cent thereof, provided in all
cases that the total annual amount payable both under the present rules and under
the Regulations of the Fund shall in no event exceed 75 per cent of the staff
member’s last pensionable remuneration.
(b) The sum of (i) benefits under the Fund and (ii) compensation payable
under articles 3.2 and 3.4 above, after being adjusted under the present rules, shall
in no event exceed 75 per cent of the staff member’s last pensionable remuneration.
(c) When benefits under the Fund are adjusted for variations in cost of
living, compensation payable under articles 3.2 and 3.4 above shall be
correspondingly adjusted.
Article 3.8
Relation to non-United Nations compensation
(a) In determining the amount of compensation payable under the present
rules, the amount of any compensation or benefits under governmental, institutional,
industrial or other workers’ compensation schemes, but not personal insurance, for
which claimants qualify shall be deducted from any amounts payable hereunder.
(b) The claimant shall not be entitled to compensation or receive
reimbursement under the present rules for medical expenses related to a service-
incurred death, injury or illness if such expenses:
(i) Have already been compensated or are compensable under such
governmental, institutional, industrial or other workers’ compensation
schemes; or
(ii) Have been reimbursed by health or medical insurance.
(c) The claimant shall inform the Advisory Board on Compensation Claims
without delay of any compensation under governmental, institutional, industrial or
other workers’ compensation schemes or insurance for which the claimant may be
eligible in connection with the death, injury or illness underlying a claim.
Article 3.9
Relation to other benefits under the Staff Rules
Special leave
(a) Once a staff member’s sick leave entitlement has been exhausted
pursuant to article 3.1 (b), and if such staff member has not separated from the
United Nations, the staff member may be placed on special leave pursuant to staff
rule 5.3.
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will be granted for any sick leave already revived under the time frames of
staff rule 6.2 (b);
(ii) To maintain the full pay status of a staff member being considered for a
disability benefit pursuant to article 33 (a) of the Regulations of the United
Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund, who has exhausted his or her sick leave
entitlement. A determination as to whether a claimant should be considered for
such a benefit shall be made in consultation with the Medical Services Division
pursuant to the established procedures of the United Nations and the Regulations
of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund. Such sick leave credit may be
granted solely to maintain full pay status until the date of termination of the staff
member’s appointment or other separation from service pursuant to article 33 (a)
of the Regulations of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund, unless other
arrangements apply during that period under conditions established by the
Secretary-General.
Home travel
(c) A staff member who is unable to work for a period of at least six months
owing to a service-incurred injury or illness, and for whom the Medical Services
Division has so certified, may request consideration for a special travel allowance
for travel of the staff member and eligible dependants to the place of entitlement,
pursuant to chapter VII of the Staff Rules, and for their return travel when the staff
member returns to duty. If such travel is commenced or terminated within 12
months of the staff member’s eligibility for home leave entitlement pursuant to staff
rule 5.2 and chapter VII of the Staff Rules, such special travel allowance shall be
deemed to be in lieu of the staff member’s home leave entitlement. If the staff
member does not return to duty, such special travel allowance shall be deemed to be
in lieu of travel on separation pursuant to chapter VII of the Staff Rules.
Section IV
Recoveries
Article 4.1
Claims against third parties
Notice
(a) All persons who submit a request for compensation for a service-incurred
death, injury or illness under the present rules must notify the Secretary-General in
writing at the earliest possible time of any claims, demands or rights that they have
pursued, that they are pursuing or that they intend in the future to pursue against any
third party or parties in connection with such service-incurred death, injury or
illness.
Assignment of rights
(b) If, in the opinion of the Secretary-General, a claimant has a claim,
demand, or right against a third party or parties, including a third party insurance
carrier, for damages or other payment(s) in connection with a service-incurred
death, injury or illness, the Secretary-General may, as a condition for granting any
compensation to the claimant, require the claimant to assign such claim, demand or
right to the United Nations so that the United Nations may pursue or enforce the
claim, demand or right in the place of the claimant.
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(c) Where the United Nations has decided to pursue a claim, demand or right
against a third party or parties pursuant to subparagraph (b) above, the claimant
shall provide to the United Nations all assistance and cooperation that is necessary
for pursuing or enforcing the claim, demand or right, including participating in any
suit or proceedings.
Settlement
(d) The United Nations is entitled to settle any claim, demand or right
against a third party or parties pursuant to subparagraph (b) above on such terms
and conditions as it determines to be reasonable. A claimant, who has assigned a
claim, demand or right under subparagraph (b), shall provide the United Nations all
assistance as may be required to reach a settlement, including, but not limited to,
participating in any settlement negotiations and executing all settlement-related
documents. The claimant shall not, under any circumstances, settle any claim,
demand or action with any third party or parties without the express written consent
of the United Nations.
Proceeds
(e) Where compensation or proceeds have been received from a third party
or parties as a result of a suit, proceedings or a settlement reached pursuant to
subparagraphs (b) to (d) above, such compensation or proceeds shall be applied:
(i) First, to pay in full the costs of the suit, proceedings or settlement,
including reasonable attorney fees;
(ii) Second, to reimburse the United Nations for any compensation provided
to the claimant pursuant to these rules; and
(iii) Third, to pay the remaining amounts to the claimant.
Future claims
(f) Any amount of compensation that a claimant may be entitled to receive
in the future pursuant to the present rules shall be first used to offset any monies
received by the claimant under subparagraph (e) (iii) above.
Article 4.2
Recovery of overpayments
(a) If the United Nations has paid a claimant in excess of any compensation
payable under the present rules, the United Nations will notify the claimant of the
amount of overpayment and request reimbursement.
(b) If immediate reimbursement in full is not feasible, any future periodic
payments of compensation payable to the claimant under the present rules shall be
reduced by 20 per cent until the overpayment has been reimbursed in full. If
immediate reimbursement in full of any lump-sum payment made under the present
rules is not feasible, the Secretary-General will seek recovery by means including,
but not limited to, the reduction of any future lump sum payments of compensation
payable to the claimant under the present rules by the entire amount of the
overpayment.
Section V
Reconsideration, review and appeal
Article 5.1
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Article 5.2
Review and appeal of administrative decisions
Claimants wishing to contest a decision taken on a claim under the present
rules, to the extent that the decision was based on considerations other than a
medical determination, shall submit to the Secretary-General a written request for
management evaluation in accordance with staff rule 11.2.
Article 5.3
Reopening of claims
Upon a written request by a claimant, or at the initiative of the Secretary-
General, a claim made under the present rules may be reopened when one or more
of the following criteria are met:
(a) The discovery of new material evidence, if such new material evidence
may materially affect:
(i) A determination as to whether a death, injury or illness was service-
incurred; or
(ii) A relevant medical determination;
(b) A worsening or improvement in the condition of the staff member, where
such worsening or improvement is directly related to the service-incurred injury or
illness, and which may entitle the staff member to additional compensation, or
warrant the reduction or elimination of compensation;
(c) A material mistake was made by the United Nations in the processing of
a claim that had an impact on its disposition.
When a claim is reopened subject to the provisions above, any such claim shall
be considered in accordance with the present rules. The Secretary-General and the
claimant shall be bound by determinations previously made, unless new material
evidence or material mistake undermines or otherwise calls into question in
substantial part those determinations.
Section VI
Transitional measures
Article 6.1
Transitional measures
(a) For claims filed for incidents occurring after the entry into force of the
present revised rules, such revised rules will be applied.
(b) For claims filed for incidents that occurred prior to the entry into force of
the present revised rules, the previously applicable rules will be applied, except that
annual compensation for widows or widowers under the former article 10.2 will
continue to be payable provided that the widow or widower has not remarried prior
to the entry into force of the present revised rules.
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