6a supp
Item No. 6a Supp Meeting Date: May 17, 2016 Incentive Pay Plan 2016 Salary and Benefits Resolution Amendment May 17, 2016 Topics Incentive Pay Plan Design Customer Feedback Implementing the Incentive Pay Plan Partial year implementation Non-Financial Goals 2 Incentive Pay Plan Results oriented Financial performance exceeds budget Payout is fully earned when two values driven, non-financial goals are met Self-funding and taxpayer oriented Financial performance must be above threshold before plan pays out At least half the positive variance is retained by the Port A portion is returned to the airport (required amount) A portion will go to the tax levy fund to help offset future increases Values driven, socially responsible Focuses on the triple bottom line Pays out to employees first, executive leadership follows Doesn't add to fixed salary costs Capacity building Makes the Port stronger over time Results oriented, self-funding and Century Agenda focused 3 Business Case Motivates exceptional performance Drives Century Agenda goals Supports working together as "One Port" Improves the Port's ability to compete for talent Makes the Port more competitive with private employers Differentiates the Port among public sector employers Is consistent with high-performing employers Benefits taxpayers, may help offset future levy increases One Port creating jobs in our community 4 Motivating Exceptional Performance TWO TYPES OF GOALS 1. Financial Self-funding 2. Values Driven, non-financial Focuses the Port on the most important social responsibility and environmental sustainability commitments each year Results Oriented, Self-funding, Values Driven, Century Agenda Focused 5 Incentive Pool Funding Adjusted Revenue Higher than + Budget Expenses Lower than Budget = Total Positive Variance Qualified Employees Receive Incentive 50% Retained by the Port Incentive pool 50% to Incentive Pool Financial & Non-Financial Goals Met Financial goals must be met to fund pool 6 Payout Method Incentive Pool Employees Executives Step 5 (Max) Step 5.1 (Max) Step 4 Step 4.1 Step 3 Step 3.1 Step 2 Step 2.1 Step 1 Step 1.1 Minimum Incentive plan pays from the bottom up 7 Individual Payout Calculations Employees Earn Awards Based on Annual Performance Review Ratings Performance Rating Payout Minimum Step Step Step Step Step 5 - Rating Distribution Factor Payout* 1 2 3 4 Maximum Unsatisfactory 0% No Payout 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% Contributing 0% 5% 1 X Payout 0.5% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% Strong 65% - 70% 2 X Payout 1.0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% Highly 15% - 20% 3 X Payout 1.5% 3% 6% 9% 12% 15% Effective Exceptional 5% - 10% 4 X Payout 2.0% 4% 8% 12% 16% 20% Total Variance Needed to Fund $2.0M $21.6M Payout Pool Funding $1.0M $10.8M NOTES payouts are based on employees eligible earnings during the plan year Payouts assume all goals, financial and non-financial, are met Funding step determined by the size of the payout pool 8 Positive Budget Variance Allocation At least 50% retained by the Port Airport General/ Tax Levy Fund Executive Leadership Team Employees 50% Shared with employees For Illustrative Purposes Only Total variance shared with stakeholders 9 Following Up Customer Feedback 24 Line of Business customers contacted, 20 responded Overall, supportive of Incentive Pay Feedback reinforces our proposed plan design Tie to the Century Agenda, include a robust appraisal process, emphasize self-funding Limited cautionary feedback Proceed cautiously, why not just increase base pay Helping employees work together is a good thing, but hope it doesn't mean increased customer costs Some worry about cost of implementation, and possible adverse impact on pay for ineligible employees Customers generally supportive of incentive pay 10 Implementing the Incentive Pay Plan RESOLUTION Commission authorizes pay and benefits PORT POLICY Policies related to authorized pay and benefits PLAN DOCUMENT Plan administration details Resolution is high level, Policy is mid-level, Documents are details 11 Implementing the Incentive Pay Plan Resolution Defines the Incentive Pay Plan, plan funding, specifies goals must be communicated in advance, refers to Port Policy HR-21 Port Policy, HR-21, Pay Administration Includes link to the performance review program, specifies performance ratings are considered when determining individual performance awards Incentive Pay Plan Document Specifies how performance ratings are considered when determining individual awards, specifies what the guided performance rating distribution is, includes reference to the performance review rating oversight process Details are contained in the plan document 12 Mid-year Implementation June 1, 2016 Implementation Mid-year implementation will require adjustments Variance eligible to fund the payout pool will be pro- rated Only 7/12 of the total positive variance will be available for 2016 incentive pay plan calculations 50% of the pro-rated total positive variance will be used to determine payout step Only part of 2016 actual results will be incentive plan eligible 13 2016 Incentive Calculation Example If a 2016 year-end total positive Then the variance eligible for variance $21.6 Million incentive pay plan calculations $12.6 Million Retained by Port ~58% of $6.3M variance considered Capped Incentive Funds over cap Pool $5M retained by the Port $1.3M 7/12 pro-rating applied to actual $5.0M capped payout pool estimated reflecting June - December eligible to fund Step 2.1, 0% to 8% payouts for results employees and executive leaders Pro-rated total variance will result in smaller payouts 14 Values Driven Non-Financial Goals #1 Small Business and WMBE Participation a. Increase small business contracting participation Port-wide, as defined by the U.S. Small Business Administration guidelines to 35%, including the sub-goal of a 50% increase (over 2015) of certified Washington State Office of Minority and Woman's Business Enterprises to 5.1%. b. By November 1, 2016, assess all Port efforts geared to promoting small and WMBE business participation and provide a report to the Commission rating the effectiveness of each and providing specific recommendations for improvements for Commission consideration. Focusing the Port on the triple bottom line 15 Values Driven Non-Financial Goals #2 Customer Satisfaction and Public Engagement a. Quantitatively and qualitatively assess customer satisfaction of all segments of non-aviation customers to measure satisfaction with Port services and facilities; and identify specific areas for improvement. b. Improve aviation customer overall satisfaction, as measured by the Airport Service Quality (ASQ), from 4.07 to 4.13. c. Assess within our jurisdiction public and other local government understanding of the Port and our role in the regional and local economy. d. By November 1, 2016, provide a report to the Commission that includes: i. Benchmarks for future goal setting to improve satisfaction with Port services and facilities. ii. Strategies to improve the ASQ. iii. High impact actions and programs to improve public and other local government understanding of the Port and our role in the regional and local economy Focusing the Port on the triple bottom line 16 Values Driven Non-Financial Goals #3 Environmental Stewardship a. Develop and ensure Port-wide implementation of an environmental scorecard that measures the Port's environmental footprint and that will serve to guide and monitor reduction efforts in all Port operating and nonoperating divisions. b. By November 1, 2016, assess potential opportunities for increasing the use of renewable energy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions at Port owned facilities and report findings and recommendations to the Commission for consideration. Focusing the Port on the triple bottom line 17 ADDENDUM 18 Historical Port of Seattle Financial Results 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Forecast * Adjusted Act/Bud Var. Non-Aeronautical Revenues $8,045 $2,031 $10,114 $19,895 $4,736 Total Port O&M Expenses $13,324 $16,846 $13,560 $11,092 $5,303 Adjusted Total Favorable Var. $21,369 $18,877 $23,674 $30,987 $10,039 Available for Incentive Payout Pool $10,684,669 $9,438,580 $11,837,106 $15,493,457 $2,911,310 Payout Step 5 4 5 5 1.1 Payout Pool Funding $9,416,920 $7,769,582 $9,970,110 $11,179,303 $2,160,187 Total Retained by POS $11,952,417 $11,107,579 $13,704,102 $19,807,611 $7,878,813 * includes pro-rated, partial year, total variance Proposed Incentive Pay Plan would have paid out in the last 4 years 19 Pool Funding Example PLAN FUNDS ITSELF 2016 Budget 2016 Actual* Variance Total Revenue $584.5m Less Aeronautical Revenue - $257.4m Adjusted Revenue = $327.1m $337.3m $10.2m Total Port Expense $336.1m $324.7m + $11.4m Total Variance = $21.6m 50% to the Payout Pool $10.8m *NOTE 2016 Actual is for illustrative purposes only, total variance supports maximum plan payout Incentive plan funded by positive budget variance 20
Limitations of Translatable Documents
PDF files are created with text and images are placed at an exact position on a page of a fixed size.
Web pages are fluid in nature, and the exact positioning of PDF text creates presentation problems.
PDFs that are full page graphics, or scanned pages are generally unable to be made accessible, In these cases, viewing whatever plain text could be extracted is the only alternative.