The version I favor can be found at CPMS. See related link.
The 2008 federal pay period calendar can be found on the official website of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM). You can search for it using keywords like "OPM federal pay period calendar 2008."
OhMyGov! has the best Federal Pay Calendar for 2011 so far. If you want to know when that money will appear in your bank account, or if you are looking for more information, including all those federal holidays, pay periods and your payroll dates, you have a choice between the following detailed pay calendars either Justice's federal pay calendar for 2011 or DoD's federal pay calendar for 2011.
Federal pay period calendars 2009 can be found at: USDA's National Finance Center. See links below
OhMyGov has all the current 2012 Federal Calendars to date.
http://i2i.nfc.usda.gov/Forms/1217n_09.pdf
period of 12 calendar month
A biweekly pay period consists of 14 calendar and 10 working days (including holidays). The 26.0892 factor is determined by dividing the number of calendar days in a pay period into the average number of days in a year (365.25/14) = 26.0892.
This will depend on the specific federal student loan you have. Stafford loans have a grace period of six months while Perkin loans have a grace period of nine months.
Pay period just ended after the business date of 5/24/2011. Pay periods are 2 weeks long.
This will all depend on the type of job that has been done. A job with a structured pay period will have a pay calendar showing when to expect pay. Other types of work may be paid on completion of work or within a month.
No, a 'calendar week' is a shown on a calendar and runs from Sunday to Saturday in progression. A 'work week' is the schedule determined by any given employer to establish a seven day period usually for determining the calculation of overtime pay. The week may be from Wednesday to the following Tuesday, etc.
You must pay within 1 year after the tax lien has been filed. Any violation will lead to a federal transgression.