Why Federal Employees Receive Notices of Proposed Action

If you are searching for the reasons for a notice of proposed action, you are likely trying to answer one urgent question:

“Why is my agency doing this to me?”

A Notice of Proposed Action (NOPA) is not random. Federal agencies rely on a small set of repeat justifications to propose discipline, removals, suspensions, and demotions. Once you understand these patterns, the agency’s strategy becomes easier to counter.

This guide explains the most common reasons agencies issue NOPAs, how those reasons are often exaggerated or misapplied, and when a federal employment lawyer can step in to protect your career.

For the full legal framework, start with the Federal Employment Law Hub for federal employees facing discipline and retaliation.

National Security Law Firm: It’s Our Turn to Fight for You.


Conduct Unbecoming a Federal Employee

One of the most frequently cited reasons for a notice of proposed action is conduct unbecoming a federal employee.

Agencies favor this charge because:

  • It is broad and flexible

  • It can cover on-duty or off-duty behavior

  • It allows agencies to argue reputational harm

In practice, conduct unbecoming is often used to stretch minor or unrelated behavior into a removal-level offense. Federal employment lawyers routinely challenge whether the alleged conduct actually meets the legal standard and whether the agency can prove nexus to the efficiency of the service.

If this charge appears in your NOPA, read the complete guide on conduct unbecoming a federal employee and do not respond without strategy.


Lack of Candor Allegations

Lack of candor is one of the most dangerous reasons agencies issue Notices of Proposed Action.

Agencies rely on lack of candor because:

  • It frames the employee as untrustworthy

  • It justifies severe penalties, including removal

  • It often relies on subjective credibility judgments

Many lack of candor charges are built on:

  • Inconsistent statements

  • Poorly phrased responses

  • Misunderstandings during investigations

  • Ambiguous questions

A federal employment lawyer focuses on whether the agency can prove intent to deceive, not just inconsistency. If your NOPA includes this allegation, review the survival guide on lack of candor charges in federal employment immediately.


Failure to Follow Instructions

Another common reason for a notice of proposed action is failure to follow instructions.

This charge is frequently misused when:

  • Instructions were unclear or contradictory

  • Policies changed without notice

  • Supervisors issued informal or shifting directives

  • Employees raised concerns or objections

Agencies often stack failure to follow instructions with insubordination or conduct unbecoming to increase pressure. A strong defense examines whether the instruction was:

  • Clear

  • Lawful

  • Reasonable

  • Actually communicated

Learn how agencies misuse this charge in the guide on failure to follow instructions.


Time and Attendance Issues

Timekeeping allegations are one of the fastest ways agencies escalate cases into NOPAs.

Common time and attendance reasons include:

  • Alleged AWOL

  • Telework disputes

  • Login/logout tracking issues

  • Leave approval conflicts

Agencies often treat administrative or technical errors as misconduct. A federal employment lawyer examines whether the agency can prove intent versus negligence and whether policies were applied consistently.

If your NOPA references attendance, review the complete resource on time and attendance misconduct in federal employment before responding.


Medical Inability and Fitness-for-Duty Claims

Agencies increasingly issue Notices of Proposed Action based on medical inability, especially following:

  • Extended medical leave

  • Requests for reasonable accommodation

  • Fitness-for-duty examinations

  • Mental health disclosures

Medical-based NOPAs are often framed as neutral, but they frequently mask:

  • Failure to engage in the interactive process

  • Retaliation for accommodation requests

  • Improper medical documentation demands

A federal employment lawyer evaluates whether the agency met its obligations and whether removal is legally justified. These cases require careful handling because they intersect with disability discrimination and due process rights.


Why Agencies Default to These NOPA Reasons

Federal agencies rely on these categories because they:

  • Are familiar to deciding officials

  • Survive initial scrutiny if unchallenged

  • Place the burden on employees to respond quickly

  • Discourage resistance through complexity

Understanding the reason for the notice of proposed action is the first step. Responding strategically is the second.


Why the Reason for the NOPA Shapes Your Entire Case

The reason cited in the NOPA determines:

  • What evidence matters

  • What defenses apply

  • Whether MSPB appeal rights exist

  • How penalties can be mitigated

  • How much settlement leverage is possible

This is why federal employees should never submit a response without understanding the legal category the agency is relying on.


When to Call a Federal Employment Lawyer

You should speak with a federal employment lawyer immediately if:

  • You received a Notice of Proposed Action

  • The NOPA cites misconduct or medical inability

  • Removal, suspension, or demotion is proposed

  • The action follows EEO or whistleblower activity

Before choosing anyone, review how to choose the best federal employment lawyer for your case so you do not make a costly mistake.


Why Federal Employees Choose National Security Law Firm

National Security Law Firm focuses exclusively on federal and military employment law.

Federal employees choose NSLF because:

Learn why federal employees nationwide choose National Security Law Firm and see what federal employees say about working with NSLF.

National Security Law Firm: It’s Our Turn to Fight for You.


Frequently Asked Questions About Reasons for Notices of Proposed Action

Does a NOPA mean the agency has already decided to fire me?

Not always, but removal is already considered reasonable. Strategy now matters more than ever.

Can the agency change the reasons later?

Yes. Agencies often refine or narrow charges later, which is why early responses must be precise.

Are these reasons always legitimate?

No. Many NOPAs rely on overcharged or misapplied allegations.

Can a lawyer really change the outcome?

Yes. Early legal intervention frequently reduces penalties or stops removals entirely.


Your Next Step

If you received a Notice of Proposed Action, do not focus only on what the agency is accusing you of — focus on why.

That insight is leverage.

Speak with a federal employment lawyer who understands how agencies weaponize NOPAs and how to dismantle them.

Get your free case plan today and take back control of your career.

National Security Law Firm: It’s Our Turn to Fight for You.