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Government employee thread! (Being a government employee is sweet) (1 Viewer)

I also find it interesting that people are being forced back into the office 5 days a week. I thought the idea was to make govt more efficient?!???
I’m a bit interested to see how it works out. Federal government sold off a lot of underutilized real estate in response to hybrid work, which helped to save money. Not even sure how much space there is for everyone to be in the office every day.
 
I also find it interesting that people are being forced back into the office 5 days a week. I thought the idea was to make govt more efficient?!???
I’m a bit interested to see how it works out. Federal government sold off a lot of underutilized real estate in response to hybrid work, which helped to save money. Not even sure how much space there is for everyone to be in the office every day.
I think it would be funny if the employees of some agencies coordinated to all show up on the same day and then post pictures of people sitting on hallway floors with laptops since they don't have a desk to use. How many OSHA laws would be violated? The fire marshal would have to order people to leave.
 
Our acting secretary said that leadership is reviewing the EOs and developing plans for implementation. I see that as a positive sign, but we'll see.
Our base CO said continue business as usual until further notice. Told us that instruction will come through the normal chain of command once the path forward is settled upon. We're a DOD R&D (civ) lab so that was expected. I doubt we get targeted like some of the other orgs.

I'm guessing that they will eventually implement 1 day per week or 1 day per pay period telework, which was where we were pre-COVID. We currently are in-office at least 60% of the time, though most are in more due to the nature of the work.
 
I also find it interesting that people are being forced back into the office 5 days a week. I thought the idea was to make govt more efficient?!???
C'mon, man
Both companies I’ve worked for since the pandemic, and my wife’s company, have successfully integrated telework that has resulted in significant savings for the company, as well as for workers. It’s win-win.
It is about reducing the federal workforce.

A lot of tech companies, financial firms, etc. have done and will do the same thing. Knowing a lot of people will refuse to go back to the office, they can implement layoffs without calling them layoffs. I think the short-sighted risk is you lose your most marketable people who were likely some of your best workers, but that’s the risk they’re taking.
 
FWIW - we do PIPs and have difficulty firing folks in the multiple Fortune 500 companies I’ve worked for. I’m not saying it’s exactly equal to the public sector, but IMO large corporations share much of the same inefficiencies as when I worked for the Federal Govt in DC. 🤷‍♂️
I’ve had the exact same experience working for multiple Fortune 500 companies. We had a guy who kept showing up drunk or high in one of our satellite offices. It wasn’t enough to observe him intoxicated — HR told us that we had to send him for a drug test to fire him. Or we could spend 6 months documenting how he was failing in his job. Even though we had customers complaining that he showed up drunk — if he showed up at all.

It was absolute insanity.
 
One thing not seeing talked about is the wording of the EO. So one of the attractions for my agency is the flexible work schedule. Same as plenty of other private companies. The EO states in office 5 days a week. Would they try to eliminate flexibility. Cause that would suck bigly. For us it's great because we end up with workers from 6am to 7pm so someone is here just in case. Plus losing that extra day off would be suck
 
The EO states in office 5 days a week.
Where does it say that? Full time does not equal straight 8s or prohibit AWS.

Heads of all departments and agencies in the executive branch of Government shall, as soon as practicable, take all necessary steps to terminate remote work arrangements and require employees to return to work in-person at their respective duty stations on a full-time basis, provided that the department and agency heads shall make exemptions they deem necessary.

This memorandum shall be implemented consistent with applicable law.
 
Military pension does not include a locality stipend (would have had to be more of a 1 year location instead of 3). Can definitely see it written to match since it already exists in legislature - and passing.
There’s a certain logic to this but military members don’t get locality in their pay, except the tax free BAH.
not completely true, our "high cost area's" get COLA. I get $129 a month for being stationed in Alameda, CA
 
The EO states in office 5 days a week.
Where does it say that? Full time does not equal straight 8s or prohibit AWS.

Heads of all departments and agencies in the executive branch of Government shall, as soon as practicable, take all necessary steps to terminate remote work arrangements and require employees to return to work in-person at their respective duty stations on a full-time basis, provided that the department and agency heads shall make exemptions they deem necessary.

This memorandum shall be implemented consistent with applicable law.
Hmm. It must have been part of his speech and not in the EO....
My bad
 
OPM issued guidance to department heads that they must revise their telework policy by COB Friday to state that all eligible employees must return to work full time and comply with such within 30 days.
 
OPM issued guidance to department heads that they must revise their telework policy by COB Friday to state that all eligible employees must return to work full time and comply with such within 30 days.
OPM memo is pretty trash calling government offices “virtually abandoned.” Most people are back at least couple of days per week from what I know. It is what it is, I guess.

My wife is basically saying that she wishes would fire her because of the demoralizing **** going on in the past couple days (more than telework).
 
FWIW - we do PIPs and have difficulty firing folks in the multiple Fortune 500 companies I’ve worked for. I’m not saying it’s exactly equal to the public sector, but IMO large corporations share much of the same inefficiencies as when I worked for the Federal Govt in DC. 🤷‍♂️
No way. You have to document, but not hard to fire people. Large companies just lay off faster than they fire
 
My wife’s department told today that they need to be in the office five days per week beginning Feb. 10. No telework ever, no exceptions. Not just going back to pre-Covid, but going back to pre-2010 telework policy.
 
My wife’s department told today that they need to be in the office five days per week beginning Feb. 10. No telework ever, no exceptions. Not just going back to pre-Covid, but going back to pre-2010 telework policy.

Wow. What was she doing until now?
In the office twice per week. Flexibility to pick which days. Worked from home the other three days.

ETA: Also works from home on the weekend frequently, and nights after getting home. But ripping up the telework agreement means no more weekend or after hours work from her because she legally can’t.
 
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everyday there is a new change and our leadership still has no answers, it’s been disheartening to say the least. I’m not sure i’ll remain active duty much longer with the way things are going
 
My wife’s department told today that they need to be in the office five days per week beginning Feb. 10. No telework ever, no exceptions. Not just going back to pre-Covid, but going back to pre-2010 telework policy.
Brutal. It's just so federal government. It really highlights all the non government employees negative opinion when the topic pops up. This just seems so easy to me. First you don't create a knee jerk reaction and end it all. Give it a year. You create a non biased workforce that investigates all employees telework production. You eliminate the bad and keep the good. The debate is the middle. It isn't all bad, but you gotta prove it. It's that crappy 5% that ruin this for everyone. People make opinions based on reading stories of just bad employees and ignore the good employees production. Imo
 
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Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
 
Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
I think it's the people who have to go to work 5 days a week? I dont get it. Why would I care if someone teleworks if they do their job? You do your job then all good. One thing to think about is not everyone can do it. My wife was a 5 day a week telework RN for the VA for 6 months. We thought we hit paydirt. She absolutely hated it and is back actually going to the hospital. I'm a veteran who has had countless doctors apts via computer at home. I love it. I get my prescriptions refilled from my couch. Eliminating that option sucks for me personally.
 
My wife’s department told today that they need to be in the office five days per week beginning Feb. 10. No telework ever, no exceptions. Not just going back to pre-Covid, but going back to pre-2010 telework policy.
Brutal. It's just so federal government. It really highlights all the non government employees negative opinion when the topic pops up. This just seems so easy to be. First you don't create a knee jerk reaction and end it all. Give it a year. You create a non biased workforce that investigates all employees telework production. You eliminate the bad and keep the good. The debate is the middle. It isn't all bad, but you gotta prove it. It's that crappy 5% that ruin this for everyone. People make opinions based on reading stories of just bad employees and ignore the good employees production. Imo
Yeah, my wife is attorney with 20 years of experience and manages team of other attorneys. Graduated from a top law school, and gave her career to the federal government. She’s had some of her best members already tell her that they will go find some place else that allows flexibility. Working for the federal government is a substantial pay cut relative to what attorneys make in the private sector; less pay and less flexibility than what can get elsewhere is not a winning strategy to retain good people. Just sucks that they are treating all employees like **** stuck to the bottom of their shoe that need to get rid of.
 
My wife’s department told today that they need to be in the office five days per week beginning Feb. 10. No telework ever, no exceptions. Not just going back to pre-Covid, but going back to pre-2010 telework policy.
Brutal. It's just so federal government. It really highlights all the non government employees negative opinion when the topic pops up. This just seems so easy to be. First you don't create a knee jerk reaction and end it all. Give it a year. You create a non biased workforce that investigates all employees telework production. You eliminate the bad and keep the good. The debate is the middle. It isn't all bad, but you gotta prove it. It's that crappy 5% that ruin this for everyone. People make opinions based on reading stories of just bad employees and ignore the good employees production. Imo
Yeah, my wife is attorney with 20 years of experience and manages team of other attorneys. Graduated from a top law school, and gave her career to the federal government. She’s had some of her best members already tell her that they will go find some place else that allows flexibility. Working for the federal government is a substantial pay cut relative to what attorneys make in the private sector; less pay and less flexibility than what can get elsewhere is not a winning strategy to retain good people. Just sucks that they are treating all employees like **** stuck to the bottom of their shoe that need to get rid of.
Unfortunately, retaining good people isn’t a factor. Every time I try to think optimistically about how I think this will play out , I have to remind myself what the real goal is.
 
Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
CA state govt did this last year. I’m not sure this is an issue that tribal affiliation easily maps onto
 
FWIW - we do PIPs and have difficulty firing folks in the multiple Fortune 500 companies I’ve worked for. I’m not saying it’s exactly equal to the public sector, but IMO large corporations share much of the same inefficiencies as when I worked for the Federal Govt in DC. 🤷‍♂️
No way. You have to document, but not hard to fire people. Large companies just lay off faster than they fire

I’ve worked at multiple Fortune 500 companies and some were easy to fire people and some were nearly impossible. It runs the gamut, but plenty of corporations are pretty monolithic.
 
Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
CA state govt did this last year. I’m not sure this is an issue that tribal affiliation easily maps onto
Everything that I’ve seen on California says just mandated two days per week in office.
The OPM memo cited the success of the DC government forcing everyone back in. I found it funny that they were pointing to the DC government as an example of doing something right.
 
Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
CA state govt did this last year. I’m not sure this is an issue that tribal affiliation easily maps onto
Everything that I’ve seen on California says just mandated two days per week in office.
It’s less draconian for sure, but the point stands and the discourse among employees mirrors this thread’s reactions.
 
everyday there is a new change and our leadership still has no answers, it’s been disheartening to say the least. I’m not sure i’ll remain active duty much longer with the way things are going
What are the key parts for active duty?
The JAG corps is already having a major recruiting problem, Army anyway.
 
Yeah, my wife is attorney with 20 years of experience and manages team of other attorneys. Graduated from a top law school, and gave her career to the federal government. She’s had some of her best members already tell her that they will go find some place else that allows flexibility. Working for the federal government is a substantial pay cut relative to what attorneys make in the private sector; less pay and less flexibility than what can get elsewhere is not a winning strategy to retain good people. Just sucks that they are treating all employees like **** stuck to the bottom of their shoe that need to get rid of.
Our office has already lost two great attorneys.
We will lose more.
Thankfully our leaders have taken a wait and see approach but we all know what’s coming.
At least DoD seems to be exempt from the hiring freeze.
I could leave and we’d be fine, this might be the time to pursue a few things I was going to wait a few years to do. At least to have more options.
 
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Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
Thought the point was to make people quit
It is and I suspect it follows the same course the covid vaccine mandate did.

People will either comply or fight it. Those easy to be separated will and those who drag it out probably win because the inefficientcy of the government.
 
I think it's been shown that the government doesn't value its employees. We lose good people to the private sector all the time because the Government wage isn't keeping pace. Working conditions are generally better within the private sector. The biggest pro is job stability within the government, but that also leads to the issue of workers doing just enough to get by.

The latest 2% pay raise isn't even keeping up with inflation which is sad when the government is also saying that wage growth is outpacing inflation.
 
I think it's been shown that the government doesn't value its employees. We lose good people to the private sector all the time because the Government wage isn't keeping pace. Working conditions are generally better within the private sector. The biggest pro is job stability within the government, but that also leads to the issue of workers doing just enough to get by.

The latest 2% pay raise isn't even keeping up with inflation which is sad when the government is also saying that wage growth is outpacing inflation.
100%. I remember when I got out of active duty military and went for a fed job. I got one, then started day 1 of my federal career. I would have to do 20 years for that agency, then my military would factor into my FERS retirement. They made a change. Now your military time starts in the beginning of your career. It is a decent incentive for military to enter the fed workforce.
 
Based on my family / acquaintances, nobody outside the FedGov really gets what the intent is, what is happening, and how it may effect them and the general competency of this country. Clearly the operating theory is that if you break it bad enough, you can then justify emergency declarations and autocratic rule. Freaking scary.
That and the "write to this email address to snitch on your fellow employees" about DEI stuff.
 
The latest 2% pay raise isn't even keeping up with inflation which is sad when the government is also saying that wage growth is outpacing inflation.
I got 3% last year and 2.5% the year before in the private sector. Many jobs aren't keeping up with inflation and if you want a raise, you have to switch companies.
 
The latest 2% pay raise isn't even keeping up with inflation which is sad when the government is also saying that wage growth is outpacing inflation.
I got 3% last year and 2.5% the year before in the private sector. Many jobs aren't keeping up with inflation and if you want a raise, you have to switch companies.
I don't know of many jobs that really are keeping up, but the macro data says wages are outpacing inflation.
 
everyday there is a new change and our leadership still has no answers, it’s been disheartening to say the least. I’m not sure i’ll remain active duty much longer with the way things are going
What are the key parts for active duty?
The JAG corps is already having a major recruiting problem, Army anyway.
we are already short on people (CG), yes we met our recruiting goals last year but they are junior members who still have to go through A schools and then it's going to take a few years for them to know their heads from their asses. So we are going to double the missions that we are already doing with broken cutters and an aging helicopter fleet and not enough members, yep gonna work out great. Our base, which is a larger one, already has an issue with Doctors and our medical has now shifted our primary care services to an Air Force unit an hour away :wall:
 
The latest 2% pay raise isn't even keeping up with inflation which is sad when the government is also saying that wage growth is outpacing inflation.
I got 3% last year and 2.5% the year before in the private sector. Many jobs aren't keeping up with inflation and if you want a raise, you have to switch companies.
I don't know of many jobs that really are keeping up, but the macro data says wages are outpacing inflation.
Mostly due to people changing companies. I know there are people 2 steps below me with less experience that make more money than I do. The reason is that they came into the company when the company was flush (~3 years ago) and negotiated well. I've been in the company 8 years. This is the way.
 
I think it's the people who have to go to work 5 days a week? I dont get it. Why would I care if someone teleworks if they do their job? You do your job then all good. One thing to think about is not everyone can do it.
This is really the bottom line (or it should be the bottom line). Do you get your work done? If so, does it matter where you do it? Also, there are some jobs that have to be done in the office. In those cases remote working is not an option. It has nothing to do with fairness. You chose a job that is hands on so you have to be hands on to do it. Someone else chose a job they can do on a computer from anywhere. So they can remote work. It's not that difficult.

It's another instance of people caring more about other people than just doing their thing. It sucks.

I have to be in the office most of the time. Being a facility engineer means if something goes wrong at a building I have to be there to figure it out. There are times when I could be at home in meetings or answering emails and there are times I need to be at the facility fixing things. I couldn't care less if you can do your whole job at home. Great less people to complain about how hot/cold it is in the office.

I know in may organization they made some positions 100% telework and ended up getting rid of a lot of real estate because it wasn't needed. Saved a bunch of money. Now we are shifting back (obviously) to everyone in the office. Not sure where those people are going to sit now. It just makes zero sense.

Bottom line is if you get your work done why does it matter where you sit?
 
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We got the mandate but no formal plan or date yet. I'll go back and be miserable. I did it for 12 years before COVID so.

As mentioned 1000 times. I will go into my cube and remotely log in to our servers exactly like I do at home. To support some one from California..... Heavy sigh.

Guess I'll start taking the longer non toll direction to try and save some $$ a little
 
Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
CA state govt did this last year. I’m not sure this is an issue that tribal affiliation easily maps onto
Everything that I’ve seen on California says just mandated two days per week in office.
I imagine after all the popcorn headlines and seeing how bad things are going we will revert back to something like 3 days in office next year.
 
Who is clamoring for all these people to get back into the office? I don't get it. Don't people from all political persuasions like remote work?
CA state govt did this last year. I’m not sure this is an issue that tribal affiliation easily maps onto
Everything that I’ve seen on California says just mandated two days per week in office.
I imagine after all the popcorn headlines and seeing how bad things are going we will revert back to something like 3 days in office next year.
As long as my AWS stays in place it's really only adding a total of 3 days back in office every pay period so not the end of the world. I will just have to use more time for appointments than before so instead of putting 1 hours in of leave it'll be 3

Prior to COVID we were allowed to telework here and there if need be, I would hope minimally that at least stands
 
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We got the mandate but no formal plan or date yet. I'll go back and be miserable. I did it for 12 years before COVID so.

As mentioned 1000 times. I will go into my cube and remotely log in to our servers exactly like I do at home. To support some one from California..... Heavy sigh.

Guess I'll start taking the longer non toll direction to try and save some $$ a little
Sorry man. Hate it for you and others.
 
Bottom line is if you get your work done why does it matter where you sit?
“Collaboration”
I say somewhat jokingly, but the line we’ve been given is largely about learning from each other. As it is we communicate almost as often while WFH as in the office. Also my group is all experienced (14s and 15s, I think the most junior person has been an attorney 16 years) so we’re not mentoring junior members of our team.
 
We got the mandate but no formal plan or date yet. I'll go back and be miserable. I did it for 12 years before COVID so.

As mentioned 1000 times. I will go into my cube and remotely log in to our servers exactly like I do at home. To support some one from California..... Heavy sigh.

Guess I'll start taking the longer non toll direction to try and save some $$ a little
Sorry man. Hate it for you and others.
Thanks but not end of the world /first world problems hopefully. If that's the worst of it so be it. It's just annoying as it's a blanket change with really no thought put into it. Not trying to be political buts it's not the first time a random policy has been put in place that makes little sense to our groups.

We have real concern about people being let go that are hard workers. I work in specialized tech support for the country and we are already short staffed and hired a couple months ago. They are legit worried they will cancel their employment
 
Bottom line is if you get your work done why does it matter where you sit?
“Collaboration”
I say somewhat jokingly, but the line we’ve been given is largely about learning from each other. As it is we communicate almost as often while WFH as in the office. Also my group is all experienced (14s and 15s, I think the most junior person has been an attorney 16 years) so we’re not mentoring junior members of our team.
I have heard that as a reason for being in the office together and I have no doubt that there are some jobs where that is a benefit and because of that there should be office time together. Again, it's not a once size fits all situation. Just because particular jobs benefit from collaboration or need to be hands on in an office or at a job site doesn't mean all jobs fit that paradigm.
 

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