| Yes. I love my agency, believe in its mission, and love my work. I feel truly fortunate. |
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Ditto, PP. I work for the staff of an independent (nonpartisan) advisory board. We provide expertise to Congress. We have a board of experts who meet regularly to set the research agenda, review the staff analyses and make recommendations based on the analyses to Congress. I manage all aspects of my research projects, from planning to data analysis to writing to making presentations. The work is generally very interesting, I believe strongly in our mission, and I think we provide an invaluable product to Congress (and thus to taxpayers). I would hate to think of Congress making decisions on these programs without our input. My colleagues are smart, hard-working, dedicated people and generally terrific to work with.
I could make much more money in the private sector, but I am paid well enough (more than most Americans) and have good benefits and job security. And I'm proud of the contribution I make. |
| yes, believe in the mission, fair pay, overworked, but enjoy the job |
Do you feel like a cog or you work at a white collar sweatshop? |
| Yes. I work for NIH and my office is four miles from my house. hours are good. Work is a little boring. But because I am a single mom - logistically it works out great for now. |
| Yes, I like my job. I am a Federal Librarian. I was in a another agency for a long time where the legal librarians were poorly treated. I hated that job. I have moved to another agency and I really like the job and my colleagues. I am grateful to have work! |
| Love it- Federal Law Enforcemet. More years in than I have left to go. Great benefits. Can't complain. |
I am the writer of that post. My hours are so flexible that I don't feel like I work in a sweatshop. I have no trouble meeting the requirements of the job and I am able to take time of when I need to. I've received outstanding ratings for the last 15 years. I do joke that I essentially "make widgets" but that is also my choice. If I wanted to do other things within the agency it would require me to go into the office more often. It is a tradeoff. I can't speak for the people on the Patent side. They may feel differently. Personally, I've always viewed law firm work as a white collar sweatshop. That said, there are days in which I do regret not having worked at a law firm when I had the chance. |
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I find it sad that most of the posters who love their fed jobs love them because they're easy and flexible.
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I agree with you, PP. |
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I find it sad that is what you took from this thread.
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+1 |
I hope that car is used FOUO (for official use only) or your ass should be chopped liver since you know you're not permitted to even make a personal detour with it coming to & from work. I just retired after 26 yrs., attorney, last 21+ in a law enf. arm of a regulatory agency. Did not enjoy the last 7 yrs. or so with increasingly amateurish and arrogant management but overall, yes I enjoyed it (though I have a hard time recommending a federal career starting now). For the PP I'm quoting, I'm hoping you know & understand the rules and abide by them, if you don't shame on you, you're doing a disservice to thousands who do and don't play fast and loose. |
Not the PP you quote but I'm the one who retired after 26 yrs. I did not feel like a cog or that I worked at a white collar sweatshop. I worked for an agency whose mission I believed in, even if many of the career and political managers were clueless buffoons or worse. I took management positions for 20+ years even though it was not what I sought (unlike many of the striving narcissists who do seek out SES and other management jobs) because, as I joked to one friend 20+ yrs. ago, "if I take the job at least I know which asshole is in charge and they have to come through me" to get certain things done. I held my subordinates, managers, and peers, to standards, and they didn't always like it but I was known as an honest broker who was not going to cowtow to further their agendas. I had enough substantive expertise and independent portfolio to be able to manage up and make sure that they could not push me out. After 26 years I left on my terms, not theirs. I have no regrets at leaving and colleagues tell me the level of absurdity and amateurism has (regrettably) only increased in the short time since I left. I think my situation is somewhat unique, but I don't think the 2 choices you posit are a binary set ... there are other possibilities, too. |
And I know dozens (DOZENS) of associates and partners at BigLaw firms who hate their work and the absurd time commitments, and agree that it isn't necessarily harder than what I or my colleagues did/do, yet they wish they could get jobs in our office when they open up. I think you're focus it out of focus. Difficult, inflexible jobs are not necessarily good things or things people seek out, or feel good about having. |