Yes, agree. Also, she said she was a Fed. |
| Playing music on speakers instead of using earphone. |
| OP, you are contributing to the perception that Feds have too much time on their hands and constantly nitpick about stupid things that do not matter. If you have extra time on your hands, read a book or do some soduku or something. |
What if you just don't get up to buzz them in?? |
hahahhahahahhahahahhahahah |
| People who poop at the office instead of doing it at home like a civilized person. |
I don't think my bowels really care that I'm in the office sooo....
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| We already had a long thread on office crapping. People are way too neurotic. |
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Your boss sounds cheap. The no-frills office where people have to pay for water, mints, coffee, tissues, etc is just amazing to me. I was part owner in a small business run by 6 employees and we still provided those things. Yes, we cut corners and some people did contribute their own things out-of-pocket (like tissues or candy) but if supplies ran out and no one had contributed, the business paid for those things to be replenished. And since we were all part-owners, it came out of all of our pockets.
However, if you have a problem with moochers, just stop providing and be blunt about it. For the guy who eats 2-3 pieces of public cake and asks you why you don't bring in snacks anymore, just say "Sorry, I realized that I was spending my own money paying for all those snacks and I'm the lowest paid person in the office, so I stopped." For the people who forget their badges, you make them wait a few minutes or have to buzz 2-3 times when they do and if they express annoyance about having to wait just say "Sorry, I was in the middle of something when you buzzed. I got here as soon as I was free." and let them realize how inconvenient it is for everyone. Also in our office, the receptionist keeps a handful of "guest badges" that can be signed out to regular visitors (like the HVAC or copier repair crew who we see regularly) or visitors for long meetings/conferences and employees who forget. The badge is signed out to the individual and signed back in when it is returned. If the badge is not returned on time, then the badge is canceled in the system so that it is worthless as a key and they issue a replacement. We keep about 4-5 such badges at a time. |
| This thread blows my mind. All feds, I assume? |
I complained about the speakerphone thing. Not a fed. |
| Old workers who should just retire already. Nothing but pests hanging around. Nobody wants you here. You know, where we actually do work. |
| People who chronically bit h at work, but don't have a solution. |
| People who clip their nails in their cubicle. So gross to listen to the noise or walk past their desk and see a little pile of nails that they couldn't even bother to put in the trash (yet for some reason felt the compulsion to sweep into a little mound on the corner of their desk). We have three people (out of seventy) who regularly clip their nails in the office. One of them does his toe nails too. Blech! |
One day you'll be an old worker. Sure, you say now that you won't be like "them," but wait until you've had a few decades of the same old thing day in and day out, the same old office politics, the same old barriers to change. It will wear you down, too, and unless you're amassing a fortune, you'll still need the paycheck. As for the "nobody wants you here," speak for yourself. We've had a few of our long-time people retire, and the office has changed dramatically -- not for the better. All of the new younger people are arrogant, pompous, think their work is perfect (when it's not) and think they know it all. I miss the old folks. |