Two butts one seat is answer. My company did two to cube when short of space. And two per office. Lots of folks quit as did not like it problem solved. |
+1, I know that kind of thing because it's in the union's presentation to members. But the PP saying SES can't just get office space is also true. Just because you see where the money is, doesn't mean you can change where it is. |
LOL, cute. My last agency was already 3 to a double cube, pre covid. Current agency is 2 to an office now, and it's a tight fit. Ever watch x-files and look at Mulder's giant basement office, that he's supposedly banished to? People would fight each other for that kind of office. |
I would not do that because I would be breaking a bunch of laws involving both procurement and spending. That may or may not stop someone else from doing it, of course. |
hi J1 J2 J3 guy, how many jobs you working now? moved into gov contracting construction? anyway, it's super easy in a private company to just yolo some office space together with a credit card and some skunkworks. But there are a whole bunch of actual laws around procurement and spending and contracting for federal agencies, and it turns out just yolo-ing it runs afoul of a lot of those laws. ALSO, a lot of the landlords with empty space in DC have the problem that they are nearly bankrupt and can't actually afford to pay the agents that hold the listings even if someone like the federal gov shows up with a pen to sign a lease, nor can they afford to pay to bring the spaces up to compliance with whatever will be put there. Will the federal gov decide to foot those bills (completely upfront) too? Could be a huge windfall for the leasing agents and the landlords, but it definitely wouldn't be legal. |
No. Some agencies have now spent YEARS downsizing office space and setting up 3-1 hoteling workstations. The idea was for 1or 2 days per week for each employee, not 5. They also don't have money to order anything or lease new office space. |