Easier to get then federal and corporate jobs? |
Oh, this is disappointing. I’m glad you’re in decent place now. I’m older than you and was excited to apply for a couple openings recently. My degree is old. My jobs are all over the place - both in location and field. I thought I could finally do something that interested me now that we live here, and I was happy to take an entry level position. Can you tell me more about the realities? Is living close a necessity? Does anyone drive in from the suburbs or is parking too hard? Do you work weekends? Early mornings and late nights? Unnecessary stress and pressure? I have work experience but not a masters degree. Are there entry jobs that are more interesting than opening mail but don’t require a graduate degree? Can you tell me more about what made those few years hard to navigate? Thank you |
They are intellectually interesting, there’s a real camaraderie, and the proximity to power is dizzying. Is great work - I spent 25 years on the Hill and still miss it. |
I know two former staff assistants that got their jobs from giving bj’s and becoming fwb’s to the chief of staff Find chief of staff’s of offices you want to work in using legistorm and set up dates |
This but also proximity to power and if you get lucky you end up with massive assyemtric upside (like Tony blinken) |
Because the hill is a young person’s game |
Yes people come from all over. Each office is allocated a certain number of parking spots. If you don’t get one of those, parking is nearly impossible. There can be early mornings and late nights but for the staff assistant not as many. The unnecessary stress can came from having to please everyone. You’re the Face of the office so chiefs of staff can put a lot of pressure on you to make everyone feel welcome on top of your normal work. In addition to sorting mail, answering the phone, managing interns and get people set up on Capitol tours, you may also sort the constituent email and write form letters. It can be a grind because even a job on the hill doesn’t mean success later. You need to work for the right member, for enough time to be known while being an expert on a specific issue (Jack of all trades don’t do as well long term) and have a decent personality so people want to help you. Most promotions are all who you know because they are rarely posted. Even with the new pay increases, pay is much less than private sector jobs so you constantly feel behind. Also, there are a lot of young gunners who can be annoying but you feel like you have to compete with them so it’s a horrible cycle. |
Which office’s chief of staff was doling out jobs like this? |