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A 4 min. listen. Remote/Telework works:
https://www.npr.org/2025/01/23/nx-s1-5270752/president-trump-wants-remote-federal-workers-back-in-their-offices |
Because they are removing hybrid schedules for feds |
| Restaurant happy hours have been packed with remote feds. What will the restaurants do now. |
Oh, just shut up. |
Sure. I’m sure they all ask for the Fed discount and you’re a waiter at Applebees |
Let me guess, either you don’t live in the DC area, or your husband is a high earner in the private sector. My husband and I are both feds and would not be able to afford a nanny to drive our two elementary aged kids to activities. As others have mentioned camps alone offer garbage hours and after care to add on another $200 to a camp week that already costs $500 is cost prohibitive. Our kids were 2 and 5 when Covid hit and we sucked it up and maintained our work performance and duties even though it felt impossible. We had no help. This feels like a real “f you” after we have been dedicated career civil servants over many years for different administrations. We don’t have a problem with returning to the office, but, the extremism is the issue. Why strip people of flexibilities they had prior to Covid? Why suggest total eradication of telework? If we can even keep 1-2 days per week that will help most people feel like they can stay a little sane and manage all of their work/life balances and priorities. |
+1. |
Yep. Before Covid one of us got up at 5am to work 7-330 to be back in time for afternoon shuffle. We still paid for aftercare since traffic etc could throw a wrench. You need carpools, that was key. PP has a DH who teleworks 100%, no idea why she is freaking out, he should just take care of all the kid shuffling just like she has been. We worked with no one teleworking, but we live in an expensive, small, old shtshack because we prioritized shorter commutes over space and newness in housing. |
Its tone deaf to act like this is a brand new and insurmountable problem. Many people are working in person for the last few years, many of them have kids, and many of them are not high earners. Before and after care exists for a reason. If you cant flex your schedule you use it. And stop signing up for activities that start before 6pm. |
Yeah all the people saying, just hire a nanny to help after school, millions of people have managed this, are just laughable. Feds are middle class around here and no, we cannot afford a nanny or even a college student to give up their days to drive our kids to and from activities. Most likely we will have to manage on our own, sacrificing the little bit of personal time we have now and our last bits of sanity. And then guess what? Work performance will definitely not improve. |
Things have changed since 2019, at least in the DMV. Aftercare is much less available, for example. You all keep positing a time before but that time no longer exists. |
Before and aftercare are filled. Last year I was on the waitlist all year and never got in. Where do you live and how old are your children? What do you do for work? How much does your spouse earn? |
By elementary school, every family I knew had a spouse who worked part time or SAH (or was a teacher). That’s what you have to do to avoid having kids in aftercare till 6 or to manage any after school activities. |
| I have a fellow fed parent in the neighborhood and we're talking about trading off childcare. Our kids start school after 9 and we've both been on beforecare waitlists for years. |
Please. Like you wouldn’t be upset if you lost a pre-Covid job benefit, not based on your performance, not even based on your specific employer’s needs/metrics, rather based on some boot licking idiot’s bad data and pettiness. Yeah, we’ll deal. But I guarantee this isn’t going to improve government services. Telework flexibilities made us more nimble and responsive and frankly pretty happy employees (at least at my agency). |