No that’s not what I meant. I was just responding to the PP that implied FCPS SACC doesn’t open on delayed days. And I have a child that doesn’t use before care, which definitely causes issues if we have a delay, so I understand the problem. |
Pay for care. |
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The roads are fine. If your kid has a late start, and your boss won’t approve a couple of hours of situational telework in this instance (I would), take leave.
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Fed here- situational telework is absolutely not allowed for this and managers can get in trouble for approving. (I would prefer my employees telework instead of taking leave, but apparently no one cares about the actual work getting done) |
| Of the many school systems in the greater DC area, where local feds live, which one would you like OPM to coordinate with, OP? Yours? |
This is what it is. I saw all of you walking your dogs and standing on the sidelines late afternoon and doing pick up and carpool in the afternoon and chatting on the street and doing your grocery shopping and headed out to the gym. FOR YEARS. These are Feds I know on my street. I was happy for you all. Great life. A good salary for a great life. I sincerely never begrudged it even though I noticed and the thought did cross my mind, gee I wonder if these people are working at other hours? (Some probably are.) I think the gig is up is the answer. The pendulum swung really far the other way and it sucks for you all. Now you gotta deal. |
All they need to do is allow liberal leave when there is a weather event. It's not like it even "costs" them anything to allow it since feds will be using their annual leave. |
By "pay for care" do you mean "put your kid in before-care daily even though you normally don't need to and they could be home eating breakfast?" Or do you mean "pay for care but only show up to use it a few times a year"? Most providers will not tolerate the latter - SAAC, in particular, will kick you out if you are routinely absent. |
At Treasury it is. Childcare cancelled with less than 24 hours notice means telework allowed |
Since you know all of these things, go right ahead and make a plan. Like the rest of us. Sometimes life is hard, but I don't go around saying that I'm the victim of cruelty (as the OP did) when it's just a little bit complicated or annoying. |
Most providers have drop-in plans. Look into it. |
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Look, this administration is cruel to feds. They’re actively trying to be cruel to feds.
However, this is NOT one of those situations. This has happened every single year to one school district or another because unless a storm affects a significant part of the metro area, OPM is open. |
k I'm tired of private sector employees coming on here and spouting off in their smug know-it-all a-hole posts when, in fact, they are talking out their insanely large butt holes. The way workplaces are totally out of sync has always been stupid. We should work to fix this, not yell at people who point out how stupid it is and tell them suck it up. Make the system better. Don't be the old nasty grandpa talking about walking to school uphill both ways with no shoes. |
What a transparent lie. "Most" childcare providers are booked up, they are not taking drop-in kids and they certainly are not then delivering those kids to school. This is even less real than the do-good neighbor who will take your kids on a random morning. |
Stop lying. |