Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before we talk about a mass exodus, read the agreement carefully.
The condition for granting remote work is "The employee’s duties require less than 16 hours per bi-weekly pay period at the agency worksite."
And you know who gets to decide that? Management. There is nothing in there about clear criteria for when "duties require."
I think maybe wait and see how many people actually get approved.
Eh. For HHS, who needs to go to the worksite except for people in a lab? They're office jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Before we talk about a mass exodus, read the agreement carefully.
The condition for granting remote work is "The employee’s duties require less than 16 hours per bi-weekly pay period at the agency worksite."
And you know who gets to decide that? Management. There is nothing in there about clear criteria for when "duties require."
I think maybe wait and see how many people actually get approved.
Anonymous wrote:Lmao, people who have homes and are settled are not fleeing MoCo. Believe it or not, it’s a great county to raise a family.
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone likes living out in the country. I tried it for several years. It was not for me.
Anonymous wrote:I’m at NIH which employs a lot of MoCo residents, but it’s a mixture of residents across the DMW including Baltimore.
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone likes living out in the country. I tried it for several years. It was not for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The NTEU just won what looks like permanent WFH for eligible HHS employees:
https://www.nteu.org/~/media/Files/nteu/docs/public/hhs/2022/102622hhs-workplace-flexibilities-mou.pdf?la=en
And here they said this would never happen. How many people will now immediately be thinking about ditching the DMV because of traffic, HCOL, rising crime, etc.? HHS is a huge employer, especially in MoCo. How badly could MoCo get hammered if people flee since MoCo relies so much on govt jobs because the county just cannot grow its economy? If govt workers start fleeing en masse due to permanent remote work, this may make Thrive 2050 an awful idea.
There are so many implications here given that the HHS may be letting the cat out of the bag for other agencies to follow suit. So many areas of the country to potentially move to with far lower costs for families and better schools.
You have no idea of what you're talking about. Most government workers live in VA and NoVa contracting workforce and IT sweatshops rely heavily on the federal government.
Anonymous wrote:The NTEU just won what looks like permanent WFH for eligible HHS employees:
https://www.nteu.org/~/media/Files/nteu/docs/public/hhs/2022/102622hhs-workplace-flexibilities-mou.pdf?la=en
And here they said this would never happen. How many people will now immediately be thinking about ditching the DMV because of traffic, HCOL, rising crime, etc.? HHS is a huge employer, especially in MoCo. How badly could MoCo get hammered if people flee since MoCo relies so much on govt jobs because the county just cannot grow its economy? If govt workers start fleeing en masse due to permanent remote work, this may make Thrive 2050 an awful idea.
There are so many implications here given that the HHS may be letting the cat out of the bag for other agencies to follow suit. So many areas of the country to potentially move to with far lower costs for families and better schools.