Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Does it really matter? It seems like the important considerations is how you would be able to help in disaster relief efforts. If you were really a leader you would approach issues as an opportunity to turn around a place that executes an important mission. But it seems like you're more concerned about your work environment and career advancement than executing FEMA's critical mission.
There's a lot more to FEMA than disaster relief. And I prefer not go somewhere where my ability to succeed is directly impacted by a group uninterested in working or doing the bare minimum to get paid and not fired. I know this is a problem across government, but there are some places worse than others...
Fair enough. FEMA has hr, it, admin, etc like other agencies. I've dealt with FEMA and I've met many caring people who were not there to collect a paycheck. They cared about the importance of the mission to get people back on their feet after catastrophic events. All while dealing with the insane politics, red tape of a huge bureaucracy, adverse public opinion and other headwinds. Every agency has bad apples. FEMA's career staff is caring and professional in my experience. The political staff can be ridiculous sometimes.