Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised that no one has ever uncovered the officer to GS scam. They spend the last few years of their active duty time lining up the GS gig then double dipping while continuing to hang out with their buddies. The ones that actually have a little ambition sell their Rolodex to a contractor and "consult" with their buddies. It's pretty unbelievable to see in action.
Yes DOD - so it's common to RIF lower grades and then hire higher graded positions at the same time?
I guess it just doesn't make sense to me from a budget perspective - if I am cutting my household spending, I don't stop buying generic paper towels but then start buying the most expensive toilet paper or something.
Anonymous wrote:But a RIF doesn't necessarily mean that the agency can't hire or has no money to hire. A RIF can also be done for reasons such as reorganization, lack of work for particular positions etc. So they can hire for other jobs, and people can be promoted for other positions.
Have you looked on OPM's site re: RIFs? http://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/workforce-restructuring/reductions-in-force/#url=3
Anonymous wrote:thanks - I've read that....but one woman has been notified her position is slated to go away. 4 people in her office have retired and she is now the only one doing the work of 5 people. And she is still being RIFd. So what I'm trying to understand is how something like that is justified.
Is money not money? Are they supposed to do desk audits and PD reviews to see if there are savings there?
I'm just trying to understand the whole justification of essentially firing people who aren't bad performers while making sure no colonel is left behind