Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep the 13. Other opportunities will arise. If I kept my supervisory 14 instead of moving to a non-sup 14, I probably would have made a GS-15 within a year or two. But I had a daycare aged kid at the time and didn't want the demanding job. I love my current 14 and wouldn't risk taking a 15 for higher pay bc the job satisfaction (interesting work and awesome management) aren't worth giving up.
Thanks, OP here--thinking exactly this (and thanks to all others who've weighed in)! Mainly, I wanted to ensure I was making an informed decision, etc. If I'd taken this job with all the red flags, it would've been ample chaos, and my spouse is already at that level in a supervisory role so...yup. There will be other opportunities, I hope.
Anonymous wrote:Keep the 13. Other opportunities will arise. If I kept my supervisory 14 instead of moving to a non-sup 14, I probably would have made a GS-15 within a year or two. But I had a daycare aged kid at the time and didn't want the demanding job. I love my current 14 and wouldn't risk taking a 15 for higher pay bc the job satisfaction (interesting work and awesome management) aren't worth giving up.
Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a child in daycare, if you had the choice between a GS13 step 4 role that would stay GS13 for a decade+, but involved a lot of prestige (mostly involves work you 100% love, great but mostly busy colleagues dealing with lots of projects) versus a GS15 role ….
Advice either way? (Please be nice?)
Anonymous wrote:Are you ok with staying GS-13 for potentially a very long time? It's not that easy to jump grades and a GS-15 would be a long way off, if it is even an option for that position. I'd personally take the 15. Who's to say that the GS-13 job won't turn into a dumpster fire if your manager changes.
Anonymous wrote:This GS 15 position sounds like a dumpster fire rather than an opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused by the idea of a prestigious GS13.