Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Do you guys really care if someone has their diploma or bar admission on their wall? Who gives a shit? Doesn't matter if they went to George Mason, George Washington, Georgetown, Florida International, or if they went they went to Kaplan or whatever school it was that created an online JD. A diploma is a diploma, and a degree is something to be proud of.
If you're shaming someone for putting a diploma on their wall, you are the problem. It is your problem that you're insecure that you are working at the same low-satisfaction ranked agency as folks from lower ranked schools. Maybe you should have worked harder and done better during OCI. Spend some time working on your anxiety over your situation, and less shit talking your hard working colleagues.
I don't think anyone cares. The reference to diplomas on the wall goes back to a troll post quoted above. The person hates the Board for some reason and spends a lot of time on insult posts about Board employees and their work.
The vast majority of criticisms about the Board in this thread relate to the toxic work environment. These are legitimate criticisms. You all need to stop focusing on the handful of sarcastic comments from one or two “trolls” and focus more on how to improve the work environment.
No one is "focusing" on the diploma troll, also known as the troll who thinks writing a 5 page SOC is the same as writing a 40 page decision.
Trust me, the Board has always had a challenging work environment due to the nature of production. The answer is to get on with it and be happy you have a secure job or find another place to work.
If you are actively being discriminated against file an EEO complaint or grievance or invest in a private attorney. You are not going to find a ton of sympathy for slowing down the work requirements in an agency that consistently has a backlog in the thousands.
Let’s be real, most BVA decisions are three to five pages long. Few decisions are more than 10 pages long. I’ve never seen a 40 page long BVA decision.
And, improving the toxic work environment at BVA doesn’t mean slowing down the work. Those two goals are not mutually inconsistent.
There’s a reason why BVA is near the bottom of work force quality of life surveys. But, on the bright side, BVA ranks higher than the Bureau of Prisons