Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again: it’s not the responsibility of federal workers to support downtown “restaurants.”
Maybe not, but it is the responsibility of the federal government to care about the variability of restaurants in our economy.
You’re a civil servant….so that means you.
Anonymous wrote:Again: it’s not the responsibility of federal workers to support downtown “restaurants.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re still home 5 days per week. My agency got rid of office space and we don’t even have room for everyone to go in anywhere. No indication we’ll be going back.
We’re probably in the same agency. Have only been in twice since 3/2020– to renew creds and to clean out my office space. The lease on our DC area buildings ran out. HQ not DC based or reasonably commutable. There is very limited hoteling downtown if needed and that’s it. Feel pretty safe in 5 days a week telework being permanent because they spent several years trying to move our offices to a new space and got nowhere. Starting from scratch isn’t realistic.
We just started Union negotiations. Looks like the big issue isn’t keeping 5 days a week. It’s whether we are FT telework/ must live in the DMV or become fully remote/ can live anywhere. Come on fully remote!
Fully remote could lose lose DC locality. Unless you’re moving to a more expensive place you’d lose money. So come on pay reduction!
People where I work are fighting to keep DC pay and live in areas with lower locality. Problem is we have people already in those localities at other sites and they don’t get DC pay and also, it’s a massive waste of public money to pay people like that but they want what they want and whine over it. Personally, I think if they want to move they should take the locality of where they live or suck up the cost to come to the home office like everyone else. I have literally no sympathy. Anyone who thought they could move to South Carolina and keep DC pay only coming in once a quarter was dreaming and unrealistic.
That's a settled matter at my agency. You moved to a lower COL area, your locality is adjusted accordingly.
Yeah I thought OMB policy was very clear on this. Two of my coworkers went remote and took the lower locality pay (happily). It's actually been harder for people in the greater DMV area to get remote approved because it's hard to prove "benefit to the agency" with the same pay but agency responsibility for travel costs.
Anonymous wrote:You federal leeches are pathetic. Fighting to keep remote work, where you know you do less than when you come to the office, and at the same time fighting for the ability to move away from the DMV and keep DMV salaries? Makes me sick. You should be ashamed of yourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You federal leeches are pathetic. Fighting to keep remote work, where you know you do less than when you come to the office, and at the same time fighting for the ability to move away from the DMV and keep DMV salaries? Makes me sick. You should be ashamed of yourselves.
What I hear you saying is that you prefer for federal employees to be working from expensive office buildings in higher COL cities like DC? You don’t want to take advantage of technology that’s now available so employees no longer need to go into the office?
Let me guess….you also don’t believe in maternity leave and would rather a woman drop out of the workforce and stop paying taxes and possible never return to work versus six months of paid leave?
And one more thing, nice try when you turn this into a woman issue. It’s not a woman issue. It’s a gender neutral issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You federal leeches are pathetic. Fighting to keep remote work, where you know you do less than when you come to the office, and at the same time fighting for the ability to move away from the DMV and keep DMV salaries? Makes me sick. You should be ashamed of yourselves.
What I hear you saying is that you prefer for federal employees to be working from expensive office buildings in higher COL cities like DC? You don’t want to take advantage of technology that’s now available so employees no longer need to go into the office?
Let me guess….you also don’t believe in maternity leave and would rather a woman drop out of the workforce and stop paying taxes and possible never return to work versus six months of paid leave?
Amazing. Company after company in the private sector has concluded that remote work isn’t working and it’s not increasing productivity and you really expect me to believe that the situation is the opposite with the federal government workers in their cushy jobs? You’re full of it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You federal leeches are pathetic. Fighting to keep remote work, where you know you do less than when you come to the office, and at the same time fighting for the ability to move away from the DMV and keep DMV salaries? Makes me sick. You should be ashamed of yourselves.
What I hear you saying is that you prefer for federal employees to be working from expensive office buildings in higher COL cities like DC? You don’t want to take advantage of technology that’s now available so employees no longer need to go into the office?
Let me guess….you also don’t believe in maternity leave and would rather a woman drop out of the workforce and stop paying taxes and possible never return to work versus six months of paid leave?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You federal leeches are pathetic. Fighting to keep remote work, where you know you do less than when you come to the office, and at the same time fighting for the ability to move away from the DMV and keep DMV salaries? Makes me sick. You should be ashamed of yourselves.
What I hear you saying is that you prefer for federal employees to be working from expensive office buildings in higher COL cities like DC? You don’t want to take advantage of technology that’s now available so employees no longer need to go into the office?
Let me guess….you also don’t believe in maternity leave and would rather a woman drop out of the workforce and stop paying taxes and possible never return to work versus six months of paid leave?
Anonymous wrote:You federal leeches are pathetic. Fighting to keep remote work, where you know you do less than when you come to the office, and at the same time fighting for the ability to move away from the DMV and keep DMV salaries? Makes me sick. You should be ashamed of yourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re still home 5 days per week. My agency got rid of office space and we don’t even have room for everyone to go in anywhere. No indication we’ll be going back.
We’re probably in the same agency. Have only been in twice since 3/2020– to renew creds and to clean out my office space. The lease on our DC area buildings ran out. HQ not DC based or reasonably commutable. There is very limited hoteling downtown if needed and that’s it. Feel pretty safe in 5 days a week telework being permanent because they spent several years trying to move our offices to a new space and got nowhere. Starting from scratch isn’t realistic.
We just started Union negotiations. Looks like the big issue isn’t keeping 5 days a week. It’s whether we are FT telework/ must live in the DMV or become fully remote/ can live anywhere. Come on fully remote!
Fully remote could lose lose DC locality. Unless you’re moving to a more expensive place you’d lose money. So come on pay reduction!
People where I work are fighting to keep DC pay and live in areas with lower locality. Problem is we have people already in those localities at other sites and they don’t get DC pay and also, it’s a massive waste of public money to pay people like that but they want what they want and whine over it. Personally, I think if they want to move they should take the locality of where they live or suck up the cost to come to the home office like everyone else. I have literally no sympathy. Anyone who thought they could move to South Carolina and keep DC pay only coming in once a quarter was dreaming and unrealistic.
That's a settled matter at my agency. You moved to a lower COL area, your locality is adjusted accordingly.