Anonymous wrote:People who can point to an exact law Congress enacted that justifies their job, and are superior at doing said job. Most people in government have survived by inserting themselves into the 23-step approval process for anything and they’re glorified paper pushers with the title assistant deputy to the deputy chief’s assistant. That’s all going away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter. With that level of cuts, those who remain cannot do the work the American people's elected officials have voted for them to do. Our tax dollars are now being wasted because there aren't enough people left to do the work we paid for.
That’s why it will all be outsourced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So in answering this question as if we were in a sane environment following the law. Since that is not true what I am saying is not necessarily going to happen but this is basically how a rif works in the federal government. First specific job series are identified. Eg 0905 (attorneys). Then specific grade levels where there is a surplus are identified. In those grade levels they look at seniority. Performance appraisals serve like a tie breaker. If you are covered by a collective bargaining agreement it will also include some rif provisions
This is how a normal RIF works, but this isn't what Trump is doing. He's picking specific sections and getting rid of them -- all DEIA, or all Policy. And then they are defining the competitive area to be just that unit, so the people being RIFed don't have any chance of being transferred elsewhere. THIS CANNOT BE LEGAL, BUT IT DOESN'T APPEAR THAT ANYONE CARES. Why is no one suing over this?
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter. With that level of cuts, those who remain cannot do the work the American people's elected officials have voted for them to do. Our tax dollars are now being wasted because there aren't enough people left to do the work we paid for.
Anonymous wrote:People who can point to an exact law Congress enacted that justifies their job, and are superior at doing said job. Most people in government have survived by inserting themselves into the 23-step approval process for anything and they’re glorified paper pushers with the title assistant deputy to the deputy chief’s assistant. That’s all going away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So in answering this question as if we were in a sane environment following the law. Since that is not true what I am saying is not necessarily going to happen but this is basically how a rif works in the federal government. First specific job series are identified. Eg 0905 (attorneys). Then specific grade levels where there is a surplus are identified. In those grade levels they look at seniority. Performance appraisals serve like a tie breaker. If you are covered by a collective bargaining agreement it will also include some rif provisions
This is how a normal RIF works, but this isn't what Trump is doing. He's picking specific sections and getting rid of them -- all DEIA, or all Policy. And then they are defining the competitive area to be just that unit, so the people being RIFed don't have any chance of being transferred elsewhere. THIS CANNOT BE LEGAL, BUT IT DOESN'T APPEAR THAT ANYONE CARES. Why is no one suing over this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who can point to an exact law Congress enacted that justifies their job, and are superior at doing said job. Most people in government have survived by inserting themselves into the 23-step approval process for anything and they’re glorified paper pushers with the title assistant deputy to the deputy chief’s assistant. That’s all going away.
Yep. I am not wishing for anyone to lose their jobs but as an experienced private sector veteran, corporations reduce their headcounts all the time for fiscal reasons and low performers are gently laid off. It's clear Trump is looking for a more resilient, nimble and efficient government and part of that has to be much greater flexibility to change the personnel as needs require rather than a system of institutional tenure that shuffles low performers from department to department.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elon Musk is all for merit based. More than anything, they will look at performance ratings
I hope so! I have some employees who have been on and off pips for years. They are veterans though so they’ll probably be the only ones not fired. I’m sure they’ll run my program into the ground.
Anonymous wrote:Elon Musk is all for merit based. More than anything, they will look at performance ratings
Anonymous wrote:So in answering this question as if we were in a sane environment following the law. Since that is not true what I am saying is not necessarily going to happen but this is basically how a rif works in the federal government. First specific job series are identified. Eg 0905 (attorneys). Then specific grade levels where there is a surplus are identified. In those grade levels they look at seniority. Performance appraisals serve like a tie breaker. If you are covered by a collective bargaining agreement it will also include some rif provisions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who can point to an exact law Congress enacted that justifies their job, and are superior at doing said job. Most people in government have survived by inserting themselves into the 23-step approval process for anything and they’re glorified paper pushers with the title assistant deputy to the deputy chief’s assistant. That’s all going away.
Yep. I am not wishing for anyone to lose their jobs but as an experienced private sector veteran, corporations reduce their headcounts all the time for fiscal reasons and low performers are gently laid off. It's clear Trump is looking for a more resilient, nimble and efficient government and part of that has to be much greater flexibility to change the personnel as needs require rather than a system of institutional tenure that shuffles low performers from department to department.
“Experienced private sector veteran” = “I feel certain I know a ton of stuff about the inner workings of the federal government, which I never though about before until yesterday.”
Private sector with a lot of federal contracting exposure. There's plenty of grift in the government and plenty of wastage and inefficient staffing. It can be a problem. It rewards some while bogging down others. No one wants to be told their job is useless or they do something that can be combined with multiple other roles in a private company. But it's true enough. "inner workings of the federal grovernment" means following endless arcane rules and processes delaying everything in order to protect one person's job or one little department that needs to justify its existence. Endless busywork and meetings and shuffling of papers.
Most people are not losing their jobs. We're not facing a situation where 80% are laid off. But I do see 30% being realistic.