Anonymous wrote:Daily reminder that the legislative agencies like CBO still have 2-3 days of telework
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many people at my work have started the reasonable accommodation process, and the office that handles those requests isn't answering emails.
HHS has like 8000 backlogged RA requests.
Are those people teleworking now before a decision on their RA request is made?
Anonymous wrote:We are allowed situational telework but it must be approved beforehand and must be documented. They claim to be monitoring it and we are told not to abuse it. It appears to be unevenly used throughout the agency, with some offices using it pretty regularly and other offices more strict. It's all dumb. I'm quitting within the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many people at my work have started the reasonable accommodation process, and the office that handles those requests isn't answering emails.
HHS has like 8000 backlogged RA requests.
Are those people teleworking now before a decision on their RA request is made?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many people at my work have started the reasonable accommodation process, and the office that handles those requests isn't answering emails.
HHS has like 8000 backlogged RA requests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a contractor at a federal agency, and I am allowed to telework four days a week, and one day in the office. Fed people have to be in the office five days a week, and they absolutely hate it.
Yes, our contractors can do full time telework while they do essentially the same job as the federal employees.
Anonymous wrote:We are back to precovid, 50% telework.
But can’t do three days in a row.
So, you have covid or are recovering from a GI bug you don’t want to share? Well, take a full day of sick leave. Especially annoying if you wake up sick the day after two days of telework.
A lot better than many agencies, but pre 2020 it was more come in about half the time, show up for important in person meetings and get your work done. Now it’s document the hell out of when you TW and take sick leave liberally to avoid extra TW
Anonymous wrote:So many people at my work have started the reasonable accommodation process, and the office that handles those requests isn't answering emails.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ad-hoc situational TW
Can use telework in a non-recurring manner:
Weather or public transportation disruptions
Before or after a dr's appt for yourself or a family member
To call in for an important mtg while on vacation
While taking care of a sick kid or when you are feeling under-the-weather but can still do a few hours of work
When you need to stay home to deal with a home repair
In short, it should be non-recurring in nature. You can't TW every Tuesday because you need to take your kid to his weekly therapy appt. It needs to be one-off usage.
Managers can also now approve 90 calendar day medical telework (self) or that related to family member caregiving. Employee can only utilize one of these 90-day reprieves in a 12 month period.
Anything longer requires a Reasonable Accommodation, which have been revoked or are very difficult to get.
This seems to be discriminatory as it’s penalizing any type of medical issues that require routine, regular care.