Anonymous wrote:You guys are insane suggesting you’ll stay late. If it’s going back to 1985, you have to operate like it’s 1985. No after hour calls.
Anonymous wrote:What are people’s thoughts on core hours? I am thinking I would want to get in as early as possible (630 or so) and leave by 230 to avoid some of the traffic and have more time with my family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"If an employee’s official duty station is more than 50 miles from any existing agency office, the agency should take steps to move the employee’s duty station to the most appropriate agency office based on the employee’s duties and job function."
What does this part mean? Can someone please translate?
Anonymous wrote:Ding ding ding. Here was the reasonable answer- make it easier for middle managers to monitor and fire under performers
We definitely don't have many of those at DOJ, at least in terms of attorneys.
Anonymous wrote:What are people’s thoughts on core hours? I am thinking I would want to get in as early as possible (630 or so) and leave by 230 to avoid some of the traffic and have more time with my family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Though Feds may hate RTO, they did it for themselves. As others have said, Fed employees are outliers in every community regarding actions that make neighbors question their dedication to their jobs, ones that oftentimes pay very well and have outsized benefits.
The typical Fed employee response to this is that others are just jealous. Well, yes…or a sense that taxpayers are paying for freeloaders, which seems unfair. Ultimately, people don’t like being treated differently for similar work, and increasingly private-sector workers feel that they are treated differently than public workers. And no, the solution isn’t for all private-sector workers to get a government job. The answer is for public-sector workers to RTO.
Most of the white collar private sector workers I know are able to work from home at least some of the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The typical Fed employee response to this is that others are just jealous. Well, yes…or a sense that taxpayers are paying for freeloaders, which seems unfair. Ultimately, people don’t like being treated differently for similar work, and increasingly private-sector workers feel that they are treated differently than public workers. And no, the solution isn’t for all private-sector workers to get a government job. The answer is for public-sector workers to RTO.
How was it not equal/fair for comparable jobs? I am a DOJ attorney, and was 3 days per week in the office, more if you had an argument or in person depo scheduled another day. My friends at DC firms are also 3 days per week in the office, more if you have a particular in-office obligation.
A fair and very reasonable position. Unfortunately, there are too many Feds who don’t come in to the office, ever, and they blatantly disregard the suggested RTO policy, which is something that you cannot do in the private sector without losing your job.
Well said. For every Fed worker who has similar work location requirements as the private sector, there are many who do not. And for those who do, many do not follow them. The overall impression is that Fed workers are shirking and/or that their managers are not holding employees accountable. Essentially, separate from any productivity argument, Fed worker optics are pretty bad.
Anonymous wrote:Ding ding ding. Here was the reasonable answer- make it easier for middle managers to monitor and fire under performers
We definitely don't have many of those at DOJ, at least in terms of attorneys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The typical Fed employee response to this is that others are just jealous. Well, yes…or a sense that taxpayers are paying for freeloaders, which seems unfair. Ultimately, people don’t like being treated differently for similar work, and increasingly private-sector workers feel that they are treated differently than public workers. And no, the solution isn’t for all private-sector workers to get a government job. The answer is for public-sector workers to RTO.
How was it not equal/fair for comparable jobs? I am a DOJ attorney, and was 3 days per week in the office, more if you had an argument or in person depo scheduled another day. My friends at DC firms are also 3 days per week in the office, more if you have a particular in-office obligation.
A fair and very reasonable position. Unfortunately, there are too many Feds who don’t come in to the office, ever, and they blatantly disregard the suggested RTO policy, which is something that you cannot do in the private sector without losing your job.
Well said. For every Fed worker who has similar work location requirements as the private sector, there are many who do not. And for those who do, many do not follow them. The overall impression is that Fed workers are shirking and/or that their managers are not holding employees accountable. Essentially, separate from any productivity argument, Fed worker optics are pretty bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NAME ONE WHITE COLLAR JOB THAT CAN NEVER EVER TELEWORK. ILL WAIT.
Right? Telework benefits the employer. They love having access to employees 24/7.
+1.
Well now they can’t have access to me 24/7. No TW agreement= no TW. I’ll be basking in the sun at 4pm on Fridays. No more late calls or hopping on at the last min. Hooray! Maybe in some weird way this is a blessing in disguise. My white collar friends will be putting in 50+hrs and I’ll just have my 40hrs on the books in person-boom.
This won’t work. Management will just give you a bad performance review and will get rid of you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The typical Fed employee response to this is that others are just jealous. Well, yes…or a sense that taxpayers are paying for freeloaders, which seems unfair. Ultimately, people don’t like being treated differently for similar work, and increasingly private-sector workers feel that they are treated differently than public workers. And no, the solution isn’t for all private-sector workers to get a government job. The answer is for public-sector workers to RTO.
How was it not equal/fair for comparable jobs? I am a DOJ attorney, and was 3 days per week in the office, more if you had an argument or in person depo scheduled another day. My friends at DC firms are also 3 days per week in the office, more if you have a particular in-office obligation.
A fair and very reasonable position. Unfortunately, there are too many Feds who don’t come in to the office, ever, and they blatantly disregard the suggested RTO policy, which is something that you cannot do in the private sector without losing your job.
Ding ding ding. Here was the reasonable answer- make it easier for middle managers to monitor and fire under performers