Anonymous wrote:It's actually okay if he does not intend to give a contract to the contractor in exchange.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I asked because I work in the private sector for a fortune 500, and people in the private sector do it all the time for their children, relatives, neighbors' kids, friends, etc... I did it a few times myself. What is such a big deal about it?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I asked because I work in the private sector for a fortune 500, and people in the private sector do it all the time for their children, relatives, neighbors' kids, friends, etc... I did it a few times myself. What is such a big deal about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:934 here. Let me just add... Not sure why you are asking this for your DH. As a SES or a fed at any level, he should know this. If he doesn't, he really shouldn't be sitting where he is sitting.
Hopefully OP is just asking out of her own curiosity and not because her SES husband asked her. You are right that anyone at that level should know the answer.
OP here. How about a different scenario? How about DS reaching out to the PM at another agency that has nothing to do with DH and get the job that way? DH is not involved in the process at all.
The caveat is that this PM is also working for the same company as the PM being managed by DH. Both PMs know each other and the PM that hires DS knows who DH is.
Is this OK in this scenario?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not what you asked. You’re obviously attempting to figure out how to skirt it so that it does not look like anything is happening that is unethical.
If your son applies to Lockheed in an open competition and is hired onto a contract in which his Father has no connection, that’s okay.[b]
If he gets a job at Lockheed because his name was floated as the son of your husband, regardless of which contract, it’s unethical. Your husband already did the floating of his name, so it’s already improper if there is literally any connection between that string pulled and your son being hired. Now, if your husband gives his son’s resume to some friend who owns a contracting company in which your husband has no reasonable assumption there is anything to be gained from the connection, it’s fine.
What happens if the son applies to a company in open competition at company X and during the interview, the son mentioned that his father is an SES a a federal agency that company X has contract with; However, the son is applying for another contracting position at another federal agency that company X also has a contract with. What will happen then?
Anonymous wrote:Also - do contractors hire fresh out of school PMs? I’ve never met one. They usually start as Business Analyst or something.
Anonymous wrote:This is not what you asked. You’re obviously attempting to figure out how to skirt it so that it does not look like anything is happening that is unethical.
If your son applies to Lockheed in an open competition and is hired onto a contract in which his Father has no connection, that’s okay.[b]
If he gets a job at Lockheed because his name was floated as the son of your husband, regardless of which contract, it’s unethical. Your husband already did the floating of his name, so it’s already improper if there is literally any connection between that string pulled and your son being hired. Now, if your husband gives his son’s resume to some friend who owns a contracting company in which your husband has no reasonable assumption there is anything to be gained from the connection, it’s fine.