JoAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most feds on this board are in exempt positions anyway so Schdule F doesn’t change anything. It only means something if you are in a non-exempt position.
Can the exempt positions already be fired at will?
Yes
So Trump wouldn’t even need Schedule F to clean house at DOJ, which I assume is his top priority.
Untrue. Most DOJ attorneys are in either the excepted service or the non-career SES. Both have protections currently. Only the super top brass politicals don’t. Schedule F would designate career employees as political in order to remove their job protections, after which they could be fired at will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most feds on this board are in exempt positions anyway so Schdule F doesn’t change anything. It only means something if you are in a non-exempt position.
Can the exempt positions already be fired at will?
Yes
So Trump wouldn’t even need Schedule F to clean house at DOJ, which I assume is his top priority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most feds on this board are in exempt positions anyway so Schdule F doesn’t change anything. It only means something if you are in a non-exempt position.
Can the exempt positions already be fired at will?
Yes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most feds on this board are in exempt positions anyway so Schdule F doesn’t change anything. It only means something if you are in a non-exempt position.
Can the exempt positions already be fired at will?
Anonymous wrote:Talk and action are two different things. For example, Republicans have been saying they want to abolish the Education Department for decades. It is still here, despite Republicans having had control of Congress and the White House.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By "freaking out" do you mean letting recruiters know that I might be more interested in their private industry positions than in the past?
The feds Schedule F would affect are the very feds who could probably make more money in private industry..
Very very different lifestyles. For many likely Schedule F, it would mean gov contracting/consulting, which is far more lucrative but requires you to do sales pitches and be on call far more.
Anonymous wrote:By "freaking out" do you mean letting recruiters know that I might be more interested in their private industry positions than in the past?
The feds Schedule F would affect are the very feds who could probably make more money in private industry..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My agency isn't particularly "political".
I came from private sector and have been a fed for several years now but, if need be, I can go back to private and most likely with higher pay due to my fed experience.
So no, I'm personally not freaking out at all.
If people are "freaking out", what do you want them to do about it? What is the point of this thread besides fear mongering?
This. I am not freaking out because why? I could move to the private sector now, but it's not like the private sector has any guarantees. Or I could wait and see and maybe get fired later, and move to the private sector then.
It feels like some of you have never had a significant job move, and don't think you could be employed if outside of the federal government.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most feds on this board are in exempt positions anyway so Schdule F doesn’t change anything. It only means something if you are in a non-exempt position.
Can the exempt positions already be fired at will?
“Excepted Service” can be fired at will.
Separately, SES can be reassigned to any other SES job at the whim of the government, which sometimes gets used to encourage someone to retire or quit.
That is straight up not true once you pass the probationary period an excepted service employee has full MSPB appeal rights.
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/employee-relations/employee-rights-appeals/#url=Appeals
Anonymous wrote:My agency isn't particularly "political".
I came from private sector and have been a fed for several years now but, if need be, I can go back to private and most likely with higher pay due to my fed experience.
So no, I'm personally not freaking out at all.
If people are "freaking out", what do you want them to do about it? What is the point of this thread besides fear mongering?
Anonymous wrote:I’m 48 and a GS15 supervisor in a job that deals with the southwest border. I stressed about it all the time. But then I saw that there is rulemaking in place, and the rulemaking would likely be litigated and/or withdrawn and that will take at least a couple of months. And then I suppose it would take at least a couple of months for me to be fired. So basically, I’m counting on hitting 50 and my agency offering early retirement. I’ve never wanted to be 50 so badly. Me and my staff are freaking out about it though.