Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. I'm an attorney considering the CFPB too and am interested in the question a few people have asked but no one has answered - is it family friendly? How much travel is there, what are the hours like, etc.?
Depends on the Office. Which are you considering?
NP here. I'm an attorney considering the CFPB too and am interested in the question a few people have asked but no one has answered - is it family friendly? How much travel is there, what are the hours like, etc.?
Depends on the Office. Which are you considering?
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I'm an attorney considering the CFPB too and am interested in the question a few people have asked but no one has answered - is it family friendly? How much travel is there, what are the hours like, etc.?
Anonymous wrote:If you were in FERS, you can stay in FERS or switch to the Federal Reserve Bank Plan (FRS). FRS is better, there is no employee contribution and the payout is 1.3% of final avg salary up to $67,308 and 1.8% of final salary in excess of $67,308. The FRS thrift plan pays automatic 1% agency contribution and matches up to an additional 7%.
Anonymous wrote:I seriously don't understand agencies who think that attorneys, who deal with privileged/confidential information, and who need to have private conversations/phone calls, don't need their own offices. My job at DOJ drives me crazy sometimes, but even our interns have private offices!
Sort of off topic, but I am in DOJ civil and we just had a big meeting about how GSA has determined that our offices are too big, and that our next lease will involve smaller offices. I don't really think they are big at all.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are lucky you share offices. Most people are in cubes. Telecommuting is permitted, though no more than once per week. It sucks, but the rest makesdon't np for it. Cordray is really pushing for an open space plan against offices.
I seriously don't understand agencies who think that attorneys, who deal with privileged/confidential information, and who need to have private conversations/phone calls, don't need their own offices. My job at DOJ drives me crazy sometimes, but even our interns have private offices!
I'm not sure this argument holds water for most federal attorneys. DOJ is slightly different. At most federal agencies, and in most divisions (including the office at issue in this post) everybody has the same client. There is no chance of inadvertent waiver of privilege in these legal shops. And while there is a lot of confidential consumer and banking information, that is true throughout the agency. There is nothing special about the legal work in that regard. The risk is of disclosure outside the Bureau, not among your colleagues.
I agree that the need for private conversations is persuasive, but again that is not about being an attorney. And many open concept offices accommodate for that by having a LOT of quiet rooms and conference rooms.
Anonymous wrote:An open office might be nice in some respects, but how could you ever write a brief??

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are lucky you share offices. Most people are in cubes. Telecommuting is permitted, though no more than once per week. It sucks, but the rest makesdon't np for it. Cordray is really pushing for an open space plan against offices.
I seriously don't understand agencies who think that attorneys, who deal with privileged/confidential information, and who need to have private conversations/phone calls, don't need their own offices. My job at DOJ drives me crazy sometimes, but even our interns have private offices!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are lucky you share offices. Most people are in cubes. Telecommuting is permitted, though no more than once per week. It sucks, but the rest makesdon't np for it. Cordray is really pushing for an open space plan against offices.
I seriously don't understand agencies who think that attorneys, who deal with privileged/confidential information, and who need to have private conversations/phone calls, don't need their own offices. My job at DOJ drives me crazy sometimes, but even our interns have private offices!
I seriously don't understand agencies who think that attorneys, who deal with privileged/confidential information, and who need to have private conversations/phone calls, don't need their own offices. My job at DOJ drives me crazy sometimes, but even our interns have private offices!
Anonymous wrote:If you are lucky you share offices. Most people are in cubes. Telecommuting is permitted, though no more than once per week. It sucks, but the rest makesdon't np for it. Cordray is really pushing for an open space plan against offices.