Anonymous wrote:I wasn't aware they differentiated by age when it comes to child care. Do they?
20:09 here. I've worked at 2 different agencies. One explicitly stated in their telework policy that you needed child care to telework if you had non-school age children. My current agency does not have any such restrictions in their telework policy. In fact, the lame telework training video includes allowing employees flexibility in child care arrangements as an example of a benefit of telework. I know many people at many agency openly telework on days when their kids are sick or during school closings. It's not a hidden thing. Branch chiefs and ADCs do it too.
My kids are now 8 and 10. I can and have had conference calls with them home and also done all manner of work. Occasionally I'll turn on a TV show for them or get them a snack. In terms of lost time, I don't see how that is any different from getting a coffee from the break room or chatting with a co-worker about sports.
I DO work for the feds and in my agency, we can't work from home if we're sick.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Okay, guess this is how it is. We will get to know our neighbors much more...
Anonymous wrote:It sux. We just cobble it together.
Thursday I took the day off and we went to Ski at liberty, half price Thursday! (I guess 10 minutes at the bus stop will kill them but 8 hours on the mountain didn't).
Usually we either bring them to work (friendly boss), take turns, phone a friend, or if they cancel early, the TKD place will open early for an all day camp.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 22:54 - I do not work for the government. I work for an organization where lots of folks have small children. On normal telecommute days, we all absolutely have child care, and we book 8 hours of work. On snow days, the rules are different - everyone knows that we are just doing whatever we can. We do whatever work we can, we book that time as teleworking, and the other hours are booked as leave.
It's the same when people are sick - if you're contagious and can't come into work, you can work from home and you book whatever hours you actually work to work and other (nap) hours to sick.
I wasn't aware they differentiated by age when it comes to child care. Do they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is unetheical and if you work for the federal government may illegal to bill hours without childcare for young children.
But this thread is about elementary age children. I'm a fed and I'm not aware of any rule regarding not being able to telework with elementary age children. Teleworking with a 6 year old is vastly different from teleworking with an infant/toddler/preschooler.
I wasn't aware they differentiated by age when it comes to child care. Do they? It would make sense, I guess, but I have a 6 year old and he's not exactly independent! And not vastly different from a preschooler (preschool ends at 4/5).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is unetheical and if you work for the federal government may illegal to bill hours without childcare for young children.
But this thread is about elementary age children. I'm a fed and I'm not aware of any rule regarding not being able to telework with elementary age children. Teleworking with a 6 year old is vastly different from teleworking with an infant/toddler/preschooler.
I wasn't aware they differentiated by age when it comes to child care. Do they? It would make sense, I guess, but I have a 6 year old and he's not exactly independent! And not vastly different from a preschooler (preschool ends at 4/5).
Anonymous wrote:It is unetheical and if you work for the federal government may illegal to bill hours without childcare for young children.
But this thread is about elementary age children. I'm a fed and I'm not aware of any rule regarding not being able to telework with elementary age children. Teleworking with a 6 year old is vastly different from teleworking with an infant/toddler/preschooler.