Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol, but as DOJ attorneys which includes FBI attorney, we are already prohibited by law from working overtime, most of already do this because the job is the job and it needs to get done.
Not true we are salaried. Its not overtime. Get over your GS 15 self.
Even salaried employees are paid overtime, but only if your boss explicitly requires you to stay late or work on the weekends. If you just do it outside your hours you are just working for the government for free. DH clocks in and out and is not allowed to work outside the office except for approved telework days or conferences/meetings/briefings, etc. If he chooses to do so, he's SOL. If he's required to come in on weekends to make a hard deadline he either gets comp time (the agency's preference) or overtime.
All this free overtime just masks the understaffing that's rampant, despite the story to the contrary that the government is full of dead weight. Many many people are covering the workload of 2 positions, especially when considering the RIFs of support staff over the past decade. Too bad there isn't an easy solution to this problem. Oh, wait, there is.
Anonymous wrote:New question:
For those of you who've bene through it, how does a furlough really work? My external deadlines and work wont' go away; say I make widgets, the customer still depends on recieving 100 widgets a month, whether or not we're furloughed.
Do some folks really end up working without pay on the furlough days? Do some just have to work that much harder on the non-furloughed days?
The widgets still have to go out - the country depends on them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about cutting some of the mooch contractors instead?
So true though that some of the least capable people are the most protected ones when it comes to gov't employment.
Most of the time the contractors are the capable ones and the Feds are the mooches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol, but as DOJ attorneys which includes FBI attorney, we are already prohibited by law from working overtime, most of already do this because the job is the job and it needs to get done.
Not true we are salaried. Its not overtime. Get over your GS 15 self.
Anonymous wrote:New question:
For those of you who've bene through it, how does a furlough really work? My external deadlines and work wont' go away; say I make widgets, the customer still depends on recieving 100 widgets a month, whether or not we're furloughed.
Do some folks really end up working without pay on the furlough days? Do some just have to work that much harder on the non-furloughed days?
The widgets still have to go out - the country depends on them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will I get to select the day of the week I don't work? Does seniority count?
For those of you so eager to take those extra days off, that just shows that you are working in offices that are overstaffed.
I bet you could cut several people and not even notice a dent in the workload, if you are showing an attitude like that.
Or we are b exhausted and are guilted when we want to take leave. Under furlough it is illegal for us to work. Blackberries off.