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Twisted Titan
26th November 2010, 03:26 AM
Pay Cuts Aren’t Enough: Time to Lay Off Federal Workers


http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/pay-cuts-arent-enough-time-to-lay-off-federal-workers/?singlepage=true

Recently, USA Today highlighted how the salaries of federal employees have skyrocketed in the past five years. According to the article (“More federal workers’ pay tops $150,000”), federal workers earning $150,000 or more in 2005 comprised only 0.4 percent of all federal employees. Today, that number has grown to 3.9 percent. In response to this, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) is calling for not only a pay freeze, but a ten percent pay cut for federal employees.

Congressman Chaffetz’s proposal fails to truly tackle the issue of fixing the amount the government spends on the salaries of its employees. Realistically, Congress won’t vote for a ten percent cut to salaries, and there is slim chance that they will allow a pay freeze. Even if these were enacted, the annual COLA (cost of living adjustment) would still increase salaries and spending.

Were Chaffetz truly serious about reining in spending in this area, he would put forward a proposal that did not cut the wages of federal workers, but the positions themselves. Government agencies are overstaffed — every agency is riddled with redundant employees.

For example: via a source who prefers to not be named, one particular government office employs fifteen people whose sole job is to scan and upload documents to a central database. They are paid to work for eight hours, but generally need to put in only two hours of actual work. The other six hours are devoted to shopping online, gossip, and sleep.

Reduce that department from fifteen employees to five, and they would each have a full day’s work and the taxpayer would have his or her money back.

This is not unique to this one office — overstaffing is a systemic problem. Agencies create positions, often at high cost, that have the single purpose of performing the functions that existing employees could easily take on. A source tells me of a federal employee who does nothing but schedule who will use the conference room.

The taxpayer is also being asked to shoulder the burden for unqualified workers and/or employees no longer fit to continue in their capacity. As the Heritage Foundation’s James Sherk notes: “Federal employees enjoy far greater job security than private sector workers. Federal agencies rarely lay off employees for poor performance.” In other words, few agencies will fire someone for poor performance or budgetary reasons. (In some agencies, particularly the U.S. federal courts, the joke is that career employees know their job is secure even if they were to commit murder.)

As the nation’s companies and families have tightened their belts and laid off workers, government has not. There was no blanket hiring freeze; nor were cost-cutting measures taken.

How do we implement a practical solution to excess spending on the salaries of government employees? The best way to go about this would be to take advantage of the large wave of federal worker retirements that is about to hit. Ordinarily, agencies would replace these workers with new hires. However, they should replace as few employees as possible and allow the positions to simply be phased out. If a position can not be eliminated, the agency does not hire an entry-level position when one becomes available. At the same time, the government would eliminate redundancies and conference room schedulers.

Additionally, poor performance, behavior, and lack of qualifications would finally be permitted to be grounds for termination.

At the end of the day, not one person can honestly tell you there isn’t a problem with the manner in which federal workers are compensated. This is not a partisan issue. The government needs to get serious and provide bold leadership in thinning its ranks.

Twisted Titan
26th November 2010, 03:42 AM
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2010-11-10-1Afedpay10_ST_N.htm


More federal workers' pay tops $150,000



The number of federal workers earning $150,000 or more a year has soared tenfold in the past five years and doubled since President Obama took office, a USA TODAY analysis finds.
The fast-growing pay of federal employees has captured the attention of fiscally conservative Republicans who won control of the U.S. House of Representatives in last week's elections. Already, some lawmakers are planning to use the lame-duck session that starts Monday to challenge the president's plan to give a 1.4% across-the-board pay raise to 2.1 million federal workers.


FEDERAL WORKERS: Earning double their private counterparts

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, who will head the panel overseeing federal pay, says he wants a pay freeze and prefers a 10% pay cut. "It's stunning when you see what's happened to federal compensation," he says. "Every metric shows we're heading in the wrong direction."

National Treasury Employees Union President Colleen Kelley counters that the proposed raise "is a modest amount and should be implemented" to help make salaries more comparable with those in the private sector.

Federal salaries have grown robustly in recent years, according to a USA TODAY analysis of Office of Personnel Management data. Key findings:

•Government-wide raises. Top-paid staff have increased in every department and agency. The Defense Department had nine civilians earning $170,000 or more in 2005, 214 when Obama took office and 994 in June.

•Long-time workers thrive. The biggest pay hikes have gone to employees who have been with the government for 15 to 24 years. Since 2005, average salaries for this group climbed 25% compared with a 9% inflation rate.

•Physicians rewarded. Medical doctors at veterans hospitals, prisons and elsewhere earn an average of $179,500, up from $111,000 in 2005.

Federal workers earning $150,000 or more make up 3.9% of the workforce, up from 0.4% in 2005.

Since 2000, federal pay and benefits have increased 3% annually above inflation compared with 0.8% for private workers, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Members of Congress earn $174,000, up from $141,300 in 2000, an increase below the rate of inflation.

Jessica Klement, government affairs director at the Federal Managers Association, says the government's official pay analysis shows that federal workers earn less than private workers for comparable jobs. Still, she says, managers are willing to give up next year's raise: "If it will help the country bounce back, they're willing to make the sacrifice."

BrewTech
26th November 2010, 07:27 AM
Cutting the federal workforce ain't never gonna happen. It's the only way the are keeping the "job" numbers up.

Also, I'm getting sick and tired of the term "earn" being used to describe the compensation that .gov employees, bankers, and the like receive. To "earn" money, one must provide a useful product or service. THEFT doesn't fit the description. The compensation these people receive is stolen from someone that actually earned the money.

Glass
26th November 2010, 07:53 AM
Don't forget they are competing with the private sector to get people amd you have to pay a lot to get the best people.

cortez
26th November 2010, 09:35 AM
the tipping point will come at some point. suprised it was in USA Toady.

gunDriller
26th November 2010, 09:45 AM
Don't forget they are competing with the private sector to get people amd you have to pay a lot to get the best people.


sometimes.

i talked about this with one of the Postal Inspectors at the Y in San Diego. he said a bunch of his co-workers headed for DHS because the pay was better. in that case i don't know if they were more competent, or just more greedy.

my other observation is that a lot of the new government employees are Jewish. at least in Sonoma County, e.g. the new "Health Action Group", a result of the Obama "get America back to work act".

they were integrated into the health department. they actually get paid to go around telling people to garden and to exercise. their salaries are paid by a combination of taxpayer money & money-printing.

http://www.sonomahealthaction.org/

aka the Soviet-ization of America.

palani
26th November 2010, 11:34 AM
I fired them all two years ago. Getting ready to do the same to the new batch of federal workers too.