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red states rule
04-06-2013, 12:39 PM
Another reason why this country is broke. But don't even think about cutting back on the high salary and ridiculous benefit package these people are "underpaid and overworked" according to the liberal media and union heads





Most government jobs aren't glamorous. You don't usually get to jet around the world if you're working for, say, the Division of Zoning. But government jobs have at least been considered secure -- and as offering great benefits.

A report released earlier this year by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (http://www.cbo.gov/publication/42921)revealed that the "majority of public employees (http://www.dailyfinance.com/2012/08/29/federal-state-workers-overpaid/)" -- regardless of education -- earn more than those in the private sector. When you factor in benefits such as health insurance and pensions, it comes to a 16 percent difference (via DailyFinance).

The report marks the first of its kind for the CBO, but the comparable trend between the private and public sectors' wage differential has been growing since 2001. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average income in the private sector has grown $11,658 over that time to last year's total of $47,815. But for the public sector, the growth is more than double that, with the figure having risen $25,343 to last year's average salary (http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/) of $75,296 for all government workers, according to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management.

Of course, at the same time, many of the prized public sector benefits are being chipped away -- and layoffs have been imposed by cash-strapped state governments, too. But still, while a large number of government workers are motivated primarily by serving the public, and might actually earn less than they could in the private sector, there are others -- from plumbers to executives -- who have wound up with surprisingly high-paying gigs. Some may have possibly used illegal means (and are awaiting trial). What do they all have in common? Their pay was footed by taxpayers, like you and me.



http://jobs.aol.com/articles/2012/09/24/7-ridiculously-overpaid-government-workers/

red states rule
04-07-2013, 05:08 AM
on top of excessive pay - trying to fire an incompetent Federal worker is damn ear impossible

You would have better luck trying to find a virgin in the Maternity Ward


http://global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/fn2/video/032713_sr_mckelway_640.jpg




Working for the federal government used to mean a trade-off -- lower salaries, in exchange for higher job security. Today, that trade-off is gone as federal workers often make good money with little risk of being fired.


Though numbers are hard to come by in the mammoth 2.4 million-employee federal workforce, an analysis by USA Today found the federal government fired only one half of one percent of its workers in fiscal year 2011. That's about five times smaller than in the private sector.


If Congress and the Executive Branch are loath to confront the bloat in government, there may be good reason. Firing federal workers is hard.


"When President Carter first came to office, he decided that he was going to revamp the civil service process," said Tom Schatz, president of the nonprofit Citizens Against Government Waste. "Nobody really talked to him much after that in the federal agencies."


Schatz said "it's extremely difficult to fire anyone in any agency unless you're sitting in a hot tub with a wine glass and you're in charge of the GSA agency out in the west."

Schatz said "it's extremely difficult to fire anyone in any agency unless you're sitting in a hot tub with a wine glass and you're in charge of the GSA agency out in the west."


That, of course, was a reference to Jeff Neely, the organizer of the infamous $800,000 General Services Administration conference in Las Vegas.
And still, Neely was not technically fired -- civil service regulations allowed him to retire with benefits.


Just this month, another GSA executive, Paul Prouty, who was fired after the Vegas conference scandal, was re-instated with 11 months back-pay after an administrative judge ruled against the GSA.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/03/27/what-to-cut-red-tape-stalls-firing-ineffective-federal-workers/#ixzz2PpW3rPeY