pineappleheadindc wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:Ok, here's a plan:
2) Create a mechanism that makes it possible to fire Federal workers who are incompetent, while preventing them from being fired for political reasons (don't know if this is possible, unfortunately).
Zonker - space purposes, edited most of your original post - but those are pretty good plans.
But for this one, above. There is a mechanism to fire incompetent Federal workers. I know. As a Federal employee and manager, I've done it. Twice.
To be fair, the frustration, headache, and stress of the process really ruins your life. You no longer want to be a manager. Essentially, two verbal warnings (documented) with granular things to do to improve; two subsequent written warnings (120 days apart) with granular things to do to improve; a 120 day formal PIP (Performance Improvement Plan) with specific tasks to do to achieve minimum performance levels and stave off firing. After that, if you can't manage it, you're gone.
But if you're the manager, you're faced with like a year of some out-of-control employee subverting your entire unit, creating chaos, the EEOC was called in on me for discrimination against a minority (I'm a minority), the union, the lies...Jeebus, I'm frustrated just typing this.
But it *is* possible.
(I note that during both processes, as my frustration and stress were at its worst, somebody decided to make the political talking point about how government employees were useless and didn't do anything. For every 2 a.m. justification writing session I had to undertake on my own, I wanted to throw a pie in the face at every politician that demagogued civicl servants.
<sigh>
Oh, and despite what politicians hint at. The problem among public servants isn't at the clerk, specialist, manager, or worker bee level. You know where it is? It's in the burrowers. The guys who get an appointee position in an agency and after a bit, apply for an "open to all applicants" new civil service job at the GS-15 level that magically appears and then they continue to exercise their lack of expertise (too many appointees lack the expertise of career senior staff - "Brownie, etc") in policy-level positions. Making decisions based on "expertise by job title" and frustrating any semblence of cohesion at the senior career staff level.
Yeah, and almost automatically get sued. I don't consider "having to spend a year and 80% of my time and incur $100,000 worth of legal fees" as equivalent to "being able to fire someone." You know? I know it's possible, and I also know how difficult it is. I know a guy in my office who just retired, his boss tried to get him fired for 5 years and couldn't do it. This was a guy who routinely fell asleep during meetings. Ugh! In the private sector, if you had cause like that you could fire them on the spot.
That's the primary reason you have so much deadweight in the government. There's a huge cost to firing people -- most people just get traded around. For a long time the place I work has been kind of a dumping ground for incompetents, and the only way to get rid of them is to wait until they retire. So not only do you have people like that sitting around, but the incentive to work hard is just not there. As a manager, what sort of credibility do you have? The only thing you can do is inspire the people under you to work because it's interesting, which I've been able to do with my own hires, but it doesn't work on everyone.