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surfered

(5,020 posts)
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 11:45 AM Wednesday

According to one laid off federal employee,

This was not a layoff. These employees were all given the same reason in their termination letters: “poor performance “ even though they had good evaluations from their supervisors.

Due to the “poor performance “ reason, they may not be able to collect unemployment and finding another job will be made more difficult.

Once again, this was not surgical or targeted for efficiency as evidenced by mistakenly firing nuclear weapons workers and bird flu scientists and then having to turn around and rehire them. It’s just an across the board reduction in force, disguised as performance based.

Just like their claims of fraud evidence, I’m betting they have no documentation supporting their poor performance claim.

Lawyers for these laid off should have a field day and the resulting settlements will greatly reduce their inflated claims of government savings. Meanwhile, services and protections we have taken for granted will be greatly diminished, if not eliminated. Imagine your worst local Department of Motor Vehicles experience and extrapolate that to the entire federal government.

68 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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According to one laid off federal employee, (Original Post) surfered Wednesday OP
Well, they couldn't find any fraud so they had to perpetrate some on us Walleye Wednesday #1
This! Joinfortmill Wednesday #7
They have simply cloaked the whole operation EndlessWire Wednesday #8
They just make a general accusation after spending a generation getting people to hate the government Walleye Wednesday #9
Well, not any factual ones, but they have their made-up "examples" that the MAGAts will eat up JHB Wednesday #39
As per usual, Republicans are the fraud they claim to seek. n/t Beartracks Wednesday #26
So they not only Fired them.. they Cruelly tried to make sure Cha Wednesday #57
If they are on probationary status, they may not have any performanve evaluation KPN Wednesday #62
Probationary status does not mean they were new employees Random Boomer 21 hrs ago #67
Lawsuit - class action .... Lovie777 Wednesday #2
Well... OldBaldy1701E Wednesday #14
Add unemployment compensation loss modrepub Wednesday #23
Won't work Cirsium Wednesday #24
Just wait until DENVERPOPS Wednesday #37
"Tort reform" Cirsium Wednesday #42
Hey Circium DENVERPOPS Wednesday #58
Thanks Cirsium Wednesday #59
this was taking on a corporation DENVERPOPS Wednesday #60
That's really their only hope. Individual lawsuits are very expensive for ordinary folks ... Hekate Wednesday #27
Yep. The Federal Government has broad discretion to layoff employees. Wiz Imp Wednesday #40
They can (and should) still file for UE. The .gov can chose to challenge the application for UE based on the firing kelly1mm Wednesday #3
The STATES should stop paying taxes to this fascist government. n/t rzemanfl Wednesday #29
The states, except in the limited capacity of employers of state employees do not 'pay' taxes the the feds. Payments kelly1mm Wednesday #34
The fascists pay no attention to the Constitution or the Courts. rzemanfl Wednesday #36
So explain to me how say, California would intercept payments going from it's residents employers to the feds kelly1mm Wednesday #50
We have scofflaws in the Executive Branch or rzemanfl Wednesday #56
I'm finding no evidence of any state denying unemployment benefits to someone who was terminated Wiz Imp Wednesday #4
The fired federal employee on CNN had not filed for unemployment yet, but she thought it would make it more difficult. surfered Wednesday #15
What state is that? I'm not doubting you but I've looked thoroughly online across almost all Wiz Imp Wednesday #18
Texas and I was a witness at the hearing surfered Wednesday #19
Due to the cost of attorney, etc the employee did not appeal surfered Wednesday #20
Interesting. According to their website, you should be eligible for benefits unless you're fired for misconduct. Wiz Imp Wednesday #25
Yes, I already read that. The case I witnessed was 20 years ago. surfered Wednesday #35
I'm absolutely sure Trump & Musk are counting on most workers not to fight back Wiz Imp Wednesday #41
I hope so as we are going to lose a lot of valuable knowledge surfered Wednesday #46
What do you think "failure to perform your work adequately if you are capable of doing so" nilram Wednesday #44
I was sneered at, enigmania Wednesday #55
Ohio is written like that too. Backseat Driver Wednesday #49
I'm willing to bet it will come out in the many, many wrongful termination lawsuits this will spawn meadowlander Wednesday #5
They are using AI Johnny2X2X Wednesday #17
There may be some "disparate impact" cases too. spooky3 Wednesday #48
they won't get severance either 4catsmom Wednesday #6
Severance Pay Eligibility in Federal Government Positions Wiz Imp Wednesday #22
Zuck just did this at Meta newdeal2 Wednesday #10
No. Not the same as what TSF/M are doing. They are purging fed gov like they purged the gop. It's not for wiggs Wednesday #52
Effin evil malaise Wednesday #11
I dont know how it works with Federal government jobs..... 70sEraVet Wednesday #12
Federal Civil Service has a process of mitigation by the employee of the reason for poor performance surfered Wednesday #16
If they were rehired into the same position shortly after being let go... Wiz Imp Wednesday #31
Remember, this is all about the money. mwmisses4289 Wednesday #13
This is absolutely the point of it all JoseBalow Wednesday #33
this isn't about saving money that will then be skimmed...although they will certainly get a taste somewhere. It's wiggs Wednesday #53
Exactly, they are thieves Dem4life1234 Yesterday #64
My husband was a California State employee, and a supervisor cksmithy Wednesday #21
This poor performance shit never works. Klarkashton Wednesday #32
I hope so. cksmithy Wednesday #51
The cruelty is on purpose. spanone Wednesday #28
I hope they can sue Musk personally, or whoever claimed the authority to fire them William Seger Wednesday #30
Class action suit lame54 Wednesday #38
Class action Cirsium Wednesday #43
What a f***ing asshole!!! BComplex Wednesday #45
They make my blood boil so much Dem4life1234 Yesterday #65
Or if Mitch McConnell hadn't whipped the republicans into voting NOT to remove him from office after TWO impeachments. BComplex 23 hrs ago #66
Fascists are not happy unless they're screwing Emile Wednesday #47
The point is fear RhapsodyFav Wednesday #54
Correct me if I'm wrong, but... DET Wednesday #61
This is what happens when people elect a criminal as a leader Dem4life1234 Yesterday #63
A Claim of "poor performance" is a positive claim.... Happy Hoosier 21 hrs ago #68

EndlessWire

(7,494 posts)
8. They have simply cloaked the whole operation
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:49 PM
Wednesday

in the guise of "fraud and corruption" when that applies to themselves. "Poor performance" will apply to anyone who is simply being cast aside.

Walleye

(37,905 posts)
9. They just make a general accusation after spending a generation getting people to hate the government
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:53 PM
Wednesday

They never come up with any specific examples of fraud, waste, or abuse.

JHB

(37,573 posts)
39. Well, not any factual ones, but they have their made-up "examples" that the MAGAts will eat up
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:05 PM
Wednesday

"Alternative facts," known to most people as "complete horseshit."

Cha

(307,434 posts)
57. So they not only Fired them.. they Cruelly tried to make sure
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 06:37 PM
Wednesday

No one else would.

I hope they have their Good Performance Papers from their Supervisors.

KPN

(16,393 posts)
62. If they are on probationary status, they may not have any performanve evaluation
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 11:56 PM
Wednesday

on record. In my career with DOI, performance evaluations and ratings were given annually. There mid- year reviews - but they focused on progress toward achieving performance goals and objectives and the need for adjustment — in the goals and objectives or workload, not performance rating. Probationary period is 1 year.

Random Boomer

(4,278 posts)
67. Probationary status does not mean they were new employees
Thu Feb 20, 2025, 11:17 AM
21 hrs ago

Many of those "probationary" employees were simply in the probation period of a promotion. In other words, they were good enough in their jobs to merit a promotion, so the firings were of some of the best employees in those departments. Which isn't a mistake, per se, since Musk's goal is to cripple the departments, and what better way to do that than remove experience staff.

modrepub

(3,726 posts)
23. Add unemployment compensation loss
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:32 PM
Wednesday

To the cost of this crap.

Wonder if M$M will report how much all this costs compared to how much was “saved”?

Cirsium

(1,767 posts)
24. Won't work
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:39 PM
Wednesday

The administration will defy any court ruling. We just watched Trump being dragged into court for 8 years and that helped rather than hurt him. While we file lawsuits, they are consolidating power and dismantling the government.

DENVERPOPS

(10,838 posts)
37. Just wait until
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:03 PM
Wednesday

Trump, the Republican Senate and Republican House find a way to outlaw "Class Action Lawsuits" I am sure that the Republican's "Wholly Owned Subsidiary", AKA the USSC. will hand them a win on that one......

That will make it impossible for groups to gang together to make it worthwhile for a lawyer to take the case......The Republicans have attempted to get rid of Class Action Lawsuits several times in recent history, but failed. Now it seems inevitable...............

No single party (person) will ever take on a giant corporation by themselves........

They also will CONTINUE to focus on appointing large numbers of Appellate Judges across the nation. (as they have been focused on doing for the past many years.) If a lower court gives a guilty verdict.......the minute it hits one of these Republican appointed appellate judges, it is thrown out....

This would be a tremendously profitable, double win for corporations.......Not only do they NOT have to worry about possible huge payouts for settlements, but they can also cut the number of corporate lawyers they have to keep around and pay......

Cirsium

(1,767 posts)
42. "Tort reform"
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:30 PM
Wednesday

Republicans have long pushed "tort reform" to protect corporations from consumers seeking damages. Their propaganda campaign has been so successful that I wouod bet there are a bunch of Democrats who think it is a good idea.

Republicans love the justice system when it goes after workers, those in minority populations and poor people. Not so much when it goes after the wealthy and powerful.

In the United States (‘US’), for three decades, advocates on behalf of business and professional interests have been claiming that American tort law is out of control, imposing unjustified costs on defendants amounting to billions and billions of dollars annually. American juries, which decide most torts cases, have been attacked as either wholly unpredictable or else predictably pro-plaintiff in their verdicts, as incapable of fairly resolving complex and often technically difficult issues presented to them, and as all too willing to award enormous sums to victims for ‘pain and suffering’ and ‘punitive damages.’

...

Lawyers representing plaintiffs offer counterarguments to all these assertions. They strongly defend the jury as a vital American institution, viewing jury-based US tort law as a crucial form of consumer protection against the callous exercise of economic might by business interests who put profit ahead of safety. Large jury verdicts are said to properly reflect an easily affordable award of well-deserved compensation to people who have suffered terrible injuries. Victim advocates point out that the imposition of punitive damages is actually rather uncommon, and argue that, even if the instances in which they are awarded are a bit unpredictable, in a world in which not all egregious forms of misconduct can be identified and punished, unpredictability actually helps to keep management on its toes.

...

Defence interests have mounted a multi-pronged effort, seeking both to make tort law generally more favorable to their side and to restrict the ability of juries to make blockbuster awards in individual cases. One strategy has been to try to influence judicially-determined common law developments. Because elected Governors in most States play key roles in appointing judges, especially to the State appellate courts, political pressure has mounted on Republican Governors to appoint judges who are pro-defendant. In the media, well-funded pro-business campaigns have widely publicised complaints about tort law. Although causal connections are difficult to establish, the upshot has been that, starting in the 1990s, many State courts have become less pro-plaintiff in their decisions. Moreover, lawyers for victims argue that pro-business efforts have also influenced jury attitudes, claiming that their clients now often receive lower tort damage awards than they would have won in the past for the same injuries.

A second strategy has been to carry the tort reform campaign to State legislatures, with the result that lawmakers are increasingly intruding in a pro-defence way on what traditionally has been an almost entirely judicially-created common law system. Along side broad-based pro-business groups, other defendant special interests have also pushed their own narrowly tailored agendas for tort relief. Physicians are the most important example, but by no means the only one. The alcohol, tobacco, and gun industries have also pushed narrow tort reform laws, as have municipal governments and privately owned public utilities.

https://www.law.berkeley.edu/files/United_States_Tort_Reform_Wars_A.TORTS.pdf

DENVERPOPS

(10,838 posts)
58. Hey Circium
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 07:19 PM
Wednesday

thank you for that reply, I found it most interesting..............

There was a movie where John Travolta? played an attorney, taking on a huge mega corporation, and losing everything and personally being destroyed........It really sticks with you.
Probably a lot more realistic than Erin Brokovich??????

I can't think of the title, but you can go up to IMDB web site and check on John Travolta's movie history......If you don't know about IMDB, you should. it is beyond incredible for any actors or movies ever done.......

Think about watching it, like I said, it really sticks with you.......

Cirsium

(1,767 posts)
59. Thanks
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 07:32 PM
Wednesday

I'll check it out. I saw a pretty good film once with John Cusack and Gene Hackman about a young couple who went after a gun manufacturer in court.

DENVERPOPS

(10,838 posts)
60. this was taking on a corporation
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 07:39 PM
Wednesday

that caused a major environmental pollution haz mat site like love canal.................

Hekate

(96,171 posts)
27. That's really their only hope. Individual lawsuits are very expensive for ordinary folks ...
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:42 PM
Wednesday

…already in dire circumstances.

Wiz Imp

(3,738 posts)
40. Yep. The Federal Government has broad discretion to layoff employees.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:07 PM
Wednesday

However, there are still very specific rules they must follow. If they don't follow those rules, then they are very much open to a class action suit. "Firing" employees is more difficult. Firing employees for "poor performance" who can prove they had all outstanding Performance evaluations would almost certainly be considered illegal.

https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF12908
In the federal government, layoffs are referred to as reduction in force (RIF) actions

Retention Registers
After establishing competitive levels, the agency establishes
a retention register for each competitive level. The
retention register is the ranking of each employee subject to
RIF within a competitive level after the agency applies four
retention factors required by law (5 U.S.C. §3502):
1. Tenure of employment,
2. Military preference (also referred to as
veterans’ preference),
3. Length of service, and
4. Efficiency or performance ratings.


https://www.reuters.com/world/us/are-trumps-mass-firings-federal-workers-legal-2025-02-13/#:~:text=As%20president%2C%20Trump%20has%20broad,they%20are%20let%20go%20arbitrarily.
Explainer: Are Trump's mass firings of federal workers legal?

HOW MUCH POWER DOES TRUMP HAVE TO FIRE OR LAY OFF WORKERS?
As president, Trump has broad authority to shrink the federal workforce, but slashing headcount may not be straightforward.

Most civil service employees can be fired legally only for bad performance or misconduct, and they have a host of due process and appeal rights if they are let go arbitrarily. Probationary employees - typically those with less than a year of service - have fewer legal protections.

Federal agencies can trim headcount through so-called reductions in force, but that can be a complicated process governed by rules and regulations dictating the scope and order of firings. The process can take months to a year or longer, and employees must be given notice and in some cases the opportunity to take a different government job.

Federal employees can appeal firings to the Merit Systems Protection Board, an independent agency that enforces laws protecting civil service workers from political retaliation and other prohibited employment practices.

kelly1mm

(5,617 posts)
3. They can (and should) still file for UE. The .gov can chose to challenge the application for UE based on the firing
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:00 PM
Wednesday

being 'for cause'. The employee can then appeal and it will be heard by a state administrative law judge. The .gov will have the burden of proof (at least in MD) by a preponderance of the evidence that the firing was for cause. If the state administrative law judge awards UE benefits they will be paid from the state UE compensation fund, not directly from the feds so not subject to DOGE freeze.

Longer term this may be a problem if the feds just stop paying UE fees/taxes to the states ......

kelly1mm

(5,617 posts)
34. The states, except in the limited capacity of employers of state employees do not 'pay' taxes the the feds. Payments
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:57 PM
Wednesday

of income/FICA tax withholdings are paid by employers directly to the feds. Sacramento or Albany have no way to intercept those payments.

Further, any attempt to do so would be enjoined within minutes by the federal courts due to the Supremacy Clause.

rzemanfl

(30,389 posts)
36. The fascists pay no attention to the Constitution or the Courts.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:02 PM
Wednesday

Playing by the rules is not working out well.

kelly1mm

(5,617 posts)
50. So explain to me how say, California would intercept payments going from it's residents employers to the feds
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 04:05 PM
Wednesday

on their employee's behalf?

Are you promoting a state actively ignoring a federal court ruling? You do at least acknowledge this 'plan' would be in direct violation of the Supremacy Clause, right? Seems a little 1950's Alabama like to me but if you are willing to go down that road .......

rzemanfl

(30,389 posts)
56. We have scofflaws in the Executive Branch or
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 06:28 PM
Wednesday

just proclaiming themselves part of it. If a state enacted a law prohibiting sending withholding from in wages earned in the state out of that state, it would prove interesting, to say the least. Kind of the reverse of saying a resident of the state could not leave it for medical care. Didn't TSF tell a court yesterday or today the administration would ignore its rulings. I don't see an end to this shitshow happening easily and quietly.

Wiz Imp

(3,738 posts)
4. I'm finding no evidence of any state denying unemployment benefits to someone who was terminated
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:05 PM
Wednesday

due to poor performance. For those people claiming this is being done so they can't collect unemployment, I'd like to see some proof of benefits being denied because the termination was stated as due to poor performance.

surfered

(5,020 posts)
15. The fired federal employee on CNN had not filed for unemployment yet, but she thought it would make it more difficult.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:08 PM
Wednesday

In my red state, people fired for cause (poor performance) have been denied state unemployment insurance

Wiz Imp

(3,738 posts)
18. What state is that? I'm not doubting you but I've looked thoroughly online across almost all
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:22 PM
Wednesday

states and have not found a single one who can legally deny unemployment for poor performance. It can be denied for misconduct. Misconduct exists only when an employee’s work behavior shows a willful and substantial disregard of the employer’s interests and expected standards of behavior. The state generally defines misconduct as deliberate and/or willful acts by the employee that violate local, state or federal laws, or acts that could cause injury to another person, or violate a company’s policy after prior warnings that place the employee’s job in jeopardy. The mere inability to do the job on a consistent basis will not be considered misconduct, even if warned that continued substandard performance will result in discharge.

Wiz Imp

(3,738 posts)
25. Interesting. According to their website, you should be eligible for benefits unless you're fired for misconduct.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:40 PM
Wednesday
https://www.twc.texas.gov/programs/unemployment-benefits/eligibility-benefit-amounts#:~:text=You%20may%20be%20eligible%20for%20benefits%20if%20you%20were%20fired,are%20capable%20of%20doing%20so.

Fired
If the employer ended your employment but you were not laid off as defined above, then you were fired. If the employer demanded your resignation, you were fired.

You may be eligible for benefits if you were fired for reasons other than misconduct. Examples of misconduct that could make you ineligible include violation of company policy, violation of law, neglect or mismanagement of your position, or failure to perform your work adequately if you are capable of doing so.


surfered

(5,020 posts)
35. Yes, I already read that. The case I witnessed was 20 years ago.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:01 PM
Wednesday

Maybe those rules were written subsequently. Maybe the employee would have prevailed on appeal, but did not choose that route for the reason explained.

It’s intimidating for many to represent themselves, not knowing the procedure or laws. Hired counsel is expensive relative to the benefit they would get.

Maybe that’s what DOGE is counting on. Intimidation is what this Administration excels at.

I would still advise the employees to file or band together to share the cost of counsel.

Wiz Imp

(3,738 posts)
41. I'm absolutely sure Trump & Musk are counting on most workers not to fight back
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:11 PM
Wednesday
Intimidation is what this Administration excels at.


You got that right!

I would still advise the employees to file or band together to share the cost of counsel.


I agree. I'm guessing there are quite a few lawyers or law firms out there willing to take on these cases in a class action or something similar.

surfered

(5,020 posts)
46. I hope so as we are going to lose a lot of valuable knowledge
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:36 PM
Wednesday

I’m not opposed to efficiency but I really don’t believe that was really the goal here. I’m sure buried in the damage is a rule, regulation, investigation that someone didn’t want or a disadvantage to a competitor or an opportunity that someone did want. Judges all their actions, these are dishonest, untrustworthy people

nilram

(3,070 posts)
44. What do you think "failure to perform your work adequately if you are capable of doing so"
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:36 PM
Wednesday

means that "poor performance" doesn't mean?

But absolutely these federal workers should still file, but they may have a few extra hoops to jump through.

enigmania

(266 posts)
55. I was sneered at,
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 05:54 PM
Wednesday
then denied unemployment in South Carolina once. The office was packed with smirking rednecks, gleefully screwing people.

meadowlander

(4,828 posts)
5. I'm willing to bet it will come out in the many, many wrongful termination lawsuits this will spawn
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:23 PM
Wednesday

that Elon's little DOGE bros who have never held a real job and/or the AI they used to generate the letter don't know the difference between a probationary period for new employees or employees in a new role and a performance plan for employees with poor performance. They were trying to fire who they thought were the "problem" employees and ended up indiscriminately firing everyone in a new role.

If I'm wrong, it will only be because it comes out earlier than the lawsuits.

Johnny2X2X

(22,316 posts)
17. They are using AI
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:21 PM
Wednesday

Basically just giving AI some loose criteria to come up with a list. This is both unethical and illegal.

And this is Elmo we're talking about here, do not be surprised if it's found out he ws using race as a criteria on who to fire. He's a white supremacist.

spooky3

(36,974 posts)
48. There may be some "disparate impact" cases too.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:44 PM
Wednesday

Since newer workers and those hired to work in “DEI” functions MAY be disproportionately people of color or women, this could be a “facially neutral” severance that has greater negative impact on women and minorities than on white men, and it would be VERY hard imho to demonstrate “business necessity.”

I’m not a lawyer.

newdeal2

(1,755 posts)
10. Zuck just did this at Meta
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:54 PM
Wednesday

Labeled everyone who was cut as a low performer. Many are complaining that it’s not true and are suing.

wiggs

(8,074 posts)
52. No. Not the same as what TSF/M are doing. They are purging fed gov like they purged the gop. It's not for
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 04:20 PM
Wednesday

efficiency, it's not for low performance, it's not for saving money. It's for installing loyalists. Simple.

70sEraVet

(4,348 posts)
12. I dont know how it works with Federal government jobs.....
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 12:58 PM
Wednesday

But my experience in the working world has been, if you get REhired, you start as a new-hire -- you loose your seniority (back to one week vacation per year, etc). And perhaps you face a pay cut.
Anyone know how it works for these workers?

surfered

(5,020 posts)
16. Federal Civil Service has a process of mitigation by the employee of the reason for poor performance
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:15 PM
Wednesday

and/or transfer to another employee.

This process is being ignored and it appears DOGE has targeted probationary employees (new hires) who have less civil service protections than longer term employees.

Wiz Imp

(3,738 posts)
31. If they were rehired into the same position shortly after being let go...
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:52 PM
Wednesday
https://www.opm.gov/job-seekers/reinstatement
I'm pretty sure, they would return at the same pay level and seniority level, etc. as when they left.

There was actually a new rule set by OPM recently allowing the Fed Government to rehire you at a higher rate of pay. I'm sure that doesn't really apply here.

https://www.fedmanager.com/news/opm-releases-new-rule-former-feds-can-be-re-hired-at-a-higher-pay-scale

OPM Releases New Rule: Former Feds Can Be Re-hired at a Higher Pay Scale

A final rule released by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) on June 8, 2021 would make it easier for federal agencies to bring back former employees at a higher pay scale. Prior to the release of this rule, agencies could bring back ex-employees, but at the same pay grade they were receiving before they left federal service.

OPM recognizes the tendency of younger workers to move more freely than previous generations from one job to another. Additionally, the skills these workers can gain from other jobs in the private sector or academia could be useful when they return to work for government.

OPM wrote in the final rule, “Facilitating the return to Government of people who have broadened their work experience in this way advances the civil service’s goal of an effective and efficient government. Apart from providing the agency with additional choices in making selections for current vacancies, it enables agencies to build a workforce of individuals who bring a variety of knowledge, training and experiences to their work.”

Former federal workers who spent three years or less in federal service have a three-year window to return to their jobs. Those who worked for the government longer than three years have no limitations on when they can be rehired. In order to be considered, former federal workers must have been given a fully successful performance rating in their final year of service before leaving government.


https://www.opm.gov/job-seekers/reinstatement

mwmisses4289

(490 posts)
13. Remember, this is all about the money.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:01 PM
Wednesday

These folks see the federal government as their private piggy bank. Any money going to employees, service members, ss recipients, etc., is money not going into their pockets.

JoseBalow

(6,614 posts)
33. This is absolutely the point of it all
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:54 PM
Wednesday

It's not complicated, they want the money for themselves.

wiggs

(8,074 posts)
53. this isn't about saving money that will then be skimmed...although they will certainly get a taste somewhere. It's
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 04:23 PM
Wednesday

about wholesale replacement of gov employees with loyal soldiers. Expertise and efficiency don't mater, loyalty does. they have much bigger plans than merely pocketing the savings from cutting jobs.

The GOP was purged of moderates and country-first patriots....TSF and Musk are doing the same with fed govt.

cksmithy

(278 posts)
21. My husband was a California State employee, and a supervisor
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:27 PM
Wednesday

for over 20 years. If he ever gave an employee a poor performance evaluation, the last sentence informed the employee who to contact to appeal their performance evaluation. Husband then would be required to supply information, etc, for his evaluation to manager. Permanent employees get a hearing, while probationary employees get nothing. For an employee to be laid off for poor performance, It just didn't happen. They would get put on an improvement program, training, etc. You could be fired if you were on probation. He never had to fire anyone, but he gave more than one poor performance evaluation, that always included what the employee needed to do to improve and keep their job.

Federal employees are civil servants and should have the same rights even if they are not union, because they are working for the federal government. Hope they all have the ability to file suits. I know all rules are off and they are not playing fair.

Klarkashton

(2,892 posts)
32. This poor performance shit never works.
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:53 PM
Wednesday

It always goes in favor of the employee.
The only way a person loses unemployment benefits is if they actually quit the job.

The trump administration is going to be fucked.

William Seger

(11,388 posts)
30. I hope they can sue Musk personally, or whoever claimed the authority to fire them
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 01:50 PM
Wednesday

I don't want taxpayers paying for his fuck-ups!

BComplex

(9,248 posts)
45. What a f***ing asshole!!!
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 02:36 PM
Wednesday
Due to the “poor performance “ reason, they may not be able to collect unemployment and finding another job will be made more difficult.

There is NO excuse for this. It is sheer cruelty for cruelty's sake.

Dem4life1234

(2,470 posts)
65. They make my blood boil so much
Thu Feb 20, 2025, 08:57 AM
Yesterday

What pisses me if, all of this could have been avoided had the justice system thrown his ass in prison.

BComplex

(9,248 posts)
66. Or if Mitch McConnell hadn't whipped the republicans into voting NOT to remove him from office after TWO impeachments.
Thu Feb 20, 2025, 09:54 AM
23 hrs ago

And then helped trump install THREE supreme court (in)justices!!!!

So much of this mess lands directly on mitch mcconnell.

RhapsodyFav

(24 posts)
54. The point is fear
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 05:12 PM
Wednesday

Plain and simple. Making people worry about how they are going to pay bills, eat and have ANY healthcare, or even losing their house. If people are absolutly scared they want them to accept the horrible money grabs and loss of rights.

DET

(1,844 posts)
61. Correct me if I'm wrong, but...
Wed Feb 19, 2025, 08:39 PM
Wednesday

I believe I read that Musk made Government managers identify a certain (very high) percentage of their employees as ‘poor performers’ to be fired, presumably so that Musk can then try to justify the terminations when he is sued. He probably then fired the managers.

Federal Government employees have always had exceptionally good protection against termination. As a Government contractor, I worked around a couple of Government employees who literally did not show up to work for weeks. But their managers knew that it would take huge amounts of time and tons of documentation to get rid of them, so they did nothing. I’m not saying that’s the norm, but it used to be pretty easy to get away with a lot as a Government worker.

On the other hand, one private company I worked for fired an entire department unexpectedly on a Friday afternoon. And if a contract is abruptly terminated, the staff are usually let go of immediately. You learn to expect the unexpected as a Government contractor. But most Government workers have never seen that. The mass firings must have shaken them to the core, especially given the incredibly cruel way in which they were conducted. They’re probably going to need psychological help - when they can afford it. Of course, we’re all going to need psychological help after this debacle.

Dem4life1234

(2,470 posts)
63. This is what happens when people elect a criminal as a leader
Thu Feb 20, 2025, 08:03 AM
Yesterday

Expect criminal activities.

I pray all of these people get their jobs back and justice is served.

Happy Hoosier

(8,751 posts)
68. A Claim of "poor performance" is a positive claim....
Thu Feb 20, 2025, 11:21 AM
21 hrs ago

Which means it can be litigated. The goverment would have to prove "poor performance," and I bet they can't.

This actually happened to a guy I know. He and his boss did NOT get along. He was terminated for "poor performance," and the boss even fabricated some evidence (mitigation plans, etc) that were not signed and never seen by the employee (at least, not that could be proven).

He sued. Got back pay, legal costs, AND the boss was demoted. This was in the early 2K's.

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