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Telework Deal Proves Trump Correct About Bureaucrats’ Remote Work Bonanza

Posted on Monday, December 16, 2024
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by W. J. Lee
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27 Comments
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Earlier this month, reports surfaced that President Biden’s former Social Security Administration (SSA) Commissioner Martin O’Malley signed a deal to make teleworking policies permanent until 2029 for more than 40,000 federal employees.

The move was seemingly a direct attempt to impede President-elect Donald Trump’s efforts to eliminate the practice, something Trump pledged to do throughout his campaign – and shed new light on just how empty government offices remain years after the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. The agreement could also complicate the efforts of Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy at the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to force federal employees back into the office.

O’Malley began negotiations the day after November’s general election with the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) union. The contract deal, which allows for up to four days of teleworking per week, was then finalized this month by the agency. After inking the deal, O’Malley promptly resigned to run for chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

It’s difficult not to assume brazen malice from O’Malley toward Trump on his way out the door – especially since O’Malley resisted writing this teleworking policy into contracts during his tenure after stating in his Senate confirmation hearings that he wanted to improve “customer service” at the agency.

The news is also proof positive that Trump’s plans for bold reform of the federal workforce are exactly what America needs, and that voters were right to put their trust in him to get the government back to work.

“Requiring federal employees to come to the office five days a week would result in a wave of voluntary terminations that we welcome,” Ramaswamy and Musk wrote in a November Wall Street Journal op-ed, before news of the SSA telework deal dropped. “If federal employees don’t want to show up, American taxpayers shouldn’t pay them for the Covid-era privilege of staying home.”

AFGE later inadvertently proved Ramaswamy’s and Musk’s assertion right when it attempted to publicly defend the SSA teleworking deal. AFGE’s SSA general committee admitted that “more than a quarter of employees are retirement-eligible, and 60% say they will seek other jobs if telework ends.”

Putting aside for a moment the political efficacy of federal bureaucratic unions, AFGE’s statement validates Musk and Ramaswamy’s claim that doing away with telework would expedite Trump’s proposed reduction in the federal workforce – saving taxpayers money and likely streamline agency operations.

A new report from Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa has shed further light on just how extensive the telework problem is throughout the federal government, not just in SSA.

Over the last two years, Ernst’s office found, 90 percent of bureaucrats have teleworked, just six percent show up five days a week, and nearly 33 percent of federal employees are entirely remote. “These individuals have been caught doing just about everything during the workday except working,” Ernst wrote on X. “My investigations have exposed bureaucrats playing golf, sitting in jail, relaxing in a bubble bath, and taking extended beach vacations. All while on the clock.”

Ernst accompanied the report by calling out the uncomfortable reality that “the nation’s capital is a ghost town,” adding that government buildings are averaging an occupancy rate of only 12 percent.

During the Biden administration, not a single agency had even half of its workforce show up to the office for in-person work. The government spends more than $15 billion in taxpayer money to keep these federal office buildings leased and maintained. This is precisely the type of waste, fraud, and abuse from the federal bureaucracy that Trump warned voters about during the campaign and that DOGE has been charged with addressing.

Ernst, who is chair of the Senate DOGE Caucus, recently unveiled legislation that would require federal agencies to limit their allowance for federal workers to telework. The legislation is gaining momentum among Republicans, who will control both chambers of Congress next year.

Federal unions recently fired back at these efforts to end telework, claiming not as many federal bureaucrats are teleworking as reported. But Ernst rightly pointed out that their frantic response and defense of telework is further proof of its inefficiency.

“Federal employees are already squealing, and the unions representing them are shamelessly fighting tooth and nail against returning to the office,” Ernst recently told reporters. “I invite public sector unions to support my legislation to track their productivity during the workday. This will show how hard they are working for the American people and settle this debate once and for all. In the coming days, I will be highlighting more profiles of ‘working’ from home. The tips from whistleblowers just keep coming into my office.”

Trump’s determination coupled with a willing Republican Congress, likely means bureaucrats’ telework days are numbered, and federal employees will have to come back to the office just like the taxpayers who pay their salaries.

W.J. Lee has served in the White House, NASA, on multiple political campaigns, and in nearly all levels of government.

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Leslie
Leslie
1 day ago

So, if the buildings they are NOT working in get closed, agencies get axed or severely reduced, and some of these “work from home people” have no job to go to, or a workplace to work from, then what? Can they simply be laid off? I do realize its very hard to fire a civil service worker, so there has to be a workaround! Is anyone else REALLY uncomfortable knowing that work at home social security people have access to secure government databases with our personal information? Did we pay to upgrade their home internet security? This deal needs to be UN-DONE!!

General Patton
General Patton
1 day ago

Enough of the Marxist Democrat Union graft, they are bankrupting our country with overpaid unneeded government workers

Tina Hand
Tina Hand
1 day ago

So if these workers only work 1 day at the office per week, then pay them for only 1 day’s work. I think they may think twice about remote work.

uncleferd
uncleferd
1 day ago

Anyway, it looks like the usual practice of undermining Trump is the prime objective. One would think there is other, more pressing work to be done… No?

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
1 day ago

To Reduce Fed Telework:
PU Paycheck at work
CUT worksite acess to worker
Reduce hours
Send Your Fired emails
NO paychecks sent by PO mail
Then see changes from those Remote workers

anna hubert
anna hubert
1 day ago

Even though offices are empty, are they still maintained and kept as if they were functional? No land lord would keep his apts. empty.

MariaRose
MariaRose
1 day ago

It is a very unfair employment program, where workers ( mostly in office-type positions) are not held accountable for their work requirements. I understand the need for flexible schedules, especially in today’s world of 24/7/365 needs, but this “privilege” of applying no recourse to have the employees adapt to changing needs because they “feel” it is their right over every other employee who works either a similar type job or another job that is not a government job. Having a government job doesn’t eliminate the performance needs of the employer and the government is an employer. By tolerating poor performance, ( allowing workers not to be efficient in their assigned tasks and allowing them not to have to commit to work in person in the office) the government is telling us taxpayers that we don’t deserve efficiency but expect us to tolerate continued poor performance.
In my opinion, they should be given the same choice that happens in private regular business settings, either work as required or quit, and if quitting is your choice don’t let the door slam on your way out.

Bill on the Hill
Bill on the Hill
1 day ago

To get started here, it is important to note Joni Ernst is a RINO.
Trumps advisors should already have a workaround on the 5 year O’Biden work from home extension…
Get back to the office, 5 days a week or be fired effective Jan 20, 2025…
As Biden shakes Trump’s hand & promises him a smooth transfer of power , not forgetting selling for pennies on the dollar of the soon to be used border wall material…
The man, i.e. is a disgrace & a pathological liar even as he heads out the door…

uncleferd
uncleferd
1 day ago

Some work effectively from home, while others do not. It seems that management oversight of those who work remotely may not be as effective as in-office oversight. One positive of remote working is avoiding all of the time wasted on office bull-sessions that likely go on all day at the federal level. On the other hand, remote workers can’t get much done if they’re out shopping for groceries, etc.

Johan
Johan
1 day ago

I am pretty sure the recent reporting on federal telework has greatly over simplified the situation. First, I would like to point out that telework is a retention tool that helps the government retain high demand/high skill workers. Second, telework allows for the government to reduce the number of leased buildings and thus reduces overhead. Thirdly, federal employees who telework generally work remotely and not in DC. As such, those non-DC paychecks are being spent in towns and cities around the country which is good. Of the federal employees I know personally, none of them take bubble baths or go golfing while on the clock. I have no doubt these things happen, but I also have no doubt that it is not as common as the media or Senator Ernst is leading us to believe. These are just my two cents.

glen
glen
1 day ago

Maybe the real problem is too much overpriced real estate. Most of the negative comments about abuses by federal employees is bloviated BS meant to rile up the uninformed. EVERY employer has a certain number of grifters who do everything they can to get paid without doing anything. Instead of vilifying federal employees how about we cancel billions in unneeded leases (talk about a jobs program for landlords!!) and consolidate federal agencies into a smaller footprint.
The government seems to be working just fine. And, I don’t know about most of you, but I didn’t vote for Musk or Ramaswamy.
By the way.. anyone see the news about new legislation being proposed that would prevent the government, specifically the National Highway Safety Administration, from collecting crash data about self driving cars. Legislation, mind you, pushed by Musk for years. Gee, wonder how he got congress to start pushing that through… hmmmm?
You all scream and yell about federal workers who, by the way, started telework UNDER the 1st Trump administration, and at the urging and direction of the 1st Trump administration due to a pandemic that THEY lost control of, while at the same time completely and indifferently shrugging. your shoulders over the clear and utterly brazen conflicts of interest Musk and Ramaswamy bring to the table. Musk, the “electric jesus”, who for years has been basking big oil and the need to ween americans off of fossil fuels, suddenly backing a president that is all about drill baby drill. Wow. Not long before his shareholders bring a class action lawsuit against him…
our government, Red and Blue, are beyond corrupt… yet you cheer on “your team” without a care In the world. We are all going down with the ship… all of us.

The Hammer
The Hammer
1 day ago

The rest of the world went to work years ago! Why are they so special? This cant be effective use of our tax’s and must stop. We need to thin the swamp anyways, this is an easy way to do it.

Phil
Phil
1 day ago

Obviously, you can’t expect these bureaucrats to come into the office, it would interfere with the job they have where they are spending most of their time.

CassCowgirl
CassCowgirl
1 day ago

This is how the “improved customer service” works in real life with the SSA working from home. Day one, on hold for 3 hours, the initial recording says wait time of two hours. After 3 hours gave up. Day two of trying to call SSA for an appointment. On hold for 4 hours, initial recording again saying wait time of two hours. No one ever answered, so that’s the improved customer service you will receive with SSA gets to work from home.

exoticdoc2
exoticdoc2
1 day ago

No matter how painful, it is the fault of those that set this up in the first place, these worthless drags on the American taxpayer must be axed. Period. End of story. If we do not start making major cuts now we are doomed. We need more wealth producers and far less wealth takers (which is all gummint employees).

PapaYEC
PapaYEC
1 day ago

We’d be better off if these bureaucrats did nothing at all.

gus
gus
1 day ago

My daughter is a paralegal for the federal government and works from home two of the five days. There have been at least two instances where she got a call at home at 9;30 pm for her to quickly do whatever paperwork to get a cell phone tap to zero in on where the criminal was. When she is has court, she gets to work at 7 am, court from 9-5, then back to the office to get all the exhibits, etc. ready for the next day. I think there should be more of an individual assessment, although I do believe there should be a minimum of 3 days in the office.

George M
George M
1 day ago

The solution is simple. No teleworkers required, all these folks just effectively quit, thanks to their union!

Michael J
Michael J
1 day ago

Thanks for revealing non critical jobs that don’t require participation in person. Cut the waste here first, return to work or be unemployed.

SAW
SAW
18 hours ago

“If federal employees don’t want to show up, American taxpayers shouldn’t pay them for the Covid-era privilege of staying home.”
AMEN!!

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