Did you ever use the time-honored, dog-ate-my-homework excuse in school? Now that you are a grown-up, Senior Correspondent Mike Causey wants to know if the excu...
Once, I think in the fourth grade, the dog really did eat my homework! I swear it!
I had made a dinosaur from chicken bones and popcycle sticks and glued it to the side of a shoe-box. Mike Dog (his name when I got him) apparently got the munchies around midnight. As an apartment dog, he was quiet and cunning. He spotted or smelled my project and quietly ate some.
That said, dogs probably get blamed for eating a lot more homework than they really do. Can the same be said about teleworkers who, for whatever reason, telework only when it feels good? Just asking, because …
Lots of federal offices have been shut down by bad weather this month. Some last week, others, including many in the Washington-Baltimore- Philadelphia area this week.
Essential and emergency operations continued, but many people did get time off. Based on the conditions in the D.C. area (which got off lighter than some other places), it was a good call. Lives were probably saved. Schools closed too. Good move.
Most of the feds we talked with — by phone or email — praised OPM for shutting things down. Those who had agreed to telework in good times were, for the most part, happy to work from home while their non-telework colleagues got the day or days off. But a column earlier this week, with a comment from an unhappy teleworker (B. W.), drew lots of comment.
The commenter said the day off for most was actually a loss for teleworkers.
Most who responded disagreed. Strongly. They said it was comments like that that give feds a bad image with the public. The majority said they were happy to telework on bad days because that was the deal.
One worker, however, said he/she was bothered by people who seem to telework at their own convenience by conveniently forgetting to bring their laptops home with them each day. “It’s amazing how many people ‘forgot’ their laptops (last) Friday!” the commenter said.
Did that happen where you work? Is there some form of laptop amnesia out there that is triggered by ice and snowstorms or was the above an isolated case? Let us know. Meantime, here are some comments on the week that was:
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
Compiled by Jack Moore
Two grandchildren of John Tyler, the 10th president of the U.S., are still alive. Tyler — one half of the “Tippecanoe and Tyler Too” campaign team — served as president between 1841 and 1845 and died in 1862.
(Source: Snopes)
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Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
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