If you lived through, or observed, the blizzard of last week, how do you think Washington did? Was Uncle Sam wise to give feds a day off, then an early-release ...
A year ago this weekend the Washington area got what turned out to be a 32.4 inch snowall. That is child’s play in some places but it was a “would-you-like-more-whine-with-your-cheese?” event in these parts. We hit a record 54. 9 inches for the winter of 2009-2010.
Remember, this is not International Falls or Murmansk. We’re on the south side of the Mason-Dixon line.
Most feds here got most of the following week off. Many other places were harder hit. And unless global warming makes a fast comeback, the next couple of weeks in the mid-Atlantic are prime snow time. Since we have 285,000 federal civilian workers inside the beltway, Uncle Sam’s snow policy is important to all of us.
Pundits, navel-gazers, traffic experts and safety specialists continue to debate the way the government here has handled things so far this year. The debate will continue until this time next year. A lot of people think the government (and power companies) could have done a better job. That is. releasing employees even earlier and/or letting everybody stay home.
But a number of feds have told us they think Uncle did pretty well, and that it is up to individual employees to take more responsibility for their own health, safety and commute. As in take leave time without waiting to see what the government will grant them.
Examples:
“I checked the weather report on-line, and decided that I would like to be at least halfway home before the precipitation started falling. I took an additional hour of leave by leaving at 3pm. It was just a bit past the halfway mark when I ran into the first bit of the storm. The last miles that were off the Interstate were not in good shape at all, the development streets were nearly impassable and 6 inches of snow greeted me in the driveway. I did get home however; about a half hour before my usual arrival. That was a well spent hour of leave.” H.E. from DOE
“PS. I learned to Drive in Upstate New York. It’s one thing to drive in snow. It’s another to drive in snow with dozens of cars all around you.”
What say you? mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
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