Contractors who are doing very, very well helping Uncle Sam with national defense and homeland security stand to reap a major windfall in talent and dollars, if...
Contractors who are making big bucks helping Uncle Sam with national defense/homeland security could reap a major talent-and-dollars windfall if Congress slashes 150,000 federal jobs and lowers benefits for future retirees.
Many of them are watching in delight as politicians, in the name of economy, move to make government a not-so-great place to work. One proposal would trim take-home pay 5 to 6 percent.
Not that there is any connection, but contractors, using money paid them by the government, contribute a lot more money to politicians than federal and postal workers can or do.
Since 9/11, thousands of long-time federal workers from Defense, Homeland Security, Customs, ICE, the Secret Service and the FBI have left or retired to take related jobs in the private sector. They have several things that make them invaluable to companies that want to do high-security business with the government: A stable retirement benefit from the government, experience and contacts inside government, and must-have invaluable security clearances that are hard to come by.
Private contractors got a similar bump during the 1990s when President Clinton (to the applause of Congress) whacked 270,000-plus civilian federal jobs. Much of the work they had been doing was shifted to firms who paid their employees with money from the government.
Congress and the White House are considering major changes in federal pay, pension, health insurance and retirement rules. Earlier this week we asked readers if they planned to ride it out or bail out.
Wham! We got an earful. For example:
To reach me: mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
Nearly Useless Factoid
by Suzanne Kubota
LifesLittleMysteries says the $10,000 bill is the most valuable U.S. currency now in circulation. It features the portrait of Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury from 1861 to 1864.
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