When it comes to shoveling it, official Washington is years ahead of anybody else. Senior Correspondent Mike Causey says this applies to snow-day policy matters...
(Editor’s Note: Mike Causey is on vacation. This column originally appeared Nov. 7, 2011.)
Roughly 13 of every 100 federal government employees lives, works and votes in the metro Washington area. That includes the District of Columbia, cities and counties in Northern Virginia and Southern Maryland — some of the richest counties in the nation — and a little bit of West Virginia.
Because it is so big — it bumps Pennsylvania on the north, middle-Virginia on the south climate conditions vary a lot. It has mountains to the west, and the massive Chesapeake Bay and even bigger Atlantic Ocean to the east. There are parts of West Virginia and western Maryland with Canadian-like weather and plants and trees. Weather experts say there are a number of micro-climates. Result, very different weather (sleet here, blizzard there) on the same day.
Bottom line is that it is easier to call the weather in Phoenix, or Minneapolis, than here.
The huge government presence, our interesting climate zones and other factors make deciding whether and when to shutdown the government the equivalent of Mission Impossible.
When the government does shutdown because of snow D.C. is ridiculed in beyond-the-beltway spots where people know how to handle snow. When the government doesn’t shutdown people who endure six hour commutes, or who get injured, demand that heads roll. Friday’s column was about the newly revised shelter-in-place policy. It applies to snowstorms and emergencies (like a terrorist attack).
So what do feds who live and work in the center of the bulls’ eye think about it. Here goes:
If the government is shut down or teleworking, why should my husband and his co-workers be risking their lives on dangerous roads driving empty buses or buses with one or two people who are riding government buses to catch a ride home.” Ann, Bus Drivers Wife
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
By Jack Moore
Fido’s not just getting frisky — he could be getting high. The Huffington Post reports that, as the availability of marijuana has grown, especially for medical purposes, the chances that pets could be exposed have also increased. “Dogs love the stuff,” Jennifer Schoedler, a Durango, Colo., veterinarian told the Durango Herald. “I’ve seen them eat the buds, plants, joints and marijuana in food.”
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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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