Federal workers have figured out that this is not a drill. But for many feds, it is getting hard to keep track of what is happening, which threats are real and ...
By now, most federal workers have figured out that this is not a drill. That being a civil servant (while still a good thing) can be nerve-wracking, too. Retirement applications are approaching all-time high levels, even as cash-strapped federal agencies are eliminating pre-retirement seminars, which are invaluable for mid-career and retirement age workers.
For many feds, it is hard to keep track of what is happening, which threats are real and who their political adversaries are. What are the real threats vs. what are simply the round-up-the-usual-suspects proposals that have been kicking around for years. Among things feds are pondering include questions like:
Questions are a lot more fun than finding and articulating real (as in accurate) answers. But we’re going to try. Today at 10 a.m. (EDT) I will join the National Institute of Transition Planning team on their For Your Benefit radio show. We’ll take a look at the state of the federal workforce as of right now.
NITP chief Bob Leins will talk about the financial and tax implications of furloughs and life in general for members of the federal workforce. Benefits expert and Government Executive columnist Tammy Flanagan will look at pre-retirement planning, the best-day-to-retire (regardless of when you plan to retire) and other benefits related issues. What are the biggest threats to your pay-benefits package? I’ll talk about the complicated (trust me) legislative proposals that are out there and the future of sequestration.
Listen if you can (1500 AM or online), and if you have questions email them to me at mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
Compiled by Jack Moore
Apple’s announcement this week that its cash holdings total about $145 billion have led to some aggressive business advice from all corners. Financial prognosticators have (perhaps tongue-in-cheek) called on the tech company to acquire everything from online streaming service Netflix and credit card giant Visa to the entire country of Hungary. However, as Slate reports, “it’s doubtful either of those companies would settle for a measly “145 billion, and countries aren’t technically for sale.”
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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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