Did the 16-day-for-some furlough ruin your year or was it a welcome suprise vacation? It is getting mixed reviews from feds who had to work and those who were...
Politicians, think tanks and journalists are still tallying up the financial cost and losses from last month’s 16-day government shutdown.
It is also a political issue, particularly in a state like Virginia where two of the least attractive major party candidates in years hope to be elected governor. Democrat Terry McAuliffe has made the shutdown a major campaign issue in a state with a major federal-military presence.
Despite sharp differences and a major spending edge over GOP candidate Ken Cuccinelli, McAuliffe (as of yesterday) was running 9 points ahead in the polls.
The same poll showed a whopping 18 percent either as undecided (as of yesterday) or likely to switch their votes at the last minute. Eight percent said they would vote for Libertarian candidate Robert Sarvis, although he has received minimal coverage in the media.
Rank-and-file feds, whether furloughed or required to work, are still dealing with the shutdown. Some resented having to work, some enjoyed the time off. Some are angry at what they were put through. Here’s some reaction to last week’s column, “Orphans of the Shutdown Storm”.
“It was nutty that they shut it down in the first place … But it was ridiculous when they said that those at home (or at the beach) would get paid. If you’re going to pay them, tell them to come in and work!” — Ken
“So while the excepted employees may feel slighted, they need to suck it up and count their blessings. I would love to have been in their position.” — Frustrated Taxpayer/ No Longer Proud To Be An American
Finally, a comment from a furloughed fed who said it was not a mid- October fun break:
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
Compiled by Jack Moore
Linked end-to-end, a year’s supply of the paper tags provided at airline counters to mark your luggage would circle the earth 30 times, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA).
(Source: Bloomberg BusinessWeek)
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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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