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I’ve been writing for a while about how Zoom pandemic rules for government workers demonstrated all too aptly who works for whom. The media has relentlessly toed the line of the Biden administration that government workers should absolutely be free to work or not work from home and that it’s a more efficient way to do things.
ProPublica, a leftist nonprofit which, to its credit, occasionally goes against the grain, shows it’s a bleak farce in which the public has lost access to even the agencies and offices that were supposed to be dedicated to it.
In the hallway outside the public advocate’s office in New York, on the 15th floor of the monumental David N. Dinkins Manhattan Municipal Building, a metal sign on the wall states that the office has walk-in hours from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday to Thursday. But the door is locked, and a paper sign on it has a contradictory message: “The Office of the Public Advocate is operating on a hybrid schedule and is only receiving constituents with an appointment.” Visitors are instructed to send an email or call a number if they want assistance.
The sign on the door is not a holdover from some earlier stage of the coronavirus pandemic. It reflects the ongoing practice of the office, a 55-person agency with a budget just under $5 million that serves as a sort of ombudsman for residents seeking assistance with city services or regulations. Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, first elected to the office in 2019, has decided for the foreseeable future to require employees to work in-person only two days per week, and the agency is therefore limiting public access to the actual office. “We’re modeling the hybrid,” said Kevin Fagan, its deputy communications director. “We’ve been calling on the city to adopt hybrid models where possible, to do remote work for health purposes and because that’s the way of the workforce right now, so that’s how we’re operating here at this point.”
Modeling the hybrid. Orwell, phone your office.
What exactly are the health purposes at this late date? And how many of these employees who won’t go to work at the office travel, go to nightclubs and supermarkets? Maybe it’s time to track them like insurance frauds who fake a back injury.
The Public Advocate’s office is closed to the public so that its employees don’t actually have to show up to work. Whom is the Public Advocate’s office actually advocating for? Itself.
The morass of public servants, the vast corrupt enterprise of big government, has only and will only ever serve itself.
The public serves the public servants who are “modeling the hybrid” for their spring fashions.
The reduction of direct interface between members of the public and the people being paid to work on their behalf represents a new normal. The diminishment of access isn’t driven by budget cuts; many agencies are in fact flush with funding as a result of the federal government’s pandemic recovery spending.
Rather, the shift is being driven by government officials seeking to accommodate a workforce that is as reluctant to give up the remote-work option as are many counterparts in the private sector.
Elizabeth Whitehouse, chief public policy officer at the Council of State Governments, said that government officials are grappling with a labor shortage caused by an aging workforce, a skills gap and uncompetitive pay levels that the temporary surge of federal funds does little to address. As a result, she said, government supervisors feel they have little choice but to offer flexible work arrangements as an inducement to hire and retain.
Or, here’s another idea, shut down all the offices that are closed anyway and free the non-workers modeling the hybrid to pursue lucrative opportunities in the private sector. Since they aren’t providing services anyway, it shouldn’t matter much. Why are we maintaining a massive class of government workers who aren’t showing up to work, providing services or even bothering to put in the most minimal effort of justifying their existence?
Besides the fact that they represent the Democrat base.
For government workers, it can be easier not to have to deal with the public in an unmediated way, with all the unexpected demands and drama that can come with that.
As it was for the medieval nobility.
But Democrats pretend that this is a democratic society and yet they do little except pay lip service to democracy.
The unmediated public does generate unexpected demands and drama. Let’s raise the moat.
Take, for example, the process for obtaining a license as a building contractor in Maryland. The Maryland Home Improvement Commission, which oversees that process, has shifted its activities mostly online. Contractors report monthslong delays in renewing licenses, putting them at risk of liability for working without a valid license…
One contractor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he feared putting his license at risk, said that after he finally managed to make an appointment online, the MHIC employee was late in arriving for it and wouldn’t let the contractor into the building, making him wait in the lobby while the employee took the application upstairs.
Who exactly has the power in this “democracy”? Not the demos. Only the ‘crats’.
I think the phrase is “shirking from home”
Here’s the positive part, if they are only going to work two days a week then the office only needs to be less than half the size therefore half the cost therefore half the TAX!!
Maybe not.
How many are ACTUALLY WORKING? Probably NONE!
Is it that the mob isn’t the only institution featuring No Show jobs, or is the mob just bigger now?