Congress revives 140-year-old rule that has federal workers in fear – good!
Over
two million people are employed by the federal government, and too many
of them have enjoyed unprecedented levels of job security even when
they’ve failed at their duties.
This
undue protection has bloated the federal budget, and the new Congress
aims to trim the fat by revising a rule started a decade after the Civil
War.
The
Holman Rule, adopted in 1876 as a means to control the booming national
debt post-war, gives lawmakers the power to target wasteful programs,
spending, and has also been used to eliminate individual federal
employees or groups of employees.
“Depending on how lawmakers use the rule,” Reuters noted,
“they could undermine long-standing civil service protections, such as
ensuring that federal employees with the same job title are paid equally
regardless of performance.” A worrisome idea to Democrats who fear the
rule might be used for nefarious political purposes.
But
conservatives and other small-government minded people and
organizations love the idea. Freedom Works director Jason Pye said,
“There are too many people working in the federal government, too many
federal agencies; there’s an alphabet soup. What we’re simply saying is
the federal government has grown too big.”
As The Washington Examiner reported,
“Up to now, firing even the worst federal bureaucrat has been very,
very difficult, so difficult that voters no longer control the agencies
they employ and that govern their lives.”
“Who
runs this country, the people of the United States or the people on the
people’s payroll?” asked Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-VA).
The Examiner noted
that because the rule requires an act of Congress, it won’t be invoked
willy-nilly; only when necessary, as in the following examples:
· Take
Elizabeth Rivera of Puerto Rico, for example, who was restored to her
job at the Department of Veterans Affairs after pleading guilty to
involvement in an armed robbery. Her union not only thwarted managers’
attempts to fire her but even successfully won back pay for the period
when she had been off the job.
· As
part of its argument for her reinstatement, officials of the American
Federation of Government Employees pointed out that her manager at the
agency is also a convicted sex offender…
· Internal Revenue Service employees who deleted Lois Lerner’s emails when they were under congressional subpoena were not fired.
· Aside
from a few scapegoats, the VA employees who systematically manipulated
the agency’s computer system at more than 100 facilities, harming
veterans to win themselves performance bonuses, were not fired.
· Two
VA managers who stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from their
agency could not be fired. Nor could many of those implicated in the
notorious scandal involving a General Services Administration conference
in Las Vegas in 2010.
Why should corrupt federal employees enjoy protections not afforded to other hard-working Americans?
A healthy fear of losing your job is always a good thing.
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