Fri Sep 14, 2007 11:00 pm
I heard that the federal government is trying to make federal awa's merge across to state, which would suck arse, i.e. "take this lesser package, or take this redundancy"Plasma Blue 636 wrote:Gosling1 wrote:Col - it all depends on the govt agency you end up working for. Some are good, others not so good. Try and get a look at the CA or employment agreement, before you decide.
Also depends on if you are talking State or Federal. I work for the federal and our conditions and pay seem to be better than state level. The CA's CDA's EA's (in short Agreements) for all Government branches are public record, so you should be able to look up conditions and expected salary well before you even apply. The only usual variation to this is if you go on to an AWA and then its open slather.
Sat Sep 15, 2007 8:14 am
mike-s wrote:I heard that the federal government is trying to make federal awa's merge across to state, which would suck arse, i.e. "take this lesser package, or take this redundancy"Plasma Blue 636 wrote:Gosling1 wrote:Col - it all depends on the govt agency you end up working for. Some are good, others not so good. Try and get a look at the CA or employment agreement, before you decide.
Also depends on if you are talking State or Federal. I work for the federal and our conditions and pay seem to be better than state level. The CA's CDA's EA's (in short Agreements) for all Government branches are public record, so you should be able to look up conditions and expected salary well before you even apply. The only usual variation to this is if you go on to an AWA and then its open slather.
</pessimism>
Sat Sep 15, 2007 6:00 pm
Plasma Blue 636 wrote:Hate to sound like one of those stupid Workplace relations ad's but thats BS Mike. AWA's are only valid between a single party and a specific employer.
Sat Sep 15, 2007 8:30 pm
mike-s wrote:Plasma Blue 636 wrote:Hate to sound like one of those stupid Workplace relations ad's but thats BS Mike. AWA's are only valid between a single party and a specific employer.
False or not, its still hard not to be a cynic about the incumbent government.
Wed Sep 19, 2007 2:29 pm
I-K wrote:Colette wrote:As someone who has always been employed in the private sector, I'd like to know what people think of working in government jobs.
How does it compare to private industries and what are the pros and cons?
I've worked for large private-sector corporations and as a contractor to government depts and, honestly, it beats the shit out of me what, if any, the differences are...
...both have dysfunctional systems, ill-thought-out and ignored-in-practice procedures, incompetent management, unmotivated staff, stillborn projects by the dozen, squandered resources by the truckload...
If you drive a desk at a large bank, insurance company, telecoms firm or IT services provider, your experience is pretty much what it'd be if you were, instead, working for a government department... anybody above and including the level of section head has no hope of getting anything done, anybody below that level simply doesn't care.
The flexible-working-hours thing is a myth... you're just as likely to have the option of working 7-3 or 11-7 in the private sector.
The lower-pay thing is patently arse-about... unless you're fresh out of school, earning mid-40's as a graden-variety cubicle pilot in a government department is routine. What's, say, a claims clerk at an insurance company earn?
Job security; also a myth... it's just as easy for a gov't dept to eliminate your position as it is for a company in the private sector. That's not even a recent development. When the current federal government first got in 11 years ago, one of the first things they did is cut the number of federal government department staff by half.
Ultimately, try this experiment... go spend a morning standing outside, say, Defence Plaza on Pitt St in the City and study the people streaming in for work. How old are they? How are the dressed? What are they carrying? What are the expressions on their faces? Then, the next morning, go do the same out the front of, say the Deutsche Bank building on Hunter St, and see if you can spot any differences. If you can't and it's the same mixture of marble-faced middle-aged men in suits, overdressed girlies in their early twenties and thirty-something out-of-shape men and women with vacant looks in their eyes heading in to do a day's attendance at both, how different can the work environment be?
Thu Sep 20, 2007 9:42 am
Shaman wrote:I-K wrote:I've worked for large private-sector corporations and as a contractor to government depts and, honestly, it beats the shit out of me what, if any, the differences are...
...both have dysfunctional systems, ill-thought-out and ignored-in-practice procedures, incompetent management, unmotivated staff, stillborn projects by the dozen, squandered resources by the truckload...
If you drive a desk at a large bank, insurance company, telecoms firm or IT services provider, your experience is pretty much what it'd be if you were, instead, working for a government department... anybody above and including the level of section head has no hope of getting anything done, anybody below that level simply doesn't care.
After reading that post I think I want to commit suicide
True enough, and good points, though - I'm contracted out to a government role atm and basically what everyone's said above is true: a whole bunch of people cruising through life with no real desire to achieve.
sometimes it's annoying if you're constantly surrounded by people who are constantly depressed and angry...
Thu Sep 20, 2007 11:16 am
I-K wrote:That's called being an inhabitant of planet Earth...
Fri Sep 21, 2007 6:33 am
Fri Sep 21, 2007 7:37 pm
Shaman wrote:(according to my g/f who's from smarter stock than one such as myself) that if you're constantly thinking, it makes you more active and gives you energy to keep going due to the way your mind works and how it creates neural pathways which allow you to perform tasks better. If you're constantly challenging yourself and making new pathways, you outgrow your role and this will be reflected in your pay
That got deep.
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