“Wi-Fi continues to descend”: Donald Trump’s return to office term is terrible

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In the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), which ordered its workers back to the office four weeks ago, the 1 dollar limit created significant problems for those in the office. “They have no soap, toilet paper or paper towels anywhere in the building. Their water machine is broken. Many cannot get on LAN and Wi-Fi continues to descend,” an IRS employee told Wired. Another SSA employee says they were told on “ration paper”.

“Deliveries are limited because no one has a purchasing authority,” says the Wired Ministry of Finance. “This is a joke we carry our own pens and paper. We have few storage pens in my department, but we cannot order more. We are out of notebooks, although there are partially used legal pads from meetings.”

Employees say that return to office term also negatively affects their productivity. “My whole team was, probably wines, worked long hours on quick turnover projects,” says a source of army futures command that works under DOD, “says Wired. “We were able to do a lot of this at home after dinner in the evening because we all have children and family responsibilities. (Return to the office) all this ended.”

Some federal employees say that the return to the office of the office has a negative impact on their health.

A SSA employee who identifies himself as Queer and uses that they/he is destroyed, is also disabled and suffers from chronic problems with pain and mobility. However, they were not unable to make the long trip from their home in the office after the office for returning to the office was imposed.

“Without a car, I pass a mile to the train and from the station to the office of concrete and metal, limping together, using elevators when I can,” they say, adding: “While I can ask for reasonable lodgings, our DEI offices were gutted, so although they were directed to apply through the appropriate channels, there is no one to process them.” During the weeks, since they returned to the office, nothing has improved.

“I don’t sleep well, I can’t have access to chairs and desks and monitors at the right heights to make me more comfortable,” they say. “I had to start reviewing my orthopedic doctor to continue treatment and start physical therapy again.”

A USDA officer says the return to the office has worsened its long -containing symptoms of carpel tunnels.

“I have an old wooden desk that is not intended to be a workplace,” says the Wired employee. “As a result that the table is too high for the chair they gave me, my carpel tunnel worsens from numbness and piercing pain in my arm. My carpel tunnel has not been a problem for about 25 years.”

An employee of the Ministry of Finance says that the people in her team should give up because of the stress resulting from the return to the office of the office and the uncertainty of what follows. “People here love their work. We love what we do,” they say. “The dismissal would mean much more than just a salary loss.”

Some employees say that these fears, combined with poor working conditions, also affect their mental health.

“I just go through a depressive episode partly because of the constant insecurity and stress,” says an employee at DOD. “Even the hardcore military boats in my agency feel grim for everything that happens.” A USDA employee told Wired that they are now dealing with severe depression due to these mandates and general fear.

The threat of a ReductionOr RIF, there is a constant care for employees when they return to the federal services.

“There is just a very very dark humor in the office,” says the Ministry of Finance officer. “I think we all expect to get RIFD or fired or something, but we just wait. Business as usual while everything is lit.”

 
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