- Messages
- 1,519
- Facility
- JNU Juneau Tower
Wasting? You got a 20% bonusWasting time of fellow controllers who train you is what pisses people off, bro.
Wasting? You got a 20% bonusWasting time of fellow controllers who train you is what pisses people off, bro.
Yes you can use staff to circumvent the release policy. Has to be permanent staff and you’ll lose good time for the time period in which you’re staff. It’ll be up to the ATMNot to steal the thread BUT does anyone know if you can take a SS job and then get to a controller position later at the same facility? Guessing that’s just an ERR but i haven’t heard of anyone doing that. NCEPT ain’t going to get me home
I believe kombucha23 is correct in that the SSS position can be assigned as additional duties on a "temporary" basis at your current facility, but if there is a bid out on USAJobs for a SSS position marked as "temporary" then I believe the 1 year restriction still applies.I couldn’t find this answered anywhere.
Absolutely possible, essentially is an ERR without a "losing facility" aspect to it in NCEPT. We just had a SSS do something similar, but was for an OS position instead.Not to steal the thread BUT does anyone know if you can take a SS job and then get to a controller position later at the same facility? Guessing that’s just an ERR but i haven’t heard of anyone doing that. NCEPT ain’t going to get me home
If that pisses someone off, then that person is miserable and will find whatever reason to be and stay miserable.Wasting time of fellow controllers who train you is what pisses people off, bro.
It's weird to me how Radar controllers don't consider that a desk job. You're sitting in a chair, staring at a screen and typing things.Here in Atlanta we had someone do this and was only able to get TMU. Not as bad at a desk job
How long should one wait before it’s considered burning bridges?I'm good with that 20%, i prefer my leave approved more so. But just stating the obvious, since forever. Never would I sit down and tell my trainers I plan on bouncing after checking out. Leaving too soon just burns bridges I don't care to burn. But that's just me.
52 weeks. Like the bid states.How long should one wait before it’s considered burning bridges?
Then he can’t leave too soon, right?52 weeks. Like the bid states.
Peter always chiming in with the FACTS.Do what's best for you, your future and those you care about. No one is going to look out for your best interests aside from you in this career, not the agency, not the union and certainly not those who would get salty about you taking a desk or filing an ERR. They got paid to train you, it wasn't some privilege bestowed upon you by them out of the goodness of thier hearts. They weren't doing you a favor. That's toxic controller bullshit, and the workforce is full of it.
What your current coworkers will think of you shouldn't be a consideration in future career moves and improving your life situation. If getting off the boards so you can take the wife out on a Saturday night or make little Timmy's tee ball games or not missing out on social events with your friends because your schedule is shit outweighs the shift premiums, or a few years tacked on at the twilight of your career is less important than the next 25 years of nights weekends and holidays do whats good for you. There's absolutely no shame in that and anyone who says otherwise is an inconsolable prick.
are you a member of tmu or something?Maybe to get to a different location or have a schedule he wants that will benefit his life?
The God complex within ATC is pathetic. Why are you so insecure that you talk shit to strangers on the internet because of their job choice?
The point is moot.Then he can’t leave too soon, right?
That’s a good way to put the whole take, tbh.The point is moot.
Do what's best for you, your future and those you care about. No one is going to look out for your best interests aside from you in this career, not the agency, not the union and certainly not those who would get salty about you taking a desk or filing an ERR. They got paid to train you, it wasn't some privilege bestowed upon you by them out of the goodness of thier hearts. They weren't doing you a favor. That's toxic controller bullshit, and the workforce is full of it.
What your current coworkers will think of you shouldn't be a consideration in future career moves and improving your life situation. If getting off the boards so you can take the wife out on a Saturday night or make little Timmy's tee ball games or not missing out on social events with your friends because your schedule is shit outweighs the shift premiums, or a few years tacked on at the twilight of your career is less important than the next 25 years of nights weekends and holidays do whats good for you. There's absolutely no shame in that and anyone who says otherwise is an inconsolable prick.
Eh.... just a long held opinion that people who think this job is the end all be all of jobs and it's some privilege to do it, and being a controller makes them less of a nobody cog in the wheel than anyone else in any other fed job is fooling themselves.Peter always chiming in with the FACTS.
I love this take, if someone asks me whats wrong with the FAA I would point to this comment. As a ton of people mentioned you are PAID to train people, its part of your job. Could you imagine a worker at jiffy lube saying "I don't do oil changes, its a waste of my time". Maybe if the work environment was full of toxic shitheads the agency wouldnt have people jumping at every staff support/supervisor and DOD gig out there.Wasting time of fellow controllers who train you is what pisses people off, bro.
Anyone who doesn't believe this watch someone go medically down, see how fast your spot gets filled with OT and how quick new people come to fill their spot once they retire.being a controller makes them less of a nobody cog in the wheel than anyone else in any other fed job is fooling themselves.
I agree with my comrade. No one is going to look out for your interests but you. If you died tomorrow the staffing work book would be updated by EOD to reflect one less body.Do what's best for you, your future and those you care about. No one is going to look out for your best interests aside from you in this career, not the agency, not the union and certainly not those who would get salty about you taking a desk or filing an ERR. They got paid to train you, it wasn't some privilege bestowed upon you by them out of the goodness of thier hearts. They weren't doing you a favor. That's toxic controller bullshit, and the workforce is full of it.
What your current coworkers will think of you shouldn't be a consideration in future career moves and improving your life situation. If getting off the boards so you can take the wife out on a Saturday night or make little Timmy's tee ball games or not missing out on social events with your friends because your schedule is shit outweighs the shift premiums, or a few years tacked on at the twilight of your career is less important than the next 25 years of nights weekends and holidays do whats good for you. There's absolutely no shame in that and anyone who says otherwise is an inconsolable prick.