Federal Workers See Risks to Them in Trump Push to Re-Open U.S.

(Bloomberg News/TNS) —
IRS headquarters in Washington. (AP Photo/J. David Ake, File)

As President Donald Trump presses states to re-open, government workers and their unions say they’re increasingly concerned that their bosses will force them back to the office without sufficient protection.

Agencies’ approaches to returning to offices have been uneven, they say. Although the Securities and Exchange Commission’s chief told many workers to plan on staying home through at least mid-July, the Internal Revenue Service has called back 11,000 workers to begin processing paper tax returns, responding to a backlog of mail and answering taxpayer calls.

Workers at some agencies who are already back — or who never left — report wide variations in their employers’ attitude toward safety. For starters, there are no plans for broad testing or contact-tracing. The haphazard approach has led to confusing and often contradictory messages being sent to more than 2 million federal workers, 85% of whom live outside the greater Washington, D.C., region.

“Their lives shouldn’t be taken for granted, and that’s the way we feel right now,” said Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents about 700,000 government workers. “Agencies are trying to appease some in this hierarchy by saying, ‘OK we’re going to re-open,’ but the reality is it’s just not feasible.”

The government’s dilemma is one many large companies have struggled to address. Banks including Citigroup Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are trying to figure out how employees can safely return, exploring policies from alternating teams that would rotate through offices on a staggered basis to seeking ways to better monitor employee health so another outbreak can be quickly thwarted. In a sign that telework is here to stay, Twitter Inc. has told some staff they can work from home permanently.

Asked to respond to criticism about the federal approach to re-opening, the Office of Personnel Management issued a statement saying that “as conditions warrant across each state, Federal agencies are working to return to normal operations. Our Federal workers have shown tremendous fortitude in keeping the U.S. strong throughout this emergency.”

Many employees at key national security agencies such as the CIA, Pentagon and State Department have been hard-pressed to work from home during the pandemic simply because classified documents they need often can be reviewed only in secure facilities, not on a laptop at home.

At the State Department, the “Diplomacy Strong” back-to-work plan for when employees return en masse provides few requirements for temperature checks or social distancing, and masks are encouraged but not required.

That’s in line with Secretary Michael Pompeo’s approach to the pandemic — he’s rarely worn a mask in public — and few top aides are seen in them at the State Department. As one of Trump’s closest and most fervent supporters, Pompeo seems to be following the lead of President Trump, who has said he doesn’t want the media to catch him wearing a mask.

State Department staff have been given three masks that can be washed and reused several times but haven’t been told to expect much more.

At the IRS, staff is being provided with hand sanitizer, masks and gloves, though supply levels aren’t consistent at different IRS facilities, said Chad Hooper, an IRS official and president of the Professional Managers Association, which represents the tax agency’s managers.

The IRS is also offering incentive pay of 10% to 25% to workers to return, largely to perform work that can’t be done at home, either for practical or taxpayer privacy reasons.

But the resumption of work at IRS processing centers hasn’t been uniformly smooth. Days after re-opening a facility in Kansas City, Missouri, the IRS had to close it for several days after an employee tested positive for Covid-19. Nonetheless, the IRS plans to order thousands more employees to return to work June 1 in states including Texas, Utah and Kentucky, that have relaxed lockdowns.

National Park employees are more dependent on the patchwork of shifting regulations at the state level than are their counterparts at more centralized agencies. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt said decisions over re-opening at his department’s 419 historic battlefields, natural sites and heritages areas are made based on local conditions overlaid by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines.

The SEC, an independent agency, may have the most far-reaching — and cautious — policy so far. Chairman Jay Clayton told employees in an email this month that mandatory telework will remain in effect until at least July 15 for the vast majority of the agency’s 4,000-plus employees. Clayton said the move was intended to provide some near-term certainty for staff.

The push and pull among government agencies echoes the battle going on across the nation, where stay-at-home orders, back-to-business moves and even the wearing of masks and other protective gear have often taken on political connotations.

Republican-led states such as Georgia and Florida initiated a gradual re-opening that has now reached all 50 states, though conditions vary within each state depending on the severity of the outbreak.

President Trump is betting that his political base will reward him for pressing the country to re-open quickly, even as the U.S. death count from Covid-19 approaches 100,000. Polls show that Republicans are increasingly supportive of his view that the nation’s economy can’t endure a longer shutdown. That sentiment was bolstered by comments Friday from Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, who said staying closed for too long may cause “irreparable damage.”

Yet mistrust runs deeper across much of the federal workforce after the president’s repeated attacks on government employees as a “Deep State” seeking to undermine his tenure. There’s also the memory of a government shutdown in 2019.

Interviews with union representatives, federal employees and experts show a perception that political appointees want to show up at the office as a sign of loyalty to Trump. Other workers feel under pressure to go to the office and express wariness about donning masks for fear it will displease their superiors.

“There’s a lack of leadership that would ensure employees that they’ll be taken care of,” said Paul Light, a professor of public service at New York University. “There’s all this turmoil in the personnel system and that doesn’t set it up for an agile response to orders to go home and come back.”

To Read The Full Story

Are you already a subscriber?
Click to log in!