5 Fallacies of Government?

Dept. of Veterans Affairs laughs out loud at the 8 hour work day

October 20, 2009 - 4:37pm

Nancy Nedoma
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By Emily Jarvis
Internet Editor
FederalNewsRadio

Nancy Nedoma is the G.I. Clinical Coordinator at the Department of Veterans Affairs' Hospital in Gainesville, Florida laughed out loud when Chris Dorobek on the Daily Debrief asked her if federal workers can typically get away with an 8-hour workday!

She also represents the employees that work in the North Florida-South Georgia Veterans Health System. She says, they have outpatient clinics throughout the region, representing about 5,000.

"It's an old and bloated notion," said Nedoma of the supposed 8-hour work day.

This is especially true for VA workers where personnel routinely deal with staff shortages, continuing resolutions, and very long hours.

"We are terribly short staffed, there are never enough hands to go around," said Nedoma.

But it's not just physician assistants, nurses and doctors that are short staffed, lab technicians often work 12 hour days.

"80 percent of diagnosis are obtained through the labs. They have to work overtime to cover the bare requirement. The fact that these people have to work overtime is reprehensible," said Nedoma.

For the VA, 12 hour work days are the norm. A fact that Nedoma says leads to overworked medical staff who are more likely to make mistakes.

"The jist of it is that we're not covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1935. That means that anything from the National Labor Relations Board rules does not apply to us as a nurse or Title 38. We are told that we have to stay over, and do mandated overtime. Thank God last year Congress passed a law that capped our professional working hours at 12 hours a day. After 12 hours your mind gets a little foggy especially if you are in a critical care area. You are just not at the top of your game when you hit 12 hours," said Nedoma.

Often times Nedoma admits that she works 14 hours a day. Two hours of which she doesn't get paid for. "I personally will spend 12-14 hours at my desk on a Friday without overtime just to keep my head above water," said Nedoma.

But Nedoma wouldn't change her line of work. "You get to take care of soldiers who protected our country. That is a real honor."

"If you like it for the first three months you will be hooked for life," said Nedoma.

(Copyright 2009 by FederalNewsRadio.com and the Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Federal News Radio 1500 AM: Air Force sets new date for tanker RFP
Home > Newsstand > Federal News Radio > WFED Stories

Air Force sets new date for tanker RFP

February 9, 2010 - 1:21pm


By Jason Miller
Executive Editor
Federal News Radio

Get ready for round 3 of the battle for the Air Force's new tanker.

The Air Force released a notice on FedBizOpps.gov Monday saying it plans on issuing a new solicitation for the KC-X Tanker Modernization Program no earlier than Feb. 23.

"This action will result in a fixed-price type contract for engineering and manufacturing development of the KC-X system including four developmental aircraft with options for up to 175 production aerial refueling tanker aircraft based on existing commercial aircraft designs; a production rate targeted at 15 aircraft per year is anticipated," the notice states.

The pre-solicitation notice lists nine performance capabilities that the vendor will have to meet, including aerial refueling of all current and programmed fixed-wing receiver aircraft including same sortie boom and rogue capability and network centric information exchange with joint services.

The Air Force says proposals will be due not earlier than 75 days from the date of RFP release. Some observers estimate the contract could be worth $35 billion.

The services also states that exchanges during the source selection process may include clarifications, communication, and discussions as necessary. Contract award is estimated by Sept. 30. The Air Force anticipates a single award but reserves the right to award multiple contracts or, not to award a contract at all, the notice states.

The tanker saga has been going on since 2000. The Air Force made the initial award to Boeing, but a scandal force the service to start over. Then in 2008, the Air Force awarded to Northrop Grumman and EADS Company. Boeing protested and inconsistencies were found in the review of proposals. Since then, the Air Force has been planning this new RFP.

(Copyright 2010 by FederalNewsRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.)

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