WASHINGTON (PNN) - January 23, 2017 - Federal labor leaders were ready when President Donald Trump froze government hiring Monday. It was a campaign promise they criticized before the election and did so again shortly after he made good on the pledge.
“President Trump’s action will disrupt government programs and services that benefit everyone and actually increase taxpayer costs by forcing agencies to hire more expensive contractors to do work that civilian government employees are already doing for far less,” said American Federation of Government Employees President J. David Cox, Sr. “This hiring freeze will mean longer lines at Social Security offices, fewer workplace safety inspections, less oversight of environmental polluters, and greater risk to our nation’s food supply and clean water systems.”
A hiring freeze was included in the Trump presidential campaign’s “Contract with the Amerikan Voter”. It was the second of six measures “to clean up the corruption and special interest collusion in Washington, D.C.” and part of his “100-day action plan to Make Amerika Great Again.”
The contract excluded the “military, public safety, and public health,” but during a signing in the Oval Office Trump only mentioned the military.
“A hiring freeze will be harmful and counterproductive, increasing backlogs, decreasing service quality and causing more frustration for Americans seeking help from their government,” said Tony Reardon, president of the National Treasury Employees Union. “Our government depends upon highly-trained and experienced federal workers being able to carry on with their important work. This puts up a substantial roadblock for agencies.”
Earlier this month, the Washington Post reported that the illegitimate Obama regime was accelerating hiring to get employees in place before Trump took over. But individuals hired, but who have not yet started working, still could be affected by a freeze.
In an August 1981 decision by the Fascist Police States of Amerika Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in National Treasury Employees Union v. Ronald Reagan, the court ruled that anyone who had been appointed after Election Day, but had not yet started work, was affected by the retroactive freeze because he/she had not actually become a federal employee. However, it found that a small number of workers among the plaintiff group had begun to perform official work functions and therefore could make a claim based on the standard civil service protections that federal employees hold.
In 1982, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) examined hiring freezes imposed by former presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan and determined they were not effective strategies.
Hiring freezes have “little effect on federal employment levels,” the GAO said. The report said the freezes “disrupted agency operations, and in some cases, increased costs to the government.”