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I Should Have Been A Firefighter - Printable Version +- MacResource (https://forums.macresource.com) +-- Forum: My Category (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Tips and Deals (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Thread: I Should Have Been A Firefighter (/showthread.php?tid=102355) |
Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - rz - 08-25-2010 Mini 9 wrote: I call Bull$hit on that. Go to www.opm.gov and look up the salary tables. Here's a link: http://www.opm.gov/oca/10tables/html/gs.asp The VAST majority of federal workers are on the GS schedule (or the WG schedule, where the pay is even lower) and the vast majority of them are at or below the GS-11 level. I'd like to know how they calculate the benefits. Long gone are the days that federal employees didn't pay into social security. Health care is affordable, but not free. And in the technical sector, even though the "average" federal employee in a scientific/engineering position makes more than the "average" private sector employee, they make FAR less than scientists/engineers in the private sector. The last study I saw determined that, salary-wise, the federal scientist/engineer makes between 20 and 25% LESS than his private sector counterpart. Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - SDGuy - 08-25-2010 Mini 9 wrote: No, their paycheck does NOT equal $123K. Those numbers include a calculated value for health care and leave time. Also - do "Private workers" include all those people earning minimum wage? For the most part, the Federal Government does not have minimum wage type jobs. A better comparison would be wage + benefits comparison for similar jobs - Engineer vs. Engineer, Project Manager vs. Project Manager, etc. Not Engineer vs. DoYouWantFriesWithThat... Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - Grateful11 - 08-25-2010 >"When my dad was on the railroad there was a story published about how the highest paid guy on Amtrak was a porter based out of Chicago who would take any overtime he could get and cashed in his vacations. He made more than the CEO" I do work for a railroad and we had a guy, a carman, that made about $82K a year by working all the OT he could get which was 12 hours a day 5 days a week. He was the local shop chairman for the his union so he controlled the OT board for his craft. Unless the CEO of Amtrak made a very small sum back then I don't see how a Porter could make more than the CEO. BTW: Railroad workers don't pay into Social Security just Medicare and Railroad Retirement. Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - lafinfil - 08-25-2010 Grateful11 wrote: This was over 15 years ago and the Chicago Tribune ran a story about him. He was a porter and worked out of Chicago to the west coast. He would stay on the train all the way out and back then take a day off and go again. The porters were probably not limited by require hours of rest like the engine crew and guys in the shops (and they get tips too!) Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - Grateful11 - 08-25-2010 lafinfil wrote: This was over 15 years ago and the Chicago Tribune ran a story about him. He was a porter and worked out of Chicago to the west coast. He would stay on the train all the way out and back then take a day off and go again. The porters were probably not limited by require hours of rest like the engine crew and guys in the shops (and they get tips too!) You're right about the rest periods, didn't think about that. Engineers and Conductors are pulled from trains after so many hours on the train. The railroad is one the strangest places one could ever work, they'll actually put you in a taxi and drive you from one state to another to put on a train to take over for another crew and then you might get laid over in a motel for a day or two waiting for another train to another location. Then there's safety, safety meeting at least twice a day and stretching exercises with each meeting. The rule book we have is about an inch thick, the folks out on the track have even more rules. Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - maco - 08-25-2010 lafinfil wrote: Everyone on the HBFD is either a Fire Captain, Chief, Engineer or Paramedic (with the exception of the Admin Asst). Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - lafinfil - 08-25-2010 Sounds like they have too much upper management, but that's probably because the pay is so good. : -) Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - decay - 08-25-2010 the railroads also play lots of games - i know someone personally who keeps getting laid off/let go, then re-hired, repeat as necessary. he's trying to get a job w/Amtrak, currently he drives cargo trains. Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - Mike Johnson - 08-25-2010 As the victim of a felony arson attack, I owe the local FD a lot. If they hadn't arrived quickly, my house might've been damaged. If they hadn't arrived at all, my house might've been destroyed. So, two points. First, does a fire department provide a net benefit? Do they save more in value than they cost in dollars? If they do, they're more than earning their pay. Second, if it's such a crazy good deal, all those people who think it's outrageously generous should become firefighters. Put up or shut up. Really. Re: I Should Have Been A Firefighter - Lee3 - 08-25-2010 Mike Johnson wrote: They are trying to. There are many qualified applicants. I am surprised no one has mentioned the retirement with Cost of Living Adjustment. Some cities are paying more in retirement and disability payments than they pay for existing services. Oh and the disability is often wink wink not enough to stop them from playing golf. |