The company said its earlier contract proposal included an immediate 4% wage increase, followed by a 3.5% increase in 2026 and a 3% increase in 2027. It also included a $5,000 contract ratification bonus and enhanced pension and 401k plan benefits.
Now Smith’s goal is to finish the CPA exams, something she was doing to make herself even more qualified for federal service.“I’m hopeful that in the future that there will be room for me in the government,” she said. “I don’t know what that would look like, but I am hopeful that it still exists.”
McKenzie Hartman, 26, was an economist forresearch division in Ogden, Utah, when she received an email Feb. 19 that she should return to the office with all her equipment.The next day, a manager collected her equipment and walked her out. On the way home, Hartman took a wrong turn because her mind was elsewhere.
“It felt surreal,” she said. “I had planned on working for the federal government since high school.”Hartman lost access to her office’s video conferencing software and couldn’t join her colleagues for her own goodbye gathering. She had to call in instead. Her termination letter came the following weekend.
“It’s crazy to get a letter terminating you for performance when everyone around you is saying incredible things about your performance,” Hartman said.
Since then, she has been applying for jobs and embarked on a road trip with her partner through several national parks, where she’s seen protests against the Trump administration’s cuts.The London resident, fully blind from the age of 7 because of congenital glaucoma, only took up the sport a decade ago and is now
in the world for his category.Also an avid runner, Rizvi has completed two marathons and although jogging with a guide is great, tennis offers more.
“On a tennis court, I have absolute freedom because I know where the boundaries are, no one needs to tell me which way to turn, I don’t need to have a cane or anything of this sort,” he told The Associated Press during ain southwest London.