I was laid off due to the ISP. Unable to find work I have taken another job at LLNL at half my old pay. To my shock my old departments org chart is as big as it was before the ISP. LLNS has filled all the laid off workers positions with matrixed engineering people. I have the proof! How can they do that? What happened to callbacks? Is anyone looking into this? Does DOE provide any oversight for LLNS and if so who can be contacted?
Tri-Valley Cares needs to be on this if they aren't already. We need to make sure that NNSA and LLNL does not make good on promises to pursue such stupid ideas as doing Plutonium experiments on NIF. The stupidity arises from the fact that a huge population is placed at risk in the short and long term. Why do this kind of experiment in a heavily populated area? Only a moron would push that kind of imbecile area. Do it somewhere else in the god forsaken hills of Los Alamos. Why should the communities in the Bay Area be subjected to such increased risk just because the lab's NIF has failed twice and is trying the Hail Mary pass of doing an SNM experiment just to justify their existence? Those Laser EoS techniques and the people analyzing the raw data are all just BAD anyways. You know what comes next after they do the experiment. They'll figure out that they need larger samples. More risk for the local population. Stop this imbecilic pursuit. They wan...
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I saw my job reposted a few months after they layed me off. It doesn't matter that they have so spend 100k+ to rebadge and retrain. That is the taxpayers problem, not theirs.
They can fire the entire employee base and replace them with H-1B visa employess from India if they want to. Only union employees might be protected.
Of course, it would be immoral and unethical and a security risk, but that does not matter in today's business climate.
There were some mistakes made in ISPing the wrong employees, but for the most part the Lab trimmed its deadwood. If it had been doing that regularly, like most well managed organizations, the massive layoffs of 2008 could have been avoided.
My morale is affected when I see good people laid off. It is also affected when I see incompetent employees remain employed.
GM has backed himself into a corner with promises of no layoffs, but the best thing he could do for the Lab is trim another 2-5% of the work force--including the bottom ULM.
Depending on the number of years worked at the Lab, terminated employees were supposed to have up to three years right to rehire. That means that if you are even minimally qualified for a posted position, by their own policy they have to interview you. Well, they've played that game in their usual fashion as well. I've applied for a number of positions in the past 17 months for which I'm more than qualified. And guess what? No interview, no phone call, no nothing. I'm getting a bit hungry now to get back to work. The job market is insanely tight right now. So, yes, I would go back to the pit for a few more years to improve my retirement situation. My mindset would be like those who remain there--it's just a job, a means to an end.
Clearly there were mistakes in who was whacked during ISP. Comp was the biggest problem that I saw, due to that fact the their DLs and other ULM had no idea what their matrixed employess actually did.
On the other hand, the complaint that older employees were targeted because of their age is nonsense.
Although I was not part of the final decisions, I participated in decisions on which employees would be considered for whacking. I can tell you that age or salary never was an issue.
If the Lab has taken care of its deadwood an a regular basis, it would not have had to deal with so many layoffs during the ISP.
Finally a good comment. Thanks.
10:07 PM is just a troll.
"Although I was not part of the final decisions, I participated in decisions on which employees would be considered for whacking. "
This is contrary to that which we layoff victims were told, and in complete agreement with that which we believed to be true, in that individuals WERE identified. Once identified, business units be easily parsed on a case by case basis, making targeted individuals vulnerable. It then becomes easy to lay off those of us in "unwanted positions". However, it's my understanding that this practice is contrary to the layoff policy. It is certainly contradictory to that which I was told on my last day, and contradictory to the statement I have in writing from LLNL.
Just so you know - Starting at the xxx.1 class and for more than six years, I progressed through the hourly ranks, until I ranked at the top of peer group of the most senior classification xxx.3. I was promoted to a salary position and was doing well in that classification for five more years. I worked for about a year in my final assignment but it was admittedly not a good fit. My productivity was not on par with my co-workers who'd been around much longer than I, to which I attribute to both a lack of clarity of understanding on my part, as well as a vacuum of leadership. I didn't feel like I was a major player on the team, and would have been more productive elsewhere. That being the case, I was looking to move. Before I could pull the trigger, I was laid off. I was a valuable asset before, and could have been so again, so why wasn't I moved?
While I believe I was targeted (perhaps justifiable at that point in time) I have no evidence to support this. Anonymous' comment does support my belief, though, and is in line with comments from my former colleagues and associates made off the record...
I am pleased to see that someone has admitted that "individuals (as opposed to positions) were identified for consideration".
Perhaps someone involved in the discrimination lawsuit will benefit from this admission.