Originally posted by: Baked
It's called a government job. When you're working for the government, you've made it.
		
		
	 
I agree with that on the majority of gvt jobs, but in my experience, I worked in IT for them in a 130 strong organisation that was reduced to 30 by the time it was done with us. They really hate functions with service delivery attached to it. We supported about 10,500 staff in approx 50 locations.
In the couple of years before outsourcing us, they outsourced the personnel dept which meant there was no one to talk at the biggest site, and changed the job search system policy so that approx 8 out of 10 jobs were only available to people in the redeployment pool (i.e. we were not eligible). The rest were unsuitable unless you were interested in reskilling in skills such as mechanical engineering or business management. With over 120 internal teams having people with those skills already available, that's a tough market.
My team willingly put in all the hours possible - 20 hr shifts in emergencies, and I got promotion to lead this server team, admittedly morale suffered when the outsourcing news hit home.
Almost everyone in my immediate team and the other teams supporting the IT function left to take any job going - most often to IT coordination jobs (i.e. ePencil-pushing for other teams, processing requests for software packages like Visio). If they left to industry then they often took their knowledge with them, although largely if they remained in gvt work, often they were happy for you to give them a call to be fair to them.
As far as service levels went,  some concessions were made but there was still pressure to maintain service delivery levels whilst the experienced co-workers disappeared.
This is the thing though, I was concerned about my future but feel less sorry for myself than others because I was interested in an IT career which defended my decision to stay, but I feel really sorry for those IT people with skills that left to find a new internal government post. The same year of outsourcing (in the end I was the only remaining long-term member of my immediate team) I found out that all the people who moved into gvt jobs face 25% staff cuts in their organisation anyway, and they were targeting posts such as those taken up by people who'd moved into semi-skilled IT coordinator jobs where they were intending to combine them between project teams.
With one exception every techie I've spoken to who left to Industry has had a good experience outside in IT (not perfect, but at least better).
I'm sure there are other fields of work in government that suffer similar problems. The UK government continue to seek staff cost savings in this way because they can't currently afford to pay the pension plans. GVT job!=cushy in all cases.