Submitted by newbureaucrat1 t3_11dp6qd in personalfinance
I have about 3 years in hospitaliy acquisitions. For the last 3 years I have barely earned 20k/yr. Only in the last 7 months have I been earning $15/hr, and yet I am not salaried. My company simply can't afford to pay me over 40k, and I'm living at home in a place with very few options as a disabled person. I got a degree in political science and was recently offered a job for 43k with promotion potential to the mid 50s in the following 2 years.
With this job being in the DC area I am aware I'll need roommates, that I won't be saving a lot.. but this is a foot in the door to being in an area with actual job opportunity for a disabled person to live. I can't drive, and this country feels actively hostile to those are blind or otherwise can't drive. Most nations and cities aren't great, but most nations at least have public transit that functions. I will have 4-6k saved up prior to moving, and I am trying to find a place to rent with roommates under $1,100 a month.
I am wondering, is federal employment worth it longer than the first few months to get me into the DC area? I have a fair amount of prior experience in media work (social media, copywriting, proofreading, editorial), and could earn mid 50s from the jump.. provided I actually get an offer. All the healhcare benefits, retirement (TSP program)...are any of these worth it when most Americans actively want the government to be cut in half? The country feels so uncertain right now that me getting a job in a generally secure line of work feels equally as uncertain as private sector work. I can't confidently plan 10 years ahead much less 2, given my medical situation and how things seem to be going with inflationn, the math just doesn't work.
nick898 t1_jaa7cd7 wrote
I’m a government contractor living in Northern Virginia. Moving to this area has been one of the greatest decisions I could have ever made financially and professionally.
The economy around here is as close to recession proof as you can get possibly get. Lots of job opportunities. Federal government is very secure work. You won’t get rich, but you can live a solid life with great benefits and a pension. If the position provides opportunities to get a clearance it’s even better.
I think the public transit in DC is pretty good. Haven’t used it in a while but always felt like I could get to where I needed to go in DC.
You’ll very likely need roommates like you said.
If you don’t see a ton of upward movement in your current job I see very little downside to moving to DC for a career in the federal government. Seems like a no brainer to me.
I wouldn’t be too worried about the state of politics in our country. You can’t predict the future. This seems like a great foot in the door opportunity that could lead to bigger and better things 5 or 10 years down the line.