T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2216.1 | parking lot in ZKO emptying? | ZENDIA::TBOYLE | | Thu Nov 12 1992 00:07 | 9 |
| Someone told me that 1800 people were layed off in ZKO on Tuesday
(yesterday) I find this hard to believe given I see nothing in here
about it. Can anyone confirm or deny layoffs of a large number like
this in ZKO? Perhaps projects with 1800 people in toto were cancelled
and 1800 people are looking. DECwrite and DECchart were cited as
specific cancellations..
Tom
|
2216.2 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Goodbyeeeeeeee | Thu Nov 12 1992 03:22 | 12 |
|
The mail that got circulated widely saying that 1800 people in ZK had been
'tapped' is plainly nonsense. ZK only houses 2800 in all and to leave more than
an entire building idle would be plain daft.
Yes there are project cuts, yes people are leaving, but NOT 1800 in one day
from ZK.
regards
Andy
|
2216.3 | | FREE::GOGUEN | Kneed My Hips -- Bo Knew Tackles! | Thu Nov 12 1992 07:41 | 11 |
| I certainly don't have any details, but December 7th, 1993 will be the
52nd anniversary of Pearl Harbor and the 1st anniversary of a lot of
tapping in TNSG. The 1800 figure may wind up being close (I've heard
1000-1500), but not just from ZKO -- TNSG is spread out further than
just Spit Brook......
As Ken Hobday said in another note, projects have been informed of
their demise, but much still needs to be considered for continued
customer satisfaction (whatever that is)...... :-(
-- dg
|
2216.4 | One who know's for sure | SBVS02::SOFFAX::anthony | | Thu Nov 12 1992 10:33 | 8 |
| Hi,
To let you know, yes the 7th of Dec is the date for the next round.
I know as I am one of the selected, Our group here in MR4 is going away.
C.A
|
2216.5 | | KNGBUD::B_SIART | Say something that makes me think! | Thu Nov 12 1992 14:04 | 8 |
|
I've been finding that a lot of the memos/statements that are being
retracted as of late are winding up being true. (i.e. the David Stone
resignation being one of them....)
-B
|
2216.6 | Nit | ELMAGO::BENBACA | New Mexico *IS* Part of the U.S.! | Thu Nov 12 1992 18:36 | 5 |
| re .3
You mean December 7th, 1992. Not 1993, right? :^) If it is 1993
then for sure many more than 1800 people will have been tapped by
then......
|
2216.7 | | GLDOA::MADISON | | Thu Nov 12 1992 19:05 | 2 |
| I thought that 4 years ago VP George bush said September 7th.
was Pearl Harbor Day.
|
2216.8 | | PEEVAX::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Thu Nov 12 1992 21:44 | 11 |
| Actually, I believe Spitbrook is closer to around 2300 after it lost a
couple of hundred around serp time. Losing 1800 would leave little more
than the grounds staff...
Also, this is where are large number of people have busted their buts
to get O/S's out the door for Alpha. TO let that collection of people
go, (as thanks for a job well done) would be the death knell for DEC
ever trying to hire another software engineer anywhere...
q
|
2216.9 | Make your point | COUNT0::WELSH | Think it through | Fri Nov 13 1992 07:24 | 9 |
| re .2:
>The mail that got circulated widely saying that 1800 people in ZK had been
>'tapped' is plainly nonsense. ZK only houses 2800 in all and to leave more than
>an entire building idle would be plain daft.
So?
/Tom
|
2216.10 | Fire people who spread deliberate mistruths | SMAUG::GARROD | Floating on a wooden DECk chair | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:09 | 7 |
| Re .all
Personally I hope the person who sent the mail saying 1800 people in
ZKO were TFSOed gets fired not TFSOed. It was an extremely
irresponsible thing to do.
Dave
|
2216.11 | smile a little | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | | Fri Nov 13 1992 15:59 | 3 |
| Lighten up Smaug::Garrod! The memo was probably just black humor.
Ken
|
2216.12 | | BALMER::MUDGETT | One Lean, Mean Whining Machine | Fri Nov 13 1992 16:31 | 20 |
| Greetings,
Speaking of firing someone!!! There is a field service organization
that is loosing some number like 1/2 of its fse's because a mamoth
customer has decided to go self-maintenance. I was gabbing with an
engineer about this and he said that the cust. looked at the numbers
they were paying us and blab, blab, blab. I asked if the site had a
service salesman and they did. Someone who is dedicated to the site
but the person is never at the site! The salesperson "works at home."
Not a problem but the site lost half our buisness and the customer
has never (effectively) seen the salesperson! The question I ponder
is, shouldn't this person get fired for some amount of incompetance!!
Or maybe in reverance for some past heroic deed the person should get
another site to ignore.
Sorry for getting off the subject but with Dec. 7 looming it seems odd
that we are still shooting the grunts rather than some of the officers
of situation.
Fred
|
2216.13 | A retraction of the 1800 *was* sent out | ALLVAX::APPEL | No matter where you go, there you are. | Fri Nov 13 1992 20:59 | 3 |
| For those who may not have seen it, the person who sent out that 1800
person memo sent out a retraction to everyone who received the mail.
(What a job THAT must have been.) He most humbly apologized, too.
|
2216.14 | | FREE::GOGUEN | Kneed My Hips -- Bo Knew Tackles! | Sat Nov 14 1992 08:24 | 4 |
| RE: .6, RE: .3
I didn't mean that the layoffs were to occur in 1993 -- I just worded
it differently -- look again.....
|
2216.15 | We were informed today of D-Day | BSS::G_HEDRICK | Obviously my VOTE didn't count! | Tue Nov 17 1992 12:31 | 21 |
| Well,
We just got outta meeting with our Distrct Manager and were told our
group 1-800-DEC-SALE will heavily be affected. Were told it wasn't
tied to any revenue we helped bring in with the sales force, that it
was directly tied to a headcount number. Our selection criteria will
be:
1. What we had on our last two PA's.
2. Time with the company-----the more time the better off we are.
3. Skill set we have.
Fortunately I might be better off than some because of time, but does
this mean DEC can just not TFSO me this time, but wait until there are
no monies and then get me good! I have already been thru one TFSO and
it ain't fun!
Waiting...
Glenn
|
2216.16 | Priority mixup | FALCNS::THRASHER | | Wed Nov 18 1992 09:13 | 10 |
| With all the talk about getting back to core competencies etc. it seems
rather illogical to have skill sets as the third criteria for evaluating
people. Time at DEC is not a good measure of someone's capabilities or
value to the company. Skill set and performance are the essential
criteria for determining one's value. Length of service and productive
service are not mutually inclusive. TFSOing people with valuable skills
because they have less time at DEC is not going to solve this company's
problems. After all they may be able to patch the hole in the bottom of
the boat which is the real problem, not the size of the crew.
|
2216.17 | just to clarify... | BOSEPM::DISMUKE | Romans 12:2 | Wed Nov 18 1992 09:24 | 13 |
| The criteria for downsizing is:
skills to match need (based on current projects)
then last 2 performance ratings
and if there is still a "tie"
then years with company
re -1 skills is the first "test". DEC is not letting those needed
parties go unless there is someone who is needed "more" for future
work.
-sandy
|
2216.18 | to clarify the clarification | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Free at last in 58 days | Wed Nov 18 1992 10:23 | 7 |
| re .16 and .17
There is still no consistency between locations and no reason to expect
it. What is true for you at your location is ont necessarily true for
the company as a whole.
Dick
|
2216.19 | Like aneone defines skill requirements | ITOWER::CARADONNA | | Wed Nov 18 1992 11:41 | 8 |
| I for one would love to know what the "skills" are that are needed.
Without these defined, this criteria is meaningless. If the skills were
defined, we might be able to develop them. I think this is a mean trick
to hide management incompetence. It makes it seem that the TSFO'ed
person is deficient. If we are told what the skills are we will get the
skills. Otherwise spare us the bogus criteria.
peter (highly skilled in everything valuable)
|
2216.20 | | MU::PORTER | savage pencil | Wed Nov 18 1992 12:30 | 28 |
| The way in which it was explained by John Adams (head of End Systems
group in NaC) was this: the Big List is ordered by
(1) rating from last two reviews
(2) time of service
That's it. Nothing to do with skills or projects.
A manager can attempt to argue that a targeted individual ("X")
should not be laid off, because X has unique critical skills,
and if X goes, then there's no-one left who can do a job
which needs doing. A strong case must be documented -- this
case is closely scrutinized by Higher Powers (my term; I'm not
sure who does this) to make sure it's watertight. Since, unlike
the above criteria, this one involves some element of judgement,
then DEC must ensure that there is no appearance of bias which
could provide material for a future discrimination suit.
If X gets a waiver, then the next person up the Big List
gets the axe instead.
This procedure is supposedly applicable across the
corporation, or at least across all of engineering. (Sorry,
I don't pay too much attention to the process outside
of engineering, since it doesn't directly affect my
welfare). The only place I can see where there's
room for local interpretation is (possibly) the exception
process, and even that seems doubtful.
|
2216.21 | | MU::PORTER | savage pencil | Wed Nov 18 1992 12:35 | 15 |
| re .19
> If we are told what the skills are we will get the
> skills.
It's not about whether anyone's capable of acquiring new and
useful skills. It's about whether getting rid of person X
would leave a hole which (a) must be filled (b) could not
be *immediately* filled by someone else. That is to say, if
person X is the only person who already has skills in a
certain area, and that area is absolutely vital, then getting
rid of X would leave the organization in a very bad way (even
worse than getting rid of someone else).
At least, that's the way I interpreted the message.
|
2216.22 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Wed Nov 18 1992 12:41 | 26 |
| <The way in which it was explained by John Adams (head of End Systems
<group in NaC) was this: the Big List is ordered by
(1) rating from last two reviews
(2) time of service
<That's it. Nothing to do with skills or projects.
That is not my understanding. My understanding is that some projects
are going to be or already have been cancelled or retrenched. It is
my understanding that only people in THOSE positions will be subjected
to the criteria.
1) &
2) above
So that, as an example, a person who is a 3 working in a position that
is to be retained, faces much less personal jeopardy than a 1 person
working on a project that is to be eliminated. (As a practical matter,
I think it is quite likely that some/many of the 1s whose positions are
to be eliminated will probably be able to find positions elsewhere in
engineering.)
I speak only of engineering as well.
herb
|
2216.23 | time of service can be either way...!!! | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Wed Nov 18 1992 13:07 | 5 |
| and by the way...
time of service can be used either way when your the one making
the decisions....by that I mean so would see it as less time
makes a person better than one who has more time...!!!!
|
2216.24 | | MU::PORTER | savage pencil | Wed Nov 18 1992 13:15 | 16 |
| re .22
Hmm, we were specifically told that <what you said> was NOT the
case.
That is to say, engineers get laid off regardless of project.
There is one Big List, ordered by rating/service-time, for
End Systems.
After the dust has cleared, we reassess who's-on-what, and
move engineers around so as to ensure that the higher-priority
projects (most likely to bring in revenue, I assume) are
adequately staffed.
I came away with the impression that this was the corporate
methodology, not just End Systems, but I could be wrong there.
|
2216.25 | More information | SMAUG::GARROD | Floating on a wooden DECk chair | Wed Nov 18 1992 17:51 | 15 |
| Re .24
What Dave Porter is saying is absolutely correct for NAC. The
additional piece of information is the following. Once the list exists
the only way to get people off of the list is to document that they
have a skill set that the 'company' (could be a specific project) needs
that could not be picked up by an engineer of the same job code (note
not the same performance level) within 6 months. If you can document
that somebody has a skill that couldn't be picked up within 6 months
then you can't get that person off of the list and the next one gets
axed instead.
Dave P is dead right the list is cross organizational.
Dave
|
2216.26 | True for the UK? | XNOGOV::LISA | Give quiche a chance | Thu Nov 19 1992 05:46 | 6 |
| I don't think it's legal to make people redundant using these criteria
in the UK. Am I right or wrong? I thought that the *job* had to be
redundant not the *person*.
Lisa.
|
2216.27 | BOHICA again | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Thu Nov 19 1992 07:57 | 7 |
| By ranking time-of-service so highly, maybe they're trying to save
money on the packages being given out. You have to pay these people
less to boot them out the door. As we've seen, each round has a new,
less attractive package. In VMS, we were told we would likely get hit
again (after Dec. 7th) at the end of the fiscal year. I would expect
the package at that point to be practically nothing. So they're saving
that for the people who have been here the longest.
|
2216.28 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Thu Nov 19 1992 13:28 | 29 |
| re .24,.25
Praps, my info isn't correct. Assuming that it isn't ...
Do either of you have any info on how one rank orders -say- a prin. engr in
Mike Thurk's organization against a prin. engr in
Dennis Roberson (nee David Stone)'s organization against a prin engr in
Bill Demmer's organization?
And given that a principal engineer in Dennis Roberson's org is 'higher
ranked' (using whatever criteria) than some specific engineer in ...
then that 'higher-ranked' engineer will not be laid off unless those
'less valued' peers in the other two organizations have also and
already selected?
And lets suppose -for the moment- that Don Harbert is directed to
eliminate 40 positions and Mike Thurk is directed to eliminate 30
positions. Lets also assume that Don Harbert's 35th person is 'higher
ranked' than the 31st person in Mike Thurk's group. One might
reasonably conclude that Don Harbert's 35th person will get the job of
Mike Thurk's 31st person who will be laid off.
Is that your understanding? And suppose that Harbert's 35th person does
not have the skill to do the job of Thurk's 31st person?
If not how would this cross organizational assessment work?
My hunch is that the reality may be somewhere between the understanding
expressed in .22 and the understanding expressed in .24, .25
herb
|
2216.29 | | DYNOSR::CHANG | Little dragons' mommy | Thu Nov 19 1992 15:06 | 12 |
| re .24
>>After the dust has cleared, we reassess who's-on-what, and
>>move engineers around so as to ensure that the higher-priority
>>projects (most likely to bring in revenue, I assume) are
>>adequately staffed.
How about engineers that cann't find any projects to match
their skill sets? Will they still be let go? Or is DEC
willing to provide re-training?
Wendy
|
2216.30 | some notes | ZENDIA::TBOYLE | | Fri Nov 20 1992 00:22 | 35 |
| With regards to laying off people X in VMS vs X in NAC, there is
largely a consistent 20% headcount reduction all accross engineering.
Hence law of averages are expected to apply, if you let o of 20% in one
org and 20% in another then you don't need to cross ladder.
I must also say I find it very disturbing how the NAC process is being
handled. I am not there, but the process was explained to me. It is an
entirely mechanical process, you find all the people with last two 3's
on their reviews and then after time of service tie breakers, they go
and then those with 2 and 3 are next then those with 3 and 2, etc.
This is a politically correct and happy process but fully idiotic which
is easily demonstrated: A prin SW engineer with two 3's is considered
equivalent to a SE II or SE I with two 3's. Not only this if a SE I has
a 2 and 3, then a Principal ENgineer with two 3's goes first. Well
isn't that stupid. I don't know about you but I want to know that the
company is capable of facing the challenges of the tough competition
and I don't trust higher performers down in the job codes over some of
our fine Principals. The Prin ENg job code has some hefty demands and
personnel is willing to insist that they should be thrown at like
everyone else....
Most of the NAC management blindly follows this process according to a
group think socialistic mind set which I think is pathetic.
People cite lawsuit prevention afor this method, but they are more
interested in making people happy than restoring our competitiveness.
In fact in the US, there are no such laws that are broken by applying a
different process of valuing higher job code skill sets over lower
ones, but this company has been buried in VOD for so long that it has
forgetten the value of performance. If our competitiveness is not
addressed, there will be more layoffs and while everyone will be so
called happy with the process, they will all be unhappy without a job.
Lets hope it won't get this bad, we can only hope.
|
2216.31 | If we just did our *jobs*... | COUNT0::WELSH | Think it through | Fri Nov 20 1992 03:42 | 20 |
| re .26:
> I thought that the *job* had to be redundant not the *person*.
Very likely you are correct - technically! But the people who
run our great company (in the UK at least) are not "techies".
This stipulation has always made me smile (faintly). How would
we know if a job is redundant? Hardly any of the people I work
with or meet have job definitions. Those who do, often understand
perfectly well that the criteria for job continuation do not
necessarily have much to do with what is on paper in the job plan.
Digital has always worked (so far) despite its "organisation",
rather than because of it. Success has come from people "doing
the right thing" based on judgment and initiative. Under these
circumstances, to talk about a specific job becoming redundant
is often quite meaningless.
/Tom
|
2216.32 | | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Free at last in 56 days | Fri Nov 20 1992 09:30 | 5 |
| All my job descriptions have included (after the pretty stuff)
"...other tasks as assigned...". Usually, 75% to 90% of the work falls
in that category. So, how do you make such a job "redundant"?
Dick
|
2216.33 | We need GOOD engineers at all levels | CORPRL::RALTO | It's all part of the show! | Fri Nov 20 1992 13:52 | 34 |
| re: .30
>> This is a politically correct and happy process but fully idiotic which
>> is easily demonstrated: A prin SW engineer with two 3's is considered
>> equivalent to a SE II or SE I with two 3's. Not only this if a SE I has
>> a 2 and 3, then a Principal ENgineer with two 3's goes first. Well
>> isn't that stupid.
Well, yes and no. Yes, because it may be legally prudent to follow
a lockstep process, but in the end the company will hurt itself by
not allowing for individual exceptional situations, thus losing some
good people in the process. And yes, more importantly, because folks
who are unlucky enough to have been caught at this point in time with
just a year or two at their current level may still be getting a "3",
but may be otherwise excellent workers whom the company has caught
at an inopportune time on their career path.
But, no, because any fully-functional software engineering group needs
performers at all levels who are doing a very good job at those levels;
imagine an army with all officers, to make a potentially elitist
analogy. And, no, because many if not most principal engineers have
little, if any, desire to do the kind of "real grunt work" expected from
the folks currently at the I, II, or Senior levels, such as coding,
building, testing, maintenance, and so on. ("Incoming..." :-))
Besides that, the company probably doesn't want to spend 70K + overhead
on someone to do SE I level work.
Fortunately, I don't have the burden of deciding who goes and who stays
under the oppressive and suffocating rules that the tense and careful
bureaucracy has whipped up. I wouldn't be a manager on this farm for
10x the salary I'm getting now.
Chris
|
2216.34 | | DV780::DAVISGB | Another hot number from the 50's | Mon Nov 23 1992 11:23 | 7 |
| I spoke with a close friend this morning who is having to lay some
folks off....."toughest thing I've ever done", he said.
"You ought to see what it's like on the receiving end", I replied.
|
2216.35 | | SCHOOL::RIEU | Say Goodbye George! | Fri Dec 04 1992 10:56 | 2 |
| Does anyone know what % they tax the TFSO package at?
Denny
|
2216.36 | retirement benefits | PROMPT::MILLING | Bob Milling, 264-2068 MKO2-2/K03 | Fri Dec 04 1992 11:51 | 7 |
| ref: .35
Along similar lines but in a broader sense, could someone please
summarize how accrued retirement benefits are handled. U.S., 15 years,
too young to retire.
Bob
|
2216.37 | your mileage may vary... | BTOVT::EDSON_D | Nealon nuked us! | Fri Dec 04 1992 14:11 | 33 |
| re .36
According to my TFSO manual (Rev. 1192-PC), I'm told the PC stands for
Plant Closing since I'm at BTO, so this information may not apply to
you...
"If you are vested but not eligible to retire, your pension benefits
will be handled as they are for normal termination:
o If the present value of your accrued benefit amounts to less than
$3500, you will receive a one-time payment approximately 4 to 6 months
after your Termination Date; or
o If the present value of your accrued benefit is $3500 or greater, you
must wait until you are at least age 55 to begin collecting your
benefit.
For more information about your pension benefits, contact your local
TFSO Administrator."
I asked personnel here if there was an easy way to find out what was in
my pension plan (< or > $3500) and they said that around the January
timeframe that kind of information is normally sent out to all DECies.
I didn't pursue it any further.
I know from the past that pension information was sent out (I'm
still trying to locate my last update) but I do remember that it
mentioned "if you continue to work for DEC until age 65 and at your
current salary...blah, blah, blah..." anyways, I don't remember it
mentioning what the current balance was.
Don
|
2216.38 | | CSC32::M_BLESSING | Mike Blessing, CSC/CS Alpha Support | Fri Dec 04 1992 14:51 | 12 |
| re: .37
I just looked at the last pension benefit statement I received.
It only tells you what you would get per month if you keep
working till age 65. It does not say what the present value
is based on current years of service.
The present value would be based on your salary, years of
service, and current age (the younger you are, the lower the
present value). A 'back of envelope' calculation I made for
myself says that my present value would be over $3500 when
I become vested in May, 1993.
|
2216.39 | roll-over to IRA? 401K? | PROMPT::MILLING | Bob Milling, 264-2068 MKO2-2/K03 | Fri Dec 04 1992 15:00 | 10 |
| ref: .37 and .38
What about some kind of roll-over to an IRA or some other plan?
New question: What about money in the SAVE plan (401K):
- amounts up to what's been put in.
- gains
- outstanding loan balances
Bob
|
2216.40 | can't answer the new question but... | BTOVT::EDSON_D | Nealon nuked us! | Fri Dec 04 1992 15:19 | 10 |
| re .39
I'm not a tax accountant nor do I play one on tv. 8-)
With that said, it was *highly* recommended that you roll the less than
$3500 into some kind of retirement plan, otherwise you might take a hit
at tax time. Remember, if you have $3500 or more in your pension plan
you can't touch the money unless you are eligible for retirement.
Don
|
2216.41 | 401K | CSOA1::DWYER | RICK DWYER @CYO | Fri Dec 04 1992 15:21 | 7 |
| re .39
Your 401K SAVE plan accumulations are payable upon retirement, or upon
termination of employment. For a termination, the amount in the 401K
is paid to you sometime after termination, I can't recall the exact
number of days. You must put the money into and IRA or some other
qualified retirement plan, or you will pay 20% penalty to the feds.
|
2216.42 | caveats on distributions | BRAT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Fri Dec 04 1992 20:46 | 18 |
| re 401K and other retirement distributions...
Presently, you have 60 days in which to take a distribution and roll it
over into a Rollover IRA to avoid getting hit for taxes. Starting Jan 1
(I believe) a new rule is in place.
In order to avoid tax problems, you MUST arrange for the transfer to go
DIRECTLY from the old to the new retirement account. It MUST be a
totally hands-off procedure; you CANNOT receive the money.
If you take the money, even if you turn it around within 60 days to a
Rollover, the distributing source (Digital, in this case) MUST withold
20% of the distribution for taxes. Although you can get it back (not
clear how, but the IRS assures us we can) it filing time, you are out
the $$$ for a while.
Dave
|
2216.43 | more on 410K | PROMPT::MILLING | Bob Milling, 264-2068 MKO2-2/K03 | Sun Dec 06 1992 00:47 | 14 |
| ref: 401K
By "20% penalty" I assume you mean 20% of any earnings and not
any penalty against funds put into the fund from payroll deductions.
Since the contributions out of the paycheck were taken out before
taxes, I also assume that both original contributions and any
earnings are subject to taxes including some amount of witholdings.
Finally, I've had loans against the 401K and have repaid them. Is
the interest that *I* paid back into *my* account considered the same
as other earnings/gains?
Bob
|
2216.44 | Have already heard too many horror stories :-( | TOHOPE::REESE_K | Three Fries Short of a Happy Meal | Sun Dec 06 1992 07:03 | 8 |
| It's been said before, I'll mention it again......do NOT rely on
speculation in here or any answers given the people listed in the
transition package. I'm not saying people aren't trying to be helpful;
bottomline, talk to a tax expert.....otherwise you could be in for a
nasty surprise at tax time.
Karen
|
2216.45 | caveat emptor | BRAT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Sun Dec 06 1992 07:51 | 29 |
| re .43, .44
Of course, it is good advice to consult an "expert". Just make sure
that you spend your money on a lawyer, skilled in representing clients
in tax court, and that you follow his advice to the letter. Tax
advisers, CPA's, accountants, notes writers, etc, are not recognized by
the Federal courts as eligible to represent you in tax matters.
My comments (not speculation) about the 20% were based on a recently
enacted law. And, it is a witholding of 20% of the TOTAL distribution,
not of the earnings. I will enter here a quote from the Nov 1992
Kiplingers Personal Finance Magazine, page 116, which provides a fair
synopsis of the effects of the law in laypeople terminology. Or you
can read the law, which I did; it is a great cure for insomnia.
"...Starting in January, a 20% witholding tax will apply to plan
distributions that go directly to employees who retire, quit, or lose
their jobs. Even if no tax is due - and none would be if the money was
rolled over into an IRA within 60 days - 20% will be witheld for the
Internal Revenue Service."
Read the article and follow my advice or ignore my advice; it is of
little consequence to me personally. I am just trying to help some of
our unfortunate brothers and sisters avoid getting SEVERELY
inconvenienced at a time when that is the LAST thing they need.
As always, FWIW
Dave
|
2216.46 | | BRAT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Sun Dec 06 1992 07:59 | 13 |
| re .43
A 401K plan is, for tax purposes, treated like a seperate "person" from
you. The interest that you pay to your 401K on a loan against your 401K
balance is considered earnings by your 401K and will be taxed as such
when you finally take distributions from that plan.
Now, that's just the way it is today. Of course, by the time you take
distributions, Congress may, yet again, change the laws around 401K
plans and all of the above might be meaningless.
FWIW,
Dave
|
2216.47 | How did he know? | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Dec 07 1992 10:08 | 7 |
| Today's "Dilbert" comic strip is particularly apropros. I don't have it in
front of me, but it has "the boss" saying "We've decided to try to use humor
to relieve the tensions caused by corporate downsizing". The last panel has
this exchange between the boss and an employee: "Knock knock". "Who's there?"
"Not you anymore".
Steve
|
2216.48 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Dec 07 1992 16:58 | 4 |
| re .47:
I said it before and I'll say it again. The guy who draws Dilbert *has to*
work for DEC.
|
2216.49 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | A dark morning in America | Mon Dec 07 1992 17:07 | 4 |
| ELF *does* reveal that two persons by the name of Scott Adams
work for Digital.
Tom_K
|
2216.50 | | NAPIER::WONG | | Mon Dec 07 1992 23:14 | 14 |
| I wish I had seen the paper earlier. I would have come into work
early and taped an enlarged copy of the cartoon to the doors of
Personnel here...
...took them over a week to get back to me about setting up an
appointment to have an advanced meeting about the consequences of
the layoff...4:30 pm on the Friday before Pearl Harbor Day does not
impress me.
Outta here on Friday.
B.
|
2216.51 | | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Mon Dec 28 1992 16:41 | 7 |
| I happened to run across something interesting today while
using ELf. All the TFSO'd people are now in a group called
'central group'. I did a search of everyone in that group
and came up with a list. However, in that list is Demmer,
Christ, McCabe, and some other V.P.s which I'm sure are still
with us. But, if you want to know if someones gone, it appears
their new group is 'central' for the next 9 weeks.
|
2216.52 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 29 1992 14:17 | 6 |
| re .51:
I don't think it's true that *all* the TFSO'd people are in Central Group.
There are some people who said in notesfiles that they were being TFSO'd
who are not listed in Central Group. BTW, there are 124 people
listed as being in Central Group whose location is listed as ZKO.
|
2216.53 | Central Group . . | KINURA::RICK | Rick Z | Tue Dec 29 1992 14:49 | 2 |
| Believe it or not, Bill Strecker and Charlie Christ are shown in the
Central Group ! ! What's goin' on ?
|
2216.54 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 29 1992 16:03 | 3 |
| re .53:
Just as .51 said. Maybe it's camouflage. Fuller and Roberson are there too.
|
2216.55 | Makes sense to me | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Revenating Generue | Tue Dec 29 1992 18:33 | 5 |
| Central Group may be the name of the unit for those who are taking over
managing the 9 business units as defined as Palmer.
IMO,
Nancy
|
2216.56 | | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Wed Dec 30 1992 09:56 | 2 |
|
Not all of the 9 business unit managers are in the central group.
|
2216.57 | | SALEM::TIMMONS | Where's Waldo? | Mon Jan 04 1993 07:02 | 8 |
| I found that the names of those TFSO'd in our location, and some
others, are shown as being in "U.S. Area Management", rather than in
"Central Group". This seems to be more related to Customer Services
type groups.
Perhaps each division has a different grouping for this purpose.
Lee
|
2216.58 | Paperwork | GUIDUK::KOWALSKI | Mark Kowalski 545-4259 | Mon Jan 04 1993 17:25 | 7 |
| When I was given the package on December 7, my personnel person told me that
I had that week to talk to her in the local office; after that, my personnel
folder would be tranferred to a "central group" Back East that handles all the
laid-off employess during their "transition" period and I would have to call
there for personnel issues.
/Mark
|