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A Schedule F appointment was a job classification in the excepted service of the United States federal civil service that existed briefly at the end of the Trump administration during 2020 and 2021. It would have contained policy-related positions, removing their civil service protections and making them easy to dismiss.
Ronald Sanders, the Trump-appointed chair of the Federal Salary Council during his first administration, resigned over the matter when Trump first moved to roll out Schedule F in 2020.
The re-introduction of Schedule F "will absolutely" be a tool in reforming the government workforce should Trump win a second term, said Paul Dans, director of the conservative Heritage Foundation ...
The initiative would strip hundreds of thousands of federal workers of civil service protections, effectively making them at-will employees, and would have politicized a major portion of the civil service. [22] Trump's successor, President Joe Biden, rescinded this executive order in January 2021, shortly after taking office, repealing the ...
In October 2020 President Donald Trump by Executive Order 13957 created a Schedule F classification in the excepted service of the United States federal civil service for policy-making positions, which was criticized by Professor Donald Kettl as violating the spirit of the Pendleton Act. [39]
Commonly referred to as “Schedule F,” Trump’s plan was to undo long-standing protections for nonpartisan civil servants. ... Trump won’t have the 60 votes he’ll need to shoot sweeping ...
The Biden administration on Thursday issued final rules meant to protect the jobs of the government's 2.2 million civil servants, as Republican challenger Donald Trump plans to replace thousands ...
In October 2020, Trump signed another executive order transferring at least 100,000 government jobs from being classified as "competitive service" to "excepted service" (Schedule F appointments), a move deemed an undermining of the Pendleton Act.