I understand that you might be interested in an IBM Mainframe Systems
Programming opportunity.  I am currently looking for someone with MVS
(Os/390-z/OS) experience that would be interested in working in San Antonio,
Texas.  The environment is County Government.  The platform is z/800 running
OS/390 with CICS.  The future is z/OS and CICS-TS.  Would you like to help
us get there??  If you are interested, call me and/or e-mail me a copy of
your résumé.

 

-----Original Message-----

From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2006 7:32 AM

To: [email protected]

Subject: Wash DC Job Opening

 

 

      I'm willing to relocate to almost anywhere in the 

USA.  San Antonio is not on my short list of "not 

there".  Can you give me any more information on the 

position (and the company)?  Will you get a bounty if I 

apply through you?

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Jim Marshall
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2006 7:32 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Wash DC Job Opening

 

There is a job opening for a GS-10 ($49397-$64213 plus overtime) for a

Production Control, JOB Scheduling/JCL/TSO/ISPF and plenty of batch work.

Before you snicker give me a chance to give some food for thought. Working

for the US Federal Government may not be your idea of a job but you may

change your mind reading below.

 

Let us say you are out of work SYSPROG, in your 50s, and heading to leave

middle age. FACT: if you work for Uncle Sam all you need is 5 years and

reach the age of 62 to retire. Sure the pension is not so great but during

your employment you are covered by a GREAT health plan and you get to carry

it into retirement at the same cost. Plus when you die, your spouse gets to

keep it until he/she dies. There is no need for Medicare Part D for you get

a prescription drugs in each plan. You get the 401K plus a small pension.

OK, give you some real numbers.

 

If you are ex-SYSPROG, then you could be a GS-10 Step 10. You can

contribute $20K per year (before taxes) to your 401K, OPM kicks in 5% of

your salary match, then remember you can do $5000 to your own IRA. In 5

years you have about $140K plus the earnings in the 401K and a small

pension of 1% high 3 years salary x 5 years. Say you had served 4 years in

the service, you can buy in for 4 more years at a cheap price and now you

will have 9 years and not quite. Say we figure the high 3 salary as $70K

you'd get $3,500 per year for the 5 years served or $6,300 for 9 years.

This is more than enough to pay your Health Plan cost and have a bit left

over. You'd be getting Social Security besides. You also have Life

Insurance and it is reasonable. Hopefully you have those big 401K's, stock

options, etc, from the companies that might have outsourced your jobs.

 

Those with maybe prior government time, a few years in when you jumped out

for the big bucks of the private world, would get a higher pension. The

killer idea is that once in the government or back in the government you

could compete for higher jobs a whole bunch easier. Also if you are now

inside the government and die of the stress caused by your private job,

your spouse automatically gets survivors rights and health care for the

rest of their lives.

 

Look out on www.usajobs.opm.gov  and look for the Office of Personnel

Management. The job is a GS-10 Computer Assistant (no snickering about the

job title, the pay is the same as a GS-10 Computer whomever). Vacancy

announcement 06-090-SMO. This is open to all sources, no previous

government time required. Also in the application or resume, this is not

like the private sector where you keep it to one page. US Gov't says the

thicker the better. Spell out everything and if the announcement mentions,

say RACF, then you say RACF. If you had ACF2, your say ACF2 (a RACF

equivalent). If the HR folks want RACF and you say ACF2, no good.

 

The position is with zSeries, z/OS, Parallel Sysplex, CICS/ADABAS,

TSO/ISPF, using Tivoli Workload Scheduler. If you know Control-M, that is

OK or any other package. Even if you do not know the package, you know the

concepts. Remember this is a hands-on so if you were the SYSPROG who

installed the package, you need to say you know how to actually schedule

things because you probably trained the PCS staff. This is not assumed by

the evaluators who might not have been SYSPROGs.

 

As an aside, OPM is a fun place to work and much better than most other US

Government agencies. So look at the long term view and maybe this is right

for you.

 

Jim Marshall

 

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