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US Census Bureau

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Review of Budget Division at U.S. Census Bureau - Budget Analyst US Census Bureau Employee Review

1.0
Jun 17, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This review pertains to Budget Division at the U.S. Census Bureau's HQ in Suitland, Maryland. Working as a Budget Analyst (full-time, permanent) provides great training to go on and work with a "Program Area" with Census or other agencies. This is supposedly because the U.S. Census Bureau has one of the more complicated and challenging set of budgeting operations to work in because of our numerous surveys (e.g., those that we request appropriated funds for, and for those surveys done for other agencies or parties). After talking with other individuals who have worked in general financial services directly for U.S. gov. agencies, some have remarked that 'if you can understand budgeting at Census, you can get it anywhere,' or that they wouldn't come to Census to work in budgeting because of the complexity of it. I don't know how true this assertion is, but this is what I've heard or have been told by other colleagues who got this info from non-Census feds or former feds.

Cons

Budget Division (all 4 areas, Formulation, Execution, Working Capital, and Systems) has been going through tumultuous times for the last several years (2014 to Spring 2018), with several waves of full-time, permanent feds leaving the Census Bureau or Budget Division at the GS-15, GS-14, and GS-12 levels, or working on temporary details or even indefinite details within the Bureau. Another wave is anticipated soon given conversations with colleagues and many, if not most (that's not an exaggeration, believe it or not) staff in budget division are applying for other positions at Census and other agencies, or are dusting off their resumes. Morale is shot, unfortunately, because of tone-deaf management (speaking generally), lack of a healthy organizational culture with clear healthy values that are people-oriented, perceived lack of sincerity and even trustworthiness regarding management, multiple vacancies that are not filled leading to increased demands placed upon all, and an overall dysfunctional environment. It's not the pay and benefits that's the problem. It's the intangibles as evidenced by staff leaving for the same grade at greener pastures. "Tone at the top" is alarmingly bad.

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5.0
Mar 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I worked as a enumerator manager and it was fun work! My employees were fun and my managers were knowledgeable.

Cons

It would've been nice to still offer PPE.

3.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Worthwhile work to benefit the city you are working in. Most everyone I worked with was pretty nice and willing to lend a hand if needed. But I feel like I saw the other side of how upper management treats people they don't like as much and i saw aspects that weren't as good through upper managements treatment of others.

Cons

Constantly changing directives from upper management. And they don't have your back when you get questioned why you followed the most recent order from your boss. Inconsistent pay scales by position. Pay varies by location. But they don't adjust it upward. If you hire on in a city that pays less, you don't get a bump if you stay with the company and work in a new city that pays better in your next assignment. Meaning new hires with no experience can easily make more than you because they started in the city that pays more. One of my best employees was paid the least. I felt bad and tried to get their rate adjusted with no luck. It very much has the vibe of they are figuring out things as they go, The department is grossly understaffed. Technology is lacking creating inefficiencies.

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