California education 'equity' official
resigns because she lives in Texas
Just the News,
by
Madeleine Hubbard
Original Article
Posted By: Beardo,
12/24/2021 3:05:38 AM
The California Department of Education's equity project manager has resigned due to the fact she lives in Texas.
Pamela Kadakia worked for the California state department while living in Texas, according to Politico. Additionally, the Lone Star State is on California's state-funded travel ban list.
California law mandates that state employees live there unless they need to live in another location for their work, such as lobbying in D.C.
Kadakia is the second California education equity official to depart in recent weeks.
Even commies don't want to live in the communist paradise of the left coast.
12 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
rfr46 12/24/2021 4:45:54 AM (No. 1017323)
And that's it, she just resigns? How about prosecution for violating California law? Giving back her salary? I yes, I forgot, that is only for Republicans.
18 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Californian 12/24/2021 4:53:03 AM (No. 1017327)
2, she didn't actually commit a crime but whomever hired her knowing she was in Texas should be fired.
This is a management problem, not an employee problem.
Furthermore, we don't need an "equity" official in the first place. Why do we promote racism in schools as official government school policy since we know equity=racism.
14 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
F15 Gork 12/24/2021 6:32:16 AM (No. 1017368)
Taxes too high out CA way?
10 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
lakerman1 12/24/2021 8:05:14 AM (No. 1017427)
I would bet that she was on payroll with other states. That's the way things are done.
One of the members of my doctoral committee was a gerontologist, and was my outside reviewer, as required by the Ph.D. process.
She wound up working full time in gerontology (elderly) in Connecticut and New York State. She had two highly paid full time positions, simultaneously.
There will be incidents like this all over the place, I predict, as friends hire friends for this stuff.
It is a sweet deal. Diversity, equity and inclusion pay some big bucks.
9 people like this.
dittos #2. where is state hr on this. they pass a law mandating residence in ca for state workers and then implement it?
5 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
GO3 12/24/2021 9:23:29 AM (No. 1017493)
Yes #4. This is a point of hire issue. Massage the hiring process, get a CA sponsor and viola, work a CA job but pay no state income tax in Texas. Some fed workers get hired in a no income tax state, work for a few years, transfer to DC and maintain home of record in the original state. Good deal if you can get it.
5 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
columba 12/24/2021 11:04:49 AM (No. 1017600)
"Equity" is a nice word that (when translated) means It will be a crime if we do not accept homosexual sex as enlightened.
2 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
mc squared 12/24/2021 11:18:11 AM (No. 1017623)
Two in a matter of days. I guess that takes care of it.
2 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
MickTurn 12/24/2021 11:23:20 AM (No. 1017633)
AND BWitch, you are hereby mandated to LEAVE Texas...Forever!
3 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
Starboard_side 12/24/2021 11:28:50 AM (No. 1017640)
And, that's runaway government for you, they can't even see she lived in Texas on her application (CV), and hired her anyway.
Or, did she say she would move to CA if she was hired?
Isn't this the 2nd person in just a week? The other lived in Philadelphia, if I recall and made $160,000 too.
5 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
DVC 12/24/2021 12:32:24 PM (No. 1017725)
Just more "remotely working"...../s off (probably just a no-show job)
Actually, how much of this will be the norm in the near future?
I have a friend who works for a California winery. She lives in Denver. She worked for them for about a year before she ever even visited the winery. She went out for a few weeks to work on-site, then back to Denver. This remote working was part of her original hiring process.
Another friend works for a large federal contactor here in the local area, but never goes into the building. They have expanded a lot in the last few years, ran out of room....so people work from home. His job is working budgeting and planning, which is data, spreadsheets, phone calls and such. He almost never needs to actually be in the presence of other managers. He could just as easily be in Alaska and working for the company in Kansas City area.
The trick is to tell a 'no show' fraud job from a real "remote work" job. Rough rule of thumb...if it is a government job....watch out.
2 people like this.
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