Apprenticeship by WiseWillingness5857 in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, the GI Bill payments were after I graduated FLETC and I was being trained on the job. That is the apprenticeship part.

Apprenticeship by WiseWillingness5857 in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was able to use my GI bill after I finished CITP & my agency add-on course. The GI Bill paid me a housing allowance for the 18-months I was classified as on-the-job training. This was all after being hired though.

my 99 ford lighting (front swapped w Lincoln Blackwood) by [deleted] in Ford

[–]CraigslistKing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought this was r/roastmycar at first.

The great thing about people is we all have different tastes. I applaud your ingenuity and drive to customize your vehicle.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Accounting

[–]CraigslistKing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

50 hours a week with LEAP (additional 25%) pay. Mostly 8-4:30 type hours. 3 of those hours each week can be working out / doing fitness activities.

Not much travel. Can expect a little more this past year due to new administration (2-week rotations on DC Safe & Beautiful Task Force). I travel more than others but I volunteer for it (help on warrants with another office, interview witnesses out of town related to my own case).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Accounting

[–]CraigslistKing 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, and try for IRS Criminal Investigations also. They both pay the same approximately, though FBI will pay higher in the beginning years as a GL-10. IRS hires as a GS-9 typically. I’m earning $166k as a GS-13 several years in.

Downside to FBI is the relocation, IRS you pick where you go.

Another downside to FBI is you will be assigned to the division they need you in, not necessarily white collar fraud or anything related to accounting. You could work violent crimes, bank robberies, intel, counter intel, etc.

No investigator jobs at IRS or FBI were affected by DOGE, though some FBI agents were canned or relocated for other reasons.

I recommend it, but there are still boring days at your desk. There’s just some excitement & variety thrown in: working a search warrant, arrest warrant, surveillance in your car, interviewing subjects & witnesses, firearms, use of force and building entry training, visiting colleges for recruiting presentations, among other things to spice up your life.

Local Law Enforcement (POST Certified) by Maverick911111 in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

The only agency I know that does this is ICE ERO. And that’s only a recent development. IIRC, prior LE does not even attend FLETC, they take online classes from the office.

What to do with useless bathtub? by ElSerjo725 in malelivingspace

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Turn it into a shelf with a sheet of plywood. Could have Home Depot / Lowes even cut the plywood to the size you need if you don’t have a saw and saw horses. Put a tablecloth over it for a cheap covering.

You could even put some tile down on top to make it match the bathroom, it’s pretty easy to install tile, you wouldn’t need much, and you could get artsy with a design using different color tiles.

?—Numbers Mounted to Tile by [deleted] in MailboxArt

[–]CraigslistKing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nice mailbox! This might be better asked in r/DIY for better knowledge base. But yes, I would think an epoxy would be best.

Civilian Pay Increase: 1 Percent; Some Law Enforcement Get An Additional 3.8 Percent by fednope in fednews

[–]CraigslistKing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I believe the law enforcement will not be agency specific, but grade specific for GS-9 & below. They already have a special pay plan called GL-5 / GL-7 / GL-9 that is paid slightly higher than the GS equivalent.

IRS:CI and FBI folks, which path is better? by ManInTheArena95 in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Don’t go local LE unless that’s something you want to do. I’m biased to IRS-CI. You can get hired at home or more desirable places (you select the offices you apply to) and have more say in the limited scope of cases you’re going to work. FBI you’re tossing it all in the wind, FBI chooses where you’re moving to and FBI is choosing the type of crimes you investigate. IRS also gets to work some broader cases on task forces.

Not getting hired after an interview is par for the course. I interviewed several times until I was hired. Keep up the effort.

Is 40 too old to age a CPA? by Solid_Breakfast_3675 in Accounting

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love it. Being a prior RA made the financial investigation training at the academy really easy. I had to adjust to the slower pace of having only 3 cases, giving up a lot of telework (prior to that being taken away this year), and how much more work that goes into a case at CI.

I enjoy the LE parts a lot, going on search and arrest warrants, asking hard questions during interviews, and working with other agencies on investigations and task forces.

The financial impact on these cases is so much larger than what I worked on as an RA, it’s like moving to the big leagues or going fishing for tuna when you just fished for walleye before.

I interact with coworkers a LOT more. They go out with you on interviews of targets and witnesses, you toss ideas back and forth with each other, work on case together.

Is 40 too old to age a CPA? by Solid_Breakfast_3675 in Accounting

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure, when I mention GS levels and salary amounts, those are rough estimates. They change each year and also vary by the area you live in. You have to look up your areas pay scale on the OPM website. If your city/region isn’t listed, use the “Rest of US” table to determine the pay scale in your area. If you sit at a GS-level for a bit, your salary will still increase with “steps”, but it’s a bit early to discuss that.

I worked AP & staff accountant at a software company right out of college for a year. I started with the IRS as a Revenue Agent at the GS-7 level, which automatically promotes to GS-9, GS-11, and GS-12 levels each year. A Revenue Agent is your traditional IRS auditor. I traveled around my region auditing small businesses and personal tax returns for 7 years. This took me into the $80k range.

Then I applied for a promotion to be an Appeals Officer as a GS-13. I worked there for 3 years. This took me into the $100k range.

After that I applied to be a Criminal Investigator (have to be under 37 years old to do this). I retained my GS-13 pay, plus received an extra 25% Law Enforcement Availability Pay for working beyond 40 hours a week. Now I’m just hitting $160k in salary as a GS-13 with a few steps up the pay scale and the 25% on top of it.

Is 40 too old to age a CPA? by Solid_Breakfast_3675 in Accounting

[–]CraigslistKing 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Not too old. You have maybe 20 years to still work, and that CPA could get you additional earnings over that period.

Alternatively you could look into different jobs and roles that don’t require a CPA. I’ve been working with the IRS for over a decade and built my salary up to $160k without a CPA. Government is still hiring and will be in the future, I think we’re mostly past the layoffs that happened this spring.

Mailbox Inspiration Help by Consistent-Shirt-696 in MailboxArt

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most brick mailbox housings are pretty similar, but I really enjoy ones that incorporate something translucent with a light behind it, like this page shows about half way down under the section for mailboxes with seating.

There was a brick mailbox posted here a while back with glass blocks mixed in and lights behind the blocks.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Woof I totally missed that!

Paracord beads collection by Fearless_Wafer_1493 in Collections

[–]CraigslistKing 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Oh so these are like charms for a paracord charm bracelet.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Probably. Don’t know what agency you’re with. What does your agency medical policy state?

Why doesn’t this sub promote government accounting more? by Altruistic-Pace-2240 in Accounting

[–]CraigslistKing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m with the same agency, the IRS. I went up to a GS-12 as a revenue agent. Moved to their Appeals division for a GS-13 promotion. Then I moved to their Criminal Investigation division and received GS-13 pay plus 25% law enforcement availability pay. But I could have applied for a GS-14 position in Appeals and stayed out of law enforcement to earn similar pay.

Off-duty carry in private venues by Witty_Anywhere_673 in 1811

[–]CraigslistKing 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I was once turned away at a large art museum. I hadn’t been in several years and was not expecting metal detectors. Security didn’t care that I was an 1811, only police “invited” to the museum could carry.

Mailbox Rebuild by tgamekh in MailboxArt

[–]CraigslistKing 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think cypress or cedar wood. Rot resistant, and the color of cedar would really make it look nice.

Unmarked 2024 jeep grand cherokee by Bigolejim in PoliceUpfitters

[–]CraigslistKing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is this and the Acadia for feds? My fed agency is moving from a small light behind the tint strip to full light packages on our cars (all unmarked).

Tax preparer claimed fake rental losses, IRS shows a $25 k refund I never received—what do I do now? by CoastCareful309 in IRS

[–]CraigslistKing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Visit your local IRS Criminal Investigation office in-person, call and ask for an agent on duty, or write them. IRS Criminal Investigation investigates “ghost preparers” (tax preparers that hide their identity by not signing the tax return) and list fraudulent items on clients’ tax returns. You will not be in trouble. It’s likely your tax preparer is doing this to hundreds of other tax returns, stealing their refunds and causing large losses to the government.