Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Defense Civilians Make Last Ditch Effort to End Furloughs

Online petition says feds have borne the brunt of cuts over the last three years.

Beleaguered federal employees have taken to the White House’s petition website to challenge the Pentagon’s decision to furlough most of its civilian workforce for 11 days in fiscal 2013.

“We the People, Department of Defense federal employees, petition the President of the United States to STOP Secretary Hagel for issuing 11 days furlough starting July 8, 2013,” the petition’s author wrote.  “Federal employees have contributed enough in the last three years with pay freezes and lay-offs.”

The author – “C.B.” from Anniston, Ala. -- argues Hagel has admitted the furloughs are not absolutely necessary at the Navy and Air Force. The Pentagon has said, however, it is “implementing furloughs with consistency across the department.”

The Defense Department originally planned to furlough all of its nearly 800,000 civilian employees for 22 days, then reduced that number to 14. Hagel finally settled on 11 unpaid days off for 650,000 workers, after identifying many exemptions.

The petitioners have a long way to go until they get President Obama’s attention; the request has received 426 signatures, more than 99,000 shy of the threshold required to prompt an official White House response.

While the Obama administration has not shown any indication it will cancel furloughs before they are scheduled to begin in July, Hagel has left the door open on reducing the number of days once again.

“If our budgetary situation permits us to end furloughs early, I would strongly prefer to do so,” Hagel wrote in the furlough notices that went out to Defense employees in late May. “That is a decision I will make later this year.”