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US Census Bureau

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Remote but requires site visits, poor organization support, unstable environment - Field Representative US Census Bureau Employee Review

2.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work, somewhat flexible schedule

Cons

Constantly changing management, constantly changing admin requirements (as in, month-month), using your own car and cell phone to interact with the general public. Part-time work can mean 15 hours one month then pressure for 40+ hours per week the next month. Evaluated on metrics on assigned cases, yet also penalized for outcomes the worker cannot control or change, e.g. 'vacant address' or 'temporary occupant'. Asked to travel, then told to pay for the travel up front and 'request reimbursement'. That is, front the expense for the US government. No promotion path, limited training. Once trained for a survey, the only way out is to leave the job - even if other surveys desperately need staffing. 'Flexible' schedule includes mandatory morning, day, evening, AND weekend work, plus mandatory meetings dictated by organization, often with one-day notice, often canceled with 1 hour notice.

Explore other reviews about US Census Bureau

5.0
Oct 6, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible schedule, given tech materials, and work was based on your location.

Cons

Lack of directions on a day to day basis.

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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