Report: DMV Worker Sleeps 3 Hours a Day at Work for 3+ Years, Keeps Job
Her supervisors have been aware of the problem for a while.

An employee of the California Department of Motor Vehicles spent hours asleep most workdays for almost four years, according to a state audit. Despite that, she's still employed. And that's just the most eye-popping moment in a report that detailed several instances of "misuse of state time and property and economically wasteful activities" that together cost tapayers more than $200,000.
From February 2014 to December 2017, the unnamed data operator "likely slept for at least three hours each day" for a total of 2,220 hours of misused time, the report says. The employee's frequent naps cost the state "more than $40,000 in salary for her wasted work time."
The constant sleeping forced the woman's colleagues to pick up her slack. Data operators are expected to process an average of 560 documents per day, but she was only able to average 200, so her colleagues had to "take on her unfinished workload." The work she did do was subpar and mistake-ridden, according to her employee evaluations.
So why did she keep her job? It's not as though her supervisors had no idea what was going on. But they either underestimated her ability to snooze for long periods of time or just didn't care enough to do something about it:
During the investigation, the employee's supervisor stated that because she woke up the employee three to four times each day, she believed the employee missed only 20 to 30 minutes of work time daily. However, four witnesses reported consistently observing the employee sleeping at her desk for hours at a time during work hours, rather than the 20 to 30 minutes estimated by the supervisor. In fact, two of these witnesses estimated that the employee slept for a minimum of three hours each workday because the supervisor did not consistently wake up the employee even when the supervisor was aware that the employee was sleeping.
Starting in February 2015, the employee's bosses repeatedly warned her that sleeping on the job was unacceptable. But she kept doing it, and they took no action to stop her. The supervisors may have thought she had a medical condition, but they didn't even take the correct steps (such as requiring her to undergo a medical examination) to address it.
In January 2017, the woman received a release from her physician "indicating that she could perform her duties," the report says. Nonetheless, "she continued to sleep at work and failed to meet the unit's production standards."
After the state auditor started investigating the case, DMV officials said they couldn't take action against the employee because "previous corrective memorandums" issued to her "did not contain the appropriate language necessary for such disciplinary action." In March, the employee was finally issued a memo with "the necessary language" to let the agency penalize her if she keeps sleeping on the job. The DMV has also said it's working with human resources to decide her ultimate fate.
But even if this woman learns to stay awake during business hours, that will barely scratch the surface of why Californians generally hate the Department of Motor Vehicles: its long lines and mind-numbing paperwork. Next month, lawmakers are holding a hearing to discuss the DMV's wait times. Hopefully the bureaucrats who attend won't sleep through it.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Can she be supplied with a free clean needle full of fentanyl?
Remember, public employees are VITAL to the country.
Why don't they replace her with an illegal? I bet she would support it...
At least the guy wasn't post stupid comments on a website for three years
The article doesn't say (naturally), but does she 'check a box'?
They probably figured it was easier picking up the slack than going through the processes required to get rid of her.
She checks the 'woman' box...
FTFY
Is this an confession?
In the mean time there are EIGHT HOUR wait times at the DMV. Let that sink in.
The person did not work in an office. She was a data entry operator.
"The person did not work in an office. She was a data entry operator."
Given that you're an imbecile, I'll bet you thought that was relevant.
How much did the audit that identified $200,000 of waste cost?
I figure my share of the waste is half a cent. Where do I go to make a claim for a refund?
"How much did the audit that identified $200,000 of waste cost?
I figure my share of the waste is half a cent. Where do I go to make a claim for a refund?"
So long as you don't personally suffer, government fuck ups are just fine?
Were you born a fucking ignoramus, or did you study long hours to become one?
At least she cannot sell fake drivers licenses while she is asleep.
"Starting in February 2015, the employee's bosses repeatedly warned her that sleeping on the job was unacceptable."
She 'works' for the government; I'm sure this was an unwelcome surprise.
I'm just amazed at her ability to snooze at will.
Simple solution to this nonsense but it will not happen.
Just make pay conditional on productivity. Your salary is based on 560 documents per day. You process less you get paid less, process more you get paid more. Problem solved.
That would violate California's unofficial motto: "From each according to his ability; to each according to his needs."
Hmm, that would almost be reasonable. Based on their actions, CA's unofficial motto is 'no thank you, I'd rather eat the rich'.
I'm more bothered by how lazy her supervisor(s) had to be to not stop this
Where are the Bob's when you need them?
That was very "progressive" of the state I think. I wonder if the state would rule that a private business to the same thing if they had a employee sleeping for three hours (on the clock) a day.
But, hey, this California so what else would you expect. The wages paid to that employee did not come from their CalGov pockets but from the taxpayers (including US taxpayers) pockets.
Perhaps she suffers from narcolepsy, and has to be accommodated per the ADA.
And blind airline pilots are being discriminated against.
Perhaps she suffers from narcolepsy, and has to be accommodated per the ADA.
And blind airline pilots are being discriminated against.
Perhaps she suffers from narcolepsy, and has to be accommodated per the ADA.
And blind airline pilots are being discriminated against.
I wonder how many of the other workers were meeting the productivity standard of 560 documents per day? My guess would be very few or none.
So, potentially five productive hours per day; not bad for government work.
Any wagers on whether or not this is a union position?
It is unnecessary to sleep a lot to work well. If you work a lot and sleep a little then you need a new job. https://craftresumes.com/ will help to get a new job. This site is doing a resume for different professions.