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The Minnesota National Guard said it was putting 1,207 of its 2,100 full-time military support personnel on furlough until further notice. Rick Swenson, of Catonsville, Md., said he retired in 2012 after spending 38 years working at the U.S. Agriculture Department because he was worried his retirement benefits would be cut and was tired of the constant criticism that was directed at federal workers. "You hear a lot of snide commentary about government people and what a cushy job they have and all that kind of stuff," said Swenson, 60, who worked as an administrative officer. "It certainly doesn't help your morale." Swenson, said most federal employees still have a strong belief in the mission of the government and want to do public service. But "it's getting tougher and tougher because we've seen a great erosion in pay and benefits." Federal employees are retiring at a faster rate this year than in 2012, according to the federal Office of Personnel Management. About 82,000 federal workers have filed retirement claims since January, up 30 percent from claims filed last year. The National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association says many workers are retiring prematurely because they worry about furloughs, the pay freeze pay and looming increases in retirement contributions. The group argues that these departures are creating a brain drain that is sapping the government of institutional knowledge needed to for medical breakthroughs, combating foodborne illnesses or even securing borders. Jackson, the Air Force acquisitions manager, said the growing anxiety among federal workers will make it tougher for the government to compete with private industry to hire the best and the brightest technical minds. "When I went to work for the government 30 years ago, I knew wasn't going to get rich doing this," he said. "But I felt strongly enough about this that this was something I wanted to do. The last two years, I've felt that our Congress has turned their backs on us."
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