Earlier this year, we learned that a key part of President Donald Trump’s day includes many hours of “Executive Time,” a White House euphemism not for meeting with high-level officials or foreign dignitaries, but for watching cable news and rage-tweeting. Now, the release of a top Cabinet member’s schedule during her first 14 months on the job is raising similar questions re: what the hell she does all day on taxpayers’ dime. Politico reports that an analysis of Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao’s daily calendars shows long periods of time blocked out as “private,” for a total of more than 290 hours of “private” time, or seven weeks’ worth, during her first year in Trump’s Cabinet. Crucially, that total does not account for evenings after 6 P.M., weekends, federal holidays, or days marked “vacation.” Most of Chao’s appointments marked “private” reportedly occurred on Fridays, with nine Fridays including a full five hours of “private” time.

While a spokesperson for the Department of Transportation claimed that the equivalent of some two months’ vacation was necessarily marked private as a security measure and involved “doctor’s appointments,” “meeting[s] with personal friends,” and “sharing meals with her husband,” not everyone is buying it:

Six former D.O.T. officials who worked closely with previous transportation secretaries told Politico that the amount of private time during work hours delineated on Chao’s calendar is atypical.

“That seems to be quite a lot,” said Beth Osborne, who was deputy assistant secretary and then acting assistant secretary for transportation policy under Obama administration Transportation Secretaries Ray LaHood and Anthony Foxx. She said that during working hours, LaHood and Foxx “were traveling or they were taking meetings from constituents or with members of Congress or whomever, and their days were pretty full up.”

At best, critics suggest that the public may not be “getting a full day’s work out of Secretary Chao,” and that, given how the bulk of her private time fell on Fridays, it’s possible the woman just loves herself a long weekend, and never learned that rule No. 1 of playing hooky is to always do it midweek, as suddenly having lots of important appointments that keep you out of the office on a Friday is bound to make people skeptical. At worst, some wonder if Chao is trying to obscure her true activities. “Given the tremendous amount of work and constant crises and challenges that come up at D.O.T., I find it highly unlikely Secretary Chao is really taking this much private time,” said a former D.O.T. official. “It certainly appears that they have just tried to over-redact meetings they would prefer the public not know about.”

Given that Chao’s calendars include a total of 10 hours of private time on the Thursday and Friday before the administration unveiled its $1.5 trillion infrastructure plan—the bulk of which would financially enrich the president’s friends—that certainly seems like a stronger possibility than Chao simply devoting 290 hours of her schedule to long lunches and deep-tissue massages.