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Chapter Two: Staffing and RecruitmentIntroductionThe "system" is flexible! There are alternatives to the full competitive process, each with its pros and cons. The choice is not always easy. The answer to "What should I do?" is often "It depends on your particular circumstances and your HR plan." A glossary of staffing terms can be found at the back of this handbook. The glossary has been prepared to give you informal explanations for common staffing terms. These explanations are not meant to replace the technical/legal definitions. HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENTYou are in charge of staffing. You make all the substantive decisions and are accountable for them. You have to live with them. As the key decision maker, you control the process. Staffing is faster if the process is planned with your HRA up front. Your HRA can be a helpful partner. Human Resources Advisors (HRAs)HRAs are technical experts and strategic advisors. Ask them for both types of advice to help develop an HR plan and staffing strategy for your whole organization. They can help implement these plans through each staffing action. They do not control the staffing project. You do. They will advise you on your legal and policy obligations, and on staffing values, and can assist you in evaluating your options. But at the end of the day, it's your decision! STAFFING OPTIONS AT A GLANCEThe following chart identifies the possible staffing options you can consider when faced with a vacancy or when looking at succession planning within your area of responsibility. It classifies the options under long-term and short-term, urgent or usual, and identifies options for staffing (inside the federal Public Service) or recruitment (outside the federal Public Service). For a listing of staffing challenges and opportunities and the staffing options that might respond to these challenges, consult the electronic document Developing a Staffing Strategy. Situation Chart/Decision TreeIf you have a vacancy, and your staffing requirement is long-term and urgent, you have the following options if staffing from the inside:
If you have a vacancy, and your staffing requirement is long-term and urgent, you have the following options if staffing from the outside:
If you have a vacancy and your staffing requirement is long-term but not urgent, you have the following options if staffing from the inside:
If you have a vacancy and your staffing requirement is long-term but not urgent, you have the following options if staffing from the outside:
If you have a vacancy and your staffing requirement is short-term, you have the following options if staffing from the inside:
If you have a vacancy and your staffing requirement is short-term, you have the following options if staffing from the outside:
TIPS FOR MANAGING STAFFING
TIPS ON MANAGING A COMPETITIONFaster Competitions through Concurrent Activities
STAFFING - IN DETAILPreparationDefine the requirements to determine what kind of job you must fill and the type of person you need. Prepare a full or partial work description and statement of qualifications. Here are some points worth pondering before you begin.
Tip
Create a Statement of Qualifications A statement of qualifications lists the knowledge, skills, and personal attributes you seek in the person you hire: screening criteria and qualifications.
To develop a statement of qualifications, use the work description and PSC Standards for Selection and Assessment. Your HRA may assist you in doing this. Another helpful tool may be a competency profile that has been developed by your department and/or the PSC for positions similar to the one(s) you want to staff. Many have been created for jobs in the various functional communities, such as Finance, HR, Communications, and so on. Check with your HRA for more information. Tip
Please note that the qualifications specified on the Statement of Qualification must be related to the work to be performed in the position, group of positions or level within an occupational group, as applicable. These qualifications, collectively, must cover the work to be performed, and must provide a basis for selection according to merit. Taking this approach will help you in justifying those qualifications, should any candidate request the PSC to review them. You should be aware that a candidate can request the PSC to review them at any time prior to the creation of the eligibility list.
Priority considerationThe Public Service Employment Act (PSEA) and Regulations (PSER) require that certain people - Minister's staff, lay-offs, surplus employees, and so on - be given priority consideration for appointment in or to the Public Service, without competition and without appeal. Persons with a priority entitlement are people to whom we have an obligation. They are individuals whose employment is in jeopardy and who look to you to give them fair consideration for opportunities that will allow them to continue their service. Considering people with a staffing priority is no longer as time-consuming a process as it was during downsizing. There are relatively few persons with priority entitlements in the system today, and the clearance process is fully computerized. A PSC "robot" e-mails a reply to your request for clearance within minutes if no priorities are identified. Finding a person with a priority who is qualified for the job may be the best thing you can hope for. You can offer the job and appoint them immediately, ahead of anyone else. Did you know?Employment equity program appointments only require consideration of persons with priority entitlement who are members of a target designated group for the program. Since deployments are not appointments, they do not require priority clearance. Priority appointments can be a good option to fill an indeterminate job. An exemption to a priority referral can be made if taking a priority person will result in an employee in your organization becoming entitled to a priority. (The PSEA provides that you don't take one to make one.) Considerations
Best Staffing Option(s)If you were unsuccessful in finding a qualified person with priority entitlement, you must look elsewhere for candidates. Your range of options is really determined by your situation but, first, answer these three questions:
Area of selectionYou should consider the qualifications required, the level of responsibility, and the number of candidates that may be available when choosing the area of selection. The objective is always to find highly qualified candidates while balancing all the staffing values and management principles. Special measures exist that may allow you to expand the area of selection for employment equity group members. Inside or outside?The PSEA requires jobs to be filled from within the Public Service unless it is not in the best interests of the Public Service to do so. Looking inside first is really a best practice for any employer of choice. Ask your HRA to help determine the area of selection to look for candidates. If you think it unlikely you will find anyone within the Public Service, you can look outside. You can look inside and outside the Public Service at the same time, if you think an internal search may be unproductive or if you need more people than you are likely to find inside. You don't have to run fruitless closed competitions or keep increasing areas of selection just to prove there are no qualified candidates internally. If, however, you run simultaneous open and closed competitions, you must
offer the job(s) to all of the employees on the eligibility list created
as a result of the closed competition before offering jobs to those on
the eligibility list that resulted from the open competition.
Quick optionsa) Deployments, secondments, assignments and acting appointmentsDeployments can be to a term or indeterminate position. The person becomes a member of your staff. A deployment cannot result in a promotion or change the tenure of an employee. Secondments, assignments, and acting appointments are of a temporary nature; the person returns to their former duties at the end of the predetermined period. Secondments/assignments involve an agreement between the employee and both managers, and can be terminated by any of them or extended by unanimous agreement. b) Existing eligibility listsScenario 1: There is a valid existing eligibility list for the specific position(s). The ideal situation - you can offer the job immediately to the next
person on the list. There is no appeal period as any appeals were heard
when
the list was established.
Scenario 2: There is a valid eligibility list for a similar position(s). You have two questions to answer: 1) Is the job you must fill similar enough to the one for which the list was established? 2) Did the advertisement (poster) for the competition that produced the list say "may be used to fill similar positions"? If you answer yes to both questions, you're home free. You can offer the job to the next person on the list, but you don't have to. Your HRA should have a complete set of valid eligibility lists. Best practiceConsider including the words "may be used for similar positions" on your posters. Treat the competition like any other project.
Assessment and SelectionBegin this phase as soon as the competition closes, earlier if you can. You need not wait for all applications to be received before screening them. ScreeningScreening eliminates those who do not meet the established screening criteria. You may need to more precisely define the qualifications or combination of qualifications to screen applicants. Be precise especially when using qualitative words such as "recent" and "significant" and be prepared to explain. Assessment and rating of candidatesApplicants must be assessed in the language of their choice. Use any of the many existing assessment tools and methods or create your own. Assessment may include an interview by a selection board, use of written exams, PSC Personnel Psychology Centre standardized tests, as well as reference checks. You have a number of options and your HRA can be particularly helpful in identifying the best tools for your needs. RankingWith a numeric rating scheme, candidates' scores determine their rank. Narrative or qualitative rating requires the board to write a detailed, precise explanation for relative rankings. Be sure of your final decisions. If anything bothers you about a candidate,
address and resolve it. Don't skip reference checks, go through the motions,
or rush just to get the process over with. Check the references of the
top candidate(s) yourself. Follow-up on the initial reference check to
clarify ambiguities. Ask the pointed questions that only one manager can
put to another, especially about a person you are about to hire from them.
Tip
AccommodationYour HRA should confirm whether persons with disabilities require accommodation before they are invited to be assessed, e.g., sign-language interpretation, technical aid, or physical location requirements. You cannot ask what the disability is. If a candidate can't come to the board, take the board to the candidate - assess and interview persons who need technical aids in their own workplace. The PSC Personnel Psychology Centre can assist you in determining what accommodations may be made, if these cannot be easily determined. There are many ways to accommodate persons with disabilities so that
they - and you - get a fair and full assessment of their knowledge and
capabilities. Please
contact your HRA for further information or visit the Employment
Equity and Diversity webiste.
AppointmentConditions of employmentUnlike screening criteria to assess candidates at the outset, conditions of employment are only checked at the end and only for the successful candidate(s). It is simply impractical and costly to subject everyone to a security clearance or medical exam before interviewing them. Before you offer the job(s) to the successful candidate(s), they must satisfy the conditions of employment (medical, security, reliability) that are mandatory for the job. You can, however, create an eligibility list and announce the results as well as deal with any appeals before all conditions of employment are met. Persons who don't meet these conditions cannot be appointed, no matter how well-qualified they are otherwise. Medical examination / security checksIf the position requires a medical examination and/or a reliability/security check, the successful candidate must supply the required information by the date specified. The more complex the medical exam or higher the security level, the longer it takes. Tips
Language AssessmentIf the position is Bilingual Imperative, the qualified candidates must have valid Second Language Examination (SLE) results to show they meet the required level of bilingualism or be tested before their names can be placed on the eligibility list. If a position is Bilingual Non-imperative, it may be filled by a candidate who does not meet the language requirements but is eligible for language training or is otherwise excluded from meeting the requirements. The employee, unless excluded, then must attain the required level of proficiency in the second language within two years. If unsuccessful, employees must be moved into another position for which they meet the language requirements. Note: Candidates must pass the SLE before they can be offered bilingual term appointments of over three months. Eligibility list
In closed competitions, qualified candidates are listed in descending order of merit, with the highest-ranking candidate at the top. In open competitions (i.e., open to the public), qualified veterans are listed first, then survivors of veterans, other Canadian citizens, and then non-Canadians. Your HRA will ensure the proper order is respected. An eligibility list can be established with a validity period from one day to two years. If initially created for less than two years, it can be extended (before it expires) any number of times up to the two-year limit. Include enough qualified candidates on the eligibility list to fill your foreseeable needs and in case the top candidate(s) turn down your job offer. If you meet your needs for the next two years, it is well worth the effort. When establishing eligibility lists, carefully consider their potential future use. Don't put 45 names on an eligibility list for one vacancy. Notify candidatesOnce an eligibility list is established, all candidates must be notified of the results of the competition. A copy of the list is attached to the notification advising them of the competition results; that they can get feedback on their performance; and, in a closed competition, that they have a right of appeal. RecourseSee Chapter 4. Letter of offerA letter of offer typically includes the salary range for the job, the starting salary, the duration of the appointment, and, if applicable, terms for language training, probationary period, relocation provisions and expenses, and union membership. Attachments usually include the Conflict of Interest Guidelines and Declaration form, and an Employment Equity Survey package. There are technical and legal reasons for the wording in letters of offer. Standard paragraphs exist. A letter of offer is a legal instrument, and an accepted letter of offer is binding on you, the offering manager. So read it over carefully before you send it; discuss anything you are not sure of with your HRA. You can sign the letter if you have delegated staffing authority from the deputy head. Did you know?You can negotiate the starting salary of an appointee from outside of the Public Service (within Treasury Board guidelines). ProbationNew appointees to the Public Service are normally on probation for one year. During this period, you have an opportunity to assess and evaluate the performance of the employee. You are responsible for providing proper training and coaching in order to give the employee the opportunity to climb the learning curve. If performance issues arise, deal with them. Advise the employee early and provide the required assistance. Work to protect your investment. There are ethical, legal and practical reasons to give new employees a fair chance to prove themselves. Ultimately, it is in your own best interest to develop an effective employee. Did you know?A probationary period cannot be extended under any circumstances. The probationary period for persons with disabilities requiring job accommodation
does not start until they are accommodated in the job. That means when
they have all the required technical or other aids necessary to be able
to do the job.
If, in the end, new employees do not work out, and you wish to reject them on probation, discuss it with your HRA early, because there are legal implications (notice period) when taking this action. Don't leave it to the last minute. You may find that you cannot take the required action.
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Updated: 2006-04-19 | Important Notices |