RECRUITMENT
CHALLENGES
Is recruitment important? Quite simply, yes. Recruitment is
always a fundamental element in the normal and constant renewal of any
organization. It is a major vehicle for any organization to bring in new
ideas, new skills and new points of view. It is a fundamental way in
which organizations can adapt to a changing external environment.
Is it necessary at this time? Yes, absolutely critical. The
Public Service faces an even greater recruitment imperative than most
organizations in Canada, as it serves in the public interest and must
maintain the values and principles that define this country. Gaps are
already obvious. Improved workplace diversity helps to define choices,
and the shift in the nature of government work affects who is hired and
what they do. All of this takes place in an increasingly competitive
labour market for skilled workers.
The Data is Already Clear
We already lack the staff we need to meet operational needs in
key occupational groups, such as the regulatory and inspection community
and information management and technology community. That threatens to
increase as other employers outbid the Public Service and offer more
attractive working and career environments.
Current and projected attrition rates point to gaps across the Public
Service, not just in specialized fields. Within five years, a
significant number of executives and more importantly, their feeder
groups, will be eligible to retire. Current recruitment and career
development processes are not enough to meet the expected demand.
Treasury Board Secretariat estimates a need for an additional 2,000 to
2,500 recruits per year to compensate for attrition.
These facts make it clear that recruitment will have to be considered
for all levels of the Public Service, not just the most junior. The low
recruitment levels of the 1980s and 1990s, the loss of many junior staff
due to downsizing, and the increasingly competitive labour market have
created an obvious demographic vacuum, with relatively low
representation of people in their 30s.
Diversity and Inclusiveness Must be Part of Any Well-Functioning
Organization
We lack a workforce that is representative of the communities we
serve, especially in the share of jobs held by members of visible
minority groups and persons with disabilities. In 1999, while 1 in
9 Canadians was a member of a visible minority, that was true for
only 1 in 17 members of the Public Service. The gap is even greater
at the management and executive categories, where the share was only 1
in 33.
The Sub-Committee heard from the Task Force on an Inclusive Public
Service and the Task Force on the Participation of Visible Minorities in
the Federal Public Service. Both task forces recognized that diversity
should be manifested at all levels. This not only makes good business
sense, but it shows that an organization truly values differences in
people and sees them as a means to fundamentally challenge and enhance
what it does and how it does it.
The Sub-Committee was made aware that there is a substantial gap
between the general Public Service and departmental commitments to more
inclusive recruitment and the actual environment, actions and decisions
of hiring managers. Those managers normally have no incentives to alter
traditional hiring criteria or practices, at present. If anything,
change to meet expectations of a more inclusive Public Service adds work
and complexity to hiring processes that are already seen as somewhat
cumbersome.
We Face Substantial Competition for Any Recruits
It is critical to point out that the Public Service is just one of
many organizations that are looking for new and bright recruits.
Demographic factors and a growing economy are leading to the most
vibrant labour market in recent memory, especially for skilled young
people. Many employers, especially in the public and quasi-public
sector, who have hired little in the past 15 to 20 years, face the same
need to recruit new staff to replace an aging workforce.
Competition is not even solely domestic anymore. Highly skilled
Canadians, whether new graduates in many fields or experienced workers,
can consider a more continental and global labour market now. The
effects of these and other considerations are that major employers are
adopting a far more strategic and aggressive approach to recruitment of
workers than ever, especially young workers.
Technology is Changing the Way We Work and the Skills We Need
Electronic communications and information technology is changing the
way government employees work and how they provide services to
Canadians. E–government represents an important challenge that new
recruits will help to address in that their ideas and skills will
capitalize on harnessing the potential of new technologies for the
future. They also work within a broader frame of reference, as they are
much more at ease with tapping into the global arena.
Recruitment of young people and people from other organizations with
substantial experience in applying new technologies to service delivery
can be important drivers of this change. Younger Canadians are often at
ease with new technologies, even if they have no technical expertise as
such.
E–government also presents opportunities to reach a broader
audience for recruitment to the Public Service. It has the potential to
tap into major recruitment centres such as universities, foreign
countries and popular Internet sites to attract the best and brightest
at a lower cost to the government.
Departments Know They Have a Recruitment Challenge
As part of the work of this Sub-Committee and the two others on
Workplace Well-Being and Learning and Development, the Clerk of the
Privy Council sent a letter to the Deputy Minister of each department in
February 2000. The letter asked departments to report on
departmental recruitment, retention and learning plans and actions. The
response to recruitment is found in Appendix A.
Responses reveal that most departments believe that they are
facing a significant recruitment challenge over the next five years,
as they prepare for the retirement of an aging workforce. Forecasted
retirements at the executive levels and in the science and technology
community are of particular concern. Departments are especially
concerned that their organizations are not representative, and they see
pending recruitment activity as the chance to right the current
employment equity and youth imbalance.
Departments are at different stages; some are conducting leading-edge
recruitment, and others know they have to act. They need to play a more
corporate role in sharing innovative approaches to develop more
strategic recruitment practices for the future.
While the recruitment imperative is generally understood by Deputy
Ministers and their management teams, it does not appear to be
understood by all hiring managers. This is partly due to workload issues
and the focus on such immediate, short-term solutions as hiring casual
employees, terms, and previous employees, rather than looking at
longer-term strategies.
The Sub-Committee also heard from both the Deputy Minister champion
for the human resources community and the Chair of the Human Resources
Council. Both have underscored the need for more strategic leadership on
human resources issues, recruitment in particular.
Existing recruitment options are not used consistently or optimally.
While departments expect to make increasing use of the Post-Secondary
Recruitment (PSR) program, that program accounts only for one percent of
new appointments each year. The Management Trainee Program and other
corporate initiatives exist and are used, but it is not clear that these
are linked to concrete, strategic human resources plans.
This non-strategic hiring activity is best evidenced by how student,
co-op and internship programs are used as recruitment tools. These
programs employ thousands of young people in the Public Service annually
but are not being used by managers as part of a long-term recruitment
strategy. Opportunities are missed for students to return for full-time
careers after graduation. Concerns have been raised by students that the
recruitment process does not always ensure a good match between their
skills and interests and an appropriate department or manager. They also
stated that they are not always provided with meaningful work, thus
affecting their desire to return to the Public Service.
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