WHAT DO WE
NEED TO LOOK AT?
We need to take collective action
We need to review the human resources framework to understand why its
inherent flexibilities are not being fully exploited by managers and if
there are unnecessary regulations that need to be eliminated or adjusted
to allow greater flexibility, particularly as it relates to recruitment.
For example, managers need to make full use of the staffing
flexibilities under the Public Service Employment Act and Regulations.
They in turn are asking for a more streamlined, responsive staffing
process that better focusses on results while supporting the
commitment to a meritorious, high quality, representative, non-partisan
Public Service that reflects fairness, transparency and equity in
practice. The Public Service Commission has developed the Values-Based
Management Framework in response to this concern, and it will work with
departments to streamline their staffing processes and help managers
meet their recruitment needs.
We need to build stronger partnerships between corporate service
branches and hiring managers. Human resources, finance and other
corporate service branches can demonstrate modern comptrollership at
work with a move to strategic business planning and a focus on
rejuvenating the workforce. These groups have important functional
roles. They can project future needs and competency requirements. They
can plan and meet financial and other resource implications of
forward-looking recruitment initiatives. They can bring their knowledge
and experience to bear to develop innovative recruitment and retention
processes and enable funding for transition staffing and other
innovations where needed.
As talent has no borders, managers, with the help of their
departments and central agencies, need to be able to reach out for
new recruits in as many places as possible. This could include
offering jobs to Canadians who have studied abroad. Interest was
expressed by the Sub-Committee in reviewing options for hiring recruits
who are not Canadian citizens. This issue is presently with the Supreme
Court of Canada.
It is important to create more inventories and pools of pre-qualified
recruits, as was done with the information technology community. In
their response to the Clerk’s call letter, departments reported that
there was a demand for this service either from the centre or across
departments with similar needs. The regulatory and inspection community,
science and technology, and communications are a few of the functional
groups that either have a high demand or anticipate large-scale hiring.
In some cases, there may be a need to provide access to bridge
funds to support recruitment, and the Treasury Board Secretariat is
prepared to look at business cases where strategic targeted needs are
identified. In other cases, this will be delivered through reallocation
and risk management. Many departments will need a kind of transitional
staffing that will enable them to bring new staff on strength to develop
the skills and basic experience that will prepare them for projected
vacancies in years to come. An example of this is the emeritus concept,
where an employee in pre-retirement status coaches the new recruit and
transfers corporate memory that is key to the position. At the core,
this does not mean a larger Public Service over the long-term.
We must provide clarity around the concept of merit,
recognizing that it is central to the recruitment strategy. This means
that all hiring managers and human resources specialists must understand
how merit is applied in an environment characterized by recruitment and
diversity and what measures are necessary. The Public Service
Commission, as the guardian of merit, is prepared to work with
departments that wish to examine the rules and guidelines that they may
have created over many years but that may no longer be necessary in the
move to a values-based approach to staffing. In this way, merit will
better match the realities of contemporary society and provide for
better outcomes and performance, while valuing different talents.
Competitive compensation packages are required, especially in
large metropolitan centres. In cities such as Toronto and Vancouver, the
strong labour market provides pay scales that outpace Public Service pay
scales. This creates general recruitment and retention issues. Because
both areas have large visible minority communities, a competitive Public
Service compensation package combined with challenging, leading-edge
work may be essential to attracting and retaining these workers.
Mobility across the broader public sector must be encouraged to
provide for more opportunities. Especially at a regional level, the
opportunity for people to move easily between one public service
employer and another, as well as within and outside of the public
sector, can be an excellent way to attract needed skills and experience.
As the Public Service moves forward on E–government, these exchanges
are invaluable for integrating the technology with other levels of
government and outside of the Public Service. While exchange programs
exist now, strategies to facilitate more permanent and flexible mobility
merit assessment.
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