Title: Chapter 14 Public Personnel Management
1Chapter 14Public Personnel Management
- American Public Administration Public Service
for the 21st Century
2Human Resource Administration
- Human resource administration - the policies and
processes that determine the terms and conditions
of employment of an organizations workforce. - Tasks include classification, compensation
policy, labor relations, productivity and
performance management, human resources training
and development, and performance appraisal.
3Evolution of the Public Service
- The evolution of public service passed through 8
distinct periods - Era of Elites (1730-1829). Government by
Gentlemen The landed gentry were appointed to
positions of responsibility. - Era of the Common Man (1830-1883). The patronage
system flourished during this period and
government positions were awarded to party
loyalists.
4Evolution of the Public Service
- Era of Reform (1884-1906). President Garfields
assassination served as a focusing event for the
passage of the Pendleton Act. - Marked the rise of the merit system that
established neutral competence as the key
requirement for public service. - Era of Efficiency (1907-1932). The Pendleton Act
was extended to cover more of the federal
workforce.
54 Progressive Principles
- Use competitive examinations as a basis for
selection of public employees - those who score
highest are to be the first ones appointed - Depoliticize the public service - performance
based on professional and technical competence
rather than partisan affiliation
64 Progressive Principles
- Create a Civil Service Commission
- a central personnel agency that could protect the
public service against incursions by patronage
oriented politicians - Protect tenure in office
- Lloyd-Lafollett Act (1912) - extended merit
principals to dismissal.
7Evolution of the Public Service
- Era of Administrative Management (1933-1960).
During this period the federal government got
bigger and the roles of administrators expanded. - The Classification Act of 1949 - delegated many
personnel activities to each federal department. - Hatch Acts of 1939 and 1940 - prohibited federal
employees from active involvement in partisan
political campaigns -
8Evolution of the Public Service
- Era of Professionalism (1961-1977). The
government workforce at all levels become more
specialized and professionalized.
9Evolution of the Public Service
- 7. Era of Civil Service Reform (1978-1991). The
Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 was an attempt
to redesign the federal personnel system to
reconcile effective management with political
responsiveness.
10CSRA of 1978
- OPM Office of Personnel Management
- MSPB Merit Systems Protection Board
- FLRA Federal Labor Relations Authority
- SES Senior Executive Service
- - premised on the Oxbridge tradition
- Â
11Evolution of the Public Service
- 8. Era of Reinvention and September 11
(1992- present). - The National Performance Review served as an
attempt to reform the federal bureaucracy, but
the events of September 11, 2001 moved the public
agenda to matters of national defense and
homeland security.
12The Human Resource Administration Process
- Human resource administration includes the
following functions - Position classification - the creation of formal
job descriptions - The General Service Schedule consists of eighteen
grades, and 450 job categories.
13Position Classification
- Involves the design of jobs, the organization of
jobs into categories, and the establishment of
appropriate rates of pay. - Principles of position classification
- Rank or status is based on the position, not the
person - Consistency across agencies for each position
- Positions are differentiated on the basis of
specific duties and responsibilities
14Factors to Consider in PC
- the nature and variety of work (complex or
simple) Â - the nature of supervision required
- the routineness of the work
- the level of originality required
- the purpose and nature of person to person work
relationships
15Factors to Consider in PC
- the scope and nature of decision making - impacts
of the decisions - the nature and extent of supervision over other
employees  - specific qualifications (e.g., level and type of
education) - Examples at the federal level e.g., clerk typist
16Advantages of PC
- provides a basis for evaluating performance
- makes it possible to design career ladders for
advancement - tells managers what the occupant of any position
is supposed to be doing
17Disadvantages of PC
- Dehumanizing?
- Can become outdated quickly
- Grade Creep
18Recruitment, Selection, Promotion
- Challenges of Recruitment
- If it is to recruit and retain the best
employees, the system of pay and compensation
should be competitive with other industries. - Since the 1980s, the federal service pay gap has
been growing despite legislation designed to
reduce the gap.
19Recruitment
- Image problems
- Pay problems
- Volker Commission Report (1989) - the quiet
crises in government - Â
20Selection
- The examination process
- Designed to identify the best-qualified
candidates for public employment. - Examinations should relate to the ability of the
candidate to perform a specific job, and should
avoid cultural bias.
21Selection
- The Process begins with a notice of position
vacancy personnel office review of applicants
recommendation to managers the rule of three - Problem with using exams as a basis for
selection validity (also discrimination)
22Selection
- Today - exams tend to be replaced by other
factors such as level of education, GPA, type of
degree, prior work experience, etc.
23Human Resource Administration
- Once an applicant scores well on the examination,
he or she is certified and included on a list
made available to the hiring agency. - The agency may select from the list or ask for
more names.
24Human Resource Administration
- Employee appraisal is the process of assessing
employees productivity. - It attempts to provide an objective basis for
evaluating performance, but there are some
inherent problems.
25Human Resource Administration
- Any human resource system must be able to deal
with poorly performing employees. - The civil service system, however, was designed
in large measure to protect public employees from
arbitrary dismissal. - Standards of performance and disciplinary policy
should be clearly articulated and fairly applied.
26Social Equity in the Public Workforce
- Affirmative action is a controversial attempt to
bring more minorities into the public workforce. - Representative bureaucracy refers to the idea
that the demographic composition of the public
workforce should reflect that of current American
society.
27Social Equity in the Public Workforce
- According to Fredrickson, social equity programs
fall into two classifications - Prospect opportunity when individuals regardless
of race or sex, can compete with roughly the same
chances of success. - Means opportunity when candidates of equal
talent, skills, or qualifications, regardless of
race or sex, can compete for the same position
with roughly the same likelihood of success.
28Current State of Equal Opportunity Employment
- Although public organizations have made great
strides, minorities are still largely excluded
from the middle and upper ranks of management. - In addition, women continue to earn less on
average than men for comparable work.
29Current State of Equal Opportunity Employment
- Comparable worth is designed to equalize pay
across groups for those performing comparable
duties. - The pattern of failing to reach the top ranks of
organizations is referred to as hitting the
glass ceiling. - Representation of women in the Senior Executive
Service has increased steadily while
representation by minority men has not increased
nearly as fast.