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DRAFT 6/25/2017 NON-ADVERTISED APPOINTMENT CRITERIA QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 1. Can you comment and give a few examples of how non-advertised appointment processes may be used to support the organization’s attainment of its employment equity objectives? The use of a non-advertised appointment process should be consistent with the staffing strategies outlined in the organization’s Human Resources Plan or Employment Equity Plan. It should also be noted that a non-advertised process may involve the consideration of one or more members of a designated employment equity group. A reason to consider one person for an appointment would be if that person has already demonstrated they are the “right fit” for the position being staffed i.e. there is an employment equity under-representation for the group and level of the position being staffed and the individual is already identified in the organization’s succession plan. It is also possible that the individual may have demonstrated their qualifications in the course of an acting or term appointment. Remember that employment equity can be listed as a current or future organizational need in the Statement of Merit Criteria. Another example is to appoint and “bridge” a student graduate who is a member of an employment equity group and who has worked with the Public Service through one of the student employment programs. It is also possible to consider several employment equity group members in instances such as where a partially assessed inventory has been established but each type of job opening to be staffed was not advertised. 2. Apart from employment equity, what are a few other examples of situations where a non-advertised process might be used to make an internal appointment? Examples could include the following: A promotion of an employee within an Approved Professional Training or Apprenticeship Program. An appointment of an employee following reclassification of their position in accordance with PSHRMAC and PSC policies/guidelines. An appointment to a position where the HR Plan identifies a skill shortage for indeterminate employees (e.g. PG-2’s). Management has exhausted the results and appointed all employees who were successful on a recent advertised process. A term PG-2 employee is hired and meets all the merit criteria. Later another indeterminate vacancy becomes available and consideration is given to proposing the term employee for indeterminate appointment via a non-advertised process. At DRAFT 6/25/2017 the same time the organization has more upcoming PG-2 vacancies for which another advertised process will be initiated. Acting appointment situations where only one subordinate employee in the unit is qualified for the appointment. An urgent unforeseen requirement to staff a position requiring a unique set of Merit Criteria e.g. there is an indeterminate vacancy due to the departure of a highly specialized employee and only one employee in the area of selection is identified as meeting the specialized requirements. 3. What are a few types of situations where an internal non-advertised appointment process might involve the consideration of more than one employee? Examples could include a situation where more than one employee is identified in the organization’s succession plan for a key position. In the absence of a succession plan, there are other situations where the feeder group(s) and employees in the organization are well known to management. For example, in backfilling a position to cover the period of a one-year leave of absence the best staffing option may be to rotate a few employees through acting appointments of slightly more than four months each. Another example is a situation where a recently advertised appointment process has identified a group of qualified employees. If another similar position became available but a new unforeseen merit criterion had to be added, it may make sense to start with the assessment results from the advertised process and complete the assessment /selection for the new position. This could be considered as a non-advertised process with its own notification step following the selection for the appointment. 4. What are some types of situations where a non-advertised appointment process might be considered for making an appointment from outside the Public Service? Again, it might be considered for employment equity reasons consistent with the staffing strategies outlined in the organization’s Human Resources or Employment Equity Plan. Emergency Term Appointments. This could apply in urgent situations when national security, health or safety considerations preclude staffing by an advertised process. This would include the need to quickly respond to operational service impairments caused by deployment of the CF and requirements for increased civilian employees to support such operations; civilians to fill in behind deployed military members whose usual occupation is garrison-based; DRAFT 6/25/2017 and replacements for civilian employees who, as reservists, may be called out to serve. The position requires a shortage skill identified in the organization’s Human Resources Plan and the recruitment strategy indicates that external non-advertised appointment processes will be used to augment and complement advertised recruitment. The shortage skill(s) rationale should be supported by data and analysis including consideration of the labour market. Circumstances consistent with the PSC’s former criteria for conducting an appointment under “Student Bridging.” A requirement to “call back” a former employee to perform the same or similar work. A requirement is to hire a part-time worker (to work less than a third of the normal number of hours of work) and a non-advertised process is the best staffing option. Situations consistent with the PSC’s former criteria for Without Competition Appointments from outside the Public Service (Named Referrals). For example, a position requires highly specialized skills and a high-calibre individual could be “lost” if the appointment is not made quickly (e.g. the appointment of an outstanding scholar, a participant in a fellowship program or a subject-matter expert). A project or program co-funded by the federal government and another sector (e.g. industry or another level of government) may be jeopardized if the position is not filled immediately and an external advertised process is not the best staffing method. A position is in a geographically remote area and it has had very low applicant interest when advertised processes were conducted over the past years. 5. In considering a non-advertised appointment process one of the requirements is to ensure that such a process is consistent with the appointment values of fairness, access and transparency. What do these values mean? The value of “fairness” means that the choice of process will be made objectively, free from political and personal favouritism. The value of “access” means that the organization will continue to provide reasonable opportunities to apply and be considered for Public Service employment and it will continue to strive for a public service that is representative of Canada’s diversity. The value of “transparency” means that information about the appointment process will be communicated in an open and timely manner. DRAFT 6/25/2017 6. A formal human resources plan is not prepared at my level of the organization. To what plan should I refer to when considering whether to staff by a non-advertised process? Consider the human resources plan at the next higher organizational level. Also consider any human resources plans and strategies that may deal with issues affecting the functional group e.g. apprenticeship studies in DND or the profile of the occupational groups in the Department or in the Public Service.