I notice the general Civil Service is recruiting on a large scale again. Advertisements appeared on newspapers last week.
There has been little or no talk about these jobs which will be in thousands.
1. There has been no recruitment in the Civil Service for years. Not entirely true; I 've competed in 2 open competitions for appointment to the civil service since 2008, and there have been several others where I work, both open recruitment and confined promotions.
2. It is a similar situation with promotions which will have to have vacancies filled from existing staff. See 1 above, not entirely true that there haven't been promotions, and yes they do create vacancies, but not an enormous number, and remember redeployment is the order of the day...
3. Natural Wastage is telling (people retire or die). See my point above re the demographic of CO's being younger than the PS general average. As an example, a quick google yields up the headcount of Revenue as at 31/12/2011 (http://debates.oireachtas.ie/dail/2012/01/31/00092.asp) you'll see 27% of CO's were 50+, compared to 47% at EO/SO grade, 61% at HEO/AO grade, 70% at AP grade, and 76% at Principal.
4. Many have left the Civil Service because of relatively low wages. Really? Have you a source for that? Where I work, the few competitions that have taken place have seen very well qualified people taking big cuts in money (myself included) - the sentiment being there's a hell of a lot to be said for the job security these days. (Plus the opportunities for advancement given the age profile at the higher grades.)
5. Applications for Career Breaks, Paternal Leave, Maternity Leave, etc have never been higher. Have you a source for that? Applications may be higher but their approval is subject to the exigencies of the job, and in any event you don't hire permanent staff to cover temporary absences, that's what hundreds and hundreds of TCO's are hired for every summer.
6. There is need for a large conveyor belt of applicants as posts will have to be filled fairly fast. There'll be 15,000 applicants easily I'd say, but that's got no bearing on the number of jobs available.
7. Overtime, Agency staff being employed is too costly and bad value compared to personal responsibility of a clerical officer in situ. Agreed, but doesn't necessarily mean that sanction to increase staff headcount will be granted. All Govt departments have staff reduction targets to meet under Croke Park / Haddington Road / Angela told us so, and that will dictate what hiring can happen.
At an informed guess there will be at least two thousand vacancies. It ain't rocket science, you know!
I joined the public sector in 2007 as a clerical officer and quite reasonably, I think, anticipated moving up the ladder. Hasn't happened due to the recruitement ban.
I would discourage anyone else from leaving the private sector to come into the public sector on a lower grade at the moment at least until grade 4 and 5 jobs become available which is not going to happen any time soon.
....Mr Earl, have a look at the entry salary scales for the new clerical officers. None of them will be booking trips to the next World Cup Finals.
My comment was not specifically referencing salaries, but the entire terms and conditions of employment (to include tea breaks, pensions, sick days, days off to go to the Galway Races or whatever) - I'm all for paying the civil servants more, when they give genuine increased productivity where needed etc. I'd rather see the younger, lower grade civil servants paid a bit more and lose some of the "fringe benefits" or work a few extra hours perhaps...
It’s good to see the state recruiting Civil Servants again. It’s an indication of a return to more normal times. Civil Servants provide much needed services for the state. Without a good Civil Service a state cannot function. This is not however a boost to the economy or anything like that as state employees do not generate wealth like primary producers or those in the export sector. That’s not Public or Civil Service bashing, it’s just the way it is. Lots of people work hard in jobs that provide essential services but don’t boost the economy. That doesn’t make them or those jobs less important.
It's tax and spend. The money is taken out of the in taxes and returned through expenditure by PS/CS employees. There's no net gain. I'm not saying that they don't add value or do good work, it's just not economic value.So are you saying that money spent by public servants in the Irish economy for goods and services does nothing to create wealth in ireland?? I'm sure that there are many businesses in this country that welcome the personal expenditure by public servants.
Mr. Earl: the 1980's have called and asked for their Civil Servants stereotype back...
I started this thread to give somebody sometime somewhere some hope. Already, it has turned into a Public Service Bashing Scene.
It's tax and spend. The money is taken out of the in taxes and returned through expenditure by PS/CS employees. There's no net gain.
At an informed guess there will be at least two thousand vacancies. It ain't rocket science, you know!
Let's be honest, it's not a well-informed guess.
The Civil Service consists of about 36,000 people, most of whom work directly in Govt departments, or a few select agencies like Revenue, OPW, PAS. This is about 3,000 down from 2008. The latest round of recruitment is indeed for the civil service. If you think that Govt are going to let the numbers get anywhere near the 2008 number, you are wrong.
I've no idea what numbers are intended to be recruited in this round. My uninformed guess is that it will be lucky to hit 3-figures. If you want to have a well-informed guess, inform it by giving PAS or Dept PER a call.