BAGUIO
CITY -- Baguio City's Human Resource Management Office is urging job
seekers to look at various vacant permanent positions in the city's local
government.
Assistant HRM officer
Edith Dawaten said on Thursday the city government is opening over 200 permanent
positions spread across city hall's 18 departments.
She said that some of
the vacancies have been published, some are already under ongoing deliberations
by the personnel selection board.
“There are many
vacancies for nurses,” she revealed.
Dawaten also cited a
vacancy for Disability Affairs Officer, a post that has been just recently
created to handle the affairs and needs of persons with disabilities.
She added that the city
government is also implementing a new system of recruitment, which subjects
applicants to a rigid process, based on instructions from the Civil Service
Commission (CSC).
All applicants for the
vacant positions will go through the new process of pre-employment, which
includes technical, personality, psychological, and critical thinking tests,
aside from an examination fit for each position.
Dawaten said the new
hiring process is even more crucial for higher positions, starting from Salary
Grade 22.
She talked about the
Executive Order of the Civil Service Commission encouraging local government
units to implement the pre-employment, personality test and critical thinking
test.
“Because we know this is
needed by the city, the mayor issued an administrative order approving the
guidelines for the conduct of the exams by a psychometrician, who is licensed
to conduct exams on personality test and interpret the results," Dawaten
said.
“Although it's really
tedious, this is an improvement in the city’s recruitment process,” the officer
said.
Baguio
City's new tourism officer, Aloysius Mapalo, was among the first ones to
undergo the process.
“Dumaan ako sa butas ng
karayom (I went through the eye of a needle). I had two separate examinations,
two separate interviews, and the other processes, which took about a month to
finish before they made the decision,” Mapalo related.
He dismissed the idea
that “palakasan and whom-you-know system” is what applies in getting an
employment in government.
“There were seven of us,
all of them from the government, mas marami silang kilala dahil nasa loob na
sila (they knew more people in the government because they were already there).
But eventually, I got selected," he continued.
Mapalo was a professor,
then dean of the engineering department of the University of the Cordilleras,
after which he became the director for creative production and the dean of
student affairs before he decided to join government.
Baguio City Councilor
Joel Alangsab, who chairs the committee on governmental affairs and a member of
the selection board, said that in joining the government, the qualification of
the applicant has more weight.
He said it is difficult
to push someone to a position in the government if the person is not qualified.
The applicant has to have the qualification aside from the requirements.
He said under the Baguio
City government, employees are rewarded for their exemplary performance and
service, while those who under-perform in several rating seasons are dropped
from the rolls. -- PNA
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