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HomeMy WebLinkAboutRES 83-476 R E S O L U T I O N WHEREAS, the City Manager has presented to the City Council goals and time limits related to an affirmative action plan for the City of Beaumont; and, WHEREAS, the Council desires to adopt such affirmative action goals and time limits for the City of Beaumont and authorize the City Manager to implement administrative regulations to enforce the goals; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BEAUMONT: THAT the Affirmative Action Goals of the City of Beaumont for a five (5) year period, in the form attached hereto and made a part hereof for all purposes, is hereby adopted. Said Affirmative Action Goals shall be and remain on file in the City Clerk' s office of the City of Beaumont for public inspection. The City Manager be, and he is hereby , authorized to promulgate and implement administrative regulations for the enforcement of such Goals. PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL of the City of Beaumont this the day of 1983. Mayor - x�2fj:3- 5v7� AFFIRMATIVE ACTION GOALS , INTRODUCTION In the implementation of the City's Affirmative Action Plan, the City of Beaumont will endeavor to meet all the goals established by the City for minorities and females. However, our assumptions and judgments in pre- dicting the number of vacancies due to attrition and expansion may fall short of the estimated number of vacancies that will occur during the five-year life span of our Affirmative Action Plan. A basic component of the City's Affirmative Action Plan is annual -monitoring. Action resulting farom the monitoring process will be annual adjustment of goals based on overall accomplishments or failures. Additionally, we must recognize that the City's resources committed to the implementation of the Affirmative Action Plan will be limited because of the economic conditions that presently exist within the City and the State as a whole. The existence of these factors require that our implementation methods be not only creative and innovative, but cost effective as well. As a result, the City of Beaumont will commit a majority of its resources to those goals established for minorities and females in the job categories where minorities and females have been traditionally excluded from parti- cipation (Administrative, Professional, and Technical occupational categories) . The City of Beaumont through its Affirmative Action Committee conducted an analysis of the City's work force. The objective of this analysis was to determine where in the City's work force minorities and women were under- utilized. utilization statistics were collected from all City Departments. Based on the in-depth evaluation conducted by the Affirmative Action Committee, the following goals were established for minorities and females. ADMINISTRATIVE, PROFESSIONAL, AND TECHNICAL - Ist Priority The evaluation of the City's work force indicated that minorities are under- utilized in the Administrative, Professional and Technical job categories and females are underutilized in the Administrative and Technical job categories. Recognizing the fact that traditionally minorities and females have been excluded from those positions that involve policy formulation and decision making and from those internal resource pools from which candidates for promotion to management are drawn, it shall be the policy of the City of Beaumont to aggressively move toward the utilization of minorities and females in these upper level positions. Thus, in order to more fairly reflect its surrounding community labor market segments in these positions, the City of Beaumont has established the following goals for minorities and females: I. Administrative Occupations - 62 positions: Occupations in which employees set broad policies, exercise overall responsibility for execution of these policies, or direct individual department or special phases of the agency's operations. Includes: department ' 1A directors, assistant directors, division chiefs, superintendents, policy majors, deputy fire chief, accountants, budget analysts, administrative assistants, and kindred workers. Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Other Female 49 9 1 10 83% 15% 22 17% Projected Composition - 1988 White Black Hisp Other Female 40 19 3 26 64% 31% 52 42% II. Professional Specialty Occupations - 73 positions: Occupations which require specialized and theoretical knowledge which is usually acquired through college training or through work experience and other training which provides comparable knowledge. Includes: engineers, planners, lawyers, doctors, registered nurses, librarians, sanitarians, systems analysts, social workers, dieticians, teachers or instructors, police captains, and fire district chiefs. Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Other Female 53 15 1 1 31 76% 21% 1% 1% 44% Projected Composition - 1988 White Black Hisp Other Female 46 23 3 1 31 63% 32% 4% 1% 42% III. Technical Occupations -_.72 positions: Occupations which require a combination of basic scientific or technical knowledge and manual skill which can be obtained through specialized post-secondary school education or through equivalent on-the-job training. Includes: drafting, engineering -and laboratory technicians, construction and code inspectors, computer programmers and operators, surveyors, licensed vocational nurses, and kindred workers. -2- Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Other F&ale 50 15 1 20 76% 23% 1% 30% Projected Composition - 1988 White Black Hisp Other Female 45 23 4 27 63% 32% 5% 38% PROTECTIVE SERVICES - 2nd Priority The protective services analysis revealed that minorities and females are under- utilized in these positions. Due to the cultural barriers traditional society has placed on minorities and women in careers as police officers, the attainment of the goals established by the City of Beaumont for minorities and females shall be accomplished by an innovative three-prong system that will assure equal acces- sibility to employment for all individuals desiring careers as police officers. Under this system, all qualified individuals shall be classified according to white/minority/female. From each classification one qualified individual , accord- ing to his or her ranking within that classification, shall be selected on a rotating basis for any vacancies that are available. For instance, if there are only three vacancies, one individual will be selected from each classification. This system shall remain in effect until the following goals established by the City for minorities and females are met. It shall be the final goal of the City to achieve the percentage composition as listed below under Final Future Composition. I. Protective Services - 436 positions: Occupations in which workers are en-. trusted with public safety, security and protection from destructive forces. Includes: patrolmen, sergeants, lieutenants, firefighters, fire engineers, fire captains, fire prevention investigators, jailers, and park rangers. Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Other Female 388 40 2 21 90% 9% 1% 5% Interim Projected Composition - 1988 White Black Hisp Other Female 338 81 17 42 78% 19% 4% 10% Final Future Composition White Black Hisp Other Female 279 140 17 183 64% 32% 4% 42% -3- SKILLED CRAFT REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE OCCUPATIONS - 3rd Priority It should be re-emphasized that the policy of the City will be to commit the majority of resources allocated to the Affirmative Action work prpgram to accomplishment of Administrative and Technical goals for reasons already stated. As a result of this policy, this category as viewed in terms of goal setting is third in priority. In these job categories, the evaluation conducted by the Affirmative Action Committee revealed that hispanics and females are underutilized in these job categories. The City therefore established the following goals for hispanics and females in these positions: Service Maintenance Occupations - 302 positions: Occupations in which workers perform duties which result in or contribute to the comfort, convenience, hygiene or safety of the general public or which contribute to the upkeep and care of buildings, facilities or grounds of public property. Includes: General laborers, construction laborers, refuse collectors, custodial personnel, crew leaders, and foremen. Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Female 55 250 4 67 187 81% 1% 22% Projected Composition - 1988 Wbite Black Hisp Female 55 231 16 129 187 77% 5% 48% II. Skilled Craft - 186 positions: Occupations in which workers perform jobs which require special manual skill and a thorough and comprehensive knowledge of the processes involved in the work which is acquired through on-the-job training and experience or through apprenticeship or other formal training programs. Includes: carpenters, electricians, electronics, technicians, painters, welders, heavy equipment operators, mechanics, repairmen and plant operators, crew leaders and foremen. Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Female 63 116 5 15 347 637 3% 8% Projected Composition - 1988 White Black Hisp Female 61 118 7 77 337. 63% 4% 42% -4- ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT/CLERICAL OCCUPATIONS - 4th Priority The` statistical evaluation of the City's work force revealed that blacks and females presently surpass their composition in the City's labor market in these job categories. Hispanics, however, were underutilized in these two job categories. Therefore, no goals were established for blacks and females in these job categories. The goals established for hisDanics' in these positions are as follows: Administrative Support - 181 Dositions: Occupations in which workers are responsible for internal and external communication, recording and retrieval of data and/or information and other paperwork required in an office. Includes: clerks and receptionists, office machine operators, clerk-typists, stenographers, secretaries, statistical clerks, dispatchers, payroll clerks, office supervisors, and kindred workers. Current Composition - 1983 White Black Hisp Other Female 109 60 3 167 63% 35% 2% 97% Projected Composition - 1988 1.1hite Black Hisp Other Female 112 62 7 171 62% 34% 4% 95%