question archive Most government entities share their compensation structure publicly

Most government entities share their compensation structure publicly

Subject:ManagementPrice: Bought3

Most government entities share their compensation structure publicly. They use a job classification plan where pay rates are based on compensable factors such as knowledge and skills similar to the federal government’s General Schedule (GS) system.

Jobs are grouped into seven classifications, ranging from Grade 1 through Grade 7. Over time, employees receive pay increases according to length of service (Steps 1–4), and progression through the steps assumes a minimum of acceptable performance.

Below is an example of a city’s waiting period within steps and published job structure:

Waiting Period

Step 1 to 2: One year

Step 2 to 3: One year and six months

Step 3 to 4: Two years

 

Grade

Step 1

Step 2

Step 3

Step 4

1

31200

32240

33280

34320

2

35360

36400

37440

38480

3

39520

40560

41600

42640

4

43680

44720

45760

46800

5

47840

48880

49920

50960

6

52000

53040

54080

54080

7

56160

57200

58240

59280

 

1. Using the schedule above, calculate the number of years it would take an employee to advance from their starting position in Grade 4 (Step 1) to Step 4 if they demonstrate acceptable performance.

2. Another employee asked what their salary would likely be after completing two additional years of service. This employee just entered their first year in Grade 4 (Step 2). If they were to demonstrate acceptable performance, what would their expected salary be after completing two additional years of service?

3. All pay rates typically increase each year based on changes in the consumer price index. Calculate the salary for each step in Grade 7 based on an overall 3% increase.

Your findings should be in a Word document and may include a bulleted list or table.

For additional details, please refer to the  Case Study Rubric  document.

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