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UPDATED: Hiring Freeze Blocks National Park Service Permanent Hiring, Seasonal Jobs Up In The Air

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Editor's note: This updates with the National Park Service's tally of vacant positions within the agency, efforts to see that law enforcement rangers and firefighters are exempt from the hiring freeze.

National Park Service officials have been told to stop filling vacant permanent positions throughout the National Park System under the federal hiring freeze President Trump ordered, though it remained unclear Wednesday which, if any, seasonal positions would be granted a waiver from the freeze.

President Trump in a memorandum on Monday called for an immediate hiring freeze to run up to 90 days, at which point he expected the Office of Management and Budget to produce a long-term plan to reduce the federal workforce. But for an agency like the Park Service, which annually hires thousands of seasonal workers, the document didn't spell out how the Service should proceed with those positions.

On Wednesday afternoon a memo sent out to management staff across the National Park System said Park Service officials were continuing to understand the process for obtaining exemptions to the hiring freeze. However, wrote NPS Chief Financial Officer Lena McDowall, what has been determined is that:

  • As of noon on January 22, 2017, no existing vacant positions may be filled, and no new positions may be created. Executive departments and agencies should not make any new offers of employment. Department and agency heads may make limited exceptions to ensure national security and public safety, but guidance on that waiver process has not been issued yet.
  • An individual who has received a job offer/appointment prior to January 22, 2017, and who has received documentation from the agency that specifies a confirmed start date on or before February 22, 2017, should report to work on that date.
  • For individuals who have received a job offer/ appointment prior to January 22, 2017, and who have received documentation from that agency that specifies a confirmed start date after February 22, 2017, we are awaiting additional guidance on the review process to determine whether these individuals should report to duty on the agreed upon start date.
  • Hiring for seasonal positions is currently underway. It is still unclear which types of seasonal positions may qualify for a waiver, so with the expectation that at least some exemptions will be granted for these positions and in recognition of the time it takes to hire and on-board seasonals, bureaus and offices should continue their seasonal hiring processes to identify qualified candidates who may be expeditiously selected when a freeze exemption is granted. No new offers of employment may be made until a freeze exemption is granted.
  • In addition, hiring processes for permanent wildland fire, law enforcement and other public safety positions should continue to identify qualified candidates. No new offers of employment should be made until a freeze exemption is granted.

According to personnel in the Park Service's Washington, D.C., headquarters, the latest "snapshot" of vacancies across the agency counted 1,731.

"The National Park Service is in coordination with the Office of Personnel Management and Office of Management and Budget on their guidance for implementing the hiring freeze. As with previous hiring freezes, the National Park Service will work with the Administration to ensure that we meet the needs of park visitors across the system," said Park Service chief spokesman Tom Crosson. "We realize that maintaining a full staff of firefighters and law enforcement officers at our parks is important for visitor safety. Therefore, per the provisions in the president’s memorandum, we will work with the Department of the Interior to ensure that personnel responsible for the safety and protection of our visitors and resources are exempt from this hiring freeze."

Park Service officials were in ongoing discussions with Interior Department, Office of Personnel Management, and Office of Management and Budget authorities to determine how seasonal positions would be handled under the freeze.

"Seasonal employees are critical to the National Park Service.  They help parks throughout the system provide quality and safe experiences for our visitors throughout peak visitation periods," said Mr. Crosson. "The NPS typically hires around 10,000 seasonal and other temporary employees throughout the year, with more than 8,000 of those on board during the peak summer visitation period."

One park superintendent, who agreed to discuss the memo anonymously, was optimistic that seasonal hiring would be allowed to go forward once the new administration realized the need for these workers.

"The Washington office is heavily engaged in trying to talk to the right people at Interior and (Office of Personnel Management) so they can explain the situation with seasonals and they are able to resolve that. It will come eventually," the superintendent said. "I’m pretty confident that it actually will get resolved pretty fast. And we will be able to hire seasonals, because seasonals aren’t what this is about. Every time we’ve had a hiring freeze in the past we’ve been able to hire seasonals. ... You can’t operate a Yosemite or a Yellowstone without a seasonal staff to collect the trash and protect the public safety. You just can’t do that, and it would adversely effect the local communities.”

But the superintendent was concerned that the eventual OMB plan might aim to reduce the federal workforce by ordering that once an employee retires that their specific position cannot be filled. If you let folks retire but don’t fill their position, you might lose a very valuable position, the superintendent said, adding that the best solution would be to give the Park Service a set personnel budget and let the agency decide which positions to fill.

At the National Parks Conservation Association, officials were alarmed by the latest developments and hoped the administration would move quickly to allow the Park Service to fill its seasonal needs.

“We’re still trying to figure out what the implications will be, but we are alarmed at the potential for an already understaffed Park Service to be further challenged to handle the great record number of visitors and care for resources that are increasingly falling into disrepair," said John Garder, NPCA's point person for budget and appropriations. "We’re concerned about how long it could take the administration to figure out the details as the hiring season for seasonal park rangers is upon us. Normally the Park Service would be looking to hire about 8,000 seasonal rangers at this time. And we are deeply concerned about whether or not they’ll be able to hire the front line workers of the Park Service, and if so when they might be given permission to do that.”

Last year's unofficial visitation tally for the National Park System was 6.4 percent above the then-record 307.2 million counted in 2015, said Mr. Garder. Some individual parks, though, saw double-digit increases, he said, pointing to Zion National Park, which saw a 17.6 percent increase, to 4,317,028

“If you look at some parks at the (visitation) increase from December '14 to December '16, you’re looking at shocking numbers for some parks. If you’re looking at parks like Zion, Rocky Mountain, it's crazy. These parks are already struggling to accommodate these visitors and do their normal work. The reality is they need more staff, not less," said Mr. Garder.

According to NPCA:

  • Based on the latest available data, the National Park Service had more than ten percent fewer staff in Fiscal Year 2015 compared to five years prior.
  • A contributor to the growth of the $12 billion park service maintenance backlog has been lack of staff to perform day-to-day maintenance and repair jobs that keep the backlog from growing
  • In 2015, NPS only had 58 cents out of every dollar needed just to keep up with the backlog

“Congressman (Ryan) Zinke in his testimony to be the next Interior secretary said very clearly that two of his main priorities are to address the maintenance backlog and to provide the resources that park rangers need," said Mr. Garder. "We’re overjoyed to see that, but this (presidential) memorandum, depending on how it’s implemented, would seriously challenge his commitment to parks, becaue you can’t repair parks without rangers. And they’re certainly not going to have the resources they need to take care of visitors if there are fewer of them out there.

"It’s important to remember that it’s not just the seasonal rangers who are the face of the Park Service to the visitors, it's also the professionals: the scientists, the archaeologists, the cultural resource specialists, the wildlife biologists. These are our national treasures, our cultural and national heritage.”

Comments

Whiners, screwing over the health of their country? From an ideologue who has NEVER done a thing for another that doesn't pay himself first.

Another baseless acqusation.  You have no clue what I have or have not done for others.


I do have a pretty good idea, and the words that come out of your mouth pretty much add up to Q.E.D. Judged solely by the words you type into that computer, you just don't give a damn about others, and you are explicit about it.


ou just don't give a damn about others

Like I said, you don't have a clue. But as usual, that doesn't stop you from jumping to uninformed conclusions and making baseless accusations.  


Steve - no I haven't seen how chaotic the Trump administration has been in the first few days.  I see Trump implementing the very policies he advocated in a clear, concise and deliberate manner.  I don't agree with everything he has done but I see nothing chaotic about it.  The only chaos is from the folks on the left that are going hysterical and violent.

 


Nothing chaotic? Why isn't Saudi Arabia on his executive order regarding immigration? As I recall, the majority of the 9-11 terrorists (15), were Saudis. Could it be because Trump has business dealings there? And his failure to adequately vet the order led to some walking back by his staff on who was affected by it. Heck, even the Koch brothers are criticizing him.

What's next? Taking down the Statue of Liberty.

"Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"


Kurt, I don't know why the Saudis aren't on there but I doubt it is because of Trump business dealings.  Can you identify those dealings?  I suspect it is because intellegence indicates that the threat is coming from the named countries and not Saudi Arabia.  In any case I don't see how this constitutes "chaos".

As to Miss Liberty, I don't see how shutting immigration from 7 countries for 90 days while we get the vetting process in order is going to be any threat to her mission. 


There is a truly great story on Traveler's front page today.  A beautifully written reminder that the diversity of our nation is one of our greatest strengths.  But that will go right over the heads of those whose little minds are so constipated that they cannot or will not see that goodness isn't limited to those who look like, worship like, sound like, and think like they do.

Now we are beginning to learn more of the powerful role that Steve Bannon is playing in the White House.  We are learning that the countrries left off the "terror list" all have one thing in common:  Trump has large business interests in each of them.

It's becoming more apparent with each passing day that we have more to fear from the Oval Office than we do from Muslims in general.

I'm heading out to Bryce in the morning.  Thank goodness we still have our parks -- for now at least.

 


Eric, from the NY Daily News:

Conspicuously, Trump doesn't hold any business interests in any of the countries on the list, but holds major stakes in several of those excluded from it, records show.

Friday’s executive order, signed at the Pentagon, suspends the issuing of U.S. visas or travel permits to people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

Not a single American was killed on U.S. soil by citizens from any of those countries between 1975 and 2015, according to statistics tallied by the conservative-leaning Cato Institute.

However, the same set of statistics show that nearly 3,000 Americans were killed by citizens from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt in the same time period — with the bulk of those killed being victims of the 9/11 attacks. Yet, people from those three countries are still welcome to apply for U.S. visas and travel permits.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/trump-muslim-ban-excludes-count...

From NPR:

He has significant commercial interests in Turkey and Azerbaijan, is developing properties in Indonesia and Dubai, and has formed companies in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. His daughter Ivanka said in 2015 that the company was looking at "multiple opportunities in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Saudi Arabia — the four areas where we are seeing the most interest."

...

The Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive think tank, hit the same point harder, saying Trump was "carpet-bombing U.S. foreign policy":

One might think that Egypt and Saudi Arabia, the two countries that nearly all the 9/11 hijackers came from — and which are currently known to be backing ISIS and other terrorists, in Saudi Arabia's case, and facing serious terror attacks on their own soil largely in response to government repression, in Egypt's — would be included in Trump's twisted analysis as potential sources of terrorism.

But no, those countries were ignored. Conflicts of interest? Nah, just a coincidence.

http://www.npr.org/2017/01/28/511996783/how-does-trumps-immigration-free...

From the Washington Post:

Some companies reflect long-established deals while others were launched as recently as Trump’s campaign, including eight that appear tied to a potential hotel project in Saudi Arabia, the oil-rich Arab kingdom that Trump has said he “would want to protect.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/a-scramble-to-assess-the...

Of course, if the president released his tax records, these reports could either be confirmed or denied.


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