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Park Ranger (Alpine Rescue and Mountaineering)

Department of the Interior
National Park Service
Pacific West Region (Interior Regions 8,9,10 and 12) - Mount Rainier National Park
This job announcement has closed

Summary

These positions are located in Mount Rainier National Park, in the Division of Visitor and Resource Protection.

The typical seasonal entry-on-duty period for Mount Rainier National Park is March-April but can be variable during these months due to weather conditions, project needs, or funding. Anticipated Entry on Duty: April 2023

Overview

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Hiring complete
Open & closing dates
12/01/2022 to 12/22/2022
Salary
$19.11 to - $24.84 per hour
Pay scale & grade
GS 5
Location
Ashford, WA
6 vacancies
Remote job
No
Telework eligible
No
Travel Required
76% or greater - You may be expected to travel for this position.
Relocation expenses reimbursed
No
Appointment type
Temporary - Not to Exceed 1039 Hours
Work schedule
Multiple Schedules
Service
Competitive
Promotion potential
None
Job family (Series)
Supervisory status
No
Security clearance
Not Required
Drug test
Yes
Position sensitivity and risk
Non-sensitive (NS)/Low Risk
Trust determination process
Announcement number
PWR-1548-SR-23-11688008-DE
Control number
691759000

This job is open to

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Clarification from the agency

The Pacific West Region is recruiting for TEMPORARY seasonal positions not to exceed 1039 hours work in a service year. Dates of employment will vary depending on funding, weather conditions and visitation. Within regulatory limitations, the length of initial appointment may be shortened or extended depending on work availability and funding.

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Duties

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The primary mission of this position is to prepare for and conduct a broad range of emergency service activities in an alpine mountaineering environment. The position is duty stationed in Ashford, WA, but performs duties throughout Mt. Rainier National Park at ranger stations and climbing high camps as well as regionally in the Pacific Northwest training and performing search and rescue activity. A high degree of professional mountaineering experience is required and must be documented in the resume. Expert skiing and/or backcountry snowboarding skill is required. Frequent in-park and out-of-park overnight travel is required and may result in as much 15-20 days per month. Duty schedules are established by the program manager to meet park needs. Work at night, overtime, and work in hazardous/environmental conditions are required. Duties include:

  • Conducting technical rope and helicopter rescues in alpine mountaineering environments on Mt. Rainier and elsewhere in the Pacific Northwest
  • Training in mountaineering, aviation, emergency medical services, avalanche, and technical rope rescue disciplines
  • Staffing front-country ranger stations and climbing high camps
  • Registering climbers where preventative search and rescue and resource protection messages are given
  • Participating in multi-day alpine mountaineering patrols at Mt. Rainier and occasionally at other regional climbing venues
  • Assisting in managing the infrastructure pertaining to human waste collected as a result of climbing use on Mount Rainier
  • Assisting the program manager in monitoring visitor use, commercial services, and wilderness character
  • Managing complex sets of personal protective equipment, inventory, supplies, and gear associated with applied skills
Mount Rainier National Park is located in southeast Pierce County and northeast Lewis County in Washington state. It was established on March 2, 1899, as the fifth national park in the United States. The park encompasses 236,381 acres (369.35 sq mi; 956.60 km2) including all of Mount Rainier, a 14,411-foot (4,392 m) stratovolcano. The mountain rises abruptly from the surrounding land with elevations in the park ranging from 1,600 feet to over 14,000 feet (490 - 4,300 m). The highest point in the Cascade Range, around are valleys, waterfalls, subalpine meadows, old-growth forest and more than 25 glaciers. The volcano is often shrouded in clouds that dump enormous amounts of rain and snow on the peak every year and hide it from the crowds that head to the park on weekends. The Carbon Glacier is the largest glacier by volume in the contiguous United States, while Emmons Glacier is the largest glacier by area.

About 1.8 million people visit Mount Rainier National Park each year. Mount Rainier is a popular peak for mountaineering with some 11,500 attempts per year with approximately 50% making it to the summit. Work takes place at all levels in the park from low-country ranger stations to climbing and rescue activities at the summit. Work is extremely strenuous and often conducted in poor weather. Backcountry travel is required and subject to primitive conditions and composes up to several weeks each year.

This announcement may be used to fill additional positions if identical vacancies occur within 90 days of the issue date of the referral certificate.

For more information on the position, please contact:
Stefan Lofgren, Climbing Program Manager, stefan_lofgren@nps.gov or 253-732-2099.

Requirements

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Conditions of employment

  • U.S. Citizenship required.
  • Appointment subject to background investigation and favorable adjudication.
  • Meet Selective Service Registration Act requirement for males.
  • Selectee will be required to participate in the Direct Deposit Electronics Funds Transfer Program.
  • A selectee receiving a first appointment to the Federal Government (Civil Service) is entitled only to the lowest step of the grade for which selected. The display of a salary range on this vacancy shall not be construed as granting an entitlement to a higher rate of pay.
  • You will be required to submit to a drug test and receive a negative drug test result prior to appointment. In addition, this position is subject to random testing for illegal drug use.
  • You will be required to operate a government (or private) motor vehicle as part of your official duties; a valid driver's license is required. You will be required to submit a Motor Vehicle Operator's License and Driving Record. You must also submit (within a State sealed envelope or submitted directly by the State authorities), and at your own expense, all certified driving records from all States that disclose all valid driver's licenses, whether current or past, possessed by you.
  • You will be required to wear a uniform and comply with the National Park Service uniform standards. A uniform allowance will be provided.
  • You will be required to work on-call, evenings, weekends, holidays, overtime and shift work.
  • You will be required to travel overnight away from home up to 16 nights per month.
  • The incumbent may be assigned to work in in-park travel status at remote high camps for up to eight days at a time.
  • The incumbent may be expected to work up to 100% of any given month in travel status on wildland fire, helicopter crew, emergency incidents, or other assignments.
  • The National Park Service has determined that the duties of this position are suitable for telework only during an emergency or natural disaster.
  • Travel, transportation & relocation expenses will not be paid. Relocation expenses will be the employee's responsibility.

Qualifications

All qualifications must be met by the closing date of this announcement-12/22/2022-unless otherwise stated in this vacancy announcement.

Credit will be given for all appropriate qualifying experience. To receive credit for experience, your resume MUST clearly indicate the nature of the duties and responsibilities for each position, starting and ending dates of employment (month/year), and the resume must reflect full and/or part-time or total number of hours worked (i.e., work 40+ hours a week, rather than indicating full-time). If part-time, the hours must be annotated to be able to pro-rate the amount of qualified specialized experience.

SELECTIVE FACTORS: Applicants must possess the following selective factors to be considered for this position. Candidates who do not meet these requirements will receive no further consideration for this position.

  • Mountaineering Experience - Applicants must have at least 20 mountaineering ascents over a period of at least five years including a wide variety of ascent types including routes on peaks where a significant portion of the climb is on glaciated terrain and on rock climbs greater than 5.9 in difficulty or mixed climbing techniques with greater than M2 are shown. If you do not meet the requirement, you will be rated ineligible for the position. Please include a climbing resume in your application package which details the mountains and routes you have climbed, the date, style (rock, glacier, alpine, ice), and difficulty.
  • Wilderness First Responder - Applicants must be able to enter on duty at the requested date as a qualified and current Wilderness First Responder or higher (EMT, Paramedic, etc.) If you are attending a course between the application period and entry on duty, you MUST indicate which school you will be attending and expected course completion date. If you do not meet the requirement, you will be rated ineligible for the position.
  • United States Pro-1 Level Avalanche Certification - Applicants must enter on duty with a Pro-1 Level Avalanche Certification. If you are attending a course between the application period and entry on duty, you MUST indicate which organization will be providing the training and expected course completion date.
- AND -

To qualify for this position at the GS-05 grade level, you must possess at least one of the following minimum qualifications by close of the announcement:

EXPERIENCE: At least one full year of specialized experience comparable in scope and responsibility to the GS-04 grade level in the Federal service (obtained in either the public or private sectors). Experience may have been in technical, administrative, or scientific work, fish and wildlife management, recreation management, law enforcement, or other park-related work. Examples of qualifying specialized experience include but are not limited to the following: park guide or tour leader; law enforcement or investigative work; archeological or historical preservation research work; forestry and/or fire management work in a park, recreation, or conservation area; management, assistant, or program specialist work involving the development and implementation of policy related to protection, conservation, or management of park areas or similar operations. You must include hours per week worked on your resume.
-OR-
EDUCATION: Successful completion of at least four years of education above the high school level at an accredited college or university with a major study or at least 24 semester/36 quarter hours in natural resource management, natural sciences, earth sciences, history, archaeology, anthropology, park and recreation management, law enforcement/police science, social sciences, museum sciences, business administration, public administration, behavior sciences, sociology or other closely related subjects pertinent to the management and protection of natural and cultural resources. You must include transcripts.
-OR-
A COMBINATION of education and experience as described above. To combine education and experience, first take the number of semester hours (or equivalent) earned towards a bachelor's degree, in excess of 60 semester hours, and divide by 60 semester hours (or equivalent). Then take the number of months of full-time experience and divide by 12 months. Add the percentages together. The total must equal at least 100 percent to qualify. You must include transcripts and hours worked per week on resume.

Volunteer Experience: Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religious; spiritual; community, student, social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.

CTAP/ICTAP Statement: Current surplus and current or former displaced Federal individuals who have special priority selection rights under the Agency Career Transition Assistance Program (CTAP) or the Interagency Career Transition Assistance Program (ICTAP) must be well qualified for the position to receive consideration for special priority selection. Well qualified means that the applicant meets the following: OPM qualification standards for the position; all selective placement factors, where applicable; special qualifying conditions that OPM has approved for the position, where applicable; is physically qualified with reasonable accommodation, where appropriate to satisfactorily perform the duties of the position upon entry; and is rated by the organization at least at the well qualified level on all competencies. Federal employees seeking CTAP/ICTAP eligibility must submit proof that they meet the requirements of 5 CFR 330.605(2) for CTAP and 5 CFR 330.704 for ICTAP. This includes a copy of the agency notice, a copy of their most recent Performance Rating, and a copy of their most recent SF-50 noting current position, grade level, and duty location.

Education

To qualify based on education, you must submit a legible copy of transcripts from an accredited institution with your name, school name, credit hours, course level, major(s), and grade-point average or class ranking. Transcripts do not need to be official, but if you are selected for this position and you used your education to qualify, you must provide official transcripts before you begin work.

If you are using education completed in foreign colleges or universities to meet qualification requirements, you must show that your education credentials have been evaluated by a private organization that specializes in interpretation of foreign education programs and such education has been deemed equivalent to that gained in an accredited U.S. education program; or full credit has been given for the courses at a U.S. accredited college or university.

Additional information

Physical Demands: The physical demands of this job are immense, and the incumbent must be in outstanding physical condition. The incumbent must be able to walk to Camp Muir (4.7 miles / 4700 vertical feet in snowy conditions) with a 30-lb pack in under four hours. The ascent from Camp Muir at 10,100' feet in elevation to the summit of Mt. Rainier is yet another 4,300' in under 3 miles in icy and rocky mountaineering conditions. The weight of a patrol backpack while on these climbs may up to 50 lbs. Work may be done in a split shift where a climb begins at 03:00 am and is done at 09:00, with a 6 hour non-work period, then begin another 4-hour work period at 15:00 to 19:00. This kind of effort coupled with the substantial physical demands, at altitude, necessitate outstanding physical capabilities.

Working Conditions: One of the most challenging outdoor work environments one can imagine, climbing rangers may work in cold and snowy conditions year around with temperatures well below zero and winds well above 50 mph where specialized equipment, training, and clothing are needed. Work is done at altitude for prolonged periods at a time (up to 8 days) at altitudes between 10,100' and 14,100' (or even greater if on an assignment outside of Mount Rainier). At these altitudes, the oxygen in the atmosphere is reduced by up to 1/3 or greater which affects mood, kinesthetics, performance, and one's ability to sleep naturally. Work may be done over cliffs, on the fireline on wildland fires, on an ambulance, in a helicopter, and in various other emergency service configurations. Work assignments often trigger hazard and environmental differential. Integrating operational leadership into daily work is exceptionally important to mitigate and manage hazards. The incumbent is exposed to substantial subjective and objective hazards of the outdoor environment with regards to various terrain types, weather, and other physical conditions.

Non-Competitive Rehire Eligibility: Temporary seasonal employees can only maintain their non-competitive rehire eligibility if they work no more than a combined total of Temporary NTE less than 1040 hours anywhere in the National Park Service (NPS) within their established service year. Accordingly, non-competitive rehire eligibility allows for re-appointment to the same position or another position appropriate for temporary appointment with the same qualification requirements (5 CFR 316.402[b][7]), based on series and grade, anywhere in the major subdivision (NPS).

If you have held a temporary seasonal appointment in the past 12 months and have already worked the maximum temporary appointment less than 1040 hours during that period, you are still welcome to apply. However, please be aware that exceeding the limit of 1040 hours in your established service year will result in the loss of your non-competitive rehire eligibility.

The limit can be exceeded by working multiple temporary seasonal positions that result in a combined total greater than 1040 hours. The limit also can be exceeded by working a single temporary seasonal appointment that exceeds 1040 hours, unless granted an exception by OPM.

If you are unable to apply online or need to fax a document that you do not have in electronic form, view the following link for information regarding an Alternate Application. Click the following link for more information, https://help.usastaffing.gov/Apply/index.php?title=Alternate_Application_Information.

How you will be evaluated

You will be evaluated for this job based on how well you meet the qualifications above.

You will be evaluated based on how well you meet the qualifications listed in this vacancy announcement. Your qualifications will be evaluated based on your application materials (e.g., resume, supporting documents), the responses you provide on the application questionnaire, and the result of the additional assessments required for this position. A review of your resume and supporting documentation will be made and compared against your responses to the Assessment Questionnaire to determine if you are qualified for this job. If your resume is incomplete or does not support the responses provided in the Assessment Questionnaire, or if you fail to submit all required documentation, you will be rated 'ineligible', 'not qualified', or your score will be adjusted accordingly. If a determination is made that you have inflated your qualifications or experience, you can lose consideration for this position. Please follow all instructions carefully; errors or omissions can affect your rating.

Candidates will be rated and ranked using Category Rating procedures. These procedures place candidates with veteran's preference above non-preference eligibles within each category. Veterans with a service connected disability of at least 10 percent are listed in the highest quality category, except when the position being filled is scientific or professional at the GS-09 grade level or higher. Under Category Rating, candidates will be rated and ranked into one of two categories:

  • Well Qualified - applicants possessing experience that exceeds the minimum qualifications of the position including all selective factors and are proficient in most of the requirements of the job
  • Qualified - applicants possessing experience that meets the minimum qualifications of the position including all selective factors and are proficient in some, but not all of the requirements of the job.
You will be evaluated on the following competencies:
  • First Response
  • Risk Management
  • Stamina
  • Technical Competence

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