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Foreign Service Human Resources Officer

Department of State
Department of State - Agency Wide
This job announcement has closed

Summary

The U.S. Department of State is developing a rank-ordered list of eligible hires for a limited number of Foreign Service Human Resources Officers (HRO) positions based on the needs of the Department. Learn more about the Department of State and a career in the Foreign Service at https://careers.state.gov.

There is more to joining the Foreign Service than just salary. Refer to the Benefits section for more information on total compensation.

Overview

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Reviewing applications
Posted 09/27/22
Location
Work site options
Telework eligible
No
Remote job
No
Relocation expenses reimbursed
Yes—After completing orientation and initial training in Washington, D.C., a Foreign Service Specialist is usually assigned to two overseas tours, each two years in length, directed by the Department. After the initial two tours, assignments will be for periods of one to three years overseas or in the United States.
Salary
$72,686 - $116,012 per year
Pay scale & grade
FP 04
Promotion potential
MC
Pay scale and grade determines the salary of the job.
Work schedule
Full-time
Travel Required
Occasional travel - Foreign Service Specialists generally spend the majority of their careers assigned to our overseas missions and at times, live away from family, at posts unaccompanied by family members, and/or in hardship conditions.
Appointment type
Permanent - Permanent after tenure granted by a Foreign Service Specialist (FSS) Tenure Board.
Occupations and job series
Supervisory status
Yes
Federal service type
This job is in the Excepted Service
Drug test
Yes
Security clearance
Top Secret
Announcement number
HRO-2022-0003
Control number
679992500

This job is open to

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Clarification from the agency

Must be a U.S. citizen. Applicants should read the entire announcement to ensure they meet all requirements and understand a Foreign Service career. Applicants may not reapply for one year after their previous application for the same position. If a Suitability Review Panel denied your suitability in the last two years, you may not apply. [Note: Candidates who were denied Diplomatic Security Special Agent (SA) positions based on SA suitability requirements may apply for non-DS positions.]

Duties

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Some of the specific duties and responsibilities of HROs include handling human resource issues for U.S. Direct-Hires (USDH) and Locally Employed (LE) staff. These include but are not limited to:

Locally Employed Staff (LE Staff) Human Resource Responsibilities

  1. Talent Management: Oversees the lifecycle of Locally Employed Staff (LE Staff) employment from recruitment, security and medical clearances, onboarding, benefits, compensation, training, discipline, performance, to separation.
  2. Performance Management: Oversees the LE Staff performance evaluation process. Provides counseling on career development and interpersonal skills. Directly manages disciplinary actions.
  3. Employee Relations and Recognition: Manages the interagency mission awards program, supervises and directs LE HR office staff.
  4. Policies and Procedures: Reviews position descriptions to ensure fair position classification, ensures updates are made to the LE Staff Handbook, monitors changes to local labor laws, and advises management on legal matters including disciplinary and grievance actions.

U.S. Direct-Hire Human Resource Responsibilities

  1. Talent Management: As Post Training Officer, approves training requests, develops mentoring programs, training programs, and administers intern, fellows, and seasonal hire programs. Oversees the hiring and performance process for Eligible Family Members.
  2. Performance Management: Conducts the annual evaluation report process, counsels and advises USDH staff on career development grievances, and manages employee relations.
  3. Employee Relations and Recognition: Develops orientation programs, post language programs, manages the awards program, prepares required reports.
  4. Policies, Procedures, and Salary and Benefit Administration: Provides and interprets federal benefits information, work/life programs, assignment information, and diplomatic immunities and accreditation. Manages the annual Foreign Service bidding cycle.
  5. Contribution to Mission Development: Serves as expert advisor on HR policies, prepares HR’s contribution to mission strategic plan, acts as Management Officer as needed, responds to interagency internal policy changes, develops workload projections.
  6. Management of the HR Office: Manages HR contracts, protects information from unauthorized disclosure, prepares HR budget, contributes to emergency management, manages furloughs, develops expertise on a variety of HR applications, analyzes and improves HR effectiveness, and manages customer service.
  7. Other HR Responsibilities When Assigned to Washington DC: Serves in HRO leadership roles, including on the Board of Examiners, training other HROs at the Foreign Service Institute, processing travel orders, or serving as a Career Development Officer and Subject Matter Expert, among other opportunities. 

Requirements

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Conditions of employment

  • Be a U.S. citizen and available for worldwide service.*
  • Be able to obtain a Top Secret Security Clearance.
  • Be able to obtain an appropriate Foreign Service Medical Clearance.
  • Be able to obtain a favorable Suitability Review Panel determination.**
  • Be at least 20 years old to apply; at least 21 years old to be appointed.
  • Be appointed prior to age 60 (preference eligible veterans excepted).***

Foreign Service Human Resources Officers (HROs) serve at many of the Department of State posts throughout the world, in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area, and Regional Centers in Charleston, South Carolina, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, and Frankfurt, Germany.

HROs are responsible for the U.S. Direct Hire (USDH) and, overseas, Locally Employed (LE) staff Human Resources (HR) programs for the Department of State and participating U.S. government (USG) agencies. Responsibilities include managing a range of HR functions including:

  • Recruitment and staffing;
  • Performance management, appraisal, and training and development;
  • Salary and benefits administration;
  • Employment policies and procedures;
  • Workforce planning and position classification.

An HRO must adhere to the highest standards of integrity, dependability, attention to detail, teamwork, and cooperation while accepting the need to travel, to live overseas, and when necessary, to live away from family.

Qualifications

Specialized Experience

Specialized Experience is work in the field of Human Resources management, which demonstrates that the applicant has acquired, and is able to apply, a combination of specific knowledge, skills, and abilities appropriate to a FS HRO position.

To qualify as Specialized Experience, the duties must be at least 60% as a Human Resources professional with responsibilities for work force planning and policy development.

Applicants must demonstrate that their job-related experience has been at progressively increasing levels of performance and responsibility through such indicators as promotions, raises, increases in duties and responsibilities, and organizational and employee impact.

Examples of Specialized Experience include, but are not limited to:

  • Recruitment and staffing – recruitment, qualifications examination and placement of professional and/or support staff personnel;
  • Staff training and development;
  • Performance management and appraisal – an organization’s employee performance management and employee evaluation program;
  • Employee relations;
  • Salary and benefits administration – wage and benefits surveys and analysis, and administration of employee benefits programs such as health benefits, life insurance, and retirement systems;
  • Employee policies and procedures;
  • Labor relations and laws – U.S. and local laws including EEO;
  • Position classification; and
  • Supervision of HR staff.

In addition to meeting the requirements above, applicants must possess excellent interpersonal and communications skills and a strong customer service orientation.

Experience as a Human Resources professional in a multicultural, diverse, or international environment, and applicants with certification(s) from professional human resources societies, associations, or organizations are preferred.

Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities (KSA)

General Human Resources Knowledge: Recruitment, training techniques, candidate assessment, organizational design and position management, change management techniques, information security methods, employee evaluation procedures, awards procedures, compensation management principles, benefit programs, grievance and disciplinary procedures, engagement and quality of work life, management issues with remote work, career development, leadership principles, supervision principles, mentoring techniques, performance metrics, equal employment opportunity law and sources of bias, information resources, legal terminology, cross-cultural communication, computer functions, and internet functions.

Skills: Written communication, oral communication, active listening, interpersonal interactions, building relationships, customer service, resolving conflict, working with others of diverse backgrounds, managing laterally and upward, leadership, training, personnel evaluating and interviewing, running meetings, teamwork, critical thinking, creative problem solving, decision making, organizing, planning, project management, time management, computer technology, operating HR communication networks, data analysis, professional social interaction, counseling and giving constructive feedback, managing intense emotional situations, presentations and public speaking, being adaptable and resilient, and self-development.

Other Requirements: Continuous learning, cross-cultural awareness, cross-cultural interest, tolerance for working overseas, tolerance of travel, tolerance of varying work environments, worldwide availability, tolerance of living away from family, attention to detail, dependability, accountability, integrity, and willingness to perform other duties.

Foreign Service Specialists must demonstrate and maintain a high standard of English, both written (overall structure as well as grammar, spelling and punctuation) and spoken (overall structure as well as delivery, clarity and brevity).

Education

Applicants must possess one of the following:

  • High school diploma or equivalency and a minimum of five years of Specialized Experience in the last 10 years, or
  • Bachelor's degree and a minimum of three years of Specialized Experience in the last 10 years, or
  • Master's degree in Human Resources or Labor Relations from an accredited program and a minimum of three years of Specialized experience in the last 10 years.

You must submit a copy of your high school diploma or equivalency certificate, or, your university transcript(s) with your application. For college-level education and higher, diplomas are not accepted in lieu of transcripts. If you do not submit this documentation to demonstrate your educational achievements, your candidacy will not continue. 

Official or unofficial transcripts may be submitted with your application, however, your transcript must be complete (no missing pages), and must include your name, the school’s name, and the degree and date awarded. A transcript missing any of these elements will not pass the minimum qualifications and your candidacy will not continue.  

Education from a program or institution within the United States must be accredited by an accrediting institution recognized by the U.S. Department of Education in order to be counted towards your qualifications.

Education completed in foreign colleges or universities may be used to meet the education requirements if you can show that the foreign education is comparable to that received in an accredited educational institution in the United States. It is your responsibility to provide such evidence when applying. Only accredited organizations recognized as specializing in the interpretation of foreign education credentials that are members of the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services (NACES) or the Association of International Credential Evaluators, Inc. (AICE) are accepted. If documentation from an accredited organization is not provided, your candidacy will not continue. 

NACES: www.naces.org/members.htm
AICE: www.aice-eval.org/members 

For further information on the evaluation of foreign education, please refer to the Office of Personnel Management and the U.S. Department of Education. The U.S. Department of State neither endorses nor recommends any individual evaluation service.

OPM: www.opm.gov
U.S. Department of Education Accreditation Tool: http://ope.ed.gov/accreditation

Additional information

*EMPLOYMENT ELIGIBILITY VERIFICATION PROGRAM (E-Verify) – Verification of employment eligibility in the United States is required.

U.S. law requires companies to employ only individuals who may legally work in the United States – either U.S. citizens, or foreign citizens who have the necessary authorization. This agency uses E-Verify to compare information from the Form I-9, Employment Eligibility Verification, to data from U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Social Security Administration (SSA) records to confirm employment eligibility. If eligibility cannot be verified, employment will be terminated.  

**The Department of State Suitability Review Panel and standards are defined in Chapter 3 of the Foreign Affairs Manual. For more information please visit: https://fam.state.gov/.

***For more information about Veteran’s Preference and how it is applied in the selection process, please visit: http://careers.state.gov/faqs/faqs-wiki/are-veterans-given-hiring-preference-

No applicant will be considered who has previously been separated from the Foreign Service under sections §607, §608, §610 or §611 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980, as amended, or who resigned or retired in lieu of separation under these provisions. In addition, no applicant will be considered who has previously been separated for failure to receive a career appointment under section §306 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980, as amended, or who resigned or retired in lieu thereof.

A Foreign Service Specialist separated for failure to receive a career appointment under section 306 may not re-apply to be a Foreign Service Specialist in the same skill code, but may apply for another skill code, or to be a Foreign Service Generalist.

Executive Branch agencies are barred by §5 US Code 3303 as amended from accepting or considering prohibited political recommendations and are required to return any prohibited political recommendations to sender. In addition, as mandated by §5 US Code 3110, relatives of federal employees cannot be granted preference in competing for these employment opportunities.

It is the policy of the Federal Government to treat all employees with dignity and respect, and to provide a workplace that is free from discrimination, whether discrimination is based on race, color, religion, sex (including gender identity or pregnancy), national origin, disability, political affiliation, marital status, membership in an employee organization, age, sexual orientation, or other non-merit factors.

The Department of State provides reasonable accommodation to applicants with disabilities. Applicants requiring reasonable accommodations for any part of the application or hiring process should so advise the Department at ReasonableAccommodations@state.gov, of receiving their invitation to the oral assessment. Decisions for granting reasonable accommodations are made on a case-by-case basis.

How you will be evaluated

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

Candidates will be evaluated on their total background; experience, education, awards, training, and self-development, as it relates to the position. Part-time work experience will be prorated. Selection for this position will be made from among candidates possessing the best total qualifications.


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Department of State - Agency Wide

Agency contact information

GTM/TAC
Phone
000-000-0000
Fax
000-000-0000
Email
HROVacancyInfo@state.gov
Address
U.S. Department of State
2401 E Street NW SA-1
Room H518
Washington, District of Columbia 20522
United States

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