Definitions
Human resources management (HRM) accountability is the responsibility shared by top agency management, line managers, and HR officials for ensuring that people are managed efficiently and effectively in support of agency mission accomplishment in accordance with the merit system principles.
A human resources management accountability system is a process for ensuring that HRM accountability is established and maintained over time.
Standards
The HRM accountability system must support the organization's mission
It must clearly address and directly support the overall organization's mission-related strategic goals and objectives, as well as those of the HR function itself.
The system should determine whether the agency has established and is executing effective human capital strategies, including but not necessarily limited to those delineated 5 CFR 250, Standards, Systems and Metrics - SSMs - (e.g., getting and keeping necessary talent, establishing and sustaining a culture of high performance, promoting effective leadership, etc.), in support of its mission and goals. It should also determine whether the HR function is adequately organized and equipped to support these strategies.
The HRM accountability system must enable the agency to identify and resolve significant problems.
It must be sufficiently targeted and comprehensive to enable the organization to identify problems or less than successful results in a timely and systematic way, especially those that pose a high risk to organizational integrity and effectiveness. The system must also enable the organization to take prompt actions to correct problems or improve sub-standard results.
Kinds of problems or issues to be addressed include HRM practices that
- result in failure to meet organizational mission goals,
- increase the organization's financial or legal vulnerability,
- give rise to systemic violations of employee protections or veterans preference, or
- lead to loss of integrity in the eyes of the public or otherwise undermine the integrity of the organization.
The HRM accountability system must provide for balanced measurement of agency human resources management.
Balance is achieved by including measures in each measurement category, as defined below. The measures chosen for use must, in the aggregate, provide a reasonable overall assessment of agency HRM -- including
- success in carrying out agency human capital strategies,
- effectiveness of HRM programs,
- efficiency of HR processes, and
- compliance with legal requirements.
The measures regarding human capital strategies must include the SSMs. Overall, measurement data will typically be drawn from a variety of sources, such as the Central Personnel Data File (CPDF) or other databases of workforce demographics, surveys of customer or employee perceptions, cost or financial data, and information from systematic internal and external reviews of records and operations.
The HRM accountability system itself and the results of its application must be documented.
The system's objectives, methods, measures, processes, and results must be documented and information generated by the system disseminated sufficiently to allow for informed review and action by appropriate officials.
Documentation should typically include
- a description of the system and its purposes and processes,
- results of the system's ongoing determination of HRM results,
- recommendations for dealing with deficiencies identified, and
- actions taken in response to recommendations.
HRM Measurement Categories
Below are four broad categories within which measures must be developed and utilized by the agency. For each category there are examples of measures that might be used. The examples are intended only to aid in understanding the categories, and are not intended to direct or limit in any way an agency's choice of measures.
- Strategic Alignment - Measures in this category address the extent to which HR goals and programs are aligned with and support the agency mission. Examples: the degree to which targeted competency gap reductions in agency restructuring plans are met, agency staff possesses competencies needed for mission-critical activities, the effectiveness of the agency's strategy for managing employee performance, or the extent to which employees understand how their jobs fit in and contribute to fulfilling the agency mission.
- HRM Program Effectiveness - Measures in this category address the extent to which HR programs achieve their desired outcomes, as well as the capacity of the HR staff and line managers to support effective HRM programs. Examples: retention rates, the level of employee satisfaction with agency HRM programs, the extent and effectiveness of training and development activities, the level of diversity in the workforce relative to the population at large, or data on the competencies of the HR workforce.
- HR Operational Efficiency - Measures in this category address the degree of efficiency of HR service delivery and the capability of the human resources and other staff to support it. Examples: accuracy and timeliness of personnel processes, including time to hire; effective use of human resources information technology including the accuracy of the HRIS data base; total cost of HR per serviced employee; or cost of a given HRM activity such as staffing, benchmarked against other agencies' data or tracked internally over time.
- Measures of Legal Compliance - Measures in this category address the extent to which HRM activities are carried out in accordance with the merit system principles and other pertinent laws and regulations. Measures should address the HRM-related actions of line managers as well as the HR staff's adherence to procedural requirements. Examples: level of compliance with veterans preference or whistleblower provisions, managers' knowledge of the merit principles, findings from internal or external HRM reviews, or results of quality control checks of CPDF data, employee files, or personnel actions.
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