Wednesday, September 7, 2022

GSD MIA

 


THE CITY

The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene had nearly 1,200 unfilled positions in June — making the agency on the pandemic’s frontline one of 46 in city government missing more than 10% of their budgeted employees, according to preliminary figures obtained by THE CITY.

The numbers reflect an ongoing challenge in hiring and retaining government workers, an issue that’s getting scrutiny at a hearing on Friday under City Councilmember Gale Brewer’s Oversight and Investigations Committee, which produced the preliminary numbers.

They show the citywide government jobs vacancy rate at 7.9% as of June. The agency with the most extreme shortfall was the Commission on Human Rights, which had 37 of its 136 budgeted positions unfilled — a rate of 27.2%.

Among larger agencies, vacancy rates were highest at the Department of Buildings, at 24.2% (489 vacancies), the Department of Health at 19.1% (1,189 vacancies) and the Department of Social Services at 17.3% (2,256 openings).

The numbers were slightly better at the city’s uniformed agencies.

The Department of Correction had a shortage of 862 workers in June, or 9.1%, although an extended trend of employees calling out sick has been compounding problems there.

And while the NYPD had a comparatively low vacancy rate of 2.9% in June, that equates to 1,448 unfilled positions, the preliminary numbers show.

“I don’t know where all these vacancies are, but I can tell you from personal experience, everything is slow in terms of getting sign-off,” said Brewer. “I’m just worried the expertise we’ve had over the years is going to disappear from the city.” 


6 comments:

Anonymous said...

No wonder there’s so many QAnon creeps on the loose instead of being confined to straight jackets.

Anonymous said...

DEFUND the UFT first !

NPC_translator said...

Fewer people to make trouble. Good.

Since everything's working "fine," they should just set these as the new employment numbers for these agencies. Most of them are totally useless anyway. Commission on Human Rights, lol!

Anonymous said...

Florida Man said...
In the down in the dumps badly broken crime ridden New York City of the 1970’s a modest man named Donald J Trump waded into a broken down slum called Manhattan and kicked off a renaissance like that city never saw before. The people of New York grew so comfortable and fat like Jerry Nadler the jelly doughnut eventually turned on their savior. Now Trump is repeating his success by drawing winners from all over the world to Florida, a former Democrat stronghold.

Anonymous said...

Everyone should move to Nebraska!

Anonymous said...

Seriously? No one wants a cushy city gig? With a pension and health insurance? Something is fishy with this story.

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