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European Personnel Selection Office

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European Personnel Selection Office
Formation2002 (established)
Location
DirectorDavid Bearfield
Websiteeuropa.eu/epso

The European Personnel Selection Office (EPSO) is responsible for selecting staff to work for the Institutions and agencies of the European Union including the European Parliament, the European Council, the European Commission, the European Court of Justice, the Court of Auditors, the European External Action Service, the Economic and Social Committee, the Committee of the Regions and the European Ombudsman. Each Institution is then able to recruit staff from among the pool of candidates selected by EPSO. On average, EPSO receives around 60,000-70,000 applications a year with around 1,500-2,000 candidates recruited by the European Union institutions.

History

EPSO was established on 26 July 2002 and became operational as of 1 January 2003. It has approximately 140 staff. Mr. David Bearfield has been the Director of EPSO since 1 September 2007.

EPSO was established with the aim of harmonising and rationalising the selection procedure, introducing greater professionalism into the selection procedures applied, but also to make more efficient and economic use of resources by generating economies of scale. Before, the Institutions managed their own selection and recruitment processes, involving different procedures.

EPSO was also created in the immediate context of the enlargement of the Union from 15 to 25 Member States that took effect on 1 May 2004. At its establishment, the main priority for the Office was to organise open competitions for citizens of the new Member States, to identify rapidly a large number of potential employees from these countries.

Selection policy

Open Competitions

The selection of staff is based on a system of open competitions. They are organised by EPSO for permanent positions as career civil servants, and for a limited number of fixed term contracts in accordance with the Staff Regulations of the EU Institutions, on the basis of harmonised criteria. EPSO cannot consider any application or CV submitted outside the framework of an official competition or selection procedure.

The details of an open competition are set out in a Notice of Competition, which is published in the Official Journal of the European Union and made available on the EPSO website. The Notice includes information on the selection criteria, the job profile and duties involved, the number of places on the reserve list, the qualifications and experience required, and the format of the tests at each stage of the selection process. To reach a wider range of candidates in the Member States, additional information about open competitions may be published in the national press, specialised press or electronic media. EPSO also participates in recruitment fairs for graduates in the Member States.

The schedule of current and planned competitions is available on the EU Careers/EPSO Website.

Selection Criteria

The eligibility requirements for EPSO selection procedures vary depending on the profile sought. In general, EU citizenship and thorough knowledge of an EU language plus satisfactory knowledge of English, French or German are required.

Profiles sought

The majority of EU staff is made up of permanent civil servants, who are selected through a series of competitive examinations, commonly known as an open competition, which are organised by EPSO. However, many senior staff are recruited from outside the EU civil service.

The EU Institutions also employ staff on a temporary basis and these are also selected by means of tests organised by EPSO.

The staff of the EU Institutions fall into one of the following categories:

Permanent officials

Permanent staff is divided into three categories: administrators (AD), assistants (AST) and assistants-secretaries (AST-SC) <

The work at the EU Institutions covers a huge range of areas and types of work. Graduate level administrators' work include formulating and negotiating draft EU laws, managing EU-wide programmes, or administering aid projects in the developing world. Equally, employees might also be participating in a specific scientific research programme, or for example, drafting the decision of the European Court of Justice or the European Ombudsman.

Assistants and Assistants-Secretaries contribute to implementing policies in various areas of EU activities or are responsible for secretarial and clerical work and ensuring the efficient operation of an administrative unit. They also play an important role in the internal management of the Institutions, notably in budgetary and financial affairs, HR, IT or librarianship.

Contract agents

EPSO also organises the selection of contract agents, who are employed for a temporary period with an initial contract running for a maximum of three to six years, depending on the type of the contract. Contract agents are recruited, for example, to do manual or administrative support–service tasks or provide additional capacity in specialised fields where officials with the required skills are not available.

Temporary agents

EPSO does not organise the selection of temporary agents. The Institutions' vacancy notices and employee profiles are published on the EPSO Website and sent to the Permanent Representations of the Member States. Temporary agents may be employed to perform a range of highly specialised or temporary tasks for a maximum period of six years.

Career opportunities

The European Civil Service offers a range of career opportunities throughout the European Union institutions. The majority of graduate opportunities are in administration and management, giving staff the opportunity to work in a variety of policy areas throughout their career. Each Notice of Competition provides a detailed description of the expected job content and qualifications or experience sought.

A job may involve participating in the EU legislative processes such as drafting a new legislation to tackle climate change, shaping EU's Energy policy, interpreting and applying EU law, analysing European markets to ensure free and fair competition, participating in operations providing humanitarian aid or monitoring the application of the Lisbon strategy to achieve the growth of the European knowledge based economy. Scientists and researchers form an important base for developing the EU's research and technological development policy. As in any international and multicultural organisation, the support tasks of Human Resources, Financial Management, IT and linguists are very challenging and important for the working of the Institutions.

There are 24 official languages in the European Union; and so a variety of career opportunities are available to linguists (translators, interpreters, as well as lawyer-linguists (legal translators)), for example, interpreting the President of the European Parliament, the Commission and allowing the citizens to read EU's legislation, Court decisions and the European Parliament or the European Council debates in their mother tongue around the Europe.

Assistants though an internal certification process may become administrators and take on more responsibilities.

Selection process

The selection procedures were reformed in 2010. The structure of each competition and the types of tests are described in detail in the Notice of competition. After each stage in the competition, only the highest scoring candidates (usually a pre-determined number in the Notice) who have achieved a pass mark are admitted to the next stage.

When a competition is published, European citizens are invited to apply electronically by creating their own EPSO profile directly on the EPSO website. All communication with candidates is done electronically through their EPSO profile. EPSO normally organises pre-selection tests in specialised test centres in all Member States; therefore, candidates may select their preferred testing location at the time of online registration. The assessment phase is usually held in Brussels or Luxembourg.

A Selection Board, made up of representatives of the Institutions and staff representatives, is responsible for approving the content of the questions and evaluating candidates at written and oral stages of the competition.

EPSO ensures that its selection procedures are fair and effective. In particular EPSO applies a policy of equal opportunities throughout the selection process. EPSO also ensures that applicants' personal data are processed in compliance with the rules on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data (Regulation (EC) No 45/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 December 2000).

Stages of the competition

The selection procedure for permanent officials normally begins with Computer Based Testing (CBT) that comprises multiple-choice tests assessing candidates' knowledge of the European Union, and numerical, verbal and abstract reasoning skills and situational judgement. In the assessment centre, there is normally a case study, oral presentation, group exercise and a competency based interview.

For contract agents, the pre-selection stage is similar to that of the open competitions for permanent staff and consist of verbal, numerical and abstract reasoning. In addition, candidates may be asked to sit a third test to ascertain their specific competences relevant to the profile of the competition.

Recruitment

Recruitment is the sole responsibility of each individual Institution. EPSO's task is to deliver and manage the reserve lists of qualified successful candidates. At the end of the selection process the highest-scoring candidates are placed on a reserve list for consideration by the Institutions for specific vacancies. The reserve lists are published in the Official Journal. They normally remain valid for one to three years and may be prolonged.

Language regime

In 2003 the EPSO Management Board adopted a three language testing regime (English, French and German) that is used for the competitions. The main objective of this decision is to ensure that candidates have sufficient linguistic skills to meet the needs of the Institutions in terms of the main working languages within the Institutions.

As a rule, candidates sit admission and written tests in their second language, which is further tested as part of the oral test. Their first language skills are tested by a short written test and in the oral examination.

For some positions specific language qualifications may be required within the framework of the competition or recruitment stage as each institution recruits on the basis of its own requirements regarding language.

Publication of the open competitions in the Official Journal of the European Union – C Series – Letter A (Information and Notices) is in three main working languages – English, French and German, and the languages concerned. At the same time a notification of reference to the full Notice of competition is published in other language versions of the Official Journal. The Official Journal is available on-line, free of charge. Potential applicants may also subscribe directly to the Official Journal to receive the issues which contain notices of competitions for selection procedures of the EU institutions. Special subscriptions known as Official Journal "series C" (A) can be ordered from sales agents by annual subscription.

Equality of treatment

EPSO applies an equal opportunities policy and accepts applications without distinction on grounds of sex, race, colour, ethnic or social origin, genetic features, language, religion or belief, political or any other opinion, membership of a national minority, property, birth, disability, age or sexual orientation.

EPSO applies a policy of anonymity as a guarantee of equal treatment for candidates and its selection procedures are organised, to the greatest extent possible, to ensure equal treatment. The testing methods and test items are regularly assessed in terms of gender equality.

The Institutions do not organise personnel selection competitions specifically for persons with a disability. However, EPSO takes all reasonable measures that facilitate participation by persons with a disability in competitions on an equal basis with the other candidates. In practical terms, EPSO proactively seeks information from candidates on the nature of their disability and proactively adapts the administration of the tests to their needs. Facilities and variety of test administration options provided to disabled candidates include the tests in Braille, on paper, with extra time, and/or are being assessed in special facilities, and where appropriate, an individual invigilator is assigned to the candidate.

Criticisms

The human resources policy of the EU institutions has been subject to much criticism. While there is a popular image of EU staff as over-paid, new employees may find this image hard to square with their own experience. Firstly, salaries and other benefits have been much reduced following a 2004 package of staff reforms; while salaries are relatively attractive to staff coming from new member states, the same cannot be said for many EU10 member state employees. This situation is aggravated by the EU refusal to recognise more than a minimal level of work experience earned outside the institutions, a particularly malign policy given that the average age of entry for AD5 ('graduate-level') staff in the Commission is 34 years old (2009 Commission Human Resources Report).

Secondly, promotion prospects for administrators are extremely poor; the Commission's own statistics reveal that an average career progression from AD5 to AD14 (Director level) takes 35–40 years, obviously unattainable for the average entrant who joins at 34 years old. It is not unusual to find staff in their 40s and 50s performing tasks that new graduates would carry out in more dynamic organisations. Management experience in the institutions is hard to gain, and further frustrates the possibilities for EU officials to attain senior management positions.

As EPSO only manages recruitment for the institutions (even if its director was the former Chef de Cabinet for the Commissioner who negotiated the 2004 reforms) it cannot be held responsible for staff career prospects, although it is doubtless guilty of false advertising. Instead, the challenge for EPSO is to improve the administration of open competitions – at present, a bafflingly random way of sifting through thousands of applications to place on a list of 'qualified candidates' (rather than, say, for specific vacancies). Successful laureates have no legal guarantee of recruitment, indeed many wait years on the reserve lists without ever being offered a position. EPSO has recently announced that it plans to shorten the average length of the concours from around 15 months to between 5–9 months.

On 15 June, the Civil Service Tribunal of the European Union issued its ruling in case F-35/08, Pachtitis/Commission, which principally concerned the authority of the European Personnel Selection Office to set admission tests. In effect, this ruling prohibits EPSO from selecting candidates in the way they are currently doing in the competitions, resulting in EPSO possibly having to arrange a new competition for the approximately 36000 candidates who will be excluded from open competition EPSO/AD/177/10. Despite this, as of 16 March 2011, a new competition following the same format has been launched, while open competition AD/177/10 remains pending.

Legal texts

See also

References

  1. BBC (14.03.2014). "European Union Jobs - Sitting the test to be a civil servant". BBC Politics report on EPSO. Retrieved 10.02.2015. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  2. >EU Staff Regulations, retrieved 10.02.2015
  3. euphorum EU career portal > New EPSO selection tests
  4. Official Journal of the European Union
  5. Sales agents of the EU Publications Office
  6. Official documents of the F-35/08 Pachtitis / Commission case
  7. Important message to candidates of open competition EPSO/AD/177/10 on the F-35/08, Pachtitis/Commission case

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