Showing posts with label Promotions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Promotions. Show all posts

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Quickie: Foreign Service 2009 Promotion Lists

The Foreign Service promotion lists came out staggered this year. The Director General of the Foreign Service, Nancy Powell says that the implementation of a cascade plan for announcing promotion lists is part of recent initiatives at HR.

"As soon as the Boards for a particular class of FS employees finish deliberations, HR releases the decision, resulting in publication of several promotion lists much earlier than anticipated and giving employees more time to prepare bids for onward assignments.”

Apparently, this is part of HR’s effort in “making the Foreign Service selection process more efficient and employee-friendly.”

Meanwhile State VP Daniel Hirsch in AFSANET message dated October 15, 2009 has this item on the promotion lists:

“Many members have expressed distress over the time lags involved in releasing this year’s promotion lists, which play an important role in many members’ decisions regarding bidding for onward assignments. While the lists were all released before paneling began, many members felt disadvantaged. We will be working with management to try to address the underlying causes of these delays. AFSA has also contributed information to an OIG review of the promotion process, which we hope will lead to greater transparency, fairness and accountability.”

Ah, we'll be in the lookout for that particular OIG review. The promotion lists for 2007 and 2008 are online at AFSA here.

The 2009 promotion lists are here.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Promotion Season Needs a Poem ...

Four Seasons - Longbridge RoadImage by joiseyshowaa via Flickr

... because this is a tricky season. Not everyone will get a promotion. The folks who get it will spend the next couple of days responding to congratulatory emails and phone calls from their friends spread across the globe. Folks who do not get it, spend the next couple of days writing congratulatory emails to their colleagues spread across the globe who just got promoted. Happy, glad, sad, bad ... all in one season. Others may feel worse than bad about being skipped over and spouses had to bear watching their partners feel worse than bad about not getting that promotion ...it is a happy-sad season ...here is the poem I've been wrestling with for weeks... if only I had Billy Collin's craft...

Promotion Season

Here now comes the promotion seasonPretty much like the flu seasonIt comes bearing aches, once every yearIt comes bearing chills and headaches

Still –

It’s a season you warmly embraceEach year, and you don’t mind at allThe heavy chills and body achesAs long as it gets you on that list

Unlike the flu season there are noShots, no vaccine or codeine to helpGet rid of that bothersome pain, a painThat is worth all if you get on that list

But –

If you do not, well –just rememberYou cannot get it from sneezingOr from kissing and getting depressAbout it won’t make it any easier

Yes –

As A-100 mates embrace the seasonAnd all you get are the snifflesWhy, bear the discomfort within reasonFor each season holds a mission –

Like the flu season, this one won'tHang around like pigeons, but same timeNext year a brand new season returnsOnce more like a born-again inspiration

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

It's That Time of Year

If you know folks in the Foreign Service, you know that they have their ears on the ground for a few weeks now listening for promotion news. The Senior Foreign Service list came out in late September, the FS-03 to FS-02 mid-level list came out late last week (thanks Digger!), the rest should come out any day now. (I'll add the links here once AFSA post the lists online).

Congratulations to Ambassador Christopher Dell (formerly DCM at US Embassy Kabul and most recently confirmed as US Ambassador to Kosovo) for his promotion to Career-Minister (that's equivalent to a 3-star general). Also promoted to the rank of Career-Minister are: Ambassador David Pearce, currently of US Embassy Algeria and Ambassador Michael Ranneberger, currently of US Embassy Kenya. Stephen Mull, currently Acting Assistant Secretary for Political Military and Marcie Ries, currently the DAS at the VCI Bureau were also promoted to the same rank.

Unlike the private sector, promotion in the FS does not come immediately with a top floor office or a new position. It does allow you to bid for higher rank-jobs when you rotate to a new assignment. Those bidding now most probably have two bid lists, one if they get promoted, the other one if they don't. And with promotion you get bigger responsibilities (and bigger headaches) and more people to supervise as you go up the career ladder. If you break into the mid-level or the Senior Foreign Service, it also means larger square footage in assigned housing (based on position rank and family size). If you are the Ambassador, DCM, or principal officer, you get an official Pickard China fine china dining set, an official residence expense reimbursable account and at least 12-14 dining room seating. (I can't tell if the embassy china is embossed with the Great Seal eagle crest in 24 karat gold like the presidential grade china).

In any case, in the competitive nature of the diplomatic service, we have yet to hear of anyone turn down a position because it carries a bigger headache. With that in mind, a promotion tanka ….

with this promotiona top floor office—quietlymy crowded inboxwaves a flag, two aspirinson my desk, makes a fun wag

Related Items:

Rank Tiers and Grade Equivalents 15 FAM 260: Guidelines for Allocating Residential Space

Space Standards Charts 15 FAM 230: Allocating Residential Space

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Insider Quote: Conflict-Averse Managerial Culture

“The current EER system reflects and exacerbates the conflict-averse managerial culture of the Foreign Service. By not forcing senior officers to rank subordinates, it essentially randomizes who gets promoted each year. Without a strong link between performance and promotions, the Foreign Service has learned to use other ways to identify top performers, such as an officer’s assignment history and “corridor reputation.” But those are neither as efficient nor as fair as an evaluation system that actually does its job.”


Jonathan Fritz
Economic Officer in Beijing; entered the Foreign Service in1993
Excerpted from EERs: The Forgotten Front in the War for Talent
Foreign Service Journal │June 2009



Friday, June 19, 2009

H.R. 2410: Towards a Modern and Expeditionary Foreign Service

TITLE III-- Subtitle A of H.R. 2410 calls for modernizing the Department of State. Section 301 specifically provides for “a more modern and expeditionary Foreign Service." I don’t know why “a more modern” language is used here. One is either modern or not. What does “more modern” actually means, I can’t say but see below. Full text of the bill is here.


SEC. 301. TOWARDS A MORE MODERN AND EXPEDITIONARY FOREIGN SERVICE.

(a) Targeted Expansion of Foreign Service- The Secretary of State shall expand the Foreign Service to--

(1) fill vacancies, particularly those vacancies overseas that are critical to key United States foreign policy and national security interests, and, in particular, to prevent crises before they emerge;

(2) increase the capacity of the Department of State to assign and deploy Foreign Service officers and other personnel to prevent, mitigate, and respond to international crises and instability in foreign countries that threaten key United States foreign policy and national security interests; and

(3) ensure that before being assigned to assignments requiring new or improved skills, members of the Foreign Service, other than foreign national employees and consular agents (as such terms are defined in section 103 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980 (22 U.S.C. 3903)), as appropriate, receive language, security, area, and other training that is necessary to successfully execute their responsibilities and to enable such members to obtain advanced and other education that will increase the capacity of the Foreign Service to complete its mission.

(b) Authorized Increases-

(1) AT THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE- The Secretary of State is authorized to hire an additional 750 members of the Foreign Service (above attrition) in fiscal year 2010 over the number of such members employed as of September 30, 2009, and an additional 750 members of the Foreign Service (above attrition) in fiscal year 2011 over the number of such members employed as of September 30, 2010.

(2) AT USAID- The Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development is authorized to hire an additional 350 members of the Foreign Service (above attrition) in fiscal year 2010 over the number of such members employed as of September 30, 2009, and an additional 350 members of the Foreign Service (above attrition) in fiscal year 2011 over the number of such members employed as of September 30, 2010.

(3) RULE OF CONSTRUCTION- Nothing in this subsection shall be construed as limiting the authority of the Secretary of State or the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development to hire personnel.

(c) Expansion of Functions of the Foreign Service- Section 104 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980 (22 U.S.C. 3904) is amended--

(1) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively; and

(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new paragraph:

‘(2) work actively to prevent, mitigate, and respond in a timely manner to international crises and instability in foreign countries that threaten the key United States foreign policy and national security interests;’.

(d) Worldwide Availability- Section 301(b) of the Foreign Service Act of 1980 (22 U.S.C. 3941(b)) is amended--

(1) by inserting ‘(1)’ before ‘The Secretary’; and

(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:

‘(2)(A) Except as provided in subparagraphs (B) and (C), at the time of entry into the Service, each member of the Service shall be available to be assigned worldwide.

‘(B) With respect to the medical eligibility of any applicant for appointment as a Foreign Service officer candidate, the Secretary of State shall determine such availability through appropriate medical examinations. If based on such examinations the Secretary determines that such applicant is ineligible to be assigned worldwide, the Secretary may waive the worldwide availability requirement under subparagraph (A) if the Secretary determines that such waiver is required to fulfill a compelling Service need. The Secretary shall establish an internal administrative review process for medical ineligibility determinations.

‘(C) The Secretary may also waive or reduce the worldwide availability requirement under subparagraph (A) if the Secretary determines, in the Secretary’s discretion, that such waiver or reduction is warranted.’.

(e) Recruiting Candidates Who Have Experience in Unstable Situations- Section 301 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980 (22 U.S.C. 3941), as amended by section 212(c) of this Act, is further amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:

‘(f) Experience in Unstable Situations- The fact that an applicant for appointment as a Foreign Service officer candidate has the experience of working in situations where public order has been undermined by instability, or where there is no civil authority that can effectively provide public safety, may be considered an affirmative factor in making such appointments.’.

(f) Training- Section 708 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980 (22 U.S.C. 4028) is amended by adding at the end the following new subsections:

‘(c) The Secretary of State shall ensure that members of the Service, other than foreign national employees and consular agents, as appropriate, receive training on methods for conflict mitigation and resolution and on the necessary skills to be able to function successfully where public order has been undermined by instability or where there is no civil authority that can effectively provide public safety.

‘(d) The Secretary of State shall ensure that members of the Service, other than foreign national employees and consular agents, as appropriate, have opportunities during their careers to obtain advanced education and training in academic and other relevant institutions in the United States and abroad to increase the capacity of the Service to fulfill its mission.’


* * *


First
, if this bill passes, I hope this would just be a down payment on that much-talked about Foreign Service bench strength. This authorizes the hiring of an additional 1500 FS employees above attrition for State and 700 new employees above attrition for USAID in the next two fiscal years. A 2007 report from the GAO says that from 2002 through 2004, the DRI (Diplomatic readiness Initiative) enabled State to hire more than 1,000 employees above attrition to respond to emerging crises and allow staff time for critical job training. However, that increase was absorbed by the demand for personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan; and thus, the desired crises and training reserve was not achieved.


The Embassy of the Future Commission called for more than 1,000 additional diplomats—a 9.3 percent increase; however, the
American Academy of Diplomacy documented the need for 2,848 additional State positions for core diplomatic functions and a training complement, as well as for 1,250 additional USAID positions by Fiscal Year 2014.


In a recent congressional hearing, Jack Lew pointed out that in FY 1990, USAID employed nearly 3,500 permanent direct hires administering $5 billion a year in assistance. As of FY 2008, USAID employed about 2,200 permanent direct hires administering $13.2 billion in assistance. Just one graphic example of doing more with less (one jaded employee said that if we continue doing more with less, there’ll come a time when we’ll be able to do everything perfectly with nothing).


Second
, this does not talk about “directed assignment” but it talks about filling critical vacancies and increasing “the capacity of the Department of State to assign and deploy Foreign Service officers and other personnel.” It also talks about worldwide availability as in “each member of the Service shall be available to be assigned worldwide.” Makes you wonder why this is in the bill unless this is a soft nudge to use the directed assignment authority. Worldwide availability has been in the books for a long time but – it has been exercised only to a limited degree. In 2007, the Government Accountability Office has recommended that the State Department use this authority: “State has not traditionally assigned its limited number of employees to particular posts based on risk and priorities; rather, it has generally assigned staff to posts for which they have expressed an interest. We recommended that State consider using its authority to direct staff to accept assignments, as necessary, to ensure that critical gaps are filled.”


Third
, it talks about Recruiting Candidates Who Have Experience in Unstable Situations saying that “experience of working in situations where public order has been undermined by instability, or where there is no civil authority that can effectively provide public safety, may be considered an affirmative factor in making such appointments.” Right now, veterans are the only group subject to a hiring preference, but only post-FSWE and after the oral exam. According to career.state.gov “Veterans who pass the Oral Assessment and qualify as preference eligibles are entitled to .175 for a 5 point preference or to .35 for a 10 point preference, based on a seven point scale. Specialist candidates, who are assessed on a 100 point scale, and who pass their oral assessment are entitled to an additional 5 to 10 points added to their competitive rating. Candidates must submit form DD-214 to document creditable military service.”


I don’t know what shape this “affirmative factor” would take on eventually. But two large groups of prospective applicants would probably fall under this category of “experience in unstable situations” – military personnel and 3161 employees.


Finally
, the last part of this section addresses training in the FS – in one part providing that FS personnel (except FSNs and consular agents) “receive training on methods for conflict mitigation and resolution and on the necessary skills to be able to function successfully where public order has been undermined by instability.” And the second part providing that the SoS, “ensure that members of the Service (except FSNs and consular agents), have opportunities during their careers to obtain advanced education and training in academic and other relevant institutions in the United States and abroad.”


Like I said in my previous post on that new cone – this does not talk about reforming the promotion process in the Foreign Service. And that will have an impact if this bill passes. Employees who feel that their careers may be negatively impacted by taking a year or two out for advanced schooling may think twice about pursuing advanced education and academic training.


It is a different story in the armed services, of course. Have you noticed how many of our military officers retire from the armed services with PhDs? It has been said that almost every
officer in the US military gains a graduate degree by the time they reach the rank of O-5, around 15-20 years of service. I don’t know if it is still true, but there was time when you can’t get promoted to a major without a master’s degree. In fact, General David Petraeus did receive his MPA in 1985 the year he made major. Two years later, he received his PhD in international relations from Princeton University and made LTC in 1991. His published works span from 1983-2008.


Military officers can pursue full-time studies toward a master’s or doctorate degree through programs paid for by the military. Many more officers pursue advanced education on their own time. The US Army for instance has the Advanced Degree Program and the Fully Funded Legal Education Program (FLEP) just to name two.


The military also spends a significant amount of time considering not only its future challenges 25-30 years from now, but also the education requirement of its future leaders:

This is the fundamental challenge the U.S. military will confront: providing the education so that future leaders can understand the political, strategic, historical, and cultural framework of a more complex world, as well as having a thorough grounding in the nature of war, past, present, and future. [...] The complexity of the future suggests that the education of senior officers must not remain limited to staff and war colleges, but should extend to the world’s best graduate schools. Professional military education must impart the ability to think critically and creatively in both the conduct of military operations and acquisition and resource allocation. The services should draw from a breadth and depth of education in a range of relevant disciplines to include history, anthropology, economics, geopolitics, cultural studies, the ‘hard’ sciences, law, and strategic communications. Their best officers should attend such programs. Officers cannot master all these disciplines, but they can and must become familiar with their implications. In other words, the educational development of America’s future military leaders must not remain confined to the school house, but must involve self study and intellectual engagement by officers throughout their careers. Read more here.


As for State -- I cannot immediately name a single program in the State Department except those advanced degrees pursued by Foreign Service officers in the war colleges and a few degrees on Social Work by employees in the Consular Bureau. Can you? How many diplomats do you know have taken sabbaticals to pursue advanced degrees in various institutions of higher learning after they’ve joined the Service? Ryan Crocker spent a year in Princeton pursuing course work in Near Eastern studies in 1984. But how many officers came in with a B.A and retired with a B.A.? In the military, it's kind of hard to find a single general without an advanced degree under his/her belt (there probably isn’t even one).


If you drill beyond the surface, you may recognize this as true -- whereas the pursuit of advanced education and continuous learning has been woven deeply into the fabric of military culture, the threads are not fully present in the State Department. That’s one change that needs to occur if the State Department expects to provide foreign policy and rigorous intellectual leadership into the next century. And if that happens, I'd be happy to call it "more modern."


Related Item:

GAO-07-1154T: State Department: Staffing and Foreign Language Shortfalls Persist Despite Initiatives to Address Gaps

Related Posts:




Thursday, June 18, 2009

H.R. 2410: A New Multilateral Diplomacy Cone?

TITLE IV—Section 402 of H.R. 2410 also provides for the promotion of FS assignments to international organizations and what looks like the possible establishment of a 6th Foreign Service cone (in addition to Political, Economic, Consular, Management, and Public Diplomacy):


TITLE IV--INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
SEC. 402. PROMOTING ASSIGNMENTS TO INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS.

(b) Establishment of a Multilateral Diplomacy Cone in the Foreign Service-

(1) FINDINGS- Congress finds the following:

(A) The Department of State maintains a number of United States missions both within the United States and abroad that are dedicated to representing the United States to international organizations and multilateral institutions, including missions in New York, Brussels, Geneva, Rome, Montreal, Nairobi, Vienna, and Paris.

(B) In offices at the Harry S. Truman Building, the Department maintains a significant number of positions in bureaus that are either dedicated, or whose primary responsibility is, to represent the United States to such organizations and institutions or at multilateral negotiations.

(C) Given the large number of positions in the United States and abroad that are dedicated to multilateral diplomacy, the Department of State may be well served in developing persons with specialized skills necessary to become experts in this unique form of diplomacy.


(2) REPORT- Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of State shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report--

(A) evaluating whether a new cone should be established for the Foreign Service that concentrates on members of the Service who serve at international organizations and multilateral institutions or are primarily responsible for participation in broad-based multilateral negotiations of international instruments; and

(B) that provides alternative mechanisms for achieving the objective of developing a core group of United States diplomats and other Government employees who have expertise and broad experience in conducting multilateral diplomacy.


I have read the reported version of this bill more than once and except for one area when it talks about enabling “members to obtain advanced and other education that will increase the capacity of the Foreign Service to complete its mission” and under this section where it talks about assignments in international organizations; it does not talk about reforming the promotion process in the Foreign Service. And that will unavoidably undermine the good intent under these two sections. If employees feel that their careers will be negatively impacted by taking a year or two out for advanced schooling or assignments in multifunctional areas or multilateral organizations, there may not be many takers.


Click
here to read the details.



Related Posts:



Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Insider Quote: On EERs and Diplomatic Wunderkinds

“The Employee Evaluation Reports we spend so much time writing every year fail to give promotion panels a useful means for comparing officers to their peers. Raters and reviewers are not required to rank their subordinate officers, and almost never do. That leaves panel members almost wholly dependent upon the EER narratives, most of which describe the rated officers as diplomatic wunderkinds. And when everyone is advertised as a superstar, it is hard to differentiate between real achievers and mediocre performers. The result is promotions that are far more random than they should be.”


Jonathan Fritz
Economic Officer in Beijing; entered the Foreign Service in 1993
from EERs: The Forgotten Front in the War for Talent
Foreign Service Journal │June 2009


Thursday, May 7, 2009

Taxes & EERs: April Pain and Suffering About Over?

Foreign Service people tend to pick up multiple skills on the job (e.g. feeding sharks, diving, feeding the fish back in DC, languages, shaking hands with dictators, etc. etc.). Multi-tasking is not the least of them (e.g. eat lunch and write cable or small talk/ translate/drink/ file info in brain folder, etc.). So it probably should not be a surprise to anyone that performance evaluation time coincides with tax time every year (except for untenured folks). Like one officer says:

“Far be it from me to question the wisdom of scheduling EER due dates at the same time as your tax returns; at least you’re combining as much pain and suffering into as short a time as possible. I’ve just finished my EER and each year I try to tell myself I’ll be more organized for next year.”


That’s from the Foreign Service Tips and Tricks blog with some good tips on employee evaluation reports for FS folks. Continue reading Preparing your EER - forms and tips.


If you’re new or contemplating a career in the FS, don’t forget to check out the Foreign Service Core Precepts (pdf). The Core Precepts provide the guidelines by which Selection Boards determine the tenure and promotability of U.S. Foreign Service employees. These Precepts will be in effect for the 2008-2009, 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 rating cycles. The precepts reflect the principles of the Career Development Program, with its emphasis on operational effectiveness, leadership and management effectiveness, sustained professional language and/or technical proficiency, and responsiveness to service needs. AFSA says that management has consulted with them regarding the content and form of these Precepts.


The precepts are also posted in the AFSA website. I don't have a copy of the previous set of precepts but I think the items appearing in bold or italics have been tweaked/added/repositioned into the current version of these precepts.


Back on EERs – I'm sure you know this but at least one did not -- whatever you do, do not/not alter the language in your Employee Evaluation Report after it had been finalized by rater, and reviewing official.


There’s this weird FSGB case -- an FSO altered the language on her EER report after it had been finalized; while her rating officer was on TDY, submitted the altered report to HR; was then found out when HR returned the document to the rating officer for a more balanced modification.


The FSO was slapped with a Letter of Reprimand arising from a charge of poor judgment. And here is the interesting part – the FSO went to the Grievance Board to seek “mitigation of the penalty, or if reprimand is deemed appropriate, that the Letter of Reprimand be amended to remove falsely prejudicial statements not supported by the facts.”


Part of the FSO/grievant’s argument was that her rater had orally agreed to make a change to the Area for Improvement (AFI) section of the EER if she (grievant) would provide her boss/rater’s supervisor a positive statement regarding her boss’ performance.


Isn't there a song that goes, like -- I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine, baby? Oops, sorry, I can't help myself ....


Anyway, according to the FSGB report published online, the FSO/grievant asserts that her supervisor/rater contacted her, seeking her “help in making his own EER sound more interesting, more ‘punchy,’ as he put it.” During this meeting, FSO/grievant took the opportunity to address her concerns regarding language contained in the AFI section of her own EER. FSO/grievant avers that her rater agreed to change one word in it as she had requested, if she provided an e-mail to rater’s superiors regarding his performance as a supervisor.


The FSGB decision? HELD: Department established that issuance of a Letter of Reprimand for use of poor judgment was justified and that the penalty was appropriate under the circumstances.


This case (FSGB No. 2008-039)
was published online as a Word document in the FSGB website, but I have converted the file into pdf so you can easily read it here. I’m still sore where I fell off when I read this …




Monday, April 6, 2009

Foggy Bottom Sage Strikes Again: In Time for EERs

The State Department's in-house mag called "State" is mostly a "happy-talk" rag as one of our blogging friends like to call it -- but really it's not all that bad. The April issue includes the 2008 promotion stats (see which cone is up, check out pdf pp.38-41).

And one of its redeeming c0ntents has always been -- at least to me, its second to the last page which contains the work of FSO/cartoonist, Brian Aggeler. I think of Brian as sort of the sage of Foggy Bottom, except that like most FSOs, he's paid to go work anywhere in the world, but D.C. (i.e. all FS employees are worldwide available). Sorry, I don't feel like calling him worldwide available sage.

The last time I heard, he was somewhere in Asia. But he has not forgotten that April brings spring and rain, and EER time (employee evaluation report). Never mind spring and rain, the last one is nothing to sneeze at -- if you're interested in your career and promotion prospects. In fact, the annual EER phase (which could take up weeks on of your time) is an opportunity to practice your diplomatic negotiation and appeasement engagement skills with your rating officer/reviewing officer.


screencapture of Brian Aggeler's cartoon in State Magazine, April 2009


Want to take out that "focus on details" phrase? Negotiate that! Want to take out a praise/dammit sentence that your boss absolutely wants to put in -- negotiate that. It's a 'diplomacy starts at home' kind of thing -- just don't stalk out in anger at the guy who signs the dotted line if you don't get your way, or interpersonal skills could go into the next EER cycle. A good rule of diplomacy should be -- never, ever let anyone see you sweat, even when the other guy fires a Taepodong-2 missile. That goes for EERs, too.





Friday, November 7, 2008

Quickie: Foreign Service 2008 Promotion List

President George W. Bush has nominated members of the Service for promotion by appointment to the class indicated. The promotions result from the findings of the 2008 Foreign Service Selection Boards which met this past summer. The lists were released in October 2008. I am posting the links here because I know some folks have been looking for this. All these documents are available at www.afsa.org.

Senior Foreign Service (FSO-01 to FE-CM)
See List


Mid-Level Foreign Service Officers (FSOs and OMS)

(Political, Management, Economic, Consular and Public Diplomacy Officers and OMS)
See List


Foreign Service Specialists (FS-04 to FS-01)

(Finance, Human Resource, General Service, Construction Engineers, Facilities Maintenance, Information Resource and Health Practitioners)
See List


Check out the rest in the AFSA Promotion List page.