Entries in Hispanic Recruiting (1)

Why isn’t the federal government succeeding in recruiting and retaining Hispanic-Americans? 

In our view at TMP Government, this is a question that sorely needs to be asked. My colleague John Bersentes and I have attempted to frame an answer to this puzzle in an article forthcoming in the March issue of The Journal of Corporate Recruiting Leadership.

We raise concerns about issues like…

  • competition with the private sector for talented Latinos
  • the relative scarcity of Hispanic-Americans in regions where the Feds recruit most heavily
  • the absence of visible high-level government champions for Hispanic inclusion
  • the absence of multi-agency, common-cause initiatives to tackle the challenge
  • the possibility that agencies are unconsciously channeling bilingual Hispanics into customer contact positions and effectively discounting their qualifications for other career paths

The government’s lack of progress on this front is a very serious problem—especially considering the rapid growth of the Hispanic workforce in the American economy at large. If the Feds continue to lose ground here at the accelerating pace we’re observing, there will almost certainly be formal mandates from the top to kick Hispanic recruiting into gear. But I’m just wondering if a state-of-emergency catch-up policy is really the soundest human capital policy.

You can find a long excerpt from John’s and my article right now on ERE.net. Your best bet is to go here to read the posted excerpt and add your comments.