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-2- <br />Associates, while providing a viable approach to job evaluation, did not present <br />a system that would fully satisfy the requirements of Minnesota law. Hallcrest- <br />Craver was eliminated because we felt that with their staffing and current com- <br />mitments, a timely product might be a problem. <br />After that interview, the RFP committee developed a more detailed and specific <br />RFP, copies of which were sent to all interested cities. The three consulting <br />firms were asked to make a second presentation which took place on November 6, <br />1984'. Invited to that meeting were all the representatives of organized labor <br />represented in the MAMA communities, representatives from private employee asso- <br />ciations and any managers or administrators who wished to attend. At the <br />conclusion of the interview, the selection committee was unanimously in favor of <br />recommending the CDC system. The CDC proposal at $345,000 was, admittedly, the <br />most expensive proposal we received; however, the unanimous feeling of the com- <br />mittee was that it was the one proposal that we felt would provide the best and <br />most legitimate results and would be the most easily maintained system over a <br />period of years. <br />RATIONALE FOR DECISION <br />I would like to briefly discuss some of the thoughts of the committee regarding <br />the selection of CDC which I hope will explain why that choice was made. First <br />and foremost, the Control Data Cor oration ro osal offers to do job evaluations <br />on all of a given cit ns. We or g na y oug t e cos o ping <br />u y to suc a s be prohibitive, and had suggested in the RFP that an evaluation <br />study that included 25 benchmark jobs would be more appropriate. CDC bid that <br />benchmark study but added that for a nominal additional charge, it would be a <br />situp ee ta�all of the positions in all cities. CDC Business Advisors' <br />computer capability ni5 es�e extension of—TFe siuiTy to all individual positions <br />in each city, a relatively simple matter. The other consulting proposals did <br />not offer that capability. <br />A very strong argument for the selection of CDC was the extent of the data <br />offered as an end product. first and foremost, after the study was completed, <br />emT,lovees based on a comparable worth scale. In addition, the MAMA cit es would <br />receive a composite benchmark study which would provide evaluations throughout <br />the metro area for those jobs which were similar. An example would be that a <br />city would be given a relative point value for the position of patrol officer <br />within its own organization, and would also have the data to compare that point <br />value to a metropolitan average and to specific patrol positions in neighboring <br />cities. This was felt to be a tremendous labor relation -personnel tool for all <br />cities and something beyond what we thought we would receive from the comparable <br />worth study. <br />Another very attractive feature of the CDC proposal was its ability to be <br />example, if a city created a new position or added responsibilities to an <br />existing job, a new questionnaire could be filled out and submitted to CDC <br />outlining the tasks that position would perform. CDC Business Advisors would <br />recompute the job evaluation rankings for that city and provide a new point <br />value for the position. <br />10 <br />