Next time you go through security on your way through the airport, smile and say thank you

Question:

Next time you go through security on your way through the airport, smile and say thank you to the screeners who help you send your bags through screening and wave you through the scanner. Low morale runs rampant through the screeners that work at the Transportation Safety Administration (TSA) and odds are that the screener you smile at is thinking about quitting.

A recent government report revealed concerns that the low morale of the screeners may be a distraction to them on the job and may even cause them to be less focused on security and screening responsibilities. About one in five of the nation’s 48,000 screeners quit every year due to low morale, low pay, discrimination and fear of retaliation if they complain. 

An ambitious program aimed at reducing turnover was implemented in 2006, paying bonuses of $500 to $1000 to screeners as a retention incentive. Although $18 million in bonuses was paid, the number of screeners leaving their jobs was unchanged. Screeners earn an average of $30,000 a year. TSA also started a program that would raise salaries of high-quality veteran screeners to a new pay grade and a better opportunity to be promoted to other government security jobs such as the Secret Service or Border Patrol. The pay and promotion system has been widely viewed by employees as not fair, credible or transparent. Employee ratings are seen as more arbitrary than based on merit.....


Questions:

1. Why do screeners describe the position as a “dead end job”? How can job design be used to correct that perception? 

2. Using sources like O*NET, develop a job description for a screener position. 

3. How might job enrichment concepts be used to increase morale and retention at TSA? 

4. Why didn’t the bonuses reduce turnover?

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Related Book For  answer-question

Fundamentals Of Human Resource Management

ISBN: 9780470169681

10th Edition

Authors: David DeCenzo, Stephen Robbins

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