AirForce said:
hehe, well not in my case, the original still hasn't left the filing cabinet at work - I'm faxing a copy to the CoC tommorrow to be used IAW mediation (where they hopefully decide to create a replacement PER) since they don't have any copies...
Which brings me back to my original question - now that 60 days has passed since the PER was signed, is it now required to staff my memorandum of greivance IAW Sec. 119, or does mediation put that limit on hold? (I've not been able to find anything stating that)
Regarding your earlier bit about "differing standards". That's not what I posted.
What I said was (to paraphrase): Everyone, at both Units I spoke of, who deserved an "immediate dot" got their immediate dot. But, no matter how many of those "deserved" that dot, only the top ten people could be given a numbered rank 1 of 52, 10 of 52 etc. IAW CFPAS Regulations. The pers who ended up being 11 of 52 ... got an NA of NA in that section of the PER.
If you open up CFPAS on your computer - it clearly lays out that "only the top ten performers" can be 'scored' OR the top 50% of performers if less than 10 pers in that rank and trade at Unit. An "outstanding Cpl" will know where to find that on their baseline because they will have "always particpates actively in the PDR/PER process" (IE: electronically fills in their 'I love me sheet' on the actual CFPAS sheet and hands in to their supervisor as CFPAS directs).
For example, if there's only 10 Sup tech Cpls at Location X, then only 5 will be ranked. IE 1 of 10, 2 of 10, 3 of 10, 4 of 10, 5 of 10. The rest will get PERs that say "NA of NA". BUT ... there may very well be 9 or 10 or even just 1 who receive "Immediate" promotion recommendations ... but I HIGHLY doubt it. <--- although, many years of experience have taught me that ALL of them believe they should receive that "Immediate" recommendation.
While you are in CFPAS, I highly recommend that you also print off the word picture booklet for your rank. Ensure that you carefully read the wording for the "score" description in each and every factor assessed for your rank. ou'll note that "Mastered" uses words like "always", "unhesitantingly", "extreme", "absolutely", "without fail" to describe what someone needs to do performance wise to receive that particular "score" in whatever assessment factor.
If you believe that you have "met that description" in the applicable assement factor, then gather up your proof for each one you believe you were unjustly scored in ... and send in IAW Greivance process. That's fair and that's why the process exists. Just remember though, if a "mastered" for "reliability" says that "always shows up for work on time and fully prepared" and you think you earned that but didn't get it ... that if your supervisor has a single incident of you being late for a briefing, work, task, appointment, meeting etc throughout the year ... that you didn't "meet" the "always" definition required IAW the CFPAS word picture standards. (Been there, actually dealt with this one).
Good luck to you however it turns out.