The phrase CTC means community technology center, "where people get access to computers and computer-related technology, such as the Internet." The Community Technology Centers' Network (CTCNet) was part of the global community technology movement that, at the time, saw a growing trend among community-based organizations, social service agencies, public and subsidized housing developments, churches, and community centers for acquiring and integrating computers into their programs. The Community Technology Center Network - CTCNet - noted about community technology centers:

If you came to one of these sites, here's what you might find:

"In a large, airy room there is a crowd of young people and adults all working at computers. In one group, students are having their first experience using a spreadsheet. At the same time, in another corner, a senior adult is teaching herself to use a database. A young man is using a PC to update the church's membership files and printing mailing labels. A young woman is at the Macintosh working on a desktop publishing project, and two teenagers are in another corner debating how best to make the Logo Turtle do what they want it to do. Others are casually 'messing about' with simulations. Still others are busy on the machines with modems--exploring the Internet, sending email, engaging in on-line chats. They are all using these technologies to achieve their own personal goals and objectives."

Then again, you might find something completely different.

The following information is from the August 14, 2000 version of the Community Technology Center Start-Up Manual, published by the Community Technology Center Network - CTCNet. You can see these an other versions of this site by going to the Internet Wayback Machine and looking for www.ctcnet.org

Chapter 4: Staffing

Introduction

No other single factor is so important to the success of a CTC as the quality of its staff and volunteers. Resourceful, friendly, helpful, reliable staff are essential to making the CTC a place people want to come to, be in, and return to.

The Steering Committee may wish to engage a staff person to work with them through the setting-up stages of operationalizing the CTC. Their choice may be a person who will be the CTC director or coordinator; alternatively they may decide to take on a community outreach director first. Both are logical choices.

In considering its staffing plan and in thinking about the individuals who will, in the long run, be the reason the CTC succeeds, the Steering Committee should bear in mind these essential qualities:

What are the Tasks?

Before plunging into a staffing plan or even making a first hire, it is wise to consider all the tasks that make up successful CTC operation. In CTCNet's experience, these fall roughly into five categories: Administrative, Community Outreach and Development, Direct Services, Facilities and Equipment, and Clerical Support.

1. Administrative

4. Facilities and Equipment Maintenance

5. Clerical and support services

This is an imposing list and, even so, may not include all the tasks required for successful operation. The Steering Committee should brainstorm additional tasks and responsibilities to ensure that the final list is all-inclusive.

For a pilot program or small center, all tasks may be the province of a single paid staff person supported by a judiciously selected group of volunteers and, of course, the Steering Committee itself. Larger operations require a greater number of paid staff. Consider, too, the possibility that participants themselves may, in time, take on operational tasks.

Preparing the Staffing Plan

Once the tasks have been determined, but before an actual plan is laid out, the Steering Committee must consider a number of other factors:

Budget

What makes staffing a CTC so difficult is that so many centers are shoestring operations. Among CTCNet affiliates, few have more than two paid staff, and several survive with a part-time coordinator and volunteers. Regardless of the stringency of the budget, CTCNet does not recommend staffing a center entirely with volunteers. There must be one person who is responsible for the overall management and direction and is empowered to make operational decisions. That person should be paid a salary with benefits and accorded the respect owed to a professional.

Ideally, a CTC will have at least one staff person in each of the above task areas, and perhaps a number of specialists in the "education" area of "Direct Service". The PUENTE center in Los Angeles is a high end example with space and staff to serve close to 2000 people of all ages every day.

At the opposite end of the scale is the Somerville Community Computing Center (SCCC). This is a low budget, but still relatively high volume operation. It employs a part-time (50%) coordinator and a consultant for community outreach and fund-raising. The rest of the staff is either volunteer or paid by other community groups that use the center (with orientation and training provided by the part-time SCCC coordinator).

Security

Budget limitations are not the only factors influencing the staffing plan. Another is the security of the space. The SCCC, with its 40+ computers, is located in three inner rooms of a secure building that maintains its own security force. Thus, supervision of classes and open hours can be done by volunteers without the presence of any paid staff. Because the Playing To Win Harlem Center, on the other hand, is a storefront operation in the heart of a low-income neighborhood, and cannot ask volunteers to take sole responsibility for the security of the space or the occupants at any time, a minimum of two paid staff must be present during all center open hours.

Size of center and hours of operation

The third major determining factor is the size of the center and the usage hours projected. In CTCNet's experience, in order to provide effective help and guidance, one staff person (paid or volunteer) should be present and available for every 10 computer stations (between 10 and 20 participants) in use. If the center is not located in a building that houses other active services (i.e. if there is no one who can be easily summoned in an emergency), it will be advisable to have two staff persons on duty at all times that the center is open to participants.

Once these factors have been taken into account, the next steps are quite simple.

  1. Take the task list (a spreadsheet is useful) and opposite each task create four columns headed "Paid Staff", "Volunteer", "Steering Committee/Board", and "Participant".
  2. Move through the task list indicating for each task the type of personnel to whom it can be assigned. NB: You may have checks in more than one column for a given task.
  3. Sort the tasks into these four categories.
  4. Take the list for each category and sort once again according to necessary skills. For example, the volunteer category may contain reception, clerical, and teaching tasks. Different skill sets are required in each, so you will need to re-sort this list according to skill set.
  5. The resulting lists will define the required staff and also provide the basis for developing job descriptions for each position.

Qualifications

Administrative tasks

In addition to documented experience in the areas itemized in the task list, persons employed for administrative tasks should be articulate, comfortable with budgets and accounting procedures, and have a developmental attitude toward staff supervision. They should also view technology as essential to the execution of their tasks since they will, in a real sense, be serving as role models for CTC participants.

Community outreach & development

The ideal candidate here is someone with the zeal of a community activist, experience in community development and fund-raising, with excellent communications skills (both verbal and written). Initiative and follow-through are key qualities.

Educational activity

Here you will be looking for someone with experience in basic technology applications, a learner rather than a teacher, a person who will reply to a question with a question rather than an answer. Imagination and creativity are essential ingredients. The person will need to have the capacity to develop projects, both for participants, and, in working with the fund-raiser, ideas for directions the CTC can take "educationally" which can be turned into proposals. The head teacher is unflappable, straightforward, a no-nonsense person who does not rely heavily on didactism.

Many centers will start out with a minimum number of software packages. The head teacher will need familiarity with these, but also must possess the kind of creativity that can turn a word processor into a coloring book project for a low reading level participant.

At CTCNet we often use the "gardener" analogy. A gardener is not interested in producing replicas of him/herself. A gardener cannot impart knowledge to a plant. Instead, a gardener uses his/her knowledge of plant culture to feed, weed, prune. A gardener is interested in the health, growth, and fecundity of his/her charges. A gardener provides space in which each plant can achieve maximum success according to its own nature. Instructional staff with this sort of philosophy tend to be more successful than others.

For personnel at their centers, the Lansing Housing Authority uses the word "coach" for both paid and volunteer teaching staff. The concept is similar, with the context one of athletics rather than horticulture.

Reception

The qualifications for this position are quite obvious: friendliness, patience, human interest, unflappability, a sense of order and decorum. In most cases, the reception people will be the "front" for the center, the first encounter most participants will have. They will also manage the telephone and provide information about the center. If volunteers are recruited for this position, training in telephone response may be necessary since many residents have little experience with using a telephone. Role play is a natural for preparing a volunteer for this position.

Facilities & equipment

A number of the tasks in this category can be farmed out, either through steering/advisory committee members (e.g., computer maintenance, trash pickup, janitorial services) or through the facilities management. What cannot be farmed out is the constant picking up and putting back of software, paper, disks, files, etc.

Regular inventory checks are likewise essential since otherwise it may be hard to tell if anything substantial is missing. A CTC without someone who takes these tasks seriously can quickly become not only a mess, but a prey to people who pick up whatever they can (e.g., mouse balls, disks, toilet paper, cleaning supplies, books, pens, etc.).

Clerical and support services

Qualifications in this area are fairly standard and coincide with generally accepted qualifications for clerical positions. In CTCNet's experience, if a person is hired, or a volunteer recruited, for these tasks, an orientation and training period is essential. Perks that can be provided include scheduled time to improve technology skills, use the internet, etc. Experience with the clerical and support services within a CTC can also constitute a rung in the training ladder for participants in any job-training program housed at the center.

Summary

Many of the qualifications described above are admittedly qualitative—difficult to specify as bulleted items in a job description. Yet it is these qualities of personnel that will be important for sustainability of the CTC.

Recruitment: Resources and Hiring Process

The Steering Committee will probably want to recruit and hire the senior personnel. Assembling the rest of the crew can then be the responsibility of those hires.

What Staffing Resources are Available?

Salaried

As stated above, at least one person must be salaried. Although administration may seem like the "biggest" job, actual daily interaction with participants at the center is more probably the arena in which success or failure of the CTC will be determined. Participants as well as management will feel more comfortable knowing who is in charge (where the buck stops). They will also appreciate seeing a familiar face, being greeted or having regular contact with the same person. In most CTCNet centers, the administrative and head "teacher" tasks are performed by a single individual.

If a sponsoring agency already employs a "Human Services Director" or equivalent, it is conceivable that that person could take on either the administration or the head "teacher" role, where the rest of the tasks are performed by volunteers or steering/advisory committee members.

Volunteer

Many tasks can be handled by volunteers. Some tasks will require technology skills or expertise, but many will not. Community residents can be considered for a variety of duties including instructional supervision but also reception, clerical, outreach, escort services, evaluating software, housekeeping, etc.

In considering potential volunteers, the resources available through the center's advisory board or steering committee should not be neglected. Appropriate tasks are those that do not require regular daily or weekly scheduling. Individual members or subcommittees can handle such areas as technology planning, acquisition and repair, community outreach and participant recruitment, grant writing and solicitation, public relations, etc.

Lastly, center participants themselves often make the best volunteers. Once the center is in operation, consider establishing a youth corps, a senior corps, or a mentoring corps from amongst the most avid center users.

Local sources of potential staff and volunteers

The immediate residential community: Since the most important criterion for staff is that they know and understand the community and be able to relate well with their participants, and to communicate with them in their language of choice, it is natural to look first at the resident community for potential candidates.

One manager recently said to CTCNet, "I would never hire a resident, and I'm not interested in resident empowerment." CTCNet would not welcome this person's center into our affiliated body.

Educational Institutions: Colleges and universities (technology, education, library services departments; job placement bureaus and internship programs) are a rich source for staff. It's important to bear in mind, however, that students are often transient.

Many high schools (public and private) have community service programs.

The local PTA may be the best source of staff/volunteers among parents in the community.

Religious Institutions: A number of national projects in this past decade have funded computer offerings through religious institutions. Should there be such in a targeted community, people who have led or participated may be candidates for staff or volunteer positions.

Other Community Service Organizations: The outreach/community mapping tasks should have identified a number of these organizations that use or teach people to use technology resources.

Computer "User" Groups and Cyber-Cafes: These will usually post job-offerings and volunteer opportunities on their electronic and actual bulletin boards.

Local Government Agencies: The Mayor's Office for Volunteerism, the Human Services Department, the Senior Services Division—all these are worth exploring.

Corporations and Small Businesses: Again, representatives serving on the Center's oversight (steering/planning) committee may provide liaison.

Local and Regional Newspapers, Radio, and Cable TV Stations will often offer free space to non-profits for job postings and calls for volunteers.

Lastly, one could consult local employment agencies, but generally that means paying a fee.

Hiring Process

Step 1: Develop job descriptions for each of the paid staff positions. Job descriptions should contain:

N.B. If the position requires writing (reports, grant proposals, PR materials), it is advisable to request a writing sample from the applicant.

Step 2: Institute the search

The Steering Committee may want to constitute a search sub-committee. Additional members of this committee may be recruited from among neighborhood residents and from partnering neighborhood agencies or institutions. If the position requires a bilingual person, some member of the Search Committee should be fluent in that second language.

Step 3: Making the decision

The Search Committee will:
Because an extensive pool of persons experienced in management and teaching in CTCs is still a thing of the future, the Steering Committee should consider asking candidate finalists to meet with a group of participants, take on the role of instructor of the pilot program during an hour or two, and/or to prepare a formal written response to a potential issue arising at the CTC.

In the early days of the Playing to Win Harlem Center, asking potential teachers to "audition" by conducting a guest workshop paid repeated dividends. A young man who seemed shy and nerdish in interview blossomed when interacting with center participants. Had it not been for this encounter, he might not have been hired. Another candidate with strong teaching credentials found it difficult to function in such an informal hands-on environment and withdrew his application.

Step 4: Sealing the bargain.

Certainly with paid staff, and recommended even for volunteers, is a letter specifying the hire (or commitment), including the responsibilities, the remuneration and benefits (if any) and indicating any trial period during which either party may sever the relationship without penalty (it is important to specify such a trial period, especially for volunteers).

Personnel Policies

If the CTC is going to have employees, it must develop personnel policies. This is true whether there are one or ten employees. Personnel policies set out the legal responsibilities of the employer and the benefit packages available to employees. They also spell out grievance procedures and any performance review process. CTC policy with regard to promotion, pay increase, and severance is also normally included. While the entire content may not be applicable to volunteers, volunteers should receive a copy of the personnel policies and the relevant areas should be discussed with them.

Legal responsibilities

If the CTC pays an employee, such action triggers certain obligations under state and federal laws. To ensure that it is meeting its obligations, the CTC should contact the local IRS and state employment tax offices to find out the CTC's filing obligations. The Steering Committee should also contact the State department of labor or department of commerce/business to find out the CTC's obligations concerning unemployment insurance, workmen's compensation, disability, and other labor practices.

Benefit packages

The CTC must consider whether to offer benefits to its employees. Benefits can include health, dental and life insurance and vacation and personal leave. No matter what the benefit package arrangements are, a written policy should be prepared and distributed to the employees to whom it applies. The Steering Committee should be aware that benefit packages can cost the CTC an additional 15%-25% of employees' salary. These costs must be reflected in the CTC financial projections (see Chapters 8 and 9).

Grievance procedures

Although one hopes that the occasion never arises, it is a good idea to be prepared for grievances that may be lodged by participants against staff, or by volunteers against staff or participants, or by staff against volunteers, peers, or superiors.

Grievance procedures should set forth a formal series of steps that must be taken in the process of lodging and settling grievances. These steps must include:

Staff assessment

An annual performance review is the most common type of staff assessment. However, it is not perceived as helpful by many people. Increasingly, human resource professionals prefer a style that features continual feedback to the employee in order to reinforce good performance and stop poor performance quickly. Under this "coaching" concept, the year begins with the employee and the supervisor or Steering Committee meeting to set goals for employee performance in the coming year. These goals are related to the overall goals of the CTC as well as to the specific assignment of the worker and his or her stage of professional growth. Goals must be agreed to by both the employee and supervisor.

As the year moves forward, the supervisor should frequently let the employee know how he or she is doing. Praise is important as well as constructive criticism. References to the mutually agreed upon goals should be a regular part of these conversations. Adjustments should be made in the performance standards and goals as the year goes by.

The supervisor should take on a greater role in the employee's achievement of his or her goals. If the employee's performance has not been satisfactory, the supervisor should help the employee get on track. If progress has been good, both can enjoy the success, and presumably the CTC's goals are being met as well. Quarterly or annual reviews should be routine meetings and few surprises should arise. If feedback is constant (even daily, in some cases), these more formal reviews are typically used for adjustment (up or down) of the goals and performance standards for the employee for the year. Proponents of this system believe it is a very effective means of staff assessment for an organization that wants continually to improve its performance.

Conditions for severance

In the best of all worlds, personnel will be reliable, will relate well with participants, and will perform ably the tasks they have agreed to perform.
It is nevertheless important to specify actions that will lead to a required probationary period or even immediate dismissal such as:

Orientation

A structured orientation program is important for any new staff. Such a program should include:

For volunteers, the orientation should provide an opportunity to meet with their specific supervisor to discuss their assignments, establish an individual schedule, and review and countersign the commitment letter.

Staff Development

Because contentment of talented and able staff is vital, and because the CTC probably does not offer the highest salaries, staff development is an essential activity for the CTC. Staff development includes a) opportunities for further education, and b) increasing job satisfaction. Topics for further education should include enhancing knowledge and skills on computers, learning software packages, and discovering the newest developments in computer technology. Techniques to increase job satisfaction include giving employees and volunteers more responsibility, adding more activities, developing flexible hours, providing job sharing, and matching jobs with individuals' interests.

Volunteers work without pay, but not without rewards. The most important rule concerning volunteers-thank them frequently and appropriately. Means of rewarding volunteers for their services can include:

development. Through telecommunications linkages with other CTCs, staff can share problems and solicit suggestions; through regional meetings and the annual All-Affiliates Conference, affiliate staff can participate in and/or conduct workshops, plan collaborative projects, and exchange information with others in similar centers.

Documentation


      
        

Exhibit 4-1:
Guide for Developing Volunteer Job Descriptions

Job Title
This will be the volunteer's identification. Give this as much prestige as possible.

Major objective
A short concise statement, reflecting the ultimate goal of the service to be performed.

Qualifications
Include all things necessary for the effective performance of duties, listing requirements from physical to human qualities desired. Be careful not to over qualify the position, you could lose some excellent volunteers due to stringent educational requirements. Specifics such as a car, proper insurance, if needed, etc., should be noted.

Responsibilities
As specifically as possible, list each duty and responsibility of the job.

Orientation/Training
This includes the nature of, specific content needed in, and the approximately hours for orientation and training, identifying persons who will conduct the training.

Time and Place
This should include the exact duty hours, which days of the week and the place where the volunteer is to perform the services. BE SPECIFIC.

Commitment
The minimum number of months you need from the volunteer based on your investment in training and supervision becomes the minimum length of commitment for the volunteer. A maximum time commitment should also be specified.

On the Job Supervision
Name of the supervisor or the position of the supervisor. In most cases, this will be the staff person with direct responsibility for the service. Include schedule of supervisory sessions.

Benefits
List any available benefits to the volunteer, i.e. free parking, coffee, mileage reimbursement and insurance.

Frustrations
Those aspects of the job which can be frustrating, e.g., the record keeping.

Satisfactions
Those aspects of the job which can give the volunteer real satisfaction and learning.

xx