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Human Resources
Compensation
Saint Louis University is committed
to a compensation administration philosophy which, consistent with
its mission as a Catholic Jesuit institution, will provide fairness,
internal equity and competitive pay rates for the purposes of attracting,
retaining, and motivating employees.
To accomplish these goals, the compensation
plan:
· Should be structured to help
attract and retain the numbers and kinds of employees required to
operate the University. Both the levels and forms of compensation
for each group of employees must be reasonably competitive with
pay levels and practices that prevail in the various labor markets
in which the institution competes.
· Should help to maintain the
University in a reasonably competitive position in its product market.
The resulting level of compensation must not place the University
in a non-competitive cost situation in which the overall compensation
results in tuition, fees, and other charges being too high.
· Should be designed in such
a way that the associated administrative time costs will be reasonable
and in proportion to the other priorities and time demands on the
University's financial resources and available management time.
· Must gain employee acceptance.
This does not necessarily mean that employees must "approve"
pay actions, or that compensation policies and practices are somehow
subject to popular vote. It does mean that employees must understand
the policies and practices and accept both their concepts and specific
actions as being reasonable and impartially administered.
· Must play a positive role
in motivating employees to perform their duties to the best of their
abilities and in a manner which supports the achievement of institutional
goals.
· Must gain acceptance by the
institution's "public," which includes, but is not limited
to, the Board of Trustees, the government and, to some extent, the
general public.
· Must provide opportunity for
employees at every level to achieve their reasonable aspirations
in a framework of equity, impartiality, and reasonableness.
Annually, University administration
will review recommendations, taking into consideration competitiveness
of the current labor market, availability of labor (especially in
critical-skill occupations), turnover data, and "replacement
cost" data, and set the institutional pay policy for the coming
fiscal year. The pay policy will reflect the market position at
which the University wishes to recruit and pay employees based upon
organizational objectives and philosophy.
This philosophy is carried out through
compensation policies which have been approved by the President's
Coordinating Council.
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