Just an update on the specific questions Gnomeking had about the RO scheme.
When the overskilled/underpaid employee is found, what exactly will the IfA do, if that person has willingly signed an employment contract for that wage?
The inspection at the moment will consider the terms of employment, and if they are found lacking will respond appropriately. If an employee has signed a contract that would not be an acceptable defence from the employer’s perspective - the employee needed a job and signed a contract, it is not their fault their employer may be underpaying them.
From the angle of Council recommendations and what next, this would come under the working party recommendation for Council to instruct “the Registered Organisations committee to use non-compliance with the recommended starting salaries as a trigger for a more detailed audit of the way an applicant or existing organisation ensures that it has appropriately competent staff at its disposal, with immediate effect. The committee has been instructed to look very closely indeed at applications from organisations that do not comply with the recommended minimum salaries: it will be up to applicants for Registration to make a persuasive case that they can recruit, retain, motivate and develop staff with the skills necessary to comply with IfA’s
Code of conduct and standards”.
When underskilled/underpaid staff are located, presumably the employer will argue that they are protecting the wages of more experienced staff, and providing valuable 'training' (at reduced wages). Presumably the IfA, with its commitment to CPD, will heartily applaud this, and hand out gold stars.
If jobs which are lower paid are done so within a programme of structured learning (eg a real training programme, or apprenticeship), which the employee will genuinely benefit from, then it could be commended. But it would have to be demonstrated by the employer that the trainee is
being trained (eg and training isn't just an excuse for low wages as you say), and that when or if their employment extends beyond the training period, they would be promoted and paid at the right scale for their skills and the role they are doing. This is what the training toolkit is all about (
http://www.archaeologists.net/h2b), which we hope will be further developed as more of the HLF funded IfA workplace bursaries are undertaken.
What, I wonder, will the procedure be, if any, when underskilled/ over-paid individuals are located?
This would be flagged as an issue if it was felt that an employee did not have the skills to be doing the job they were doing. As always it is totally dependent on specific circumstances but I suspect this would result in either a recommendation to review the role, or a condition of registration that the employee either received the training they needed to undertake the role (if it was that simple), or that the role was done by someone with the right skills. Failure to meet the condition would mean the RO will not be registered, whereas a recommendation would be reviewed at the next inspection.