A. 
Purpose. The Compensation and Classification Plan provides a systematic method to inventory and classify all positions into approved salary ranges, based on the list of duties, responsibilities, and the level of work performed. This plan ensures position classification is based on a proven system of evaluation that is up to date and reflective of the values of McLean County.
B. 
Responsibility. The County Administrator shall establish and maintain a Position Classification Plan that provides the basis for compensation of County employees and shall apply the methodology outlined by the plan to interpret appropriate position classification for new and reclassified positions. The County Administrator will use this methodology to maintain the Position Classification List, which includes all active County positions and the job grades to which they have been assigned.
C. 
Allocation of positions.
(1) 
Classification is determined by the established Position Classification Plan methodology as stated in the General Compensation Plan. It is the responsibility of the County Administrator to interpret the analysis of all positions using this plan.
(2) 
Classification is based on the majority of the position's duties included in the position description.
(3) 
Positions with salary requirements determined by state or federal laws, ordinances, and/or funded grants will be placed in the job grade that includes the adequate range to meet the salary requirements.
D. 
Maintenance of the classification plan.
(1) 
The County Administrator will periodically review the methodology used in the plan to determine if it continues to align with the values of McLean County and allows the County to offer competitive salaries.
(2) 
Any substantial change to classification methodology is subject to approval by the County Board.
E. 
Maintenance of the position classification list.
(1) 
The County Administrator may periodically review any or all positions on the Position Classification List and report recommended changes to the Finance Committee and the affected departments.
(2) 
Except in extraordinary circumstances, new positions and position reclassifications are normally approved as part of the annual budget process and must be approved by the Finance Committee.
(a) 
Newly requested position classification and existing position reclassifications outside of the annual budget process must follow established procedures maintained by the County Administrator.
(b) 
All requests outside of the annual budget process require review by the oversight committee, and approval by the County Administrator, the Finance Committee, and the County Board.
(c) 
Employees in existing positions that are reclassified into a higher job grade will stay in the same step in the job grade as in the previous classification. This should result in approximately a 7% increase per job grade level.
(d) 
Employees in existing positions that are reclassified into a lower job grade will remain at their current rate of pay, in the closest possible step, without reducing the rate of pay. If the reclassification places the position into a job grade in which the maximum rate is lower than the employee's current rate, the employee's rate will be placed at the maximum rate of the new grade.
F. 
Position descriptions. The County Administrator shall maintain written procedures for the creation, amendment, and maintenance of job descriptions. Departments must follow these procedures when creating new positions or in order to make substantive changes to existing job descriptions.
G. 
Location of position descriptions. A complete inventory of all position descriptions shall be on file in the County Administrator's office.
A. 
Classification structure. Each position with unique duties shall have a unique position description that will include details which are considered in the determination of the appropriate classification of the position.
B. 
Classification. This section indicates which job grade in which the position has been classified.
C. 
Summary. This section consists of a one-paragraph brief of the position.
(1) 
It describes the kind of work performed, as well as the general area of work, responsibility level, and whether or not the position has supervisory duties.
(2) 
This summary should indicate whether the supervision is direct or indirect (through intermediary supervisors) and the size of the staff supervised in terms of small, medium, large-sized, etc.
(3) 
This summary should include a description of the classes of employees supervised, or by characterizing supervised employees by functional types.
D. 
Essential duties and responsibilities. This section gives specific examples of tasks which illustrate the kind of work performed described in previous sections.
(1) 
The examples should be somewhat common in most of the positions of that class, as well as show a range of different duties.
(2) 
While not every duty will be listed, the important or major assignments should be listed along with those most frequently performed.
(3) 
Various types of equipment and machinery used should be described if they are an essential part of the duties. Other information stated includes how this class is different from classes closely related, any lead responsibilities or supervision provided, and the nature in which assignments are received and work is reviewed.
E. 
Qualifications.
(1) 
Education and experience. This section specifies the type and amount of previous work experience and the type and amount of previous formal education required (if any) which a candidate should possess. Such requirements are used as basic screening devices. Education should be listed first, identifying the type of relevant education required. Experience should be listed second and identify the length and type of experience required.
(a) 
Some experience: implies a small amount of experience sufficient to enable persons to have general familiarity with methods and terminology in common work situations of the occupational field. (This may be in the general range of no experience to two years of experience but will vary depending on how relevant and how recent it is.)
(b) 
Experience: implies sufficient experience to perform independently the standard duties usually found in the particular type of work. (This experience may be in the range of two years to four years.)
(c) 
Considerable experience: implies sufficient experience to provide familiarity with principles and practices applicable to a wide variety of work characteristics of the class, including unusual as well as commonplace work situations. (This experience may be in the range of four years to six years.)
(2) 
Licenses or certifications. This section is for listing any legal requirements, certifications, and/or regulations that limit the practice of a profession or occupation to persons who possess a specific requirement. There may also be very specific prerequisites to certain classes that must be met before otherwise qualifying.
(3) 
Special requirements. This section includes any requirements that are specific to this position and not included in other requirement sections. This may include types of previous experience or specific education, training, or required access.
(4) 
Knowledge, skills, and abilities.
(a) 
Knowledge. Information needed to perform adequately in the job at an acceptable level, usually obtained through formal education and on-the-job experience.
(b) 
Skills. Abilities or techniques acquired by special training.
(c) 
Abilities. Competencies which represent the employees' proficiencies or current stage of development.
F. 
Physical demands. This section describes the physical demands of the job and the physical attributes required to perform the essential duties and responsibilities. The physical activities required of the job should be listed, as well as the frequency with which they are done. If physical activities such as carrying or moving are required, describe the type of objects carried or moved and the approximate range of weight of items carried. Describe required operation of equipment in this section and the frequency.
G. 
Work environment. This section should describe the work environment or setting of the job. Describe the environment or setting in which the job is primarily performed, any secondary setting and the frequency. Indicate elements or hazards an employee performing this job will typically be exposed to, protective equipment required and the frequency of such conditions.
A. 
Philosophy. It is the policy of the County to maintain labor market competitiveness within the boundaries of fiscal feasibility. The County is committed to attracting and retaining a diverse workforce of high-performing employees with the knowledge, experience, skills, and dedication needed to consistently provide County services and continue to grow a better McLean County.
B. 
Composition. The Pay Plan shall consist of the Position Classification List and Job Grade Table for the fiscal year and the narrative document entitled, "General Compensation Plan for Non-Union Employees."
(1) 
The General Compensation Plan may include, but will not necessarily be limited to the following sections:
(a) 
Annual salary adjustments. This section includes details related to any approved across-the-board adjustments or other adjustments to be made to all general employee salary rates. If there is an across-the-board adjustment for the fiscal year, details will be included in this section.
(b) 
Establishing salaries. This section includes the considerations approved for establishing salaries for employees who are newly hired, rehired, promoted, demoted, or transferred.
(c) 
Merit increases. This section includes the merit increase methodology, eligibility, ranges, and the General Merit Increase Schedule for General Employees for All Pay Grades.
C. 
Adoption of pay plan. The County Administrator shall annually present the General Compensation Plan to the County Board for approval, after the adoption of the annual budget.
D. 
Establishing salaries. The following factors are used when determining position classification into salary ranges.
(1) 
Leadership: degree to which a position receives direction or provides direction to others.
(2) 
Working conditions: degree to which a position operates in an environment of change or risk to oneself or others.
(3) 
Complexity: degree to which higher level educational knowledge, or analytical abilities must be utilized.
(4) 
Decision making: degree to which a position acts autonomously and oversees the actions of others.
(5) 
Relationships: degree to which the position interacts with others.
E. 
Policy review.
A. 
Compensation ranges are linked directly to the plan of position classifications and shall be determined with due regard to ranges in pay for other classes, relative difficulty and responsibility of positions in the class, availability of employees in certain occupational categories, rates of pay in other jurisdictions, cost-of-living factors, the financial policies of the County and other economic considerations.
B. 
Prior to the preparation of each annual budget, the County Administrator shall present a proposed compensation schedule to the Finance Committee for approval.
A. 
FLSA requirements. The Federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires that all employees who are not exempt from overtime payment and who are not salaried be compensated at the rate of 1.5 times their regular hourly rate for all hours actually worked beyond 40 hours in a workweek. The County's workweek begins at 12:01 a.m. Sunday (12:00 midnight of Saturday night) and ends at that same time the following weekend. The overtime payment may either be in wages or in compensatory time gained (at the same 1.5 rate).
B. 
Exempt/nonexempt. Those employees eligible for overtime include all employees in position classifications listed on the Salary Schedule as Grade 10 or below, except as specified, as well as those employees on the Salary Schedule in Grade 11 or higher who are specifically designated as nonexempt. All elected officials are exempt from overtime by the nature of their positions.
C. 
Continuous/noncontinuous. In conformance with the FLSA, the following policy for providing overtime payment as wages or compensatory time shall be utilized for those employees who are eligible for overtime:
(1) 
Employees in noncontinuous operations are those employees in position classifications with schedules which do not generally require overtime work and which do not require a replacement when they are absent. These employees shall receive 1.5 times their regular hourly rate, or compensatory time at the 1.5 rate, for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek, with only those hours actually worked counted toward the forty-hour requirement.
(2) 
Employees in continuous operations are those employees in position classifications with schedules which normally require overtime work because the position must be staffed on a twenty-four-hour-per-day basis, which often requires that a replacement be provided for any absence. These employees shall receive 1.5 times their regular hourly rate, or compensatory time at the 1.5 rate, for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek, with only those hours actually worked counted toward the forty-hour requirement.
D. 
Employees eligible for straight-time overtime. Although hours worked below 40 in a workweek are not regulated by the FLSA except as mandated by the minimum wage requirement, certain full-time employees are regularly scheduled to work fewer than 40 hours in a workweek. Generally, such employees are on a 37.5-hours-per-week schedule. When such employees exceed their regularly scheduled full-time schedule (actual time worked), they shall receive straight-time overtime at the rate of 1.0 times their hourly rate for those additional hours worked below 40.
E. 
Compensatory time. All employees who are eligible for overtime, as noted above, may be compensated with the equivalent compensatory time rather than monetary payment. This shall also apply to straight-time overtime (Subsection D). This election of compensatory time or monetary payment shall be made by the employee before such overtime is recorded on the County's time sheets. Compensatory time shall be recorded as the straight-time equivalent, i.e., one hour of overtime at the 1.5 rate shall be reported as 1.5 hours of compensatory time earned; the same hour of overtime at the 1.0 rate shall be reported as 1.0 hour of compensatory time earned, etc.
F. 
Compensatory time accrual limits. All such earned compensatory time must be reported under the proper pay code so that all such employees' pay stubs will contain their actual balances. Employees who are not eligible for overtime payment may not report any hours as earned compensatory time. No employee's actual compensatory time balance shall exceed 40 hours. The County Administrator may suspend this policy when it is necessary to do so for the general health, safety and welfare of McLean County employees. Upon declaring the policy suspended, the County Administrator shall take the following steps:
(1) 
Notify the County Board Chairman and all department heads of the declaration to suspend the policy which prohibits compensatory time balance in excess of 40 hours; and
(2) 
Specifically identify a time frame through which the policy is suspended.
G. 
Compensatory time off. Employees who request compensatory time off, i.e., to use their earned compensatory time, shall make such requests in a manner consistent with departmental procedures, and in increments of 15 minutes. Such requests shall be granted unless there is a negative impact on the department's operation. Such accrued compensatory time must be used by employees prior to the termination of their employment, since the purpose of electing compensatory time is to have time off, unless this is not possible for operational reasons. Accrued compensatory time is not eligible for monetary payment, unless such time remains after the employee's termination.
H. 
Professional and administrative employees. Salaried exempt employees are not eligible for overtime or compensatory time off and shall not have their pay reduced because of absence during a workweek other than for disciplinary suspensions in increments of one week, for major violations of safety rules or lack of benefit time to provide payment during such an absence. Pay reductions for these reasons shall be not less than one-day increments.
I. 
Authorization and assignment of overtime. All overtime must be authorized by the department head in advance of being worked. If prior authorization is not feasible because of conditions, a confirming authorization must be made on the next regular working day following the date on which the overtime was worked. Department heads will make every effort to assign overtime as equitably and evenly as possible.
A. 
Administrative adjustments. Upon approval of the Finance Committee, a salary adjustment may be made when the County Administrator determines that a salary adjustment may resolve a manifest error or clear an inequity.
B. 
Temporary upgrades. When, in the normal course of conducting the County's business, the function of an office is impaired by an absence of six weeks or more of personnel with duties vital to the County's business, the employee assuming the responsibility for additional duties of a higher job class, outside of his or her normal job class, may be eligible for a temporary pay upgrade for the length of time that the employee performs those extra duties.
(1) 
Any request for a temporary upgrade must be submitted by the Department Head, or designee, in writing to the County Administrator's office.
(2) 
Compensation for a temporary upgrade will not be increased until the request has been submitted by the Department Head and approved by the County Administrator.
(3) 
The County Administrator may approve temporary upgrades using the following criteria:
(a) 
The position that is temporarily vacated has duties that cannot be left unattended for an extended period of time.
(b) 
The immediate supervisor of the temporarily vacated position, if there is a supervisor, is unable to fulfill those duties.
(c) 
The absence of the employee is unavoidable, and the department has no control over the absence.
(d) 
The duties and responsibilities of the temporarily vacated position are such that they cannot be efficiently done when spread among many employees and can only be efficiently accomplished by upgrading a single employee.
(e) 
The employee will be performing duties and responsibilities that would normally be done exclusively by an employee in a job grade of the equivalent of at least three job grades higher, or in the following circumstances, at least two job grades higher:
[1] 
The temporary upgrade involves additional supervisory responsibilities; and/or
[2] 
The temporary upgrade involves financial responsibilities for which the employee is normally not responsible; and/or
[3] 
The temporary upgrade involves making policy decisions for which the employee is normally not responsible.
(f) 
These additional duties will constitute at least 50% of the employee's workday.
(4) 
Appeals. When a request for temporary upgrade is denied by the County Administrator, or designee, the department head may appeal the decision to the oversight committee responsible for personnel policies. The department head shall not be permitted to introduce information to the committee that was not made available to the County Administrator. The decision of this committee shall be final.
(5) 
Compensation. An employee who receives a temporary upgrade of one pay grade higher than his or her normal job class shall receive no additional compensation. An employee who receives a temporary upgrade of two pay grades higher shall receive a 5% increase to his or her normal pay. An employee who receives a temporary upgrade of three or more pay grades shall receive a 10% increase to his or her normal pay.
A. 
Payroll periods. Pay periods shall be no less than two per month. Paychecks will be issued within seven calendar days of the close of the reporting period.
B. 
Voluntary payroll deductions. Payroll deductions will include the following:
(1) 
All wages, salary amounts, or other compensation paid by McLean County to any of its employees are not subject to collection under a future wage assignment. Request for such assignment will be denied.
(2) 
Other payroll deductions may be made at the discretion of the employee if there are sufficient numbers of employees who wish the same type of deduction (i.e., United Way). Such requests shall be reviewed by the County Administrator and the Payroll Department, and their recommendations shall be presented to the County Board for approval.
A. 
Departmental use of internal time cards. All County departments shall use internal time cards providing for the recording of all categories of time and requiring signature by the employee and the supervisor in a format as determined by the County Administrator.
B. 
Not required for departments with time clocks. Any department having a time clock and requiring punching at appropriate times is excluded from this additional documentation.
C. 
Description of hours. All nonexempt employees shall record a detailed description of hours worked and verify these hours by signing their respective internal time card. All exempt employees shall file a time report indicating any leave time claimed and shall verify these hours by signing their timecard. Electronic submission of time cards and leave time claimed may be required, as determined by the County payroll system. Certain County operations may require employees to record time worked by a particular function or from a particular fund. In these cases, a detailed description of hours worked shall also be completed. However, these do not constitute time sheets.
A. 
Using the task list provided by the department (for new positions) or the existing job description, the following factors are considered:
(1) 
Leadership: degree to which a position receives direction or provides direction to others.
(2) 
Working conditions: degree to which a position operates in an environment of change or risk to oneself or others.
(3) 
Complexity: degree to which higher level educational knowledge, or analytical abilities must be utilized.
(4) 
Decisionmaking: degree to which a position acts autonomously and oversees the actions of others.
(5) 
Relationships: degree to which the position interacts with others.
B. 
Market peers are identified through geographic location, similar demographics, similar economy, or recruitment difficulty.
C. 
Position classification analysis and market information combined determine the ideal classification.
D. 
If the ideal classification falls between existing job grades:
(1) 
The higher grade should be selected if a position has high turnover or recruitment issues.
(2) 
The lower grade should be selected otherwise.