Resolution 94-21027 RESOLUTION NO. 94-21027 -
A RESOLUTION OF THE MAYOR AND CITY
COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH,
FLORIDA, WAIVING THE COMPETITIVE BIDDING
PROCESS, AND AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR AND CITY
CLERK TO EXECUTE A PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH
AND THE MIAMI-DADE COMMUNITY COLLEGE,
SCHOOL `OF JUSTICE AND SAFETY ADMINISTRATION,
ASSESSMENT CENTER FOR JOB ANALYSIS AND
ASSESSMENT CENTER INSTRUMENT ADMINISTRATION
AND VALIDATION FOR THE POLICE OFFICER/TRAINEE
CLASSIFICATION.
Whereas,the Consent Decree entered into by the Department of Justice (DOJ) and
the City of Miami Beach recognizes the continuing need of the City to hire entry-level
Police Officer/Trainees in order to maintain adequate levels of public safety, and therefore
allows for the administration of an Interim Hiring Program; and -
Whereas, the City has determined that additional Police Officer/Trainees need to be
hired in order to maintain public safety; and
Whereas, the provisions of the Consent Decree require that any Interim Hiring
Program developed by the City must be agreed to by the DOJ and approved by the court;
and
Whereas, the City developed such an Interim Hiring Program and the DOJ and the
court previously agreed to its use for one phase of Interim Hiring; and
Whereas, it is projected that the DOJ will have agreed to the use of the Interim
Hiring program for a second phase of Interim Hiring by January 14, 1994, or soon
thereafter; and
Whereas, the City believes that use of an Assessment Center process will fulfill the
City's desires to adequately and appropriately evaluate what it believes to be the job-related
skills of Police Officer/Trainee candidates; and
Whereas, the successful use of the Assessment Center instrument, as a critical
component of the Interim Hiring Program, in the First phase of Interim Hiring, yielded
results consistent with the City's desire for diversity, resulting in the appointment of five
Hispanic, five.Black, and five non-Hispanic White Police Officer/Trainees; and
5
Whereas, the Miami-Dade Community College (MDCC) Assessment Center
develops, validates, and administers assessment instruments in compliance with Equal
Employment Opportunity (EEO) Guidelines, the American Psychological Association's
Testing Standards, and the Standards for Ethical Considerations for Assessment Center
Operation; and
Whereas, the MDCC Assessment Center has served over 25 law enforcement =.
agencies in the State of Florida and assessed 6,000 entry-level and 5,000 promotional
candidates; and
Whereas, the MDCC Assessment Center's trained and experienced staff has
developed, validated, and administered the job-related Assessment Center instrument for
the Metropolitan Dade County Public Safety Department and has provided them with entry-
level police selection services since 1983, evaluating over 3,400 entry-level candidates, and
has administered the Assessment Center instrument to 34 City of Miami Beach Police
Officer/Trainee candidates in the first phase of Interim Hiring, and is therefore, thoroughly
and uniquely familiar with the Assessment Center instrument and its validation; and
4' .
Whereas, the MDCC Assessment Center has agreed to perform a job analysis and
validate the Assessment Center instrument for the job duties of a City of Miami Beach
Police Officer/Trainee; and
Whereas,the performance of a job analysis and test validation will help to insure the
administration of fair job-related selection procedures and to protect the City against
litigation under Federal law, especially Title VII of the Civil Rights Act; and
Whereas, the aforementioned Assessment Center instrument is the property of
Metropolitan Dade County Public Safety Department who has agreed to allow the City to
utilize the instrument, for the second phase of the Interim Hiring Program; and •
Whereas, use of Metropolitan Dade County's Assessment Center instrument, as
administered by the MDCC Assessment Center is an integral part of the Interim Hiring
Program developed by the City; and
Whereas,the MDCC Assessment Center is able to administer the Assessment Center
instrument for the City of Miami Beach 'from February 14, through 18, 1994; and
Whereas, the Mayor and the City Commission wish to expedite the administration
of the Police Officer/Trainee examination and deems it in the best interest of the City to
waive the competitive bidding process and to award the attached contract to the MDCC
Assessment Center; and
Whereas, funding for this contract is available from the Police Department
Professional Services budget.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT DULY RESOLVED BY THE MAYOR AND CITY
COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA, that the Mayor and the
City Commission hereby waive the competitive bidding process and authorize the Mayor and
City Clerk to execute the attached Professional Services Agreement between the City and
the MDCC Assessment Center, in consideration for an amount not to exceed $29,000,
including all out-of-pocket and other expenses incurred by the MDCC Assessment Center.
The Mayor and the City Commission authorize the City Manager to exercise the option of
• extending said contract for the evaluation of up to 25 additional candidates for an additional
$160/candidate, not to exceed an additional $6,000 including all out-of-pocket and other
expenses incurred by MDCC Assessment Center.
PASSED AND ADOPTED this 19th day of January , 1994.
Attest:
A,
)0 / /
City Clerk, Richard E. Brown ay.' ymour Gelber
FORM APPROVED
LE T. •
_ By
Date _444Z14/6'
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CITY OF MIAMI BEACH
CITY HALL 1700 CONVENTION CENTER DRIVE MIAMI BEACH FLORIDA 33139
OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER TELEPHONE: (305) 673-7010
FAX: (305) 673-7782
COMMISSION MEMORANDUM NO. _. q-9
TO: Mayor Seymour Gelber and DATE: January 19 , 1994
Members of the City Commission
FROM: Roger M. Carlto�
City Manager
SUBJECT: PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGREEMENT WITH MIAMI-DADE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE, SCHOOL OF JUSTICE AND SAFETY
ADMINISTRATION ASSESSMENT CENTER FOR JOB ANALYSIS AND
ADMINISTRATION AND VALIDATION OF ASSESSMENT CENTER TEST
INSTRUMENT
ADMINISTRATIVE RECOMMENDATION:
It is recommended that the Mayor and the City Commission waive the competitive bid
process, in accordance with City Code 31A, Paragraph 10e, and authorize the Mayor and
the City Clerk to execute the attached Contract with the Miami-Dade Community College
(MDCC) Assessment Center to perform job analysis and to administer, validate, score, and
report results of the Metropolitan Dade County Composite Interactive Assessment Center
instrument to up to fifty (50) City of Miami Beach Police Officer/Trainee candidates.
CONTRACT AMOUNT AND FUNDING;
Not to exceed $29,000.
Funds are available from the Police Department's Professional Services budget, Account
Number 011.1110.000312.
BACKGROUND:
The City of Miami Beach entered into a Consent Decree with the Department of Justice
(DOJ) covering the hiring of Police Officer/Trainees. The Court provisionally entered the
Consent Decree on July 28, 1992, and filed final entry on June 04, 1993.
In the Consent Decree, all parties recognized the continuing need of the City to hire Police
Officer/Trainees in order to maintain adequate levels of public safety. It has been
determined that additional Police Officer/Trainees need to be hired in the immediate future
to insure proper law enforcement staffing. Therefore, pursuant to the Consent Decree, the
City developed an Interim Hiring Program. Under the terms of the Consent Decree, an
Interim Hiring Program may be developed and used as a temporary selection procedure
until permanent selection procedures are in place consistent with the Consent Decree. The
DOJ and the court previously agreed that the City may use the Interim Hiring Program for
one phase of the Interim Hiring. Since the City again needs to increase its law enforcement
staffing, the City sent a second proposal to the DOJ for utilization of the Interim Hiring
Program for a second phase of Interim Hiring. It is projected that approval will have been i 0
received from the DOJ by January 14, 1994, or soon thereafter.
AGENDA .R', ,
ITEM
DATE - I I _a LI
•
a �1
BACKGROUND - continued;
In addition, the MDCC Assessment 'Center instrument was successfully administered to
thirty-four (34) City of Miami Beach Police Officer/Trainee candidates in the first phase of
Interim Hiring. The results of the first Interim Hiring, using the Assessment Center
instrument, were consistent with the City's desire for diversity. The first administration
resulted in the appointment of five Hispanic,five Black, and five non-Hispanic White Police
Officer/Trainees.
The present public safety staffing needs are urgent, however, the City desires to use an
adequate, appropriate, job-related, and fair method of evaluating the skills of Police
Officer/Trainee.candidates. For these reasons, the Interim Hiring Program utilizes the
Assessment Center Interactive instrument which was developed and validated for
Metropolitan Dade County entry-level Police Officers. The process was developed and is
administered by trained and experienced staff at the MDCC Assessment Center. The
Assessment Center has provided selection services to Metro-Dade County since 1983, and
has successfully evaluated over 3,400 entry-level Police Officer candidates for that agency.
Metro Dade County has agreed to allow the City to utilize their Interactive Assessment
Center instrument(again saving the City at least $8,000) for the second phase of the Interim
Hiring Program.
To further the efforts to administer a fair and job-related selection procedure, the attached
agreement for Professional Services includes job analysis and validation of the Assessment
Center instrument for the duties of a City of Miami Beach Police Officer.
ANALYSIS:
In order to meet the Consent Decree requirements as well as the City's time and quality
requirements, the Interim Hiring Program was developed so that candidates are evaluated
in a manner that the City believes to be fair,job-related and expeditious.
A second use of this plan, including the use of Metro Dade County's Interactive Assessment
Center instrument at the MDCC Assessment Center, although not guaranteeing there will
be no challenges to the City's developed Program, is expected to be agreed to by the DOJ.
The Assessment Center process can be administered February 14, through 18, 1994.
The City Manager may exercise the option of having the MDCC Assessment Center
evaluate up to 25 additional candidates for an additional $160/candidate (not to exceed an
additional $6,000).
CONCLUSION:
In view of the fact that the MDCC Assessment Center is thoroughly familiar with the
classification of entry-level Police Officer/Trainee, has developed, validated, and
administered a valid selection process for Metro-Dade County for the past 10 years, and has
successfully administered the Assessment Center instrument for the City of Miami Beach,
Commission approval is requested authorizing the Mayor and the City Clerk to execute this
Agreement for Professional Services.
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Attachments
11
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• . EXHIBIT A
CITY OF MIAMI BEACH
CITY HALL 1700 CONVENTION CENTER DRIVE MIAMI BEACH FLORIDA 33139
wiwimismwr
OFFICE OF THE PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT Telephone 673
Januay 10, 1994
TRANSMITTED VIA FAXSIMILE AND US MAIL
Lorren Oliver
Assessment Center
School of Justice & Safety Administration
Miami Dade Community College - North Campus
11380 NW 27 Avenue
Miami, FL 33167-3495
•
Dear Mr. Oliver:
This is to confirm our conversations regarding the following items:
1. The City of Miami Beach is scheduled to run entry-level Police Officer/Trainee
candidates through the Assessment Center the week of February 14, 1994. These
dates can be held until January 20, 1994.
a. The City expects approximately 50 candidates
b. The Assessment Center can run 10 candidates per day
c. Each team of 3 Assessors can evaluate approximately 7 candidates per day
2. The exercise will consist of the Metro-Dade County composite interactive exercise.
The candidates will be scored on the report writing/Written communications skills,
however this score will be used for training purposes only and will NOT be included
in determining Assessment Center overall score.
3. Assessor reorientation-will take place the week of February 7, for one half day at the
Assessment Center. The 14 assessors, who attended training in February 1993, and
who performed as Assessors in July 1993, will participate. You will notify me, as
soon as possible, of the exact date, time, and location of the assessor reorientation
so that assessor attendance is insured with minimal disruption to public safety
services.
PAGE 1 of 8
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4. The assessors will begin their evaluation of candidates on February 17, if possible,
dependent upon the number of candidates iand site availability. The evaluations will
Assessors evaluations may run through
begin at 8:30 until approximately 3:30
February 25, dependent upon number of candidates. Everything possible will be
done in order to begin and complete assessor evaluations of candidates as soon as
possible.
fo
5. You will notify me regarding how quickly verbal results will be ready. Everything
possible will be done to give verbal pass/fail results to the City as quickly as is
possible.
•
6. A proposal will be completed by January 10, or January 11, 1994, at the latest. I will
be notified, as soon as the proposal is'ready so that it may be picked up.
7. A draft contract has been prepared and will be forwarded to you as soon as approved
by the City Manager and Office of the City Attorney.
It is my understanding, per Ed Valdez, that authorizationof the Assessment Centern exercise
of
Metro-Dade County Public Safety Department, for
was mailed to you last week and faxed on January 7, 1994. However, I have also enclosed
a copy of this authorization for your records, in case you have not yet received it.
You will be notified as soon as Department of Justice approval is received.
Sincerely,
Gail Poe-Liu
A/Asst Human Resources Director
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cc: T. C. Adderly, Human Resources Director
PAGE 2 of 8
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44R. Metro-Dade Police
I:s, : A • Department
ippe Director's Office EFTIMET
9105 N.W.25th Street
Miami,Florida 33172
J A N 7 REI'D
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
• By
January 3, 1994 • •
Mr. T. C. Adderly
Human Resources Director
City of Miami Beach
• City Hall
1700Convention Center Drive
Miami Beach, Florida 33139
Dear Mr. Adderly:
Thank you for your recent letter
regarding the use of the Assessment
Center• exercise for police officer
applicants.
Please accept this letter as
authorization to use the entry-level
• exercise for police officer applicants.
Mr. Lorren Oliver has been contacted
regarding this matter. •
If you need further assistance in this
matter, please contact Mr. Edmundo
Valdes, Human Resources Section, at
471-1945.
Sincerely;
coeFRED TAYLOR
Director
cc: Lorren O. Oliver
Associate Director
Assessment Center
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TVMiami-Dade
COMMUNITY COLLEGE -.- - _
North Campus
January 11, 1994
T. C. Adderly
Personnel Director
City of Miami Beach
1700 Convention Center Drive
Miami Beach, FL 33139
Dear Mr. Adderly:
I am forwarding this cost proposal as a follow-up to recent telephone conversations with yourself
and Gail Poe-Lieu on your staff. This cost proposal is an extension of the June 1993 agreement
between the City of Miami Beach and the Miami-Dade Community College, School of Justice
and Safety Administration -Assessment Center to utilize the existing Metro-Dade Police
Department entry-level simulation to evaluate candidates for entry-level police officer positions
with Miami Beach Police Department.
Given the fact that no current job analysis exists for the position of police officer with the City
of Miami Beach, the understandings and assumptions outlined in our October 9, 1992
correspondence to Milton Vickers would again apply (see attached). It is therefore critical that
Justice Department approval be obtained to extend the agreement to utilize the process in this
manner. We have already received a copy of Metro-Dade Police Department's consent to have
their simulation used by your agency.
The week of February 14 has been reserved on our schedule for your agency. This time-frame
will be held until Thursday, January 20th, pending contractual agreement. Please do not hesitate
to contact me should you have questions.
Sincere•
eat
Lorren O. liver
Associate Director
LO/sp •
Enclosure
PAGE 4 of 8
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MIAMI BEACH POLICE DEPARTMENT
COST PROPOSAL
Training
Provide 1/2 day of assessor refresher training $ 250.00
Compensate six (6) role players for one 600.00
refresher training day - $100 per day
Compensate two (2) role players for up to 1,000.00
five (5) performance days at $100 per day
•
(combined).
Candidate Cost
$175 per candidate $5,250 - $8,750
To assess 30-50 candidates, administer $7,100 - $10,600
process, monitor and record evaluation,
prepare report, provide feedback, etc.
I. Job Analysis $8,000
• A job analysis will be conducted to assess job content so that knowledge, skills, and
abilities and other requisite employee specifications can be identified. A list of critical
task statements and their prerequisite knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSA's) will be
identified.
II. Validation $10, 000
A content validation strategy will be conducted to determine the commonalities that exist
between the critical KSl 's derived from the Metro-Dade Police Department job analysis
and those derived from the Miami Beach Police Department job analysis. Next, a
criterion-referenced predictive validation strategy will be conducted to determine the
viability of the assessment center in predicting success in the training academy and also
to determine how well the assessment center predicts success on the job.
PAGE 5 of 8
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in Miami-Dade
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
North Campus October 9, 1992
Milton Vickers, Director
Minority Business Development
111 NW 1st Street Ste 1710
Miami FL 33128-1975
Dear Mr. Vickers:
The School of Justice & Safety Administration Assessment
Center would be pleased to provide services to the City of Miami
Beach, to develop interim testing procedures for entry level police
and fire applicants. The Center has an unparalleled depth and
breadth of experience in public safety assessment ranging from
entry level to executive level positions.
The Assessment Center has the experience and resources to
develop and implement relevant exercises, evaluate the records, and
analyze the necessary data for any Public Safety position. Our
testing processes range from content valid written tests tailored
for individual agencies to assessment-based oral boards to full
scale complex assessment centers using telephones, intercoms,
radios, etc.
Based on our prior discussions, the immediate task is to
formulate interim screening devices for the classifications police
officer and firefighter I in the City of Miami Beach. It is our
understanding that no current job analyses exist for these
classifications. The basic approach will therefore be to implement
a procedure on the basis of assumptions acceptable to the court and
all other concerned parties. These interim procedures .would be
replaced as soon as comprehensive job analyses can be conducted to
provide a professionally acceptable basis for the development of
validated testing instruments.
•
If one were to compare the prerequisite knowledge, skills and
abilities for competent job performance for the entry level police
officer or firefighter across departments in Dade County, it would
be reasonable to expect to find a common core of attributes across
departments. These departments provide services in the same
geographic area with a core of similarity in the operating
conditions, service requirements, and resource base, especially for
departments of comparable size. It would further follow that to
• the extent that this common core exists, predictors of success at
the entry level for a given classification should have acceptable
PAGE 6 of 8
24
Milton Vickers, Director
Page 2
October 9, 1992
validity across departments. The limitation facing the system is
that the criterion validation data required to conduct the type of
comparisons suggested above is not presently available.
It must be understood that our proposed interim process relies
on assumptions of validity generalization (that test validity can
be "transported" to a similar environment given essentially the
same position) . If that assumption is acceptable, our strategy
will utilize available entry level police and firefighter job
analytic data from other departments in this geographic area (e.g.
MDPD, MPD, WPBFD) to provide a start point for test instrument
development. The Center will utilize Subject Matter Experts (SMEs)
from the respective departments within the City of Miami Beach and
from the School of Justice and Safety Administration to review this
job analysis data and to provide feedback to maximize applicability
for the City of Miami Beach. We will develop test instruments that
incorporate the information and judgements obtained in the SME
review process. SMEs will also conduct subsequent reviews of the
developed test instruments and related scoring/evaluation
protocols before interim implementation.
If this interim strategy is acceptable to the court and all
other concerned parties, we can proceed with more detailed
discussions of methodology, time frames and related costs.
As I am sure you will recall when the Assessment Center was
established in 1982, the thinking was that this resource facility
would function to serve the testing/evaluation needs of public
safety agencies in the area. Since its inception, the center has
evaluated over 11,000 individuals for a variety of public safety
positions nationwide. MDPD has consistently utilized our center to
evaluate candidates for entry level police officer positions and
for all promotions to the ranks of Sergeant, Lieutenant and
Captain. We have assessed over 3400 police officer applicants for
that department. It is interesting to note that in a criterion
validation study conducted by Pines and Bernadin (1992) , our
assessment center process for entry level police officer was found
to be a more effective predictor of job performance than cognitive
ability tests for a sample of police officer candidates from the
City of Miami Police Department.
PAGE7of8
25
Milton Vickers, Director
Page 3
October 9, 1992
The Assessment Center would welcome the opportunity to provide
services to the City of Miami Beach. I look forward to our meeting
next Monday.
SincereiK,
Lorren O. Oliver
Associate Director
SJSA Assessment Center
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