Home » Workforce planning strategy a key priority at Whitehorse

Workforce planning strategy a key priority at Whitehorse

Similar to councils around the nation, the City of Whitehorse understands the importance of recruitment and staff retention to its day to day operations and ongoing strategic planning processes.

Located in Melbourne’s leafy eastern suburbs, Whitehorse’s 1,200 employees serve a population of over 150,000 people.

Manager Organisational Development, Pauline Bennett, said that Whitehorse City Council’s strategic planning is a combination of Council and Business Planning, Financial Planning and Workforce Planning.

Through its Workforce Planning Model, Council aims to achieve optimum workforce performance by increasing its competitive advantage through establishing itself as an employer of choice.

Commencing its Workforce Planning process in late 2007, the first step was workforce analytics – to establish how well Council was managing its workforce.

Using workforce forecasting it then identified what needed to change to meet challenges both now and into the future. Lastly, it formulated its workforce strategy –

how it will get there.

A Workforce Planning Committee was formed in April 2008, with representatives from divisions across councils, and particularly from divisions with difficult to recruit positions. This committee established 28 ‘job families’, with all workers allocated to one family. Within each ‘family’ critical jobs have been identified and succession planning commenced.

Of the specific jobs identified as critical, some 57 per cent of these didn’t have successors.

The committee also prioritised divisional job families, deeming those difficult to fill as red, becoming hard to fill as amber and relatively easy to fill as green.

Specific strategies now in place to address this include the following:

  • sector branding (Municipal Association of Victoria initiative)
  • salaries and benefits benchmarking
  • flexible working arrangements for

    staff

  • recruitment initiatives
  • retention initiatives
  • health and wellbeing program.

Pauline Bennett said that as well as providing a range of benefits to staff, this workforce planning approach has enabled Council to have greater engagement with, and retention of, its current team.

“It means we are delivering on our key performance indicator of having the right people at the right time in the right place,” she said. “In addition it has reduced overall costs for Council.”

For further information contact Pauline Bennett on (03) 9262 6333.

 

 

Digital Editions


  • Greater Geraldton bridge lauded

    Greater Geraldton bridge lauded

    City of Greater Geraldton bridge replacement project wins prestigious engineering award Inovative engineering has earned the recently completed Nangetty-Walkaway Road Bridge Replacement Project top honours…

More News

  • Big attraction for tiny town

    Big attraction for tiny town

    Dozens of tourists have created history as the first passengers in decades to arrive in the tiny southern Queensland town of Thallon by rail. Excited passengers travelled for hours on…

  • Together Butchulla Talk

    Together Butchulla Talk

    A new Indigenous book celebrating the Butchulla language and local animals was launched at Hervey Bay Library earlier this month with storytime, language, dance and art activities for families to…

  • New Logan arena

    New Logan arena

    An upgraded arena for equestrians has officially opened at Skerman Park in North Maclean. Logan City Council delivered the $928,000 project, which includes a weatherproof roof, to support members of…

  • Noosa mastering AI

    Noosa mastering AI

    Digital Hub is trying to help Noosa locals get the most out of AI. Mastering AI can make life easier in countless ways. From planning weekly meals with specific dietary…

  • Change in the weather

    Change in the weather

    AUSSIE FLOOD RESCUE It’s obvious to everybody that we are seeing weather changes. It appears to be more erratic and frequent than ever before. Local government bodies are plagued by…

  • Dandycon set to return

    Dandycon set to return

    Dandy Con, Greater Dandenong’s much loved comic and pop culture festival, returns on Saturday 11 April 2026 between 11am–4pm, bigger than ever. This free, all ages event fills Dandenong Library,…

  • A creative future for Kingston

    A creative future for Kingston

    The community has been invited to help shape Kingston’s creative and cultural future. Kingston residents are being invited to help finalise the city’s cultural roadmap, with the Draft Creative and…

  • Tweed residents gunking up wastewater

    Tweed residents gunking up wastewater

    Tweed Shire Council is urging residents to rethink what they flush down the toilet and pour down the drain, after revealing that crews remove around 156 tonnes of rubbish and…

  • In memory of Chris Quilkey

    In memory of Chris Quilkey

    It was with great sadness that we learned that former Blacktown City Deputy Mayor and Councillor Chris Quilkey has passed away. First and foremost, our thoughts are with Chris’s family,…

  • Unit demolished as Ipswich flood recovery continues

    Unit demolished as Ipswich flood recovery continues

    Ipswich Mayor Teresa Harding has welcomed the demolition of Mihi Grove, a flood-hit 42-unit complex in Brassall purchased as part of the Queensland and Australian Government’s Resilient Homes Fund Voluntary…