PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS/WORKING CONDITIONS: Employee is required to be able to lift at least 40 pounds, be on his/her feet at least 50% of the time, and walk approximately 3 miles daily due to making trouble calls and inspections. Climbing on ladders and scaffolds is commonplace and contributes to the arduous nature of the job. There may be special requirements for agility and dexterity such as exceptional hand/eye coordination. Trips to satellite outpatient clinics are sometimes necessary and will involve transportation via station vehicle.
Most work areas are heated or air-conditioned. There is a hazard of electrical shock, burns, and various forms of dirt and debris while working on complex technical medical equipment. There are hazards of exposure to bacterial germs, caustic materials, and contamination both known and unknown, while working in clinics, wards, laboratories, isolation areas, etc. Work requires use of personal protective equipment (PPE) such as but not limited to half/full face respirators, air pack, dusk masks, safety glasses, and shoes appropriate to the work. Discomfort may be experienced while wearing PPE.
Applicants will be rated in accordance with the
OPM Federal Wage System Qualifications. For this position, the job element method is used to match what you, the applicant, can do against what the work calls for. Your knowledge, skills and abilities will be compared to the knowledge, skills and abilities (called job elements) needed for success. Your qualifications will first be evaluated against the prescribed screen out element (WG-2 and higher only; screen-outs are not applicable to WG-1). Applicants who appear to meet the screen out element are considered for further rating; those who do not are rated ineligible and are eliminated from consideration. The potential eligibles are rated against the remainder of the job elements. While a specific length of training and experience is not required,
your responses to the questionnaire must be supported by detailed descriptions of your experience on your resume.
SCREEN-OUT: Requiresthe ability to do the work of a Medical Equipment Repairer - Medical Gas Technician without more than normal supervision. To receive eligible status, applicant(s) must assure that resume demonstrates experience working in a hospital/healthcare environment performing repairs, installations, modifications, troubleshooting, maintenance, calibrations, adjustments, and inspections on a wide variety of medical, laboratory, and dental equipment (electrical, electronic, mechanical), including medical gas and ancillary equipment and components (e.g., air, vacuum, suctions, gas systems, etc.); reading/interpreting blueprints, drawings, manuals, wiring diagrams, and other specifications; and using instrumentation common to the trade to test medical systems, digital meters, oscilloscopes, waveform generators, and electrical safety analyzers.
A
Quality Ranking Factor* has also been requested by the facility to help determine which of the basically qualified applicants are likely to be better qualified for a position.
The quality ranking factor for this position is: Requires the ability to obtain an American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) 6010 and 6040 certifications within 120 days of hire
OR possess a current or past valid ASSE certification. This is required to efficiently perform maintenance, repair, installation and modification of medical gas systems.
NOTE: Copy of certifications required to receive credit.
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Quality Ranking Factors are skills, knowledge, abilities, or other worker characteristics which could be expected to result in superior performance on the job. Quality ranking factors will not be used for screening but may be used as ranking criteria. Applicants with higher proficiency levels may rank above those with lower proficiency levels on a quality ranking factor.
You will be rated on the following Job Elements as part of the assessment questionnaire for this position:
- Equipment Assembly, Installation, Repair
- Interpret Instructions, Specifications (includes blueprint reading)
- Measuring Instruments
- Quality Ranking Factor
- Technical Practices
- Troubleshooting
- Use and Maintain Tools and Equipment
- Without more than normal supervision
IMPORTANT: A full year of work is considered to be 35-40 hours of work per week. All experience listed on your resume must include the month and year start/end dates. Part-time experience will be credited on the basis of time actually spent in appropriate activities. Applicants wishing to receive credit for such experience must indicate clearly the nature of their duties and responsibilities in each position and the number of hours a week spent in such employment.
Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religious; spiritual; community; student; social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.