This group includes positions the duties of which are to advise on, manage, or provide instructions and information concerning the operation, maintenance, and use of equipment, shops, buildings, laundries, printing plants, power plants, cemeteries, or other government facilities, or other work involving services provided predominantly by persons in trades, crafts, or manual labor operations. Positions in this group require technical or managerial knowledge and ability, plus a practical knowledge of trades, crafts, or manual labor operations.
There were 14,731 federal workers employed in this group within most of the Executive Branch departments, and in some large and small independent agencies, over 300 are employed overseas. The largest employers of this group are the military departments that hire civilians at their bases stateside and overseas. Others work for most of the larger departments including 1,221 with the VA, 842 with the Department of Interior, and 666 with the Department of Justice.
Don’t overlook any agency in your job search as there are positions available in many agencies.
The following information is compiled from numerous federal documents including qualification standards, job announcements, career articles, occupation flysheets, FEDSCOPE, OPM, Agency websites, interviews with federal employees, The United States Government Manual, and from the Department of Labor’s Occupational Outlook Handbook.
Click the job title for job listings, the number employed, hiring agencies, and job series definitions.
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These position descriptions are excerpted from the qualification standards for select job titles in this group. In the General Schedule position classification system is established under chapter 51 of title 5, United States Code. The term “General Schedule” or “GS” denotes the major position classification system and pay structure for white collar work in the Federal government. Agencies that are no longer subject to chapter 51 have replaced the GS pay plan indicator with agency-unique pay plan indicators. For example, the Bureau of Prisons uses GL instead of the GS designation. For this reason, reference to General Schedule or GS is often omitted from the individual qualification standard sheets.
A brief introduction for major occupations within this group is provided below.
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This series covers two-grade interval positions that manage, supervise, lead, or perform administrative work that involves:
This occupation does not include one-grade interval equipment, facilities, and services assistance work.
The federal government employs 4,447 in this occupation. The Department of the Navy employs 1,650, the VA has 788 facility specialist while the Department of the Army has 714. The remaining are employed by the other organizations including most of the cabinet level agencies.
As a Facilities Specialist you will perform facilities management at designated facilities. You will serve as primary point of contact for all facilities, space and building management functions. Responsible for all functions related to facility and space management for the primary district or laboratory headquarters building, a building with office, storage and special use space with parking and landscaped grounds, to include building operation and maintenance services; space management utilization and allocation; building alterations and modifications; signage; key control; moving services; conference and special events support; parking assignment; and related support services.
Job Series Titles: (The USAJOBS selection lists all federal job vacancies for this job series.)
Sampling of Jobs Typically Advertised in the Group:
This series covers two-grade interval positions that manage, supervise, lead, or perform administrative work that involves the operation or maintenance of one or more Federal cemeteries. The work requires broad administrative knowledge of the operation and maintenance requirements of cemeteries.
The federal government employs 124 in this occupation, 95 work for the Veterans Administration, 7 for the Department of the Army, and one each for the Department of the Interior and Department of the Navy. There are 20 employees that work overseas for the American Battles Monuments Commission.
Job Series Titles: (The USAJOBS selection lists all federal job vacancies for this job series.)
The basic title of positions that provide administrative support in cemetery operations is Cemetery Administration Specialist. The title also applies to staff positions that involve developing cemetery administration policies and operating procedures, methods, standards, and techniques.
The basic title of positions in this occupation that involve directly administering the operations of a cemetery or cemeteries is Cemetery Administrator.
Cemetery administration specialists perform a variety of the following services concerning interments, maintenance and repair, administration, and public affairs/public relations.
For interments services they:
For maintenance and repair services they:
For administration services they:
For public affairs/public relations services they:
This series covers two-grade interval positions that supervise, lead, or perform administrative work that involves operating and maintaining buildings, grounds, and other facilities such as posts, bases, shipyards, depots, medical or health care facilities, power plants, navigation locks, parks, forests, and roadways. The work requires administrative knowledge and skills and broad technical knowledge of the operating capabilities and maintenance requirements of various kinds of facilities, physical plants, and equipment. This series typically involves coordinating and directing work performed by a variety of trades and labor employees and requires broad knowledge of such work; however, this knowledge is not a paramount qualification requirement. The basic title for this occupation is Facility Operations Specialist.
The federal government employs 2,431 in this occupation. The Department of the Interior employs 448, and the Departments of the Army, Navy and Air Force employs 1,140 civilian workers in this series. Al cabinet level agencies except HHS and the Department of Education employ facility operations specialists.
Job Series Titles: (The USAJOBS selection lists all federal job vacancies for this job series.)
Facility operations specialists operate facilities including physical structures, utilities, roadways, and surrounding grounds. Physical structures include buildings such as office buildings, hospitals, cultural institutions, historic buildings, and other types of government-owned buildings. Cultural institutions include facilities such as museums and libraries. Facility operations includes programs and services essential to maintain a safe, healthy, and comfortable facility.
Facility operations specialists perform a variety of administrative services in the following programs and services functions:
The printing services specialist manages, supervises, leads, or performs administrative work that involves operating and maintaining a printing program when the work requires knowledge and skill in printing, printing processes, reprographics, printing procurement, and applying relevant laws, regulations, methods, and techniques.
The federal government employs 437 printing services specialists. The Government Printing Office is the largest employer with 161 followed by the Treasury Department with 75, the Department of the Army with 37 and the VA with 18. Small numbers work for other agencies.
Job Series Titles: (The USAJOBS selection lists all federal job vacancies for this job series.)
Printing services specialists perform a variety of the following services:
Printing services specialists also perform duties such as:
This series covers two-grade interval positions that supervise, lead, or perform administrative work that involves operating food services of Federal Government institutions including storeroom, kitchen, dining room, and meat and bakery operations. The work requires a practical knowledge of menu planning and food service operations.
The federal government employs 359 in this occupation. The Department of Justice is the largest employer with 203 employees to manage their prison system facilities. The military departments also employ a good number of civilians. Several other cabinet level agencies employ a few workers in this specialty.
Food services specialists perform a variety of the following services:
Job Series Titles: (The USAJOBS selection lists all federal job vacancies for this job series.)
This series covers two-grade interval positions that supervise, lead, or perform administrative work that involves collecting, analyzing, interpreting, and developing specialized information about equipment. Work also involves providing advisory services to those who design, test, produce, procure, supply, operate, repair, or dispose of equipment. Work may also involve developing or revising equipment maintenance programs. The work requires applying an intensive and practical knowledge of the characteristics, properties, and uses of equipment. Knowledge is of the type gained from technical training, education, and experience in functions such as repairing, overhauling, maintaining, constructing, or inspecting equipment.
The federal government employs 6,070 in this occupation. Just over 300 works overseas. The Departments of the Army, Navy and Air Force employ 5,509 civilians in this occupation. All cabinet level agencies except HUD and the Department of Labor employ small numbers of equipment specialists.
The basic title for this occupation is Equipment Specialist.
As an occupation, the Equipment Services Series, GS-1670, encompasses the broad equipment phases of preproduction, production, usage, and disposal. Within these stages, equipment specialists perform a wide variety of services. They obtain, provide, and base recommendations on equipment information such as:
They also consider equipment uses; design and operating characteristics and limitations; operating instructions; reliable and unreliable manufacturers; operating and repair capabilities of different organizational levels; and disposal procedures.
Job Series Titles: (The USAJOBS selection lists all federal job vacancies for this job series.)