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Sunday, 3 June 2012

Classified Service vs Unclassified Service | Difference between Classified and Unclassified

Classified Service

Classified Service vs Unclassified Service
Classified service is defined as all positions now existing or hereafter created in the civil service & not specifically designated unclassified pursuant to M.S. 43A.08 or other enabling legislation.

Furthermore, every classified (service) position is assigned to a specific job classification based on the similarities of duties & duties to the respective job class specifications. Job class specifications exist for over one,300 job classifications. Each class specification is a general description of the kind of work performed by employees in that classification.


Examples of classified service jobs include but are not limited to: Account Clerk, Account Clerk Senior, Delivery Van Driver, Office & Administrative Specialist (OAS), OAS Intermediate, Principal, & Senior.

Unclassified Service

examples of unclassified service; presidents, vice-presidents, deans, other managers and professionals in academic and academic support programs, administrative or service faculty, teachers, research assistants, and student employees eligible under terms of the federal Economic Opportunity Act work study program in the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, but not the custodial, clerical, or maintenance employees, or any professional or managerial worker performing duties in connection with the business administration

Unclassified Service refers to any position NOT included in Classified Service, such as Administrators, Faculty, and MSUAASF positions.


Well, the classified commercial section of a newspaper had the commercials sorted in to several classes, like employees wanted or lost and found. An unclassified commercial section had all the notices thrown in, probably as first come, first printed.
Following that line of thought, I could imagine some government reports listing employment numbers by sorting jobs in to distinct classes, like industrial, medical, service, etc. There would still be some people in jobs that didn't fall in to any of those categories, so they would be unclassified jobs, I guess.
I have never seen that done in practice, but I haven't read that plenty of government reports, either.


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