CIVIL SERVANTS
MEN SERVING IN WAR
NO LOSS OP PROMOTION
(0.C.) NEW PLYMOUTH, this day. As far as possible he wanted no member of tne public service serving in the war to suffer loss of grading or to lose his classification, said Mr. J. H. Boyes, Public Service Commissioner, in speaking at the reunion of the Taranaki section of the Public Service Association. "What is to become of those thousands of officers serving overseas when they return from the war?" asked Mr. Boyes.
One of the most important aspects of the position was the need for a comprehensive plan dealing with the whole question of rehabilitation and embracing a course of intensive training to place returning officers in the same position as they would have occupied had they not been called to the war. He felt no officer should suffer in classification or advancement.
Mr. Boyes believed the whole service would be with him and would help him in the evolution of a workable plan.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXXII, Issue 285, 2 December 1941, Page 2
Word Count
165CIVIL SERVANTS Auckland Star, Volume LXXII, Issue 285, 2 December 1941, Page 2
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