The South Pacific

Full Version: Ministry Leadership
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Every Minister of Regional Affairs is free to organise their staff and advisors as they see fit, according to their specific needs and the people available. What follows is a brief explanation of how I have organised the Ministry leadership and who occupies each position.
  • Minister: the head of the Ministry, coordinating all the projects and discussing them at the Cabinet level.
  • Deputy Minister: the second in command, main adviser to the Minister and the one who helps oversee the execution of all projects.
  • Advisory Council: a body of advisors appointed by the Minister, who discuss the progress of Ministry projects and new ways of making everyone work better, as well as process applications for the Fellowship Programme.
  • Directors: appointed by the Minister to lead and supervise the execution of specific projects, as well as guiding those staff members assigned to it.
Minister:
  • Feirmont
Deputy Ministers:
  • Kris Montresor
  • Bonaugure
Advisory Council:
  • Bonaugure
  • Kris Montresor
Directors:
  • TAC (Historical Project)
  • Feirmont (Southern Journal & South Pacific Radio)
  • Henn (World Census Ejection Contest)
  • Bonaugure (Festivals)
If you have any questions about the Ministry staff, how they are appointed and anything else related to the Ministry of Regional Affairs, feel free to ask here.
Actually, I've got a question that's been eating at me for a while. As Director's are we able to bring in new people to help with a project since staff is heavily on the low side?
Yes, as a matter of fact you can (and are encouraged to) bring in people who can contribute. Part of your job is also to advertise your Projects and get people interested in them. Just make sure not to give out the HQ's password to non-staff members!

(In all fairness, the full Ministry staff has never been more numerous. Unless you are talking about the Historical Project, in which case I do agree with you.)
Well, The Historical Project was definitely in mind, but also large projects in general. A large project needs more than two or three people.
I guess I'm comparing the Ministry now to how it was in mid-2013, when there was literally no staff and the Minister was recalled for having disappeared for the past month.