I'm confused. Will he have some sort of admin rights?
EDIT: I fear I'm not understanding the situation. If you mean "add to payroll" as in give the guy log in information and let him report his hours so he gets paid, then absolutely do it. If you mean give the guy the ability to adjust wages/labor categories/PTO hours/whatever, I'd be taking a much closer look. If the guy was specifically hired for that job, as a temp to hire with a 6-12 month contract I'd probably do it. If the guy is some random employee with a 6 week contract I wouldn't give the guy anything beyond the ability to report his hours.
The gal is a temp hr person, why hr wants the ability to have a temp manipulate wages/labor is beyond me so I'm going to try to hold off until the actual IT manager gets back as I got far too many bigger projects I have to do (the entire company is going on a new software which makes dos look awesome.
). Its a security risk considering this person is probably not going to be here beyond harvest (1-2 months) and the damn hr manager wants to give her about $2000 dollars of equipment to a TEMP, that equipment can go out to other departments like the grain brokers who actually need it, not to have it just to have it which I think it is the case for accessing the payroll system.
What really I am a graduate in Computer Science and can not even find a descent job, in my field. Must be lack o experience. Any suggestions?
What I have been doing for the better part of 10 years is being the neighborhood IT guy doing all sorts of odds and ends, mostly building pcs. Thats how I got the experience necessary for this job, but I also had a network administration degree and a slew of professional references. So if I were you, I would get into doing side IT work by either advertising by word of mouth or put an ad in the newspaper. Just be aware you won't get $50 an hour, but more the less do it for the experience and instead of charging them by the hour, do it by the job. If you are a programmer, good luck I hope you have at least a bachelors degree and a few programming certs to go along with it, those type of jobs (depending on where you live) are pretty hard to get your foot in the door. Finally, if all else fails, go for a helpdesk job, it won't pay much (better than minimum wage), but at least it will look good on a resume.