0 having worked for the same organization, or having had the same job for a long time:
Substantial groups of long-serving workers (including managerial, clerical and artisan grades) exhibited a high degree of residential stability.
In almost every case, however, the committee chairman was a long-serving member of the assembly.
According to a long-serving tax officer, this form of selecting the tax administration's leadership was widely resented among tax officers.
Especially in eras before a professionalized civil service, a long-serving legislator might have been the best source of institutional memory in state government.
Practices that built incentives for long legislative tenure and that channeled long-serving members into key decision-making positions no doubt resulted in a variety of policy consequences.
Under that agreement, the basic starting pay of a constable will be £2,400 a year and that of a long-serving constable will be £3,402.
The corporate nature of the staff is important: they tend to be long-serving because of the type of surgery that they undertake.
They have offered long-serving teachers a year's sabbatical—the lion.