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Old 2009-08-21, 03:41 PM   #1
orangina
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Registered: Aug 2008
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 18
Trying to cobble together a new position

Our planning department is relatively small (17 persons inc. fire marshall, inspections, planning, community development, permitting, and zoning.) We are looking to get one more person in the office who can work on a variety of small programs that we are building.

An opportunity arose to partner with the state in getting a Soil Erosion and Sedimentation Control person -- under this arrangement the state would pay 60% of the salary and we would pay 40%. Given the current economy we are under budget constraints so I am looking for any other sources of money that might be used to fund the other 40%.

Anyone know of creative ways to fund this position without enacting new fees or dipping into the budget?

One idea we had was to assign this person building rehab tasks and maybe there would be some housing grants that could contribute to the position's salary. I really don't know and am in search of some creative thinking on this one. Thank you!
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Old 2009-08-21, 05:42 PM   #2
stroskey
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You didn't mention anything about Housing in your list of workers. If this position worked on some Housing items, like Section 8 or CDBG rehab you could use those admin funds to offset some costs. Good thinking with the grant-writing position; the more grants they secure the more your department has to spend (both admin and project costs).
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Old 2009-08-21, 06:29 PM   #3
Tide
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Can you partner with your state universities? Possibly their extension services to pick up some of that tab? We were looking into a partnership with Clemson for a 2 year partly paid arborist/planner position (Clemson extension would provide the money for the arborist)
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Old 2009-08-26, 04:19 PM   #4
orangina
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We have a firm under contract to do our rehab housing -- that may change in 2-3 years but until then we are under contract to do work through them. So, I would LIKE to match this with housing but my hands are a little tied.

The arborist idea is intriguing -- is there a program name that I can pursue further on my own?
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Old 2009-08-26, 10:39 PM   #5
kms
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Location: Western Pennsylvania
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How about a stormwater person, maybe an education specialist, or a watershed specialist?

Here in PA, conservation districts administer the state's E&S program. The funding is shared by the state and counties (some counties contribute more than others). Some other CD employees would be ag related, like nutrient management, or the positions above. There are also Chesapeake Bay techs in that watershed. Go to the PACD web page if you want to find more info. Districts are pretty creative when it comes to funding strategies.
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Old 2009-08-27, 10:24 AM   #6
Rygor
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Do you have any Tax Increment Finance Districts in your community? If so, the new person could serve as a brownfield mitigation specialist for parcels in the TIF (especially if you have any industrial in your TIF) and possibly do some redevelopment work, as well. Most states will let you use TIF money to fund positions related to TIF administration.
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Old 2009-08-27, 10:47 AM   #7
NHPlanner
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Quote:
Originally posted by orangina View post
Our planning department is relatively small (17 persons inc. fire marshall, inspections, planning, community development, permitting, and zoning.)
Off-topic:
I admit to chuckling when I read this....this would be considered a BIG department around here.
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Old 2009-11-03, 03:19 PM   #8
joshking2
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Talk to your COG. Alot of times they could use someone P/T and the county could use someone P/T and do a cost share agreement.
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Old 2009-11-06, 07:10 PM   #9
Brocktoon
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Can you job share with the county or another city? Another thought is can one of your existing staff members do the job or learn it?
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