Central Michigan University
Mount Pleasant, MI, USA
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR/ADMISSIONS & FINANCIAL AID/CMED
Position Number: S-3421
Position Summary:
The Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid for the College of Medicine (CMED ) supports the Director of Admissions in managing the office to ensure admissions and recruitment goals are implemented and achieved through strong leadership, coordination, and delivery of excellent customer services to all constituents including, students, faculty, and staff. The Associate Director manages extensive recruitment activities including travel in accordance with the recruitment plan for CMED . The Associate Director must be familiar with all aspects of the campus community, make independent decisions, and operate with a high level of autonomy. This position also requires the coordination of student financial service activities upon direction from the Sr. Assoc. Director of Financial Aid. The Associate Director functions under the general supervision of the Director of Admissions for CMED and works in cooperation with appropriate university offices and within existing university policies, procedures, and practices.
Required Qualifications:
Bachelor’s degree preferably in education, business, public administration, or a related field. Three years of relevant experience in a field related to customer service, sales, marketing, or social services. Demonstrated understanding of marketing. Excellent organizational skills with the ability to multi-task and set priorities. Excellent written and verbal communication skills. Strong interpersonal skills with an emphasis on customer service. Strong computer skills including word processing and database experience. Ability to learn new computer programs. Demonstrated high professional and ethical standards, and the ability to handle confidential or sensitive information. Ability to work a flexible schedule. Ability to initiate and independently plan, organize, coordinate, and perform work in various situations with multiple demands. Ability to perform the essential functions of the position, with or without reasonable accommodation.
Preferred Qualifications:
Master’s degree. Experience in enrollment management, recruitment management, or admissions management in a higher education setting. Experience in transcript evaluation. Experience with minority and other diversity related recruitment. Experience in medical school admissions. Familiarity with pre-medical course requirements. Knowledge of a holistic admissions process and the Multi-Mini Interview (MMI ) technique.
Duties & Responsibilities:
Manages the recruitment of qualified prospective applicants for admissions and matriculation in accordance with CMU and CMED policy. Serves as an integral member of the Admissions leadership team for CMED . Participates in the development of strategic plans and policies that support the mission, goals, and objectives of the office of student affairs. Gathers, analyzes, and reports data related to recruitment programming and its effectiveness of student/family satisfaction. Processes and manages applications for admissions to CMED . Manages data and provides statistical information on inquiries, applicants, and enrolled students for LCME and annual reporting. Fulfills responsibilities of the Director of Admissions in their absence for committee meetings. Develops and implements a marketing and recruitment plan that assists CMED in successfully achieving its educational mission and recruitment/enrollment goals. Orcestrates recruiting activities directly related to targeted groups as outlined in the recruitment plan, or as otherwise assigned. Travels throughout Michigan and select out-of-state locations as required. Presents trainings across campus to assist academic advisors in understanding the medical school admissions process. Directs all aspects of CMED Interview Days; invitations, online software set-up, volunteer coordination/training, compilation/analysis of results, reporting, and presentations. Coordinates the CMED second look day. Represents CMED in a variety of recruitment and marketing activities including, but not limited to, education fairs and business meetings. Assists the Director of Admissions in developing and implementing targeted student outreach. Develops, evaluates, and promotes quality customer service initiatives to all constituents including students, faculty, and other support departments. Responds to inquiry phone calls and e-mails in a reasonable time frame. Manages all aspects of the Dean’s Ambassador Program to include recruitment, training, and scheduling. Responsible for the Road to Matriculation Series including recruitment of speakers, advertising/announcements, and evaluation. Identifies quality students for consideration by the Admissions Committee to support the mission of CMED through the professional evaluation of a student’s academic credentials and other relevant factors. Exercises professional judgment and initiative to make recommendations for process improvement within CMED’s Office of Admissions. Assists in the coordination of student financial service activities and shares the responsibility of continual establishment of operational policies and procedures, as well as the development and implementation of processes as needed to improve services. Assists with giving financial aid presentations as well as professional development opportunities for medical students. Assists students with applications for additional resources, generally private scholarships. Works with outside agencies and organizations to promote scholarships for the MD students. Certifies and disseminates required costs associated with enrollment at the College for purposes of acquisition of additional funds for students from outside organizations, such as HPSP and other scholarships. Serves on CMED’s Scholarship Committee to determine awarding parameters of gift aid for best use of resources to attract diverse and exceptional students. Establishes and maintains effective working relationships with others. Ensures the effective daily operation of services including application and transcript evaluation, use of AMP , CRM , SAP , and Pro-SAM , and other admissions programs. Performs other duties as assigned.
Supervision Exercised:
None.
Employee Group: Professional & Administrative -Salary
Staff Pay Level:
Pay Range: $55,000 - $65,000 per year
Division:
Department: College of Medicine
Position Status: Regular
Position End Date:
Employment Status: Full-Time
FTE: 1.0
Position Type: 12 month
Weekly Work Schedule: Mon-Fri, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. / weekends and evenings as needed
Location: 1200 S Franklin St, Mt Pleasant, Michigan, 48859
Posting Ends:
Open Until Filled: Yes
About the Department:
About CMU:
Central Michigan University has a more than 125-year legacy of preparing students to become leaders and changemakers in their communities and in their personal and professional lives.
We serve nearly 15,500 students on our Mount Pleasant campus, in satellite locations around the state and throughout the country, and through flexible online programs. Many of our approximately 300 undergraduate, master’s, specialist and doctoral programs in the arts, media, business, education, human services, health professions, liberal arts, social sciences, medicine, science and engineering are nationally ranked for excellence.
CMU leads the nation in leadership development programming through our Sarah R. Opperman Leadership Institute, and we are proud to be among only 5% of U.S. universities in the top two Carnegie research classifications. Our faculty work with graduate and undergraduate students in areas such as Great Lakes research, medical innovation, engineering technology and more.
Central is home to 17 men’s and women’s Division 1 sports including football, basketball, gymnastics, baseball, wrestling and more. Our student-athletes achieve great success in competition and in the classroom, capturing Mid-American Conference championships and maintaining an average cumulative GPA of 3.17.
CMU is located in Mount Pleasant, a community that blends the best of small-town living with big-city amenities. It’s part of the culturally varied and vibrant Great Lakes Bay Region that also includes Saginaw, Bay City, Midland and the state’s largest Native American community, centered on the Saginaw Chippewa Isabella Reservation in Mount Pleasant.
Area residents enjoy the mix of outdoor activities, cultural events, shopping and dining options, and family attractions. Other major Michigan destinations and attractions — Lansing, Grand Rapids, Detroit, Traverse City, wineries, beaches, golf and ski resorts, and many more — are within easy reach of the city’s central location in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula.
CMU employees enjoy access to a nationally recognized wellness program along with health care and benefits that exceed regional, state and national norms.
CMU Leadership Standards:
Central Michigan University is a place where we value students and work for their success, where we act as family, and where employees are engaged, appreciated and have extraordinary opportunities to make a difference.
We intentionally maintain and strengthen the hallmark CMU culture that sets us apart from our peers by expecting CMU leaders and employees to model the following Leadership Standards and develop them within their teams.
Please review the https://www.cmich.edu/docs/default-source/president's-division/president's-office/leadershipstandards_posterb36018d4-e03b-4687-b885-e28376513297.pdf?sfvrsn=eb2e2255_3 before applying for this position.
Message to Applicants:
Central Michigan University is dedicated to fostering a broadly diverse and inclusive campus that respects all social identities, experiences, and perspectives. In an effort to further this initiative, we are especially interested in candidates who will advance and promote an inclusive and supportive environment for every member of our university community.
You must submit an on-line application in order to be considered as an applicant for this position.
Cover letters may be addressed to the Hiring Committee.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to submit recommendation letters.
If there is another applicable document you wish to include that is not required, please utilize Other Document (1).
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5603167
CMU , an AA/EO institution, strongly and actively strives to increase diversity and provide equal opportunity within its community. CMU does not discriminate against persons based on age, color, disability, ethnicity, familial status, gender, gender expression, gender identity, genetic information, height, marital status, national origin, political persuasion, pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions, race, religion, sex, sex‐based stereotypes, sexual orientation, transgender status, veteran status, or weight (see https://www.cmich.edu/offices-departments/OCRIE). If you wish to see “EEO is the Law” posters, please https://www.cmich.edu/docs/default-source/president's-division/ocrie/eeo-is-the-law-poster.pdf?sfvrsn=8ae1a123_10. CMU does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the education program or activity that it operates, including admission and employment, and is required by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 not to discriminate in such a matter. Inquiries about the application of Title IX can be made to CMU’s Title IX Coordinator, the US Department of Education’s Assistant Secretary, or both. CMU’s Title IX Coordinator can be reached at:
Phone: 989-774-3253 Office: 103 E. Preston St. Bovee University Center, suite 306 Mount Pleasant, MI 48858 Email: titleix@cmich.edu
Full Time
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR/ADMISSIONS & FINANCIAL AID/CMED
Position Number: S-3421
Position Summary:
The Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid for the College of Medicine (CMED ) supports the Director of Admissions in managing the office to ensure admissions and recruitment goals are implemented and achieved through strong leadership, coordination, and delivery of excellent customer services to all constituents including, students, faculty, and staff. The Associate Director manages extensive recruitment activities including travel in accordance with the recruitment plan for CMED . The Associate Director must be familiar with all aspects of the campus community, make independent decisions, and operate with a high level of autonomy. This position also requires the coordination of student financial service activities upon direction from the Sr. Assoc. Director of Financial Aid. The Associate Director functions under the general supervision of the Director of Admissions for CMED and works in cooperation with appropriate university offices and within existing university policies, procedures, and practices.
Required Qualifications:
Bachelor’s degree preferably in education, business, public administration, or a related field. Three years of relevant experience in a field related to customer service, sales, marketing, or social services. Demonstrated understanding of marketing. Excellent organizational skills with the ability to multi-task and set priorities. Excellent written and verbal communication skills. Strong interpersonal skills with an emphasis on customer service. Strong computer skills including word processing and database experience. Ability to learn new computer programs. Demonstrated high professional and ethical standards, and the ability to handle confidential or sensitive information. Ability to work a flexible schedule. Ability to initiate and independently plan, organize, coordinate, and perform work in various situations with multiple demands. Ability to perform the essential functions of the position, with or without reasonable accommodation.
Preferred Qualifications:
Master’s degree. Experience in enrollment management, recruitment management, or admissions management in a higher education setting. Experience in transcript evaluation. Experience with minority and other diversity related recruitment. Experience in medical school admissions. Familiarity with pre-medical course requirements. Knowledge of a holistic admissions process and the Multi-Mini Interview (MMI ) technique.
Duties & Responsibilities:
Manages the recruitment of qualified prospective applicants for admissions and matriculation in accordance with CMU and CMED policy. Serves as an integral member of the Admissions leadership team for CMED . Participates in the development of strategic plans and policies that support the mission, goals, and objectives of the office of student affairs. Gathers, analyzes, and reports data related to recruitment programming and its effectiveness of student/family satisfaction. Processes and manages applications for admissions to CMED . Manages data and provides statistical information on inquiries, applicants, and enrolled students for LCME and annual reporting. Fulfills responsibilities of the Director of Admissions in their absence for committee meetings. Develops and implements a marketing and recruitment plan that assists CMED in successfully achieving its educational mission and recruitment/enrollment goals. Orcestrates recruiting activities directly related to targeted groups as outlined in the recruitment plan, or as otherwise assigned. Travels throughout Michigan and select out-of-state locations as required. Presents trainings across campus to assist academic advisors in understanding the medical school admissions process. Directs all aspects of CMED Interview Days; invitations, online software set-up, volunteer coordination/training, compilation/analysis of results, reporting, and presentations. Coordinates the CMED second look day. Represents CMED in a variety of recruitment and marketing activities including, but not limited to, education fairs and business meetings. Assists the Director of Admissions in developing and implementing targeted student outreach. Develops, evaluates, and promotes quality customer service initiatives to all constituents including students, faculty, and other support departments. Responds to inquiry phone calls and e-mails in a reasonable time frame. Manages all aspects of the Dean’s Ambassador Program to include recruitment, training, and scheduling. Responsible for the Road to Matriculation Series including recruitment of speakers, advertising/announcements, and evaluation. Identifies quality students for consideration by the Admissions Committee to support the mission of CMED through the professional evaluation of a student’s academic credentials and other relevant factors. Exercises professional judgment and initiative to make recommendations for process improvement within CMED’s Office of Admissions. Assists in the coordination of student financial service activities and shares the responsibility of continual establishment of operational policies and procedures, as well as the development and implementation of processes as needed to improve services. Assists with giving financial aid presentations as well as professional development opportunities for medical students. Assists students with applications for additional resources, generally private scholarships. Works with outside agencies and organizations to promote scholarships for the MD students. Certifies and disseminates required costs associated with enrollment at the College for purposes of acquisition of additional funds for students from outside organizations, such as HPSP and other scholarships. Serves on CMED’s Scholarship Committee to determine awarding parameters of gift aid for best use of resources to attract diverse and exceptional students. Establishes and maintains effective working relationships with others. Ensures the effective daily operation of services including application and transcript evaluation, use of AMP , CRM , SAP , and Pro-SAM , and other admissions programs. Performs other duties as assigned.
Supervision Exercised:
None.
Employee Group: Professional & Administrative -Salary
Staff Pay Level:
Pay Range: $55,000 - $65,000 per year
Division:
Department: College of Medicine
Position Status: Regular
Position End Date:
Employment Status: Full-Time
FTE: 1.0
Position Type: 12 month
Weekly Work Schedule: Mon-Fri, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. / weekends and evenings as needed
Location: 1200 S Franklin St, Mt Pleasant, Michigan, 48859
Posting Ends:
Open Until Filled: Yes
About the Department:
About CMU:
Central Michigan University has a more than 125-year legacy of preparing students to become leaders and changemakers in their communities and in their personal and professional lives.
We serve nearly 15,500 students on our Mount Pleasant campus, in satellite locations around the state and throughout the country, and through flexible online programs. Many of our approximately 300 undergraduate, master’s, specialist and doctoral programs in the arts, media, business, education, human services, health professions, liberal arts, social sciences, medicine, science and engineering are nationally ranked for excellence.
CMU leads the nation in leadership development programming through our Sarah R. Opperman Leadership Institute, and we are proud to be among only 5% of U.S. universities in the top two Carnegie research classifications. Our faculty work with graduate and undergraduate students in areas such as Great Lakes research, medical innovation, engineering technology and more.
Central is home to 17 men’s and women’s Division 1 sports including football, basketball, gymnastics, baseball, wrestling and more. Our student-athletes achieve great success in competition and in the classroom, capturing Mid-American Conference championships and maintaining an average cumulative GPA of 3.17.
CMU is located in Mount Pleasant, a community that blends the best of small-town living with big-city amenities. It’s part of the culturally varied and vibrant Great Lakes Bay Region that also includes Saginaw, Bay City, Midland and the state’s largest Native American community, centered on the Saginaw Chippewa Isabella Reservation in Mount Pleasant.
Area residents enjoy the mix of outdoor activities, cultural events, shopping and dining options, and family attractions. Other major Michigan destinations and attractions — Lansing, Grand Rapids, Detroit, Traverse City, wineries, beaches, golf and ski resorts, and many more — are within easy reach of the city’s central location in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula.
CMU employees enjoy access to a nationally recognized wellness program along with health care and benefits that exceed regional, state and national norms.
CMU Leadership Standards:
Central Michigan University is a place where we value students and work for their success, where we act as family, and where employees are engaged, appreciated and have extraordinary opportunities to make a difference.
We intentionally maintain and strengthen the hallmark CMU culture that sets us apart from our peers by expecting CMU leaders and employees to model the following Leadership Standards and develop them within their teams.
Please review the https://www.cmich.edu/docs/default-source/president's-division/president's-office/leadershipstandards_posterb36018d4-e03b-4687-b885-e28376513297.pdf?sfvrsn=eb2e2255_3 before applying for this position.
Message to Applicants:
Central Michigan University is dedicated to fostering a broadly diverse and inclusive campus that respects all social identities, experiences, and perspectives. In an effort to further this initiative, we are especially interested in candidates who will advance and promote an inclusive and supportive environment for every member of our university community.
You must submit an on-line application in order to be considered as an applicant for this position.
Cover letters may be addressed to the Hiring Committee.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to submit recommendation letters.
If there is another applicable document you wish to include that is not required, please utilize Other Document (1).
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5603167
CMU , an AA/EO institution, strongly and actively strives to increase diversity and provide equal opportunity within its community. CMU does not discriminate against persons based on age, color, disability, ethnicity, familial status, gender, gender expression, gender identity, genetic information, height, marital status, national origin, political persuasion, pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions, race, religion, sex, sex‐based stereotypes, sexual orientation, transgender status, veteran status, or weight (see https://www.cmich.edu/offices-departments/OCRIE). If you wish to see “EEO is the Law” posters, please https://www.cmich.edu/docs/default-source/president's-division/ocrie/eeo-is-the-law-poster.pdf?sfvrsn=8ae1a123_10. CMU does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the education program or activity that it operates, including admission and employment, and is required by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 not to discriminate in such a matter. Inquiries about the application of Title IX can be made to CMU’s Title IX Coordinator, the US Department of Education’s Assistant Secretary, or both. CMU’s Title IX Coordinator can be reached at:
Phone: 989-774-3253 Office: 103 E. Preston St. Bovee University Center, suite 306 Mount Pleasant, MI 48858 Email: titleix@cmich.edu
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and one year of related environmental experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Acceptable (equivalent) Education/Experience: Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and 1 year environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Associate's degree (2 years) and 3 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) High School diploma or equivalent and 5 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Position Summary This is an entry-level professional position that may include work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: coordination and performance activities of environmental programs, compliance review and inspection of environmentally affected sites, implementation of land management activities and environmental site evaluation, environmental regulation research, field sampling and testing, hazardous materials collection or management, public education activities, and record-keeping and data coordination. Depending on the hiring division, the employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for conducting various compliance reviews and inspections, field sampling, drafting enforcement action, reviewing data for permits, testifying at administrative hearings, assessing, monitoring and managing natural areas as needed. Responsibilities will vary according to division assignment within the Environmental Protection Department (EPD): Water Resources, Pollution Prevention or Land Conservation; or Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department (SWRR): Hazardous Waste. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. May conduct periodic compliance inspections of areas, facilities, and/or activities that come under environmental regulation and review permit and compliance status. At the direction of supervisor, investigates complaints from citizens regarding alleged hazardous or unsafe environmental conditions. Researches and assists in development of new and/or existing environmental regulations and education materials. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery in order to carry out various Environmental Protection operations. May assist with land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Water Resources Division Performs inspections of groundwater wells, surface waters, wastewater treatment facilities and other environmentally affected sites for compliance with regulations or planning or monitoring purposes. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for compliance with applicable codes and ordinances. Refers unsuccessful enforcement attempts to supervisor for review and follow-up. May draft Warning Notices if needed. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with special projects and grants for water quality and water conservation which may involve data collection, summary, and report writing. Assists with implementation of the Alachua County Water Quality Code, including irrigation elements. Assists with public outreach programs. Pollution Prevention Division for EPD (includes Petroleum Management and Hazardous Materials) and Hazardous Waste Collection Division for SWRR: Collects, receives and processes for proper recycling/disposal hazardous wastes, household and automotive chemicals, paints solvents and electronic scrap from households and small businesses. Inspects and maintains hazardous waste collection areas to ensure compliance with regulations and standard operating procedures in order to maintain safe and environmentally responsible handling of hazardous materials. Operates, on a frequent basis, a forklift and truck to transport drums of hazardous waste materials. Coordinates the request for and receipt of information necessary to obtain operating, installation and closure permits. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders to coordinate remediation of spills. Land Conservation Division Implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas under higher-level supervision, including exotic plant control, prescribed burning, forestry, data collection, site development, monitoring, maintenance and security. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for project implementation. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with drafting scopes of services and overseeing contractors. Evaluates natural areas for acquisition and management; performs conservation easement compliance inspections and public outreach activities. Assists with the development of management plans and outreach materials. Operates and transports light or medium equipment such as farm tractors to prep lines for prescribed burning and/or debris clean up, chippers, and skid steer for restoration projects in addition to small equipment such as chainsaws. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Knowledge of codes, laws and environmental program rules and requirements related to area of environmental coverage. Knowledge of environmental sampling techniques, sampling equipment and quality control procedures in field activities applicable to Water Resources and Land Conservation divisions within the Environmental Protection Department . Knowledge of local, state and federal rules, regulations and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of local flora and fauna, as it relates to Land Conservation division within the Environmental Protection Department. Knowledge of computer, word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems as applicable. Skill in dealing effectively with facility owners, governmental officials and citizens. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles. Ability to follow standard operating procedures and compile routine reports and maintain accurate records. Ability to operate field monitoring, sampling, and/or material handling equipment including a forklift after a suitable training period. Ability to implement resource management techniques, utilize related equipment and follow safety procedures, including the proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with County employees, other governmental agencies and the general public. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand and walk. The employee frequently is required to use hands to finger, handle or feel; talk or hear; and taste or smell. The employee occasionally is required to sit; climb or balance; and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl. The employee must frequently lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in outside weather conditions and is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles. The employee occasionally works near moving mechanical parts and is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals and risk of electrical shock. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and one year of related environmental experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Acceptable (equivalent) Education/Experience: Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and 1 year environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Associate's degree (2 years) and 3 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) High School diploma or equivalent and 5 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Position Summary This is an entry-level professional position that may include work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: coordination and performance activities of environmental programs, compliance review and inspection of environmentally affected sites, implementation of land management activities and environmental site evaluation, environmental regulation research, field sampling and testing, hazardous materials collection or management, public education activities, and record-keeping and data coordination. Depending on the hiring division, the employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for conducting various compliance reviews and inspections, field sampling, drafting enforcement action, reviewing data for permits, testifying at administrative hearings, assessing, monitoring and managing natural areas as needed. Responsibilities will vary according to division assignment within the Environmental Protection Department (EPD): Water Resources, Pollution Prevention or Land Conservation; or Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department (SWRR): Hazardous Waste. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. May conduct periodic compliance inspections of areas, facilities, and/or activities that come under environmental regulation and review permit and compliance status. At the direction of supervisor, investigates complaints from citizens regarding alleged hazardous or unsafe environmental conditions. Researches and assists in development of new and/or existing environmental regulations and education materials. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery in order to carry out various Environmental Protection operations. May assist with land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Water Resources Division Performs inspections of groundwater wells, surface waters, wastewater treatment facilities and other environmentally affected sites for compliance with regulations or planning or monitoring purposes. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for compliance with applicable codes and ordinances. Refers unsuccessful enforcement attempts to supervisor for review and follow-up. May draft Warning Notices if needed. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with special projects and grants for water quality and water conservation which may involve data collection, summary, and report writing. Assists with implementation of the Alachua County Water Quality Code, including irrigation elements. Assists with public outreach programs. Pollution Prevention Division for EPD (includes Petroleum Management and Hazardous Materials) and Hazardous Waste Collection Division for SWRR: Collects, receives and processes for proper recycling/disposal hazardous wastes, household and automotive chemicals, paints solvents and electronic scrap from households and small businesses. Inspects and maintains hazardous waste collection areas to ensure compliance with regulations and standard operating procedures in order to maintain safe and environmentally responsible handling of hazardous materials. Operates, on a frequent basis, a forklift and truck to transport drums of hazardous waste materials. Coordinates the request for and receipt of information necessary to obtain operating, installation and closure permits. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders to coordinate remediation of spills. Land Conservation Division Implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas under higher-level supervision, including exotic plant control, prescribed burning, forestry, data collection, site development, monitoring, maintenance and security. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for project implementation. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with drafting scopes of services and overseeing contractors. Evaluates natural areas for acquisition and management; performs conservation easement compliance inspections and public outreach activities. Assists with the development of management plans and outreach materials. Operates and transports light or medium equipment such as farm tractors to prep lines for prescribed burning and/or debris clean up, chippers, and skid steer for restoration projects in addition to small equipment such as chainsaws. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Knowledge of codes, laws and environmental program rules and requirements related to area of environmental coverage. Knowledge of environmental sampling techniques, sampling equipment and quality control procedures in field activities applicable to Water Resources and Land Conservation divisions within the Environmental Protection Department . Knowledge of local, state and federal rules, regulations and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of local flora and fauna, as it relates to Land Conservation division within the Environmental Protection Department. Knowledge of computer, word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems as applicable. Skill in dealing effectively with facility owners, governmental officials and citizens. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles. Ability to follow standard operating procedures and compile routine reports and maintain accurate records. Ability to operate field monitoring, sampling, and/or material handling equipment including a forklift after a suitable training period. Ability to implement resource management techniques, utilize related equipment and follow safety procedures, including the proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with County employees, other governmental agencies and the general public. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand and walk. The employee frequently is required to use hands to finger, handle or feel; talk or hear; and taste or smell. The employee occasionally is required to sit; climb or balance; and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl. The employee must frequently lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in outside weather conditions and is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles. The employee occasionally works near moving mechanical parts and is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals and risk of electrical shock. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
University of California, Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz, CA, USA
Director of Medical Services
JOB POSTING
Update as of 8/7/2024: The salary range for the Director of Medical Services has increased to $310,000-$385,000/annually. Salary commensurate with skills, qualifications and experience.
Student Health Services is hiring our new Director of Medical Services! Come to Santa Cruz, California, and join a team of dedicated health care professionals serving students at the University of California Santa Cruz. Provide clinical service and leadership in a beautiful redwood forest surrounded by ocean views, wildlife and fresh air.
Our Medical Director will be a licensed physician who is passionate about and committed to serving the medical needs of a diverse college student population by providing direct service and leading a team of well experienced clinicians ensuring the highest quality of medical care for students.
If desired, opportunities available for this position include:
• Both on campus and remote work • Relocation Expense reimbursement, when eligibility guidelines are met
UC Santa Cruz staff have access to comprehensive benefits packages. Here is sample of benefits:
• Medical, Dental & Vision Care Insurance Plans • UC Retirement Plan • Group Term Life Insurance • Legal Insurance • Pet Insurance • 13 Paid Holidays plus accrued vacation and sick leave
For more information on the comprehensive benefits package offered by the university
visit: https://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.htmlhttps://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.htmlhttps://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.htmlhttps://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.html
Thank you for your interest in UC Santa Cruz.
HOW TO APPLY
For full consideration, applicants should attach their resume and cover letter when applying for a job opening. For guidance related to the application process or if you are experiencing difficulties when applying, please review the https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/index.html on our Talent Acquisition website.
• https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/how-to-apply/index.html • https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/troubleshooting.html • https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/tips-for-applicants/index.html • https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/Frequently-Asked-Questions/index.html
INITIAL REVIEW DATE (IRD)
Application materials submitted by 11:59 pm on the IRD will be routed to the hiring unit for consideration. Materials submitted after the IRD will ONLY be forwarded at the request of the hiring unit. To ensure your application is routed for consideration, submit your materials before 11:59 p.m. on the IRD. Talent Acquisition cannot accept application materials outside of the jobs portal, and is unable to update submitted applications on an applicant's behalf, or forward communications to the hiring units. For more information about the IRD and the applicant review process, https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/ird-and-applicant-review-process.html.
The IRD for this job is: 08-28-2024
ABOUT UC SANTA CRUZ
UC Santa Cruz is a public university like no other in California, combining the experience of a small, liberal arts college with the depth and rigor of a major research university. It's known as an unconventional place where innovation and experimentation is part of the campus's DNA. That playful, bold spirit still thrives today, all on a campus renowned as among the most beautiful in the world.
DEPARTMENT OVERVIEW
UC Santa Cruz (UCSC) Student Health Services (SHS) is a full-service medical facility offering clinical, educational, and psychological support to UCSC students. SHS is deeply committed to ensuring affordable, well-integrated, multidisciplinary healthcare that effectively supports the university’s diverse campus communities, through equitable access and culturally competent, high-quality programs and services.
The Primary Care Program includes primary care and same-day care, with the support of on-site radiology, a COLA-accredited clinical laboratory, and a campus pharmacy. Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) supports UCSC students to maintain or improve their general well-being by providing a broad range of counseling, psychiatric services, consultation, and outreach services and programs.
Other departments include Student Health Outreach and Promotion (SHOP), home of the Condom Co-op; CARE (Campus Advocacy, Resources, and Empowerment) the advocacy and prevention education office that supports survivors of sexual assault, stalking, and dating/domestic violence; and Student Insurance Programs.
Student Health Services employs approximately 150 staff including physicians, psychiatrists, case managers, lab scientists, pharmacists, nurses, radiologists, and many other clinical and administrative staff. Student Health and Wellness welcomes staff with interest and experience in working with students with a wide range of ethnic, cultural, and gender identities.
More information can be found at: https://healthcenter.ucsc.edu
JOB SUMMARY
Under the general direction of the Associate Vice Chancellor/Executive Director of Student Health and Wellness Chief Well Being Officer, the Director of Medical Services (Medical Director) has primary responsibility for medical care at UCSC Student Health Services. As the senior clinical leader and member of the senior administrative staff, the Director of Medical Services promotes and assures quality clinical services across the student health facility and provides strategic direction. The Director of Medical Services plans, develops, coordinates, and assesses the health service.
In addition to medical services, the Director provides senior strategic leadership in the design, development, implementation, coordination, assessment, and continuous improvement of health-related programs and services for students. This includes collaborative efforts of medical, psychological, and psychiatric services, providing health leadership on known and emerging issues relevant to the health, safety, and well-being of students. The Director of Medical Services also spends a portion of their time providing direct clinical care to patients.
As Director of Medical Services, this position provides consultative support and supervision for the clinical staff, leadership in developing and implementing clinical policies and procedures, and is a member of the Student Health Services management team. The Director oversees all medical care provided by SHS physicians, Nurse Practitioners, and Physician Assistants, either through direct or delegated supervision, and indirectly supervises all other staff involved in the delivery of medical care to students. The Director directly oversees the Associate Medical Director (NP/PA Supervisor) Clinic Director (Nurse Supervisor), Lab Director, Dietician, and X-Ray operations.
APPOINTMENT INFORMATION
Budgeted Salary: $310,000-$385,000/annually. Salary commensurate with skills, qualifications and experience. Under California law, the University of California, Santa Cruz is required to post a reasonable estimate of the compensation for this role. The salary shown above is the budgeted amount the University reasonably expects to pay and the salary extended should not exceed this posted amount.
Benefits Level Eligibility: Full benefits
Schedule Information:
• Full-time, Fixed • Percentage of Time: 100%, 40 Hours per Week • Days of the Week: Mon-Fri • Shift Includes: Day
Employee Classification: Career appointment
Job End Date: None
Work Location: UC Santa Cruz Main Campus
Union Representation: Non-Represented
Job Code Classification: 000587 (PHYSCN SHS MGR 2) Grade 31
Travel: Never or Rarely
JOB DUTIES
25% - Leadership and Management
• Provide overall leadership for medical practice, clinical quality improvement, delivery of clinical services, and continuing medical and professional education for providers at Student Health Services (SHS). • Provide high-quality, cost-effective, and accessible primary care, specialty care, ancillary services, and medical/pharmaceutical products to the student campus community through an appropriate combination of services and expertise, off-campus consultation and specialty care, insurance contracts, and income-generating operations. • Direct and oversee clinical services at Student Health Services: Provide oversight and medical consultation to all SHS physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, nurses, ancillary services, or other clinical support staff involved in direct patient care. • Provide medical consultation and review for laboratory, radiology, pharmacy, travel clinic, nutrition, health education, optometry, and insurance. Provide ongoing analysis and monitoring of patient scheduling systems to ensure patient needs are met. • Set and interpret goals, directions, policies and procedures, and operational processes, as well as assess interactions of all areas/departments within SHS in the provision of quality medical services. • Plan for potential crises and ensure business continuity in the event of building or system disruptions or a pandemic event. • Confer with other campus departments, medical groups, and the Santa Cruz County Public Health Department on the health care needs of students or public health issues. • Maintain contact with other student health directors in and outside of the UC system and the Office of the President, regarding student health care issues. Serve as needed on campus-wide and system-wide committees, and represent UCSC on initiatives and efforts related to oversight of Student Health Centers at the Office of the President. Collaborate closely with other members of the Student Health Services cluster to ensure seamless delivery of services to students. • Participate in UC statewide SHS Directors meetings and projects to ensure appropriate program assessment, benchmarking, communications with UCOP, and sharing of best practices. • Provide oversight for the on-campus Student Health Services Insurance plans and referral processes. • Ensure compliance with state and federal regulations to maintain state licensures for the pharmacy, clinical laboratory, and x-ray. • Collaborate with the other directors to maintain accreditation by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC) or other nationally recognized accrediting agencies for purposes of ensuring the quality of care that meets recognized standards in the medical community. • Participate as a colleague with all members of the senior management team for joint management decisions, and provide medical leadership for management team decisions and program priorities. • Maintain a positive working relationship with the campus staff and campus community. Demonstrate behavioral standards expected of medical professionals and customer service staff, and lead by example. Serve as a role model and perform effectively in a service environment.
25% - Program Management
Program Development:
• Direct program development including active participation in and support of campus wellness initiatives, evaluation of existing services, and their modification or addition designed to maximize the well-being of students attending UCSC. • Oversee provision of primary medical care and patient education to promote self-care and develop knowledgeable healthcare consumers through a wide range of health-related education and outreach activities. Establish benchmarks for evaluating the status of student health and trends. Conduct assessments and studies to evaluate services, service needs, and the status of student health. • Coordinate with the AVC for Student Health and Wellness, Directors of SHOP (Student Health Outreach and Prevention), CAPS (Counseling and Psychological Services), Psychiatry, and CARE (Advocate Office for Sexual and Gender-Based Violence and Sexual Misconduct) on policy and program issues to provide integrated, comprehensive patient care services. Specifically, collaborate with SHOP to provide integrated services in areas such as sleep, nutrition and healthy eating, sexual health, and screening for alcohol and other substance abuse; CAPS, Psychiatry, and Case Management to provide integrated services for patients; and with CARE to support and improve the care for students utilizing their services.
Clinical Quality Improvement:
• Direct the Quality Assurance (QA) Program, including the Risk Management Program, utilization review, case management, peer review, trend reports, and staff education. • Provide leadership to the senior management team regarding quality improvement opportunities, medical service improvements, patient accessibility to services, and emerging health trends. • In collaboration with the Quality Assurance Manager, perform independent clinical audits, oversee and participate in activities of the Quality Assurance, Peer Review Committees, and benchmarking studies with other UC student health centers to ensure delivery of high-quality medical care at Student Health Services (SHS). • Participate on the credentialing committee responsible for credentialing and privileging of all licensed health care providers at SHS, including physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, pharmacists, optometrists, registered nurses, psychologists, psychiatrists, LCSW, MFT, and radiologic/laboratory technicians. • Coordinate with the QA Manager/Chair to prepare and submit incident reports, implement corrective actions as necessary, and on all risk management activities related to the provision of clinical care. • Review and respond to patient complaints regarding medical care, provision of services, accessibility, and insurance/referral issues. Notify the AVC of potential risk matters. • Coordinate with the supervisors and managers and answer correspondence related to the medical care of students or staff, including reports to public health and other agencies. • Public Health Response and Communicable Disease Management: • Contribute to Campus protocols, supervise clinical response teams; and provide guidance to pandemic nurses, residence staff, and dining. Cover night and weekend concerns cases, where applicable, and act as Medical Consultant to Child Care, CHES, EH&S, Athletics, and Workers Comp, especially regarding pandemic cases and exposures. • Supervise and provide consultation to lab and providers on the best options for lab tests. Add and remove Quest and in-house lab tests based on the latest data. • Conduct Office of Health and Human Services (OHSS) OHSS Assessments: review and approve clearances for animal workers. • Provide leadership for the integrated care of students in need of behavioral health services.
25% - Clinic supervision
• Oversee all medical care provided by SHS physicians, Nurse Practitioners, and Physician Assistants, either through direct or delegated supervision. Indirectly supervise all other staff involved in the delivery of medical care to students. • Encourage and train SHS staff in the continuous development of customer service orientation and focus on the provision of high-quality, cost-effective, and accessible medical care for the students of UCSC. • Recruit, screen applications, interview candidates, and select medical staff in accordance with State and Federal laws, university personnel policies, affirmative action goals, and SHS policies and procedures. • Support UCSC's Principles of Community and Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action programs as they apply to medical staff recruitment, selection, and administration. • Train and assign work to new and continuing employees. Routinely assess staff capabilities and workload, monitoring productivity and redistributing work when necessary. Identify areas that need backup support. • Independently provide supervision and conduct performance evaluations. Clearly communicate job expectations, and monitor performance and progress. Provide guidance on performance standards and University procedures. Determine what discipline should be imposed for subordinates, with authority to apply such, and/or recommend the same to higher level management. Contribute to developing and presenting positions for collective bargaining. • Provide leadership for and support clinician continuing education and professional development for medical staff.
25% - Direct Care
• Provide general and consultative medical care to students, consisting of diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic illness or injury. • Establish and record medical history and exam, assessment, treatment, and prognosis in an electronic medical record system. • Order and interpret lab tests, x-rays, and other diagnostic studies. • Assume responsibility for assigned patients until care is transferred. Consult with and provide referrals to specialists as necessary. • Perform minor procedures, such as laceration repair, incision and drainage, removal of foreign bodies, toenail surgeries, and excision or biopsy of minor lesions. • Provide care in medical emergencies, including CPR, and administration of medications. • Actively promote disease prevention and health promotion activities, including patient education activities on wellness, sexually transmitted diseases, mental health, and substance abuse. • Maintain confidentiality of patients, students, and staff.
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS
• Graduation from a class A accredited school of medicine with the degree of Medical Doctor (MD) or Graduation from a class A accredited school of osteopathy with the degree of Doctor of Osteopathy (DO) • Must be Licensed MD or DO in State of California in good standing; See Special Conditions of Employment for further requirements. • At least 5 years clinical experience in an ambulatory care clinic or similar practice, urgent care or private practice. • Demonstrated management experience in a large complex healthcare facility with proven ability to analyze, interpret and apply management principles, practices and techniques in the conduct of business. • Thorough knowledge of administration of ambulatory healthcare, psychological counseling and student service facilities. Knowledge of management theory and practice in complex healthcare organizations. • Leadership, supervisory and consensus building skills with the knowledge to act within University regulations and in the best interest of the unit. Proven ability to manage crisis situations and effectively facilitate and resolve interpersonal conflicts. Demonstrated skill in problem solving and mediation among competing influences. • Demonstrated knowledge and skill in supervision and organizational management. Skill in recruitment, selection, evaluation, delegation, development, motivation, reward and discipline. • Well-developed and proven skill to develop relationships, interact and communicate with diverse groups of people, using tact, sound judgment, diplomacy and flexibility. Skill to communicate effectively with students, staff, medical providers, faculty, visitors, parents and external contacts. Skill to create and present informational or training programs for medical providers, staff, students or other groups. • Demonstrated ability to approach complex problems, such as scarce resources, creatively and with innovation, proposing and implementing solutions that satisfy diverse needs and demands of individuals and/or units. Ability to independently make decisions and initiate actions. Ability to exercise sound professional judgment. • Ability to develop realistic goals and objectives and determine priorities among many competing demands. Ability to systematically break multidimensional problems or processes into component parts and to use analytical techniques to identify solutions. Ability and willingness to develop, and work as part of a collaborative team to achieve common objectives. Skill to participate effectively on committee assignments • Demonstrated skill to practice emergency medicine, perform minor surgery, and wound care. Skill to provide consultation to health care providers. Skill to serve a large volume of patients rapidly and effectively by appointment or on a walk-in basis within set time limits. Demonstrated skill to record in an orderly and logical manner the history, exam, assessment, treatment plan, patient education, and other information related to patient care in the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) system. Demonstrated ability to maintain confidentiality. • Working knowledge of public and preventive health principles and practices. Knowledge of private and group medical practice; federal and state laws regarding medical records, student information management, right to privacy and confidentiality (including HIPAA and FERPA) and CLIA requirements as stipulated in Federal and California Laws. Knowledge of health insurance benefit structures and claim procedures. • Demonstrated skill in the use of word processing, spreadsheet, database, email, medical information and web software. Intermediate or advanced skill in use of (some or all) MS Excel, Word, Outlook, Internet Explorer, and electronic medical records systems.
PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS
• At least 3 years administrative experience including direct supervision and personnel management. • Experience supervising staff and making personnel decisions in a collective bargaining environment. • Knowledge of community resources and public health requirements of the county of Santa Cruz and the State of California. • Board Certification in Family Medicine (See Special Conditions of Employment for additional information on licensure and board certification requirements) • Knowledge of age-specific health education goals and strategies, including both preventive and emergency interventions. • Prior experience providing and/or administering health care and services on a university campus. • Proven knowledge of good laboratory practices and applicable CLIA regulations for maintaining a safe and healthy laboratory work environment. • Demonstrated understanding of quality and proficiency standards for in house laboratory tests resulting in accurate and reliable patient test results. • Proven knowledge for control of quality, radiation safety, and technical aspects of all X-ray examinations and procedures. • Strong understanding of the Environmental Health and Safety (EH&S) requirements for laboratory and medical X-ray safety and a working knowledge of the rules and procedures regulating these requirements.
SPECIAL CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT
• Must be Licensed MD or DO in State of California in good standing • Current valid federal controlled substance registration (DEA certificate) • BLS Certified or the ability to become BLS certified within 6 months of hire (unit will sponsor such training) • Must be Board Certified in Primary Care Specialty, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, or Emergency Medicine • Graduate of an accredited medical or osteopathic school. • Must possess a current CPR certificate. • Selected candidate will be required to successfully complete a pre-hire criminal history background check and a pre-hire credentialing check. • Selected candidate will be required to take a TB test within 60 days of hire. • Complete HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accessibility) training within 30 days of hire • Selected candidate will be required to complete training within established time frames as directed including UC compliance training. • The selected candidate will be required to work primarily on campus, with periods of remote work possible based on operational needs. If a hybrid work schedule is confirmed, the selected candidate must be able to work successfully from a home/remote office and be able to fulfill the requirements of the UCSC telecommuting agreement. Ability to work occasional evenings and weekends as directed. Ability to respond to emergencies after hours as necessary. • Clery Act: This position has been identified as a Campus Security Authority (CSA); required to report crimes, incidents, and disciplinary referral statistics as required by the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (20 USC § 1092(f)). • Ability to wear proper safety attire (long pants, closed-toe shoes, etc.) and personal protective equipment common in a laboratory setting. • Ability to read signs and follow directions on labels that are written in English as well as ability to read and understand Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) and the proper use of chemical compounds. • Ability to maintain appearance and conduct suitable for working in a professional setting. • Must comply with current care workers as defined by state and federal regulatory agencies; current health safety requirements to be discussed during interview. • The University of California has implemented a https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/5000695/VaccinationProgramsPolicy covering all employees. Employees, including new hires, are required to comply with any applicable policies relating to the University of California vaccine program. • Per the Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act (CANRA), this position has been identified as a Mandated Reporter. The selected candidate will be required to report known or suspected child abuse or neglect as defined by CANRA and will be required to sign a Statement Acknowledging Requirement to Report Child Abuse prior to commencing employment. CANRA Penal Codes, and related definitions, requirements, and responsibilities may be obtainedhttps://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayText.xhtml?lawCode=PEN&division=&title=1.&part=4.&chapter=2.&article=2.5https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayText.xhtml?lawCode=PEN&division=&title=1.&part=4.&chapter=2.&article=2.5.
SAFETY STATEMENT
All UCSC employees must understand and follow job safety procedures, attend required health and safety training, proactively promote safety at work, and promptly report actual and potential accidents and injuries.
EEO/AA
The University of California is an Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status. UC Santa Cruz is committed to excellence through diversity and strives to establish a climate that welcomes, celebrates, and promotes respect for the contributions of all students and employees.
For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4010393/PPSM-20
For the University of California’s Anti-Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/Anti-Discrimination
APPLICANTS ARE REQUIRED TO USE THE UCSC ON-LINE PROCESS View full job description and access on-line application: https://apptrkr.com/5483561
Full Time
Director of Medical Services
JOB POSTING
Update as of 8/7/2024: The salary range for the Director of Medical Services has increased to $310,000-$385,000/annually. Salary commensurate with skills, qualifications and experience.
Student Health Services is hiring our new Director of Medical Services! Come to Santa Cruz, California, and join a team of dedicated health care professionals serving students at the University of California Santa Cruz. Provide clinical service and leadership in a beautiful redwood forest surrounded by ocean views, wildlife and fresh air.
Our Medical Director will be a licensed physician who is passionate about and committed to serving the medical needs of a diverse college student population by providing direct service and leading a team of well experienced clinicians ensuring the highest quality of medical care for students.
If desired, opportunities available for this position include:
• Both on campus and remote work • Relocation Expense reimbursement, when eligibility guidelines are met
UC Santa Cruz staff have access to comprehensive benefits packages. Here is sample of benefits:
• Medical, Dental & Vision Care Insurance Plans • UC Retirement Plan • Group Term Life Insurance • Legal Insurance • Pet Insurance • 13 Paid Holidays plus accrued vacation and sick leave
For more information on the comprehensive benefits package offered by the university
visit: https://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.htmlhttps://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.htmlhttps://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.htmlhttps://ucnet.universityofcalifornia.edu/compensation-and-benefits/index.html
Thank you for your interest in UC Santa Cruz.
HOW TO APPLY
For full consideration, applicants should attach their resume and cover letter when applying for a job opening. For guidance related to the application process or if you are experiencing difficulties when applying, please review the https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/index.html on our Talent Acquisition website.
• https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/how-to-apply/index.html • https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/troubleshooting.html • https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/tips-for-applicants/index.html • https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/Frequently-Asked-Questions/index.html
INITIAL REVIEW DATE (IRD)
Application materials submitted by 11:59 pm on the IRD will be routed to the hiring unit for consideration. Materials submitted after the IRD will ONLY be forwarded at the request of the hiring unit. To ensure your application is routed for consideration, submit your materials before 11:59 p.m. on the IRD. Talent Acquisition cannot accept application materials outside of the jobs portal, and is unable to update submitted applications on an applicant's behalf, or forward communications to the hiring units. For more information about the IRD and the applicant review process, https://shr.ucsc.edu/talent-acquisition/applicant_resources/ird-and-applicant-review-process.html.
The IRD for this job is: 08-28-2024
ABOUT UC SANTA CRUZ
UC Santa Cruz is a public university like no other in California, combining the experience of a small, liberal arts college with the depth and rigor of a major research university. It's known as an unconventional place where innovation and experimentation is part of the campus's DNA. That playful, bold spirit still thrives today, all on a campus renowned as among the most beautiful in the world.
DEPARTMENT OVERVIEW
UC Santa Cruz (UCSC) Student Health Services (SHS) is a full-service medical facility offering clinical, educational, and psychological support to UCSC students. SHS is deeply committed to ensuring affordable, well-integrated, multidisciplinary healthcare that effectively supports the university’s diverse campus communities, through equitable access and culturally competent, high-quality programs and services.
The Primary Care Program includes primary care and same-day care, with the support of on-site radiology, a COLA-accredited clinical laboratory, and a campus pharmacy. Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) supports UCSC students to maintain or improve their general well-being by providing a broad range of counseling, psychiatric services, consultation, and outreach services and programs.
Other departments include Student Health Outreach and Promotion (SHOP), home of the Condom Co-op; CARE (Campus Advocacy, Resources, and Empowerment) the advocacy and prevention education office that supports survivors of sexual assault, stalking, and dating/domestic violence; and Student Insurance Programs.
Student Health Services employs approximately 150 staff including physicians, psychiatrists, case managers, lab scientists, pharmacists, nurses, radiologists, and many other clinical and administrative staff. Student Health and Wellness welcomes staff with interest and experience in working with students with a wide range of ethnic, cultural, and gender identities.
More information can be found at: https://healthcenter.ucsc.edu
JOB SUMMARY
Under the general direction of the Associate Vice Chancellor/Executive Director of Student Health and Wellness Chief Well Being Officer, the Director of Medical Services (Medical Director) has primary responsibility for medical care at UCSC Student Health Services. As the senior clinical leader and member of the senior administrative staff, the Director of Medical Services promotes and assures quality clinical services across the student health facility and provides strategic direction. The Director of Medical Services plans, develops, coordinates, and assesses the health service.
In addition to medical services, the Director provides senior strategic leadership in the design, development, implementation, coordination, assessment, and continuous improvement of health-related programs and services for students. This includes collaborative efforts of medical, psychological, and psychiatric services, providing health leadership on known and emerging issues relevant to the health, safety, and well-being of students. The Director of Medical Services also spends a portion of their time providing direct clinical care to patients.
As Director of Medical Services, this position provides consultative support and supervision for the clinical staff, leadership in developing and implementing clinical policies and procedures, and is a member of the Student Health Services management team. The Director oversees all medical care provided by SHS physicians, Nurse Practitioners, and Physician Assistants, either through direct or delegated supervision, and indirectly supervises all other staff involved in the delivery of medical care to students. The Director directly oversees the Associate Medical Director (NP/PA Supervisor) Clinic Director (Nurse Supervisor), Lab Director, Dietician, and X-Ray operations.
APPOINTMENT INFORMATION
Budgeted Salary: $310,000-$385,000/annually. Salary commensurate with skills, qualifications and experience. Under California law, the University of California, Santa Cruz is required to post a reasonable estimate of the compensation for this role. The salary shown above is the budgeted amount the University reasonably expects to pay and the salary extended should not exceed this posted amount.
Benefits Level Eligibility: Full benefits
Schedule Information:
• Full-time, Fixed • Percentage of Time: 100%, 40 Hours per Week • Days of the Week: Mon-Fri • Shift Includes: Day
Employee Classification: Career appointment
Job End Date: None
Work Location: UC Santa Cruz Main Campus
Union Representation: Non-Represented
Job Code Classification: 000587 (PHYSCN SHS MGR 2) Grade 31
Travel: Never or Rarely
JOB DUTIES
25% - Leadership and Management
• Provide overall leadership for medical practice, clinical quality improvement, delivery of clinical services, and continuing medical and professional education for providers at Student Health Services (SHS). • Provide high-quality, cost-effective, and accessible primary care, specialty care, ancillary services, and medical/pharmaceutical products to the student campus community through an appropriate combination of services and expertise, off-campus consultation and specialty care, insurance contracts, and income-generating operations. • Direct and oversee clinical services at Student Health Services: Provide oversight and medical consultation to all SHS physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, nurses, ancillary services, or other clinical support staff involved in direct patient care. • Provide medical consultation and review for laboratory, radiology, pharmacy, travel clinic, nutrition, health education, optometry, and insurance. Provide ongoing analysis and monitoring of patient scheduling systems to ensure patient needs are met. • Set and interpret goals, directions, policies and procedures, and operational processes, as well as assess interactions of all areas/departments within SHS in the provision of quality medical services. • Plan for potential crises and ensure business continuity in the event of building or system disruptions or a pandemic event. • Confer with other campus departments, medical groups, and the Santa Cruz County Public Health Department on the health care needs of students or public health issues. • Maintain contact with other student health directors in and outside of the UC system and the Office of the President, regarding student health care issues. Serve as needed on campus-wide and system-wide committees, and represent UCSC on initiatives and efforts related to oversight of Student Health Centers at the Office of the President. Collaborate closely with other members of the Student Health Services cluster to ensure seamless delivery of services to students. • Participate in UC statewide SHS Directors meetings and projects to ensure appropriate program assessment, benchmarking, communications with UCOP, and sharing of best practices. • Provide oversight for the on-campus Student Health Services Insurance plans and referral processes. • Ensure compliance with state and federal regulations to maintain state licensures for the pharmacy, clinical laboratory, and x-ray. • Collaborate with the other directors to maintain accreditation by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC) or other nationally recognized accrediting agencies for purposes of ensuring the quality of care that meets recognized standards in the medical community. • Participate as a colleague with all members of the senior management team for joint management decisions, and provide medical leadership for management team decisions and program priorities. • Maintain a positive working relationship with the campus staff and campus community. Demonstrate behavioral standards expected of medical professionals and customer service staff, and lead by example. Serve as a role model and perform effectively in a service environment.
25% - Program Management
Program Development:
• Direct program development including active participation in and support of campus wellness initiatives, evaluation of existing services, and their modification or addition designed to maximize the well-being of students attending UCSC. • Oversee provision of primary medical care and patient education to promote self-care and develop knowledgeable healthcare consumers through a wide range of health-related education and outreach activities. Establish benchmarks for evaluating the status of student health and trends. Conduct assessments and studies to evaluate services, service needs, and the status of student health. • Coordinate with the AVC for Student Health and Wellness, Directors of SHOP (Student Health Outreach and Prevention), CAPS (Counseling and Psychological Services), Psychiatry, and CARE (Advocate Office for Sexual and Gender-Based Violence and Sexual Misconduct) on policy and program issues to provide integrated, comprehensive patient care services. Specifically, collaborate with SHOP to provide integrated services in areas such as sleep, nutrition and healthy eating, sexual health, and screening for alcohol and other substance abuse; CAPS, Psychiatry, and Case Management to provide integrated services for patients; and with CARE to support and improve the care for students utilizing their services.
Clinical Quality Improvement:
• Direct the Quality Assurance (QA) Program, including the Risk Management Program, utilization review, case management, peer review, trend reports, and staff education. • Provide leadership to the senior management team regarding quality improvement opportunities, medical service improvements, patient accessibility to services, and emerging health trends. • In collaboration with the Quality Assurance Manager, perform independent clinical audits, oversee and participate in activities of the Quality Assurance, Peer Review Committees, and benchmarking studies with other UC student health centers to ensure delivery of high-quality medical care at Student Health Services (SHS). • Participate on the credentialing committee responsible for credentialing and privileging of all licensed health care providers at SHS, including physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, pharmacists, optometrists, registered nurses, psychologists, psychiatrists, LCSW, MFT, and radiologic/laboratory technicians. • Coordinate with the QA Manager/Chair to prepare and submit incident reports, implement corrective actions as necessary, and on all risk management activities related to the provision of clinical care. • Review and respond to patient complaints regarding medical care, provision of services, accessibility, and insurance/referral issues. Notify the AVC of potential risk matters. • Coordinate with the supervisors and managers and answer correspondence related to the medical care of students or staff, including reports to public health and other agencies. • Public Health Response and Communicable Disease Management: • Contribute to Campus protocols, supervise clinical response teams; and provide guidance to pandemic nurses, residence staff, and dining. Cover night and weekend concerns cases, where applicable, and act as Medical Consultant to Child Care, CHES, EH&S, Athletics, and Workers Comp, especially regarding pandemic cases and exposures. • Supervise and provide consultation to lab and providers on the best options for lab tests. Add and remove Quest and in-house lab tests based on the latest data. • Conduct Office of Health and Human Services (OHSS) OHSS Assessments: review and approve clearances for animal workers. • Provide leadership for the integrated care of students in need of behavioral health services.
25% - Clinic supervision
• Oversee all medical care provided by SHS physicians, Nurse Practitioners, and Physician Assistants, either through direct or delegated supervision. Indirectly supervise all other staff involved in the delivery of medical care to students. • Encourage and train SHS staff in the continuous development of customer service orientation and focus on the provision of high-quality, cost-effective, and accessible medical care for the students of UCSC. • Recruit, screen applications, interview candidates, and select medical staff in accordance with State and Federal laws, university personnel policies, affirmative action goals, and SHS policies and procedures. • Support UCSC's Principles of Community and Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action programs as they apply to medical staff recruitment, selection, and administration. • Train and assign work to new and continuing employees. Routinely assess staff capabilities and workload, monitoring productivity and redistributing work when necessary. Identify areas that need backup support. • Independently provide supervision and conduct performance evaluations. Clearly communicate job expectations, and monitor performance and progress. Provide guidance on performance standards and University procedures. Determine what discipline should be imposed for subordinates, with authority to apply such, and/or recommend the same to higher level management. Contribute to developing and presenting positions for collective bargaining. • Provide leadership for and support clinician continuing education and professional development for medical staff.
25% - Direct Care
• Provide general and consultative medical care to students, consisting of diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic illness or injury. • Establish and record medical history and exam, assessment, treatment, and prognosis in an electronic medical record system. • Order and interpret lab tests, x-rays, and other diagnostic studies. • Assume responsibility for assigned patients until care is transferred. Consult with and provide referrals to specialists as necessary. • Perform minor procedures, such as laceration repair, incision and drainage, removal of foreign bodies, toenail surgeries, and excision or biopsy of minor lesions. • Provide care in medical emergencies, including CPR, and administration of medications. • Actively promote disease prevention and health promotion activities, including patient education activities on wellness, sexually transmitted diseases, mental health, and substance abuse. • Maintain confidentiality of patients, students, and staff.
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS
• Graduation from a class A accredited school of medicine with the degree of Medical Doctor (MD) or Graduation from a class A accredited school of osteopathy with the degree of Doctor of Osteopathy (DO) • Must be Licensed MD or DO in State of California in good standing; See Special Conditions of Employment for further requirements. • At least 5 years clinical experience in an ambulatory care clinic or similar practice, urgent care or private practice. • Demonstrated management experience in a large complex healthcare facility with proven ability to analyze, interpret and apply management principles, practices and techniques in the conduct of business. • Thorough knowledge of administration of ambulatory healthcare, psychological counseling and student service facilities. Knowledge of management theory and practice in complex healthcare organizations. • Leadership, supervisory and consensus building skills with the knowledge to act within University regulations and in the best interest of the unit. Proven ability to manage crisis situations and effectively facilitate and resolve interpersonal conflicts. Demonstrated skill in problem solving and mediation among competing influences. • Demonstrated knowledge and skill in supervision and organizational management. Skill in recruitment, selection, evaluation, delegation, development, motivation, reward and discipline. • Well-developed and proven skill to develop relationships, interact and communicate with diverse groups of people, using tact, sound judgment, diplomacy and flexibility. Skill to communicate effectively with students, staff, medical providers, faculty, visitors, parents and external contacts. Skill to create and present informational or training programs for medical providers, staff, students or other groups. • Demonstrated ability to approach complex problems, such as scarce resources, creatively and with innovation, proposing and implementing solutions that satisfy diverse needs and demands of individuals and/or units. Ability to independently make decisions and initiate actions. Ability to exercise sound professional judgment. • Ability to develop realistic goals and objectives and determine priorities among many competing demands. Ability to systematically break multidimensional problems or processes into component parts and to use analytical techniques to identify solutions. Ability and willingness to develop, and work as part of a collaborative team to achieve common objectives. Skill to participate effectively on committee assignments • Demonstrated skill to practice emergency medicine, perform minor surgery, and wound care. Skill to provide consultation to health care providers. Skill to serve a large volume of patients rapidly and effectively by appointment or on a walk-in basis within set time limits. Demonstrated skill to record in an orderly and logical manner the history, exam, assessment, treatment plan, patient education, and other information related to patient care in the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) system. Demonstrated ability to maintain confidentiality. • Working knowledge of public and preventive health principles and practices. Knowledge of private and group medical practice; federal and state laws regarding medical records, student information management, right to privacy and confidentiality (including HIPAA and FERPA) and CLIA requirements as stipulated in Federal and California Laws. Knowledge of health insurance benefit structures and claim procedures. • Demonstrated skill in the use of word processing, spreadsheet, database, email, medical information and web software. Intermediate or advanced skill in use of (some or all) MS Excel, Word, Outlook, Internet Explorer, and electronic medical records systems.
PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS
• At least 3 years administrative experience including direct supervision and personnel management. • Experience supervising staff and making personnel decisions in a collective bargaining environment. • Knowledge of community resources and public health requirements of the county of Santa Cruz and the State of California. • Board Certification in Family Medicine (See Special Conditions of Employment for additional information on licensure and board certification requirements) • Knowledge of age-specific health education goals and strategies, including both preventive and emergency interventions. • Prior experience providing and/or administering health care and services on a university campus. • Proven knowledge of good laboratory practices and applicable CLIA regulations for maintaining a safe and healthy laboratory work environment. • Demonstrated understanding of quality and proficiency standards for in house laboratory tests resulting in accurate and reliable patient test results. • Proven knowledge for control of quality, radiation safety, and technical aspects of all X-ray examinations and procedures. • Strong understanding of the Environmental Health and Safety (EH&S) requirements for laboratory and medical X-ray safety and a working knowledge of the rules and procedures regulating these requirements.
SPECIAL CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT
• Must be Licensed MD or DO in State of California in good standing • Current valid federal controlled substance registration (DEA certificate) • BLS Certified or the ability to become BLS certified within 6 months of hire (unit will sponsor such training) • Must be Board Certified in Primary Care Specialty, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, or Emergency Medicine • Graduate of an accredited medical or osteopathic school. • Must possess a current CPR certificate. • Selected candidate will be required to successfully complete a pre-hire criminal history background check and a pre-hire credentialing check. • Selected candidate will be required to take a TB test within 60 days of hire. • Complete HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accessibility) training within 30 days of hire • Selected candidate will be required to complete training within established time frames as directed including UC compliance training. • The selected candidate will be required to work primarily on campus, with periods of remote work possible based on operational needs. If a hybrid work schedule is confirmed, the selected candidate must be able to work successfully from a home/remote office and be able to fulfill the requirements of the UCSC telecommuting agreement. Ability to work occasional evenings and weekends as directed. Ability to respond to emergencies after hours as necessary. • Clery Act: This position has been identified as a Campus Security Authority (CSA); required to report crimes, incidents, and disciplinary referral statistics as required by the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (20 USC § 1092(f)). • Ability to wear proper safety attire (long pants, closed-toe shoes, etc.) and personal protective equipment common in a laboratory setting. • Ability to read signs and follow directions on labels that are written in English as well as ability to read and understand Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) and the proper use of chemical compounds. • Ability to maintain appearance and conduct suitable for working in a professional setting. • Must comply with current care workers as defined by state and federal regulatory agencies; current health safety requirements to be discussed during interview. • The University of California has implemented a https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/5000695/VaccinationProgramsPolicy covering all employees. Employees, including new hires, are required to comply with any applicable policies relating to the University of California vaccine program. • Per the Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act (CANRA), this position has been identified as a Mandated Reporter. The selected candidate will be required to report known or suspected child abuse or neglect as defined by CANRA and will be required to sign a Statement Acknowledging Requirement to Report Child Abuse prior to commencing employment. CANRA Penal Codes, and related definitions, requirements, and responsibilities may be obtainedhttps://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayText.xhtml?lawCode=PEN&division=&title=1.&part=4.&chapter=2.&article=2.5https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayText.xhtml?lawCode=PEN&division=&title=1.&part=4.&chapter=2.&article=2.5.
SAFETY STATEMENT
All UCSC employees must understand and follow job safety procedures, attend required health and safety training, proactively promote safety at work, and promptly report actual and potential accidents and injuries.
EEO/AA
The University of California is an Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status. UC Santa Cruz is committed to excellence through diversity and strives to establish a climate that welcomes, celebrates, and promotes respect for the contributions of all students and employees.
For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4010393/PPSM-20
For the University of California’s Anti-Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/Anti-Discrimination
APPLICANTS ARE REQUIRED TO USE THE UCSC ON-LINE PROCESS View full job description and access on-line application: https://apptrkr.com/5483561
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and one year of related environmental experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Acceptable (equivalent) Education/Experience: Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and 1 year environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Associate's degree (2 years) and 3 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) High School diploma or equivalent and 5 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) For the Hazardous Waste Division of the Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department: Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen & physical examination and successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Must obtain the DOT Forklift Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. Must obtain the Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPR) Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. Position Summary This is an entry-level professional position that may include work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: coordination and performance activities of environmental programs, compliance review and inspection of environmentally affected sites, implementation of land management activities and environmental site evaluation, environmental regulation research, field sampling and testing, hazardous materials collection or management, public education activities, and record-keeping and data coordination. Depending on the hiring division, the employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for conducting various compliance reviews and inspections, field sampling, drafting enforcement action, reviewing data for permits, testifying at administrative hearings, assessing, monitoring and managing natural areas as needed. Responsibilities will vary according to division assignment within the Environmental Protection Department (EPD): Water Resources, Pollution Prevention or Land Conservation; or Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department (SWRR): Hazardous Waste. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. May conduct periodic compliance inspections of areas, facilities, and/or activities that come under environmental regulation and review permit and compliance status. At the direction of supervisor, investigates complaints from citizens regarding alleged hazardous or unsafe environmental conditions. Researches and assists in development of new and/or existing environmental regulations and education materials. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery in order to carry out various Environmental Protection operations. May assist with land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Water Resources Division Performs inspections of groundwater wells, surface waters, wastewater treatment facilities and other environmentally affected sites for compliance with regulations or planning or monitoring purposes. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for compliance with applicable codes and ordinances. Refers unsuccessful enforcement attempts to supervisor for review and follow-up. May draft Warning Notices if needed. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with special projects and grants for water quality and water conservation which may involve data collection, summary, and report writing. Assists with implementation of the Alachua County Water Quality Code, including irrigation elements. Assists with public outreach programs. Pollution Prevention Division for EPD (includes Petroleum Management and Hazardous Materials) and Hazardous Waste Collection Division for SWRR: Collects, receives and processes for proper recycling/disposal hazardous wastes, household and automotive chemicals, paints solvents and electronic scrap from households and small businesses. Inspects and maintains hazardous waste collection areas to ensure compliance with regulations and standard operating procedures in order to maintain safe and environmentally responsible handling of hazardous materials. Operates, on a frequent basis, a forklift and truck to transport drums of hazardous waste materials. Coordinates the request for and receipt of information necessary to obtain operating, installation and closure permits. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders to coordinate remediation of spills. Land Conservation Division Implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas under higher-level supervision, including exotic plant control, prescribed burning, forestry, data collection, site development, monitoring, maintenance and security. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for project implementation. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with drafting scopes of services and overseeing contractors. Evaluates natural areas for acquisition and management; performs conservation easement compliance inspections and public outreach activities. Assists with the development of management plans and outreach materials. Operates and transports light or medium equipment such as farm tractors to prep lines for prescribed burning and/or debris clean up, chippers, and skid steer for restoration projects in addition to small equipment such as chainsaws. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Knowledge of codes, laws and environmental program rules and requirements related to area of environmental coverage. Knowledge of environmental sampling techniques, sampling equipment and quality control procedures in field activities applicable to Water Resources and Land Conservation divisions within the Environmental Protection Department . Knowledge of local, state and federal rules, regulations and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of local flora and fauna, as it relates to Land Conservation division within the Environmental Protection Department. Knowledge of computer, word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems as applicable. Skill in dealing effectively with facility owners, governmental officials and citizens. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles. Ability to follow standard operating procedures and compile routine reports and maintain accurate records. Ability to operate field monitoring, sampling, and/or material handling equipment including a forklift after a suitable training period. Ability to implement resource management techniques, utilize related equipment and follow safety procedures, including the proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with County employees, other governmental agencies and the general public. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand and walk. The employee frequently is required to use hands to finger, handle or feel; talk or hear; and taste or smell. The employee occasionally is required to sit; climb or balance; and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl. The employee must frequently lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in outside weather conditions and is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles. The employee occasionally works near moving mechanical parts and is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals and risk of electrical shock. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and one year of related environmental experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Acceptable (equivalent) Education/Experience: Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and 1 year environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Associate's degree (2 years) and 3 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) High School diploma or equivalent and 5 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) For the Hazardous Waste Division of the Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department: Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen & physical examination and successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Must obtain the DOT Forklift Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. Must obtain the Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPR) Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. Position Summary This is an entry-level professional position that may include work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: coordination and performance activities of environmental programs, compliance review and inspection of environmentally affected sites, implementation of land management activities and environmental site evaluation, environmental regulation research, field sampling and testing, hazardous materials collection or management, public education activities, and record-keeping and data coordination. Depending on the hiring division, the employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for conducting various compliance reviews and inspections, field sampling, drafting enforcement action, reviewing data for permits, testifying at administrative hearings, assessing, monitoring and managing natural areas as needed. Responsibilities will vary according to division assignment within the Environmental Protection Department (EPD): Water Resources, Pollution Prevention or Land Conservation; or Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department (SWRR): Hazardous Waste. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. May conduct periodic compliance inspections of areas, facilities, and/or activities that come under environmental regulation and review permit and compliance status. At the direction of supervisor, investigates complaints from citizens regarding alleged hazardous or unsafe environmental conditions. Researches and assists in development of new and/or existing environmental regulations and education materials. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery in order to carry out various Environmental Protection operations. May assist with land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Water Resources Division Performs inspections of groundwater wells, surface waters, wastewater treatment facilities and other environmentally affected sites for compliance with regulations or planning or monitoring purposes. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for compliance with applicable codes and ordinances. Refers unsuccessful enforcement attempts to supervisor for review and follow-up. May draft Warning Notices if needed. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with special projects and grants for water quality and water conservation which may involve data collection, summary, and report writing. Assists with implementation of the Alachua County Water Quality Code, including irrigation elements. Assists with public outreach programs. Pollution Prevention Division for EPD (includes Petroleum Management and Hazardous Materials) and Hazardous Waste Collection Division for SWRR: Collects, receives and processes for proper recycling/disposal hazardous wastes, household and automotive chemicals, paints solvents and electronic scrap from households and small businesses. Inspects and maintains hazardous waste collection areas to ensure compliance with regulations and standard operating procedures in order to maintain safe and environmentally responsible handling of hazardous materials. Operates, on a frequent basis, a forklift and truck to transport drums of hazardous waste materials. Coordinates the request for and receipt of information necessary to obtain operating, installation and closure permits. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders to coordinate remediation of spills. Land Conservation Division Implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas under higher-level supervision, including exotic plant control, prescribed burning, forestry, data collection, site development, monitoring, maintenance and security. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for project implementation. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with drafting scopes of services and overseeing contractors. Evaluates natural areas for acquisition and management; performs conservation easement compliance inspections and public outreach activities. Assists with the development of management plans and outreach materials. Operates and transports light or medium equipment such as farm tractors to prep lines for prescribed burning and/or debris clean up, chippers, and skid steer for restoration projects in addition to small equipment such as chainsaws. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Knowledge of codes, laws and environmental program rules and requirements related to area of environmental coverage. Knowledge of environmental sampling techniques, sampling equipment and quality control procedures in field activities applicable to Water Resources and Land Conservation divisions within the Environmental Protection Department . Knowledge of local, state and federal rules, regulations and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of local flora and fauna, as it relates to Land Conservation division within the Environmental Protection Department. Knowledge of computer, word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems as applicable. Skill in dealing effectively with facility owners, governmental officials and citizens. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles. Ability to follow standard operating procedures and compile routine reports and maintain accurate records. Ability to operate field monitoring, sampling, and/or material handling equipment including a forklift after a suitable training period. Ability to implement resource management techniques, utilize related equipment and follow safety procedures, including the proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with County employees, other governmental agencies and the general public. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand and walk. The employee frequently is required to use hands to finger, handle or feel; talk or hear; and taste or smell. The employee occasionally is required to sit; climb or balance; and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl. The employee must frequently lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in outside weather conditions and is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles. The employee occasionally works near moving mechanical parts and is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals and risk of electrical shock. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Social Media Specialist
Job No: 531444
Work Type: Staff Full-Time
Location: Main Campus (Gainesville, FL)
Categories: Communications/Public Relations/Marketing
Department: 60440000 - AG-IFAS COMMUNICATION SERVICES
Job Description
Classification Title:
Social Media Specialist
Job Description:
The University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is a leading institution dedicated to research, education, and Extension in agriculture, natural resources, and life sciences. UF/IFAS Communications is seeking a dynamic individual to join our team as a Social Media Specialist to enhance our online presence and engagement.
The Social Media Specialist will play a crucial role in enhancing the UF/IFAS online presence through strategic content development and effective social media management. The Social Media Specialist will develop and produce content, perform social media strategy execution and community engagement across UF/IFAS flagship social media platforms. This position requires a creative thinker with strong technical skills, a passion for storytelling, and the ability to collaborate effectively with diverse teams.
Content Creation:
• Develop compelling content for UF/IFAS flagship social media channels, including Facebook, X, Instagram, LinkedIn, and emerging platforms. • Utilize equipment such as iPhones, gimbals, mirrorless cameras, GoPros, and other audio/visual tools to create diverse content (videos, photos, graphics, GIFs). • Execute social media manager-directed content strategies. • Research, script, direct, film, and edit engaging videos. • Coach faculty, staff, volunteers, and event attendees, providing guidance on camera presence. • Provide live social coverage during events. • Edit photos using Adobe Lightroom. • Organize and coordinate photo and video shoots. • Collaborate with the creative services design team to create visually appealing social media graphics.
Content Distribution and Engagement:
• Draft and schedule social media posts across UF/IFAS platforms. Manually post content to social media platforms. • Ensure that posts are accessible and comply with UF/IFAS guidelines. • Obtain necessary approvals for content. • Coordinate with communicators across UF/IFAS to align messaging. • Monitor comments, direct messages, and tags, responding promptly and professionally. • Collaborate with others to address any arising issues. • Regularly engage with other UF/IFAS accounts to amplify messages and foster community interaction. • Provide gentle monitoring of accounts to maintain a positive online presence.
Work Environment:
Full time work, Monday through Friday, with occasional travel required for story development, events, and conferences. Travel will include one day and overnight trips and may also incorporate weekends. Remote/hybrid work arrangements may be approved on an annual basis. UF/IFAS is an equal opportunity employer with a commitment to fostering a caring and respectful community for all individuals.
Join us in showcasing the impactful work of UF/IFAS through creative storytelling and engaging content. Apply now to be a part of our dynamic team!
Expected Salary:
$40,000-45,000; commensuate with education, skills and experience.
Minimum Requirements:
Bachelor's degree and two years of relevant experience or equivalent combination of education and experience.
Preferred Qualifications:
• Experience in social media content creation and management for a business or educational institution, including analytics. • Proficiency in photo and video editing software (e.g., Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe Photoshop, Canva). • Proficiency in multimedia production tools and equipment, including iPhone and DSLR/R cameras. • Strong communication skills and attention to detail. • Ability to work independently and collaboratively, think creatively, adapt to changing priorities, and manage multiple projects effectively. • Passion for agriculture, food sciences, and environmental topics is a plus. • Bilingual proficiency is a plus.
Special Instructions to Applicants:
Interested candidates should submit their resume, cover letter, professional references, and work samples or a portfolio link showcasing relevant social media work with the online application.
Application must be submitted by 11:55 p.m. (ET) of the posting end date.
Health Assessment Required: No
Applications Close: 30 Jun 2024
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5294935
The University is committed to non-discrimination with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, marital status, national origin, political opinions or affiliations, genetic information and veteran status in all aspects of employment including recruitment, hiring, promotions, transfers, discipline, terminations, wage and salary administration, benefits, and training.
jeid-a2e0b7688e2abd4b927808511c048be5
Full Time
Social Media Specialist
Job No: 531444
Work Type: Staff Full-Time
Location: Main Campus (Gainesville, FL)
Categories: Communications/Public Relations/Marketing
Department: 60440000 - AG-IFAS COMMUNICATION SERVICES
Job Description
Classification Title:
Social Media Specialist
Job Description:
The University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is a leading institution dedicated to research, education, and Extension in agriculture, natural resources, and life sciences. UF/IFAS Communications is seeking a dynamic individual to join our team as a Social Media Specialist to enhance our online presence and engagement.
The Social Media Specialist will play a crucial role in enhancing the UF/IFAS online presence through strategic content development and effective social media management. The Social Media Specialist will develop and produce content, perform social media strategy execution and community engagement across UF/IFAS flagship social media platforms. This position requires a creative thinker with strong technical skills, a passion for storytelling, and the ability to collaborate effectively with diverse teams.
Content Creation:
• Develop compelling content for UF/IFAS flagship social media channels, including Facebook, X, Instagram, LinkedIn, and emerging platforms. • Utilize equipment such as iPhones, gimbals, mirrorless cameras, GoPros, and other audio/visual tools to create diverse content (videos, photos, graphics, GIFs). • Execute social media manager-directed content strategies. • Research, script, direct, film, and edit engaging videos. • Coach faculty, staff, volunteers, and event attendees, providing guidance on camera presence. • Provide live social coverage during events. • Edit photos using Adobe Lightroom. • Organize and coordinate photo and video shoots. • Collaborate with the creative services design team to create visually appealing social media graphics.
Content Distribution and Engagement:
• Draft and schedule social media posts across UF/IFAS platforms. Manually post content to social media platforms. • Ensure that posts are accessible and comply with UF/IFAS guidelines. • Obtain necessary approvals for content. • Coordinate with communicators across UF/IFAS to align messaging. • Monitor comments, direct messages, and tags, responding promptly and professionally. • Collaborate with others to address any arising issues. • Regularly engage with other UF/IFAS accounts to amplify messages and foster community interaction. • Provide gentle monitoring of accounts to maintain a positive online presence.
Work Environment:
Full time work, Monday through Friday, with occasional travel required for story development, events, and conferences. Travel will include one day and overnight trips and may also incorporate weekends. Remote/hybrid work arrangements may be approved on an annual basis. UF/IFAS is an equal opportunity employer with a commitment to fostering a caring and respectful community for all individuals.
Join us in showcasing the impactful work of UF/IFAS through creative storytelling and engaging content. Apply now to be a part of our dynamic team!
Expected Salary:
$40,000-45,000; commensuate with education, skills and experience.
Minimum Requirements:
Bachelor's degree and two years of relevant experience or equivalent combination of education and experience.
Preferred Qualifications:
• Experience in social media content creation and management for a business or educational institution, including analytics. • Proficiency in photo and video editing software (e.g., Adobe Premiere Pro, Adobe Photoshop, Canva). • Proficiency in multimedia production tools and equipment, including iPhone and DSLR/R cameras. • Strong communication skills and attention to detail. • Ability to work independently and collaboratively, think creatively, adapt to changing priorities, and manage multiple projects effectively. • Passion for agriculture, food sciences, and environmental topics is a plus. • Bilingual proficiency is a plus.
Special Instructions to Applicants:
Interested candidates should submit their resume, cover letter, professional references, and work samples or a portfolio link showcasing relevant social media work with the online application.
Application must be submitted by 11:55 p.m. (ET) of the posting end date.
Health Assessment Required: No
Applications Close: 30 Jun 2024
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5294935
The University is committed to non-discrimination with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, marital status, national origin, political opinions or affiliations, genetic information and veteran status in all aspects of employment including recruitment, hiring, promotions, transfers, discipline, terminations, wage and salary administration, benefits, and training.
jeid-a2e0b7688e2abd4b927808511c048be5
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree with major course work in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field, and three years of professional level environmental related experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. This is a supervisory land management position in the Alachua County Land Conservation and Management program (Alachua County Forever). This position is responsible for all aspects of managing conservation lands in the Alachua County preserve system. Forestry experience desirable. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Position Summary This is a professional position that may supervise work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: inspection, testing and enforcement of air and water pollution control ordinances, hazardous waste management or collection, as well as protection, evaluation, stewardship and/or management of natural and historic resources for Alachua County. The employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for coordinating and supervising field and laboratory activities related to water quality, air quality or other environmental monitoring and assessment, technical review of contaminated site remediation, public education program coordination, regulatory activities regarding natural/historic resources, hazardous materials, hazardous waste collection, and/or land stewardship activities. Responsibilities will vary according to Department and division assignment within the Solid Waste & Resource Recovery Department (Hazardous Waste Management) and the Environmental Protection Department (Natural Resources, Water Resources, Petroleum Management, Land Conservation and/or Hazardous Materials Management). Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Conducts and supervises field collection of samples and/or data and/or observations for environmental analysis, evaluates data, prepares reports and recommendations. Coordinates with other regulatory agencies. May supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees including determining work procedures and schedules; issuing instructions and assigning duties; reviewing work; recommending personnel actions; conducting performance reviews; and conducting departmental training and orientation. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or solid waste regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates complaint for corrective action and makes recommendations. Provides guidance and oversight and enforcement of federal, state and local environmental regulations. Evaluates inspection and monitoring data from multiple sources. Depending on the hiring division, examples may include water monitoring wells, solid waste management sites, wastewater treatment plants, and hazardous materials management facilities, photopoints, transects or data from other agencies as appropriate. May coordinate and/or assist with stewardship activities such as natural resource restoration, controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring and assist with land acquisition. Prepares reports and recommendations. Prepares and conducts public education programs and compliance assistance training programs. Designs and establishes environmental monitoring programs as needed. Testifies, as needed, at administrative hearings and/or court as a technical witness and/or to support enforcement actions. Assists the supervisor in the preparation of periodic operating reports and presentations to various Boards; provides input into area budget needs. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles and four-wheel drive vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery, in order to conduct job duties that, depending on the hiring division, may include field tests, inspections, evaluations, prescribed burns, exotic species control, and investigations to obtain data for use in determining code compliance, sources of, and methods for controlling County-wide environmental pollutants, performing on-site evaluations, plant and animal surveys, and other ecological monitoring as appropriate. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Land Conservation Division: Plans and implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas including exotic plant control, prescribed fire, forestry, restoration and site development. Develops projects and scopes of work, coordinates and oversees contractors performing land stewardship activities such as: invasive plant and animal control, site preparation, planting, timber harvesting, site maintenance, site development, natural and cultural resource monitoring, restoration and prescribed burning. May coordinate prescribed burning activities on County owned or managed properties, through preparation, review and implementation of burn prescriptions. May serve as burn boss or burn crew member on prescribed burns. May plan and implement maintenance and creation of firebreaks and preparation of areas for burning. May coordinate with the Florida Forest Service, contractors and other agencies on prescribed burning and other stewardship activities. May perform environmental assessments of properties nominated for acquisition through the Alachua County Forever Program to identify natural resources, physiographic and ecological characteristics, hydrological resources, manageability, and public accessibility. Analyzes environmental considerations and prepares evaluation reports. Responsible for land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring, preparation of base-line monitoring reports and development of management plans. Natural Resources Division: Analyzes environmental characteristics of development applications and administrative permits and may provide recommendations on land use, zoning and site plans. Performs compliance inspections for development projects to determine consistency with environmental code requirements and development order conditions. Responds to citizen and agency inquiries and complaints related to natural and water resource issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts natural resources outreach and education. Performs environmental assessments of special planning areas to identify natural resources and historic resources and physiographic and ecological characteristics. Assists in developing and implementing elements in the County's Comprehensive Plan and land development regulations. Hazardous Materials Management: Performs rotational 24/7 on call and emergency response as required for hazardous materials incidents/releases within the County and coordinates remediation of spills. Interacts and coordinates with inter-agencies, state and federal agencies as needed/required. Performs periodic compliance and enforcement inspections of regulated facilities, contaminated sites, remediation sites, and other environmental sites to ensure compliance with and enforcement of local codes, ordinances, state and federal regulatory programs; reviews permits and compliance status. Manages remediation activities at environmental sites, including technical and/or cost oversight of engineering contractors for compliance monitoring, contamination assessments and remedial actions arising from groundwater, surface water, soil or ambient air contamination with hazardous or toxic materials and petroleum products to ensure compliance with program regulations and local ordinances. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted regulatory programs or hazardous materials and waste management programs. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders and coordinates remediation of spills. Assists in developing pollution control, air pollution and hazardous and solid waste elements of land development regulations, County Comprehensive Plan, and ordinances and regulations. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local regulations, including the proper storage, handling, transportation and disposal of hazardous materials. Responds to citizen and multi-agency inquiries and complaints related to hazardous materials and hazardous waste issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations, codes, and ordinances and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential civil and/or criminal enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts hazardous materials outreach and education. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Petroleum Management Division: Petroleum Restoration Program: Provides oversight and management of work conducted at petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated sites under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Petroleum Restoration Program. Provides technical and fiscal oversight of assessment and remediation activities. Develops cost effective scopes of work and purchase orders, and reviews invoices for quality and completeness of work performed or goods and service provided by contractors and vendors. Reviews deliverables, technical documents and invoices for accuracy and completeness, issues comment and approval letters, and updates County and State project tracking databases and document repositories. Conducts field, installation, and operation & maintenance inspections. Storage Tanks Compliance Program: Conducts petroleum storage tanks inspections under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Storage Tanks Compliance Verification Program, including but not limited to routine compliance, installation, closure, discharge, non-compliance, and complaint inspections. Records inspection results in the State's Florida Inspection Reporting Storage Tanks (FIRST) on-line database, produces inspection reports, and issues in compliance, compliance assistance offer, and return to compliance letters. Communicates with facility owners/operators, compliance contractors, and certified pollutant storage system contractors to schedule and conduct annual compliance inspections, and coordinate installation and closure inspections. Water Resources Division: Coordinates and conducts water resources outreach and education. Monitors and performs wastewater treatment facility inspections. Conducts training on erosion and sediment control. Prepares, coordinates and manages contracts and grants. Collects groundwater and surface water samples and ensures data quality assurance and quality control procedures and targets are met. Analyzes water quality and hydrologic data and prepares technical reports. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local water resources regulations. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): Coordinates operations programs for solid waste, household hazardous wastes, used oil collection and waste reduction/recycling alternatives so as to maintain compliance with appropriate regulations. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted hazardous waste management programs. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Routinely prepares hazardous waste packages for shipment according to DOT regulations. Routinely identifies and categorizes unknown waste streams received from customers according to SOP. Assists with fiscal budgeting, scheduling, communication and logistical details of hazardous waste collection grants, special projects and neighborhood collection activities. Oversees and supervises all operations of the HHW collection center when the Household Hazardous Waste Coordinator is not present. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Thorough knowledge of the technical methods and procedures involved in the administration of environmental regulations, programs and policies. Depending on assigned division, this may include: technical methods and procedures involved in land management and acquisition; theories and practices of ecology and land management, including restoration, weed science and prescribed burning; knowledge of the flora, fauna and ecology of North Central Florida; general environmental programs such as solid waste management, hazardous waste disposal, petroleum cleanup, air and water monitoring, natural and historic resource protection, land acquisition and land stewardship. Considerable knowledge of environmental sampling procedures and equipment. Knowledge of local, state, and federal rules, regulations, and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems. Knowledge of effective supervisory techniques and modern principles and practices of supervision. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles, small equipment and machinery. Ability to apply engineering and scientific principles and methods. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. Ability to create concise, clear and succinct technical reports. Ability to research technical problems, formulates recommendations, and compiles related reports. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with co-workers, the general public and other County agencies. Hazardous Materials Division: Knowledge of applicable codes, ordinances, statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of hazardous materials and hazardous waste regulations and emergency response operations. Working knowledge of MS Office Suite, ArcMap, GIS, data management and data validation. Water Resources Division: Working knowledge of MS Word and Excel, and data management and data validation. Natural Resources D i v i s i on : Working knowledge of GIS, MS Word and Excel, SharePoint, and data management.. Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, and wetland delineation. Land Conservation Division: Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, operation, maintenance and transportation of heavy trucks, farm tractors, wildland fire engines, pumps, chain saws, mowers and trimmers used in preserve maintenance, fuels management and restoration. Working knowledge of GIS and data management. Petroleum Management Division: Knowledge of applicable statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of state-approved storage tank system equipment, installation specifications, and closure procedures. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to use hands to finger, handle, or feel objects, tools, or controls. The employee frequently is required to talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; sit; reach with hands and arms; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; and taste or smell. The employee must lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee is required to use hands to finger, handle or fell, and reach with hands and arms. The employee is frequently required to stand, sit; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl, and talk and hear. The employee is occasionally required to climb stairs or balance. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 50 pounds, occasionally lift and/or move in excess of 100 pounds in the preparation of hazardous waste for disposal by use of 55-gallon drums. Occasionally required to use personal protective equipment (PPE) in dealing with hazardous waste. Specific visual abilities include close vision, distance vision, color vision, and depth perception. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee frequently works in outside weather conditions. The employee is occasionally exposed to fumes or airborne particles and toxic or caustic chemicals. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Land Conservation Division: The employee may regularly work near moving parts, are regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles, extreme heat and a loud work environment. Hazardous Materials: While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in various facilities, near moving mechanical parts, potential elevation with climbing and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, occasional extreme climate conditions and can be potentially exposed to vapors, airborne particles, and toxic chemicals. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works near moving mechanical parts, and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, and is frequently exposed to fumes and airborne particles, and toxic or caustic chemicals. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree with major course work in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field, and three years of professional level environmental related experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. This is a supervisory land management position in the Alachua County Land Conservation and Management program (Alachua County Forever). This position is responsible for all aspects of managing conservation lands in the Alachua County preserve system. Forestry experience desirable. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Position Summary This is a professional position that may supervise work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: inspection, testing and enforcement of air and water pollution control ordinances, hazardous waste management or collection, as well as protection, evaluation, stewardship and/or management of natural and historic resources for Alachua County. The employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for coordinating and supervising field and laboratory activities related to water quality, air quality or other environmental monitoring and assessment, technical review of contaminated site remediation, public education program coordination, regulatory activities regarding natural/historic resources, hazardous materials, hazardous waste collection, and/or land stewardship activities. Responsibilities will vary according to Department and division assignment within the Solid Waste & Resource Recovery Department (Hazardous Waste Management) and the Environmental Protection Department (Natural Resources, Water Resources, Petroleum Management, Land Conservation and/or Hazardous Materials Management). Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Conducts and supervises field collection of samples and/or data and/or observations for environmental analysis, evaluates data, prepares reports and recommendations. Coordinates with other regulatory agencies. May supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees including determining work procedures and schedules; issuing instructions and assigning duties; reviewing work; recommending personnel actions; conducting performance reviews; and conducting departmental training and orientation. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or solid waste regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates complaint for corrective action and makes recommendations. Provides guidance and oversight and enforcement of federal, state and local environmental regulations. Evaluates inspection and monitoring data from multiple sources. Depending on the hiring division, examples may include water monitoring wells, solid waste management sites, wastewater treatment plants, and hazardous materials management facilities, photopoints, transects or data from other agencies as appropriate. May coordinate and/or assist with stewardship activities such as natural resource restoration, controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring and assist with land acquisition. Prepares reports and recommendations. Prepares and conducts public education programs and compliance assistance training programs. Designs and establishes environmental monitoring programs as needed. Testifies, as needed, at administrative hearings and/or court as a technical witness and/or to support enforcement actions. Assists the supervisor in the preparation of periodic operating reports and presentations to various Boards; provides input into area budget needs. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles and four-wheel drive vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery, in order to conduct job duties that, depending on the hiring division, may include field tests, inspections, evaluations, prescribed burns, exotic species control, and investigations to obtain data for use in determining code compliance, sources of, and methods for controlling County-wide environmental pollutants, performing on-site evaluations, plant and animal surveys, and other ecological monitoring as appropriate. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Land Conservation Division: Plans and implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas including exotic plant control, prescribed fire, forestry, restoration and site development. Develops projects and scopes of work, coordinates and oversees contractors performing land stewardship activities such as: invasive plant and animal control, site preparation, planting, timber harvesting, site maintenance, site development, natural and cultural resource monitoring, restoration and prescribed burning. May coordinate prescribed burning activities on County owned or managed properties, through preparation, review and implementation of burn prescriptions. May serve as burn boss or burn crew member on prescribed burns. May plan and implement maintenance and creation of firebreaks and preparation of areas for burning. May coordinate with the Florida Forest Service, contractors and other agencies on prescribed burning and other stewardship activities. May perform environmental assessments of properties nominated for acquisition through the Alachua County Forever Program to identify natural resources, physiographic and ecological characteristics, hydrological resources, manageability, and public accessibility. Analyzes environmental considerations and prepares evaluation reports. Responsible for land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring, preparation of base-line monitoring reports and development of management plans. Natural Resources Division: Analyzes environmental characteristics of development applications and administrative permits and may provide recommendations on land use, zoning and site plans. Performs compliance inspections for development projects to determine consistency with environmental code requirements and development order conditions. Responds to citizen and agency inquiries and complaints related to natural and water resource issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts natural resources outreach and education. Performs environmental assessments of special planning areas to identify natural resources and historic resources and physiographic and ecological characteristics. Assists in developing and implementing elements in the County's Comprehensive Plan and land development regulations. Hazardous Materials Management: Performs rotational 24/7 on call and emergency response as required for hazardous materials incidents/releases within the County and coordinates remediation of spills. Interacts and coordinates with inter-agencies, state and federal agencies as needed/required. Performs periodic compliance and enforcement inspections of regulated facilities, contaminated sites, remediation sites, and other environmental sites to ensure compliance with and enforcement of local codes, ordinances, state and federal regulatory programs; reviews permits and compliance status. Manages remediation activities at environmental sites, including technical and/or cost oversight of engineering contractors for compliance monitoring, contamination assessments and remedial actions arising from groundwater, surface water, soil or ambient air contamination with hazardous or toxic materials and petroleum products to ensure compliance with program regulations and local ordinances. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted regulatory programs or hazardous materials and waste management programs. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders and coordinates remediation of spills. Assists in developing pollution control, air pollution and hazardous and solid waste elements of land development regulations, County Comprehensive Plan, and ordinances and regulations. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local regulations, including the proper storage, handling, transportation and disposal of hazardous materials. Responds to citizen and multi-agency inquiries and complaints related to hazardous materials and hazardous waste issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations, codes, and ordinances and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential civil and/or criminal enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts hazardous materials outreach and education. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Petroleum Management Division: Petroleum Restoration Program: Provides oversight and management of work conducted at petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated sites under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Petroleum Restoration Program. Provides technical and fiscal oversight of assessment and remediation activities. Develops cost effective scopes of work and purchase orders, and reviews invoices for quality and completeness of work performed or goods and service provided by contractors and vendors. Reviews deliverables, technical documents and invoices for accuracy and completeness, issues comment and approval letters, and updates County and State project tracking databases and document repositories. Conducts field, installation, and operation & maintenance inspections. Storage Tanks Compliance Program: Conducts petroleum storage tanks inspections under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Storage Tanks Compliance Verification Program, including but not limited to routine compliance, installation, closure, discharge, non-compliance, and complaint inspections. Records inspection results in the State's Florida Inspection Reporting Storage Tanks (FIRST) on-line database, produces inspection reports, and issues in compliance, compliance assistance offer, and return to compliance letters. Communicates with facility owners/operators, compliance contractors, and certified pollutant storage system contractors to schedule and conduct annual compliance inspections, and coordinate installation and closure inspections. Water Resources Division: Coordinates and conducts water resources outreach and education. Monitors and performs wastewater treatment facility inspections. Conducts training on erosion and sediment control. Prepares, coordinates and manages contracts and grants. Collects groundwater and surface water samples and ensures data quality assurance and quality control procedures and targets are met. Analyzes water quality and hydrologic data and prepares technical reports. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local water resources regulations. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): Coordinates operations programs for solid waste, household hazardous wastes, used oil collection and waste reduction/recycling alternatives so as to maintain compliance with appropriate regulations. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted hazardous waste management programs. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Routinely prepares hazardous waste packages for shipment according to DOT regulations. Routinely identifies and categorizes unknown waste streams received from customers according to SOP. Assists with fiscal budgeting, scheduling, communication and logistical details of hazardous waste collection grants, special projects and neighborhood collection activities. Oversees and supervises all operations of the HHW collection center when the Household Hazardous Waste Coordinator is not present. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Thorough knowledge of the technical methods and procedures involved in the administration of environmental regulations, programs and policies. Depending on assigned division, this may include: technical methods and procedures involved in land management and acquisition; theories and practices of ecology and land management, including restoration, weed science and prescribed burning; knowledge of the flora, fauna and ecology of North Central Florida; general environmental programs such as solid waste management, hazardous waste disposal, petroleum cleanup, air and water monitoring, natural and historic resource protection, land acquisition and land stewardship. Considerable knowledge of environmental sampling procedures and equipment. Knowledge of local, state, and federal rules, regulations, and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems. Knowledge of effective supervisory techniques and modern principles and practices of supervision. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles, small equipment and machinery. Ability to apply engineering and scientific principles and methods. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. Ability to create concise, clear and succinct technical reports. Ability to research technical problems, formulates recommendations, and compiles related reports. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with co-workers, the general public and other County agencies. Hazardous Materials Division: Knowledge of applicable codes, ordinances, statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of hazardous materials and hazardous waste regulations and emergency response operations. Working knowledge of MS Office Suite, ArcMap, GIS, data management and data validation. Water Resources Division: Working knowledge of MS Word and Excel, and data management and data validation. Natural Resources D i v i s i on : Working knowledge of GIS, MS Word and Excel, SharePoint, and data management.. Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, and wetland delineation. Land Conservation Division: Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, operation, maintenance and transportation of heavy trucks, farm tractors, wildland fire engines, pumps, chain saws, mowers and trimmers used in preserve maintenance, fuels management and restoration. Working knowledge of GIS and data management. Petroleum Management Division: Knowledge of applicable statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of state-approved storage tank system equipment, installation specifications, and closure procedures. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to use hands to finger, handle, or feel objects, tools, or controls. The employee frequently is required to talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; sit; reach with hands and arms; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; and taste or smell. The employee must lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee is required to use hands to finger, handle or fell, and reach with hands and arms. The employee is frequently required to stand, sit; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl, and talk and hear. The employee is occasionally required to climb stairs or balance. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 50 pounds, occasionally lift and/or move in excess of 100 pounds in the preparation of hazardous waste for disposal by use of 55-gallon drums. Occasionally required to use personal protective equipment (PPE) in dealing with hazardous waste. Specific visual abilities include close vision, distance vision, color vision, and depth perception. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee frequently works in outside weather conditions. The employee is occasionally exposed to fumes or airborne particles and toxic or caustic chemicals. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Land Conservation Division: The employee may regularly work near moving parts, are regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles, extreme heat and a loud work environment. Hazardous Materials: While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in various facilities, near moving mechanical parts, potential elevation with climbing and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, occasional extreme climate conditions and can be potentially exposed to vapors, airborne particles, and toxic chemicals. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works near moving mechanical parts, and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, and is frequently exposed to fumes and airborne particles, and toxic or caustic chemicals. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Master's degree in counseling, psychology or related mental health field and three years of mental health counseling and/or crisis intervention experience. A Post-Master's Education Specialist (Ed.S.) Degree is equivalent to the required education and one year of related work experience in suicide and crisis intervention. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience may be considered for trainee status. Licensure in mental health, marriage and family counseling or any related mental health field is required within two years of employment. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Must successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen and s uccessful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. This is a grant funded position. There are no rights to permanent employment. Position Summary This is responsible professional crisis intervention counseling work in the County's Crisis Center. An employee assigned to this classification directs the daily processing of crisis calls, develops appropriate action plans for immediate client cases and coordinates needed client-supporting resources. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of the results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Assigns caseloads and related duties, and coordinates activities of staff, volunteers, and graduate students in providing counseling services to assist clients with problems of emergency or crises nature. Assists all staff through individual and group conferences in analyzing case problems and in improving their diagnostic and helping skills. Reviews case records and evaluates performance of staff members and recommends indicated action. Participates in developing and implementing agency administrative policy. Counsels clients individually and/or in groups on planned basis and in emergencies. Trains new employees in areas such as agency policy, department procedures, and agency or government regulations. Provides in-service training for experienced workers in areas such as new policies, procedures, and regulations. Represents department in community or in interagency activities. Conducts and/or directs staff development programs. Directs and assists volunteer and graduate student counselors in effective processing of immediate telephone and walk-in requests for assistance. Continuously reviews current case load. Counsels and refers clients to appropriate agencies or services in the community. Continuously evaluates and advises crisis intervention volunteers, practicum and internship graduate students. Maintains effective liaison with assisting community mental health and other agencies. Keeps records and maintains client files. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle regularly to respond to crisis calls 24 hours a day/ 7 days a week; drives to offsite locations to conduct training and/or participate in outreach events. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Considerable knowledge of current techniques, principles and practices of crisis intervention and suicide counseling. Considerable knowledge of laws, rules and regulations relating to operations of community crisis intervention centers. Knowledge of community counseling/intervention resources available to the center. Ability to effectively train and supervise volunteers. Ability to respond calmly, quickly and effectively in crisis situations; ability to supervise volunteer crisis intervention counselors in crisis situations. Ability to work with and counsel suicidal/distraught clients. Ability to establish and maintain good working relationship with assisting agencies, other County departments and employees and the general public. Ability to ensure continuous availability of needed supplies; ability to manage daily shift operations. Ability to keep records and maintain files. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit; talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; use hands to finger, handle or feel; and reach with hands and arms. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Master's degree in counseling, psychology or related mental health field and three years of mental health counseling and/or crisis intervention experience. A Post-Master's Education Specialist (Ed.S.) Degree is equivalent to the required education and one year of related work experience in suicide and crisis intervention. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience may be considered for trainee status. Licensure in mental health, marriage and family counseling or any related mental health field is required within two years of employment. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Must successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen and s uccessful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. This is a grant funded position. There are no rights to permanent employment. Position Summary This is responsible professional crisis intervention counseling work in the County's Crisis Center. An employee assigned to this classification directs the daily processing of crisis calls, develops appropriate action plans for immediate client cases and coordinates needed client-supporting resources. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of the results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Assigns caseloads and related duties, and coordinates activities of staff, volunteers, and graduate students in providing counseling services to assist clients with problems of emergency or crises nature. Assists all staff through individual and group conferences in analyzing case problems and in improving their diagnostic and helping skills. Reviews case records and evaluates performance of staff members and recommends indicated action. Participates in developing and implementing agency administrative policy. Counsels clients individually and/or in groups on planned basis and in emergencies. Trains new employees in areas such as agency policy, department procedures, and agency or government regulations. Provides in-service training for experienced workers in areas such as new policies, procedures, and regulations. Represents department in community or in interagency activities. Conducts and/or directs staff development programs. Directs and assists volunteer and graduate student counselors in effective processing of immediate telephone and walk-in requests for assistance. Continuously reviews current case load. Counsels and refers clients to appropriate agencies or services in the community. Continuously evaluates and advises crisis intervention volunteers, practicum and internship graduate students. Maintains effective liaison with assisting community mental health and other agencies. Keeps records and maintains client files. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle regularly to respond to crisis calls 24 hours a day/ 7 days a week; drives to offsite locations to conduct training and/or participate in outreach events. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Considerable knowledge of current techniques, principles and practices of crisis intervention and suicide counseling. Considerable knowledge of laws, rules and regulations relating to operations of community crisis intervention centers. Knowledge of community counseling/intervention resources available to the center. Ability to effectively train and supervise volunteers. Ability to respond calmly, quickly and effectively in crisis situations; ability to supervise volunteer crisis intervention counselors in crisis situations. Ability to work with and counsel suicidal/distraught clients. Ability to establish and maintain good working relationship with assisting agencies, other County departments and employees and the general public. Ability to ensure continuous availability of needed supplies; ability to manage daily shift operations. Ability to keep records and maintain files. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit; talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; use hands to finger, handle or feel; and reach with hands and arms. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Coordinator, Student Affairs Program
R0141105
Medicine, Reno - University of Nevada School of Medicine
The University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) appreciates your interest in employment at our growing institution. We want your application process to go smoothly and quickly. Final applications must be submitted prior to the close of the recruitment.
If you need assistance or have questions regarding the application process, please contact our recruitment helpline at (775) 784-1495 or https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fjobs%40unr.edu%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cmichellebriggs%40unr.edu%7C3fc56ddb0d3143705f1c08d9932205df%7C523b4bfc0ebd4c03b2b96f6a17fd31d8%7C1%7C0%7C637702596595879550%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=f3IzAEa5H3%2FeLS%2BymU9ZqLPkGDVrZukYCBVy8XHJYe0%3D&reserved=0. For UNR Med professional job postings, please contact the Office of Professional Recruitment at (775) 784-6778.
Job Description
The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is seeking a Coordinator to manage UNR Med's Student Affairs Programs for medical students.
The primary function of the Program Coordinator is to develop, implement, promote, manage, and evaluate Student Affairs programs for medical students to support an optimal experience throughout their medical education. The Program Coordinator oversees the identification, introduction, execution, and assessment of student affairs programming and interventions to include, but not limited to, Supplemental Instruction (SI) and Tutoring, new student orientation (MedFIT), student government, and mentorship (Pack Mentor Elective). This position reports to the Director of Student Affairs.
Responsibilities include:
• Oversight of the Supplemental Instruction (SI) and Tutoring program and associated course (MED 661TM), supporting medical student learning needs throughout the four-year curriculum with academic peer-assisted learning • Development and instruction of the new student transition course, MedFIT (MED 630), a week-long orientation program designed to familiarize students with academic expectations and support resources of medical school, and offer opportunity to begin to develop community and sense of belonging • Support for and leadership development of the UNR Med Student Government, ASUNSOM (Associated Students of Nevada - School of Medicine) as faculty advisor • Instruction and oversight of fourth-year mentorship elective course, Pack Mentors MED 661, which matches students in their final year of medical school with students in other years to offer peer support, guidance, and mentorship • Continuous assessment and quality improvement of Student Affairs programs, including but not limited to those above
The ideal candidate will demonstrate the ability to provide effective oversight, development, and support for learner-facing programs designed to enhance medical student success, professional identity development, and sense of belonging. They will have the ability to work independently and in collaboration with others to support holistic student success. They will have observational, organizational, and interpersonal skills that allow for identification and strong development and facilitation of effective student programming.
Required Qualifications
Bachelor's Degree and 2 years of related work experience OR
Master's Degree and 1 years of related work experience
Relevant Experience: student affairs programming, medical education, college student development and/or retention programs, event programming, and related areas.
Schedule
This position requires occasional travel and a variable schedule due to evening and weekend events.
Preferred Qualifications
• Experience working with student mentorship, coaching and/or student programs in a higher education setting • Experience with program assessment and program development • Previous experience in a role with visibility to curricula
Compensation Grade
B
To view the salary schedule for this position, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/compensation-evaluation/compensation/salary-schedules and select Administrative Faculty by Grade. Salary is competitive and commensurate with related education and experience
Total Compensation
The total compensation package includes a competitive salary, moving allowance (if applicable), a rich retirement plan, health insurance options that include dental and vision, life insurance, thirty (30) days of sick leave provided upon start date and two (2) days of sick leave accrued per full month after the first year of service, two (2) days of annual leave accrued each full month, along with many other benefits. Additionally, there is a grant-in-aid educational benefit for faculty and dependents. For more information, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/benefits
Faculty Dual Career Assistance Program
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes the importance of addressing dual-career couples' professional needs. We offer a dual career assistance program to newly hired faculty spouses/partners that provides resources and assists them to identify career opportunities in Northern Nevada. https://www.unr.edu/hr/jobs/dual-career-program
Department Information
For more information about the School of Medicine, please visit https://med.unr.edu/
Department Contact
Bailey Howard
Search Coordinator
mailto:Baileyhoward@med.unr.edu
Exempt Yes
Full-Time Equivalent 100.0%
Required Attachment(s)
1) Resume/CV
2) Letters of Application (Cover letter)
3) Three professional references (include name, title, company/organization, email address, phone number)
4) One-page inclusivity statement: Please write a brief statement (one page maximum) about how you would contribute toward our mission of creating a culturally inclusive environment in the role for which you are applying. Please also highlight contributions you have made to this goal in your previous role(s).
Required UNR Med Recruitment Survey
Please complete the survey at the link below; this 1-2 minute survey will allow us to understand our current status and the effectiveness of our efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion at UNR Med. Survey data will not be accessible by the department for which you are applying or the recruitment team.
https://unr.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5uwa6f4UdCXFzOB?RID=MLRP_8wvvyes5WZVKBaR
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med)
For over 50 years the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med) has trained physicians who are leading the way to 'A Healthy Nevada', nation, and world. Community-based and research-intensive, UNR Med is committed to our four-part mission of education, research, clinical service, and diversity. We show this commitment through our demonstrated core values: people are our strength, we innovate and improve, we serve with integrity, and we success with trust and respect.
The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is an inclusive and engaged community. We recognize that diverse faculty and leaders add value to the educational experience and promote excellence in our teaching, patient care, and research missions. We seek applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and experiences who will contribute to our mission and uphold our core values.
Our mission has guided our growth in graduating the next generation of primary and specialty care physicians and medical researchers while maintaining personalized instruction. The School of Medicine has statewide outreach with a local touch providing patient care, health services, and training physicians in Reno, Nevada and in the state's rural communities. We are expanding provider education to train medical specialists as Medical Doctors as well as Speech Pathologists and Physician Assistants. We are actively expanding technologically-advanced infrastructure to keep pace with our world-class research to meet the needs of students, patients, and researchers. We seek to create an environment that serves all who enter our doors, from the physicians who teach our learners to our employees, patients, and students.
This posting is open until filled
Qualified individuals are encouraged to apply immediately. Lists of eligible candidates will be established and hiring may occur early in the recruiting process. Recruitment will close without notice when a sufficient number of applications are received, or a hiring decision has been made.
Posting Close Date
Note to Applicant
A background check will be conducted on the candidate(s) selected for hire.
HR will attempt to verify academic credentials upon receipt of hiring documents. If the academic credentials cannot be verified, HR will notify the faculty member that an official transcript of their highest degree must be submitted within thirty days of the faculty member's first day of employment.
References will be contacted at the appropriate phase of the recruitment process.
Applicants hired on a federal contract may be subject to E-Verify.
As part of the hiring process, applicants for positions in the Nevada System of Higher Education may be required to demonstrate the ability to perform job-related tasks.
For positions that require driving, evidence of a valid driver's license will be required at the time of employment and as a condition of continued employment.
Schedules are subject to change based on organizational needs.
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5133638
Founded in 1874, the University of Nevada, Reno is the State of Nevada’s land grant institution with a statewide mission and presence. The University of Nevada, Reno is a Carnegie I Research Institution and has been recognized as a “Top Tier” Best National University by U.S. News & World Report. With an enrollment of nearly 21,000 students we offer 145 Tier 1 accredited degree programs. Located in the picturesque Truckee Meadows the University of Nevada, Reno is surrounded by numerous state and national parks, is 45 minutes from beautiful Lake Tahoe, and four hours from San Francisco.
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. We are an inclusive and engaged community and recognize the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
The Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person’s age, disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race, or religion.
Full Time
Coordinator, Student Affairs Program
R0141105
Medicine, Reno - University of Nevada School of Medicine
The University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) appreciates your interest in employment at our growing institution. We want your application process to go smoothly and quickly. Final applications must be submitted prior to the close of the recruitment.
If you need assistance or have questions regarding the application process, please contact our recruitment helpline at (775) 784-1495 or https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fjobs%40unr.edu%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cmichellebriggs%40unr.edu%7C3fc56ddb0d3143705f1c08d9932205df%7C523b4bfc0ebd4c03b2b96f6a17fd31d8%7C1%7C0%7C637702596595879550%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=f3IzAEa5H3%2FeLS%2BymU9ZqLPkGDVrZukYCBVy8XHJYe0%3D&reserved=0. For UNR Med professional job postings, please contact the Office of Professional Recruitment at (775) 784-6778.
Job Description
The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is seeking a Coordinator to manage UNR Med's Student Affairs Programs for medical students.
The primary function of the Program Coordinator is to develop, implement, promote, manage, and evaluate Student Affairs programs for medical students to support an optimal experience throughout their medical education. The Program Coordinator oversees the identification, introduction, execution, and assessment of student affairs programming and interventions to include, but not limited to, Supplemental Instruction (SI) and Tutoring, new student orientation (MedFIT), student government, and mentorship (Pack Mentor Elective). This position reports to the Director of Student Affairs.
Responsibilities include:
• Oversight of the Supplemental Instruction (SI) and Tutoring program and associated course (MED 661TM), supporting medical student learning needs throughout the four-year curriculum with academic peer-assisted learning • Development and instruction of the new student transition course, MedFIT (MED 630), a week-long orientation program designed to familiarize students with academic expectations and support resources of medical school, and offer opportunity to begin to develop community and sense of belonging • Support for and leadership development of the UNR Med Student Government, ASUNSOM (Associated Students of Nevada - School of Medicine) as faculty advisor • Instruction and oversight of fourth-year mentorship elective course, Pack Mentors MED 661, which matches students in their final year of medical school with students in other years to offer peer support, guidance, and mentorship • Continuous assessment and quality improvement of Student Affairs programs, including but not limited to those above
The ideal candidate will demonstrate the ability to provide effective oversight, development, and support for learner-facing programs designed to enhance medical student success, professional identity development, and sense of belonging. They will have the ability to work independently and in collaboration with others to support holistic student success. They will have observational, organizational, and interpersonal skills that allow for identification and strong development and facilitation of effective student programming.
Required Qualifications
Bachelor's Degree and 2 years of related work experience OR
Master's Degree and 1 years of related work experience
Relevant Experience: student affairs programming, medical education, college student development and/or retention programs, event programming, and related areas.
Schedule
This position requires occasional travel and a variable schedule due to evening and weekend events.
Preferred Qualifications
• Experience working with student mentorship, coaching and/or student programs in a higher education setting • Experience with program assessment and program development • Previous experience in a role with visibility to curricula
Compensation Grade
B
To view the salary schedule for this position, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/compensation-evaluation/compensation/salary-schedules and select Administrative Faculty by Grade. Salary is competitive and commensurate with related education and experience
Total Compensation
The total compensation package includes a competitive salary, moving allowance (if applicable), a rich retirement plan, health insurance options that include dental and vision, life insurance, thirty (30) days of sick leave provided upon start date and two (2) days of sick leave accrued per full month after the first year of service, two (2) days of annual leave accrued each full month, along with many other benefits. Additionally, there is a grant-in-aid educational benefit for faculty and dependents. For more information, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/benefits
Faculty Dual Career Assistance Program
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes the importance of addressing dual-career couples' professional needs. We offer a dual career assistance program to newly hired faculty spouses/partners that provides resources and assists them to identify career opportunities in Northern Nevada. https://www.unr.edu/hr/jobs/dual-career-program
Department Information
For more information about the School of Medicine, please visit https://med.unr.edu/
Department Contact
Bailey Howard
Search Coordinator
mailto:Baileyhoward@med.unr.edu
Exempt Yes
Full-Time Equivalent 100.0%
Required Attachment(s)
1) Resume/CV
2) Letters of Application (Cover letter)
3) Three professional references (include name, title, company/organization, email address, phone number)
4) One-page inclusivity statement: Please write a brief statement (one page maximum) about how you would contribute toward our mission of creating a culturally inclusive environment in the role for which you are applying. Please also highlight contributions you have made to this goal in your previous role(s).
Required UNR Med Recruitment Survey
Please complete the survey at the link below; this 1-2 minute survey will allow us to understand our current status and the effectiveness of our efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion at UNR Med. Survey data will not be accessible by the department for which you are applying or the recruitment team.
https://unr.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5uwa6f4UdCXFzOB?RID=MLRP_8wvvyes5WZVKBaR
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med)
For over 50 years the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med) has trained physicians who are leading the way to 'A Healthy Nevada', nation, and world. Community-based and research-intensive, UNR Med is committed to our four-part mission of education, research, clinical service, and diversity. We show this commitment through our demonstrated core values: people are our strength, we innovate and improve, we serve with integrity, and we success with trust and respect.
The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is an inclusive and engaged community. We recognize that diverse faculty and leaders add value to the educational experience and promote excellence in our teaching, patient care, and research missions. We seek applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and experiences who will contribute to our mission and uphold our core values.
Our mission has guided our growth in graduating the next generation of primary and specialty care physicians and medical researchers while maintaining personalized instruction. The School of Medicine has statewide outreach with a local touch providing patient care, health services, and training physicians in Reno, Nevada and in the state's rural communities. We are expanding provider education to train medical specialists as Medical Doctors as well as Speech Pathologists and Physician Assistants. We are actively expanding technologically-advanced infrastructure to keep pace with our world-class research to meet the needs of students, patients, and researchers. We seek to create an environment that serves all who enter our doors, from the physicians who teach our learners to our employees, patients, and students.
This posting is open until filled
Qualified individuals are encouraged to apply immediately. Lists of eligible candidates will be established and hiring may occur early in the recruiting process. Recruitment will close without notice when a sufficient number of applications are received, or a hiring decision has been made.
Posting Close Date
Note to Applicant
A background check will be conducted on the candidate(s) selected for hire.
HR will attempt to verify academic credentials upon receipt of hiring documents. If the academic credentials cannot be verified, HR will notify the faculty member that an official transcript of their highest degree must be submitted within thirty days of the faculty member's first day of employment.
References will be contacted at the appropriate phase of the recruitment process.
Applicants hired on a federal contract may be subject to E-Verify.
As part of the hiring process, applicants for positions in the Nevada System of Higher Education may be required to demonstrate the ability to perform job-related tasks.
For positions that require driving, evidence of a valid driver's license will be required at the time of employment and as a condition of continued employment.
Schedules are subject to change based on organizational needs.
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5133638
Founded in 1874, the University of Nevada, Reno is the State of Nevada’s land grant institution with a statewide mission and presence. The University of Nevada, Reno is a Carnegie I Research Institution and has been recognized as a “Top Tier” Best National University by U.S. News & World Report. With an enrollment of nearly 21,000 students we offer 145 Tier 1 accredited degree programs. Located in the picturesque Truckee Meadows the University of Nevada, Reno is surrounded by numerous state and national parks, is 45 minutes from beautiful Lake Tahoe, and four hours from San Francisco.
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. We are an inclusive and engaged community and recognize the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
The Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person’s age, disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race, or religion.
Program Coordinator, Senior Outreach Services
R0140695
University of Nevada, Reno - Main Campus
The University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) appreciates your interest in employment at our growing institution. We want your application process to go smoothly and quickly. Final applications must be submitted prior to the close of the recruitment.
If you need assistance or have questions regarding the application process, please contact our recruitment helpline at (775) 784-1495 or https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fjobs%40unr.edu%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cmichellebriggs%40unr.edu%7C3fc56ddb0d3143705f1c08d9932205df%7C523b4bfc0ebd4c03b2b96f6a17fd31d8%7C1%7C0%7C637702596595879550%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=f3IzAEa5H3%2FeLS%2BymU9ZqLPkGDVrZukYCBVy8XHJYe0%3D&reserved=0. For UNR Med professional job postings, please contact the Office of Professional Recruitment at (775) 784-6778.
Job Description
The Sanford Center for Aging at the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine invites applications for the role of Program Coordinator, Senior Outreach Services (SOS). This grant-funded program is part of Community Services and provides volunteer-based companionship to Washoe County elders living at home who are lonely, isolated and looking for a friend. The SOS Coordinator will prioritize client and volunteer service and identify community resources to address client needs; administer in-home client assessments; assist the Director to identify and implement quality improvements; successfully match clients with trained volunteers; conduct outreach to targeted populations; measure, analyze and report on grant output goals; and maintain accurate client and volunteer data. This position reports to the Director of Community Services.
At the Sanford Center for Aging, we are committed to dispelling ageism and providing compassionate care and service to our community's older adult population. The ideal candidate in this role will share our mission to serve, and demonstrate excellent written, verbal, and active listening communication skills, management of distinct priorities on differing timelines, adaptability and an eye for detail and organization. An enthusiasm for outreach, relationship building, forging personal connections with clients and volunteers, and engaging with a variety of audiences will contribute to success in the role. A strong sense of self and respect for the boundaries and abilities of others are key.
Required Qualifications
Bachelor's Degree and two years of related professional experience OR
Master's Degree and one year of related professional work experience
Related Experience: Working with older adults in home settings
Certification and Licensure: Nevada Driver's License
Preferred Qualifications
• Background in social work, human services, public health or related field • Experience working with/managing volunteers • Experience administering needs assessments • Experience connecting individuals with community resources
Compensation Grade
B
To view the salary schedule for this position, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/compensation-evaluation/compensation/salary-schedules and select Administrative Faculty by Grade. Salary is competitive and commensurate with related education and experience
Total Compensation
The total compensation package includes a competitive salary, moving allowance (if applicable), a rich retirement plan, health insurance options that include dental and vision, life insurance, thirty (30) days of sick leave provided upon start date and two (2) days of sick leave accrued per full month after the first year of service, two (2) days of annual leave accrued each full month, along with many other benefits. Additionally, there is a grant-in-aid educational benefit for faculty and dependents. For more information, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/benefits
Faculty Dual Career Assistance Program
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes the importance of addressing dual-career couples' professional needs. We offer a dual career assistance program to newly hired faculty spouses/partners that provides resources and assists them to identify career opportunities in Northern Nevada. https://www.unr.edu/hr/jobs/dual-career-program
Department Information
For more information about the School of Medicine, please visit https://med.unr.edu/
For more information about the Sanford Center for Aging, please visit https://med.unr.edu/aging
Department Contact
Gary Aldax
Search Coordinator
mailto:aencinias@med.unr.edu
Exempt Yes
Full-Time Equivalent 60.0%
Required Attachment(s)
1) Resume/CV
2) Letters of Application (Cover letter)
3) Three professional references (include name, title, company/organization, email address, phone number)
4) One-page inclusivity statement: Please write a brief statement (one page maximum) about how you would contribute toward our mission of creating a culturally inclusive environment in the role for which you are applying. Please also highlight contributions you have made toward this goal in your previous role(s).
Required UNR Med Recruitment Survey
Please complete the survey at the link below; this 1-2 minute survey will allow us to understand our current status and the effectiveness of our efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion at UNR Med. Survey data will not be accessible by the department for which you are applying or the recruitment team.
https://unr.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5uwa6f4UdCXFzOB?RID=MLRP_8wvvyes5WZVKBaR
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med)
For over 50 years the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med) has trained physicians who are leading the way to 'A Healthy Nevada', nation, and world. Community-based and research-intensive, UNR Med is committed to our four-part mission of education, research, clinical service, and diversity. We show this commitment through our demonstrated core values: people are our strength, we innovate and improve, we serve with integrity, and we success with trust and respect.
The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is an inclusive and engaged community. We recognize that diverse faculty and leaders add value to the educational experience and promote excellence in our teaching, patient care, and research missions. We seek applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and experiences who will contribute to our mission and uphold our core values.
Our mission has guided our growth in graduating the next generation of primary and specialty care physicians and medical researchers while maintaining personalized instruction. The School of Medicine has statewide outreach with a local touch providing patient care, health services, and training physicians in Reno, Nevada and in the state's rural communities. We are expanding provider education to train medical specialists as Medical Doctors as well as Speech Pathologists and Physician Assistants. We are actively expanding technologically-advanced infrastructure to keep pace with our world-class research to meet the needs of students, patients, and researchers. We seek to create an environment that serves all who enter our doors, from the physicians who teach our learners to our employees, patients, and students.
This posting is open until filled
Qualified individuals are encouraged to apply immediately. Lists of eligible candidates will be established and hiring may occur early in the recruiting process. Recruitment will close without notice when a sufficient number of applications are received, or a hiring decision has been made.
Posting Close Date
Note to Applicant
A background check will be conducted on the candidate(s) selected for hire.
HR will attempt to verify academic credentials upon receipt of hiring documents. If the academic credentials cannot be verified, HR will notify the faculty member that an official transcript of their highest degree must be submitted within thirty days of the faculty member's first day of employment.
References will be contacted at the appropriate phase of the recruitment process.
Applicants hired on a federal contract may be subject to E-Verify.
As part of the hiring process, applicants for positions in the Nevada System of Higher Education may be required to demonstrate the ability to perform job-related tasks.
For positions that require driving, evidence of a valid driver's license will be required at the time of employment and as a condition of continued employment.
Schedules are subject to change based on organizational needs.
The University of Nevada, Reno is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person's age (40 or older), disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race (including hair texture and protected hairstyles such as natural hairstyles, afros, bantu knots, curls, braids, locks and twists), color, or religion (protected classes).
About Us
The University of Nevada, Reno is a leading American public research university committed to the promise of a future powered by knowledge. Founded in 1874 as Nevada's original land-grant university, the University serves 21,000 undergraduate and graduate students from all 50 states and 63 countries.
Classified by the Carnegie® Classification of Institutions of Higher Education as an R1 (“Very High Research”) university, it is also recognized in the Carnegie® Community Engagement classification. The University is also ranked by U.S. News & World Report among the “Best National Universities” and “Best National Public Universities.” It also ranks in the top tier of the WSJ/Times Higher Education World University Rankings and the New York Times' “Top Colleges for Economic Diversity.”
Since 2009, nearly $1 billion has been has invested in advanced labs, facilities, and residence halls on the main campus. The University is home to Nevada's first medical school - the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine - and it delivers on its original land-grant mission with outreach across the state through the University of Nevada, Reno Extension, Nevada Agricultural Experiment Station, Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology, Nevada Small Business Development Center, the Nevada Seismological Laboratory, and Wolf Pack Athletics.
The main campus is in Reno, Nevada, a burgeoning global technology hub with a vibrant midtown and downtown. Found where the high desert of the Great Basin meets the High Sierra and Lake Tahoe, the beautiful, 290-acre main campus is also a Nevada State Arboretum. In recent years, the University has expanded to include two additional locations: the Redfield Campus in south Reno and the Wayne L. Prim campus in Incline Village, which is the home of the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe.
As part of the Nevada System of Higher Education - comprised of two research universities, one state college, four community colleges and an environmental research institute - the University is committed to developing strong partnerships with each of these institutions for the benefit of all Nevadans.
Through its commitment to high-impact education, world-improving research and creative activity, and outreach that's transforming Nevada's communities and businesses, the University continues its nearly 150-year tradition of benefitting our state, nation and world.
The University recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. The inclusive and engaged community on campus recognizes the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
Today, the University delivers on its original land-grant mission of access to education and knowledge by investing in the academics, facilities, support, engagement and vibrant campus life that promote our diverse students' cognitive growth and academic achievement - all while remaining one of the best values in American higher education.
For more information, please visit the http://www.unr.edu/.
University of Nevada, Reno
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5133640
Founded in 1874, the University of Nevada, Reno is the State of Nevada’s land grant institution with a statewide mission and presence. The University of Nevada, Reno is a Carnegie I Research Institution and has been recognized as a “Top Tier” Best National University by U.S. News & World Report. With an enrollment of nearly 21,000 students we offer 145 Tier 1 accredited degree programs. Located in the picturesque Truckee Meadows the University of Nevada, Reno is surrounded by numerous state and national parks, is 45 minutes from beautiful Lake Tahoe, and four hours from San Francisco.
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. We are an inclusive and engaged community and recognize the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
The Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person’s age, disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race, or religion.
Full Time
Program Coordinator, Senior Outreach Services
R0140695
University of Nevada, Reno - Main Campus
The University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) appreciates your interest in employment at our growing institution. We want your application process to go smoothly and quickly. Final applications must be submitted prior to the close of the recruitment.
If you need assistance or have questions regarding the application process, please contact our recruitment helpline at (775) 784-1495 or https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fjobs%40unr.edu%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cmichellebriggs%40unr.edu%7C3fc56ddb0d3143705f1c08d9932205df%7C523b4bfc0ebd4c03b2b96f6a17fd31d8%7C1%7C0%7C637702596595879550%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=f3IzAEa5H3%2FeLS%2BymU9ZqLPkGDVrZukYCBVy8XHJYe0%3D&reserved=0. For UNR Med professional job postings, please contact the Office of Professional Recruitment at (775) 784-6778.
Job Description
The Sanford Center for Aging at the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine invites applications for the role of Program Coordinator, Senior Outreach Services (SOS). This grant-funded program is part of Community Services and provides volunteer-based companionship to Washoe County elders living at home who are lonely, isolated and looking for a friend. The SOS Coordinator will prioritize client and volunteer service and identify community resources to address client needs; administer in-home client assessments; assist the Director to identify and implement quality improvements; successfully match clients with trained volunteers; conduct outreach to targeted populations; measure, analyze and report on grant output goals; and maintain accurate client and volunteer data. This position reports to the Director of Community Services.
At the Sanford Center for Aging, we are committed to dispelling ageism and providing compassionate care and service to our community's older adult population. The ideal candidate in this role will share our mission to serve, and demonstrate excellent written, verbal, and active listening communication skills, management of distinct priorities on differing timelines, adaptability and an eye for detail and organization. An enthusiasm for outreach, relationship building, forging personal connections with clients and volunteers, and engaging with a variety of audiences will contribute to success in the role. A strong sense of self and respect for the boundaries and abilities of others are key.
Required Qualifications
Bachelor's Degree and two years of related professional experience OR
Master's Degree and one year of related professional work experience
Related Experience: Working with older adults in home settings
Certification and Licensure: Nevada Driver's License
Preferred Qualifications
• Background in social work, human services, public health or related field • Experience working with/managing volunteers • Experience administering needs assessments • Experience connecting individuals with community resources
Compensation Grade
B
To view the salary schedule for this position, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/compensation-evaluation/compensation/salary-schedules and select Administrative Faculty by Grade. Salary is competitive and commensurate with related education and experience
Total Compensation
The total compensation package includes a competitive salary, moving allowance (if applicable), a rich retirement plan, health insurance options that include dental and vision, life insurance, thirty (30) days of sick leave provided upon start date and two (2) days of sick leave accrued per full month after the first year of service, two (2) days of annual leave accrued each full month, along with many other benefits. Additionally, there is a grant-in-aid educational benefit for faculty and dependents. For more information, please visit: https://www.unr.edu/hr/benefits
Faculty Dual Career Assistance Program
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes the importance of addressing dual-career couples' professional needs. We offer a dual career assistance program to newly hired faculty spouses/partners that provides resources and assists them to identify career opportunities in Northern Nevada. https://www.unr.edu/hr/jobs/dual-career-program
Department Information
For more information about the School of Medicine, please visit https://med.unr.edu/
For more information about the Sanford Center for Aging, please visit https://med.unr.edu/aging
Department Contact
Gary Aldax
Search Coordinator
mailto:aencinias@med.unr.edu
Exempt Yes
Full-Time Equivalent 60.0%
Required Attachment(s)
1) Resume/CV
2) Letters of Application (Cover letter)
3) Three professional references (include name, title, company/organization, email address, phone number)
4) One-page inclusivity statement: Please write a brief statement (one page maximum) about how you would contribute toward our mission of creating a culturally inclusive environment in the role for which you are applying. Please also highlight contributions you have made toward this goal in your previous role(s).
Required UNR Med Recruitment Survey
Please complete the survey at the link below; this 1-2 minute survey will allow us to understand our current status and the effectiveness of our efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion at UNR Med. Survey data will not be accessible by the department for which you are applying or the recruitment team.
https://unr.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5uwa6f4UdCXFzOB?RID=MLRP_8wvvyes5WZVKBaR
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med)
For over 50 years the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med) has trained physicians who are leading the way to 'A Healthy Nevada', nation, and world. Community-based and research-intensive, UNR Med is committed to our four-part mission of education, research, clinical service, and diversity. We show this commitment through our demonstrated core values: people are our strength, we innovate and improve, we serve with integrity, and we success with trust and respect.
The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is an inclusive and engaged community. We recognize that diverse faculty and leaders add value to the educational experience and promote excellence in our teaching, patient care, and research missions. We seek applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and experiences who will contribute to our mission and uphold our core values.
Our mission has guided our growth in graduating the next generation of primary and specialty care physicians and medical researchers while maintaining personalized instruction. The School of Medicine has statewide outreach with a local touch providing patient care, health services, and training physicians in Reno, Nevada and in the state's rural communities. We are expanding provider education to train medical specialists as Medical Doctors as well as Speech Pathologists and Physician Assistants. We are actively expanding technologically-advanced infrastructure to keep pace with our world-class research to meet the needs of students, patients, and researchers. We seek to create an environment that serves all who enter our doors, from the physicians who teach our learners to our employees, patients, and students.
This posting is open until filled
Qualified individuals are encouraged to apply immediately. Lists of eligible candidates will be established and hiring may occur early in the recruiting process. Recruitment will close without notice when a sufficient number of applications are received, or a hiring decision has been made.
Posting Close Date
Note to Applicant
A background check will be conducted on the candidate(s) selected for hire.
HR will attempt to verify academic credentials upon receipt of hiring documents. If the academic credentials cannot be verified, HR will notify the faculty member that an official transcript of their highest degree must be submitted within thirty days of the faculty member's first day of employment.
References will be contacted at the appropriate phase of the recruitment process.
Applicants hired on a federal contract may be subject to E-Verify.
As part of the hiring process, applicants for positions in the Nevada System of Higher Education may be required to demonstrate the ability to perform job-related tasks.
For positions that require driving, evidence of a valid driver's license will be required at the time of employment and as a condition of continued employment.
Schedules are subject to change based on organizational needs.
The University of Nevada, Reno is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person's age (40 or older), disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race (including hair texture and protected hairstyles such as natural hairstyles, afros, bantu knots, curls, braids, locks and twists), color, or religion (protected classes).
About Us
The University of Nevada, Reno is a leading American public research university committed to the promise of a future powered by knowledge. Founded in 1874 as Nevada's original land-grant university, the University serves 21,000 undergraduate and graduate students from all 50 states and 63 countries.
Classified by the Carnegie® Classification of Institutions of Higher Education as an R1 (“Very High Research”) university, it is also recognized in the Carnegie® Community Engagement classification. The University is also ranked by U.S. News & World Report among the “Best National Universities” and “Best National Public Universities.” It also ranks in the top tier of the WSJ/Times Higher Education World University Rankings and the New York Times' “Top Colleges for Economic Diversity.”
Since 2009, nearly $1 billion has been has invested in advanced labs, facilities, and residence halls on the main campus. The University is home to Nevada's first medical school - the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine - and it delivers on its original land-grant mission with outreach across the state through the University of Nevada, Reno Extension, Nevada Agricultural Experiment Station, Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology, Nevada Small Business Development Center, the Nevada Seismological Laboratory, and Wolf Pack Athletics.
The main campus is in Reno, Nevada, a burgeoning global technology hub with a vibrant midtown and downtown. Found where the high desert of the Great Basin meets the High Sierra and Lake Tahoe, the beautiful, 290-acre main campus is also a Nevada State Arboretum. In recent years, the University has expanded to include two additional locations: the Redfield Campus in south Reno and the Wayne L. Prim campus in Incline Village, which is the home of the University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe.
As part of the Nevada System of Higher Education - comprised of two research universities, one state college, four community colleges and an environmental research institute - the University is committed to developing strong partnerships with each of these institutions for the benefit of all Nevadans.
Through its commitment to high-impact education, world-improving research and creative activity, and outreach that's transforming Nevada's communities and businesses, the University continues its nearly 150-year tradition of benefitting our state, nation and world.
The University recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. The inclusive and engaged community on campus recognizes the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
Today, the University delivers on its original land-grant mission of access to education and knowledge by investing in the academics, facilities, support, engagement and vibrant campus life that promote our diverse students' cognitive growth and academic achievement - all while remaining one of the best values in American higher education.
For more information, please visit the http://www.unr.edu/.
University of Nevada, Reno
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/5133640
Founded in 1874, the University of Nevada, Reno is the State of Nevada’s land grant institution with a statewide mission and presence. The University of Nevada, Reno is a Carnegie I Research Institution and has been recognized as a “Top Tier” Best National University by U.S. News & World Report. With an enrollment of nearly 21,000 students we offer 145 Tier 1 accredited degree programs. Located in the picturesque Truckee Meadows the University of Nevada, Reno is surrounded by numerous state and national parks, is 45 minutes from beautiful Lake Tahoe, and four hours from San Francisco.
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. We are an inclusive and engaged community and recognize the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
The Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person’s age, disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race, or religion.
Middle School Director Brentwood School – Los Angeles, CA July 2024
THE SCHOOL Brentwood School in Los Angeles, California, is an independent, coeducational, college-preparatory day school in the Brentwood neighborhood of west Los Angeles. The school, a community of 1200+ Kindergarten through 12th grade students and 151 faculty members, is situated on two campuses. The three-acre West Campus (K-5) is four blocks away from the original 28-acre East Campus (6-12). In its relatively short history of 50 years, Brentwood has grown to be one of the premier independent day schools in California. Students describe a warm and caring atmosphere where they are known and valued as individuals. Embracing high standards of academic excellence, character development, and emotional intelligence, Brentwood encourages students to think critically and creatively and to act ethically.
Brentwood School is fully accredited by the California Association of Independent Schools and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, and is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), the California Association of Independent Schools, INDEX, A Better Chance, and the Independent School Alliance for Minority Affairs.
HISTORY Founded as a non-profit corporation in 1972, Brentwood School acquired the Brentwood Military Academy, which had existed on the land now known as Brentwood’s East Campus, and opened a co-educational, college preparatory day school with grades 6-10. Grade 11 was added in fall 1973 and Brentwood’s first senior class graduated in June 1975. In 1994, Brentwood purchased the nearby Marymount Junior School campus and opened a Kindergarten through grade 6 campus in the fall of 1995. As the 2019-2020 school year began, Brentwood opened a new Middle School building and reconfigured the division to include grades 6-8. LOCATION AND SETTING Visitors to Brentwood’s two campuses are immediately struck by their beauty and warmth. The setting is a well-integrated blend of old and new buildings, red-tiled roofs, intimate courtyards, ivy-covered walls and green fields. Brentwood’s East Campus, housing grades 6-12, is situated on 28 acres with Mission-style historic buildings, a new 73,000 square foot Middle School building, renovated Upper School classrooms, and sustainable landscaping. The five story Middle School building houses not only general classrooms but also includes dedicated spaces for music, art, science, fabrication and design, theater rehearsal, film, dance, a separate theater, a library, and dining hall/kitchen. The Middle School also has its own playing field and outdoor commons areas adjacent to the Middle School building. The Upper School facilities, including classrooms, laboratory space, a cafeteria, a bookstore, faculty and administrative offices and courtyards, are on the hillside with sweeping views across Los Angeles to the ocean. The 22-acre East Campus Athletics Complex was completed in 2001 and the Caruso Watt Aquatics Center opened in the spring of 2008. No other school in the Los Angeles area boasts such an expansive, state-of-the-art facility that encompasses such a wide variety of sports. Lying at the base of the Santa Monica Mountains at the western edge of Los Angeles, the community of Brentwood is gracious and welcoming, with comfortable homes on leafy, well-maintained streets. Nearby neighborhoods and cities include Pacific Palisades, Santa Monica, Westwood, and Bel Air. The UCLA campus is about one mile east of the school. The Brentwood area is also home to the Getty Center, one of the world’s most comprehensive arts, conservation, and education institutions.
COMMUNITY Brentwood School has always been a community where students and teachers know and care about each other. The closeness and longevity of these relationships is evident in the close ties many teachers still share with alumni/ae. The vibrant faculty draws on a wealth of teaching experiences. Fifty-nine faculty members have been at Brentwood for 10 or more years and 91 hold advanced degrees. Brentwood’s student body is diverse and lively. Students of color comprise 46% of the population. Tuition for the 2023-2024 school year is $50,880 (grades 6-12) and Brentwood is strongly committed to an aggressive financial support program. The school has budgeted $9.7 million annually for financial support and 17% of the East Campus students receive support. With the school’s close proximity to three major freeways, Brentwood is easily accessible to students from a wide geographical area served by eleven school bus routes and an extensive carpool system. DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION Every single person in our community brings something different. Their unique background and personal experiences represent a value added to our community. Brentwood is intentional, purposeful, and strategic about honoring people in all their differences which is reflected in Diversity as a core value. Equity is being conscious and cognitive of our efforts to best meet the needs of all members of our community. Inclusion means creating an environment where all participants and constituents can be their best selves, irrespective of background, experience, and lifestyle. We do this with a variety of measures, policies, and programs. We do this through our curriculum—in what we teach and how we teach it. We work together as students, parents, faculty, and administration to maintain an inclusive community. All of this is motivated and inspired by our recognition that diversity is advantageous now and in the future.
ACADEMIC AND CO-CURRICULAR PROGRAMS The child-centered philosophies of learning and teaching, the emphasis on a broad-based and diverse liberal arts curriculum that is connected and sequential between grades and divisions, and the unwavering quest for excellence are all common features of the Brentwood K-12 experience. The school provides a core curriculum that is primarily traditional and classical emphasizing language, communication, mathematical reasoning, and computation. The goal of both curriculum and pedagogy is to foster intellectual curiosity, excitement for learning, and a desire to fulfill individual potential.
THE MIDDLE SCHOOL (GRADES 6-8) On the East Campus, the 352 Middle School students learn to assume more responsibility for their own education. The 6th grade class is composed of 42 Brentwood Lower School students plus 34 new students while the 7th grade class of 137 welcomed 74 new students this past year. The ideal class size means students benefit not only from a great deal of personal attention, but also from a feeling of being closely connected to the school, to one another, and to the faculty. In this nurturing, supportive environment, students are exposed to a broad range of subjects that allow them to explore their interests, develop new ones, and experience both personal and intellectual growth. See the Middle School Curriculum Guide for more information. The weekly meetings of the Middle School Advisory Program allow students to develop more fully connections with faculty members in small, intimate groups. In faculty-moderated sessions, students explore topics that include core values, organization and study skills, coping with peer pressure, and ethical decision-making. In addition, the Middle School Family Groups are designed to build community and leadership, combining students from 6th - 8th grades in groups. Each group of approximately 14 students participates in activities including Advisory Olympics/Games and Community Discussions that range from challenging subjects to fun topics that are relevant to Middle School age students. CO-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES Brentwood encourages active participation in extracurricular activities in order to engage students in the life of the school and enable students to discover and purse their passions. It is a goal to provide students with as many areas as possible in which to develop their talents and to experience success. Opportunities abound for participation in art, athletics, debate, drama, dance, jazz band, orchestra, rhythm section workshop, chorus, student government, and service learning.
THE ARTS The arts programs at Brentwood foster a supportive atmosphere that promotes questioning, individuality, and diversity. The Middle School arts at Brentwood offer instruction in visual arts, dance, music, film, and drama. Working in observational, abstract, and/or inventive ways, students learn to manipulate ideas, techniques, and materials through a thoughtful, evolving application of the elements and principles of art and design as they work toward creative goals.
THE ATHLETIC PROGRAM A tradition of wide and enthusiastic participation in physical education and athletics has developed alongside athletic success. Brentwood fields highly competitive teams and prizes character, sportsmanship, and teamwork. Approximately 80% of students in the Middle School participate on at least one Middle School team, and many play on two or three different teams during the school year. There are 29 Middle School interscholastic teams representing the Middle School in 14 sports. Each year Brentwood teams attain numerous league and sectional championships as well as many playoff berths. A “no-cut” policy applies to 6th-8th grade teams. The program is designed to engender an understanding of commitment, sportsmanship, hard work, and responsibility.
SERVICE LEARNING Brentwood’s service learning program ensures the development of social awareness, and inspires students to be lifelong learners with a self-motivated sense of responsibility to the local, national, and global communities. The school is a caring and conscientious neighbor, to both the nearby VA and broader Los Angeles communities.
BELLDEGRUN CENTER FOR INNOVATION LEADERSHIP (BCIL) The Belldegrun Center for Innovative Leadership prepares community members in grades K – 12 to engage with real world challenges and explore solutions within and beyond the classroom. Work with BCIL impacts the entire Brentwood School community, cultivating innovative problem solvers, courageous risk takers, effective managers, adept communicators, and inspired community builders. Through their involvement in BCIL, students and faculty seek answers in creative, collaborative ways and discover that their work can have an impact. PARENT INVOLVEMENT Brentwood believes in partnering with parents in the education of their child and encourages and welcomes parents to actively participate in the life of the school. The children benefit from sharing their school world with their parents; the school benefits from parents who contribute their talents, interests, and energy to support and enrich the school’s programs; and the parents benefit from experiencing first-hand the environment in which their children are educated. Parents are strongly encouraged to participate in the Parents Association and Eagles organizations and to attend parent education events including guest lectures and breakfasts with the Middle School Director.
STRENGTHS OF THE MIDDLE SCHOOL One of the hallmarks of the Brentwood Middle School is a passionate, vibrant, and child-centered faculty who are committed to the following: ● A culture of collegiality, professionalism, and interdisciplinary collaboration ● A commitment to equity, inclusion, and cross-cultural competency ● Vigorous college-preparatory academic program that fosters critical and creative thinking and provides rich extracurricular offerings ● Students who are happy, self-confident, well-rounded, and caring ● High quality educational and athletic facilities on a magnificent campus ● Core values that emphasize character, personal responsibility, and service to the greater community
● A balance of hard work and fun, and of high expectations and nurturing, with a strong focus on the quality of student life ● An enviable stature and high demand for admissions in the universe of greater Los Angeles independent schools
THE POSITION The Middle School Director is responsible for all aspects of the program and personnel in the Middle School. The Middle School Leadership Team is comprised of the Director, Assistant Middle School Director, Middle School Director of Service Learning, Learning Specialist, the counselors/School Psychologist, Assistant Director of Equity and Inclusion, and the Associate Athletic Director.
EXPECTATIONS The Middle School Director will lead a robust division that has constructed its programs and operations with careful attention to Brentwood’s mission and values. The Director of the Middle School will accomplish the following:
● Provide leadership through the support and collaboration with an excellent faculty, attending to the curriculum, and ensuring the Middle School’s overall vitality ● Work with the faculty and administration to sustain systems and structures that support and increase the effectiveness of the school’s curriculum and programs ● Strengthen collaboration and foster transparency and trust through open communication, clear expectations and full engagement- working closely with the Middle School leadership, faculty, staff, parents, and students ● Foster an environment that encourages open discussion with the freedom to express varied points of view ● Create a culture where critical feedback is seen and experienced as a catalyst for professional and personal growth
● Engage fully in the daily life of the school and support students of varied identifies, lifestyles, and beliefs ● Provide educational leadership and be a skilled spokesperson for the school’s vibrant, educational program ● Work closely with the Head of Brentwood School and the members of the School Leadership Team to foster the strength of the entire school
PROFESSIONAL QUALITIES Brentwood School is interested in candidates who can support, articulate, and promote a mission-driven, child-centered model of education. Along with excellent organizational and leadership skills, ideal candidates will have backgrounds that demonstrate most, if not all, of the following:
● A warm, approachable presence on campus that invites and respects the views of others yet is decisive when needed ● Visible and accessible on campus, knowing and enjoying the faculty, staff, parents, and especially the students of the school ● Engage actively with students, faculty, staff, and families in the daily life of the school, preserving and promoting the warmth and closeness that defines the Middle School’s culture ● Knowledge and understanding of developmentally appropriate and inclusive curriculum and instructional practices ● Strong familiarity with significant educational, DEI, and technology trends in independent schools ● Effective communication with faculty members, students, and parents, in a clear concise, and timely manner, keeping these groups appropriately informed of potential issues and or needs ● Experience evaluating faculty ● Cross-cultural competency and a commitment to equity and inclusion ● Ability to synthesize and articulate the school’s educational vision and to inspire and motivate others towards further strengthening the Middle School ● Teaching and administrative experience at the Middle School level ● An advanced degree is preferred ● Collaborative approach to leadership balanced with the ability to make decisions ● A lifelong learner who uses the latest research to complement their own experiences ● The ability to motivate, inspire, and support faculty and staff PERSONAL QUALITIES The favored candidate is an outgoing, energetic, confident person of keen intellect and integrity who will enjoy developing and guiding the Middle School community. The frequency with which parents and teachers are on campus working together requires a leader who is the soul of discretion. The Middle School will be best served by a leader who is self-aware; has a hands-on, approachable style; a sense of humor; and a true love and appreciation for educating middle school-age children.
TO APPLY: Brentwood School is dedicated to the creation of a diverse faculty and staff that best represents our student body and the city of Los Angeles. Information about our school can be found at www.bwscampus.com. Please submit a letter of interest and resume to the contact person listed below. In your letter, highlight your education and experience specifically related to diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Kim Hutchings Senior Executive Assistant and Administrative Liaison to the Board of Trustees 100 S. Barrington Place Los Angeles, CA 90049 Email: khutchings@bwscampus.com
COMPENSATION: Brentwood School's employment requirements vary, from positions requiring no experience to those needing 20+ years of expert experience. Our salary range includes all levels of experience, from $175,000 to $225,000. Salaries are determined based on years of experience, education, full- or part-time status, the category of the role, and the number of months of worked per school year. Salary ranges do not include benefits, i.e. 403b retirement matching, paid lunch time, free breakfast and lunch, free parking, subsidy toward medical, dental, vision, life/AD&D plans, and generous time off. The pay range is an estimate and is not guaranteed. If hired, your actual base salary will be determined by your education, experience, and category.
Full Time
Middle School Director Brentwood School – Los Angeles, CA July 2024
THE SCHOOL Brentwood School in Los Angeles, California, is an independent, coeducational, college-preparatory day school in the Brentwood neighborhood of west Los Angeles. The school, a community of 1200+ Kindergarten through 12th grade students and 151 faculty members, is situated on two campuses. The three-acre West Campus (K-5) is four blocks away from the original 28-acre East Campus (6-12). In its relatively short history of 50 years, Brentwood has grown to be one of the premier independent day schools in California. Students describe a warm and caring atmosphere where they are known and valued as individuals. Embracing high standards of academic excellence, character development, and emotional intelligence, Brentwood encourages students to think critically and creatively and to act ethically.
Brentwood School is fully accredited by the California Association of Independent Schools and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, and is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), the California Association of Independent Schools, INDEX, A Better Chance, and the Independent School Alliance for Minority Affairs.
HISTORY Founded as a non-profit corporation in 1972, Brentwood School acquired the Brentwood Military Academy, which had existed on the land now known as Brentwood’s East Campus, and opened a co-educational, college preparatory day school with grades 6-10. Grade 11 was added in fall 1973 and Brentwood’s first senior class graduated in June 1975. In 1994, Brentwood purchased the nearby Marymount Junior School campus and opened a Kindergarten through grade 6 campus in the fall of 1995. As the 2019-2020 school year began, Brentwood opened a new Middle School building and reconfigured the division to include grades 6-8. LOCATION AND SETTING Visitors to Brentwood’s two campuses are immediately struck by their beauty and warmth. The setting is a well-integrated blend of old and new buildings, red-tiled roofs, intimate courtyards, ivy-covered walls and green fields. Brentwood’s East Campus, housing grades 6-12, is situated on 28 acres with Mission-style historic buildings, a new 73,000 square foot Middle School building, renovated Upper School classrooms, and sustainable landscaping. The five story Middle School building houses not only general classrooms but also includes dedicated spaces for music, art, science, fabrication and design, theater rehearsal, film, dance, a separate theater, a library, and dining hall/kitchen. The Middle School also has its own playing field and outdoor commons areas adjacent to the Middle School building. The Upper School facilities, including classrooms, laboratory space, a cafeteria, a bookstore, faculty and administrative offices and courtyards, are on the hillside with sweeping views across Los Angeles to the ocean. The 22-acre East Campus Athletics Complex was completed in 2001 and the Caruso Watt Aquatics Center opened in the spring of 2008. No other school in the Los Angeles area boasts such an expansive, state-of-the-art facility that encompasses such a wide variety of sports. Lying at the base of the Santa Monica Mountains at the western edge of Los Angeles, the community of Brentwood is gracious and welcoming, with comfortable homes on leafy, well-maintained streets. Nearby neighborhoods and cities include Pacific Palisades, Santa Monica, Westwood, and Bel Air. The UCLA campus is about one mile east of the school. The Brentwood area is also home to the Getty Center, one of the world’s most comprehensive arts, conservation, and education institutions.
COMMUNITY Brentwood School has always been a community where students and teachers know and care about each other. The closeness and longevity of these relationships is evident in the close ties many teachers still share with alumni/ae. The vibrant faculty draws on a wealth of teaching experiences. Fifty-nine faculty members have been at Brentwood for 10 or more years and 91 hold advanced degrees. Brentwood’s student body is diverse and lively. Students of color comprise 46% of the population. Tuition for the 2023-2024 school year is $50,880 (grades 6-12) and Brentwood is strongly committed to an aggressive financial support program. The school has budgeted $9.7 million annually for financial support and 17% of the East Campus students receive support. With the school’s close proximity to three major freeways, Brentwood is easily accessible to students from a wide geographical area served by eleven school bus routes and an extensive carpool system. DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION Every single person in our community brings something different. Their unique background and personal experiences represent a value added to our community. Brentwood is intentional, purposeful, and strategic about honoring people in all their differences which is reflected in Diversity as a core value. Equity is being conscious and cognitive of our efforts to best meet the needs of all members of our community. Inclusion means creating an environment where all participants and constituents can be their best selves, irrespective of background, experience, and lifestyle. We do this with a variety of measures, policies, and programs. We do this through our curriculum—in what we teach and how we teach it. We work together as students, parents, faculty, and administration to maintain an inclusive community. All of this is motivated and inspired by our recognition that diversity is advantageous now and in the future.
ACADEMIC AND CO-CURRICULAR PROGRAMS The child-centered philosophies of learning and teaching, the emphasis on a broad-based and diverse liberal arts curriculum that is connected and sequential between grades and divisions, and the unwavering quest for excellence are all common features of the Brentwood K-12 experience. The school provides a core curriculum that is primarily traditional and classical emphasizing language, communication, mathematical reasoning, and computation. The goal of both curriculum and pedagogy is to foster intellectual curiosity, excitement for learning, and a desire to fulfill individual potential.
THE MIDDLE SCHOOL (GRADES 6-8) On the East Campus, the 352 Middle School students learn to assume more responsibility for their own education. The 6th grade class is composed of 42 Brentwood Lower School students plus 34 new students while the 7th grade class of 137 welcomed 74 new students this past year. The ideal class size means students benefit not only from a great deal of personal attention, but also from a feeling of being closely connected to the school, to one another, and to the faculty. In this nurturing, supportive environment, students are exposed to a broad range of subjects that allow them to explore their interests, develop new ones, and experience both personal and intellectual growth. See the Middle School Curriculum Guide for more information. The weekly meetings of the Middle School Advisory Program allow students to develop more fully connections with faculty members in small, intimate groups. In faculty-moderated sessions, students explore topics that include core values, organization and study skills, coping with peer pressure, and ethical decision-making. In addition, the Middle School Family Groups are designed to build community and leadership, combining students from 6th - 8th grades in groups. Each group of approximately 14 students participates in activities including Advisory Olympics/Games and Community Discussions that range from challenging subjects to fun topics that are relevant to Middle School age students. CO-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES Brentwood encourages active participation in extracurricular activities in order to engage students in the life of the school and enable students to discover and purse their passions. It is a goal to provide students with as many areas as possible in which to develop their talents and to experience success. Opportunities abound for participation in art, athletics, debate, drama, dance, jazz band, orchestra, rhythm section workshop, chorus, student government, and service learning.
THE ARTS The arts programs at Brentwood foster a supportive atmosphere that promotes questioning, individuality, and diversity. The Middle School arts at Brentwood offer instruction in visual arts, dance, music, film, and drama. Working in observational, abstract, and/or inventive ways, students learn to manipulate ideas, techniques, and materials through a thoughtful, evolving application of the elements and principles of art and design as they work toward creative goals.
THE ATHLETIC PROGRAM A tradition of wide and enthusiastic participation in physical education and athletics has developed alongside athletic success. Brentwood fields highly competitive teams and prizes character, sportsmanship, and teamwork. Approximately 80% of students in the Middle School participate on at least one Middle School team, and many play on two or three different teams during the school year. There are 29 Middle School interscholastic teams representing the Middle School in 14 sports. Each year Brentwood teams attain numerous league and sectional championships as well as many playoff berths. A “no-cut” policy applies to 6th-8th grade teams. The program is designed to engender an understanding of commitment, sportsmanship, hard work, and responsibility.
SERVICE LEARNING Brentwood’s service learning program ensures the development of social awareness, and inspires students to be lifelong learners with a self-motivated sense of responsibility to the local, national, and global communities. The school is a caring and conscientious neighbor, to both the nearby VA and broader Los Angeles communities.
BELLDEGRUN CENTER FOR INNOVATION LEADERSHIP (BCIL) The Belldegrun Center for Innovative Leadership prepares community members in grades K – 12 to engage with real world challenges and explore solutions within and beyond the classroom. Work with BCIL impacts the entire Brentwood School community, cultivating innovative problem solvers, courageous risk takers, effective managers, adept communicators, and inspired community builders. Through their involvement in BCIL, students and faculty seek answers in creative, collaborative ways and discover that their work can have an impact. PARENT INVOLVEMENT Brentwood believes in partnering with parents in the education of their child and encourages and welcomes parents to actively participate in the life of the school. The children benefit from sharing their school world with their parents; the school benefits from parents who contribute their talents, interests, and energy to support and enrich the school’s programs; and the parents benefit from experiencing first-hand the environment in which their children are educated. Parents are strongly encouraged to participate in the Parents Association and Eagles organizations and to attend parent education events including guest lectures and breakfasts with the Middle School Director.
STRENGTHS OF THE MIDDLE SCHOOL One of the hallmarks of the Brentwood Middle School is a passionate, vibrant, and child-centered faculty who are committed to the following: ● A culture of collegiality, professionalism, and interdisciplinary collaboration ● A commitment to equity, inclusion, and cross-cultural competency ● Vigorous college-preparatory academic program that fosters critical and creative thinking and provides rich extracurricular offerings ● Students who are happy, self-confident, well-rounded, and caring ● High quality educational and athletic facilities on a magnificent campus ● Core values that emphasize character, personal responsibility, and service to the greater community
● A balance of hard work and fun, and of high expectations and nurturing, with a strong focus on the quality of student life ● An enviable stature and high demand for admissions in the universe of greater Los Angeles independent schools
THE POSITION The Middle School Director is responsible for all aspects of the program and personnel in the Middle School. The Middle School Leadership Team is comprised of the Director, Assistant Middle School Director, Middle School Director of Service Learning, Learning Specialist, the counselors/School Psychologist, Assistant Director of Equity and Inclusion, and the Associate Athletic Director.
EXPECTATIONS The Middle School Director will lead a robust division that has constructed its programs and operations with careful attention to Brentwood’s mission and values. The Director of the Middle School will accomplish the following:
● Provide leadership through the support and collaboration with an excellent faculty, attending to the curriculum, and ensuring the Middle School’s overall vitality ● Work with the faculty and administration to sustain systems and structures that support and increase the effectiveness of the school’s curriculum and programs ● Strengthen collaboration and foster transparency and trust through open communication, clear expectations and full engagement- working closely with the Middle School leadership, faculty, staff, parents, and students ● Foster an environment that encourages open discussion with the freedom to express varied points of view ● Create a culture where critical feedback is seen and experienced as a catalyst for professional and personal growth
● Engage fully in the daily life of the school and support students of varied identifies, lifestyles, and beliefs ● Provide educational leadership and be a skilled spokesperson for the school’s vibrant, educational program ● Work closely with the Head of Brentwood School and the members of the School Leadership Team to foster the strength of the entire school
PROFESSIONAL QUALITIES Brentwood School is interested in candidates who can support, articulate, and promote a mission-driven, child-centered model of education. Along with excellent organizational and leadership skills, ideal candidates will have backgrounds that demonstrate most, if not all, of the following:
● A warm, approachable presence on campus that invites and respects the views of others yet is decisive when needed ● Visible and accessible on campus, knowing and enjoying the faculty, staff, parents, and especially the students of the school ● Engage actively with students, faculty, staff, and families in the daily life of the school, preserving and promoting the warmth and closeness that defines the Middle School’s culture ● Knowledge and understanding of developmentally appropriate and inclusive curriculum and instructional practices ● Strong familiarity with significant educational, DEI, and technology trends in independent schools ● Effective communication with faculty members, students, and parents, in a clear concise, and timely manner, keeping these groups appropriately informed of potential issues and or needs ● Experience evaluating faculty ● Cross-cultural competency and a commitment to equity and inclusion ● Ability to synthesize and articulate the school’s educational vision and to inspire and motivate others towards further strengthening the Middle School ● Teaching and administrative experience at the Middle School level ● An advanced degree is preferred ● Collaborative approach to leadership balanced with the ability to make decisions ● A lifelong learner who uses the latest research to complement their own experiences ● The ability to motivate, inspire, and support faculty and staff PERSONAL QUALITIES The favored candidate is an outgoing, energetic, confident person of keen intellect and integrity who will enjoy developing and guiding the Middle School community. The frequency with which parents and teachers are on campus working together requires a leader who is the soul of discretion. The Middle School will be best served by a leader who is self-aware; has a hands-on, approachable style; a sense of humor; and a true love and appreciation for educating middle school-age children.
TO APPLY: Brentwood School is dedicated to the creation of a diverse faculty and staff that best represents our student body and the city of Los Angeles. Information about our school can be found at www.bwscampus.com. Please submit a letter of interest and resume to the contact person listed below. In your letter, highlight your education and experience specifically related to diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Kim Hutchings Senior Executive Assistant and Administrative Liaison to the Board of Trustees 100 S. Barrington Place Los Angeles, CA 90049 Email: khutchings@bwscampus.com
COMPENSATION: Brentwood School's employment requirements vary, from positions requiring no experience to those needing 20+ years of expert experience. Our salary range includes all levels of experience, from $175,000 to $225,000. Salaries are determined based on years of experience, education, full- or part-time status, the category of the role, and the number of months of worked per school year. Salary ranges do not include benefits, i.e. 403b retirement matching, paid lunch time, free breakfast and lunch, free parking, subsidy toward medical, dental, vision, life/AD&D plans, and generous time off. The pay range is an estimate and is not guaranteed. If hired, your actual base salary will be determined by your education, experience, and category.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree with major course work in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field, and three years of professional level environmental related experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. This is a grant funded position. Employees are eligible for benefits but have no rights to permanent employment. This position is in the Petroleum Management Division: Position Summary This is a professional position that may supervise work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: inspection, testing and enforcement of air and water pollution control ordinances, hazardous waste management or collection, as well as protection, evaluation, stewardship and/or management of natural and historic resources for Alachua County. The employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for coordinating and supervising field and laboratory activities related to water quality, air quality or other environmental monitoring and assessment, technical review of contaminated site remediation, public education program coordination, regulatory activities regarding natural/historic resources, hazardous materials, hazardous waste collection, and/or land stewardship activities. Responsibilities will vary according to Department and division assignment within the Solid Waste & Resource Recovery Department (Hazardous Waste Management) and the Environmental Protection Department (Natural Resources, Water Resources, Petroleum Management, Land Conservation and/or Hazardous Materials Management). Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Conducts and supervises field collection of samples and/or data and/or observations for environmental analysis, evaluates data, prepares reports and recommendations. Coordinates with other regulatory agencies. May supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees including determining work procedures and schedules; issuing instructions and assigning duties; reviewing work; recommending personnel actions; conducting performance reviews; and conducting departmental training and orientation. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or solid waste regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates complaint for corrective action and makes recommendations. Provides guidance and oversight and enforcement of federal, state and local environmental regulations. Evaluates inspection and monitoring data from multiple sources. Depending on the hiring division, examples may include water monitoring wells, solid waste management sites, wastewater treatment plants, and hazardous materials management facilities, photopoints, transects or data from other agencies as appropriate. May coordinate and/or assist with stewardship activities such as natural resource restoration, controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring and assist with land acquisition. Prepares reports and recommendations. Prepares and conducts public education programs and compliance assistance training programs. Designs and establishes environmental monitoring programs as needed. Testifies, as needed, at administrative hearings and/or court as a technical witness and/or to support enforcement actions. Assists the supervisor in the preparation of periodic operating reports and presentations to various Boards; provides input into area budget needs. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles and four-wheel drive vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery, in order to conduct job duties that, depending on the hiring division, may include field tests, inspections, evaluations, prescribed burns, exotic species control, and investigations to obtain data for use in determining code compliance, sources of, and methods for controlling County-wide environmental pollutants, performing on-site evaluations, plant and animal surveys, and other ecological monitoring as appropriate. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Land Conservation Division: Plans and implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas including exotic plant control, prescribed fire, forestry, restoration and site development. Develops projects and scopes of work, coordinates and oversees contractors performing land stewardship activities such as: invasive plant and animal control, site preparation, planting, timber harvesting, site maintenance, site development, natural and cultural resource monitoring, restoration and prescribed burning. May coordinate prescribed burning activities on County owned or managed properties, through preparation, review and implementation of burn prescriptions. May serve as burn boss or burn crew member on prescribed burns. May plan and implement maintenance and creation of firebreaks and preparation of areas for burning. May coordinate with the Florida Forest Service, contractors and other agencies on prescribed burning and other stewardship activities. May perform environmental assessments of properties nominated for acquisition through the Alachua County Forever Program to identify natural resources, physiographic and ecological characteristics, hydrological resources, manageability, and public accessibility. Analyzes environmental considerations and prepares evaluation reports. Responsible for land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring, preparation of base-line monitoring reports and development of management plans. Natural Resources Division: Analyzes environmental characteristics of development applications and administrative permits and may provide recommendations on land use, zoning and site plans. Performs compliance inspections for development projects to determine consistency with environmental code requirements and development order conditions. Responds to citizen and agency inquiries and complaints related to natural and water resource issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts natural resources outreach and education. Performs environmental assessments of special planning areas to identify natural resources and historic resources and physiographic and ecological characteristics. Assists in developing and implementing elements in the County's Comprehensive Plan and land development regulations. Hazardous Materials Management: Performs rotational 24/7 on call and emergency response as required for hazardous materials incidents/releases within the County and coordinates remediation of spills. Interacts and coordinates with inter-agencies, state and federal agencies as needed/required. Performs periodic compliance and enforcement inspections of regulated facilities, contaminated sites, remediation sites, and other environmental sites to ensure compliance with and enforcement of local codes, ordinances, state and federal regulatory programs; reviews permits and compliance status. Manages remediation activities at environmental sites, including technical and/or cost oversight of engineering contractors for compliance monitoring, contamination assessments and remedial actions arising from groundwater, surface water, soil or ambient air contamination with hazardous or toxic materials and petroleum products to ensure compliance with program regulations and local ordinances. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted regulatory programs or hazardous materials and waste management programs. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders and coordinates remediation of spills. Assists in developing pollution control, air pollution and hazardous and solid waste elements of land development regulations, County Comprehensive Plan, and ordinances and regulations. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local regulations, including the proper storage, handling, transportation and disposal of hazardous materials. Responds to citizen and multi-agency inquiries and complaints related to hazardous materials and hazardous waste issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations, codes, and ordinances and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential civil and/or criminal enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts hazardous materials outreach and education. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Petroleum Management Division: Petroleum Restoration Program: Provides oversight and management of work conducted at petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated sites under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Petroleum Restoration Program. Provides technical and fiscal oversight of assessment and remediation activities. Develops cost effective scopes of work and purchase orders, and reviews invoices for quality and completeness of work performed or goods and service provided by contractors and vendors. Reviews deliverables, technical documents and invoices for accuracy and completeness, issues comment and approval letters, and updates County and State project tracking databases and document repositories. Conducts field, installation, and operation & maintenance inspections. Storage Tanks Compliance Program: Conducts petroleum storage tanks inspections under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Storage Tanks Compliance Verification Program, including but not limited to routine compliance, installation, closure, discharge, non-compliance, and complaint inspections. Records inspection results in the State's Florida Inspection Reporting Storage Tanks (FIRST) on-line database, produces inspection reports, and issues in compliance, compliance assistance offer, and return to compliance letters. Communicates with facility owners/operators, compliance contractors, and certified pollutant storage system contractors to schedule and conduct annual compliance inspections, and coordinate installation and closure inspections. Water Resources Division: Coordinates and conducts water resources outreach and education. Monitors and performs wastewater treatment facility inspections. Conducts training on erosion and sediment control. Prepares, coordinates and manages contracts and grants. Collects groundwater and surface water samples and ensures data quality assurance and quality control procedures and targets are met. Analyzes water quality and hydrologic data and prepares technical reports. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local water resources regulations. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): Coordinates operations programs for solid waste, household hazardous wastes, used oil collection and waste reduction/recycling alternatives so as to maintain compliance with appropriate regulations. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted hazardous waste management programs. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Routinely prepares hazardous waste packages for shipment according to DOT regulations. Routinely identifies and categorizes unknown waste streams received from customers according to SOP. Assists with fiscal budgeting, scheduling, communication and logistical details of hazardous waste collection grants, special projects and neighborhood collection activities. Oversees and supervises all operations of the HHW collection center when the Household Hazardous Waste Coordinator is not present. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Thorough knowledge of the technical methods and procedures involved in the administration of environmental regulations, programs and policies. Depending on assigned division, this may include: technical methods and procedures involved in land management and acquisition; theories and practices of ecology and land management, including restoration, weed science and prescribed burning; knowledge of the flora, fauna and ecology of North Central Florida; general environmental programs such as solid waste management, hazardous waste disposal, petroleum cleanup, air and water monitoring, natural and historic resource protection, land acquisition and land stewardship. Considerable knowledge of environmental sampling procedures and equipment. Knowledge of local, state, and federal rules, regulations, and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems. Knowledge of effective supervisory techniques and modern principles and practices of supervision. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles, small equipment and machinery. Ability to apply engineering and scientific principles and methods. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. Ability to create concise, clear and succinct technical reports. Ability to research technical problems, formulates recommendations, and compiles related reports. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with co-workers, the general public and other County agencies. Hazardous Materials Division: Knowledge of applicable codes, ordinances, statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of hazardous materials and hazardous waste regulations and emergency response operations. Working knowledge of MS Office Suite, ArcMap, GIS, data management and data validation. Water Resources Division: Working knowledge of MS Word and Excel, and data management and data validation. Natural Resources D i v i s i on : Working knowledge of GIS, MS Word and Excel, SharePoint, and data management.. Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, and wetland delineation. Land Conservation Division: Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, operation, maintenance and transportation of heavy trucks, farm tractors, wildland fire engines, pumps, chain saws, mowers and trimmers used in preserve maintenance, fuels management and restoration. Working knowledge of GIS and data management. Petroleum Management Division: Knowledge of applicable statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of state-approved storage tank system equipment, installation specifications, and closure procedures. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to use hands to finger, handle, or feel objects, tools, or controls. The employee frequently is required to talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; sit; reach with hands and arms; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; and taste or smell. The employee must lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee is required to use hands to finger, handle or fell, and reach with hands and arms. The employee is frequently required to stand, sit; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl, and talk and hear. The employee is occasionally required to climb stairs or balance. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 50 pounds, occasionally lift and/or move in excess of 100 pounds in the preparation of hazardous waste for disposal by use of 55-gallon drums. Occasionally required to use personal protective equipment (PPE) in dealing with hazardous waste. Specific visual abilities include close vision, distance vision, color vision, and depth perception. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee frequently works in outside weather conditions. The employee is occasionally exposed to fumes or airborne particles and toxic or caustic chemicals. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Land Conservation Division: The employee may regularly work near moving parts, are regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles, extreme heat and a loud work environment. Hazardous Materials: While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in various facilities, near moving mechanical parts, potential elevation with climbing and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, occasional extreme climate conditions and can be potentially exposed to vapors, airborne particles, and toxic chemicals. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works near moving mechanical parts, and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, and is frequently exposed to fumes and airborne particles, and toxic or caustic chemicals. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree with major course work in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field, and three years of professional level environmental related experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. This is a grant funded position. Employees are eligible for benefits but have no rights to permanent employment. This position is in the Petroleum Management Division: Position Summary This is a professional position that may supervise work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: inspection, testing and enforcement of air and water pollution control ordinances, hazardous waste management or collection, as well as protection, evaluation, stewardship and/or management of natural and historic resources for Alachua County. The employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for coordinating and supervising field and laboratory activities related to water quality, air quality or other environmental monitoring and assessment, technical review of contaminated site remediation, public education program coordination, regulatory activities regarding natural/historic resources, hazardous materials, hazardous waste collection, and/or land stewardship activities. Responsibilities will vary according to Department and division assignment within the Solid Waste & Resource Recovery Department (Hazardous Waste Management) and the Environmental Protection Department (Natural Resources, Water Resources, Petroleum Management, Land Conservation and/or Hazardous Materials Management). Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Conducts and supervises field collection of samples and/or data and/or observations for environmental analysis, evaluates data, prepares reports and recommendations. Coordinates with other regulatory agencies. May supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees including determining work procedures and schedules; issuing instructions and assigning duties; reviewing work; recommending personnel actions; conducting performance reviews; and conducting departmental training and orientation. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or solid waste regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates complaint for corrective action and makes recommendations. Provides guidance and oversight and enforcement of federal, state and local environmental regulations. Evaluates inspection and monitoring data from multiple sources. Depending on the hiring division, examples may include water monitoring wells, solid waste management sites, wastewater treatment plants, and hazardous materials management facilities, photopoints, transects or data from other agencies as appropriate. May coordinate and/or assist with stewardship activities such as natural resource restoration, controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring and assist with land acquisition. Prepares reports and recommendations. Prepares and conducts public education programs and compliance assistance training programs. Designs and establishes environmental monitoring programs as needed. Testifies, as needed, at administrative hearings and/or court as a technical witness and/or to support enforcement actions. Assists the supervisor in the preparation of periodic operating reports and presentations to various Boards; provides input into area budget needs. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles and four-wheel drive vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery, in order to conduct job duties that, depending on the hiring division, may include field tests, inspections, evaluations, prescribed burns, exotic species control, and investigations to obtain data for use in determining code compliance, sources of, and methods for controlling County-wide environmental pollutants, performing on-site evaluations, plant and animal surveys, and other ecological monitoring as appropriate. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Land Conservation Division: Plans and implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas including exotic plant control, prescribed fire, forestry, restoration and site development. Develops projects and scopes of work, coordinates and oversees contractors performing land stewardship activities such as: invasive plant and animal control, site preparation, planting, timber harvesting, site maintenance, site development, natural and cultural resource monitoring, restoration and prescribed burning. May coordinate prescribed burning activities on County owned or managed properties, through preparation, review and implementation of burn prescriptions. May serve as burn boss or burn crew member on prescribed burns. May plan and implement maintenance and creation of firebreaks and preparation of areas for burning. May coordinate with the Florida Forest Service, contractors and other agencies on prescribed burning and other stewardship activities. May perform environmental assessments of properties nominated for acquisition through the Alachua County Forever Program to identify natural resources, physiographic and ecological characteristics, hydrological resources, manageability, and public accessibility. Analyzes environmental considerations and prepares evaluation reports. Responsible for land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring, preparation of base-line monitoring reports and development of management plans. Natural Resources Division: Analyzes environmental characteristics of development applications and administrative permits and may provide recommendations on land use, zoning and site plans. Performs compliance inspections for development projects to determine consistency with environmental code requirements and development order conditions. Responds to citizen and agency inquiries and complaints related to natural and water resource issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts natural resources outreach and education. Performs environmental assessments of special planning areas to identify natural resources and historic resources and physiographic and ecological characteristics. Assists in developing and implementing elements in the County's Comprehensive Plan and land development regulations. Hazardous Materials Management: Performs rotational 24/7 on call and emergency response as required for hazardous materials incidents/releases within the County and coordinates remediation of spills. Interacts and coordinates with inter-agencies, state and federal agencies as needed/required. Performs periodic compliance and enforcement inspections of regulated facilities, contaminated sites, remediation sites, and other environmental sites to ensure compliance with and enforcement of local codes, ordinances, state and federal regulatory programs; reviews permits and compliance status. Manages remediation activities at environmental sites, including technical and/or cost oversight of engineering contractors for compliance monitoring, contamination assessments and remedial actions arising from groundwater, surface water, soil or ambient air contamination with hazardous or toxic materials and petroleum products to ensure compliance with program regulations and local ordinances. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted regulatory programs or hazardous materials and waste management programs. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders and coordinates remediation of spills. Assists in developing pollution control, air pollution and hazardous and solid waste elements of land development regulations, County Comprehensive Plan, and ordinances and regulations. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local regulations, including the proper storage, handling, transportation and disposal of hazardous materials. Responds to citizen and multi-agency inquiries and complaints related to hazardous materials and hazardous waste issues. Receives complaints regarding violations of environmental regulations, codes, and ordinances and/or site-specific rules, plans, and guidelines; investigates potential civil and/or criminal enforcement situations for corrective action and resolution. Coordinates and conducts hazardous materials outreach and education. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Petroleum Management Division: Petroleum Restoration Program: Provides oversight and management of work conducted at petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated sites under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Petroleum Restoration Program. Provides technical and fiscal oversight of assessment and remediation activities. Develops cost effective scopes of work and purchase orders, and reviews invoices for quality and completeness of work performed or goods and service provided by contractors and vendors. Reviews deliverables, technical documents and invoices for accuracy and completeness, issues comment and approval letters, and updates County and State project tracking databases and document repositories. Conducts field, installation, and operation & maintenance inspections. Storage Tanks Compliance Program: Conducts petroleum storage tanks inspections under the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Storage Tanks Compliance Verification Program, including but not limited to routine compliance, installation, closure, discharge, non-compliance, and complaint inspections. Records inspection results in the State's Florida Inspection Reporting Storage Tanks (FIRST) on-line database, produces inspection reports, and issues in compliance, compliance assistance offer, and return to compliance letters. Communicates with facility owners/operators, compliance contractors, and certified pollutant storage system contractors to schedule and conduct annual compliance inspections, and coordinate installation and closure inspections. Water Resources Division: Coordinates and conducts water resources outreach and education. Monitors and performs wastewater treatment facility inspections. Conducts training on erosion and sediment control. Prepares, coordinates and manages contracts and grants. Collects groundwater and surface water samples and ensures data quality assurance and quality control procedures and targets are met. Analyzes water quality and hydrologic data and prepares technical reports. Oversees and enforces compliance with federal, state and local water resources regulations. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): Coordinates operations programs for solid waste, household hazardous wastes, used oil collection and waste reduction/recycling alternatives so as to maintain compliance with appropriate regulations. Prepares and reviews purchase orders or work orders and reviews invoices for work performed or services or goods provided by contractors and vendors in support of county or state contracted hazardous waste management programs. Prepares and revises procedures and implements staff training on various hazardous materials safety policies and procedures including proper documentation and training records. Routinely prepares hazardous waste packages for shipment according to DOT regulations. Routinely identifies and categorizes unknown waste streams received from customers according to SOP. Assists with fiscal budgeting, scheduling, communication and logistical details of hazardous waste collection grants, special projects and neighborhood collection activities. Oversees and supervises all operations of the HHW collection center when the Household Hazardous Waste Coordinator is not present. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Thorough knowledge of the technical methods and procedures involved in the administration of environmental regulations, programs and policies. Depending on assigned division, this may include: technical methods and procedures involved in land management and acquisition; theories and practices of ecology and land management, including restoration, weed science and prescribed burning; knowledge of the flora, fauna and ecology of North Central Florida; general environmental programs such as solid waste management, hazardous waste disposal, petroleum cleanup, air and water monitoring, natural and historic resource protection, land acquisition and land stewardship. Considerable knowledge of environmental sampling procedures and equipment. Knowledge of local, state, and federal rules, regulations, and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems. Knowledge of effective supervisory techniques and modern principles and practices of supervision. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles, small equipment and machinery. Ability to apply engineering and scientific principles and methods. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. Ability to create concise, clear and succinct technical reports. Ability to research technical problems, formulates recommendations, and compiles related reports. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with co-workers, the general public and other County agencies. Hazardous Materials Division: Knowledge of applicable codes, ordinances, statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of hazardous materials and hazardous waste regulations and emergency response operations. Working knowledge of MS Office Suite, ArcMap, GIS, data management and data validation. Water Resources Division: Working knowledge of MS Word and Excel, and data management and data validation. Natural Resources D i v i s i on : Working knowledge of GIS, MS Word and Excel, SharePoint, and data management.. Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, and wetland delineation. Land Conservation Division: Considerable skill in the identification of local flora, fauna and natural communities, operation, maintenance and transportation of heavy trucks, farm tractors, wildland fire engines, pumps, chain saws, mowers and trimmers used in preserve maintenance, fuels management and restoration. Working knowledge of GIS and data management. Petroleum Management Division: Knowledge of applicable statutes, rules, regulations, program policies, technical guidance, and memoranda. Knowledge of state-approved storage tank system equipment, installation specifications, and closure procedures. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to use hands to finger, handle, or feel objects, tools, or controls. The employee frequently is required to talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; sit; reach with hands and arms; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; and taste or smell. The employee must lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee is required to use hands to finger, handle or fell, and reach with hands and arms. The employee is frequently required to stand, sit; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl, and talk and hear. The employee is occasionally required to climb stairs or balance. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 50 pounds, occasionally lift and/or move in excess of 100 pounds in the preparation of hazardous waste for disposal by use of 55-gallon drums. Occasionally required to use personal protective equipment (PPE) in dealing with hazardous waste. Specific visual abilities include close vision, distance vision, color vision, and depth perception. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee frequently works in outside weather conditions. The employee is occasionally exposed to fumes or airborne particles and toxic or caustic chemicals. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Land Conservation Division: The employee may regularly work near moving parts, are regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles, extreme heat and a loud work environment. Hazardous Materials: While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in various facilities, near moving mechanical parts, potential elevation with climbing and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, occasional extreme climate conditions and can be potentially exposed to vapors, airborne particles, and toxic chemicals. Hazardous Waste Management Division (SWRR): While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works near moving mechanical parts, and is regularly exposed to outdoor weather conditions. The employee occasionally works in precarious places, and is frequently exposed to fumes and airborne particles, and toxic or caustic chemicals. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Master's Degree in counseling, psychology or related mental health field and two years of mental health counseling and/or crisis intervention experience, or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. A Post-Master's Education Specialist (Ed.S.) Degree is equivalent to the required education and one year of related work experience in suicide and crisis intervention. Licensure in mental health, marriage and family counseling or any related mental health field is required within six months of employment. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. This is a grant funded position. Employees are eligible for benefits but have no rights to permanent employment. Position Summary This is responsible professional work providing mobile response team services, and the ongoing development, training and support of the Crisis Center's mobile response program. An employee assigned to this classification coordinates the mobile response team training and external relationships with schools, law enforcement, and other agencies. The employee also directs the daily processing of mobile response calls, follow up contacts, and warm hand offs to community providers. Work is directed and reviewed by a higher level supervisor through conferences, reports and observation of the results achieved. Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Provides supervision and guidance to both volunteers and graduate students, counsels clients and helps to maintain a continuous community suicide prevention and crisis intervention program. Provides trauma sensitive and strength based mobile response crisis intervention services. Provides direct service through mobile response, crisis phone line, face to face counseling, or through Crisis Center chat/text services as needed, on planned basis and in emergencies. Provides clients and families with prompt screening, assessment, crisis intervention support, and linkage to community services. Develops care plans for mobile response clients and their families focused on strategies to reduce individual and family stressors and for maintaining stabilization. Provides care coordination by enlisting the consultation of psychiatric providers and other mental health/social service organizations and transitioning care via a warm hand?off when possible and appropriate. Provides after-hours on-call and in person supervision for mobile response team and all Crisis Center workers. Assists with coordination of mobile response team schedules, caseloads and related duties, and coordinates activities of staff, volunteers, and graduate students in providing mobile response and ongoing counseling services to assist clients and families in crisis. Designs training curriculum, identifies, and prepares mobile response team members in coordination with other Crisis Center staff. Develops and reviews assessment tools, care plans, and safety standards for mobile outreach response. Maintains memorandums of understanding with all county law enforcement agencies, local school administration, and other participating agencies. Ensures process for informed consent and HIPAA compliance measures. Provides supervision and clinical training to graduate students toward their certification and/or licensure. Assists staff and volunteers, through individual and group conferences, in analyzing mobile response cases, client concerns, and the ongoing coordination of care. Informs citizens and community organizations about the Crisis Center's mobile response team, crisis intervention services and suicide prevention programs that are available to the community. Collaborates with local agencies to coordinate client care as well as to develop and implement community-wide strategies to address mental health issues. Collects feedback from each individual and family regarding the service delivery to improve outcomes of care that inform, individualize, and improve provider service delivery. Participates in developing and implementing agency administrative policy. Trains new employees in areas such as agency policy, department procedures, and agency or government regulations. Provides in-service training for experienced workers in areas such as advanced mobile response and crisis intervention skills, policies and procedures, trauma informed care, cultural and linguistic competency. Represents department in community or in interagency activities. Conducts and/or directs staff development programs. Directs and assists volunteer and graduate student counselors in effective processing of immediate telephone, mobile outreach, and walk-in requests for assistance. Continuously reviews current caseload. Counsels and refers clients to appropriate agencies or services in the community as appropriate. Supervises and continuously evaluates and advises crisis intervention volunteers, practicum and Internship graduate students. Maintains client files and records. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle regularly to respond to crisis calls 24 hours a day/ 7 days a week; drives to offsite locations to conduct training and/or participate in outreach events. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Considerable knowledge of the laws, rules and regulations relating to the operation of community crisis intervention programs. Considerable knowledge of current techniques, principles and practices of crisis intervention and suicide prevention programs. Knowledge of community counseling/intervention resources available to the center. Skill in the use of personal computers including word processing programs. Ability to work with diverse populations and demonstrate cultural and linguistic competency. Ability to work with and counsel suicidal/distraught clients and work within a family driven and youth guided collaborative model. Ability to function in a team setting. Ability to train, supervise and appraise volunteers and students. Ability to react calmly and quickly in emergencies. Ability to coordinate and supervise volunteers and students in emergency situations. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. Ability to make public presentations before community organizations about the program. Ability to develop and maintain good working relationships with assisting agencies, other County departments, employees and the general public. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit; talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; use hands to finger, handle or feel; and reach with hands and arms. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. The Crisis Center operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year and employees in this position will be required to work various hours and days of the week. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Master's Degree in counseling, psychology or related mental health field and two years of mental health counseling and/or crisis intervention experience, or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. A Post-Master's Education Specialist (Ed.S.) Degree is equivalent to the required education and one year of related work experience in suicide and crisis intervention. Licensure in mental health, marriage and family counseling or any related mental health field is required within six months of employment. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. This is a grant funded position. Employees are eligible for benefits but have no rights to permanent employment. Position Summary This is responsible professional work providing mobile response team services, and the ongoing development, training and support of the Crisis Center's mobile response program. An employee assigned to this classification coordinates the mobile response team training and external relationships with schools, law enforcement, and other agencies. The employee also directs the daily processing of mobile response calls, follow up contacts, and warm hand offs to community providers. Work is directed and reviewed by a higher level supervisor through conferences, reports and observation of the results achieved. Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Provides supervision and guidance to both volunteers and graduate students, counsels clients and helps to maintain a continuous community suicide prevention and crisis intervention program. Provides trauma sensitive and strength based mobile response crisis intervention services. Provides direct service through mobile response, crisis phone line, face to face counseling, or through Crisis Center chat/text services as needed, on planned basis and in emergencies. Provides clients and families with prompt screening, assessment, crisis intervention support, and linkage to community services. Develops care plans for mobile response clients and their families focused on strategies to reduce individual and family stressors and for maintaining stabilization. Provides care coordination by enlisting the consultation of psychiatric providers and other mental health/social service organizations and transitioning care via a warm hand?off when possible and appropriate. Provides after-hours on-call and in person supervision for mobile response team and all Crisis Center workers. Assists with coordination of mobile response team schedules, caseloads and related duties, and coordinates activities of staff, volunteers, and graduate students in providing mobile response and ongoing counseling services to assist clients and families in crisis. Designs training curriculum, identifies, and prepares mobile response team members in coordination with other Crisis Center staff. Develops and reviews assessment tools, care plans, and safety standards for mobile outreach response. Maintains memorandums of understanding with all county law enforcement agencies, local school administration, and other participating agencies. Ensures process for informed consent and HIPAA compliance measures. Provides supervision and clinical training to graduate students toward their certification and/or licensure. Assists staff and volunteers, through individual and group conferences, in analyzing mobile response cases, client concerns, and the ongoing coordination of care. Informs citizens and community organizations about the Crisis Center's mobile response team, crisis intervention services and suicide prevention programs that are available to the community. Collaborates with local agencies to coordinate client care as well as to develop and implement community-wide strategies to address mental health issues. Collects feedback from each individual and family regarding the service delivery to improve outcomes of care that inform, individualize, and improve provider service delivery. Participates in developing and implementing agency administrative policy. Trains new employees in areas such as agency policy, department procedures, and agency or government regulations. Provides in-service training for experienced workers in areas such as advanced mobile response and crisis intervention skills, policies and procedures, trauma informed care, cultural and linguistic competency. Represents department in community or in interagency activities. Conducts and/or directs staff development programs. Directs and assists volunteer and graduate student counselors in effective processing of immediate telephone, mobile outreach, and walk-in requests for assistance. Continuously reviews current caseload. Counsels and refers clients to appropriate agencies or services in the community as appropriate. Supervises and continuously evaluates and advises crisis intervention volunteers, practicum and Internship graduate students. Maintains client files and records. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle regularly to respond to crisis calls 24 hours a day/ 7 days a week; drives to offsite locations to conduct training and/or participate in outreach events. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Considerable knowledge of the laws, rules and regulations relating to the operation of community crisis intervention programs. Considerable knowledge of current techniques, principles and practices of crisis intervention and suicide prevention programs. Knowledge of community counseling/intervention resources available to the center. Skill in the use of personal computers including word processing programs. Ability to work with diverse populations and demonstrate cultural and linguistic competency. Ability to work with and counsel suicidal/distraught clients and work within a family driven and youth guided collaborative model. Ability to function in a team setting. Ability to train, supervise and appraise volunteers and students. Ability to react calmly and quickly in emergencies. Ability to coordinate and supervise volunteers and students in emergency situations. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. Ability to make public presentations before community organizations about the program. Ability to develop and maintain good working relationships with assisting agencies, other County departments, employees and the general public. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit; talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; use hands to finger, handle or feel; and reach with hands and arms. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. The Crisis Center operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year and employees in this position will be required to work various hours and days of the week. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Master's degree in counseling, psychology or related mental health field and three years of mental health counseling and/or crisis intervention experience. A Post-Master's Education Specialist (Ed.S.) Degree is equivalent to the required education and one year of related work experience in suicide and crisis intervention. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience may be considered for trainee status. Licensure in mental health, marriage and family counseling or any related mental health field is required within two years of employment. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Must successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen and s uccessful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Position Summary This is responsible professional crisis intervention counseling work in the County's Crisis Center. An employee assigned to this classification directs the daily processing of crisis calls, develops appropriate action plans for immediate client cases and coordinates needed client-supporting resources. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of the results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Assigns caseloads and related duties, and coordinates activities of staff, volunteers, and graduate students in providing counseling services to assist clients with problems of emergency or crises nature. Assists all staff through individual and group conferences in analyzing case problems and in improving their diagnostic and helping skills. Reviews case records and evaluates performance of staff members and recommends indicated action. Participates in developing and implementing agency administrative policy. Counsels clients individually and/or in groups on planned basis and in emergencies. Trains new employees in areas such as agency policy, department procedures, and agency or government regulations. Provides in-service training for experienced workers in areas such as new policies, procedures, and regulations. Represents department in community or in interagency activities. Conducts and/or directs staff development programs. Directs and assists volunteer and graduate student counselors in effective processing of immediate telephone and walk-in requests for assistance. Continuously reviews current case load. Counsels and refers clients to appropriate agencies or services in the community. Continuously evaluates and advises crisis intervention volunteers, practicum and internship graduate students. Maintains effective liaison with assisting community mental health and other agencies. Keeps records and maintains client files. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle regularly to respond to crisis calls 24 hours a day/ 7 days a week; drives to offsite locations to conduct training and/or participate in outreach events. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Considerable knowledge of current techniques, principles and practices of crisis intervention and suicide counseling. Considerable knowledge of laws, rules and regulations relating to operations of community crisis intervention centers. Knowledge of community counseling/intervention resources available to the center. Ability to effectively train and supervise volunteers. Ability to respond calmly, quickly and effectively in crisis situations; ability to supervise volunteer crisis intervention counselors in crisis situations. Ability to work with and counsel suicidal/distraught clients. Ability to establish and maintain good working relationship with assisting agencies, other County departments and employees and the general public. Ability to ensure continuous availability of needed supplies; ability to manage daily shift operations. Ability to keep records and maintain files. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit; talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; use hands to finger, handle or feel; and reach with hands and arms. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Supplemental Information An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Master's degree in counseling, psychology or related mental health field and three years of mental health counseling and/or crisis intervention experience. A Post-Master's Education Specialist (Ed.S.) Degree is equivalent to the required education and one year of related work experience in suicide and crisis intervention. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience may be considered for trainee status. Licensure in mental health, marriage and family counseling or any related mental health field is required within two years of employment. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Must successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen and s uccessful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Position Summary This is responsible professional crisis intervention counseling work in the County's Crisis Center. An employee assigned to this classification directs the daily processing of crisis calls, develops appropriate action plans for immediate client cases and coordinates needed client-supporting resources. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of the results obtained. Examples of Duties ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. Assigns caseloads and related duties, and coordinates activities of staff, volunteers, and graduate students in providing counseling services to assist clients with problems of emergency or crises nature. Assists all staff through individual and group conferences in analyzing case problems and in improving their diagnostic and helping skills. Reviews case records and evaluates performance of staff members and recommends indicated action. Participates in developing and implementing agency administrative policy. Counsels clients individually and/or in groups on planned basis and in emergencies. Trains new employees in areas such as agency policy, department procedures, and agency or government regulations. Provides in-service training for experienced workers in areas such as new policies, procedures, and regulations. Represents department in community or in interagency activities. Conducts and/or directs staff development programs. Directs and assists volunteer and graduate student counselors in effective processing of immediate telephone and walk-in requests for assistance. Continuously reviews current case load. Counsels and refers clients to appropriate agencies or services in the community. Continuously evaluates and advises crisis intervention volunteers, practicum and internship graduate students. Maintains effective liaison with assisting community mental health and other agencies. Keeps records and maintains client files. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle regularly to respond to crisis calls 24 hours a day/ 7 days a week; drives to offsite locations to conduct training and/or participate in outreach events. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Considerable knowledge of current techniques, principles and practices of crisis intervention and suicide counseling. Considerable knowledge of laws, rules and regulations relating to operations of community crisis intervention centers. Knowledge of community counseling/intervention resources available to the center. Ability to effectively train and supervise volunteers. Ability to respond calmly, quickly and effectively in crisis situations; ability to supervise volunteer crisis intervention counselors in crisis situations. Ability to work with and counsel suicidal/distraught clients. Ability to establish and maintain good working relationship with assisting agencies, other County departments and employees and the general public. Ability to ensure continuous availability of needed supplies; ability to manage daily shift operations. Ability to keep records and maintain files. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is frequently required to sit; talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; use hands to finger, handle or feel; and reach with hands and arms. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Supplemental Information An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Outreach and Marketing Coordinator
R0138993
Medicine, Reno - University of Nevada School of Medicine
The University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) appreciates your interest in employment at our growing institution. We want your application process to go smoothly and quickly. Final applications must be submitted prior to the close of the recruitment.
If you need assistance or have questions regarding the application process, please contact our recruitment helpline at (775) 784-1495 or https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fjobs%40unr.edu%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cmichellebriggs%40unr.edu%7C3fc56ddb0d3143705f1c08d9932205df%7C523b4bfc0ebd4c03b2b96f6a17fd31d8%7C1%7C0%7C637702596595879550%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=f3IzAEa5H3%2FeLS%2BymU9ZqLPkGDVrZukYCBVy8XHJYe0%3D&reserved=0. For UNR Med professional job postings, please contact the Office of Professional Recruitment at (775) 784-6778.
Job Description
The Outreach and Marketing Coordinator shares responsibility for building a pipeline of well-prepared
and diverse applicants to UNR Med's MD and MD Pathway Programs and for recruitment programs
resulting in the annual enrollment of new students.
Responsibilities include:
• The coordination and promotion of outreach events that inspire and prepare prospective students for the admissions process by exposing them to healthcare careers and educating them about the medical school admissions process, application and program requirements, and selection criteria. Tasks include: development of informational presentations and handouts, coordinating event logistics and coordinating with speakers.
• Marketing, communications, and recruitment programs that showcase UNR Med's programs, curriculum, facilities, and research opportunities to increase the number of applicants who accept our offers of admission. Tasks include: Development and updating of admissions website, social media accounts, a monthly e-newsletter, development of brochures and flyers to promote events and use of various software platforms to recruit and provide resources to prospective applicants and admitted students.
• Supporting initiatives and engaging with external partners to develop and deliver programming that inspires high school and college students from medically underserved communities to pursue careers in medicine.
• Supervision of student employees, student interns and/or administrative assistants.
• Tracking of outreach event and marketing budget expenditures.
• Collection of data and information about event attendance to improve return on investment of outreach and recruitment strategies.
The Outreach and Marketing Coordinator works closely with the Director of Admissions, the Coordinator for Diversity Initiatives, and with School of Medicine Marketing, Communications, and Events professionals along with our partners on the undergraduate campus, regional high schools, and other organizations committed to encouraging young people to pursue STEM-focused education and careers.
The ideal candidate will demonstrate the ability to build and maintain interpersonal relationships with institutional and external partners and to build and promote events from start to finish. We seek a team member with the capacity to adapt to in-the-moment considerations, a strong detail orientation, and the capacity to independently manage events. Important skills include being able to develop creative digital content for the web and social media accounts, and the ability to communicate effectively in writing as well as verbally one-on-one and in front of groups. Other qualities include a passion for education and for working with students from underrepresented backgrounds, a service orientation, a collaborative team-based work style, and alignment with UNR Med's core values.
Required Qualifications
Bachelor's Degree and two years of related work experience OR
Master's Degree and one year of related work experience
Related experience: student affairs, recruitment, marketing, sales, event planning, event planning, admissions, student advising, education or diversity outreach programs.
Preferred qualifications:
Knowledge of medical school application process
Experience working with diverse student populations
Experience coordinating events.
Knowledge of best practices in marketing and promotions, including graphic design experience and prior experience using social media to promote events.
This position requires occasional travel and a variable schedule due to evening and weekend events.
Compensation Grade
B
https://www.unr.edu/hr/compensation-evaluation/salary-schedules
Faculty Dual Career Assistance Program
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes the importance of addressing dual-career couples' professional needs. We offer a dual career assistance program to newly hired faculty spouses/partners that provides resources and assists them to identify career opportunities in Northern Nevada. https://www.unr.edu/hr/jobs/dual-career-program
Department Information
For more information on the University and the School of Medicine, please visit http://med.unr.edu/why-faculty
For more information on the Office of Admissions, please visit https://med.unr.edu/admissions
Department Contacts
Tara Klement
Search Coordinator
mailto:tklement@med.unr.edu
Exempt Yes
Full-Time Equivalent 100.0%
Required Attachment(s)
Attach the following four documents to your application
1) Resume/CV
2) Letters of Application (Cover letter)
3) Three professional references (include name, title, company/organization, email address, phone number)
4) One-page personal diversity statement: Fostering a diverse and inclusive environment is one of the core missions of UNR Med. We recognize that diversity promotes excellence in education, research, service, and health care. As we train future providers to care for, and researchers to address the needs of, an increasingly diverse patient population, we value developing a leadership team and faculty body that reflect and honor the diversity of the world in which we live. Through a school-wide process, UNR Med has selected specific mission-based diversity groups, including individuals who are underrepresented in medicine and those who identify as first generation, rural, or from low income backgrounds. When faculty bring a range of their personal and professional experiences to UNR Med, this diversity enriches the learning experiences of our students, expands the breadth and impact of research inquiries, and assists the members of our community in breaking down stereotypical thinking and personal biases and become more comfortable with the scope of human experiences beyond our own. Given the value UNR Med places on diversity, equity and inclusion, we ask that you submit a one-page personal diversity statement outlining your thoughts on each of the following:
• Describe your beliefs in regard to how diversity can advance the missions of a medical school (please provide specific examples); • Explain your professional background and experiences in contributing toward a climate of diversity, equity and inclusion at a previous institution or organization (such as how you have come to understand the history of historically marginalized communities in the United States; how you have ensured inclusivity in your classroom or other teaching; programs you have developed in the area of diversity; mentoring of diverse students, faculty, and staff; how you have addressed diversity issues such as health care disparities in your research or teaching; service work that promotes diversity, equity and inclusion; and/or how you have promoted an environment where diversity is welcomed and fostered); and • Delineate how your background and experiences would qualify you to advance UNR Med's mission of diversity, equity and inclusion in the position for which you are applying (please include specific examples pertinent to your desired role).
Required UNR Med Recruitment Survey
Please complete the survey at the link below; this 1-2 minute survey will allow us to understand our current status and the effectiveness of our efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion at UNR Med. Survey data will not be accessible by the department for which you are applying or the recruitment team.
https://unr.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5uwa6f4UdCXFzOB?RID=MLRP_8wvvyes5WZVKBaR
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med)
For nearly 50 years the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med) has trained physicians who are leading the way to ‘A Healthy Nevada,' nation, and world. Community-based and research-intensive, UNR Med was founded upon a three-part mission of education, research, and service and is committed to the values of compassion, diversity, excellence, integrity, respect, safety, service, and stewardship. The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is an inclusive and engaged community. We recognize that diverse faculty and leaders add value to the educational experience and promote excellence in our teaching, patient care, and research missions. We seek applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and experiences who can contribute to our mission and uphold our core values.
Our mission has guided our growth in graduating the next generation of primary and specialty care physicians and medical researchers while maintaining personalized instruction. We are building new residencies to train medical specialists and expanding technologically-advanced infrastructure to keep pace with our world-class research to meet the needs of students, patients, and researchers. The School of Medicine has statewide outreach with a local touch providing patient care, health services, and training physicians in Reno, Nevada and in the state's rural communities. We seek to create an environment that serves all who enter our doors, from the physicians who teach our learners to our employees and patients, whose health we seek to improve.
This posting is open until filled
Qualified individuals are encouraged to apply immediately. Lists of eligible candidates will be established and hiring may occur early in the recruiting process. Recruitment will close without notice when a sufficient number of applications are received, or a hiring decision has been made
Posting Close Date
Note to Applicant
A background check will be conducted on the candidate(s) selected for hire.
HR will attempt to verify academic credentials upon receipt of hiring documents. If the academic credentials cannot be verified, HR will notify the faculty member that an official transcript of their highest degree must be submitted within thirty days of the faculty member's first day of employment.
References will be contacted at the appropriate phase of the recruitment process.
Applicants hired on a federal contract may be subject to E-Verify.
As part of the hiring process, applicants for positions in the Nevada System of Higher Education may be required to demonstrate the ability to perform job-related tasks.
For positions that require driving, evidence of a valid driver's license will be required at the time of employment and as a condition of continued employment.
Schedules are subject to change based on organizational needs.
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4732590
Founded in 1874, the University of Nevada, Reno is the State of Nevada’s land grant institution with a statewide mission and presence. The University of Nevada, Reno is a Carnegie I Research Institution and has been recognized as a “Top Tier” Best National University by U.S. News & World Report. With an enrollment of nearly 21,000 students we offer 145 Tier 1 accredited degree programs. Located in the picturesque Truckee Meadows the University of Nevada, Reno is surrounded by numerous state and national parks, is 45 minutes from beautiful Lake Tahoe, and four hours from San Francisco.
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. We are an inclusive and engaged community and recognize the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
The Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person’s age, disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race, or religion.
Full Time
Outreach and Marketing Coordinator
R0138993
Medicine, Reno - University of Nevada School of Medicine
The University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) appreciates your interest in employment at our growing institution. We want your application process to go smoothly and quickly. Final applications must be submitted prior to the close of the recruitment.
If you need assistance or have questions regarding the application process, please contact our recruitment helpline at (775) 784-1495 or https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fjobs%40unr.edu%2F&data=04%7C01%7Cmichellebriggs%40unr.edu%7C3fc56ddb0d3143705f1c08d9932205df%7C523b4bfc0ebd4c03b2b96f6a17fd31d8%7C1%7C0%7C637702596595879550%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=f3IzAEa5H3%2FeLS%2BymU9ZqLPkGDVrZukYCBVy8XHJYe0%3D&reserved=0. For UNR Med professional job postings, please contact the Office of Professional Recruitment at (775) 784-6778.
Job Description
The Outreach and Marketing Coordinator shares responsibility for building a pipeline of well-prepared
and diverse applicants to UNR Med's MD and MD Pathway Programs and for recruitment programs
resulting in the annual enrollment of new students.
Responsibilities include:
• The coordination and promotion of outreach events that inspire and prepare prospective students for the admissions process by exposing them to healthcare careers and educating them about the medical school admissions process, application and program requirements, and selection criteria. Tasks include: development of informational presentations and handouts, coordinating event logistics and coordinating with speakers.
• Marketing, communications, and recruitment programs that showcase UNR Med's programs, curriculum, facilities, and research opportunities to increase the number of applicants who accept our offers of admission. Tasks include: Development and updating of admissions website, social media accounts, a monthly e-newsletter, development of brochures and flyers to promote events and use of various software platforms to recruit and provide resources to prospective applicants and admitted students.
• Supporting initiatives and engaging with external partners to develop and deliver programming that inspires high school and college students from medically underserved communities to pursue careers in medicine.
• Supervision of student employees, student interns and/or administrative assistants.
• Tracking of outreach event and marketing budget expenditures.
• Collection of data and information about event attendance to improve return on investment of outreach and recruitment strategies.
The Outreach and Marketing Coordinator works closely with the Director of Admissions, the Coordinator for Diversity Initiatives, and with School of Medicine Marketing, Communications, and Events professionals along with our partners on the undergraduate campus, regional high schools, and other organizations committed to encouraging young people to pursue STEM-focused education and careers.
The ideal candidate will demonstrate the ability to build and maintain interpersonal relationships with institutional and external partners and to build and promote events from start to finish. We seek a team member with the capacity to adapt to in-the-moment considerations, a strong detail orientation, and the capacity to independently manage events. Important skills include being able to develop creative digital content for the web and social media accounts, and the ability to communicate effectively in writing as well as verbally one-on-one and in front of groups. Other qualities include a passion for education and for working with students from underrepresented backgrounds, a service orientation, a collaborative team-based work style, and alignment with UNR Med's core values.
Required Qualifications
Bachelor's Degree and two years of related work experience OR
Master's Degree and one year of related work experience
Related experience: student affairs, recruitment, marketing, sales, event planning, event planning, admissions, student advising, education or diversity outreach programs.
Preferred qualifications:
Knowledge of medical school application process
Experience working with diverse student populations
Experience coordinating events.
Knowledge of best practices in marketing and promotions, including graphic design experience and prior experience using social media to promote events.
This position requires occasional travel and a variable schedule due to evening and weekend events.
Compensation Grade
B
https://www.unr.edu/hr/compensation-evaluation/salary-schedules
Faculty Dual Career Assistance Program
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes the importance of addressing dual-career couples' professional needs. We offer a dual career assistance program to newly hired faculty spouses/partners that provides resources and assists them to identify career opportunities in Northern Nevada. https://www.unr.edu/hr/jobs/dual-career-program
Department Information
For more information on the University and the School of Medicine, please visit http://med.unr.edu/why-faculty
For more information on the Office of Admissions, please visit https://med.unr.edu/admissions
Department Contacts
Tara Klement
Search Coordinator
mailto:tklement@med.unr.edu
Exempt Yes
Full-Time Equivalent 100.0%
Required Attachment(s)
Attach the following four documents to your application
1) Resume/CV
2) Letters of Application (Cover letter)
3) Three professional references (include name, title, company/organization, email address, phone number)
4) One-page personal diversity statement: Fostering a diverse and inclusive environment is one of the core missions of UNR Med. We recognize that diversity promotes excellence in education, research, service, and health care. As we train future providers to care for, and researchers to address the needs of, an increasingly diverse patient population, we value developing a leadership team and faculty body that reflect and honor the diversity of the world in which we live. Through a school-wide process, UNR Med has selected specific mission-based diversity groups, including individuals who are underrepresented in medicine and those who identify as first generation, rural, or from low income backgrounds. When faculty bring a range of their personal and professional experiences to UNR Med, this diversity enriches the learning experiences of our students, expands the breadth and impact of research inquiries, and assists the members of our community in breaking down stereotypical thinking and personal biases and become more comfortable with the scope of human experiences beyond our own. Given the value UNR Med places on diversity, equity and inclusion, we ask that you submit a one-page personal diversity statement outlining your thoughts on each of the following:
• Describe your beliefs in regard to how diversity can advance the missions of a medical school (please provide specific examples); • Explain your professional background and experiences in contributing toward a climate of diversity, equity and inclusion at a previous institution or organization (such as how you have come to understand the history of historically marginalized communities in the United States; how you have ensured inclusivity in your classroom or other teaching; programs you have developed in the area of diversity; mentoring of diverse students, faculty, and staff; how you have addressed diversity issues such as health care disparities in your research or teaching; service work that promotes diversity, equity and inclusion; and/or how you have promoted an environment where diversity is welcomed and fostered); and • Delineate how your background and experiences would qualify you to advance UNR Med's mission of diversity, equity and inclusion in the position for which you are applying (please include specific examples pertinent to your desired role).
Required UNR Med Recruitment Survey
Please complete the survey at the link below; this 1-2 minute survey will allow us to understand our current status and the effectiveness of our efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion at UNR Med. Survey data will not be accessible by the department for which you are applying or the recruitment team.
https://unr.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5uwa6f4UdCXFzOB?RID=MLRP_8wvvyes5WZVKBaR
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med)
For nearly 50 years the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine (UNR Med) has trained physicians who are leading the way to ‘A Healthy Nevada,' nation, and world. Community-based and research-intensive, UNR Med was founded upon a three-part mission of education, research, and service and is committed to the values of compassion, diversity, excellence, integrity, respect, safety, service, and stewardship. The University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine is an inclusive and engaged community. We recognize that diverse faculty and leaders add value to the educational experience and promote excellence in our teaching, patient care, and research missions. We seek applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and experiences who can contribute to our mission and uphold our core values.
Our mission has guided our growth in graduating the next generation of primary and specialty care physicians and medical researchers while maintaining personalized instruction. We are building new residencies to train medical specialists and expanding technologically-advanced infrastructure to keep pace with our world-class research to meet the needs of students, patients, and researchers. The School of Medicine has statewide outreach with a local touch providing patient care, health services, and training physicians in Reno, Nevada and in the state's rural communities. We seek to create an environment that serves all who enter our doors, from the physicians who teach our learners to our employees and patients, whose health we seek to improve.
This posting is open until filled
Qualified individuals are encouraged to apply immediately. Lists of eligible candidates will be established and hiring may occur early in the recruiting process. Recruitment will close without notice when a sufficient number of applications are received, or a hiring decision has been made
Posting Close Date
Note to Applicant
A background check will be conducted on the candidate(s) selected for hire.
HR will attempt to verify academic credentials upon receipt of hiring documents. If the academic credentials cannot be verified, HR will notify the faculty member that an official transcript of their highest degree must be submitted within thirty days of the faculty member's first day of employment.
References will be contacted at the appropriate phase of the recruitment process.
Applicants hired on a federal contract may be subject to E-Verify.
As part of the hiring process, applicants for positions in the Nevada System of Higher Education may be required to demonstrate the ability to perform job-related tasks.
For positions that require driving, evidence of a valid driver's license will be required at the time of employment and as a condition of continued employment.
Schedules are subject to change based on organizational needs.
University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/4732590
Founded in 1874, the University of Nevada, Reno is the State of Nevada’s land grant institution with a statewide mission and presence. The University of Nevada, Reno is a Carnegie I Research Institution and has been recognized as a “Top Tier” Best National University by U.S. News & World Report. With an enrollment of nearly 21,000 students we offer 145 Tier 1 accredited degree programs. Located in the picturesque Truckee Meadows the University of Nevada, Reno is surrounded by numerous state and national parks, is 45 minutes from beautiful Lake Tahoe, and four hours from San Francisco.
The University of Nevada, Reno recognizes that diversity promotes excellence in education and research. We are an inclusive and engaged community and recognize the added value that students, faculty, and staff from different backgrounds bring to the educational experience.
The Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE) is committed to providing a place of work and learning free of discrimination on the basis of a person’s age, disability, whether actual or perceived by others (including service-connected disabilities), gender (including pregnancy related conditions), military status or military obligations, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, national origin, race, or religion.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Alachua County, FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and one year of related environmental experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Acceptable (equivalent) Education/Experience: Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and 1 year environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Associate's degree (2 years) and 3 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) High School diploma or equivalent and 5 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) For the Hazardous Waste Division of the Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department: Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen & physical examination and successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Must obtain the DOT Forklift Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. Must obtain the Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPR) Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. This position will coordinate public events for children and adults and deliver programs to learn about protecting our water. This will include implementing programs in local schools and at community events, some of which will be on weekends or weeknights. This position will work closely with partner agencies and schools on scheduling and delivering programming year-round, including some large, County-sponsored community events as well as participation at other community festivals and events. Position Summary This is an entry-level professional position that may include work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: coordination and performance activities of environmental programs, compliance review and inspection of environmentally affected sites, implementation of land management activities and environmental site evaluation, environmental regulation research, field sampling and testing, hazardous materials collection or management, public education activities, and record-keeping and data coordination. Depending on the hiring division, the employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for conducting various compliance reviews and inspections, field sampling, drafting enforcement action, reviewing data for permits, testifying at administrative hearings, assessing, monitoring and managing natural areas as needed. Responsibilities will vary according to division assignment within the Environmental Protection Department (EPD): Water Resources, Pollution Prevention or Land Conservation; or Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department (SWRR): Hazardous Waste. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained.Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. May conduct periodic compliance inspections of areas, facilities, and/or activities that come under environmental regulation and review permit and compliance status. At the direction of supervisor, investigates complaints from citizens regarding alleged hazardous or unsafe environmental conditions. Researches and assists in development of new and/or existing environmental regulations and education materials. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery in order to carry out various Environmental Protection operations. May assist with land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Water Resources Division Performs inspections of groundwater wells, surface waters, wastewater treatment facilities and other environmentally affected sites for compliance with regulations or planning or monitoring purposes. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for compliance with applicable codes and ordinances. Refers unsuccessful enforcement attempts to supervisor for review and follow-up. May draft Warning Notices if needed. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with special projects and grants for water quality and water conservation which may involve data collection, summary, and report writing. Assists with implementation of the Alachua County Water Quality Code, including irrigation elements. Assists with public outreach programs. Pollution Prevention Division for EPD (includes Petroleum Management and Hazardous Materials) and Hazardous Waste Collection Division for SWRR: Collects, receives and processes for proper recycling/disposal hazardous wastes, household and automotive chemicals, paints solvents and electronic scrap from households and small businesses. Inspects and maintains hazardous waste collection areas to ensure compliance with regulations and standard operating procedures in order to maintain safe and environmentally responsible handling of hazardous materials. Operates, on a frequent basis, a forklift and truck to transport drums of hazardous waste materials. Coordinates the request for and receipt of information necessary to obtain operating, installation and closure permits. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders to coordinate remediation of spills. Land Conservation Division Implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas under higher-level supervision, including exotic plant control, prescribed burning, forestry, data collection, site development, monitoring, maintenance and security. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for project implementation. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with drafting scopes of services and overseeing contractors. Evaluates natural areas for acquisition and management; performs conservation easement compliance inspections and public outreach activities. Assists with the development of management plans and outreach materials. Operates and transports light or medium equipment such as farm tractors to prep lines for prescribed burning and/or debris clean up, chippers, and skid steer for restoration projects in addition to small equipment such as chainsaws. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Knowledge of codes, laws and environmental program rules and requirements related to area of environmental coverage. Knowledge of environmental sampling techniques, sampling equipment and quality control procedures in field activities applicable to Water Resources and Land Conservation divisions within the Environmental Protection Department . Knowledge of local, state and federal rules, regulations and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of local flora and fauna, as it relates to Land Conservation division within the Environmental Protection Department. Knowledge of computer, word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems as applicable. Skill in dealing effectively with facility owners, governmental officials and citizens. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles. Ability to follow standard operating procedures and compile routine reports and maintain accurate records. Ability to operate field monitoring, sampling, and/or material handling equipment including a forklift after a suitable training period. Ability to implement resource management techniques, utilize related equipment and follow safety procedures, including the proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with County employees, other governmental agencies and the general public. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand and walk. The employee frequently is required to use hands to finger, handle or feel; talk or hear; and taste or smell. The employee occasionally is required to sit; climb or balance; and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl. The employee must frequently lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in outside weather conditions and is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles. The employee occasionally works near moving mechanical parts and is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals and risk of electrical shock. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and one year of related environmental experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. A Valid Florida Driver License is required and a Motor Vehicle Record that meets the requirements of Alachua County policy #6-7; Motor Vehicle Records will be reviewed prior to employment. If, in the past 24-month period, the applicants Motor Vehicle Record has more than three (3) moving traffic infractions or three (3) or more at fault motor vehicle accidents (or combination of both and /or a conviction/pending charge for driving under the influence) or is in violation of any standard mandated by Federal or State Law or Regulation, the minimum qualifications are not met for the position. Successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Acceptable (equivalent) Education/Experience: Bachelor's degree in environmental science, environmental engineering, chemistry, natural science, or a related field and 1 year environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) Associate's degree (2 years) and 3 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) High School diploma or equivalent and 5 years environmental and/or hazardous waste experience. (5 years total) For the Hazardous Waste Division of the Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department: Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen & physical examination and successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Must obtain the DOT Forklift Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. Must obtain the Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPR) Certification within six (6) months of hire into this position and maintain the certification for duration of employment; this training is provided by the County. This position will coordinate public events for children and adults and deliver programs to learn about protecting our water. This will include implementing programs in local schools and at community events, some of which will be on weekends or weeknights. This position will work closely with partner agencies and schools on scheduling and delivering programming year-round, including some large, County-sponsored community events as well as participation at other community festivals and events. Position Summary This is an entry-level professional position that may include work in any of the following areas depending on the hiring division: coordination and performance activities of environmental programs, compliance review and inspection of environmentally affected sites, implementation of land management activities and environmental site evaluation, environmental regulation research, field sampling and testing, hazardous materials collection or management, public education activities, and record-keeping and data coordination. Depending on the hiring division, the employee assigned to this classification may be responsible for conducting various compliance reviews and inspections, field sampling, drafting enforcement action, reviewing data for permits, testifying at administrative hearings, assessing, monitoring and managing natural areas as needed. Responsibilities will vary according to division assignment within the Environmental Protection Department (EPD): Water Resources, Pollution Prevention or Land Conservation; or Solid Waste and Resource Recovery Department (SWRR): Hazardous Waste. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level professional supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained.Examples of Duties This is an emergency essential classification. Upon declaration of a disaster and/or emergency, all employees in this classification are required to work. Exudes a positive customer service focus. Advocates building organizational culture through aligning decisions with core values including: integrity, honesty, respect, diversity, innovation, accountability and communication. May conduct periodic compliance inspections of areas, facilities, and/or activities that come under environmental regulation and review permit and compliance status. At the direction of supervisor, investigates complaints from citizens regarding alleged hazardous or unsafe environmental conditions. Researches and assists in development of new and/or existing environmental regulations and education materials. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles), as well as small equipment and machinery in order to carry out various Environmental Protection operations. May assist with land acquisition and stewardship activities such as controlled burns, exotic plant control, field inspections, and environmental monitoring. Performs the duties listed, as well as those assigned, with professionalism and a sense of urgency. Water Resources Division Performs inspections of groundwater wells, surface waters, wastewater treatment facilities and other environmentally affected sites for compliance with regulations or planning or monitoring purposes. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for compliance with applicable codes and ordinances. Refers unsuccessful enforcement attempts to supervisor for review and follow-up. May draft Warning Notices if needed. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with special projects and grants for water quality and water conservation which may involve data collection, summary, and report writing. Assists with implementation of the Alachua County Water Quality Code, including irrigation elements. Assists with public outreach programs. Pollution Prevention Division for EPD (includes Petroleum Management and Hazardous Materials) and Hazardous Waste Collection Division for SWRR: Collects, receives and processes for proper recycling/disposal hazardous wastes, household and automotive chemicals, paints solvents and electronic scrap from households and small businesses. Inspects and maintains hazardous waste collection areas to ensure compliance with regulations and standard operating procedures in order to maintain safe and environmentally responsible handling of hazardous materials. Operates, on a frequent basis, a forklift and truck to transport drums of hazardous waste materials. Coordinates the request for and receipt of information necessary to obtain operating, installation and closure permits. Performs emergency spill response as required for hazardous materials or petroleum product spills in support of first responders to coordinate remediation of spills. Land Conservation Division Implements land stewardship activities on Alachua County natural areas under higher-level supervision, including exotic plant control, prescribed burning, forestry, data collection, site development, monitoring, maintenance and security. Prepares data summaries and reports including tables, charts, spreadsheets, maps and databases for evaluation and tracking of environmental data. Reviews project plans, specifications, and/or permit applications at the direction of supervisor for project implementation. Operates environmental monitoring equipment according to standard operating procedures and documents data and field measurements. Assists with drafting scopes of services and overseeing contractors. Evaluates natural areas for acquisition and management; performs conservation easement compliance inspections and public outreach activities. Assists with the development of management plans and outreach materials. Operates and transports light or medium equipment such as farm tractors to prep lines for prescribed burning and/or debris clean up, chippers, and skid steer for restoration projects in addition to small equipment such as chainsaws. NOTE: These examples are intended only as illustrations of the various kinds of work performed in positions allocated to this class. The omission of specific statements of duties does not exclude them from the position if the work is similar, related or a logical assignment to the position. KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES Knowledge of codes, laws and environmental program rules and requirements related to area of environmental coverage. Knowledge of environmental sampling techniques, sampling equipment and quality control procedures in field activities applicable to Water Resources and Land Conservation divisions within the Environmental Protection Department . Knowledge of local, state and federal rules, regulations and ordinances related to environmental protection. Knowledge of local flora and fauna, as it relates to Land Conservation division within the Environmental Protection Department. Knowledge of computer, word processing and data management programs and Geographic Information Systems as applicable. Skill in dealing effectively with facility owners, governmental officials and citizens. Skill in the operation of motor vehicles. Ability to follow standard operating procedures and compile routine reports and maintain accurate records. Ability to operate field monitoring, sampling, and/or material handling equipment including a forklift after a suitable training period. Ability to implement resource management techniques, utilize related equipment and follow safety procedures, including the proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with County employees, other governmental agencies and the general public. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing. PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand and walk. The employee frequently is required to use hands to finger, handle or feel; talk or hear; and taste or smell. The employee occasionally is required to sit; climb or balance; and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl. The employee must frequently lift and/or move up to 80 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and the ability to adjust focus. WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee regularly works in outside weather conditions and is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles. The employee occasionally works near moving mechanical parts and is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals and risk of electrical shock. The employee may perform field work in inclement weather and harsh conditions such as wet areas and dense brush with biting insects, venomous animals or irritating plants. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud. An organization is only as good as the people it employs. To attract and retain the best team possible, the Alachua County Board of County Commissioners offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support the County, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.BoCC-Contributed Benefits Medical/Health Insurance Employee Life Insurance Florida Retirement System Employee Assistance Program Optional Benefits Dental Insurance Vision Insurance Supplemental & Dependent Life Insurance Deferred Retirement Program Flexible Spending Accounts Roth IRA Tuition Assistance Program Computer Purchase Program NOTE: For detailed information regarding available benefits click here. You may also view Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding benefits. FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM (FRS) The Florida Retirement System is a retirement plan designed to provide an income to a vested employee and his/her family when the employee retires, becomes partially or totally disabled, or dies prior to retirement. A defined benefit or defined contribution option may be chosen by the employee. TUITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Permanent, full-time employees are eligible for educational assistance funds. Contact the Human Resources Office for program details. HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Eve (IAFF*) Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday (All non-IAFF employees) 2 Floating Holidays (All non- IAFF employees) *IAFF – International Association of FirefightersPay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. International Association of Firefighters follow the General Contract 7k regarding holidays. Vacation Leave – Generous vacation accrual rates with payout of unused accrued leave, with some restrictions. For more detailed information regarding vacation leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-2 . Sick leave is earned at a rate of 4 hours per pay period by all permanent, full-time employees*. At the end of each fiscal year, eligible employees can convert up to 10 days of accrued sick leave to vacation leave on a 2:1 basis. For more detailed information regarding sick leave refer to Employee Policy Manual, Section 7-3 *Accruals slightly different for IAFF employee.