Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville (Library HQ), FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor’s degree in computer science or a related field or a Master's degree in Library Science from a library school program accredited by the American Library Association; and three years automated systems and/or network experience including two years of supervisory experience. Must provide own means of transportation. Successful completion of a criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Position Summary This is highly responsible administrative and managerial work directing and supervising the Automated Services Section of the Support Services Division for the Alachua County Library District. An employee assigned to this classification is directly responsible for project teams performing systems analysis, systems development, programming, testing and maintenance; selection and implementation of purchased software applications; network analysis, network development and network maintenance. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Coordinates the work of a major section and/or District-wide service that includes but is not limited to: management of the library automation system, management of the library computer network, maintenance of all software and hardware for the Library District, provision of computer support and training for library staff and maintenance of the library website. Supervises and coordinates the activities of subordinate managers and other 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. Keeps abreast of new developments in the field, especially as they relate to library operations. Analyzes needs, and recommends and implements appropriate measures for improving service; disseminates such information to section and other library staff. Plans, organizes and coordinates library District-wide in-service training for the Support Services Division and/or District staff. Provides technical assistance and guidance to subordinate staff. Develops Section budget, monitors, and controls budget expenditures. Plans and organizes services. Recommends policies to the Support Services Division Director; implements approved procedures for the section and the library system. Assists in establishing standards for collections; services and devises control procedures to assure the attainment of standards. Works with the Support Services Division Director to provide a coordinated program of library services in compliance with the Long Range Plan and Service Level Guidelines. Coordinates District-wide projects and studies as assigned by the Support Services Division Director; develops, implements, analyzes and reports statistical measures of library service. Recommends changes in Long Range Service Plans to the Support Services Division Director; assists in developing plans District-wide as assigned. Provides Board of Trustees and Governing Board with information as requested by the Support Services Division Director. Provides the public with information by utilizing library resources, and through public presentations on library services; resolves complaints. Conducts and reviews research projects to determine the feasibility of upgrading and/or adding to existing systems. Meets with a variety of users to determine information processing needs and recommends alternative solutions to existing and anticipated problems. Establishes, directs and monitors the job flow for team projects. Reviews and evaluates operating policies and procedures and makes recommendations to improve operating efficiency and productivity. Supervises the activities of systems and programming for revising and integrating complex operating systems. Performs short-range planning and recommends alternatives for increasing productivity. Attends conferences and participates in related professional organizations. Performs related work as required. 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 principles, practices, and techniques of system sciences, especially as they apply to public libraries. Thorough knowledge of local and wide area network software, especially as they apply to public libraries. Comprehensive knowledge of management and supervisory techniques and the ability to apply them to create effective and efficient service. The ability to supervise and organize the work of subordinate staff, enforce disciplinary procedures, coach and counsel staff and effectively appraise employee’s performance. Considerable knowledge of principles and practices of administration and organization including general budgeting, accounting and personnel techniques and management principles and practices. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing, including the preparation of written reports and memoranda. Ability to develop long and short-range goals and ensure they are properly implemented. Ability to conduct meetings. Ability to effectively manage multiple, concurrent complex system development projects. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with Division Directors, peers, supervisors, fellow employees, and general public. Understand how and why Library policies and procedures were developed. Ensure patron compliance of all policies and procedures through effective communication and enforcement. 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 sit, talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to reach and be mobile. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 10 pounds, frequently lift and/or move up to 25 pounds, and occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds while setting up new personal computer systems and/or network servers. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision, and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of computer monitors. 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 • 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.For other benefits such as life insurance and health insurance: Employee Benefits New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday 3 Floating Holidays Pay periods are every two (2) weeks beginning at 12:01 a.m. Saturday through 12:00 midnight Friday. Payday is the second Friday following the end of a pay period.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor’s degree in computer science or a related field or a Master's degree in Library Science from a library school program accredited by the American Library Association; and three years automated systems and/or network experience including two years of supervisory experience. Must provide own means of transportation. Successful completion of a criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Position Summary This is highly responsible administrative and managerial work directing and supervising the Automated Services Section of the Support Services Division for the Alachua County Library District. An employee assigned to this classification is directly responsible for project teams performing systems analysis, systems development, programming, testing and maintenance; selection and implementation of purchased software applications; network analysis, network development and network maintenance. Work is performed under the direction of a higher level supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Coordinates the work of a major section and/or District-wide service that includes but is not limited to: management of the library automation system, management of the library computer network, maintenance of all software and hardware for the Library District, provision of computer support and training for library staff and maintenance of the library website. Supervises and coordinates the activities of subordinate managers and other 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. Keeps abreast of new developments in the field, especially as they relate to library operations. Analyzes needs, and recommends and implements appropriate measures for improving service; disseminates such information to section and other library staff. Plans, organizes and coordinates library District-wide in-service training for the Support Services Division and/or District staff. Provides technical assistance and guidance to subordinate staff. Develops Section budget, monitors, and controls budget expenditures. Plans and organizes services. Recommends policies to the Support Services Division Director; implements approved procedures for the section and the library system. Assists in establishing standards for collections; services and devises control procedures to assure the attainment of standards. Works with the Support Services Division Director to provide a coordinated program of library services in compliance with the Long Range Plan and Service Level Guidelines. Coordinates District-wide projects and studies as assigned by the Support Services Division Director; develops, implements, analyzes and reports statistical measures of library service. Recommends changes in Long Range Service Plans to the Support Services Division Director; assists in developing plans District-wide as assigned. Provides Board of Trustees and Governing Board with information as requested by the Support Services Division Director. Provides the public with information by utilizing library resources, and through public presentations on library services; resolves complaints. Conducts and reviews research projects to determine the feasibility of upgrading and/or adding to existing systems. Meets with a variety of users to determine information processing needs and recommends alternative solutions to existing and anticipated problems. Establishes, directs and monitors the job flow for team projects. Reviews and evaluates operating policies and procedures and makes recommendations to improve operating efficiency and productivity. Supervises the activities of systems and programming for revising and integrating complex operating systems. Performs short-range planning and recommends alternatives for increasing productivity. Attends conferences and participates in related professional organizations. Performs related work as required. 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 principles, practices, and techniques of system sciences, especially as they apply to public libraries. Thorough knowledge of local and wide area network software, especially as they apply to public libraries. Comprehensive knowledge of management and supervisory techniques and the ability to apply them to create effective and efficient service. The ability to supervise and organize the work of subordinate staff, enforce disciplinary procedures, coach and counsel staff and effectively appraise employee’s performance. Considerable knowledge of principles and practices of administration and organization including general budgeting, accounting and personnel techniques and management principles and practices. Ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing, including the preparation of written reports and memoranda. Ability to develop long and short-range goals and ensure they are properly implemented. Ability to conduct meetings. Ability to effectively manage multiple, concurrent complex system development projects. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with Division Directors, peers, supervisors, fellow employees, and general public. Understand how and why Library policies and procedures were developed. Ensure patron compliance of all policies and procedures through effective communication and enforcement. 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 sit, talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to reach and be mobile. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 10 pounds, frequently lift and/or move up to 25 pounds, and occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds while setting up new personal computer systems and/or network servers. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision, and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of computer monitors. 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 • 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.For other benefits such as life insurance and health insurance: Employee Benefits New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday 3 Floating Holidays Pay periods are every two (2) weeks beginning at 12:01 a.m. Saturday through 12:00 midnight Friday. Payday is the second Friday following the end of a pay period.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
FL - Facilities Dept., FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in business administration, facilities management, construction management or a closely related field and five years related professional level facilities management experience, including three years of supervisory experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. 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 highly responsible managerial work, directing and supervising the Facilities Management Department. An employee assigned to this classification plans, organizes, directs, and controls assigned activities and operations of the Facilities Management Department, including capital preservation programs, vertical and horizontal construction projects, and comprehensive maintenance operations for critical and non-critical County facilities. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level 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 the County's core values. Manages and coordinates the activities of subordinate supervisors and 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. Oversees capital preservation initiatives, including lifecycle replacement and major system upgrades for County facilities. Develops, implements, and manages Facilities training programs for various trades, safety, and compliance, ensuring staff are educated and informed. Develops and coordinates maintenance improvement programs for the identification and prioritization of department needs. Provides oversight and coordination of vertical construction projects, including new facilities, major renovations, and expansions, and horizontal construction projects, including site development, utilities, and infrastructure improvements, ensuring projects are delivered on schedule and within budget. Responsible for service contracts compliance administration; assists with developing scope of services, terms and conditions, and costs; drafts and submits service-related bids and evaluates contracted work, ensuring compliance with agreements, including construction, professional services, and capital project contracts. Responsible for automated maintenance work order system administration, establishing and ensuring workload prioritization for customer service and maintenance operations; manages workflow, distribution, workload, measurement, and evaluation, while ensuring alignment with capital project schedules and operational continuity of critical facilities. Coordinates facility inspections, prepares and analyzes inspection reports, and incorporates findings into capital planning and preservation strategies Assists in the development and management of departmental budget and business plan, including multiyear capital improvement programming and construction budgeting. Oversees special projects as assigned by the Department Director, including complex capital and infrastructure initiatives. Coordinates activities with other County departments. Assists in the formulation of policy for the department, including policies related to capital project delivery and asset management. Coordinates activities with various city, state, and federal agencies. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles) to conduct facility site reviews and inspections for assigned buildings & sites throughout the County. Acts in the Director's absence when required. Performs the listed duties, 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 materials and methods used in building construction and stages of construction, when possible, defects and violations may most easily be observed and corrected. Considerable knowledge of local, state, and federal laws associated with building codes as they apply to delivering maintenance services in the County buildings. Considerable knowledge of the principles and practices of modern personnel supervision and motivation. Knowledge of basic architectural and construction principles. Knowledge of infrastructure systems, including site utilities, drainage, roadway improvements, and supporting horizontal construction components. Knowledge of construction delivery methods, including design-bid-build, construction manager at risk, job order contracting, and related public project models. Knowledge of capital improvement planning and asset lifecycle management. Knowledge of public sector procurement requirements, contract administration, and competitive solicitation processes related to construction and professional services. Knowledge of Green and Sustainable features in County buildings. Ability to read and identify discrepancies in blueprints. Ability to use independent judgment in making highly visible and complex decisions. Ability to formulate and effectively and efficiently implement policies and procedures. Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing, including public speaking and preparing written reports and memoranda. Ability to develop objectives for department programs and direct effective long and short-range planning. Ability to evaluate cost estimates, schedules, and construction documents for accuracy and fiscal responsibility. Ability to oversee and manage multiple concurrent capital and construction projects while maintaining uninterrupted operations at critical facilities. Ability to analyze and evaluate current program activities and procedures. Ability to develop, prepare, and monitor complex budgets. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate supervisors and employees. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with co-workers, elected officials, community interest groups, 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 regularly required to talk or hear. The employee is frequently required to sit. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; reach with hands and arms; and taste or smell. Specific vision abilities required include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth perception and the ability to adjust focus. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. 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 occasionally works near moving mechanical parts; and is occasionally exposed to wet, humid conditions (non-weather); outdoor weather conditions; fumes or airborne particles; toxic or caustic chemicals and vibration. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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 business administration, facilities management, construction management or a closely related field and five years related professional level facilities management experience, including three years of supervisory experience; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. 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 highly responsible managerial work, directing and supervising the Facilities Management Department. An employee assigned to this classification plans, organizes, directs, and controls assigned activities and operations of the Facilities Management Department, including capital preservation programs, vertical and horizontal construction projects, and comprehensive maintenance operations for critical and non-critical County facilities. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level 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 the County's core values. Manages and coordinates the activities of subordinate supervisors and 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. Oversees capital preservation initiatives, including lifecycle replacement and major system upgrades for County facilities. Develops, implements, and manages Facilities training programs for various trades, safety, and compliance, ensuring staff are educated and informed. Develops and coordinates maintenance improvement programs for the identification and prioritization of department needs. Provides oversight and coordination of vertical construction projects, including new facilities, major renovations, and expansions, and horizontal construction projects, including site development, utilities, and infrastructure improvements, ensuring projects are delivered on schedule and within budget. Responsible for service contracts compliance administration; assists with developing scope of services, terms and conditions, and costs; drafts and submits service-related bids and evaluates contracted work, ensuring compliance with agreements, including construction, professional services, and capital project contracts. Responsible for automated maintenance work order system administration, establishing and ensuring workload prioritization for customer service and maintenance operations; manages workflow, distribution, workload, measurement, and evaluation, while ensuring alignment with capital project schedules and operational continuity of critical facilities. Coordinates facility inspections, prepares and analyzes inspection reports, and incorporates findings into capital planning and preservation strategies Assists in the development and management of departmental budget and business plan, including multiyear capital improvement programming and construction budgeting. Oversees special projects as assigned by the Department Director, including complex capital and infrastructure initiatives. Coordinates activities with other County departments. Assists in the formulation of policy for the department, including policies related to capital project delivery and asset management. Coordinates activities with various city, state, and federal agencies. Operates, as required, motor vehicles (including departmental motor vehicles) to conduct facility site reviews and inspections for assigned buildings & sites throughout the County. Acts in the Director's absence when required. Performs the listed duties, 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 materials and methods used in building construction and stages of construction, when possible, defects and violations may most easily be observed and corrected. Considerable knowledge of local, state, and federal laws associated with building codes as they apply to delivering maintenance services in the County buildings. Considerable knowledge of the principles and practices of modern personnel supervision and motivation. Knowledge of basic architectural and construction principles. Knowledge of infrastructure systems, including site utilities, drainage, roadway improvements, and supporting horizontal construction components. Knowledge of construction delivery methods, including design-bid-build, construction manager at risk, job order contracting, and related public project models. Knowledge of capital improvement planning and asset lifecycle management. Knowledge of public sector procurement requirements, contract administration, and competitive solicitation processes related to construction and professional services. Knowledge of Green and Sustainable features in County buildings. Ability to read and identify discrepancies in blueprints. Ability to use independent judgment in making highly visible and complex decisions. Ability to formulate and effectively and efficiently implement policies and procedures. Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing, including public speaking and preparing written reports and memoranda. Ability to develop objectives for department programs and direct effective long and short-range planning. Ability to evaluate cost estimates, schedules, and construction documents for accuracy and fiscal responsibility. Ability to oversee and manage multiple concurrent capital and construction projects while maintaining uninterrupted operations at critical facilities. Ability to analyze and evaluate current program activities and procedures. Ability to develop, prepare, and monitor complex budgets. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate supervisors and employees. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with co-workers, elected officials, community interest groups, 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 regularly required to talk or hear. The employee is frequently required to sit. The employee is occasionally required to stand; walk; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; reach with hands and arms; and taste or smell. Specific vision abilities required include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth perception and the ability to adjust focus. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds. 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 occasionally works near moving mechanical parts; and is occasionally exposed to wet, humid conditions (non-weather); outdoor weather conditions; fumes or airborne particles; toxic or caustic chemicals and vibration. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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.
THE W.K. KELLOGG FOUNDATION The W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) , an international foundation headquartered in Battle Creek, Michigan with regional offices in Michigan, Mississippi, New Mexico, and Mexico City is a leading philanthropic institution that supports thriving children, working families, equitable communities, and the dynamic connections among them. The New Mexico office in Albuquerque collaborates with grantee organizations, communities, and other stakeholders throughout New Mexico.
“ The W.K. Kellogg Foundation supports children, families, and communities as they strengthen and create conditions that propel vulnerable children to achieve success as individuals and as contributors to the larger community and society .”
THE OPPORTUNITY The Senior Executive Assistant (SEA) serves as a strategic administrative partner to the Director of New Mexico Programs. The SEA is the essential “engine” of the New Mexico office, managing scheduling and administration for the Director, providing support and facilitation for the regional team, and serving as the office representative for visitors and grantees. The SEA is both a strategic and hands-on leader ensuring operational excellence and facilities management, seamless leadership and team support, and high-touch coordination with grantee partners and the Battle Creek headquarters. The ideal candidate brings a relational mindset and technical savvy to navigate complex nonprofit and philanthropic relationships and systems with clarity and care.
Responsibilities Strategic Executive Partnership : Act as a high-level partner to the Director, managing the complexities of their schedule and priorities to ensure the office remains focused on its mission-critical work.
Calendar and Priority Orchestration : Manage complex calendars and scheduling across internal and external stakeholders, proactively flagging conflicts and shifting timelines.
Travel and Logistics : Design and execute end-to-end travel arrangements and itineraries, ensuring all logistics and expense processing are handled with precision.
Workflow Systems : Maintain organized systems for contact management, meeting cadence, and administrative workflow to ensure leadership continuity.
Meeting Excellence and Synthesis : Oversee the full lifecycle of internal and external engagements, ensuring the Director is fully briefed and that every meeting results in clear outcomes and next steps.
Briefing and Preparation : Develop high-quality meeting materials, agendas, and briefing packets; research and supply pertinent background information for key events.
Active Participation : Join key meetings to capture core themes and trends, synthesizing complex discussions into concise, actionable summary products for the team.
Action Tracking : Manage post-meeting follow-through by developing action plans and project timelines, ensuring accountability across the New Mexico leadership team.
Office Operation and Stewardship : Lead the day-to-day operations of the office to foster a professional, productive, and culturally responsive environment.
Physical Workspace Management : Oversee office procurement, vendor relationships, meal coordination, and equipment maintenance to ensure a high-functioning workspace.
Local Presence : Anchor the office environment with a consistent presence (typically 2-3 days per week, more if needed), serving as the primary point of contact for visitors and new hires.
Operational Budgeting : Support the place-based office with budget planning, contract assistance, and general administrative project management.
Stakeholder Engagement and Liaison : Serve as a professional representative of the foundation, welcoming partners and grantees to the New Mexico office and coordinating effectively with other WKKF offices while maintaining the highest standards of discretion.
Relationship Management : Build and maintain trust-based relationships with staff, external partners, community leaders, and dignitaries.
Strategic Communications : Respond to internal and external inquiries on behalf of the Director; draft and edit letters, speeches, and funding documents.
Confidentiality : Handle highly sensitive information concerning personnel and strategic planning with absolute integrity and discretion.
CANDIDATE PROFILE While no candidate is expected to have all of the desired qualifications, strong applicants will have a track record of successful and relevant professional experience and a demonstrated commitment to the values and mission of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Ideal candidates will have:
Professional Experience
Background : Bachelor's degree with 5+ years of executive support experience (or 8+ years of experience with some college/equivalent).
Sector Knowledge : Previous experience in the nonprofit or philanthropic sector is highly preferred.
Cultural Fluency : Experience working effectively with diverse cultural, social, and ethnic backgrounds; a strong preference for bilingual (English/Spanish) candidates or those with Indigenous language skills.
Technical Skills and Competencies
System Proficiency : Advanced skills in Microsoft Office, databases, and experience with automated accounting systems (SAP preferred).
Editorial : Strong ability to draft, edit, and synthesize complex information into clear, professional communications.
Project Management : Proven ability to manage multiple moving parts, from event logistics to long-term project tracking.
Personal Attributes
System Thinker : Ability to see how administrative tasks connect to the broader mission and "bring people together" through organized processes.
Agility : a curious mindset with the ability to thrive in a remote/hybrid environment and pivot quickly as priorities shift.
Values Alignment : Deep commitment to racial equity, community-led change, and the core DNA of W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
Compensation and Impact
Salary Range : $75,200 – $94,000 (Commensurate with experience).
The "Why" : This role is more than administrative; it is an opportunity to strengthen the conditions that allow vulnerable children and families in New Mexico to thrive.
TO APPLY More information about the W.K. Kellogg Foundation may be found at: www.wkkf.org
This search is being led by Katherine Jacobs and Jehivian Hernandez of GDSI Leadership . Due to the pace of this search, candidates are strongly encouraged to apply as soon as possible. Candidates may submit their cover letter, outlining their interest and qualifications, along with their resume, via GDSI’s applicant portal .
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation is an equal opportunity employer and strongly encourages applications from people of color, persons with disabilities, women, and LGBTQ+ applicants.
Full Time
THE W.K. KELLOGG FOUNDATION The W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) , an international foundation headquartered in Battle Creek, Michigan with regional offices in Michigan, Mississippi, New Mexico, and Mexico City is a leading philanthropic institution that supports thriving children, working families, equitable communities, and the dynamic connections among them. The New Mexico office in Albuquerque collaborates with grantee organizations, communities, and other stakeholders throughout New Mexico.
“ The W.K. Kellogg Foundation supports children, families, and communities as they strengthen and create conditions that propel vulnerable children to achieve success as individuals and as contributors to the larger community and society .”
THE OPPORTUNITY The Senior Executive Assistant (SEA) serves as a strategic administrative partner to the Director of New Mexico Programs. The SEA is the essential “engine” of the New Mexico office, managing scheduling and administration for the Director, providing support and facilitation for the regional team, and serving as the office representative for visitors and grantees. The SEA is both a strategic and hands-on leader ensuring operational excellence and facilities management, seamless leadership and team support, and high-touch coordination with grantee partners and the Battle Creek headquarters. The ideal candidate brings a relational mindset and technical savvy to navigate complex nonprofit and philanthropic relationships and systems with clarity and care.
Responsibilities Strategic Executive Partnership : Act as a high-level partner to the Director, managing the complexities of their schedule and priorities to ensure the office remains focused on its mission-critical work.
Calendar and Priority Orchestration : Manage complex calendars and scheduling across internal and external stakeholders, proactively flagging conflicts and shifting timelines.
Travel and Logistics : Design and execute end-to-end travel arrangements and itineraries, ensuring all logistics and expense processing are handled with precision.
Workflow Systems : Maintain organized systems for contact management, meeting cadence, and administrative workflow to ensure leadership continuity.
Meeting Excellence and Synthesis : Oversee the full lifecycle of internal and external engagements, ensuring the Director is fully briefed and that every meeting results in clear outcomes and next steps.
Briefing and Preparation : Develop high-quality meeting materials, agendas, and briefing packets; research and supply pertinent background information for key events.
Active Participation : Join key meetings to capture core themes and trends, synthesizing complex discussions into concise, actionable summary products for the team.
Action Tracking : Manage post-meeting follow-through by developing action plans and project timelines, ensuring accountability across the New Mexico leadership team.
Office Operation and Stewardship : Lead the day-to-day operations of the office to foster a professional, productive, and culturally responsive environment.
Physical Workspace Management : Oversee office procurement, vendor relationships, meal coordination, and equipment maintenance to ensure a high-functioning workspace.
Local Presence : Anchor the office environment with a consistent presence (typically 2-3 days per week, more if needed), serving as the primary point of contact for visitors and new hires.
Operational Budgeting : Support the place-based office with budget planning, contract assistance, and general administrative project management.
Stakeholder Engagement and Liaison : Serve as a professional representative of the foundation, welcoming partners and grantees to the New Mexico office and coordinating effectively with other WKKF offices while maintaining the highest standards of discretion.
Relationship Management : Build and maintain trust-based relationships with staff, external partners, community leaders, and dignitaries.
Strategic Communications : Respond to internal and external inquiries on behalf of the Director; draft and edit letters, speeches, and funding documents.
Confidentiality : Handle highly sensitive information concerning personnel and strategic planning with absolute integrity and discretion.
CANDIDATE PROFILE While no candidate is expected to have all of the desired qualifications, strong applicants will have a track record of successful and relevant professional experience and a demonstrated commitment to the values and mission of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Ideal candidates will have:
Professional Experience
Background : Bachelor's degree with 5+ years of executive support experience (or 8+ years of experience with some college/equivalent).
Sector Knowledge : Previous experience in the nonprofit or philanthropic sector is highly preferred.
Cultural Fluency : Experience working effectively with diverse cultural, social, and ethnic backgrounds; a strong preference for bilingual (English/Spanish) candidates or those with Indigenous language skills.
Technical Skills and Competencies
System Proficiency : Advanced skills in Microsoft Office, databases, and experience with automated accounting systems (SAP preferred).
Editorial : Strong ability to draft, edit, and synthesize complex information into clear, professional communications.
Project Management : Proven ability to manage multiple moving parts, from event logistics to long-term project tracking.
Personal Attributes
System Thinker : Ability to see how administrative tasks connect to the broader mission and "bring people together" through organized processes.
Agility : a curious mindset with the ability to thrive in a remote/hybrid environment and pivot quickly as priorities shift.
Values Alignment : Deep commitment to racial equity, community-led change, and the core DNA of W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
Compensation and Impact
Salary Range : $75,200 – $94,000 (Commensurate with experience).
The "Why" : This role is more than administrative; it is an opportunity to strengthen the conditions that allow vulnerable children and families in New Mexico to thrive.
TO APPLY More information about the W.K. Kellogg Foundation may be found at: www.wkkf.org
This search is being led by Katherine Jacobs and Jehivian Hernandez of GDSI Leadership . Due to the pace of this search, candidates are strongly encouraged to apply as soon as possible. Candidates may submit their cover letter, outlining their interest and qualifications, along with their resume, via GDSI’s applicant portal .
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation is an equal opportunity employer and strongly encourages applications from people of color, persons with disabilities, women, and LGBTQ+ applicants.
Assistant Director for Operations
Department: Physical Education and Recreation Appointment Type and Duration: Regular, Ongoing Salary: $67,000 - $72,000 per year Compensation Band: OS-OA06-Fiscal Year 2025-2026 FTE: 1.0 Application Review Begins
March 30, 2026; position open until filled Special Instructions to Applicants
Please apply online and upload the following materials:
• Current resume with detailed employment history, including the month and year for the start and end dates of each role.
• Cover letter explaining your interest in the position and how your skills and experience align with our qualifications.
• Contact information for at least three professional references, one being your current or most recent supervisor. We will notify you before contacting any references.
To be considered in the initial review, complete applications must be submitted by March 29, 2026 at 11:55 PM (Pacific Time). Application review will begin March 30, 2026. Only complete applications will be considered. A complete application includes a resume, cover letter, and references.
**Questions regarding the application procedure can be sent to:**
Patty Smith Executive Assistant Department of Physical Education and Recreation mailto:plsmith@uoregon.edu 541-346-1041 Department Summary
The Division of Student Life supports the university's academic mission and strategic plan through comprehensive programs and services that promote and advance student learning and success while fostering an inclusive and vibrant campus community. Student Life includes four major portfolios, the Office of the Dean of Students, Experiential Learning & Engagement, Health & Wellbeing, and Division Administration. Key programs and departments within the division include but are not limited to University Health Services, Erb Memorial Union, Physical Education & Recreation, Parent and Family Programs, Major Student Events (Commencement, Homecoming, University Day), Fraternity and Sorority Life, Counseling, Health Promotion, Community and Belonging, Strategic Communications, Student Government Engagement & Success, Student Conduct and Community Standards, and Support for Students in Crisis and Students of Concern.
The Physical Education and Recreation Department (PE and Rec) plays a vital role at the University of Oregon in educating, engaging, and inspiring the campus community to live active, balanced lives! As part of the Division of Student Life, we expand learning beyond the classroom and facilitate positive experiences to support physical, emotional, and social wellbeing, as well as student success. We actively cultivate a safe, inclusive, and accessible environment at the Student Rec Center that honors diverse needs and encourages people of all abilities and backgrounds to participate.
PE and Rec offers world-class facilities, a long tradition of curricular-based physical education classes, and a growing and diverse set of programs, but what really sets the department apart is the culture co-created by the people who work here. We are committed to equity, belonging, and social justice, as well as fostering a diverse and culturally-aware community. PE and Rec team members are cooperative and collaborative, both within and outside the department, and we strive for excellence in everything we do for our community. We demonstrate integrity in our interactions and challenge each other to continually grow and develop.
Core Values: *Compassion *Cooperation *Development *Equity and Inclusion *Excellence *Fun *Integrity *Stewardship *Wellbeing Position Summary
The Assistant Director for Operations provides leadership for the planning, policies, staffing, operations and services of a large, complex department. This includes the Student Recreation Center and the Student Tennis Center, as well as the outdoor tennis courts, two multi-purpose indoor recreation facilities, two natural turf fields, four lighted synthetic turf fields, and an outdoor jogging track. This is a full-time, 12-month position expected to work in-person on our Eugene campus.
This position is responsible for direct supervision and evaluation of two Officer of Administration positions and approximately 20 operations student employees and indirect supervision of approximately 80 student employees. The Assistant Director for Operations makes decisions on hiring, training & supervising practices, work priorities and assignments, and budgetary needs and reviews. The position also implements and enforces policies and procedures for facility operations. This position chairs the department Risk Management Team and coordinates comprehensive training programs for operations staff.
The Assistant Director for Operations reports to the Associate Director for Business and Operations. Minimum Requirements
• Bachelor's degree in recreation administration, physical education, or related field, or equivalent combination of education and experience relevant to position.
• Two (2) years of full-time responsibility in a recreation environment reflecting experience in facilities and operations.
• Two (2) years of experience in hiring, mentoring, supervising, scheduling, training and/or evaluating staff.
• CPR and First Aid Certification or the ability to obtain within 3 months of employment. Professional Competencies
• Proficiency with software applications for word processing, membership management, and personnel tracking.
• Ability to work effectively with individuals from diverse backgrounds, in support of an inclusive and welcoming environment.
• Strong and effective communication skills. Preferred Qualifications
• Master's degree in recreation administration, physical education, or related field.
• Leadership experience and/or a commitment to student learning and development.
• Knowledge of/experience with budget management.
• Experience with Innosoft Fusion rec management software on the system administration level.
• Two (2) years of experience managing risk in a recreation and fitness environment.
FLSA Exempt: Yes
All offers of employment are contingent upon successful completion of a background check.
The University of Oregon is proud to offer a robust benefits package to eligible employees, including health insurance, retirement plans, and paid time off. For more information about benefits, visit https://hr.uoregon.edu/about-benefits.
The University of Oregon is an equal-opportunity institution committed to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. The University encourages all qualified individuals to apply and does not discriminate on the basis of any protected status, including veteran and disability status. The University is committed to providing reasonable accommodations to applicants and employees with disabilities. To request an accommodation in connection with the application process, please mailto:uocareers@uoregon.edu or call 541-346-5112.
UO prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy (including pregnancy-related conditions), age, physical or mental disability, genetic information (including family medical history), ancestry, familial status, citizenship, service in the uniformed services (as defined in federal and state law), veteran status, expunged juvenile record, and/or the use of leave protected by state or federal law in all programs, activities and employment practices as required by Title IX, other applicable laws, and policies. Retaliation is prohibited by UO policy. Questions may be referred to the Office of Equal Opportunity and Access. Contact information, related policies, and complaint procedures are https://investigations.uoregon.edu/reporting.
In compliance with federal law, the University of Oregon prepares an annual report on campus security and fire safety programs and services. The Annual Campus Security and Fire Safety Report is available https://clery.uoregon.edu/annual-campus-security-and-fire-safety-report.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/6964396
Full Time
Assistant Director for Operations
Department: Physical Education and Recreation Appointment Type and Duration: Regular, Ongoing Salary: $67,000 - $72,000 per year Compensation Band: OS-OA06-Fiscal Year 2025-2026 FTE: 1.0 Application Review Begins
March 30, 2026; position open until filled Special Instructions to Applicants
Please apply online and upload the following materials:
• Current resume with detailed employment history, including the month and year for the start and end dates of each role.
• Cover letter explaining your interest in the position and how your skills and experience align with our qualifications.
• Contact information for at least three professional references, one being your current or most recent supervisor. We will notify you before contacting any references.
To be considered in the initial review, complete applications must be submitted by March 29, 2026 at 11:55 PM (Pacific Time). Application review will begin March 30, 2026. Only complete applications will be considered. A complete application includes a resume, cover letter, and references.
**Questions regarding the application procedure can be sent to:**
Patty Smith Executive Assistant Department of Physical Education and Recreation mailto:plsmith@uoregon.edu 541-346-1041 Department Summary
The Division of Student Life supports the university's academic mission and strategic plan through comprehensive programs and services that promote and advance student learning and success while fostering an inclusive and vibrant campus community. Student Life includes four major portfolios, the Office of the Dean of Students, Experiential Learning & Engagement, Health & Wellbeing, and Division Administration. Key programs and departments within the division include but are not limited to University Health Services, Erb Memorial Union, Physical Education & Recreation, Parent and Family Programs, Major Student Events (Commencement, Homecoming, University Day), Fraternity and Sorority Life, Counseling, Health Promotion, Community and Belonging, Strategic Communications, Student Government Engagement & Success, Student Conduct and Community Standards, and Support for Students in Crisis and Students of Concern.
The Physical Education and Recreation Department (PE and Rec) plays a vital role at the University of Oregon in educating, engaging, and inspiring the campus community to live active, balanced lives! As part of the Division of Student Life, we expand learning beyond the classroom and facilitate positive experiences to support physical, emotional, and social wellbeing, as well as student success. We actively cultivate a safe, inclusive, and accessible environment at the Student Rec Center that honors diverse needs and encourages people of all abilities and backgrounds to participate.
PE and Rec offers world-class facilities, a long tradition of curricular-based physical education classes, and a growing and diverse set of programs, but what really sets the department apart is the culture co-created by the people who work here. We are committed to equity, belonging, and social justice, as well as fostering a diverse and culturally-aware community. PE and Rec team members are cooperative and collaborative, both within and outside the department, and we strive for excellence in everything we do for our community. We demonstrate integrity in our interactions and challenge each other to continually grow and develop.
Core Values: *Compassion *Cooperation *Development *Equity and Inclusion *Excellence *Fun *Integrity *Stewardship *Wellbeing Position Summary
The Assistant Director for Operations provides leadership for the planning, policies, staffing, operations and services of a large, complex department. This includes the Student Recreation Center and the Student Tennis Center, as well as the outdoor tennis courts, two multi-purpose indoor recreation facilities, two natural turf fields, four lighted synthetic turf fields, and an outdoor jogging track. This is a full-time, 12-month position expected to work in-person on our Eugene campus.
This position is responsible for direct supervision and evaluation of two Officer of Administration positions and approximately 20 operations student employees and indirect supervision of approximately 80 student employees. The Assistant Director for Operations makes decisions on hiring, training & supervising practices, work priorities and assignments, and budgetary needs and reviews. The position also implements and enforces policies and procedures for facility operations. This position chairs the department Risk Management Team and coordinates comprehensive training programs for operations staff.
The Assistant Director for Operations reports to the Associate Director for Business and Operations. Minimum Requirements
• Bachelor's degree in recreation administration, physical education, or related field, or equivalent combination of education and experience relevant to position.
• Two (2) years of full-time responsibility in a recreation environment reflecting experience in facilities and operations.
• Two (2) years of experience in hiring, mentoring, supervising, scheduling, training and/or evaluating staff.
• CPR and First Aid Certification or the ability to obtain within 3 months of employment. Professional Competencies
• Proficiency with software applications for word processing, membership management, and personnel tracking.
• Ability to work effectively with individuals from diverse backgrounds, in support of an inclusive and welcoming environment.
• Strong and effective communication skills. Preferred Qualifications
• Master's degree in recreation administration, physical education, or related field.
• Leadership experience and/or a commitment to student learning and development.
• Knowledge of/experience with budget management.
• Experience with Innosoft Fusion rec management software on the system administration level.
• Two (2) years of experience managing risk in a recreation and fitness environment.
FLSA Exempt: Yes
All offers of employment are contingent upon successful completion of a background check.
The University of Oregon is proud to offer a robust benefits package to eligible employees, including health insurance, retirement plans, and paid time off. For more information about benefits, visit https://hr.uoregon.edu/about-benefits.
The University of Oregon is an equal-opportunity institution committed to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. The University encourages all qualified individuals to apply and does not discriminate on the basis of any protected status, including veteran and disability status. The University is committed to providing reasonable accommodations to applicants and employees with disabilities. To request an accommodation in connection with the application process, please mailto:uocareers@uoregon.edu or call 541-346-5112.
UO prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy (including pregnancy-related conditions), age, physical or mental disability, genetic information (including family medical history), ancestry, familial status, citizenship, service in the uniformed services (as defined in federal and state law), veteran status, expunged juvenile record, and/or the use of leave protected by state or federal law in all programs, activities and employment practices as required by Title IX, other applicable laws, and policies. Retaliation is prohibited by UO policy. Questions may be referred to the Office of Equal Opportunity and Access. Contact information, related policies, and complaint procedures are https://investigations.uoregon.edu/reporting.
In compliance with federal law, the University of Oregon prepares an annual report on campus security and fire safety programs and services. The Annual Campus Security and Fire Safety Report is available https://clery.uoregon.edu/annual-campus-security-and-fire-safety-report.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/6964396
We’re Hiring!
Associate Director, Recruitment & Onboarding
Location of Position: Marin Headlands, Sausalito, California
Reports to : Senior Director, People & Culture
Position Classification & Expected Hours of Work, and Travel:
This is a full-time position.
Regular onsite work is required.
Days and hours of work may vary according to the needs of The Marine Mammal Center.
Evening, weekend, and holiday work is required as job duties demand.
Travel within California is expected for this position.
Compensation Range: $93,600 - $109,738 annual
Benefits:
Holidays
Sick Time
Vacation
Medical, Dental, and Vision
Life Insurance
Long Term Disability Insurance
401k Retirement Plan
Employee Assistance Program
Job Summary:
The Associate Director, Recruitment & Onboarding serves as the senior operational lead and is the architect for staff recruitment, hiring, and onboarding and volunteer recruitment, onboarding, and placement at The Marine Mammal Center. This role provides strategic input, architectural design, and operational leadership to ensure recruitment and onboarding practices are consistent, equitable, compliant, and aligned with the Center’s mission and strategic priorities. The Associate Director, Recruitment & Onboarding translates organizational direction, workforce and volunteer priorities, and operational needs into scalable recruitment and onboarding frameworks, tools, and practices. This role oversees and develops a multidisciplinary recruitment team, manages recruitment systems, and stewards the organization’s staff position description and volunteer role description libraries. This role is accountable for day-to-day staff hiring outcomes and volunteer placements. This position actively supports the Center’s mission by ensuring the organization attracts, selects, and onboards a diverse, skilled, and mission-aligned staff workforce and volunteer community.
Essential Functions:
Recruitment & Onboarding Strategy: 60%
Serve as the senior operational lead and manage recruitment and onboarding frameworks that support staff recruitment, hiring, and onboarding and volunteer recruitment, onboarding, and placement, aligned with organizational priorities established by the People & Culture department and Executive leadership
Provide oversight of end-to-end processes for staff and volunteer recruitment and onboarding, ensuring consistent, equitable, and high-quality practices.
Manage and administer all Applicant Tracking System (ATS) and onboarding platforms, ensuring appropriate configuration, data integrity, user access, and system performance.
Provide operational leadership for ATS and onboarding platform reviews, assessing system effectiveness, alignment with organizational needs, compliance requirements, and user experience.
Lead and support the development of Requests for Proposal (RFPs) for recruitment and onboarding systems as needed, including requirements gathering, evaluation criteria, and cross-functional coordination.
Manage and facilitate recruitment and onboarding vendor evaluation and selection processes, including demonstrations, comparative analysis, and recommendation development in partnership with People & Culture leadership and other stakeholders as needed.
Provide leadership and guidance for recruitment and onboarding system implementation, configuration, testing, and rollout, ensuring data integrity, minimal disruption, and alignment with recruitment and onboarding workflows as needed.
Ensure background checks, motor vehicle checks, Form I-9, E-Verify, and other pre-boarding requirements for staff and volunteers are completed accurately, efficiently, and in compliance with all applicable requirements.
Ensure recruitment and onboarding practices align with applicable federal, state, and local laws and regulations, funding requirements and budget constraints, and organizational policies.
Develop and maintain dashboards and reports measuring staff time-to-fill, source of staff hire, volunteer pipeline health, placement timelines, compliance, candidate and volunteer experience, and outreach or event return on investment (ROI).
Review recruitment and onboarding data to identify trends, risks, and gaps; implement corrective actions and provide recommendations to People & Culture leadership as needed.
Lead continuous improvement of recruitment and onboarding frameworks, tools, and standards to strengthen effectiveness, experience, and outcomes.
Design sourcing approaches that support organizational hiring priorities, including proactive pipeline development for hard-to-fill, technical, and mission-critical staff roles.
Provide oversight of talent pipeline development for staff and volunteers, ensuring sustainable, mission-aligned candidate and volunteer pools are maintained.
Serve as a visible talent brand ambassador for the Center, confidently articulating the organization’s mission, impact, culture, and opportunities to candidates and prospective volunteers.
Engage directly in sourcing and outreach activities for staff and volunteer roles when positions are senior-level, highly specialized, strategically critical, or present unique recruitment challenges.
Establish standards and expectations for candidate and volunteer experience across recruitment stages, ensuring timely communication, structured interviews, and consistent offer or placement practices.
Manage and steward the Center’s staff position description library and role description library, ensuring consistency, accuracy, and alignment with organizational structure, position and role levels, equitable classification practices, workforce planning, and operational needs.
Maintain established templates, standards, and review processes for the creation, updating, and approval of staff position descriptions and volunteer role descriptions.
Provide oversight and guidance to management during the development or revision of a position or role description using established protocols.
Conduct regular and periodic reviews of position and volunteer role descriptions to ensure ongoing relevance, clarity, and organizational alignment.
Ensure position description and role description libraries are integrated with recruitment and onboarding systems and workflows.
Leadership & Management: 25 %
Hire, train, mentor, and manage staff, ensuring individual and team development, alignment with goals, and adherence to policies and best practices.
Provide direct supervision and coaching to strengthen communication capacity across departments, building a culture of clear, consistent, and mission-driven storytelling.
Meet with direct reports to identify and resolve problems; perform personnel actions, such as approving timesheets and evaluating performance.
Monitor workload distribution and team capacity to ensure sustainable operations and effective service delivery.
Coach and train direct reports to build sourcing and outreach capabilities across the Recruitment & Onboarding team for position and role levels, ensuring sustainability and high-quality recruitment practices.
Foster a collaborative, service-oriented, and mission-aligned team culture grounded in professionalism, confidentiality, and continuous improvement.
Partner with hiring managers and organizational leaders to clarify staffing and volunteer needs, define hiring and onboarding criteria, and set expectations for recruitment and onboarding timelines.
Review hiring and volunteer placement outcomes and intervene when barriers, delays, or risks arise.
Serve as the primary escalation point for staff recruitment, hiring, and onboarding and volunteer recruitment, onboarding, and placement issues, resolving most challenges and elevating matters to People & Culture leadership when issues involve policy interpretation, legal or compliance risk, and/or cross-departmental impact.
Supports the development of the Recruitment & Onboarding budget in collaboration with the Senior Director, Human Resources; tracks results to ensure alignment with key financial targets for expenses and/or revenue in collaboration with management; approves and monitors team expenditures within established parameters.
Organizational Impact: 10%
Actively contribute as a core member of the Center’s DEI committee, providing insight, data analysis, and recommendations related to recruitment, onboarding, risk mitigation, and data analytics to inform innovative practices to enhance organizational culture.
Lead the implementation of DEI initiatives aligned with organizational priorities for recruitment and onboarding of staff and volunteers.
Support and prioritize the Center’s DEI objectives and integrate as opportunities arise.
May actively serve on various organizational wide committees as assigned.
Other Duties as Assigned: 5%
Perform special projects and research as assigned.
Perform other duties as assigned.
Supervisory Responsibility:
- Human Resources Specialist
- Volunteer Recruitment & Onboarding Coordinator
1 - Volunteer Recruitment & Onboarding Manager
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities:
Strong commitment to the mission and strategic priorities of The Marine Mammal Center.
Ability to understand strategic organizational issues and influence change.
Strong knowledge of human resources practices, policies, and procedures, with demonstrated judgment and discretion in application
Demonstrated knowledge of current recruitment, onboarding, talent acquisition tools, strategies, processes, and best practices.
Experience serving as a system administrator/super user for a complex Applicant Tracking System (ATS), including requisitions, job postings, candidate communications, interview scheduling, offer management, onboarding workflows, and advanced analytics/reporting.
Experience implementing, optimizing, and maintaining platforms, including workflow design, change management, documentation, and end-user training.
Experience managing vendor relationships, contracts, and service delivery for recruiting systems and related tools.
Experience with employer branding and recruitment-related marketing strategies to support candidate attraction and engagement.
Strong, current knowledge of applicable state and federal laws and regulations related to recruiting and hiring.
Demonstrated ability to develop, interpret, and leverage data and analytics to inform strategy, drive continuous improvement, and improve outcomes.
Customer-focused approach with the ability to understand stakeholder needs, set clear expectations, and consistently deliver high-quality service.
Strong leadership and team building skills, with the ability to motivate team members, balance workloads, set priorities, monitor performance, and mentor, coach and develop talent.
Ability to quickly establish professional rapport with internal customers; approachable and able to engage with sensitivity, patience, and professionalism in addressing interpersonal concerns.
Demonstrated professionalism and confidentiality in handling sensitive and confidential information.
Excellent written, verbal, active listening, presentation, and facilitation skills, with the ability to communicate clearly, concisely, and timely.
Comfort participating in group presentations and negotiations, representing the function effectively with internal and external stakeholders.
Ability to work collaboratively and maintain open communication in a team environment, partnering effectively across functions and levels.
Ability to work independently to manage projects, priorities, commitments, and deadlines.
Strong organization skills including attention to detail, effective problem-solving, multitasking, and time management.
Ability to solve complex problems efficiently and effectively, applying sound judgment and making timely decisions
Demonstrated ability to take initiative, prioritize competing demands, resolve conflicts, and follow through to completion
Adapts to and learns from change, challenges, and feedback; demonstrates flexibility in approach and supports others in adopting new processes and expectations.
Proficiency with Microsoft Office applications (Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, SharePoint, Word) and virtual collaboration tools (Asana, Slack, Teams, Zoom).
Ability to build and sustain effective working relationships with people from diverse backgrounds while demonstrating self-awareness, respect, and professionalism.
Willingness to support and participate in the Center’s diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
Qualifications and Experience:
Professional HR certification such as SHRM-SCP or SPHR preferred.
Valid driver license with acceptable motor vehicle record to maintain standards of insurability. (Must be 21+ years old as frequently driving company vehicles is required for this position.)
This position requires a combination of education and/or experience equivalent to a bachelor’s degree in human resources or related field; and 7 years of experience directly related in recruitment and onboarding operations, with at least 5 years in a leadership/people management capacity.
Work Environment & Physical Requirements:
This position operates in a professional office, laboratory, and hospital environment both indoors and outdoors with access to other parts of the facilities via outdoor pathways.
Routinely uses standard office equipment, which may involve repetitive motion.
This role involves extended periods of desk work and computer use.
Job responsibilities may include physical tasks requiring manual dexterity, coordination, and mobility, including lifting or moving up to 25 pounds.
Exposure to odors associated with animals and the care of animals.
Limited exposure to allergens and zoonotic diseases.
OUR COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY
The Marine Mammal Center actively engages individuals from all backgrounds. We are committed to embracing diversity within our organization because we firmly believe that diverse employee teams help us to achieve our best organizational outcomes and provide the most effective support to the communities we serve. We are deeply dedicated to creating and maintaining an inclusive, equitable and supportive work environment. We strongly encourage people from underrepresented groups to apply. The Marine Mammal Center believes in growth and supporting our employees as best we can so they can become their best selves in and outside of work. We believe that a healthy work environment means building an inclusive culture where people can thrive together and feel supported and empowered. We believe in stretch versus constraint.
OUR MISSION
The Marine Mammal Center advances ocean health through marine mammal rescue and rehabilitation, research, and education.
ABOUT THE MARINE MAMMAL CENTER For more information, please visit our “About Us” page at www.marinemammalcenter.org
To Apply: Please submit a cover letter and resume and provide a brief description about how your experience aligns with the role.
Note that applications without a cover letter will not be considered.
In your cover letter, please feel free to note which pronouns you use (For example – she/her/hers, he/him/his, they/them/theirs, etc).
We strongly encourage people of color, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and non-binary people, veterans, parents, and individuals with disabilities to apply. The Center is an equal opportunity employer and welcomes everyone to our team. If you need reasonable accommodation at any point in the application or interview process, please let us know.
Full Time
We’re Hiring!
Associate Director, Recruitment & Onboarding
Location of Position: Marin Headlands, Sausalito, California
Reports to : Senior Director, People & Culture
Position Classification & Expected Hours of Work, and Travel:
This is a full-time position.
Regular onsite work is required.
Days and hours of work may vary according to the needs of The Marine Mammal Center.
Evening, weekend, and holiday work is required as job duties demand.
Travel within California is expected for this position.
Compensation Range: $93,600 - $109,738 annual
Benefits:
Holidays
Sick Time
Vacation
Medical, Dental, and Vision
Life Insurance
Long Term Disability Insurance
401k Retirement Plan
Employee Assistance Program
Job Summary:
The Associate Director, Recruitment & Onboarding serves as the senior operational lead and is the architect for staff recruitment, hiring, and onboarding and volunteer recruitment, onboarding, and placement at The Marine Mammal Center. This role provides strategic input, architectural design, and operational leadership to ensure recruitment and onboarding practices are consistent, equitable, compliant, and aligned with the Center’s mission and strategic priorities. The Associate Director, Recruitment & Onboarding translates organizational direction, workforce and volunteer priorities, and operational needs into scalable recruitment and onboarding frameworks, tools, and practices. This role oversees and develops a multidisciplinary recruitment team, manages recruitment systems, and stewards the organization’s staff position description and volunteer role description libraries. This role is accountable for day-to-day staff hiring outcomes and volunteer placements. This position actively supports the Center’s mission by ensuring the organization attracts, selects, and onboards a diverse, skilled, and mission-aligned staff workforce and volunteer community.
Essential Functions:
Recruitment & Onboarding Strategy: 60%
Serve as the senior operational lead and manage recruitment and onboarding frameworks that support staff recruitment, hiring, and onboarding and volunteer recruitment, onboarding, and placement, aligned with organizational priorities established by the People & Culture department and Executive leadership
Provide oversight of end-to-end processes for staff and volunteer recruitment and onboarding, ensuring consistent, equitable, and high-quality practices.
Manage and administer all Applicant Tracking System (ATS) and onboarding platforms, ensuring appropriate configuration, data integrity, user access, and system performance.
Provide operational leadership for ATS and onboarding platform reviews, assessing system effectiveness, alignment with organizational needs, compliance requirements, and user experience.
Lead and support the development of Requests for Proposal (RFPs) for recruitment and onboarding systems as needed, including requirements gathering, evaluation criteria, and cross-functional coordination.
Manage and facilitate recruitment and onboarding vendor evaluation and selection processes, including demonstrations, comparative analysis, and recommendation development in partnership with People & Culture leadership and other stakeholders as needed.
Provide leadership and guidance for recruitment and onboarding system implementation, configuration, testing, and rollout, ensuring data integrity, minimal disruption, and alignment with recruitment and onboarding workflows as needed.
Ensure background checks, motor vehicle checks, Form I-9, E-Verify, and other pre-boarding requirements for staff and volunteers are completed accurately, efficiently, and in compliance with all applicable requirements.
Ensure recruitment and onboarding practices align with applicable federal, state, and local laws and regulations, funding requirements and budget constraints, and organizational policies.
Develop and maintain dashboards and reports measuring staff time-to-fill, source of staff hire, volunteer pipeline health, placement timelines, compliance, candidate and volunteer experience, and outreach or event return on investment (ROI).
Review recruitment and onboarding data to identify trends, risks, and gaps; implement corrective actions and provide recommendations to People & Culture leadership as needed.
Lead continuous improvement of recruitment and onboarding frameworks, tools, and standards to strengthen effectiveness, experience, and outcomes.
Design sourcing approaches that support organizational hiring priorities, including proactive pipeline development for hard-to-fill, technical, and mission-critical staff roles.
Provide oversight of talent pipeline development for staff and volunteers, ensuring sustainable, mission-aligned candidate and volunteer pools are maintained.
Serve as a visible talent brand ambassador for the Center, confidently articulating the organization’s mission, impact, culture, and opportunities to candidates and prospective volunteers.
Engage directly in sourcing and outreach activities for staff and volunteer roles when positions are senior-level, highly specialized, strategically critical, or present unique recruitment challenges.
Establish standards and expectations for candidate and volunteer experience across recruitment stages, ensuring timely communication, structured interviews, and consistent offer or placement practices.
Manage and steward the Center’s staff position description library and role description library, ensuring consistency, accuracy, and alignment with organizational structure, position and role levels, equitable classification practices, workforce planning, and operational needs.
Maintain established templates, standards, and review processes for the creation, updating, and approval of staff position descriptions and volunteer role descriptions.
Provide oversight and guidance to management during the development or revision of a position or role description using established protocols.
Conduct regular and periodic reviews of position and volunteer role descriptions to ensure ongoing relevance, clarity, and organizational alignment.
Ensure position description and role description libraries are integrated with recruitment and onboarding systems and workflows.
Leadership & Management: 25 %
Hire, train, mentor, and manage staff, ensuring individual and team development, alignment with goals, and adherence to policies and best practices.
Provide direct supervision and coaching to strengthen communication capacity across departments, building a culture of clear, consistent, and mission-driven storytelling.
Meet with direct reports to identify and resolve problems; perform personnel actions, such as approving timesheets and evaluating performance.
Monitor workload distribution and team capacity to ensure sustainable operations and effective service delivery.
Coach and train direct reports to build sourcing and outreach capabilities across the Recruitment & Onboarding team for position and role levels, ensuring sustainability and high-quality recruitment practices.
Foster a collaborative, service-oriented, and mission-aligned team culture grounded in professionalism, confidentiality, and continuous improvement.
Partner with hiring managers and organizational leaders to clarify staffing and volunteer needs, define hiring and onboarding criteria, and set expectations for recruitment and onboarding timelines.
Review hiring and volunteer placement outcomes and intervene when barriers, delays, or risks arise.
Serve as the primary escalation point for staff recruitment, hiring, and onboarding and volunteer recruitment, onboarding, and placement issues, resolving most challenges and elevating matters to People & Culture leadership when issues involve policy interpretation, legal or compliance risk, and/or cross-departmental impact.
Supports the development of the Recruitment & Onboarding budget in collaboration with the Senior Director, Human Resources; tracks results to ensure alignment with key financial targets for expenses and/or revenue in collaboration with management; approves and monitors team expenditures within established parameters.
Organizational Impact: 10%
Actively contribute as a core member of the Center’s DEI committee, providing insight, data analysis, and recommendations related to recruitment, onboarding, risk mitigation, and data analytics to inform innovative practices to enhance organizational culture.
Lead the implementation of DEI initiatives aligned with organizational priorities for recruitment and onboarding of staff and volunteers.
Support and prioritize the Center’s DEI objectives and integrate as opportunities arise.
May actively serve on various organizational wide committees as assigned.
Other Duties as Assigned: 5%
Perform special projects and research as assigned.
Perform other duties as assigned.
Supervisory Responsibility:
- Human Resources Specialist
- Volunteer Recruitment & Onboarding Coordinator
1 - Volunteer Recruitment & Onboarding Manager
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities:
Strong commitment to the mission and strategic priorities of The Marine Mammal Center.
Ability to understand strategic organizational issues and influence change.
Strong knowledge of human resources practices, policies, and procedures, with demonstrated judgment and discretion in application
Demonstrated knowledge of current recruitment, onboarding, talent acquisition tools, strategies, processes, and best practices.
Experience serving as a system administrator/super user for a complex Applicant Tracking System (ATS), including requisitions, job postings, candidate communications, interview scheduling, offer management, onboarding workflows, and advanced analytics/reporting.
Experience implementing, optimizing, and maintaining platforms, including workflow design, change management, documentation, and end-user training.
Experience managing vendor relationships, contracts, and service delivery for recruiting systems and related tools.
Experience with employer branding and recruitment-related marketing strategies to support candidate attraction and engagement.
Strong, current knowledge of applicable state and federal laws and regulations related to recruiting and hiring.
Demonstrated ability to develop, interpret, and leverage data and analytics to inform strategy, drive continuous improvement, and improve outcomes.
Customer-focused approach with the ability to understand stakeholder needs, set clear expectations, and consistently deliver high-quality service.
Strong leadership and team building skills, with the ability to motivate team members, balance workloads, set priorities, monitor performance, and mentor, coach and develop talent.
Ability to quickly establish professional rapport with internal customers; approachable and able to engage with sensitivity, patience, and professionalism in addressing interpersonal concerns.
Demonstrated professionalism and confidentiality in handling sensitive and confidential information.
Excellent written, verbal, active listening, presentation, and facilitation skills, with the ability to communicate clearly, concisely, and timely.
Comfort participating in group presentations and negotiations, representing the function effectively with internal and external stakeholders.
Ability to work collaboratively and maintain open communication in a team environment, partnering effectively across functions and levels.
Ability to work independently to manage projects, priorities, commitments, and deadlines.
Strong organization skills including attention to detail, effective problem-solving, multitasking, and time management.
Ability to solve complex problems efficiently and effectively, applying sound judgment and making timely decisions
Demonstrated ability to take initiative, prioritize competing demands, resolve conflicts, and follow through to completion
Adapts to and learns from change, challenges, and feedback; demonstrates flexibility in approach and supports others in adopting new processes and expectations.
Proficiency with Microsoft Office applications (Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, SharePoint, Word) and virtual collaboration tools (Asana, Slack, Teams, Zoom).
Ability to build and sustain effective working relationships with people from diverse backgrounds while demonstrating self-awareness, respect, and professionalism.
Willingness to support and participate in the Center’s diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
Qualifications and Experience:
Professional HR certification such as SHRM-SCP or SPHR preferred.
Valid driver license with acceptable motor vehicle record to maintain standards of insurability. (Must be 21+ years old as frequently driving company vehicles is required for this position.)
This position requires a combination of education and/or experience equivalent to a bachelor’s degree in human resources or related field; and 7 years of experience directly related in recruitment and onboarding operations, with at least 5 years in a leadership/people management capacity.
Work Environment & Physical Requirements:
This position operates in a professional office, laboratory, and hospital environment both indoors and outdoors with access to other parts of the facilities via outdoor pathways.
Routinely uses standard office equipment, which may involve repetitive motion.
This role involves extended periods of desk work and computer use.
Job responsibilities may include physical tasks requiring manual dexterity, coordination, and mobility, including lifting or moving up to 25 pounds.
Exposure to odors associated with animals and the care of animals.
Limited exposure to allergens and zoonotic diseases.
OUR COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY
The Marine Mammal Center actively engages individuals from all backgrounds. We are committed to embracing diversity within our organization because we firmly believe that diverse employee teams help us to achieve our best organizational outcomes and provide the most effective support to the communities we serve. We are deeply dedicated to creating and maintaining an inclusive, equitable and supportive work environment. We strongly encourage people from underrepresented groups to apply. The Marine Mammal Center believes in growth and supporting our employees as best we can so they can become their best selves in and outside of work. We believe that a healthy work environment means building an inclusive culture where people can thrive together and feel supported and empowered. We believe in stretch versus constraint.
OUR MISSION
The Marine Mammal Center advances ocean health through marine mammal rescue and rehabilitation, research, and education.
ABOUT THE MARINE MAMMAL CENTER For more information, please visit our “About Us” page at www.marinemammalcenter.org
To Apply: Please submit a cover letter and resume and provide a brief description about how your experience aligns with the role.
Note that applications without a cover letter will not be considered.
In your cover letter, please feel free to note which pronouns you use (For example – she/her/hers, he/him/his, they/them/theirs, etc).
We strongly encourage people of color, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and non-binary people, veterans, parents, and individuals with disabilities to apply. The Center is an equal opportunity employer and welcomes everyone to our team. If you need reasonable accommodation at any point in the application or interview process, please let us know.
We’re Hiring!
Veterinary Technician Senior Manager
Location of Position: Marin Headlands, Sausalito, California
Reports to : Director, Hospital Operations
Position Classification & Expected Hours of Work, and Travel:
This is a full-time position.
Regular onsite work is required.
Days and hours of work may vary according to the needs of The Marine Mammal Center.
Evening, weekend, and holiday work is required as job duties demand.
Occasional travel to satellite facilities and/or fieldwork within California is expected for this position.
Compensation Range: $81,120 - $93,600 annual
Benefits:
Holidays
Sick Time
Vacation
Medical, Dental, and Vision
Life Insurance
Long Term Disability Insurance
401k Retirement Plan
Employee Assistance Program
Job Summary:
The Veterinary Technician Senior Manager is responsible for the direction and oversight of the team of Registered Veterinary Technicians (RVTs) at The Marine Mammal Center’s main hospital located in Sausalito, California. As a member of the Hospital Operations Department leadership team, this role contributes to the overall direction, strategy, and operational excellence of the hospital. They provide oversight and direction for the daily operations of the RVT team in support of veterinary and husbandry needs of the patients in care. This position serves as manager and mentor of the RVT team, fostering professional development, competency growth, and a collaborative team environment while ensuring adherence to best practices in marine mammal medicine. The Veterinary Technician Senior Manager works collaboratively to ensure integration between clinical and animal husbandry functions, supporting alignment with organizational practices in marine mammal medicine, research activities, and Teaching Hospital program initiatives to advance the Center’s mission and strategic priorities.
Essential Functions:
Leadership, Education, & People Management: 30%
Hire, train, mentor, and manage staff, ensuring individual and team development, alignment with goals, and adherence to policies and protocols.
Mentor and provide for professional development of staff, fostering professional growth and ensuring the expansion of skillsets to maintain standards of care and encourage professional growth.
Provide coaching to strengthen internal communications within the team and across departments, creating a positive, supportive, and team-oriented work environment.
Meet with staff to identify and resolve problems; perform personnel actions such as approving timesheets and evaluating performance.
Provide mentorship, instruction, and supervision to participants in the Center’s Teaching Hospital programs.
Participation in team, department, and organizational leadership and strategy meetings and workshops as requested.
Provide guidance, advice, and judgement determinations for medical-related questions from animal care volunteers.
Program Administration: 25%
Manage and mentor the veterinary technician team, providing clear daily workflow direction and assigning assignments with clinical priorities.
Oversee the implementation of hospital operations policies and procedures, ensuring compliance with permits, regulatory guidance, and organizational standards.
Ensure proper documentation, data accuracy, and compliance with medical recordkeeping (RUBY database), controlled substance handling, and safety protocols.
Collaborate closely with the Hospital Operations leadership team to ensure smooth clinical operations.
Provide consultation and guidance to California-based satellite facilities, consulting with the attending veterinarian as needed, to provide medical orders over-the-phone.
Manage medical supply inventories and coordinate procurement within budget guidelines.
Ensure the accurate maintenance of controlled drugs and drug logs.
Ensure the Clinical Wiki (repository of clinical SOPs) is kept updated with current procedures.
Ensure the Center’s reference materials, training courses, and Learning Management System (LMS) content reflect current protocols and practices.
Technical Management: 30 %
Provide oversight and leadership in coordination of patient care activities, workflow management, and resource allocation to ensure clinical operations run at high efficiency.
Serve as a technical expert and problem-solve for complex clinical cases, ensuring adherence to established veterinary protocols.
Monitor patient progress and ensure timely communication of findings and treatment responses to veterinarians for review.
Continuously monitor and evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of methods and procedures; identify opportunities for improvement and review with appropriate staff; direct the implementation of improvements.
Perform and oversee advanced technical procedures under the direction of the attending veterinarian, including patient assessments, diagnostic testing, imaging, sample collection, anesthesia administration, surgical assistance, and euthanasia.
Oversee the execution of veterinary orders, ensuring adherence to established medical protocols, and leading the technician team in maintaining high standards of care and safety in all clinical operations.
Ensure that all equipment is properly maintained, and that all personnel responsible for use of the equipment have the necessary training.
Ensure that the hospital areas are maintained and kept in compliance with the standards set by our regulating agencies.
Budget Management & Fundraising: 5%
Support the department’s budget development; track results to ensure alignment with key financial targets for expenses and/or revenue in collaboration with management; approve and monitor team expenditures.
Represent and promote the Center to donors, prospects, and partners as opportunities arise.
May occasionally support the cultivation of individual donors, grants, family foundations, and corporate sponsors in both written and verbal formats.
Organizational Impact: 5 %
May actively serve on an organizational wide committee(s).
Support and prioritize the Center’s DEI objectives and integrate as opportunities arise.
Other Duties as Assigned: 5%
Perform special projects and research as assigned.
Perform other duties as assigned.
Supervisory Responsibility:
1 – Animal Husbandry Manager
1 – Satellite Animal Husbandry Manager
2 – Veterinary Technician
2 – Relief Veterinary Technician
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities:
Strong commitment to the mission of the Marine Mammal Center.
Ability to oversee and ensure staff proficiency in veterinary clinical procedures, providing mentorship, training, and quality assurance.
Ability to oversee patient monitoring and guide staff in responding effectively to changes or emergencies, ensuring calm, accurate, and protocol-driven care.
Broad background and robust skillset in advanced veterinary nursing tasks, and the ability to train others to perform them as well.
Ability to supervise the safe and competent use of veterinary equipment (e.g., anesthesia, digital x-ray machines, ultrasound, endoscopy, lab equipment), ensuring staff are trained, safe, and compliant with protocols.
Strong communication skills, with the ability to convey information clearly and foster transparent communication across teams, departments, and volunteers.
Demonstrated decision-making and judgment skills, with the capacity to prioritize, allocate resources, and make sound operational choices in complex situations.
Ability to mentor and instruct students and staff at differing stages of their career path, demonstrating patience, adaptability, and commitment to professional development.
Ability to oversee accurate medical recordkeeping, ensuring data entry, compliance, and integrity within the medical recordkeeping system and other databases.
Ability to translate management directives into clear staff priorities, ensuring alignment between daily work and organizational objectives.
Capacity to work independently while exercising managerial judgment, ensuring projects, priorities, commitments, and deadlines are met.
Ability to gather, analyze, and interpret data to identify potential problems and implement effective solutions.
Ability to build collaboration across diverse teams, fostering open communication, shared responsibility, and mutual respect.
Adaptability and resilience in the face of change, with the ability to model learning and growth from challenges and feedback.
Strong organizational and leadership skills, including attention to detail, time management, and the ability to coordinate multiple priorities simultaneously.
Skills using Microsoft Office applications (Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, SharePoint, Word) and videoconference technology (Slack, Teams, Zoom).
Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with staff, volunteers, training participants, and members of the public.
Ability to practice self-awareness and respect while engaging with staff, volunteers, training participants, and members of the public.
Willingness to support and participate in the Center’s diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
Qualifications and Experience:
This position requires a combination of education and experience equivalent to graduation from a Veterinary Technology Program and 5 years of clinical experience in a high-volume private practice or zoological setting and 3 years of people management.
Work Environment & Physical Requirements:
This position operates in a professional office, laboratory, and hospital environment both indoors and outdoors with access to other parts of the facilities via outdoor pathways.
Working in outdoor weather conditions and elements is expected.
Routinely uses standard office equipment requiring repetitive motion in tasks.
Ability to work at a desk for extended periods of time using a computer.
Ability to work in an open-cubicle office space environment with many distractions.
Ability to operate equipment safely and competently to carry out duties.
Ability to walk up to 5 miles during a shift on a frequent basis.
Ability to drive/operate a vehicle for extensive periods of time, this includes operating large trucks to assist with transporting animals between sites.
Ability to spend extended periods of time on your feet, walking, standing, crouching, and climbing stairs (potentially in inclement weather conditions).
Ability to work closely with wild animals requires physical strength, dexterity, and reflexes to keep themselves and other personnel around them safe.
Ability to perform physical work requires manual dexterity, agility, strength, and coordination, including the ability to lift and/or move up to 50 pounds. (This includes the ability to restrain large marine mammals and walking on varying terrain while carrying large animal carriers.)
Risks associated with animal handling such as animal bites or scratches.
Exposure to allergens and zoonotic diseases.
Involves strong smells associated with dead animals (carcasses) and the care of live animals.
OUR COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY
The Marine Mammal Center actively engages individuals from all backgrounds. We are committed to embracing diversity within our organization because we firmly believe that diverse employee teams help us to achieve our best organizational outcomes and provide the most effective support to the communities we serve. We are deeply dedicated to creating and maintaining an inclusive, equitable and supportive work environment. We strongly encourage people from underrepresented groups to apply. The Marine Mammal Center believes in growth and supporting our employees as best we can so they can become their best selves in and outside of work. We believe that a healthy work environment means building an inclusive culture where people can thrive together and feel supported and empowered. We believe in stretch versus constraint.
OUR MISSION
The Marine Mammal Center advances ocean health through marine mammal rescue and rehabilitation, research, and education.
ABOUT THE MARINE MAMMAL CENTER For more information, please visit our “About Us” page at www.marinemammalcenter.org
To Apply: Please submit a cover letter and resume and provide a brief description about how your experience aligns with the role.
Note that applications without a cover letter will not be considered.
In your cover letter, please feel free to note which pronouns you use (For example – she/her/hers, he/him/his, they/them/theirs, etc).
We strongly encourage people of color, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and non-binary people, veterans, parents, and individuals with disabilities to apply. The Center is an equal opportunity employer and welcomes everyone to our team. If you need reasonable accommodation at any point in the application or interview process, please let us know.
Full-time
We’re Hiring!
Veterinary Technician Senior Manager
Location of Position: Marin Headlands, Sausalito, California
Reports to : Director, Hospital Operations
Position Classification & Expected Hours of Work, and Travel:
This is a full-time position.
Regular onsite work is required.
Days and hours of work may vary according to the needs of The Marine Mammal Center.
Evening, weekend, and holiday work is required as job duties demand.
Occasional travel to satellite facilities and/or fieldwork within California is expected for this position.
Compensation Range: $81,120 - $93,600 annual
Benefits:
Holidays
Sick Time
Vacation
Medical, Dental, and Vision
Life Insurance
Long Term Disability Insurance
401k Retirement Plan
Employee Assistance Program
Job Summary:
The Veterinary Technician Senior Manager is responsible for the direction and oversight of the team of Registered Veterinary Technicians (RVTs) at The Marine Mammal Center’s main hospital located in Sausalito, California. As a member of the Hospital Operations Department leadership team, this role contributes to the overall direction, strategy, and operational excellence of the hospital. They provide oversight and direction for the daily operations of the RVT team in support of veterinary and husbandry needs of the patients in care. This position serves as manager and mentor of the RVT team, fostering professional development, competency growth, and a collaborative team environment while ensuring adherence to best practices in marine mammal medicine. The Veterinary Technician Senior Manager works collaboratively to ensure integration between clinical and animal husbandry functions, supporting alignment with organizational practices in marine mammal medicine, research activities, and Teaching Hospital program initiatives to advance the Center’s mission and strategic priorities.
Essential Functions:
Leadership, Education, & People Management: 30%
Hire, train, mentor, and manage staff, ensuring individual and team development, alignment with goals, and adherence to policies and protocols.
Mentor and provide for professional development of staff, fostering professional growth and ensuring the expansion of skillsets to maintain standards of care and encourage professional growth.
Provide coaching to strengthen internal communications within the team and across departments, creating a positive, supportive, and team-oriented work environment.
Meet with staff to identify and resolve problems; perform personnel actions such as approving timesheets and evaluating performance.
Provide mentorship, instruction, and supervision to participants in the Center’s Teaching Hospital programs.
Participation in team, department, and organizational leadership and strategy meetings and workshops as requested.
Provide guidance, advice, and judgement determinations for medical-related questions from animal care volunteers.
Program Administration: 25%
Manage and mentor the veterinary technician team, providing clear daily workflow direction and assigning assignments with clinical priorities.
Oversee the implementation of hospital operations policies and procedures, ensuring compliance with permits, regulatory guidance, and organizational standards.
Ensure proper documentation, data accuracy, and compliance with medical recordkeeping (RUBY database), controlled substance handling, and safety protocols.
Collaborate closely with the Hospital Operations leadership team to ensure smooth clinical operations.
Provide consultation and guidance to California-based satellite facilities, consulting with the attending veterinarian as needed, to provide medical orders over-the-phone.
Manage medical supply inventories and coordinate procurement within budget guidelines.
Ensure the accurate maintenance of controlled drugs and drug logs.
Ensure the Clinical Wiki (repository of clinical SOPs) is kept updated with current procedures.
Ensure the Center’s reference materials, training courses, and Learning Management System (LMS) content reflect current protocols and practices.
Technical Management: 30 %
Provide oversight and leadership in coordination of patient care activities, workflow management, and resource allocation to ensure clinical operations run at high efficiency.
Serve as a technical expert and problem-solve for complex clinical cases, ensuring adherence to established veterinary protocols.
Monitor patient progress and ensure timely communication of findings and treatment responses to veterinarians for review.
Continuously monitor and evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of methods and procedures; identify opportunities for improvement and review with appropriate staff; direct the implementation of improvements.
Perform and oversee advanced technical procedures under the direction of the attending veterinarian, including patient assessments, diagnostic testing, imaging, sample collection, anesthesia administration, surgical assistance, and euthanasia.
Oversee the execution of veterinary orders, ensuring adherence to established medical protocols, and leading the technician team in maintaining high standards of care and safety in all clinical operations.
Ensure that all equipment is properly maintained, and that all personnel responsible for use of the equipment have the necessary training.
Ensure that the hospital areas are maintained and kept in compliance with the standards set by our regulating agencies.
Budget Management & Fundraising: 5%
Support the department’s budget development; track results to ensure alignment with key financial targets for expenses and/or revenue in collaboration with management; approve and monitor team expenditures.
Represent and promote the Center to donors, prospects, and partners as opportunities arise.
May occasionally support the cultivation of individual donors, grants, family foundations, and corporate sponsors in both written and verbal formats.
Organizational Impact: 5 %
May actively serve on an organizational wide committee(s).
Support and prioritize the Center’s DEI objectives and integrate as opportunities arise.
Other Duties as Assigned: 5%
Perform special projects and research as assigned.
Perform other duties as assigned.
Supervisory Responsibility:
1 – Animal Husbandry Manager
1 – Satellite Animal Husbandry Manager
2 – Veterinary Technician
2 – Relief Veterinary Technician
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities:
Strong commitment to the mission of the Marine Mammal Center.
Ability to oversee and ensure staff proficiency in veterinary clinical procedures, providing mentorship, training, and quality assurance.
Ability to oversee patient monitoring and guide staff in responding effectively to changes or emergencies, ensuring calm, accurate, and protocol-driven care.
Broad background and robust skillset in advanced veterinary nursing tasks, and the ability to train others to perform them as well.
Ability to supervise the safe and competent use of veterinary equipment (e.g., anesthesia, digital x-ray machines, ultrasound, endoscopy, lab equipment), ensuring staff are trained, safe, and compliant with protocols.
Strong communication skills, with the ability to convey information clearly and foster transparent communication across teams, departments, and volunteers.
Demonstrated decision-making and judgment skills, with the capacity to prioritize, allocate resources, and make sound operational choices in complex situations.
Ability to mentor and instruct students and staff at differing stages of their career path, demonstrating patience, adaptability, and commitment to professional development.
Ability to oversee accurate medical recordkeeping, ensuring data entry, compliance, and integrity within the medical recordkeeping system and other databases.
Ability to translate management directives into clear staff priorities, ensuring alignment between daily work and organizational objectives.
Capacity to work independently while exercising managerial judgment, ensuring projects, priorities, commitments, and deadlines are met.
Ability to gather, analyze, and interpret data to identify potential problems and implement effective solutions.
Ability to build collaboration across diverse teams, fostering open communication, shared responsibility, and mutual respect.
Adaptability and resilience in the face of change, with the ability to model learning and growth from challenges and feedback.
Strong organizational and leadership skills, including attention to detail, time management, and the ability to coordinate multiple priorities simultaneously.
Skills using Microsoft Office applications (Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, SharePoint, Word) and videoconference technology (Slack, Teams, Zoom).
Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with staff, volunteers, training participants, and members of the public.
Ability to practice self-awareness and respect while engaging with staff, volunteers, training participants, and members of the public.
Willingness to support and participate in the Center’s diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
Qualifications and Experience:
This position requires a combination of education and experience equivalent to graduation from a Veterinary Technology Program and 5 years of clinical experience in a high-volume private practice or zoological setting and 3 years of people management.
Work Environment & Physical Requirements:
This position operates in a professional office, laboratory, and hospital environment both indoors and outdoors with access to other parts of the facilities via outdoor pathways.
Working in outdoor weather conditions and elements is expected.
Routinely uses standard office equipment requiring repetitive motion in tasks.
Ability to work at a desk for extended periods of time using a computer.
Ability to work in an open-cubicle office space environment with many distractions.
Ability to operate equipment safely and competently to carry out duties.
Ability to walk up to 5 miles during a shift on a frequent basis.
Ability to drive/operate a vehicle for extensive periods of time, this includes operating large trucks to assist with transporting animals between sites.
Ability to spend extended periods of time on your feet, walking, standing, crouching, and climbing stairs (potentially in inclement weather conditions).
Ability to work closely with wild animals requires physical strength, dexterity, and reflexes to keep themselves and other personnel around them safe.
Ability to perform physical work requires manual dexterity, agility, strength, and coordination, including the ability to lift and/or move up to 50 pounds. (This includes the ability to restrain large marine mammals and walking on varying terrain while carrying large animal carriers.)
Risks associated with animal handling such as animal bites or scratches.
Exposure to allergens and zoonotic diseases.
Involves strong smells associated with dead animals (carcasses) and the care of live animals.
OUR COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY
The Marine Mammal Center actively engages individuals from all backgrounds. We are committed to embracing diversity within our organization because we firmly believe that diverse employee teams help us to achieve our best organizational outcomes and provide the most effective support to the communities we serve. We are deeply dedicated to creating and maintaining an inclusive, equitable and supportive work environment. We strongly encourage people from underrepresented groups to apply. The Marine Mammal Center believes in growth and supporting our employees as best we can so they can become their best selves in and outside of work. We believe that a healthy work environment means building an inclusive culture where people can thrive together and feel supported and empowered. We believe in stretch versus constraint.
OUR MISSION
The Marine Mammal Center advances ocean health through marine mammal rescue and rehabilitation, research, and education.
ABOUT THE MARINE MAMMAL CENTER For more information, please visit our “About Us” page at www.marinemammalcenter.org
To Apply: Please submit a cover letter and resume and provide a brief description about how your experience aligns with the role.
Note that applications without a cover letter will not be considered.
In your cover letter, please feel free to note which pronouns you use (For example – she/her/hers, he/him/his, they/them/theirs, etc).
We strongly encourage people of color, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and non-binary people, veterans, parents, and individuals with disabilities to apply. The Center is an equal opportunity employer and welcomes everyone to our team. If you need reasonable accommodation at any point in the application or interview process, please let us know.
Salary Range:
$47,112
About SMU
SMU’s more than 12,000 diverse, high-achieving students come from all 50 states and over 80 countries to take advantage of the University’s small classes, meaningful research opportunities, leadership development, community service, international study and innovative programs.
SMU serves approximately 7,000 undergraduates and 5,000 graduate students through eight degree-granting schools: Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences , Cox School of Business , Lyle School of Engineering , Meadows School of the Arts , Simmons School of Education and Human Development , Dedman School of Law , Perkins School of Theology and Moody School of Graduate and Advanced Studies .
SMU is data driven, and its powerful supercomputing ecosystem – paired with entrepreneurial drive – creates an unrivaled environment for the University to deliver research excellence.
Now in its second century of achievement, SMU is recognized for the ways it supports students, faculty and alumni as they become ethical, enterprising leaders in their professions and communities. SMU’s relationship with Dallas – the dynamic center of one of the nation’s fastest-growing regions – offers unique learning, research, social and career opportunities that provide a launch pad for global impact.
SMU is nonsectarian in its teaching and committed to academic freedom and open inquiry.
About the Position:
This role is an on-campus, in-person position.
The Residential Community Director (RCD) at SMU provides leadership in developing and sustaining positive, academically-focused, residential communities. A successful RCD also accomplishes administrative functions required in managing a university residential community. The position is live-in, serves in an on-call rotation, and reports to an Associate Director for Residential Life.
While our current vacancies are in Residential Commons, serving mainly first-year and some second-year students, it is possible that the successful candidate is placed in one of our Upper Division communities serving sophomores, juniors, and seniors.
Essential Functions:
Train, supervise, and evaluate the job performance of student leaders. Conduct regularly scheduled individual and group meetings. Provide development and accountability for student leaders.
Develop a personal knowledge of individual residents to better provide assistance and related support. Assist with retention efforts. Serve as a case manager through the Caring Community Connections program. Provide conflict mediation and parent interaction to resolve student issues.
Assess needs of residents. Provide and facilitate programming (including at least one large-scale signature event program yearly) in support of the Residential Commons tradition to promote a positive living and learning environment that fosters a sense of belonging. Advise the programming board for your community.
Lead and/or serve on one or more RLSH (and potentially Student Affairs) committees. Meet regularly with the supervisor and other RLSH staff.
Collaborate with the Faculty in Residence (FIR) for your community and support their connection to the leadership team and programmatic efforts where applicable.
Serve as a Conduct Officer for student conduct cases occurring in the residential areas.
Coordinate building operations. Assist with occupancy management, including but not limited to managing room and hall changes, check-in and check-out activity, etc. Monitor the physical condition of assigned areas and report work requests and desired facility improvements per established procedures.
Manage budget & financial paperwork, including purchasing and expense reports.
Assist in major annual processes, e.g., staff selection, assessments, and serve on the on-call rotation to manage student and facilities emergencies, etc.
Perform related duties as assigned or required to meet RLSH and University goals.
Regular evening/weekend hours will be required for student meetings, programs, trainings and other events.
This person will serve on an on-call rotation. This person is also expected to be a presence in the community in which they live.
Qualifications
Education and Experience:
A Bachelor’s degree is required. A Master's degree is preferred. A degree in Higher Education Administration, College Student Personnel, Counseling in Higher Education, or related field is preferred.
Work experience in related areas of Student Affairs is required. Previous Residence Life experience (full-time or graduate) is strongly preferred. Experience working in a Residential College setting or experience working with academic and faculty partners is preferred. Experience supervising student staff is also preferred.
Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:
Candidate must demonstrate strong interpersonal and verbal communication skills, with the ability to communicate broadly across the University and develop and maintain effective relationships with a wide range of constituencies. Must also demonstrate strong written communication skills.
Candidate must possess strong problem-solving skills with the ability to identify and analyze problems, as well as devise creative solutions. Must also have strong organizational, planning and time management skills.
Physical and Environmental Demands:
Sit for long periods of time
Deadline to Apply:
Priority consideration may be given to submissions received by February 23, 2026.
This position is open until filled.
EEO Statement
SMU is an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, disability, genetic information, veteran status, sexual orientation, or gender identity and expression.
Benefits:
SMU offers staff a broad, competitive array of health and related benefit s. In addition to traditional benefits such as health, dental, and vision plans, SMU offers a wide range of wellness programs to help attract, support, and retain our employees whose work continues to make SMU an outstanding education and research institution.
SMU is committed to providing an array of retirement programs that benefit and protect you and your family throughout your working years at SMU and, if you meet SMU's retirement eligibility criteria, during your retirement years after you leave SMU.
The value of learning at SMU isn't just about preparing our students for the future. Employees have access to a wide variety of professional and personal development opportunities , including tuition benefits .
Full Time
Salary Range:
$47,112
About SMU
SMU’s more than 12,000 diverse, high-achieving students come from all 50 states and over 80 countries to take advantage of the University’s small classes, meaningful research opportunities, leadership development, community service, international study and innovative programs.
SMU serves approximately 7,000 undergraduates and 5,000 graduate students through eight degree-granting schools: Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences , Cox School of Business , Lyle School of Engineering , Meadows School of the Arts , Simmons School of Education and Human Development , Dedman School of Law , Perkins School of Theology and Moody School of Graduate and Advanced Studies .
SMU is data driven, and its powerful supercomputing ecosystem – paired with entrepreneurial drive – creates an unrivaled environment for the University to deliver research excellence.
Now in its second century of achievement, SMU is recognized for the ways it supports students, faculty and alumni as they become ethical, enterprising leaders in their professions and communities. SMU’s relationship with Dallas – the dynamic center of one of the nation’s fastest-growing regions – offers unique learning, research, social and career opportunities that provide a launch pad for global impact.
SMU is nonsectarian in its teaching and committed to academic freedom and open inquiry.
About the Position:
This role is an on-campus, in-person position.
The Residential Community Director (RCD) at SMU provides leadership in developing and sustaining positive, academically-focused, residential communities. A successful RCD also accomplishes administrative functions required in managing a university residential community. The position is live-in, serves in an on-call rotation, and reports to an Associate Director for Residential Life.
While our current vacancies are in Residential Commons, serving mainly first-year and some second-year students, it is possible that the successful candidate is placed in one of our Upper Division communities serving sophomores, juniors, and seniors.
Essential Functions:
Train, supervise, and evaluate the job performance of student leaders. Conduct regularly scheduled individual and group meetings. Provide development and accountability for student leaders.
Develop a personal knowledge of individual residents to better provide assistance and related support. Assist with retention efforts. Serve as a case manager through the Caring Community Connections program. Provide conflict mediation and parent interaction to resolve student issues.
Assess needs of residents. Provide and facilitate programming (including at least one large-scale signature event program yearly) in support of the Residential Commons tradition to promote a positive living and learning environment that fosters a sense of belonging. Advise the programming board for your community.
Lead and/or serve on one or more RLSH (and potentially Student Affairs) committees. Meet regularly with the supervisor and other RLSH staff.
Collaborate with the Faculty in Residence (FIR) for your community and support their connection to the leadership team and programmatic efforts where applicable.
Serve as a Conduct Officer for student conduct cases occurring in the residential areas.
Coordinate building operations. Assist with occupancy management, including but not limited to managing room and hall changes, check-in and check-out activity, etc. Monitor the physical condition of assigned areas and report work requests and desired facility improvements per established procedures.
Manage budget & financial paperwork, including purchasing and expense reports.
Assist in major annual processes, e.g., staff selection, assessments, and serve on the on-call rotation to manage student and facilities emergencies, etc.
Perform related duties as assigned or required to meet RLSH and University goals.
Regular evening/weekend hours will be required for student meetings, programs, trainings and other events.
This person will serve on an on-call rotation. This person is also expected to be a presence in the community in which they live.
Qualifications
Education and Experience:
A Bachelor’s degree is required. A Master's degree is preferred. A degree in Higher Education Administration, College Student Personnel, Counseling in Higher Education, or related field is preferred.
Work experience in related areas of Student Affairs is required. Previous Residence Life experience (full-time or graduate) is strongly preferred. Experience working in a Residential College setting or experience working with academic and faculty partners is preferred. Experience supervising student staff is also preferred.
Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:
Candidate must demonstrate strong interpersonal and verbal communication skills, with the ability to communicate broadly across the University and develop and maintain effective relationships with a wide range of constituencies. Must also demonstrate strong written communication skills.
Candidate must possess strong problem-solving skills with the ability to identify and analyze problems, as well as devise creative solutions. Must also have strong organizational, planning and time management skills.
Physical and Environmental Demands:
Sit for long periods of time
Deadline to Apply:
Priority consideration may be given to submissions received by February 23, 2026.
This position is open until filled.
EEO Statement
SMU is an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, disability, genetic information, veteran status, sexual orientation, or gender identity and expression.
Benefits:
SMU offers staff a broad, competitive array of health and related benefit s. In addition to traditional benefits such as health, dental, and vision plans, SMU offers a wide range of wellness programs to help attract, support, and retain our employees whose work continues to make SMU an outstanding education and research institution.
SMU is committed to providing an array of retirement programs that benefit and protect you and your family throughout your working years at SMU and, if you meet SMU's retirement eligibility criteria, during your retirement years after you leave SMU.
The value of learning at SMU isn't just about preparing our students for the future. Employees have access to a wide variety of professional and personal development opportunities , including tuition benefits .
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville (Library HQ), FL
Minimum Qualifications Master’s degree in library science from a library school program accredited by the American Library Association or a master's degree in public administration, an M.B.A., or closely related field and four years supervisory experience. Must possess a valid State of Florida Driver's license and be insurable by the District's insurance carrier. Must provide own means of transportation. Successful completion of a drug screen and criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Evening and weekend work hours may be required. Position Summary This is highly responsible professional administrative work directing a major section of the Public Services Division of the Alachua County Library District. An employee in this classification is responsible for all activities, operations and functions of their assigned area, including the supervision of staff, implementation of modern library techniques and technologies, establishment of procedures, recommendation of policies, and development of short and long range plans and budgets for their assigned area, as well as assisting with District-wide planning. Work is performed independently under the direction of the Public Services Division Director and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Coordinates the work of a major section of the Public Services Division, including but not limited to: reference and information services, readers’ advisory, programming, circulation, outreach and community liaison, services to youth, services to adults, marketing and promotion. May have responsibility for District-wide coordination of specific services at the direction of the Public Services Division Director. Directly supervises Headquarters Departments and/or Branches as assigned and coordinates the activities of subordinate supervisors, branch managers, and other 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. Keeps abreast of new developments in the field, including those of a technological nature. Analyzes needs, and recommends and implements appropriate measures for improving service; disseminates such information to Section, Public Services Division and other library staff. Plans, organizes, and coordinates District-wide training related to library services. Provides assistance and guidance to professional and paraprofessional staff in areas of expertise. Develops Section budget, monitors and controls budget expenditures. Plans and organizes services. Recommends policies to the Public Services Division Director and implements procedures for the Section. Assists in establishing standards for collections and services and devises control procedures to assure the attainment of standards. Works with other Section Administrators, Division Directors, and Library Administration to provide a coordinated program of library services in compliance with the Long Range Plan and Service Level Guidelines. Coordinates District-wide projects and studies at the direction of the Public Services Division Director; develops, implements, analyzes and reports statistical measures of library service. Recommends changes in Long Range Service Plans to the Public Services Division Director; assists in developing District-wide plans at the direction of the Public Services Division Director. Provides Board of Trustees and Governing Board with information as requested by the Public Services Division Director. Provides the public with information by utilizing library resources, and through public presentations on library services; resolves complaints. Recommends selection of library materials. Attends conferences and participates in related professional organizations. Drives a District vehicle to perform duties as required at various Alachua County Library branches. Performs related and other duties as assigned. 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 Comprehensive knowledge of goals, principles, practices, systems and techniques of professional public library work. Comprehensive knowledge of management and supervisory techniques, the ability to apply them to create effective and efficient service, the ability to supervise and organize the work of staff, enforce disciplinary procedures, coach and counsel staff and effectively appraise employee’s performance. Thorough knowledge of a variety of subject matters and related books and literature. Thorough knowledge of the principles of book selection. Thorough knowledge of reader interests, authors and available books and materials. Considerable knowledge of materials available within the District's agencies and other area libraries. Considerable knowledge of computerized library systems. Considerable knowledge of publisher and dealer practices and methods. Ability to analyze library problems and make sound improvement recommendations. Ability to effectively plan for and manage a library service within an independent taxing district. Ability to safely operate a District vehicle. Ability to communicate effectively both verbally and in writing. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with library staff and the public. Ability to maintain complex records, perform research and in-depth analyses, and prepare reports. Ability to contribute to the overall growth and development of the Library District. Understand how and why Library policies and procedures were developed. Ensure patron compliance of all policies and procedures through effective communication and enforcement. 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 sit, talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to reach and be mobile. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds in the handling of books. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision, and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of printed matter and computer monitors. 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 Professional library experience preferred but not required. • 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.For other benefits such as life insurance and health insurance: Employee Benefits New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday 3 Floating Holidays Pay periods are every two (2) weeks beginning at 12:01 a.m. Saturday through 12:00 midnight Friday. Payday is the second Friday following the end of a pay period.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Master’s degree in library science from a library school program accredited by the American Library Association or a master's degree in public administration, an M.B.A., or closely related field and four years supervisory experience. Must possess a valid State of Florida Driver's license and be insurable by the District's insurance carrier. Must provide own means of transportation. Successful completion of a drug screen and criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Evening and weekend work hours may be required. Position Summary This is highly responsible professional administrative work directing a major section of the Public Services Division of the Alachua County Library District. An employee in this classification is responsible for all activities, operations and functions of their assigned area, including the supervision of staff, implementation of modern library techniques and technologies, establishment of procedures, recommendation of policies, and development of short and long range plans and budgets for their assigned area, as well as assisting with District-wide planning. Work is performed independently under the direction of the Public Services Division Director and is reviewed through conferences, reports and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Coordinates the work of a major section of the Public Services Division, including but not limited to: reference and information services, readers’ advisory, programming, circulation, outreach and community liaison, services to youth, services to adults, marketing and promotion. May have responsibility for District-wide coordination of specific services at the direction of the Public Services Division Director. Directly supervises Headquarters Departments and/or Branches as assigned and coordinates the activities of subordinate supervisors, branch managers, and other 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. Keeps abreast of new developments in the field, including those of a technological nature. Analyzes needs, and recommends and implements appropriate measures for improving service; disseminates such information to Section, Public Services Division and other library staff. Plans, organizes, and coordinates District-wide training related to library services. Provides assistance and guidance to professional and paraprofessional staff in areas of expertise. Develops Section budget, monitors and controls budget expenditures. Plans and organizes services. Recommends policies to the Public Services Division Director and implements procedures for the Section. Assists in establishing standards for collections and services and devises control procedures to assure the attainment of standards. Works with other Section Administrators, Division Directors, and Library Administration to provide a coordinated program of library services in compliance with the Long Range Plan and Service Level Guidelines. Coordinates District-wide projects and studies at the direction of the Public Services Division Director; develops, implements, analyzes and reports statistical measures of library service. Recommends changes in Long Range Service Plans to the Public Services Division Director; assists in developing District-wide plans at the direction of the Public Services Division Director. Provides Board of Trustees and Governing Board with information as requested by the Public Services Division Director. Provides the public with information by utilizing library resources, and through public presentations on library services; resolves complaints. Recommends selection of library materials. Attends conferences and participates in related professional organizations. Drives a District vehicle to perform duties as required at various Alachua County Library branches. Performs related and other duties as assigned. 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 Comprehensive knowledge of goals, principles, practices, systems and techniques of professional public library work. Comprehensive knowledge of management and supervisory techniques, the ability to apply them to create effective and efficient service, the ability to supervise and organize the work of staff, enforce disciplinary procedures, coach and counsel staff and effectively appraise employee’s performance. Thorough knowledge of a variety of subject matters and related books and literature. Thorough knowledge of the principles of book selection. Thorough knowledge of reader interests, authors and available books and materials. Considerable knowledge of materials available within the District's agencies and other area libraries. Considerable knowledge of computerized library systems. Considerable knowledge of publisher and dealer practices and methods. Ability to analyze library problems and make sound improvement recommendations. Ability to effectively plan for and manage a library service within an independent taxing district. Ability to safely operate a District vehicle. Ability to communicate effectively both verbally and in writing. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with library staff and the public. Ability to maintain complex records, perform research and in-depth analyses, and prepare reports. Ability to contribute to the overall growth and development of the Library District. Understand how and why Library policies and procedures were developed. Ensure patron compliance of all policies and procedures through effective communication and enforcement. 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 sit, talk or hear. The employee is occasionally required to reach and be mobile. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 25 pounds in the handling of books. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision, and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of printed matter and computer monitors. 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 Professional library experience preferred but not required. • 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.For other benefits such as life insurance and health insurance: Employee Benefits New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Juneteenth Independence Day Labor Day Veterans' Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Additional Christmas Holiday 3 Floating Holidays Pay periods are every two (2) weeks beginning at 12:01 a.m. Saturday through 12:00 midnight Friday. Payday is the second Friday following the end of a pay period.
Executive Summary
Proteus Fund partners with foundations, individual donors, activists, and other allies to work strategically towards racial, gender, queer, and disability justice and an inclusive, fully representative democracy. The Fund partners with philanthropic and community leaders to identify critical opportunities, gaps, and challenges facing movement organizations and mobilizes donor support and a range of non-grant tools to strengthen and sustain their work.
Proteus Fund donor collaboratives have become a best-in-class model for bridging responsible and responsive philanthropy with cutting-edge social justice movements to generate and fuel deep, durable impact. Through fiscal sponsorship, Proteus Fund partners with emerging initiatives and innovative movement leaders, enabling them to focus on growing their work and influence with the support of a trusted operational partner. To date, Proteus Fund and its affiliated 501(c)(4) organization, the Proteus Action League (PAL), have distributed over $350 million in grants and provided essential tools to support and strengthen activists, advocates, networks, coalitions, and issue-specific campaigns at the local, state, and national level.
The work of Proteus Fund is deeply rooted in a set of core values that are aligned with its vision and mission:
Diversity, equity, and inclusion;
Integrity and professionalism;
Transparency and accountability; and
Respect and humility.
Proteus Fund is moving into a new chapter at a moment of significant change and heightened challenge for social justice movements and the communities they serve. As political, cultural, and philanthropic landscapes continue to shift, the need for nimble, values-driven philanthropic intermediaries that can move resources strategically and stand in deep partnership with movements has never been greater. Proteus Fund is seeking a President & CEO who will lead the organization in this context with renewed clarity of purpose, deep resolve, and bold stewardship that builds on Proteus Fund’s strong foundation and momentum, while evolving to meet the urgency, complexity, and opportunities of the moment and realizing a vision for amplified, enduring impact.
About Proteus Fund
Proteus Fund was founded in 1994 by Meg Gage to refine and expand a collaborative funding model that would leverage shared resources and align strategy among multiple funders to drive significant social change and, in the process, transform the philanthropic sector. Over the last thirty years, Proteus Fund has evolved to become a $60 million progressive philanthropic organization with a diverse and talented staff of ninety who support twenty-three donor collaboratives, donor advised funds, and fiscally sponsored projects. Proteus Fund also provides critical programmatic support and capacity for partners on the frontlines of the fight for social justice. Current funds include:
The Piper Fund , which supports grassroots civic engagement and inclusive democracy work;
The Rights, Faith & Democracy Collaborative , focused on the intersections of religious freedom, queer justice, and gender equity;
The RISE Together Fund , dedicated to advancing civil rights, inclusion, and equity for Black, African, Arab, Middle Eastern, Muslim, and South Asian (BAMEMSA) communities; and
The Solidarity Collaborative , which mobilizes philanthropic support for cross-movement racial justice and solidarity efforts.
Over the course of its history, Proteus Fund has managed additional funds that have had transformational impact, including the Civil Marriage Collaborative , which played a key role in securing the freedom to marry nationwide, culminating in the 2015 Supreme Court decision affirming this federal constitutional right. Proteus Fund hosts a robust array of fiscally sponsored projects and donor-advised funds that align with its mission of advancing justice, equity, and ensuring a fully representative democracy. The organization advances key learning and insights and advocates for effective philanthropic strategies , tactics, and practices with the goal of making the sector a more nimble, innovative, and responsive social justice movement partner.
The President & CEO oversees the work of two legally distinct but mission-aligned organizations – the 501(c)(3) Proteus Fund and the 501(c)(4) Proteus Action League (“PAL”). Each entity uses the tools available to it to tackle a broad range of funder and movement needs in service of social justice goals, while navigating complex compliance, governance, and risk considerations and always in accordance with the federal tax and other laws applicable to each entity. Each entity has its own programmatic priorities, regulatory requirements and compliance mechanisms, and each is governed by its own board of directors.
The President & CEO serves as the enterprise leader for both organizations, with responsibility for the overall vision, strategy, culture, and sustainability of both Proteus Fund and PAL to help ensure mission alignment, and requiring careful time and resource allocation, accounting, and management to maintain the legal and operational separateness of both entities.
Working closely with both boards, staff, funder partners, and community collaborators, the President & CEO must steward a sophisticated dual-entity structure; lead in partnership with highly engaged governance bodies; and ensure strong alignment across mission, operations, compliance, and risk management.
Proteus Fund operates from offices in New York City and the Boston metropolitan area, supported by a talented and diverse staff located throughout the United States. Onsite team members are in the office 2-3 days each week, and the full team is committed to fostering collaboration, camaraderie, and a vibrant, values-driven culture to drive inspiration and impact.
The Current Moment
Current threats to social justice movements and fundamental building blocks of our democracy are arguably more acute now than they have been at any other point in Proteus Fund’s 30-year history. Social justice movement foundations, philanthropic intermediaries, and community leaders are grappling with myriad, overlapping challenges, amplifying the need for strategic collaboration, exceptional coordination, and steadfast mutual support.
It is in this context that Paul Di Donato is now ending his remarkable 10-year tenure as the organization’s President & CEO. Under his leadership, Proteus Fund has experienced unprecedented strategic growth, significantly increasing its grantmaking size and impact, while adding many non-grantmaking tools and approaches to its portfolio. While the stakes are undeniably high, Proteus Fund is poised to meet the demands of this moment. Building on a foundation of strong financial management, a deeply collaborative and inclusive staff culture, a highly engaged board of directors, and a wealth of content expertise, the next President & CEO will be tasked with building on both Proteus Fund and PAL’s legacies of success, providing calm and steady leadership in a tumultuous political and cultural context, working alongside the board, staff, other funders, and community collaborators and partners to protect hard-won gains and carve a clear, values-driven path to achieve a shared vision for a better future.
The Opportunity
The next President & CEO of Proteus Fund will be an experienced, principled, values-driven, and highly resilient leader who is passionate about advancing social justice and transforming philanthropy. They will guide the organization through a time of uncertainty and challenge in our world, building on the considerable legacy and momentum Proteus Fund has achieved to date.
This is an exceptional opportunity for the right person to step in and lead an organization that plays an essential role in the philanthropic and larger social justice ecosystem at a critical time . Opportunities for impact in this role are myriad and include the following:
Lead at a Pivotal Moment for the Social Justice Ecosystem
The next Proteus Fund President & CEO has a distinct opportunity to amplify Proteus Fund’s role as a steadfast and bold leader among intermediaries advancing social justice at a critical juncture. The current moment calls for a leader who can thoughtfully identify, manage, and mitigate risk and sustain programmatic clarity and a clear stance amid emerging challenges, while remaining firmly anchored in Proteus Fund’s core values. The incoming President & CEO will chart a path forward that deepens Proteus Fund’s impact and influence, strengthening its position as a model for peer institutions navigating similarly complex and turbulent terrain.
Steward and Strengthen a Culture of Excellence and Collaboration
Proteus Fund has cultivated a deeply committed, engaged, and collaborative staff culture that is central to its effectiveness as an intermediary delivering high-quality, tailored work. The incoming President & CEO will build on this strong foundation by inspiring approximately 50 core staff and approximately 50 fiscally sponsored project staff to work collaboratively, investing in their ongoing strength and cohesion and creating the conditions for people to do their best work and thrive.
Deepen Partnerships and Steward Complex Funder Relationships
Proteus has experienced significant strategic growth in recent years, including revenue expansion and deepened relationships with major funders. The next President & CEO will be expected to develop and oversee successful execution of a robust fundraising strategy designed to meet the moment, cultivating and stewarding complex funder partnerships and positioning Proteus Fund and PAL for continued impact and resilience in a rapidly evolving environment.
Beyond traditional fundraising, the President & CEO will advance Proteus Fund’s distinctive practice of “partner-raising,” cultivating deep, strategic relationships with other funders as true collaborators in the work. This role calls for a leader who can inspire sustained investment while navigating increasingly complex funder dynamics shaped by heightened sensitivity to the risks and competing demands of the current political environment. The President & CEO will strengthen and expand Proteus Fund’s community of committed partners by clearly articulating the organization’s unique philanthropic intermediary value, demonstrating impact with rigor and clarity, and building durable trust amid uncertainty.
Advance Financial Stewardship and Strategic Clarity
The President & CEO will join an organization with a strong financial foundation, shaped by the leadership of the Chief Financial Officer and finance team. Building on this base, the President & CEO will bring additional financial perspective to support sound decision-making, deepen shared understanding of risk, and guide thoughtful, strategic choices about resource allocation in service of the mission.
Cultivate a Strong Partnership with the Board of Directors
The President & CEO will steward strong and engaged, independent Proteus Fund and PAL Boards of Directors, each of which is comprised of exceptional philanthropic and community leaders and grounded in mutual trust, transparency, and clear communication. They will facilitate effective governance, strategic focus, and rigorous, mission-centered dialogue and debate.
Harness and Expand the Power and Potential of the Proteus Action League (PAL)
A central priority for the incoming President & CEO will be to chart a bold and innovative course for a multi-entity model that includes Proteus Fund’s 501(c)(4) affiliate PAL, articulating and advancing a transformative strategy for its future impact in the social justice and advocacy arena. This moment presents a rare opportunity to amplify the role of an intermediary in the c4 space by advancing a compelling value proposition that engages funders and partners alike, setting a new standard for strategic leadership in this critical domain.
The President & CEO serves as a critical bridge and steward of Proteus Fund’s relationship with its sister c4 organization, PAL, ensuring close alignment and effective collaboration between the two entities.
Desired Qualifications
While no one candidate will embody all of the qualifications enumerated below, the ideal candidate will possess many of the following professional and personal abilities, attributes, and experiences:
Professional Experience and Education
10-15 years of progressive, senior/executive leadership experience in philanthropic or nonprofit management. A demonstrated track record of increasing responsibility and successful oversight of complex initiatives is required. Candidates without prior CEO/ED experience should demonstrate readiness to lead a $20M+ organization with substantial staff oversight and board partnership
Prior experience leading foundation or philanthropic intermediary/infrastructure organizations is preferred
While deep technical expertise in c4 operations is not required, the President & CEO must bring a strong grasp of the landscape, along with the creativity and credibility to diversify revenue
No specific degree is required for this role. Relevant experience and demonstrated leadership are more important than formal credentials
Visionary Leadership
Proven ability to anchor strategic organizational decision-making in core values, especially in complex or uncertain environments
Demonstrated ability to navigate immediate demands while advancing long-term organizational goals
Experience identifying and managing risk strategically and effectively
History of leading with composure, clarity, and confidence while navigating external scrutiny or constraints
Exceptional People and Culture Stewardship
Proven record of building and sustaining cohesive, collaborative organizational cultures with high levels of staff engagement
Ability to balance decisiveness with inclusivity, ensuring staff feel heard while maintaining directional clarity
Track record of retaining and developing high-performing staff and creating environments where diverse talents thrive
Experience managing boards effectively, fostering strong governance, and building trust
Intermediary, Fundraising and Partnership Building Expertise
Knowledge of how philanthropic intermediaries work and the distinct role they play in the social justice ecosystem
Experience navigating multi-faceted funder relationships
Well-developed approach to partnership building that cultivates deep, sustainable, and values-aligned relationships
Proven ability to diversify revenue. Experience with c4 fundraising strongly preferred
Public-Facing Leadership and Credibility
Experience and comfort serving as a public advocate, spokesperson, and coalition builder
Track record as a strong connector in the field with a proven ability to identify and build partnerships that serve the field as a whole
Established reputation/credibility and relationships in both philanthropy and progressive movements
Communication and Crisis Management
Demonstrated excellence in communication, with the capacity to manage messaging proactively and strategically, anticipate challenges, and address issues before they escalate
Ability to build trust and alignment with clarity, transparency, and authenticity among diverse audiences and stakeholders
Commitment to Justice, Equity, and Movement Building
Demonstrated commitment to racial, economic, and social justice
Track record of building diverse teams and creating inclusive organizational cultures that facilitate equity and belonging
Experience working across lines of difference to advance shared goals
Understanding of how identity, power, and privilege operate within philanthropic and movement ecosystems
Vision and Strategy for Multi-Entity Engagement
Demonstrated understanding of the c3 and c4 landscape, including regulatory considerations and the strategic opportunities to advance mission impact
Demonstrated ability to collaborate effectively with c4 partners and integrate c4 strategies into a broader theory of change
Familiarity with political and advocacy dynamics at the federal, state, and local levels, with the capacity to leverage this knowledge to inform strategic decisions
Location
Proteus Fund and PAL headquarters are located in New York City, with offices in the Boston metropolitan area and a talented and diverse staff located throughout the United States. While this is a hybrid role and residency in the New York metropolitan area is not required, the President & CEO will maintain regular on-site presence in the New York office. Occasional travel for meetings, conferences, etc. will be required.
Compensation
The base compensation for this role is $325,000-$375,000. This range is based on a variety of factors that include the current market, relevant skill sets and expertise, years of previous/applicable experience, and Proteus Fund's commitment to ensuring pay equity within the organization.
Benefits
Proteus Fund is committed to ensuring that its employees are supported holistically via competitive compensation and benefits and a collaborative, values-aligned work environment and culture. Proteus Fund offers a comprehensive and market-leading benefits package, including a sector-leading retirement plan. Highlights include:
Medical and dental coverage for employees and eligible dependents, effective on the first day of employment
Retirement savings plan (401(k)) with an organizational contribution of 10% of annual base compensation
Three weeks of vacation in the first year and four weeks in subsequent years
Fifteen sick days and three personal days annually
Fifteen paid holidays
Professional development support and growth opportunities
Life insurance
Paid family leave, short-term disability, and long-term disability coverage
Equity at Proteus Fund
An Equal-Opportunity Employer Committed to Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion.
Proteus Fund is steadfast in its commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Proteus Fund does not discriminate against anyone on the basis of race, color, religion or creed, national origin, ancestry, alienage, or citizenship status, genetic information, gender identity or expression, age, marital status, domestic partnership status, caregiver status, familial status, sexual orientation, veteran or military status, disability, neurodiversity, medical condition, height, weight, sex or gender (including pregnancy, childbirth, lactation, and related medical conditions), sexual and reproductive health decisions or decision making (of covered persons or their dependents), domestic violence, sexual violence, or stalking victim status, pre-employment arrest record, or any other characteristic protected by law.
Throughout this document, use of the pronoun “they” is intended to be inclusive of humans who identify as non-binary as well as those of gender expansive identities and experiences.
Accessibility
Proteus Fund is committed to the full inclusion of all qualified individuals. As part of this commitment, Proteus Fund will ensure that people with disabilities are provided reasonable accommodations. If reasonable accommodation is needed to participate in the job application or interview process, to perform essential job functions, and/or to receive other benefits and privileges of employment, please contact NPAG using the contact information provided below.
To Apply
More information about the Proteus Fund can be found at: https://www.proteusfund.org/ .
This search is being led by Ellen LaPointe, Ebony Breaux-Liang, and Andres Marcuse-Gonzalez of NPAG . We invite applications with a resume and cover letter outlining your interest and qualifications via the NPAG website . Should you have questions, candidate nominations, or if you need assistance or accommodations in the application process, please contact Andres at Andres@npag.com .
Full Time
Executive Summary
Proteus Fund partners with foundations, individual donors, activists, and other allies to work strategically towards racial, gender, queer, and disability justice and an inclusive, fully representative democracy. The Fund partners with philanthropic and community leaders to identify critical opportunities, gaps, and challenges facing movement organizations and mobilizes donor support and a range of non-grant tools to strengthen and sustain their work.
Proteus Fund donor collaboratives have become a best-in-class model for bridging responsible and responsive philanthropy with cutting-edge social justice movements to generate and fuel deep, durable impact. Through fiscal sponsorship, Proteus Fund partners with emerging initiatives and innovative movement leaders, enabling them to focus on growing their work and influence with the support of a trusted operational partner. To date, Proteus Fund and its affiliated 501(c)(4) organization, the Proteus Action League (PAL), have distributed over $350 million in grants and provided essential tools to support and strengthen activists, advocates, networks, coalitions, and issue-specific campaigns at the local, state, and national level.
The work of Proteus Fund is deeply rooted in a set of core values that are aligned with its vision and mission:
Diversity, equity, and inclusion;
Integrity and professionalism;
Transparency and accountability; and
Respect and humility.
Proteus Fund is moving into a new chapter at a moment of significant change and heightened challenge for social justice movements and the communities they serve. As political, cultural, and philanthropic landscapes continue to shift, the need for nimble, values-driven philanthropic intermediaries that can move resources strategically and stand in deep partnership with movements has never been greater. Proteus Fund is seeking a President & CEO who will lead the organization in this context with renewed clarity of purpose, deep resolve, and bold stewardship that builds on Proteus Fund’s strong foundation and momentum, while evolving to meet the urgency, complexity, and opportunities of the moment and realizing a vision for amplified, enduring impact.
About Proteus Fund
Proteus Fund was founded in 1994 by Meg Gage to refine and expand a collaborative funding model that would leverage shared resources and align strategy among multiple funders to drive significant social change and, in the process, transform the philanthropic sector. Over the last thirty years, Proteus Fund has evolved to become a $60 million progressive philanthropic organization with a diverse and talented staff of ninety who support twenty-three donor collaboratives, donor advised funds, and fiscally sponsored projects. Proteus Fund also provides critical programmatic support and capacity for partners on the frontlines of the fight for social justice. Current funds include:
The Piper Fund , which supports grassroots civic engagement and inclusive democracy work;
The Rights, Faith & Democracy Collaborative , focused on the intersections of religious freedom, queer justice, and gender equity;
The RISE Together Fund , dedicated to advancing civil rights, inclusion, and equity for Black, African, Arab, Middle Eastern, Muslim, and South Asian (BAMEMSA) communities; and
The Solidarity Collaborative , which mobilizes philanthropic support for cross-movement racial justice and solidarity efforts.
Over the course of its history, Proteus Fund has managed additional funds that have had transformational impact, including the Civil Marriage Collaborative , which played a key role in securing the freedom to marry nationwide, culminating in the 2015 Supreme Court decision affirming this federal constitutional right. Proteus Fund hosts a robust array of fiscally sponsored projects and donor-advised funds that align with its mission of advancing justice, equity, and ensuring a fully representative democracy. The organization advances key learning and insights and advocates for effective philanthropic strategies , tactics, and practices with the goal of making the sector a more nimble, innovative, and responsive social justice movement partner.
The President & CEO oversees the work of two legally distinct but mission-aligned organizations – the 501(c)(3) Proteus Fund and the 501(c)(4) Proteus Action League (“PAL”). Each entity uses the tools available to it to tackle a broad range of funder and movement needs in service of social justice goals, while navigating complex compliance, governance, and risk considerations and always in accordance with the federal tax and other laws applicable to each entity. Each entity has its own programmatic priorities, regulatory requirements and compliance mechanisms, and each is governed by its own board of directors.
The President & CEO serves as the enterprise leader for both organizations, with responsibility for the overall vision, strategy, culture, and sustainability of both Proteus Fund and PAL to help ensure mission alignment, and requiring careful time and resource allocation, accounting, and management to maintain the legal and operational separateness of both entities.
Working closely with both boards, staff, funder partners, and community collaborators, the President & CEO must steward a sophisticated dual-entity structure; lead in partnership with highly engaged governance bodies; and ensure strong alignment across mission, operations, compliance, and risk management.
Proteus Fund operates from offices in New York City and the Boston metropolitan area, supported by a talented and diverse staff located throughout the United States. Onsite team members are in the office 2-3 days each week, and the full team is committed to fostering collaboration, camaraderie, and a vibrant, values-driven culture to drive inspiration and impact.
The Current Moment
Current threats to social justice movements and fundamental building blocks of our democracy are arguably more acute now than they have been at any other point in Proteus Fund’s 30-year history. Social justice movement foundations, philanthropic intermediaries, and community leaders are grappling with myriad, overlapping challenges, amplifying the need for strategic collaboration, exceptional coordination, and steadfast mutual support.
It is in this context that Paul Di Donato is now ending his remarkable 10-year tenure as the organization’s President & CEO. Under his leadership, Proteus Fund has experienced unprecedented strategic growth, significantly increasing its grantmaking size and impact, while adding many non-grantmaking tools and approaches to its portfolio. While the stakes are undeniably high, Proteus Fund is poised to meet the demands of this moment. Building on a foundation of strong financial management, a deeply collaborative and inclusive staff culture, a highly engaged board of directors, and a wealth of content expertise, the next President & CEO will be tasked with building on both Proteus Fund and PAL’s legacies of success, providing calm and steady leadership in a tumultuous political and cultural context, working alongside the board, staff, other funders, and community collaborators and partners to protect hard-won gains and carve a clear, values-driven path to achieve a shared vision for a better future.
The Opportunity
The next President & CEO of Proteus Fund will be an experienced, principled, values-driven, and highly resilient leader who is passionate about advancing social justice and transforming philanthropy. They will guide the organization through a time of uncertainty and challenge in our world, building on the considerable legacy and momentum Proteus Fund has achieved to date.
This is an exceptional opportunity for the right person to step in and lead an organization that plays an essential role in the philanthropic and larger social justice ecosystem at a critical time . Opportunities for impact in this role are myriad and include the following:
Lead at a Pivotal Moment for the Social Justice Ecosystem
The next Proteus Fund President & CEO has a distinct opportunity to amplify Proteus Fund’s role as a steadfast and bold leader among intermediaries advancing social justice at a critical juncture. The current moment calls for a leader who can thoughtfully identify, manage, and mitigate risk and sustain programmatic clarity and a clear stance amid emerging challenges, while remaining firmly anchored in Proteus Fund’s core values. The incoming President & CEO will chart a path forward that deepens Proteus Fund’s impact and influence, strengthening its position as a model for peer institutions navigating similarly complex and turbulent terrain.
Steward and Strengthen a Culture of Excellence and Collaboration
Proteus Fund has cultivated a deeply committed, engaged, and collaborative staff culture that is central to its effectiveness as an intermediary delivering high-quality, tailored work. The incoming President & CEO will build on this strong foundation by inspiring approximately 50 core staff and approximately 50 fiscally sponsored project staff to work collaboratively, investing in their ongoing strength and cohesion and creating the conditions for people to do their best work and thrive.
Deepen Partnerships and Steward Complex Funder Relationships
Proteus has experienced significant strategic growth in recent years, including revenue expansion and deepened relationships with major funders. The next President & CEO will be expected to develop and oversee successful execution of a robust fundraising strategy designed to meet the moment, cultivating and stewarding complex funder partnerships and positioning Proteus Fund and PAL for continued impact and resilience in a rapidly evolving environment.
Beyond traditional fundraising, the President & CEO will advance Proteus Fund’s distinctive practice of “partner-raising,” cultivating deep, strategic relationships with other funders as true collaborators in the work. This role calls for a leader who can inspire sustained investment while navigating increasingly complex funder dynamics shaped by heightened sensitivity to the risks and competing demands of the current political environment. The President & CEO will strengthen and expand Proteus Fund’s community of committed partners by clearly articulating the organization’s unique philanthropic intermediary value, demonstrating impact with rigor and clarity, and building durable trust amid uncertainty.
Advance Financial Stewardship and Strategic Clarity
The President & CEO will join an organization with a strong financial foundation, shaped by the leadership of the Chief Financial Officer and finance team. Building on this base, the President & CEO will bring additional financial perspective to support sound decision-making, deepen shared understanding of risk, and guide thoughtful, strategic choices about resource allocation in service of the mission.
Cultivate a Strong Partnership with the Board of Directors
The President & CEO will steward strong and engaged, independent Proteus Fund and PAL Boards of Directors, each of which is comprised of exceptional philanthropic and community leaders and grounded in mutual trust, transparency, and clear communication. They will facilitate effective governance, strategic focus, and rigorous, mission-centered dialogue and debate.
Harness and Expand the Power and Potential of the Proteus Action League (PAL)
A central priority for the incoming President & CEO will be to chart a bold and innovative course for a multi-entity model that includes Proteus Fund’s 501(c)(4) affiliate PAL, articulating and advancing a transformative strategy for its future impact in the social justice and advocacy arena. This moment presents a rare opportunity to amplify the role of an intermediary in the c4 space by advancing a compelling value proposition that engages funders and partners alike, setting a new standard for strategic leadership in this critical domain.
The President & CEO serves as a critical bridge and steward of Proteus Fund’s relationship with its sister c4 organization, PAL, ensuring close alignment and effective collaboration between the two entities.
Desired Qualifications
While no one candidate will embody all of the qualifications enumerated below, the ideal candidate will possess many of the following professional and personal abilities, attributes, and experiences:
Professional Experience and Education
10-15 years of progressive, senior/executive leadership experience in philanthropic or nonprofit management. A demonstrated track record of increasing responsibility and successful oversight of complex initiatives is required. Candidates without prior CEO/ED experience should demonstrate readiness to lead a $20M+ organization with substantial staff oversight and board partnership
Prior experience leading foundation or philanthropic intermediary/infrastructure organizations is preferred
While deep technical expertise in c4 operations is not required, the President & CEO must bring a strong grasp of the landscape, along with the creativity and credibility to diversify revenue
No specific degree is required for this role. Relevant experience and demonstrated leadership are more important than formal credentials
Visionary Leadership
Proven ability to anchor strategic organizational decision-making in core values, especially in complex or uncertain environments
Demonstrated ability to navigate immediate demands while advancing long-term organizational goals
Experience identifying and managing risk strategically and effectively
History of leading with composure, clarity, and confidence while navigating external scrutiny or constraints
Exceptional People and Culture Stewardship
Proven record of building and sustaining cohesive, collaborative organizational cultures with high levels of staff engagement
Ability to balance decisiveness with inclusivity, ensuring staff feel heard while maintaining directional clarity
Track record of retaining and developing high-performing staff and creating environments where diverse talents thrive
Experience managing boards effectively, fostering strong governance, and building trust
Intermediary, Fundraising and Partnership Building Expertise
Knowledge of how philanthropic intermediaries work and the distinct role they play in the social justice ecosystem
Experience navigating multi-faceted funder relationships
Well-developed approach to partnership building that cultivates deep, sustainable, and values-aligned relationships
Proven ability to diversify revenue. Experience with c4 fundraising strongly preferred
Public-Facing Leadership and Credibility
Experience and comfort serving as a public advocate, spokesperson, and coalition builder
Track record as a strong connector in the field with a proven ability to identify and build partnerships that serve the field as a whole
Established reputation/credibility and relationships in both philanthropy and progressive movements
Communication and Crisis Management
Demonstrated excellence in communication, with the capacity to manage messaging proactively and strategically, anticipate challenges, and address issues before they escalate
Ability to build trust and alignment with clarity, transparency, and authenticity among diverse audiences and stakeholders
Commitment to Justice, Equity, and Movement Building
Demonstrated commitment to racial, economic, and social justice
Track record of building diverse teams and creating inclusive organizational cultures that facilitate equity and belonging
Experience working across lines of difference to advance shared goals
Understanding of how identity, power, and privilege operate within philanthropic and movement ecosystems
Vision and Strategy for Multi-Entity Engagement
Demonstrated understanding of the c3 and c4 landscape, including regulatory considerations and the strategic opportunities to advance mission impact
Demonstrated ability to collaborate effectively with c4 partners and integrate c4 strategies into a broader theory of change
Familiarity with political and advocacy dynamics at the federal, state, and local levels, with the capacity to leverage this knowledge to inform strategic decisions
Location
Proteus Fund and PAL headquarters are located in New York City, with offices in the Boston metropolitan area and a talented and diverse staff located throughout the United States. While this is a hybrid role and residency in the New York metropolitan area is not required, the President & CEO will maintain regular on-site presence in the New York office. Occasional travel for meetings, conferences, etc. will be required.
Compensation
The base compensation for this role is $325,000-$375,000. This range is based on a variety of factors that include the current market, relevant skill sets and expertise, years of previous/applicable experience, and Proteus Fund's commitment to ensuring pay equity within the organization.
Benefits
Proteus Fund is committed to ensuring that its employees are supported holistically via competitive compensation and benefits and a collaborative, values-aligned work environment and culture. Proteus Fund offers a comprehensive and market-leading benefits package, including a sector-leading retirement plan. Highlights include:
Medical and dental coverage for employees and eligible dependents, effective on the first day of employment
Retirement savings plan (401(k)) with an organizational contribution of 10% of annual base compensation
Three weeks of vacation in the first year and four weeks in subsequent years
Fifteen sick days and three personal days annually
Fifteen paid holidays
Professional development support and growth opportunities
Life insurance
Paid family leave, short-term disability, and long-term disability coverage
Equity at Proteus Fund
An Equal-Opportunity Employer Committed to Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion.
Proteus Fund is steadfast in its commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Proteus Fund does not discriminate against anyone on the basis of race, color, religion or creed, national origin, ancestry, alienage, or citizenship status, genetic information, gender identity or expression, age, marital status, domestic partnership status, caregiver status, familial status, sexual orientation, veteran or military status, disability, neurodiversity, medical condition, height, weight, sex or gender (including pregnancy, childbirth, lactation, and related medical conditions), sexual and reproductive health decisions or decision making (of covered persons or their dependents), domestic violence, sexual violence, or stalking victim status, pre-employment arrest record, or any other characteristic protected by law.
Throughout this document, use of the pronoun “they” is intended to be inclusive of humans who identify as non-binary as well as those of gender expansive identities and experiences.
Accessibility
Proteus Fund is committed to the full inclusion of all qualified individuals. As part of this commitment, Proteus Fund will ensure that people with disabilities are provided reasonable accommodations. If reasonable accommodation is needed to participate in the job application or interview process, to perform essential job functions, and/or to receive other benefits and privileges of employment, please contact NPAG using the contact information provided below.
To Apply
More information about the Proteus Fund can be found at: https://www.proteusfund.org/ .
This search is being led by Ellen LaPointe, Ebony Breaux-Liang, and Andres Marcuse-Gonzalez of NPAG . We invite applications with a resume and cover letter outlining your interest and qualifications via the NPAG website . Should you have questions, candidate nominations, or if you need assistance or accommodations in the application process, please contact Andres at Andres@npag.com .
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Two years of professional level experience in Human Resources. Bachelor's degree in business administration or related field in human resources management or related field; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen and successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Position Summary This is specialized professional work in the Alachua County Human Resources Department. An employee assigned to this classification is responsible for performing a variety of personnel management functions, as well as assisting with special projects and assignments. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level 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 the County's core values. Advises applicants of job opportunities and requirements; evaluates applicant qualifications; refers qualified candidates; and provides guidance to directors, managers, and supervisors throughout the interviewing and hiring process. May participate, coordinate, or assist with interviews. Interprets and applies policies, rules, and regulations; collaborates with managers to ensure compliance; and participates in the development, revision, and implementation of policies and procedures. Maintains compliance with federal and state regulations concerning employment. Participates in person in new employee orientation presentations to ensure a positive onboarding experience and promote a successful transition into the organization. Identifies and pursues new recruitment strategies, including advertising opportunities; attending in-person and virtual job and career fairs; developing recruitment open position flyers; promoting employee referral programs; and building relationships with organizations and educational institutions, to expand employment opportunities. Coordinates pre-employment requirements, including but not limited to background checks, drug screenings, credential verification, and onboarding documentation, ensuring timely completion. Reviews and approves employee action forms to ensure accuracy, resolves any issues, and confirms actions are within established guidelines. Participates in a range of Human Resources program activities, including in-service training, internship programs, and classification and compensation studies. Serves as the primary contact for County volunteer programs, provides oversight and guidance to departments to ensure policy compliance, record maintenance, and reporting. Maintains personnel and payroll information within the enterprise resource planning (ERP) system. Administers the applicant tracking system and acts as the primary point of contact for questions, issues, or training in the system. Assists the Emergency Management Department with Emergency duties in the event of disaster activation. Serves as lead for Emergency Support Function (ESF) 15 Volunteers and Donations and will assist with staffing shelters. Prepares correspondence in response to requests and inquiries from citizens and employees. Completes research projects and statistical reports as needed. May process documentation for new hires and personnel changes for current employees. 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 Knowledge of standard principles, practices, and techniques of Human Resources Administration. Knowledge of the operations of County Government; knowledge of the functions of all County Departments. Knowledge of applicable employment laws and related regulations. Knowledge of applicant tracking systems, enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, and HR/payroll recordkeeping. Knowledge of volunteer program administration and coordination. Knowledge of emergency management support functions, particularly volunteer and donation coordination. Skill in evaluating applicant qualifications, interpreting job requirements, and supporting effective hiring decisions. Skill in interpreting and applying policies, rules, and regulations consistently and accurately. Skill in administering HR systems, including applicant tracking and ERP systems, and providing user support or training. Skill in recruitment outreach, including advertising, job fairs, partnerships, and social media strategies. Ability to maintain confidentiality, exercise sound judgment when handling sensitive personnel information, and make sound decisions based on information at hand. Ability to collaborate with departments to ensure policy compliance and effective HR service delivery. Ability to adapt to changing priorities and respond effectively during emergency activations. Ability to lead and coordinate volunteer efforts during emergencies or disaster situations. Ability to write, review, and interpret policies and procedures. Ability to write memoranda and prepare detailed reports. Ability to communicate e?ectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to conduct research and prepare statistical analysis. Ability to manage and organize work in an e?cient manner. Ability to establish and maintain e?ective working relationships with Department Directors, County employees, outside agencies, the general public, and co-workers. 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 position, the employee regularly sits, communicates verbally or audibly, and uses hands and fingers to handle or operate office equipment. The employee occasionally stands, walks, or moves about as required. Speci?c vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, 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. Work is primarily performed in an indoor, climate-controlled office environment. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Supplemental Information Confidential Position: Certain personal information for employees (and specific family members) in this job position is exempt from public records pursuant to Chapter 119 of the Florida Statutes. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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 Two years of professional level experience in Human Resources. Bachelor's degree in business administration or related field in human resources management or related field; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen and successful completion of all applicable background checks pre-hire and ongoing are required. Position Summary This is specialized professional work in the Alachua County Human Resources Department. An employee assigned to this classification is responsible for performing a variety of personnel management functions, as well as assisting with special projects and assignments. Work is performed under the direction of a higher-level 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 the County's core values. Advises applicants of job opportunities and requirements; evaluates applicant qualifications; refers qualified candidates; and provides guidance to directors, managers, and supervisors throughout the interviewing and hiring process. May participate, coordinate, or assist with interviews. Interprets and applies policies, rules, and regulations; collaborates with managers to ensure compliance; and participates in the development, revision, and implementation of policies and procedures. Maintains compliance with federal and state regulations concerning employment. Participates in person in new employee orientation presentations to ensure a positive onboarding experience and promote a successful transition into the organization. Identifies and pursues new recruitment strategies, including advertising opportunities; attending in-person and virtual job and career fairs; developing recruitment open position flyers; promoting employee referral programs; and building relationships with organizations and educational institutions, to expand employment opportunities. Coordinates pre-employment requirements, including but not limited to background checks, drug screenings, credential verification, and onboarding documentation, ensuring timely completion. Reviews and approves employee action forms to ensure accuracy, resolves any issues, and confirms actions are within established guidelines. Participates in a range of Human Resources program activities, including in-service training, internship programs, and classification and compensation studies. Serves as the primary contact for County volunteer programs, provides oversight and guidance to departments to ensure policy compliance, record maintenance, and reporting. Maintains personnel and payroll information within the enterprise resource planning (ERP) system. Administers the applicant tracking system and acts as the primary point of contact for questions, issues, or training in the system. Assists the Emergency Management Department with Emergency duties in the event of disaster activation. Serves as lead for Emergency Support Function (ESF) 15 Volunteers and Donations and will assist with staffing shelters. Prepares correspondence in response to requests and inquiries from citizens and employees. Completes research projects and statistical reports as needed. May process documentation for new hires and personnel changes for current employees. 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 Knowledge of standard principles, practices, and techniques of Human Resources Administration. Knowledge of the operations of County Government; knowledge of the functions of all County Departments. Knowledge of applicable employment laws and related regulations. Knowledge of applicant tracking systems, enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, and HR/payroll recordkeeping. Knowledge of volunteer program administration and coordination. Knowledge of emergency management support functions, particularly volunteer and donation coordination. Skill in evaluating applicant qualifications, interpreting job requirements, and supporting effective hiring decisions. Skill in interpreting and applying policies, rules, and regulations consistently and accurately. Skill in administering HR systems, including applicant tracking and ERP systems, and providing user support or training. Skill in recruitment outreach, including advertising, job fairs, partnerships, and social media strategies. Ability to maintain confidentiality, exercise sound judgment when handling sensitive personnel information, and make sound decisions based on information at hand. Ability to collaborate with departments to ensure policy compliance and effective HR service delivery. Ability to adapt to changing priorities and respond effectively during emergency activations. Ability to lead and coordinate volunteer efforts during emergencies or disaster situations. Ability to write, review, and interpret policies and procedures. Ability to write memoranda and prepare detailed reports. Ability to communicate e?ectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to conduct research and prepare statistical analysis. Ability to manage and organize work in an e?cient manner. Ability to establish and maintain e?ective working relationships with Department Directors, County employees, outside agencies, the general public, and co-workers. 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 position, the employee regularly sits, communicates verbally or audibly, and uses hands and fingers to handle or operate office equipment. The employee occasionally stands, walks, or moves about as required. Speci?c vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, 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. Work is primarily performed in an indoor, climate-controlled office environment. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate. Supplemental Information Confidential Position: Certain personal information for employees (and specific family members) in this job position is exempt from public records pursuant to Chapter 119 of the Florida Statutes. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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.
ABOUT THE ROLE
This is a new position at HPN. The Senior Accounting Coordinator will report to the Director of Finance and will assist in the daily operations of the accounting department. As this is a small team, you will play a key role in helping to support a dynamic, multi-entity organization, including its various affiliates and business units.
MAJOR DUTIES & RESPONSIBILITIES
Accounts Payable
Assist with vendor setup and maintenance by collecting required documentation (W-9 forms, ACH files) and keeping vendor files current.
Process bi-weekly A/P payments.
Follow up on open Purchase Orders and manager approvals.
Oversee the A/P mailbox and ensure timely responses.
Reconcile A/P subledger.
Review and process employee expense reports, ensuring compliance with company policies.
Banking & Reconciliation
Perform daily and monthly bank reconciliations across multiple accounts and entities.
Reconcile corporate credit card transactions.
Prepare wire transfers and confirm banking instructions with external parties.
Assist with new bank account setup.
Accounts Receivable
Prepare and issue member dues invoices.
Follow up on outstanding receivables.
Reconcile A/R subledger.
General Accounting
Prepare and post journal entries to the general ledger.
Prepare and maintain detailed reconciliation schedules for key balance sheet accounts, including Prepaid Expenses, Accrued Liabilities, Deferred Revenue, and Fixed Asset Depreciation.
Assist with accounting for grant income, lending receivables/payables, and other business activities as needed.
Support audit preparation and 1099 processing.
Train new employees on Purchase Order process, Expense Reports, and Timesheets.
Take on additional tasks and responsibilities as needed.
QUALIFICATIONS
2–5 years of relevant experience.
Knowledge and experience of finance and accounting principles.
Proficiency in accounting software and Microsoft Excel (experience with Sage Intacct would be a plus).
Experience in a multi-entity environment.
Comfortable working in a growing, fast-paced environment.
Ability to manage multiple tasks and meet deadlines.
Able to work independently and collaboratively within a team.
Self-motivated, proactive, and adaptable.
LOCATION
HPN is a remote company. Employees may work from anywhere in the contiguous 48 states while staying fully engaged with their team and the broader company through virtual collaboration tools and regular online meetings.** Occasional travel is required for in-person meetings, conferences, or team-building events to foster strong relationships and ensure alignment with key initiatives. The ideal candidate should be prepared to work from their home, have a dedicated office, and be comfortable balancing virtual communication with the ability to travel as needed for business purposes.
** The successful candidate is expected to be available during Eastern time zone business hours.
COMPENSATION
Salary Range: $63,200-$71,100. Commensurate with education and experience with a bonus potential.
BENEFITS:
15 vacation days, 12 sick days, 12 paid holidays, paid personal day, medical, dental and vision insurance, health savings account, flexible spending account, dependent care flexible spending account, retirement, and savings plan/401(k) match, group life insurance, short- and long-term disability, parental leave, sabbatical leave, professional development and much more!
TO APPLY:
Please submit a resume and a thoughtful cover letter detailing your interest in this opportunity and your relevant skills and expertise here.
ABOUT THE HOUSING PARTNERSHIP NETWORK
Housing Partnership Network (HPN) is an award-winning membership network of 100 of the nation’s leading affordable housing and community development nonprofits. The Housing Partnership Network’s mission is to leverage the individual strengths and mobilize the collective power of our member organizations to bring innovative solutions to America’s affordable housing and community development sectors. We do this through practitioner-driven peer exchange to deliver creative housing policy, programs, and financing to our network members. Our vision is that all people live in vibrant, inclusive, healthy communities where access to safe, affordable, and sustainable homes creates opportunity, wealth building, and economic mobility.
Since our founding in 1992, HPN has collectively served over 12.8 million people; developed, rehabilitated, or preserved about 470,000 affordable homes; and launched 14 successful social enterprises. Our work has been recognized with honors including the MacArthur Award for Creative & Effective Institutions and Wells Fargo NEXT Award for Opportunity Finance for its ongoing leadership and innovation in affordable housing and community development. HPN represents a new breed of entrepreneurial nonprofit that combines a mission focus with business acumen to achieve ambitious social outcomes. The hallmark of HPN’s member‐driven approach is:
Peer Exchange among the senior leaders of HPN member organizations who share knowledge and ideas to advance best practices in the field.
Policy and Advocacy to strengthen the impact, scale, and sustainability of the sector.
Innovation R&D is borne from ideas surfaced through peer exchange which HPN staff explore and test.
Social Enterprises that HPN and members develop together are launched to address current affordable housing and community development challenges and advance innovative solutions.
Learn more at www.housingpartnership.net .
OUR COMMITMENT TO EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
HPN is committed to creating a diverse and equitable environment and is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. HPN recruits, employs, trains, compensates, and promotes regardless of race, color, religion, gender, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, national origin, genetics, disability, age, veteran status and other protected status.
Full Time
ABOUT THE ROLE
This is a new position at HPN. The Senior Accounting Coordinator will report to the Director of Finance and will assist in the daily operations of the accounting department. As this is a small team, you will play a key role in helping to support a dynamic, multi-entity organization, including its various affiliates and business units.
MAJOR DUTIES & RESPONSIBILITIES
Accounts Payable
Assist with vendor setup and maintenance by collecting required documentation (W-9 forms, ACH files) and keeping vendor files current.
Process bi-weekly A/P payments.
Follow up on open Purchase Orders and manager approvals.
Oversee the A/P mailbox and ensure timely responses.
Reconcile A/P subledger.
Review and process employee expense reports, ensuring compliance with company policies.
Banking & Reconciliation
Perform daily and monthly bank reconciliations across multiple accounts and entities.
Reconcile corporate credit card transactions.
Prepare wire transfers and confirm banking instructions with external parties.
Assist with new bank account setup.
Accounts Receivable
Prepare and issue member dues invoices.
Follow up on outstanding receivables.
Reconcile A/R subledger.
General Accounting
Prepare and post journal entries to the general ledger.
Prepare and maintain detailed reconciliation schedules for key balance sheet accounts, including Prepaid Expenses, Accrued Liabilities, Deferred Revenue, and Fixed Asset Depreciation.
Assist with accounting for grant income, lending receivables/payables, and other business activities as needed.
Support audit preparation and 1099 processing.
Train new employees on Purchase Order process, Expense Reports, and Timesheets.
Take on additional tasks and responsibilities as needed.
QUALIFICATIONS
2–5 years of relevant experience.
Knowledge and experience of finance and accounting principles.
Proficiency in accounting software and Microsoft Excel (experience with Sage Intacct would be a plus).
Experience in a multi-entity environment.
Comfortable working in a growing, fast-paced environment.
Ability to manage multiple tasks and meet deadlines.
Able to work independently and collaboratively within a team.
Self-motivated, proactive, and adaptable.
LOCATION
HPN is a remote company. Employees may work from anywhere in the contiguous 48 states while staying fully engaged with their team and the broader company through virtual collaboration tools and regular online meetings.** Occasional travel is required for in-person meetings, conferences, or team-building events to foster strong relationships and ensure alignment with key initiatives. The ideal candidate should be prepared to work from their home, have a dedicated office, and be comfortable balancing virtual communication with the ability to travel as needed for business purposes.
** The successful candidate is expected to be available during Eastern time zone business hours.
COMPENSATION
Salary Range: $63,200-$71,100. Commensurate with education and experience with a bonus potential.
BENEFITS:
15 vacation days, 12 sick days, 12 paid holidays, paid personal day, medical, dental and vision insurance, health savings account, flexible spending account, dependent care flexible spending account, retirement, and savings plan/401(k) match, group life insurance, short- and long-term disability, parental leave, sabbatical leave, professional development and much more!
TO APPLY:
Please submit a resume and a thoughtful cover letter detailing your interest in this opportunity and your relevant skills and expertise here.
ABOUT THE HOUSING PARTNERSHIP NETWORK
Housing Partnership Network (HPN) is an award-winning membership network of 100 of the nation’s leading affordable housing and community development nonprofits. The Housing Partnership Network’s mission is to leverage the individual strengths and mobilize the collective power of our member organizations to bring innovative solutions to America’s affordable housing and community development sectors. We do this through practitioner-driven peer exchange to deliver creative housing policy, programs, and financing to our network members. Our vision is that all people live in vibrant, inclusive, healthy communities where access to safe, affordable, and sustainable homes creates opportunity, wealth building, and economic mobility.
Since our founding in 1992, HPN has collectively served over 12.8 million people; developed, rehabilitated, or preserved about 470,000 affordable homes; and launched 14 successful social enterprises. Our work has been recognized with honors including the MacArthur Award for Creative & Effective Institutions and Wells Fargo NEXT Award for Opportunity Finance for its ongoing leadership and innovation in affordable housing and community development. HPN represents a new breed of entrepreneurial nonprofit that combines a mission focus with business acumen to achieve ambitious social outcomes. The hallmark of HPN’s member‐driven approach is:
Peer Exchange among the senior leaders of HPN member organizations who share knowledge and ideas to advance best practices in the field.
Policy and Advocacy to strengthen the impact, scale, and sustainability of the sector.
Innovation R&D is borne from ideas surfaced through peer exchange which HPN staff explore and test.
Social Enterprises that HPN and members develop together are launched to address current affordable housing and community development challenges and advance innovative solutions.
Learn more at www.housingpartnership.net .
OUR COMMITMENT TO EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
HPN is committed to creating a diverse and equitable environment and is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. HPN recruits, employs, trains, compensates, and promotes regardless of race, color, religion, gender, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, national origin, genetics, disability, age, veteran status and other protected status.
Recruitics, LLC (agency on behalf of Rush University)
Chicago, IL, USA
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Business Unit: Rush Medical Center
Hospital: Rush University Medical Center
Department: Philanthropy
Work Type: Full Time (Total FTE between 0.9 and 1.0)
Shift: Shift 1
Work Schedule: 8 Hr (8:30:00 AM - 5:00:00 PM)
Rush offers exceptional rewards and benefits learn more at our Rush benefits page (https://www.rush.edu/rush-careers/employee-benefits).
Pay Range: $57,137 - $71,427 per year Rush salaries are determined by many factors including, but not limited to, education, job-related experience and skills, as well as internal equity and industry specific market data. The pay range for each role reflects Rush’s anticipated wage or salary reasonably expected to be offered for the position. Offers may vary depending on the circumstances of each case.
Summary: Working with the Senior Director of Stewardship, the Assistant Director of Stewardship will implement stewardship programs that are designed to engage donors in RUSH’s mission and vision, inform them about RUSH initiatives, campaign progress, and accept, acknowledge, recognize, and report on gifts. This program includes a range of tactics, such as general and donor specific reports, print and electronic communications, recognition signage, and personal interaction with leadership. The Assistant Director will collaborate regularly with other members of the donor engagement section, including members of the Major and Principal Gifts, Annual Giving, Strategic Communication and Development Communications, Alumni Relations, and Development Operations teams.
Requirements:
Baccalaureate degree
At least two years in philanthropic communications, preference given to stewardship experience.
Excellent written and oral communications skills
Professional demeanor
High proficiency in Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint); familiarity with donor databases, Web content management tools and Web-based email communication tools is also important.
Ability to think strategically about audiences and plan stewardship activities to meet needs.
Ability to conceive and manage projects from inception to delivery, including tracking and reporting on progress and results.
Ability to engage others in an initiative and facilitate their input, moving the project forward to conclusion
Ability to work well in a collaborative environment and problem-solve effectively Excellent grammar and editing skills.
Ability to articulate RUSH’s mission and the campaign vision to a variety of constituencies with poise and diplomacy
Responsibilities:
Execute Office of Philanthropy’s pledge reminder process, working with Development Operations and gift officers to ensure that reminders reflect giving history and are appropriate.
Manage and execute the general acknowledgment process for gifts of $50,000 or less
Work with the Senior Director of Stewardship and gift officers to produce leadership acknowledgment letters as appropriate.
Participate in the launch of a key report forecasting and project management process.
Update and manage donor/recognition walls and additional recognition opportunities as applicable.
Work with the Senior Director and Associate Director of Stewardship on producing and delivery of stewardship reports.
Manage and oversee the planning and execution of Annual Impact Reports.
Execute end-of-the-year statements for donors.
Develop and execute plans for fiscal year thank you messages from the Office of Philanthropy and calendar year thank you messages from RUSH Leadership.
Support gift agreement process as needed.
Support professorship recognition program as needed.
Document via contact reports all outgoing communications from the team.
Implement special projects as needed.
Contribute to goal setting and the evaluation of the effectiveness of various stewardship activities.
Support Senior Director of Stewardship, with the development of a Campaign Stewardship plan.
Maintain and update endowed faculty positions brochure.
Draft and mail condolence notes and resolution cover letters.
Management of bi-annual data updates to stewardship module in CRM
Rush is an equal opportunity employer. We evaluate qualified applicants without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran status, and other legally protected characteristics.
Full Time
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Business Unit: Rush Medical Center
Hospital: Rush University Medical Center
Department: Philanthropy
Work Type: Full Time (Total FTE between 0.9 and 1.0)
Shift: Shift 1
Work Schedule: 8 Hr (8:30:00 AM - 5:00:00 PM)
Rush offers exceptional rewards and benefits learn more at our Rush benefits page (https://www.rush.edu/rush-careers/employee-benefits).
Pay Range: $57,137 - $71,427 per year Rush salaries are determined by many factors including, but not limited to, education, job-related experience and skills, as well as internal equity and industry specific market data. The pay range for each role reflects Rush’s anticipated wage or salary reasonably expected to be offered for the position. Offers may vary depending on the circumstances of each case.
Summary: Working with the Senior Director of Stewardship, the Assistant Director of Stewardship will implement stewardship programs that are designed to engage donors in RUSH’s mission and vision, inform them about RUSH initiatives, campaign progress, and accept, acknowledge, recognize, and report on gifts. This program includes a range of tactics, such as general and donor specific reports, print and electronic communications, recognition signage, and personal interaction with leadership. The Assistant Director will collaborate regularly with other members of the donor engagement section, including members of the Major and Principal Gifts, Annual Giving, Strategic Communication and Development Communications, Alumni Relations, and Development Operations teams.
Requirements:
Baccalaureate degree
At least two years in philanthropic communications, preference given to stewardship experience.
Excellent written and oral communications skills
Professional demeanor
High proficiency in Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint); familiarity with donor databases, Web content management tools and Web-based email communication tools is also important.
Ability to think strategically about audiences and plan stewardship activities to meet needs.
Ability to conceive and manage projects from inception to delivery, including tracking and reporting on progress and results.
Ability to engage others in an initiative and facilitate their input, moving the project forward to conclusion
Ability to work well in a collaborative environment and problem-solve effectively Excellent grammar and editing skills.
Ability to articulate RUSH’s mission and the campaign vision to a variety of constituencies with poise and diplomacy
Responsibilities:
Execute Office of Philanthropy’s pledge reminder process, working with Development Operations and gift officers to ensure that reminders reflect giving history and are appropriate.
Manage and execute the general acknowledgment process for gifts of $50,000 or less
Work with the Senior Director of Stewardship and gift officers to produce leadership acknowledgment letters as appropriate.
Participate in the launch of a key report forecasting and project management process.
Update and manage donor/recognition walls and additional recognition opportunities as applicable.
Work with the Senior Director and Associate Director of Stewardship on producing and delivery of stewardship reports.
Manage and oversee the planning and execution of Annual Impact Reports.
Execute end-of-the-year statements for donors.
Develop and execute plans for fiscal year thank you messages from the Office of Philanthropy and calendar year thank you messages from RUSH Leadership.
Support gift agreement process as needed.
Support professorship recognition program as needed.
Document via contact reports all outgoing communications from the team.
Implement special projects as needed.
Contribute to goal setting and the evaluation of the effectiveness of various stewardship activities.
Support Senior Director of Stewardship, with the development of a Campaign Stewardship plan.
Maintain and update endowed faculty positions brochure.
Draft and mail condolence notes and resolution cover letters.
Management of bi-annual data updates to stewardship module in CRM
Rush is an equal opportunity employer. We evaluate qualified applicants without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran status, and other legally protected characteristics.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Bachelor's degree in public or business administration, engineering, construction, architecture, or related field and five years code enforcement or related experience, two of the five years must be supervisory; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum 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. Florida Association of Code Enforcement "Fundamentals of Code Enforcement", “Administrative Aspects of Code Enforcement”, and “Legal Issues in Code Enforcement” certifications required. Must have or obtain Property Maintenance and Housing Inspector Certification within 12 months of hire in this classification. Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen, physical, and s uccessful completion of all applicable background checks, pre-hire and ongoing, are required. Position Summary This is highly responsible administrative, technical and supervisory work managing and coordinating field assignments; conducting investigations and processing violations of County zoning ordinances and regulations for the Code Administration Office. An employee assigned to this classification is responsible for management of the Code Administration Office operations, staff and all code programs including: Property Maintenance, Nuisance Abatement, Minimum Housing, Zoning and Sign Code Enforcement, Commercial Landscape and Tree Protection, Solid Waste Code Enforcement and the County's Rental Permitting Program. Work is performed under the direction of a higher- level 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 the County's core values. Oversees the administration/enforcement of County Codes as provided in Florida Statute, Chapter 162; reviews code cases prior to administration/enforcement through the Special Magistrate or County Court. Manages the day-to-day operations of the Code Administration Office and provides advice on the interpretation and application of code administration policies and procedures to resolve issues and questions. Assigns scope of work as it relates to each code program; performs moderately complex administrative and financial duties such as review and evaluate statistical data, review and report monthly expenses, and review invoices and research special projects and issues. Supervises and coordinates 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. Develops policies, procedures, processes and short- and long-term plans as it relates to Code Administration; responsible for office budget and allocation of funds. Provides technical guidance and assistance to code officers; review, design, implement and direct code administration/enforcement procedures. Researches and makes recommendations related to regulatory ordinances as required to implement policy decisions. Prepares written reports related to the operations of field personnel and assesses the effectiveness of county codes and ordinances. Makes recommendations and prepares reports related to the updating of complex codes and ordinances. Assists staff and public with the more complex code interpretations, reports, and field inspections as required. Ensures consistent administration/enforcement of county codes and ensures that citizen service requests are processed in a time-bound manner. Handles citizen complaints related to code administration/enforcement and makes decisions based upon sound judgment regarding the application of various codes and ordinances. Provides evidence and testimony before a Special Magistrate or other evidentiary bodies. Provides presentations to the Board of County Commissioners, citizen groups and other boards and advisory groups. Coordinates with other departments to enforce codes related to their duties such as environmental protection, building permitting, zoning, land use, solid waste collection and public health. Develops new programs to regulate business activities as necessary. Identifies opportunities to improve service delivery methods and procedures; makes recommendations to acquire software, equipment and staff levels to accomplish goals. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform duties. 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 Thorough knowledge of County zoning ordinances, policies and procedures. Thorough knowledge of methods and procedures of zoning inspection. Thorough knowledge and understanding of Chapter 162, Florida State Statutes. Considerable knowledge of County wide geographic area and of County's sign ordinances . Knowledge of procedures used in hearing a case with the Special Magistrate. Ability to effectively manage projects and appropriate priorities; ability to effectively coordinate with other departments and coordinate the activities and assignments of employees. Ability to deal tactfully with contractors, architects, engineers and the general public. Ability to impartially explain to the general public County zoning ordinances and procedures. Ability to prepare accurate reports and maintain detailed records. Ability to set clear objectives and measures and monitor process, progress and results. Ability to effectively manage, motivate, evaluate and develop subordinates to create a high performing, positive team environment. Ability to read and comprehend maps, plats and aerial photographs. Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to deal courteously and tactfully with the general public both in person and over the phone. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with coworkers, the Special Magistrate 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 regularly required to talk or hear, and use hands to finger, handle or feel. The employee is frequently required to walk, and sit. The employee is occasionally required to stand; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; reach with hands and arms and smell. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and 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 is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles; toxic or caustic chemicals; outdoor weather conditions. The employee is occasionally exposed to wet, humid conditions (non-weather); work near moving mechanical parts; work in high, precarious places; risk of electrical shock, and vibration. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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 public or business administration, engineering, construction, architecture, or related field and five years code enforcement or related experience, two of the five years must be supervisory; or any equivalent combination of related training and experience. Applicants within six months of meeting the minimum 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. Florida Association of Code Enforcement "Fundamentals of Code Enforcement", “Administrative Aspects of Code Enforcement”, and “Legal Issues in Code Enforcement” certifications required. Must have or obtain Property Maintenance and Housing Inspector Certification within 12 months of hire in this classification. Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen, physical, and s uccessful completion of all applicable background checks, pre-hire and ongoing, are required. Position Summary This is highly responsible administrative, technical and supervisory work managing and coordinating field assignments; conducting investigations and processing violations of County zoning ordinances and regulations for the Code Administration Office. An employee assigned to this classification is responsible for management of the Code Administration Office operations, staff and all code programs including: Property Maintenance, Nuisance Abatement, Minimum Housing, Zoning and Sign Code Enforcement, Commercial Landscape and Tree Protection, Solid Waste Code Enforcement and the County's Rental Permitting Program. Work is performed under the direction of a higher- level 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 the County's core values. Oversees the administration/enforcement of County Codes as provided in Florida Statute, Chapter 162; reviews code cases prior to administration/enforcement through the Special Magistrate or County Court. Manages the day-to-day operations of the Code Administration Office and provides advice on the interpretation and application of code administration policies and procedures to resolve issues and questions. Assigns scope of work as it relates to each code program; performs moderately complex administrative and financial duties such as review and evaluate statistical data, review and report monthly expenses, and review invoices and research special projects and issues. Supervises and coordinates 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. Develops policies, procedures, processes and short- and long-term plans as it relates to Code Administration; responsible for office budget and allocation of funds. Provides technical guidance and assistance to code officers; review, design, implement and direct code administration/enforcement procedures. Researches and makes recommendations related to regulatory ordinances as required to implement policy decisions. Prepares written reports related to the operations of field personnel and assesses the effectiveness of county codes and ordinances. Makes recommendations and prepares reports related to the updating of complex codes and ordinances. Assists staff and public with the more complex code interpretations, reports, and field inspections as required. Ensures consistent administration/enforcement of county codes and ensures that citizen service requests are processed in a time-bound manner. Handles citizen complaints related to code administration/enforcement and makes decisions based upon sound judgment regarding the application of various codes and ordinances. Provides evidence and testimony before a Special Magistrate or other evidentiary bodies. Provides presentations to the Board of County Commissioners, citizen groups and other boards and advisory groups. Coordinates with other departments to enforce codes related to their duties such as environmental protection, building permitting, zoning, land use, solid waste collection and public health. Develops new programs to regulate business activities as necessary. Identifies opportunities to improve service delivery methods and procedures; makes recommendations to acquire software, equipment and staff levels to accomplish goals. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform duties. 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 Thorough knowledge of County zoning ordinances, policies and procedures. Thorough knowledge of methods and procedures of zoning inspection. Thorough knowledge and understanding of Chapter 162, Florida State Statutes. Considerable knowledge of County wide geographic area and of County's sign ordinances . Knowledge of procedures used in hearing a case with the Special Magistrate. Ability to effectively manage projects and appropriate priorities; ability to effectively coordinate with other departments and coordinate the activities and assignments of employees. Ability to deal tactfully with contractors, architects, engineers and the general public. Ability to impartially explain to the general public County zoning ordinances and procedures. Ability to prepare accurate reports and maintain detailed records. Ability to set clear objectives and measures and monitor process, progress and results. Ability to effectively manage, motivate, evaluate and develop subordinates to create a high performing, positive team environment. Ability to read and comprehend maps, plats and aerial photographs. Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to deal courteously and tactfully with the general public both in person and over the phone. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with coworkers, the Special Magistrate 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 regularly required to talk or hear, and use hands to finger, handle or feel. The employee is frequently required to walk, and sit. The employee is occasionally required to stand; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl; reach with hands and arms and smell. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and 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 is regularly exposed to fumes or airborne particles; toxic or caustic chemicals; outdoor weather conditions. The employee is occasionally exposed to wet, humid conditions (non-weather); work near moving mechanical parts; work in high, precarious places; risk of electrical shock, and vibration. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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.
Annual Salary: $179,358.40 - $278,012.80
First Review: January 9, 2026
Expected Start Date: February/March 2026
Description
Role
The Director of Information Technology (IT) provides technology vision and leadership by setting objectives and strategies that support the mission of the Agency, bringing together local decision-makers to develop solutions to regional issues including improving equity, transportation, air quality, clean energy, economic development, goods movement, public health, public safety, housing, and more. Reporting to the Senior Director of Data Science and Information Technology for daily operations, and also reporting major technology strategic, risks and implementation action items to the CEO, and in collaboration with senior leadership and executive team, the Director devises and directs the Agency's technology strategy and ensures that all systems necessary to support its operations and objectives are in place. The Director selects and implements suitable technology to streamline all internal operations to help optimize their strategic benefits and improve customer experience. The Director is an influential leader who inspires, motivates, and guides others towards an understood goal, continually leading by example and making technology 'easy' for the customer.
Overview of the Information Technology Department
The Information Technology (IT) department plays a pivotal role in supporting the agency's mission by providing innovative and efficient technology solutions. IT is responsible for ensuring the seamless operation, security, and advancement of SANDAG’s IT infrastructure and business information systems. The IT department is dedicated to fostering a secure, reliable, and innovative IT environment that empowers SANDAG to achieve its objectives and better serve the community.
Through strategic planning, robust cybersecurity, and a commitment to excellence, IT ensures that SANDAG remains at the forefront of technology and information management.
Experience and Qualifications
A bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university, with major course work in information technology, business administration, or a related field. A master’s degree is desirable.
Eight years of increasingly responsible, professional information technology experience, including four years of supervisory and management experience.
Ability to identify cost-effective opportunities for technological investment including sourcing, purchasing, staffing, and in-house development.
Experience in managing projects and the project portfolio as they relate to the selection, acquisition, development, and installation of major information systems.
Strategic and operational planning to achieve SANDAG goals by fostering innovation, prioritizing IT initiatives, and coordinating the evaluation, deployment, and management of current and future IT systems across the organization.
Benefits
We offer a complete benefits package to full-time employees including:
Hybrid work options
9/80 flexible work schedule
Pay-for-performance merit increases
Retirement - Defined Benefit Plan with the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS)
Retirement - 457 Defined Contribution Plan with Voya
Excellent health insurance options for employees and their eligible dependents
Free dental and vision insurance for employees and their eligible dependents
Education Assistance of up to $5,250 a year for regular employees
Free transit pass for use throughout the San Diego region, bus, Rapid Express, Trolley, and COASTER
Paid time off including 12 paid holidays, 2 floating holiday days, generous paid time off (PTO) per year, depending on length of service
Executive level positions:
Management Benefit valued at 2.5% of salary that can be applied towards time off, health premiums, or deferred compensation
Access to an Executive Health Program
Annual contribution to 457 Deferred Compensation Plan
Paid parking
Call (619) 699-1900 or visit https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/sandag ? for information. January 9, 2026. EOE
Full-time
Annual Salary: $179,358.40 - $278,012.80
First Review: January 9, 2026
Expected Start Date: February/March 2026
Description
Role
The Director of Information Technology (IT) provides technology vision and leadership by setting objectives and strategies that support the mission of the Agency, bringing together local decision-makers to develop solutions to regional issues including improving equity, transportation, air quality, clean energy, economic development, goods movement, public health, public safety, housing, and more. Reporting to the Senior Director of Data Science and Information Technology for daily operations, and also reporting major technology strategic, risks and implementation action items to the CEO, and in collaboration with senior leadership and executive team, the Director devises and directs the Agency's technology strategy and ensures that all systems necessary to support its operations and objectives are in place. The Director selects and implements suitable technology to streamline all internal operations to help optimize their strategic benefits and improve customer experience. The Director is an influential leader who inspires, motivates, and guides others towards an understood goal, continually leading by example and making technology 'easy' for the customer.
Overview of the Information Technology Department
The Information Technology (IT) department plays a pivotal role in supporting the agency's mission by providing innovative and efficient technology solutions. IT is responsible for ensuring the seamless operation, security, and advancement of SANDAG’s IT infrastructure and business information systems. The IT department is dedicated to fostering a secure, reliable, and innovative IT environment that empowers SANDAG to achieve its objectives and better serve the community.
Through strategic planning, robust cybersecurity, and a commitment to excellence, IT ensures that SANDAG remains at the forefront of technology and information management.
Experience and Qualifications
A bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university, with major course work in information technology, business administration, or a related field. A master’s degree is desirable.
Eight years of increasingly responsible, professional information technology experience, including four years of supervisory and management experience.
Ability to identify cost-effective opportunities for technological investment including sourcing, purchasing, staffing, and in-house development.
Experience in managing projects and the project portfolio as they relate to the selection, acquisition, development, and installation of major information systems.
Strategic and operational planning to achieve SANDAG goals by fostering innovation, prioritizing IT initiatives, and coordinating the evaluation, deployment, and management of current and future IT systems across the organization.
Benefits
We offer a complete benefits package to full-time employees including:
Hybrid work options
9/80 flexible work schedule
Pay-for-performance merit increases
Retirement - Defined Benefit Plan with the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS)
Retirement - 457 Defined Contribution Plan with Voya
Excellent health insurance options for employees and their eligible dependents
Free dental and vision insurance for employees and their eligible dependents
Education Assistance of up to $5,250 a year for regular employees
Free transit pass for use throughout the San Diego region, bus, Rapid Express, Trolley, and COASTER
Paid time off including 12 paid holidays, 2 floating holiday days, generous paid time off (PTO) per year, depending on length of service
Executive level positions:
Management Benefit valued at 2.5% of salary that can be applied towards time off, health premiums, or deferred compensation
Access to an Executive Health Program
Annual contribution to 457 Deferred Compensation Plan
Paid parking
Call (619) 699-1900 or visit https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/sandag ? for information. January 9, 2026. EOE
Annual Salary Range: $90,500.80 – 140,296.00 First Review of Applications: January 8, 2026 Expected Start Date: February/March 2026
Description
Role
The Senior Administrative Analyst will work as part of SANDAG’s Office of the Independent Performance Auditor (OIPA) to help ensure OIPA is effective and efficient in their administrative operations and intergovernmental responsibilities. The position will provide complex professional, analytical, and administrative support for the OIPA, the SANDAG Audit Committee, and provide general administrative audit and investigative support.
Office of the Independent Performance Auditor
On January 1, 2018, a new California Assembly Bill (AB 805) required the creation of the Audit Committee and an Independent Performance Auditor (IPA) position. The IPA leads the Office of the Independent Performance Auditor (OIPA) and has the authority to conduct performance audits of all departments, offices, boards, activities, and programs of the consolidated agency. OIPA is currently a 10-person independent, oversight function expected to grow to 12 positions by fiscal year 2028. Performance audits are conducted in compliance with Generally Accepted Government auditing standards (GAGAS). OIPA’s performance audits can include reviewing compliance with the agency’s administrative policies, procedures, and local, state and federal regulations; audits of funding, revenue streams, capital projects, expenditures, enterprise risk management, public procurement practices, various transportation projects and programs, and other regional planning programs and initiatives that impact the region.
OIPA serves as the Board of Directors’ oversight function that objectively evaluates and recommends improvements to SANDAG operations. The IPA presents an annual work plan to the Audit Committee for approval based upon the results of an annual risk assessment. OIPA is also the official body of SANDAG to investigate allegations of potential fraud, waste, abuse, and gross mismanagement identified by SANDAG staff or other stakeholders.
Experience and Qualifications
Bachelor's degree with major course work in Public Administration, Business Administration, or a related field,
Three years of progressive professional program and administration experience in areas such as business/office services, executive office management, or project and contract management.
Experience performing complex professional administrative and analytical functions in program administration; auditing or contract experience preferred; familiarity with federal, state, and local policies, procedures, laws, regulations, and administrative and departmental policies and procedures.
Experience with the development of scopes of work, independent cost estimates, project budgets and schedules, and performing contract administration functions.
Demonstrated experience researching, compiling, and analyzing data and information; ability to prepare meaningful summary reports from assembled data; ability to analyze data and make appropriate recommendations.
Benefits
Hybrid work options
9/80 flexible work schedule
Pay-for-performance merit increases
Retirement - Defined Benefit Plan with the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS)
Retirement - 457 Defined Contribution Plan with Voya
Excellent health insurance options for employees and their eligible dependents
Free dental and vision insurance for employees and their eligible dependents
Education Assistance of up to $5,250 a year for regular employees
Free transit pass for use throughout the San Diego region, bus, Rapid Express, Trolley, and COASTER
Paid time off including 12 paid holidays, 2 floating holiday days, generous paid time off (PTO) per year, depending on length of service.
Call (619) 699-1900 or visit https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/sandag ? for information. First Review: January 8, 2026. EOE
Full-time
Annual Salary Range: $90,500.80 – 140,296.00 First Review of Applications: January 8, 2026 Expected Start Date: February/March 2026
Description
Role
The Senior Administrative Analyst will work as part of SANDAG’s Office of the Independent Performance Auditor (OIPA) to help ensure OIPA is effective and efficient in their administrative operations and intergovernmental responsibilities. The position will provide complex professional, analytical, and administrative support for the OIPA, the SANDAG Audit Committee, and provide general administrative audit and investigative support.
Office of the Independent Performance Auditor
On January 1, 2018, a new California Assembly Bill (AB 805) required the creation of the Audit Committee and an Independent Performance Auditor (IPA) position. The IPA leads the Office of the Independent Performance Auditor (OIPA) and has the authority to conduct performance audits of all departments, offices, boards, activities, and programs of the consolidated agency. OIPA is currently a 10-person independent, oversight function expected to grow to 12 positions by fiscal year 2028. Performance audits are conducted in compliance with Generally Accepted Government auditing standards (GAGAS). OIPA’s performance audits can include reviewing compliance with the agency’s administrative policies, procedures, and local, state and federal regulations; audits of funding, revenue streams, capital projects, expenditures, enterprise risk management, public procurement practices, various transportation projects and programs, and other regional planning programs and initiatives that impact the region.
OIPA serves as the Board of Directors’ oversight function that objectively evaluates and recommends improvements to SANDAG operations. The IPA presents an annual work plan to the Audit Committee for approval based upon the results of an annual risk assessment. OIPA is also the official body of SANDAG to investigate allegations of potential fraud, waste, abuse, and gross mismanagement identified by SANDAG staff or other stakeholders.
Experience and Qualifications
Bachelor's degree with major course work in Public Administration, Business Administration, or a related field,
Three years of progressive professional program and administration experience in areas such as business/office services, executive office management, or project and contract management.
Experience performing complex professional administrative and analytical functions in program administration; auditing or contract experience preferred; familiarity with federal, state, and local policies, procedures, laws, regulations, and administrative and departmental policies and procedures.
Experience with the development of scopes of work, independent cost estimates, project budgets and schedules, and performing contract administration functions.
Demonstrated experience researching, compiling, and analyzing data and information; ability to prepare meaningful summary reports from assembled data; ability to analyze data and make appropriate recommendations.
Benefits
Hybrid work options
9/80 flexible work schedule
Pay-for-performance merit increases
Retirement - Defined Benefit Plan with the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS)
Retirement - 457 Defined Contribution Plan with Voya
Excellent health insurance options for employees and their eligible dependents
Free dental and vision insurance for employees and their eligible dependents
Education Assistance of up to $5,250 a year for regular employees
Free transit pass for use throughout the San Diego region, bus, Rapid Express, Trolley, and COASTER
Paid time off including 12 paid holidays, 2 floating holiday days, generous paid time off (PTO) per year, depending on length of service.
Call (619) 699-1900 or visit https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/sandag ? for information. First Review: January 8, 2026. EOE
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
FL, FL
Minimum Qualifications Associate's degree and two years of professional level administrative experience; or any equivalent combination of related education, training and/or 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 a criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Position Summary This is highly responsible administrative work providing professional and clerical assistance and support directly to the Assistant Supervisor of Elections and other management staff as assigned. An employee assigned to this classification provides a variety of election specific, complex and routine administrative work in the administration of the office of the Supervisor of Elections. Work is performed under the general direction of the immediate supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Coordinates the Election Worker training program for Early Voting and Election Day Workers. Responds to Election Worker inquires via email, phone, or face to face, processes Election Worker applications, and assists in inputting and maintaining the Election Worker database software. Assists Assistant Supervisor of Elections in creating and updating the current curriculum for all tasks-specific training programs, coordinates Election Worker training schedules and assists in instructing training classes as needed. Assists in the recruitment, training, assignment, and retention of Election Workers. Submits names of elections workers interested in becoming an elections deputy to the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office for background checks and approval. Assists with maintaining the online Election Worker database for interested Election Workers. Responsible for maintaining up-to-date Election Workers information on Elections website. Assists the Election Workers checking supplies for pickup. Creates, schedules and assigns Election Worker training classes in Election Worker database. Schedules, coordinates and supports Election Workers orientation classes. Sends out data correspondence to potential Election Workers and follow-up as needed. Evaluate Election Worker performance and makes recommendations to the Assistant Supervisor of Elections. Reviews Election Worker applications for completeness prior to data input into the Election Worker module. Plans, organizes, and conducts Election Worker recruitment drives maintaining the presence of the Supervisor of Elections office in the community in collaboration with the Director of Communications and Outreach. Makes recommendations for adjusting recruitment strategies to ensure an adequate number of Election Workers are available at all times. Inputs and maintains Election Worker database, processes updates and terminations. Provides friendly and courteous customer service and resolves issues in a timely manner. Assists with I-9 forms during training check-in. Develops solutions resulting in improved productivity, efficiency, and effectiveness for Election Worker programs. Assists and cross trains with Candidate Services. Assists when needed with other election functions to gain full knowledge of Elections Office. Handles special projects and other duties as assigned. Prepares a variety of reports and related information for decision-making purposes; conducts research and analysis and prepares recommendations; prepares spreadsheets and word processing documents as needed. Creates and maintains filing systems. Investigates and follows-up on complaints and requests for information. Assists with proofing and reviewing Supervisor of Elections notices, flyers, brochures, newsletters, media releases, news articles and other informational materials about programs and services. Assists with training and educational programs. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Performs related work as required. 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 the principles and practices of organization, management, and personnel. Knowledge of Florida Election Law as it pertains to areas of responsibility. Knowledge of the standard practices in the fields of local government and personnel management. Knowledge of modern office practices, procedures, systems and equipment. Knowledge of the functions and operations of County government and the Supervisor of Elections office. Skilled in the operation and use of a personal computer including word processing, power point, excel spreadsheet and database software; calculator; telephone; copy machine; and fax machine. Ability to gather and analyze data and draw conclusions. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees, if assigned. Ability to communicate effectively, verbally and in writing. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with the general public, voters, candidates, Supervisor of Elections employees and other County officials. Ability to prepare detailed written reports and 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 frequently required to sit; talk or hear; use hands to finger, handle, feel or operate objects, tools or controls; and reach with hands and arms. The employee is occasionally required to walk. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 40 pounds (election equipment). Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of computer monitors. 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. Alachua County Supervisor of Elections offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support us, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.Employer-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 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. • HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Independence Day Labor Day Veterans’ Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Pay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. Contact Human Resources for more information.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Associate's degree and two years of professional level administrative experience; or any equivalent combination of related education, training and/or 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 a criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Position Summary This is highly responsible administrative work providing professional and clerical assistance and support directly to the Assistant Supervisor of Elections and other management staff as assigned. An employee assigned to this classification provides a variety of election specific, complex and routine administrative work in the administration of the office of the Supervisor of Elections. Work is performed under the general direction of the immediate supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Coordinates the Election Worker training program for Early Voting and Election Day Workers. Responds to Election Worker inquires via email, phone, or face to face, processes Election Worker applications, and assists in inputting and maintaining the Election Worker database software. Assists Assistant Supervisor of Elections in creating and updating the current curriculum for all tasks-specific training programs, coordinates Election Worker training schedules and assists in instructing training classes as needed. Assists in the recruitment, training, assignment, and retention of Election Workers. Submits names of elections workers interested in becoming an elections deputy to the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office for background checks and approval. Assists with maintaining the online Election Worker database for interested Election Workers. Responsible for maintaining up-to-date Election Workers information on Elections website. Assists the Election Workers checking supplies for pickup. Creates, schedules and assigns Election Worker training classes in Election Worker database. Schedules, coordinates and supports Election Workers orientation classes. Sends out data correspondence to potential Election Workers and follow-up as needed. Evaluate Election Worker performance and makes recommendations to the Assistant Supervisor of Elections. Reviews Election Worker applications for completeness prior to data input into the Election Worker module. Plans, organizes, and conducts Election Worker recruitment drives maintaining the presence of the Supervisor of Elections office in the community in collaboration with the Director of Communications and Outreach. Makes recommendations for adjusting recruitment strategies to ensure an adequate number of Election Workers are available at all times. Inputs and maintains Election Worker database, processes updates and terminations. Provides friendly and courteous customer service and resolves issues in a timely manner. Assists with I-9 forms during training check-in. Develops solutions resulting in improved productivity, efficiency, and effectiveness for Election Worker programs. Assists and cross trains with Candidate Services. Assists when needed with other election functions to gain full knowledge of Elections Office. Handles special projects and other duties as assigned. Prepares a variety of reports and related information for decision-making purposes; conducts research and analysis and prepares recommendations; prepares spreadsheets and word processing documents as needed. Creates and maintains filing systems. Investigates and follows-up on complaints and requests for information. Assists with proofing and reviewing Supervisor of Elections notices, flyers, brochures, newsletters, media releases, news articles and other informational materials about programs and services. Assists with training and educational programs. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Performs related work as required. 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 the principles and practices of organization, management, and personnel. Knowledge of Florida Election Law as it pertains to areas of responsibility. Knowledge of the standard practices in the fields of local government and personnel management. Knowledge of modern office practices, procedures, systems and equipment. Knowledge of the functions and operations of County government and the Supervisor of Elections office. Skilled in the operation and use of a personal computer including word processing, power point, excel spreadsheet and database software; calculator; telephone; copy machine; and fax machine. Ability to gather and analyze data and draw conclusions. Ability to effectively supervise and coordinate the activities of subordinate employees, if assigned. Ability to communicate effectively, verbally and in writing. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with the general public, voters, candidates, Supervisor of Elections employees and other County officials. Ability to prepare detailed written reports and 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 frequently required to sit; talk or hear; use hands to finger, handle, feel or operate objects, tools or controls; and reach with hands and arms. The employee is occasionally required to walk. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 40 pounds (election equipment). Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of computer monitors. 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. Alachua County Supervisor of Elections offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support us, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.Employer-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 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. • HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Independence Day Labor Day Veterans’ Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Pay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. Contact Human Resources for more information.
The John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts
Washington, DC 20566, USA
About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As America's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across the United States and around the world, connecting the greatest living artists with audiences of every stripe, no matter their background. We welcome all Americans and creators and visitors from across the globe to discover, experience, learn about, be inspired by, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a total rewards package to all full-time employees to include: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 13 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Pay Details The Kennedy Center strives to design equitable compensation programs. The projected salary range for this position is $95,000 - $105,000, commensurate with experience, and includes a comprehensive benefits package. This is the targeted range of possible compensation for this role at the time of posting. This range may be modified in the future. Base pay within the range is ultimately determined by a candidate’s skills, expertise, and experience as it relates to the position qualifications and responsibilities. Job Description The Director, Theater Programming works with SVP of Artistic Programming to manage the operations of the department’s presentations and self-produced shows. In addition to managing budgets and contracts, they will serve as the primary point of contacted for production logistics and coordination with internal and external stakeholders. The Director must be able to make decisions and exercise discretion in order to prioritize assignments and work under pressure, as many projects are time sensitive and involve concurrent deadlines. Key Responsibilities Manages contracting, budgets, and logistics, for 50% of all Theater Programming presentations and productions, working with external agencies, communicating with artists and agents, and working with internal staff to coordinate education, special events and legal issues. Serves as General Director for assigned produced theatrical productions including contracting creative teams, stage management, and artists. This will include: Contracting and maintaining of weekly financials and budgets Management of internal booking calendar and ArtsVision for current and upcoming season of shows; Liaising with company management, creative teams, Kennedy Center Booking, and Kennedy Center Production, to coordinate logistics for space management (onsite and offsite), production schedules and calendars, and production requirements for rehearsals and performances; Management of payroll for all show employees; Oversight of all payments as outlined in contracts and agreements; Insures smooth flow of all communications Work with Center’s Marketing, PR, and Development departments to advance presented and produced Theater programs. Works with Coordinator on programming projects. Manages logistical details for approximately 200 performances or ancillary events per season Research and evaluate trends and new programming ideas. Review institutional data to help direct programming. Reads scripts or other submitted materials on new plays and evaluate for artistic merit and production feasibility. Other duties as assigned. Key Qualifications A minimum of 5 – 8 years experience working in the Arts, in the capacity of Associate Producer/Associate General Director, and/or Marketing or Booking agent. Must have familiarity with theater related budgets, numbers, contracts, etc. Bachelor of Arts or Science, Masters, or other education/experience in arts management Prior experience working in a non-profit arts institution and/or Broadway/theatrical office. Detail oriented, knowledge of Excel and accounting systems, and ability to prioritize between multiple job responsibilities. Excellent written and verbal communication and ability to work with various levels at the Center. Ability to work well with artists, booking managers and agents. Must be extremely detail-oriented, have excellent interpersonal skills, ability to work in a fast-paced, multi-tasked environment, work well under pressure and be able to meet deadlines. Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area. Relocation assistance is not provided. Candidate must be willing to work onsite.
Full-time
About The Kennedy Center “I am certain that after the dust of centuries has passed over our cities, we, too, will be remembered not for victories or defeats in battle or in politics, but for our contribution to the human spirit.” – President John F. Kennedy The Kennedy Center is the nation’s cultural center and living memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Located on the banks of the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., the Center presents performances across all genres, and is also home to artistic affiliates Washington National Opera and National Symphony Orchestra. At the Kennedy Center, we strive to foster belonging and empowerment at work. We are able to advance our mission because of our committed and passionate employees. We are fortunate to be able to leverage their diverse perspectives, life experiences and skills to inform how our workplace can be a safe, transparent, and replenishing community. The Kennedy Center is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate against any employee or applicant based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, veteran status, marital status, pregnancy or related condition, or any other basis protected by law. Mission Statement: As America's performing arts center, and a living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, we are a leader for the arts across the United States and around the world, connecting the greatest living artists with audiences of every stripe, no matter their background. We welcome all Americans and creators and visitors from across the globe to discover, experience, learn about, be inspired by, and engage with the arts. Why Join Us We offer a total rewards package to all full-time employees to include: Staff offers for discount tickets Retirement plan with organization matching (after 1 year of employment) Qualifying employer for the Public Student Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF) Commuter programs including pre-tax options for discounted parking and SmartBenefits (WMATA) Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Personal Days available immediately upon hire 13 paid holidays per year Medical, Dental, and Vision benefits with FSA and HSA options, and paid FMLA Pay Details The Kennedy Center strives to design equitable compensation programs. The projected salary range for this position is $95,000 - $105,000, commensurate with experience, and includes a comprehensive benefits package. This is the targeted range of possible compensation for this role at the time of posting. This range may be modified in the future. Base pay within the range is ultimately determined by a candidate’s skills, expertise, and experience as it relates to the position qualifications and responsibilities. Job Description The Director, Theater Programming works with SVP of Artistic Programming to manage the operations of the department’s presentations and self-produced shows. In addition to managing budgets and contracts, they will serve as the primary point of contacted for production logistics and coordination with internal and external stakeholders. The Director must be able to make decisions and exercise discretion in order to prioritize assignments and work under pressure, as many projects are time sensitive and involve concurrent deadlines. Key Responsibilities Manages contracting, budgets, and logistics, for 50% of all Theater Programming presentations and productions, working with external agencies, communicating with artists and agents, and working with internal staff to coordinate education, special events and legal issues. Serves as General Director for assigned produced theatrical productions including contracting creative teams, stage management, and artists. This will include: Contracting and maintaining of weekly financials and budgets Management of internal booking calendar and ArtsVision for current and upcoming season of shows; Liaising with company management, creative teams, Kennedy Center Booking, and Kennedy Center Production, to coordinate logistics for space management (onsite and offsite), production schedules and calendars, and production requirements for rehearsals and performances; Management of payroll for all show employees; Oversight of all payments as outlined in contracts and agreements; Insures smooth flow of all communications Work with Center’s Marketing, PR, and Development departments to advance presented and produced Theater programs. Works with Coordinator on programming projects. Manages logistical details for approximately 200 performances or ancillary events per season Research and evaluate trends and new programming ideas. Review institutional data to help direct programming. Reads scripts or other submitted materials on new plays and evaluate for artistic merit and production feasibility. Other duties as assigned. Key Qualifications A minimum of 5 – 8 years experience working in the Arts, in the capacity of Associate Producer/Associate General Director, and/or Marketing or Booking agent. Must have familiarity with theater related budgets, numbers, contracts, etc. Bachelor of Arts or Science, Masters, or other education/experience in arts management Prior experience working in a non-profit arts institution and/or Broadway/theatrical office. Detail oriented, knowledge of Excel and accounting systems, and ability to prioritize between multiple job responsibilities. Excellent written and verbal communication and ability to work with various levels at the Center. Ability to work well with artists, booking managers and agents. Must be extremely detail-oriented, have excellent interpersonal skills, ability to work in a fast-paced, multi-tasked environment, work well under pressure and be able to meet deadlines. Candidate must be local or willing to relocate to the DMV area. Relocation assistance is not provided. Candidate must be willing to work onsite.
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
Gainesville, FL
Minimum Qualifications Competitive salary up to $150,000/year , based on experience. Master's degree or Certified Public Accountant with major course work in accounting, business administration, or a related field and five years progressively responsible governmental accounting and/or budgetary experience; or equivalent combination of related education, training, and experience. Acceptable equivalent education, training, and experience: Bachelor 's degree and Certified Public Accountant with major course work in accounting, business administration, or a related field, and seven years of progressively responsible governmental accounting and/or budgetary experience. Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen and successful completion of all applicable background checks, pre-hire and ongoing, are required. Position Summary This is a highly professional and senior-level management position specific to directing the Budget and Fiscal Services Department. An employee assigned to this classification is responsible for the administration and management of financial matters, fiscal policies and procedures, and directing the assigned department and divisions; evaluating and coordinating existing programs and recommending revisions and/or new services. Work is performed under the broad direction of a higher-level 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 the County's core values. Manages/coordinates and/or provides direct supervision over the activities of assigned supervisors and managers and/or employees, including determining work procedures and schedules; issuing instructions and assigning duties; reviewing work; recommending and approving personnel actions; conducting performance reviews; and may coordinate departmental training and/or orientation. Collaborates with Directors, Managers, County Staff, County Manager, and other officials to plan, coordinate, implement, and modify programs and matters affecting internal operations in assigned departments. Directs, plans, implements, and delivers written reports, oral presentations, and/or speeches as assigned by a higher-level Administrator. Ensures proper administration, development, and monitoring of budgets for Departments and Divisions; provides direction and reviews budget expenditures, revenues, appropriations, and enhancements. Develops, evaluates, and revises financial policies and procedures; recommends implementation of new policies. Maintains liaison with Finance and Accounting and works with staff on matters related to financial operations. Coordinates activities related to budget limits, timely and correct payment, and proper implementation of fiscal policies, rules, and regulations. Monitors expenditures for adherence to budgetary controls and proper implementation of financial policies, rules, and regulations. Designs, develops, and recommends implementation of fiscal information processing and control systems. Interprets the financial impacts of statutory changes and makes recommendations for proposed revisions and changes required for proper conformance. Directs and coordinates the efforts of designated divisions to meet the goals and objectives of the organization. Performs the listed duties, 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 Thorough knowledge of the principles and practices of local government administration and organization. Thorough knowledge of the principles and practices of governmental accounting, budgeting, fiscal management, and management science. Thorough knowledge of the principles related to the legal requirements governing financial operations of the County. Considerable knowledge of all laws, rules, and regulations governing the various departments within the County. Knowledge of the organization's functions and financial problems of County governments. Ability to supervise and organize the work of staff, develop and motivate staff, enforce disciplinary procedures, and effectively appraise employee performance. Ability to facilitate teams in the resolution of issues and realization of goals and objectives. Ability to exercise leadership in a team-based management environment. Ability to develop, prepare, and monitor complex budgets. Ability to review County fiscal problems and proposed policies in terms of financial and administrative implications. Ability to plan, organize, and direct the work of professional and clerical employees and to develop improvements in County financial management practices. Ability to prepare, analyze, evaluate, and interpret fiscal, accounting, and management data. Ability to encourage and foster customer service focus, employee development and empowerment, commitment to environmental preservation and sustainable development, integrity, professionalism, and responsibility at all organizational levels. Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to prepare written reports and memoranda. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with other employees, County officials and the public. Ability to make sound recommendations for office policies and procedures. Ability to develop objectives and implement short and long-range plans. 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 talk or hear. The employee is frequently required to sit, and use hands to finger, handle or feel. The employee is occasionally required to stand, walk, 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, peripheral 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. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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 Competitive salary up to $150,000/year , based on experience. Master's degree or Certified Public Accountant with major course work in accounting, business administration, or a related field and five years progressively responsible governmental accounting and/or budgetary experience; or equivalent combination of related education, training, and experience. Acceptable equivalent education, training, and experience: Bachelor 's degree and Certified Public Accountant with major course work in accounting, business administration, or a related field, and seven years of progressively responsible governmental accounting and/or budgetary experience. Successful completion of a pre-employment drug screen and successful completion of all applicable background checks, pre-hire and ongoing, are required. Position Summary This is a highly professional and senior-level management position specific to directing the Budget and Fiscal Services Department. An employee assigned to this classification is responsible for the administration and management of financial matters, fiscal policies and procedures, and directing the assigned department and divisions; evaluating and coordinating existing programs and recommending revisions and/or new services. Work is performed under the broad direction of a higher-level 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 the County's core values. Manages/coordinates and/or provides direct supervision over the activities of assigned supervisors and managers and/or employees, including determining work procedures and schedules; issuing instructions and assigning duties; reviewing work; recommending and approving personnel actions; conducting performance reviews; and may coordinate departmental training and/or orientation. Collaborates with Directors, Managers, County Staff, County Manager, and other officials to plan, coordinate, implement, and modify programs and matters affecting internal operations in assigned departments. Directs, plans, implements, and delivers written reports, oral presentations, and/or speeches as assigned by a higher-level Administrator. Ensures proper administration, development, and monitoring of budgets for Departments and Divisions; provides direction and reviews budget expenditures, revenues, appropriations, and enhancements. Develops, evaluates, and revises financial policies and procedures; recommends implementation of new policies. Maintains liaison with Finance and Accounting and works with staff on matters related to financial operations. Coordinates activities related to budget limits, timely and correct payment, and proper implementation of fiscal policies, rules, and regulations. Monitors expenditures for adherence to budgetary controls and proper implementation of financial policies, rules, and regulations. Designs, develops, and recommends implementation of fiscal information processing and control systems. Interprets the financial impacts of statutory changes and makes recommendations for proposed revisions and changes required for proper conformance. Directs and coordinates the efforts of designated divisions to meet the goals and objectives of the organization. Performs the listed duties, 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 Thorough knowledge of the principles and practices of local government administration and organization. Thorough knowledge of the principles and practices of governmental accounting, budgeting, fiscal management, and management science. Thorough knowledge of the principles related to the legal requirements governing financial operations of the County. Considerable knowledge of all laws, rules, and regulations governing the various departments within the County. Knowledge of the organization's functions and financial problems of County governments. Ability to supervise and organize the work of staff, develop and motivate staff, enforce disciplinary procedures, and effectively appraise employee performance. Ability to facilitate teams in the resolution of issues and realization of goals and objectives. Ability to exercise leadership in a team-based management environment. Ability to develop, prepare, and monitor complex budgets. Ability to review County fiscal problems and proposed policies in terms of financial and administrative implications. Ability to plan, organize, and direct the work of professional and clerical employees and to develop improvements in County financial management practices. Ability to prepare, analyze, evaluate, and interpret fiscal, accounting, and management data. Ability to encourage and foster customer service focus, employee development and empowerment, commitment to environmental preservation and sustainable development, integrity, professionalism, and responsibility at all organizational levels. Ability to communicate effectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to prepare written reports and memoranda. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with other employees, County officials and the public. Ability to make sound recommendations for office policies and procedures. Ability to develop objectives and implement short and long-range plans. 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 talk or hear. The employee is frequently required to sit, and use hands to finger, handle or feel. The employee is occasionally required to stand, walk, 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, peripheral 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. 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 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 Firefighters Pay 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.
Obstetrician and Gynecologist / Medical Director OBED (Open Rank Faculty)
Hiring Department: Obstetrics and Gynecology
Location: Chicago, IL
Requisition ID: 1038631
Posting Close Date: January 1, 2026
Salary: The budgeted salary range for the position is $190,000 to $220,000. Salary is competitive and commensurate with qualifications and experience, while also considering internal equity.
About the University of Illinois Chicago
UIC is among the nation's preeminent urban public research universities, a Carnegie RU/VH research institution, and the largest university in Chicago. UIC serves over 34,000 students, comprising one of the most diverse student bodies in the nation and is designated as a Minority Serving Institution (MSI), an Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institution (AANAPSI) and a Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI). Through its 16 colleges, UIC produces nationally and internationally recognized multidisciplinary academic programs in concert with civic, corporate and community partners worldwide, including a full complement of health sciences colleges. By emphasizing cutting-edge and transformational research along with a commitment to the success of all students, UIC embodies the dynamic, vibrant and engaged urban university. Recent "Best Colleges" rankings published by U.S. News & World Report, found UIC climbed up in its rankings among top public schools in the nation and among all national universities. UIC has over 300,000 alumni, and is one of the largest employers in the city of Chicago.
This position is intended to be https://www.hr.uillinois.edu/cms/One.aspx?portalId=4292&pageId=2461262. This includes Health, Dental, Vision, Life Insurance, a Retirement Plan, Paid time Off, and Tuition waivers for employees and dependents.
Position Summary
The Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC) is seeking an experienced OB/GYN physician to serve as the Medical Director of the Obstetrical Emergency Department (OBED). This 100% inpatient leadership role oversees clinical operations of the OBED, providing evaluation and management for all pregnant and postpartum patients presenting for urgent or emergent care from early pregnancy through six weeks postpartum. The Medical Director will guide the clinical, operational, and quality performance of the unit while maintaining an active clinical presence, providing direct patient care. Responsibilities include ensuring high standards of patient safety, fostering team collaboration, and supervising residents and medical students. The position is day-shift based with no required weekday or weekend call, though call opportunities are available if desired.
Duties & Responsibilities
• Serve as a key clinical and administrative leader responsible for overseeing all aspects of the OBED operations, including patient care delivery, clinical quality, staffing, education, and continuous process improvement. • Ensure that pregnant patients presenting with urgent or emergent conditions receive safe, timely, and evidence-based care in alignment with the department and institution's standards and regulatory requirements. • Provide triage and care for all OB MD and unassigned OB/GYN patients presenting to the OBED. • Work within a highly collaborative team, including OB/GYN, CNMs, Family Medicine, OB Anesthesia, Neonatology, and 24/7 Maternal Fetal Medicine support. • Assist in emergent cesarean or vaginal deliveries, provide coverage for precipitous births, manage obstetric emergencies such as postpartum hemorrhage, and provide coverage for other OB/GYN providers during their involvement with these emergencies. • Provide consultative support to CNMs and Family Physicians. • Directly supervise, teach, and mentor medical students, residents, and fellows. • Perform other related duties and participate in special projects as assigned.
Minimum Qualifications
• MD degree (or equivalent) • Board certified/board eligible in Obstetrics & Gynecology • Eligible for medical licensure in the State of Illinois.
Preferred Qualifications
The ideal candidate for this role has a passion for direct patient care as well as experience with administrative oversight, quality improvement, and education.
Review of candidates will begin immediately. For fullest consideration, submit CV, cover letter, and names of three references directly on our site at:
The University of Illinois System is an equal opportunity employer, including but not limited to disability and/or veteran status, and complies with all applicable state and federal employment mandates. Please visit https://www.hr.uillinois.edu/cms/one.aspx?portalId=4292&pageId=5705 to view our non-discrimination statement and find additional information about required background checks, sexual harassment/misconduct disclosures, and employment eligibility review through E-Verify.
The university provides accommodations to applicants and employees. https://jobs.uic.edu/request-and-accomodation/
Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools may be used in some portions of the candidate review process for this position, however, all employment decisions will be made by a person.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/6793664
Full Time
Obstetrician and Gynecologist / Medical Director OBED (Open Rank Faculty)
Hiring Department: Obstetrics and Gynecology
Location: Chicago, IL
Requisition ID: 1038631
Posting Close Date: January 1, 2026
Salary: The budgeted salary range for the position is $190,000 to $220,000. Salary is competitive and commensurate with qualifications and experience, while also considering internal equity.
About the University of Illinois Chicago
UIC is among the nation's preeminent urban public research universities, a Carnegie RU/VH research institution, and the largest university in Chicago. UIC serves over 34,000 students, comprising one of the most diverse student bodies in the nation and is designated as a Minority Serving Institution (MSI), an Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institution (AANAPSI) and a Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI). Through its 16 colleges, UIC produces nationally and internationally recognized multidisciplinary academic programs in concert with civic, corporate and community partners worldwide, including a full complement of health sciences colleges. By emphasizing cutting-edge and transformational research along with a commitment to the success of all students, UIC embodies the dynamic, vibrant and engaged urban university. Recent "Best Colleges" rankings published by U.S. News & World Report, found UIC climbed up in its rankings among top public schools in the nation and among all national universities. UIC has over 300,000 alumni, and is one of the largest employers in the city of Chicago.
This position is intended to be https://www.hr.uillinois.edu/cms/One.aspx?portalId=4292&pageId=2461262. This includes Health, Dental, Vision, Life Insurance, a Retirement Plan, Paid time Off, and Tuition waivers for employees and dependents.
Position Summary
The Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC) is seeking an experienced OB/GYN physician to serve as the Medical Director of the Obstetrical Emergency Department (OBED). This 100% inpatient leadership role oversees clinical operations of the OBED, providing evaluation and management for all pregnant and postpartum patients presenting for urgent or emergent care from early pregnancy through six weeks postpartum. The Medical Director will guide the clinical, operational, and quality performance of the unit while maintaining an active clinical presence, providing direct patient care. Responsibilities include ensuring high standards of patient safety, fostering team collaboration, and supervising residents and medical students. The position is day-shift based with no required weekday or weekend call, though call opportunities are available if desired.
Duties & Responsibilities
• Serve as a key clinical and administrative leader responsible for overseeing all aspects of the OBED operations, including patient care delivery, clinical quality, staffing, education, and continuous process improvement. • Ensure that pregnant patients presenting with urgent or emergent conditions receive safe, timely, and evidence-based care in alignment with the department and institution's standards and regulatory requirements. • Provide triage and care for all OB MD and unassigned OB/GYN patients presenting to the OBED. • Work within a highly collaborative team, including OB/GYN, CNMs, Family Medicine, OB Anesthesia, Neonatology, and 24/7 Maternal Fetal Medicine support. • Assist in emergent cesarean or vaginal deliveries, provide coverage for precipitous births, manage obstetric emergencies such as postpartum hemorrhage, and provide coverage for other OB/GYN providers during their involvement with these emergencies. • Provide consultative support to CNMs and Family Physicians. • Directly supervise, teach, and mentor medical students, residents, and fellows. • Perform other related duties and participate in special projects as assigned.
Minimum Qualifications
• MD degree (or equivalent) • Board certified/board eligible in Obstetrics & Gynecology • Eligible for medical licensure in the State of Illinois.
Preferred Qualifications
The ideal candidate for this role has a passion for direct patient care as well as experience with administrative oversight, quality improvement, and education.
Review of candidates will begin immediately. For fullest consideration, submit CV, cover letter, and names of three references directly on our site at:
The University of Illinois System is an equal opportunity employer, including but not limited to disability and/or veteran status, and complies with all applicable state and federal employment mandates. Please visit https://www.hr.uillinois.edu/cms/one.aspx?portalId=4292&pageId=5705 to view our non-discrimination statement and find additional information about required background checks, sexual harassment/misconduct disclosures, and employment eligibility review through E-Verify.
The university provides accommodations to applicants and employees. https://jobs.uic.edu/request-and-accomodation/
Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools may be used in some portions of the candidate review process for this position, however, all employment decisions will be made by a person.
To apply, visit https://apptrkr.com/6793664
Alachua County Board of County Commissioners
FL, FL
Minimum Qualifications Graduation from high school or equivalent, or any equivalent combination of experience and training. 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 a criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. Position Summary This is entry-level clerical and technical work in the Elections Operations Center for the Alachua County Supervisor of Elections Office and provides direct support to the Elections Operations Director. An employee assigned to this classification performs a variety of tasks relating to the Election Operation Center, election records, voting equipment and supplies throughout Alachua County. The work is routine and performed within the guidelines of established laws and rules and departmental regulations and procedures. Work is performed under the general direction of the immediate supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Performs configuration, diagnostics, and maintenance with elections voting equipment by following specific step by step instructions. Stocks equipment, supplies, voting booths, and ballots for each polling place and early voting site. Performs site surveys at each polling place and early voting site and determines if ADA requirements are met by federal law. Organizes and maintains Elections Operations Center. Transports elections materials to locations throughout Alachua County. Files records for retention and disposition preparation in accordance with the GS1 and GS3 retention and disposition schedules. Organizes and maintains elections records in election vault. Scan documents, completes information on forms and responsible for data entry for record. Responsible for maintaining the cleanliness of election vehicles and keeping each vehicle with fuel. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Performs related work as required. 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 the functions and operations of County government and the Supervisor of Elections office. Skilled in the operation and use of a personal computer including word processing, power point, excel spreadsheet and database software; calculator; telephone; copy machine; and fax machine. Ability to follow procedures thoroughly and carry out complex instructions. Ability to learn the methods, procedures, laws, and best practices specific to the Supervisor of Election office. Ability to plan, schedule, and meet deadlines critical to the function of an election. Ability to collect and analyze data using industry standard software. Ability to maintain detailed documentation and communicate effectively, verbally and in writing. Ability to sort, distribute, and deliver equipment and supplies accurately and efficiently. Ability to safely operate a cargo van, box truck, and hydraulic lift. Ability to push and/or pull fully loaded hand carts, ability to load and unload materials from carts and/or vehicles. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with the general public, voters, co-workers and other County officials. 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; use hands to finger, handle, feel, or operate objects, tools, or controls; and reach with hands and arms. The employee is regularly required to walk. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds (election equipment). Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of computer monitors. 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 Preferred : Experience with interpreting and applying Florida Election Laws and regulations is highly desirable. Alachua County Supervisor of Elections offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support us, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.Employer-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 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. • HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Independence Day Labor Day Veterans’ Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Pay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. Contact Human Resources for more information.
Full-time
Minimum Qualifications Graduation from high school or equivalent, or any equivalent combination of experience and training. 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 a criminal history background investigation is required prior to employment. Applicants within six months of meeting the education/experience requirement may be considered for trainee status. Position Summary This is entry-level clerical and technical work in the Elections Operations Center for the Alachua County Supervisor of Elections Office and provides direct support to the Elections Operations Director. An employee assigned to this classification performs a variety of tasks relating to the Election Operation Center, election records, voting equipment and supplies throughout Alachua County. The work is routine and performed within the guidelines of established laws and rules and departmental regulations and procedures. Work is performed under the general direction of the immediate supervisor and is reviewed through conferences, reports, and observation of results obtained. Examples of Duties Performs configuration, diagnostics, and maintenance with elections voting equipment by following specific step by step instructions. Stocks equipment, supplies, voting booths, and ballots for each polling place and early voting site. Performs site surveys at each polling place and early voting site and determines if ADA requirements are met by federal law. Organizes and maintains Elections Operations Center. Transports elections materials to locations throughout Alachua County. Files records for retention and disposition preparation in accordance with the GS1 and GS3 retention and disposition schedules. Organizes and maintains elections records in election vault. Scan documents, completes information on forms and responsible for data entry for record. Responsible for maintaining the cleanliness of election vehicles and keeping each vehicle with fuel. Drives a County and/or personal vehicle to perform required duties. Performs related work as required. 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 the functions and operations of County government and the Supervisor of Elections office. Skilled in the operation and use of a personal computer including word processing, power point, excel spreadsheet and database software; calculator; telephone; copy machine; and fax machine. Ability to follow procedures thoroughly and carry out complex instructions. Ability to learn the methods, procedures, laws, and best practices specific to the Supervisor of Election office. Ability to plan, schedule, and meet deadlines critical to the function of an election. Ability to collect and analyze data using industry standard software. Ability to maintain detailed documentation and communicate effectively, verbally and in writing. Ability to sort, distribute, and deliver equipment and supplies accurately and efficiently. Ability to safely operate a cargo van, box truck, and hydraulic lift. Ability to push and/or pull fully loaded hand carts, ability to load and unload materials from carts and/or vehicles. Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with the general public, voters, co-workers and other County officials. 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; use hands to finger, handle, feel, or operate objects, tools, or controls; and reach with hands and arms. The employee is regularly required to walk. The employee must occasionally lift and/or move up to 50 pounds (election equipment). Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, color vision and the ability to adjust focus associated with the constant use of computer monitors. 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 Preferred : Experience with interpreting and applying Florida Election Laws and regulations is highly desirable. Alachua County Supervisor of Elections offers a competitive benefit program. We believe that if we expect our employees to support us, we must first support the health and financial well-being of our employees and their families, now and as they plan for their future.Employer-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 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. • HOLIDAYS Holidays are as follows: New Years Day Martin Luther King Day Memorial Day Independence Day Labor Day Veterans’ Day Thanksgiving Day Friday following Thanksgiving Christmas Day Pay periods are every two weeks, Monday through Sunday. Payday is Friday. Contact Human Resources for more information.