City of Ledyard CT header
File #: 23-2100    Version: 1 Name:
Type: General Discussion Status: Filed
File created: 9/19/2023 In control: Finance Committee
On agenda: 10/4/2023 Final action: 10/4/2023
Title: Discuss adding a new Administrative Assistant position to support the Public Works Director/Town Engineer
Attachments: 1. Public Works Admin Assistant Tasking.pdf, 2. PW Director-Town Engineer Job Description.pdf, 3. Highway Superintendent Job Description.pdf
AGENDA REQUEST
GENERAL DISCUSSION ITEM

Subject:
title
Discuss adding a new Administrative Assistant position to support the Public Works Director/Town Engineer
end


Background:
Over the course of thirty years, the Public Works Department has functioned without an administrative assistant for the Director and other management staff. As the present Director looks toward retirement, there is a more pressing need to fill this gap for several reasons.
First, there are many tasks that would most suitably be covered by an administrative assistant for efficiency and continuity of operations. That these functions have been undertaken for many years by the Director and now also in a number of areas by the Highway Superintendent does not imply that this has been or will continue to be a suitable arrangement. In addition to tasks that have been directly associated with the Director's job, the Director has also assumed a fuller burden of specific duties that were formerly handled by the Service Manager, a position that was eliminated several years ago.
Second, the management of the knowledge and information related to all of the areas of the Director's oversight is confined to memory and a multitude of mostly Microsoft Office-based tools that are tailored to the essential details and needs of these areas. These are semi-organized in a vast network of computer folders encumbered by hundreds of obsolete files. There has simply been inadequate time to streamline all of the saved data/information and have it available at this point in a ready fashion for an efficient turnover.
Third, the next Director will thus be unable to simply pick up and move forward from where things are and may understandably be unwilling to bear this administrative load in the volume and way in which it presently exists.
Fourth, though the next Director will undoubtedly carve out their own approach and priorities, there is the real risk of loss of stability and momentum in critical areas if a tran...

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