HomeMy WebLinkAboutCommunity Conversations slides for 092325 meeting in BrinnonJefferson County
Your Local Government
2025Key LeadershipTransition
Previous County Administrator County Administrator as of July 1, 2025
Mark McCauley (retired) Josh Peters
Jefferson County Family in 2025 is made up of 367 folks,
including:86 in Public Works(with 25 on Roads team& 25 in Solid Waste)64 in Public Health54 in JCSO27 in Central Services24 in the Courts22 in Community Development
Assessor
Auditor
Clerk
District Court Judge
Prosecuting Attorney
Sheriff
Superior Court Judge
Treasurer
Central Services
Community Development
Emergency Management
WSU Extension
Human Resources
Public Works
Public Health
Financial Management
3 County Commissioners and
8 Independent Elected Officials
County Administrator and
8 Department Directors
Jefferson County is proud to announce that two of its top Public Works leaders have earned prestigious honors from the Washington State Association of County Engineers (WSACE).
•Public Works Director Monte Reinders has been named County Engineer of the Year, and
•Assistant Public Works Director Eric Kuzma has received the title of Program Manager of the Year
…recognizing their exceptional service, technical expertise, and lasting contributions to the field of
public works.
Public Works
More top-notch talent:
Stacie Prada, County Treasurer
Widely known around the state as the consummate professional.
Appointed by State Treasurer Mike Pellicciotti to the Local
Government Investment Pool (LGIP) Advisory Committee,
Which advises the State Treasurer on LGIP operational issues,
budget, and oversight of the Statewide Custody Program.
Appointed to the State Auditor’s Office (SAO) Local Government
Advisory Committee through 12/31/2027.
EXPENSES BY DEPT
GENERAL FUND EXPENDITURE approx. $30m annually
Total Revenue across all
Funds = ~$85m
(mostly sewer funding from
Federal Indirect Awards)
•Uncertainty at federal/state levels
•Lingering threat of inflation &
potential recession
•2026 Budget
•Need for business growth & jobs
•Cost of housing, housing shortage
•Homelessness
•Recruiting and retaining staff
•New technology
•Climate resilience/ adaptation
CHALLENGES
& OPPORTUNITIES
•Strategic Plan•Roads & Trails•Port Hadlock Sewer•Stewarding Public Assets•Economic Development•Housing, Homelessness•Planning & Permitting•Law & J ustice•Forests & Wildfire Prevention - CWPP•Parks & Recreation•Aquatic Center
PRIORITIES
& PROGRESS
PRIORITY:
Housing
(for all)
OlyCAP 7ᵗʰ Haven Project: 43 Units of
transitional and supportive housing
Caswell-Brown Village:
50 units of shelter & supportive facilities on county land
managed by OlyCAP for unhoused persons
Habitat’s Mason Street Neighborhood in Port Hadlock:
136 units, including permanently affordable housing
Habitat for Humanity Landes Street Project (City of PT)
$ 3 5 .6 M
Hadlock
Wastewater
Project
Key milestones :
•Final design – Fall
2023
•Sitework – completed
February 2024
•WW Treatment plant –
scheduled completion
October 2025
•Collection system –
completed March
2025
•Connections –
approx. 59 scheduled
for completion end of
2025
•Connections to
continue until funding
runs out through end
of 2027
Phase 1
Sewer Map
Olympic Peninsula officials and
Jefferson County staff joined
Governor Bob Ferguson [on May 8,
2025] to celebrate the successful
reopening of Upper Hoh Road, the
primary access route to the Hoh Rain
Forest section of Olympic National
Park. The road had been closed since
December due to significant damage
caused by heavy rainfall.
Road Repairs
PRIORITY:
Planning,
Community
Development
DCD Mission Statement:
"To preserve and enhance the quality of life in
Jefferson County by promoting a vibrant
economy, sound communities, and a healthy
environment."
2025 Periodic Update
of the Comp Plan &
development regulations
•Housing Element
•Climate Resilience Element
•Critical Areas Ordinance
Planning Commission public hearings this fall
Critical Areas Ordinance
Comp Plan / Development Regs
PRIORITY:
Forest Management; Wildfire
Protection
jefferson-county-cwpp-jeffcowa.hub.arcgis.com
Fire mitigation project tracker
Community risk
assessments
Story boards – actual fire events
CWPP
Jefferson County Sustainable Forestry Program
⚫Goal: Create a sustainable forestry program that will:
⚫Improve forest health and biodiversity
⚫Increase carbon sequestration
⚫Reduce fire risk
⚫Generate a positive net revenue stream that could
fund/partially fund a property manager position
PRIORITY:
Parks &
Recreation
JUMP! Funding
Summary
P HASE 1
2021
Revenue Sources Dollars Percent
JUMP! Private Committee Cash
Raised $222,733 17%
Michael Berry Memorial
Foundation $50,000 3.82%
Jefferson Healthcare $15,000 1.14 %
Jefferson County Capital Funding $475,492 36.29%
RCO Gra nt $500,000 38.16%
Donation of Labor and Materials $ 4 7,115 3.60%
Total $ 1,310 ,34 0 100%
JUMP! Funding
Summary
PHASE 2
2025
Revenue Sources Dollars Percent
Washington Department of Social
and Health Services, “Dan
Thompson Account Grant”
$515,565 98% of
Phase 2
JUMP! Private Committee Cash
Raised $ 11,0 0 0
2% of
Phase 2
Phase 1 and 2 Total $1,836,905 100%
Grand re-opening
June 25, 2025
•Monday mornings, 9:00 AM in the Commissioners Chambers at the County Courthouse or virtually through Zoom
•Join a Board!
•Conservation Futures Citizen Oversight Committee (3)•Intellectual Developmental Disabilities Advisory Board (2)•LEOFF I Retirement Disability Board (1)•Marine Resources Committee (2 = District #1 Alt & District #3)•Noxious Weed Control Board (2 = District #4; District #5)•North Pacific Coast Marine Resource Committee (1)•Planning Commission (2 = District #2 ; District #3)•Solid Waste Advisory Committee (4) ( 1= Agriculture Alt & 1= District #1, #2 & #3)•Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) Advisory Committee (2)•Public Infrastructure Fund (PIF) Board (1 = District #3)•Housing Fund Board (2)
•WEBSITE: www.co.Jefferson.wa.us
Departments /
Offices
•The Department’s Mission:
•Provide high quality Facility Maintenance and
Information System services to Jefferson County
•List of activities / programs:
•Facility maintenance, capital project management,
custodial services, Information technology, records
management, public records, and GIS services.
•Who do we serve?
•We primarily serve Jefferson County Departments,
but also respond to public record requests, and
provide GIS and website access to the public.
•Department Snapshot
• 14 facilities, 27 staff, $6.4M annual budget
Central Services DepartmentCentral Services
•Mission and/or Core Function
•The assessor’s primary duty is to determine the value
of all taxable real and personal property within
Jefferson County for the purpose of equitable
distribution of the tax liabilities of property owners
for taxes that support schools, fire, roads, library,
utilities, etc.
•List of activities / programs
•Property Appraisals (30,000+ properties).
•Maintain parcels, records, and maps.
•Segregations and Exemptions.
•Setting levies for property tax collection.
•Department Snapshot
•11 Employees including field appraisers.
Assessor
Assessor’s Office
We serve as the “bank of the county”
for districts and county core
•Property Taxes, Real Estate Excise Tax (REET) tax,
and Revenue Collection
•Banking Services, Cash and Debt Management
•Investment, Financial Reporting & Analysis, and
more.
Who do we serve?
•The public, county districts & county core
How do we do it?
•Team of six, including the elected treasurer
•Balance to the penny every day
•Audited by the State annually
Treasurer’s Office
Our Mission to be the locally trusted source for collecting and protecting public funds
Treasurer’s Office
Property Taxes
•Statements mailed in February each year
•Payments are due April 30 and October 31
•Pay online, by mail, at drop-box, autopay, at office
•Partial payments may be made by check or
electronically if using phone number on back of
statement
Treasurer’s Office
Visual Element?
Treasurer’s Office
•Sales taxes collected in Jefferson County and
City of Port Townsend with RCWs
•Washington State sales tax data (excel workbook)
Treasurer’s Office ResourcesTreasurer’s Office
We strive to deliver accurate, timely, kind and
efficient services to our customers.
Auditor’s Office
Visual Element?
Vehicle & Vessel
Licensing Document
Recording
Finance
Elections
Office hours 8:30 to 4:00
Elections 8:30 to 4:30
Auditor’s Office
We provide resources, workshops, tools, and consultation and to residents of Jefferson County to help
support farming, gardening, natural resource protection and more. We collaborate with city and county
departments, non-profits and other organizations to amplify and extend resources.
We have a staff of 8 in offices in Port Hadlock, as well as a classroom and conference room that meet
diverse needs of our community. Our annual budget is: $ 867,740 (fund 108 &109)
WSU Extension, Jefferson County
WSU Jefferson County Extension programs connect the communities
of Jefferson County with the knowledge base of Washington State
University to promote quality of life and advance economic well-being.
Our five core programs are:
•Master Gardeners
•Water Resources
•Regional Small Farms
•4-H Youth Development
•Noxious Weeds
Mission Statement
“To preserve and enhance the quality of life in Jefferson County by promoting a
vibrant economy, sound communities, and a healthy environment.”
Divisions
•Permit Center – Customer service, application intake, addressing
•Land Use – Comprehensive Plan (policy), Development Code (regulation),
Development Review (subdivisions, land use permits)
•Building – Plan review, inspections, floodplain administration
•Code Compliance – Investigations of land use and building code complaints
•Office of the Fire Marshal – Fire investigations, commercial fire safety inspections
DCD Snapshot
•23 positions (including part-time, clerk hire, and vacant)
•Annual budget: ~$4M
•Permit Center & Building teams intake, review, issue, and inspect 600+ permits
each year, ranging from the installation of ductless heat pumps and assigning
addresses to the building of single-family homes and large commercial projects.
•Land Use Development Review Division (DRD) evaluates and processes 400+
applications annually, including Site Development Reviews, Shoreline Development
Permits, Boundary Line Adjustments, and more.
Department of Community Development (DCD)Department of Community Development
Mission: Always working for a safer and healthier Jefferson
County
Core Function: Prevent and mitigate the spread of disease
Main services:
Administration – finance, contracts, policy, safety, operations
Human Services – disabilities, behavioral health
Cross Cutting Capabilities – emergency preparedness &
response, climate & health, assessment, communications
Community & Family Health – clinic, nutrition, immunizations,
nurse home visiting, harm reduction, communicable disease,
foot care, and substance use prevention
Environmental Health – solid waste, code compliance,
permitting, water quality, natural resources, food safety,
pollution prevention, zoonotic diseases
Primary customers: Jefferson County residents; all are welcome
Department Snapshot: 60 staff, 5 facilities, $8m annual budget
Jefferson County Public Health (JCPH)
•Solid Waste (25,000 tons + 3,500 tons recycling)
•County Roads (400 miles; 38 bridges; 2,500 culverts)
•Parks and Recreation (23 parks; many recreation programs)
•Port Hadlock Sewer Project – operational Sept. 2025
Public WorksSolid Waste Program
Parks & Recreation
Port Hadlock Sewer
Public Works
•Providing law enforcement services to all of
Jefferson County since 1853
•CIVIL OFFICE – serve orders, courtroom security,
courthouse security
•JAIL – house and care for inmates, transport to court and
outside facilities
•PATROL – criminal investigations / traffic enforcement /
keep peace / death investigations (unattended deaths)
•dedicated South County deputy as of 2025
•2 dedicated West End deputies
•Animal Control deputy
•56 employees total:
•25 commissioned, 16 corrections, 5 civil staff, 1
animal control, and 9 civilian
Jefferson County sheriff’s offiCe
•Mission and/or Core Function
•Plan for, administer, and execute a comprehensive
program of disaster mitigation, preparedness,
response and recovery.
•List of activities / programs
•Readiness of Emergency Operations Center
•Alert and Warning (including Nixle)
•Disaster planning (CEMP, HMP)
•Outreach and Education
•Who are your primary “customers”?
•All county residents, “Whole Community”
•Department Snapshot
•2 full-time staff, 4 part-time grant-funded staff
•316k annual budget (approx. 60k from FEMA grants)
Dept of Emergency ManagementDepartment of Emergency Management
•Prosecuting Criminal Acts in Jefferson County
•All felonies in Jefferson County
•All misdemeanors in Jefferson County, including the
City of Port Townsend
•All juvenile offenses in Jefferson County
•We also handle our own appeals as well
•Corporate Counsel to Jefferson County
•Provide Legal Counsel to different county
departments
•Examples:
•Employment law
•Land use law
•Contract review
•Ordinance drafting
•And much more!
•Child Support Enforcement
•Provide assistance to custodial parents who are
having difficulty collecting child support from non-
custodial parents
Prosecuting
Attorney’s Office
•14 Total Employees
•1 Prosecuting Attorney
•4 Criminal Deputy Prosecuting Attorneys
•3 Civil Deputy Prosecuting Attorneys
•1 Victim Witness Coordinator
•1 Child Support Enforcement Officer
•2 Paralegals
•2 Legal Assistants
Budget ≈$1.5 million
Prosecuting
Attorney’s Office
Why go to the Clerk’s Office?
•Access Public Court Records
•Open a New Case (lawsuit, protection order,
divorce, probate, adoption) or file in an existing case
•Make payment for Superior Court fees, fines, copies of
decrees and judgments
•Return a Jury Qualification Form
•Make an appointment with the Family Law Facilitator
County Clerk
Our commitment is to protect the
integrity and accuracy of Superior
Court records while serving the
public and legal community in a
courteous, professional, and efficient
manner.
In 2024, the Clerk’s Office opened
855 new cases, and took minutes
for 2,457 proceedings.
What do the Clerks do?
•Keep an impartial record of Court proceedings
•Provide customer service to people with Superior Court
cases and those seeking related information
•Docket entry, scanning and certification of court records
•Maintain filed case documents and exhibits from state
and local agencies, attorneys, and pro se litigants
County Clerk
Nothing Works Without Clerks!
In the Clerk’s Office, we have:
•1 Elected County Clerk
•1 Chief Deputy Clerk
•3 Deputy Clerks
•1 Family Law Facilitator
Clerk’s Office
•Felony Level Criminal Cases: 5-10 Jury Trials Per Year
•Civil Cases: Property Disputes/Landlord-Tenant; Trusts and Estates; Family and Juvenile;
Lawsuits > $10K; Protection Orders
•Appeals of Administrative and District Court Decisions
•Therapeutic Courts Including Drug Court and Family Treatment Court
•Aspiring to Be Trauma Responsive and Minimize Stress of Coming to Court
•1 Elected Judge, Court Administrator, Part-Time Court Commissioner, Bailiffs, and Therapeutic
Court Coordinator (shared with District Court’s Behavioral Health Ct)
•Budget ≈ $540,000
•Restorative Justice; Color of Justice; Law Library; Law and Justice Council.
Superior Court
Jefferson County’s Court of General Jurisdiction
John Deacon, Courthouses.com
•District Court strives to serve by just and expeditious resolution
of legal matters, providing courteous and equal treatment to all
in an atmosphere of mutual respect and dignity while
maintaining the independence of the judiciary.
•District Court is a court of limited jurisdiction established by
State statute. Also serves as the Municipal Court for Port
Townsend.
•Types of cases heard: Infractions, criminal traffic (DUI, Reckless
Driving, Hit and Run) and non-traffic violations (such as Assault
4, Theft, Malicious Mischief, Disorderly Conduct, etc.), Small
Claims, Civil Actions, Name Changes and Protection Orders.
•Behavioral Health Court
•We serve clients in the City of Port Townsend and all of
Jefferson County.
•Snapshot of office: 1 Judge, 9 employees including a Court
Administrator, Deputy Court Administrator, 4 Clerks and 2
probation officers, and the Therapeutic Court Administrator.
J EFFERSON COUNTY
DISTRICT COURT
Jefferson County District Court
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