County reorganized to save $500,000 a year...
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County reorganized to save $500,000 a year
Orange County Interim Chief Executive James D. Ruth on Friday
announced a reorganization of county government that will save
$291,000 this fiscal year and more than $513,000 annually in
subsequent years.
Ruth has been the county’s interim CEO since 2003 and will
continue in that position through this year.
The reorganization plan changes the duties of the county’s four
assistant CEOs, who will each have the title of deputy CEO. Oversight
of 10 county departments that now report to the CEO will shift to the
heads of the Infrastructure and Environmental Services Department and
the Government and Public Services Department.
Ruth suggested the latter change because the CEO now has too broad
a span of control, and the changes will provide better oversight, he
said.
Human resources will return to being a separate department that
will report directly to the CEO, and the Planning and Development
Services and Public Facilities and Resources departments will be
combined. Eight vacant positions in the county executive office will
be eliminated.
Other changes in the plan include creation of a department
management committee, which brings department heads together monthly
to discuss county operations and budget issues; a leadership academy
for county managers, who will take classes at Chapman University; and
succession plans identifying future leaders in each department to
ensure smooth transitions when retirement or turnover occurs.
Ruth will present the plan to the county Board of Supervisors on
Tuesday.
Locals to be honored at council meeting
Costa Mesa residents Charles and Diane Buchanan will be recognized
by Mayor Gary Monahan at the Jan. 20 City Council meeting for their
contribution to the improvement of Jordan Park.
The couple participated in the city’s Adopt-A-Bench program and
donated money to replace two existing benches in Jordan park with new
ones with backrests. Their donation also helped the city to plant
three new trees in the park.
The Buchanans will receive a special certificate of appreciation
from the mayor at the council meeting.
At the same meeting, Surat Singh will receive the Mayor’s Award
for his outstanding service to the Costa Mesa Senior Center.
Singh donated the Thanksgiving dinner at the center attended by
225 seniors. He also made sure that seniors attending the center’s
New Year’s Eve party had transportation.
Maori culture will meet Shakespeare at UCI
UC Irvine’s International Center for Writing and Translation on
Jan. 29 will present “The Maori Shakespeare,” a seminar that will
explore ways in which the Maori language and culture meet the works
of William Shakespeare through writers’, scholars’, filmmakers’ and
performance artists’ projects.
Don C. Selwyn, executive producer and director of “The Maori
Merchant of Venice,” the first Maori-language feature film and the
first Shakespeare film to be produced in New Zealand, will come from
New Zealand. Other panelists will be Merimeri Penfold, activist,
professor and translator of Shakespeare’s sonnets, and Michael Neill,
professor and Shakespearean scholar.
The seminar and discussion will be moderated by Hugh Roberts, UCI
professor of English, and will include a reading of the first
translations of Shakespeare’s sonnets in Maori. The panel will be
followed by a reception and film screening of “The Maori Merchant of
Venice” in conjunction with the UCI Film and Video Center.
The seminar will begin at 4 p.m. The afternoon session is free.
The film screening, which will begin at 7 p.m., will cost $5. For
information, visit https://www.hnet.uci.edu/icwt.
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