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Honoring excellence in Boulder County public service

2006 Finalists and Winners

The Boulder County Commissioners received 41 outstanding entries for the first annual Pinnacle Awards in 2006. Of those entries, they selected 18 finalists (three in each category). Click on each project to read a full description of what the program entailed.

Public Service

Stewardship and Sustainability

Public Involvement

Innovation

Collaboration and Teamwork

"Grab Bag"



Medicare Ombudsman Team

The Medicare Part D prescription drug plan has presented seniors with a difficult and often confusing choice from among more than 40 different prescription drug plans. There are approximately 34,000 Medicare-eligible seniors in Boulder County who had only six months to enroll from November 2005 to May 2006.

Boulder County had only four half-time Medicare Ombudsmen, but this team was able to assist more than 3,100 seniors through free seminars, public presentations, one-on-one counseling and phone calls.

To assist in the process, the ombudsmen created a volunteer program and trained 10 volunteers to help beneficiaries with paperwork, data entry and enrollment.

This program has proved essential, as the next enrollment period beginning Nov. 15, 2006, is only six weeks long.

The Medicare Ombudsman team demonstrates the very best in public service, diligence and stewardship. Their tireless efforts to provide training, objective information and support to our senior population have helped thousands of residents make informed decisions about enrollment. The ombudsmen are passionate about serving the citizens of Boulder County, as evidenced by their willingness to work long hours and their desire to improve the quality of life for residents in our community.

Ramsey Support Team

A new development in the Jonbenet Ramsey case generated immense media and public interest in the summer of 2006. A support team of County employees mobilized to provide 24/7 logistical operations and information dissemination to the media, public and various governmental agencies, all the while ensuring that County business operations and public service continued in an effective manner.

This was a tremendous effort by employees in several departments/divisions working together and with outside agencies.

Architects division -

  • Coordinated with the City of Boulder to stage and set up electrical and logistical requirements for the media "tent city" in the Justice Center parking lot
  • Provided electrical feeds to network news crews
  • Provided staging, seating and audio for District Attorney's press conferences
  • Created signage for parking lots and jury assembly rooms

Commissioners' Office -

  • Coordinated media logistics at the Justice Center parking lot
  • Supported the D.A.'s office with internal and external communications, including news releases, news conferences and cross-agency strategic planning
  • Coordinated the tally of expenses for the D.A., Sheriff and Commissioners' offices

Facilities -

  • Ensured continuity of business and facility operations at the Justice Center and ensured minimal disruption of public access
  • Provided support to the D.A. and Sheriff's offices during transport of the suspect to the County Jail
  • Provided logistical support and basic needs for media representatives in the Justice Center parking lot.
Housing Authority Special Homelessness Prevention Project

In September 2006, a formerly homeless individual living on just over $600/month in disability income managed to purchase a mobile home for $500 and attain a Section 8 voucher to help pay the lot rent. However, the home failed inspection due to lack of heat, hot water, stove and refrigerator.

The City of Boulder Mediation Center referred the client to the Boulder County Housing Authority's Longs Peak Energy Conservation program. LPEC's rehabilitation program was able to negotiate with the City of Boulder Housing and Human Services Department to obtain approval to spend approximately $2,500 to finance the needed improvements. Weatherization crews made repairs to the heating system, installed a hot water heater, made electrical repairs and installed a refrigerator at a reduced rate. They also obtained a donated microwave oven and toaster over to provide cooking facilities.

Through this collaboration with the City of Boulder Housing and Human Services Division, the Center for People with Disabilities, the City of Boulder Mobile Home Rehab Program, the Weatherization program, and the LPEC and Housing Authority Rehab program, we were able to prevent a return to homelessness for this client just before winter.

An investment of $2,500 saved at least twice that in the costs of services that multiple agencies would have incurred in providing services had this client returned to homelessness.

Boulder County Fair Zero Waste Event

As part of the County's commitment to sustainability, the Resource Conservation Division enlisted a huge number of County staff, senior tax workers and volunteers to reduce waste and increase public awareness at the 2006 Boulder County Fair.

Through their efforts, the County was able to reduce, reuse and compost more than four tons of material. Most importantly, their presence and educational information exposed the event's 69,000-plus visitors to the concept of zero waste and other ways to dispose of "trash."

The effort required 880 hours of volunteer and senior tax worker time. At least three food vendors switched from traditional plastic dining ware to compostable cutlery. The program succeeded in composting 700 yards of animal bedding and waste and saving 11,200 gallons of water, 10,579 kilowatt hours of energy and 27 trees.

County Jail Food Waste Composting Project

The Boulder County Jail has an inmate garden that allows inmates to cultivate plants - and a hobby - and learn gardening skills. When a previous source of compost for the garden was terminated, jail staff and the Resource Conservation Division decided to implement an innovative approach modeled on a program at the Keystone resort.

Resource Conservation purchased two Earth Tubs for the jail. Boulder County Transportation installed concrete slabs for the composting system and the Building Division installed electrical connections. The composting tubs became operational in May 2006, allowing the jail to manage food waste while generating compost to enhance the soils in the garden.

From May through November 2006 alone, the project generated approximately 21 cubic yards of compost for the jail garden.

This project reduced waste being sent to the landfill, created a sustainable production of compost for the garden and will generate greater yields for the garden. This system also saves labor and capital expenses: inmate crews and staff already associated with waste management or management of the garden provide the labor, and it is as simple as redirecting waste from one container to another only feet away.

Conservation Easement Stewardship Program

Most of Boulder County's 780 Conservation Easement properties had never been monitored, and the job is expanding as the County continually acquires new conservation easements. These properties constitute about 27,400 acres - nearly one third of County-held open space interests.

In June 2005, Janis Whisman became the Land Stewardship Officer for the Parks and Open Space Department. She quickly created a conservation easement database and organized a team to monitor all of the County's 780 conservation easements. In 2006, she and her team visited and monitored 310 properties.

This is even more amazing because Janis and her team had to start from "scratch" and devote significant time to creating folders for each property that detail the significant data such as maps, Assessor's records and land use approvals. After visits, they prepared reports and updated the conservation easement database.

This project creates a strong stewardship program to protect the County's interests in perpetuity.

Business Services Solutions Project

This Workforce Boulder County program is a true community partnership, in which Boulder County works with local employers to offer customized training programs to expand the knowledge or improve the basic skills of employees. Businesses gain well-trained, specialized employees; employees gain valuable job skills; and Boulder County supports a skilled and flexible workforce.

Corporate employers pay 50 percent of the cost of training, and Boulder County provides 50 percent match funding. The County provides a 75-percent match for non-profit clients, who pay 25 percent of training costs.

The program had trained 76 employees from Boulder County businesses by the end of 2006. It even brought together two health care institutions that, through the project, have worked together to create a training program for employees of both institutions.

Continuous training for workers improves efficiency by closing skill gaps, increasing employee retention and improving the overall productivity and competitive position of the business. As businesses develop and promote existing talent, they also save money by developing worker loyalty and reducing turnover.

Head Start Waste Reduction Program

Boulder County Head Start's staff has implemented several changes over the last few years to help reduce, reuse and recycle materials that are used in classrooms.

Federal and state health and safety requirements can make this a challenge in preschool programs, but Head Start has managed to meet and/or exceed those requirements while implementing waste-reduction practices. Innovations include washable, re-useable cups for tooth brushing, cloth rags instead of paper towels for cleaning up spills and tables, and recycling in all classrooms.

Classrooms include bins for paper recycling, placed where children can do the recycling themselves. Likewise the classroom kitchen areas include co-mingled container and paper recycling. 

Head Start also selects the most environmentally friendly products when purchasing, such as foam soap in recyclable containers. A goal for 2007 is to implement composting at all Head Start sites, both to benefit the environment and to educate children.

With 164 children in preschool, these sustainability touches really add up, from milk jugs to hand-washing.

Speech Server Application Development

The Treasurer's Office staff has spent many hours in the past answering incoming phone calls from taxpayers inquiring about property tax information. Last year, when Microsoft introduced speech server technology, Boulder County's Information Technology staff developed a new application for the Treasurer's Office that allows taxpayers to make inquiries about their taxes and obtain detailed property descriptions - all through an automated phone number.

The automated system works via two new technologies. The first, text to speech, allows staff to post information as text on the Web, which the speech server then reads and converts the text to speech. This saves staff time by not requiring staff to record a new message.

The second, speech recognition, allows callers to speak their preferences and commands as they would when speaking directly to an employee (rather than pushing keys on the telephone pad). The Treasurer's program includes speech recognition for addresses, which is difficult to do.

Biomass Central Heating System

This innovative project reduces air pollution while accomplishing two important, necessary tasks for the County: disposing of wood chips produced by forest improvement and fire mitigation projects, and heating the County's new Parks and Open Space headquarters in Longmont.

The project uses trees being harvested from Parks and Open Space property through forest stand improvement and fire mitigation projects. Prior to the Biomass Heating System, the trees were redistributed on the forest floor as chips or burned in slash piles, contributing to air pollution in the county.

In addition to reducing air pollution and improving forest ecosystems, this system reduces the County's overall cost of heating the Parks and Open Space building by not using natural gas, a costly and non-renewable resource.

This project is the only operating biomass heating facility in Colorado and is a model program locally, nationally and internationally. It has been visited by more than 20 tours from other countries, municipalities, federal and state agencies.

Parks and Open Space Building Exterior Walls

During the design phase of the new Parks and Open Space administration building, the County Architects office chose to pursue the use of insulated concrete forms for construction of the building's exterior walls, an innovation that saves energy and reduces noise.

This technology, typically used for residential construction, is expected to generate a long-term cost savings due to reduced energy usage.

Insulated Concrete Form (ICF) system is a modular block system consisting of two pieces of rigid foam held together by plastic webs. After being assembled, they become the forms into which the concrete is poured. The resulting system becomes the wall's structure, insulation and vapor barrier all in one. The exterior siding/veneer and the interior drywall are then attached directly to this system. Benefits of the system include:

  • The forms are made from both recycled and recyclable materials
  • Achieves an insulation rating of R-50, meaning it is very successful in eliminating heat flow
  • Improves noise reduction as a buffer to an adjacent airport runway
  • Eliminates the need for typical wood forms.
VMware Software Server Consolidation

Boulder County's Information Technology department was facing a challenge: the computer room's physical, electrical and cooling capacities were reaching their maximum, yet the County needed the ability to continue to add more systems to support growing computing needs.

IT staff researched, found, designed and began implementing a product called VMware. This product has enabled IT to convert physical servers into virtual servers, allowing an average of eight virtual servers to now run on just one physical box. In 2006, approximately 50 virtual servers were created on eight physical servers, hosting applications for the Housing Authority, Clerk and Recorder, HR/Payroll and County Intranet and Internet Web sites.

Reducing the number of servers has:

  • Reduced the annual maintenance cost per server by 70 percent, from $938 to $269
  • Reduced annual server replacement cost per server by 83 percent, from $1,230 to $205
  • Reduced electrical usage by 13 percent
  • Reduced the temperature (and therefore load on A/C units) in the computer room by 7 percent, from 82 degrees F to 76 degrees
  • Provided a failover strategy for many systems that didn't already have one - we can instantaneously and without interruption move a virtual server to another physical server in case of hardware problems
  • Reduced our new server build time by 80 percent, from approximately 10 hours to less than two hours.
Jail Booking Team

This team was the first of its kind for the Boulder County Sheriff's Office Jail Division. For many years - since the creation of the 12-hour shift - the Jail had experienced problems of communication and consistency between the four different shifts. As the jail grew to capacity, these challenges began to take a toll on performance, consistency and interagency communication.

In response, Sgt. Sandra Nelson formed a booking team composed of line staff representing all four shifts. Members were selected based on their experience and initiative at their booking posts and were charged with goals of identifying, prioritizing and initiating new policies and procedures to ensure consistency and improve efficiency. They also were tasked to seek improvements to booking practices and physical layout to better manage the growing number of inmates processed into and out of jail.

North Broadway Initiative

Historically, the business park at 4919, 4939 and 4949 N. Broadway has presented various problems in terms of zoning, fire hazards and law enforcement. Illegal occupancy and interior modification of the units without permits were the primary cause behind these problems - resulting in life safety concerns.

A collaboration of seven agencies representing a breadth of disciplines tackled this problem area by performing inspections of all 130 units. The initiative has succeeded in drastically reducing issues and violations.

The effort began in 2005, when Boulder County Sheriff's Deputies Sue Cullen and Drake Clark began planning for the project, dubbed "The North Broadway Initiative." The effort required many months of inter-agency strategic planning and problem solving. The Boulder County Attorney's Office prepared administrative search warrants.

Participating agencies collaborated to inspect all 130 units for fire, safety and building code violations in order to assure the health and safety of tenants and business owners who own or lease space, as well as for the good of the general public.

Agencies that assisted with the North Broadway Initiative were:

  • Boulder County Land Use
  • Boulder Rural Fire Department
  • Boulder County Attorney's Office
  • Boulder County Public Health
  • State of Colorado Public Health/State Water Quality
  • Environmental Protection Agency
  • Boulder County Sheriff's Office

Some of the units in the complex have been re-inspected. Building and fire officials will continue to conduct re-inspections to monitor progress, compliance and to note any future violations. The program has already had noticeable results:

  • Calls for service to the area are down
  • New, legitimate businesses are moving in
  • Numerous other business owners have approached the team during inspections to thank them for their efforts
  • Electrical and plumbing work is being brought up to code
  • The Fire Marshal will ensure that units have working fire extinguishers and alarms
  • Forbidden propane and acetylene tanks have been removed or will be brought up to code
  • Junk vehicles and garbage have been removed
Soil Work for New Communications and Detox Centers

Boulder County has saved thousands of dollars by utilizing its existing Transportation Department equipment and employees on a project that would have otherwise required expensive contractor work.

Construction of a new Communications Center and Detox Center near the Boulder County Jail has required a massive effort to re-grade the site for drainage, install foundation drainage, install and compact backfill materials, cut roads to grade, and excavate and process large volumes of soil to remove unwanted materials such as decaying wood, tires, culverts, etc.

The Boulder County Transportation Department provided operators and equipment, when available outside of their regularly scheduled projects and duties, to accomplish these tasks at little cost to the project.

In addition, the Boulder County Parks Department has been able to use a large volume of the excess soil generated by these projects - soil that otherwise would have been hauled off to the landfills and incurred landfill fees.

The soils will be used fro reclamation at several mining sites and for restoring ravine washouts at several Open Space sites.

Goodhue Farmhouse Rehabilitation

In June 1998, Boulder County designated the Rock Creek Farm Cultural Landscape District as a local historic landmark. The farm building complex had been previously determined eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. The Goodhue Farmhouse - built around 1912 and stationed at the heart of the old farming operation - stood in disrepair after surviving 90 years of farm-family use and flood events.

Using a $53,470 grant from the Colorado State Historic Fund, Boulder County began rehabilitation of the farmhouse in 2004. In addition to preserving the historic property, Boulder County aimed to create a unique meeting space for southeastern Boulder County.

The Goodhue Farm Meeting House officially opened on Nov. 17, 2005. The facility accommodates up to 70 people, and is available free to all Boulder County departments. Other governmental agencies and non-profits may reserve the space for a minimal fee. The site provides a charming setting for public programs and county meetings, as well as an opportunity to learn about the history of the settlers of the region.

Grasslands Restoration

The Grasslands Restoration project is aimed at turning less productive agricultural lands back into native plant communities that will provide habitat for many grassland wildlife species in Boulder County.

A joint project between Boulder County Parks and Open Space's Agricultural and Resource Management divisions, the restoration includes research projects as well as seeding of native species. The Weed Work Group and the Plant Ecology Work Group coordinated to plan and implement restoration efforts.

Two research projects launched in 2006 are testing innovative techniques for grassland restoration for the purpose of achieving greater diversity on our grasslands.

HIV/STI Outreach Program

Boulder County Public Health's HIV/STI Outreach Program began a formal collaboration with the Boulder County AIDS Project (BCAP) in January 2006 with the intent to increase the capacity for HIV testing and prevention services in Boulder County despite limited resources.

From this effort, HIV testing has nearly doubled across the county, with testing clinics being offered not only in traditional, office-based settings, but also in outreach settings as well. By combining resources, Public Health and BCAP are able to meet clients "where they're at" and reduce barriers to getting tested such as cost, transportation and stigma. Outreach testing is occurring in settings such as a teen clinic, methadone and other substance abuse treatment settings, the homeless shelter, adult bookstores and El Comite.

In addition, the two agencies have collaborated to provide large-scale, community-wide events to promote awareness of HIV issues in Boulder County, including National HIV testing day on June 24, 2006, on the Pearl Street Mall. The effort succeeded in drawing 92 people to be tested and spread education and awareness to more than 1,000 people through materials distribution, visible presence on the mall and outreach.

The organizations also participated in National Latino AIDS Awareness Day on Oct. 15, 2006, at the Twin Peaks Mall, and tested 48 people. An additional 250 people were reached through materials distribution and outreach. Finally, Public Health and BCAP collaborated for Boulder Pride's Block Party event in September, testing 20 people and reaching more than 500 at a booth set up on the mall.

 

 

 


 

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