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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-05-22 Commissioner Minutes TUESDAY, MAY 22, 2018 The Franklin County Commissioners met Tuesday, May 22, 2018, with the following members present: David S. Keller, Robert L. Thomas and Robert G. Ziobrowski. Chairman Keller presided and after calling the meeting to order, a Moment of Silence, and the Pledge of Allegiance, proceeded with the business of the day. Chairman Keller asked to amend the agenda to move the Emergency Services Week Proclamation after public comment. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas; unanimously approved to adopt the amended agenda. There was no public comment. The Board reviewed information regarding National Emergency Medical Services Week. Elizabeth Heller, Assistant EMS Chief at Fayetteville Fire Department, along with representatives from local EMS services and fire companies, were present to receive the proclamation. Ms. Heller thanked the Board for recognizing them and mentioned that she is here on behalf of Mr. Bitner who could not be present today. Mr. Bitner asked her to mention how far EMS has evolved and how they used to utilize local funeral homes to eer staff than volunteers. She explained that the volunteer census is very low and it continues to decline. She said they are struggling to keep staff. Ms. Heller explained the exorbitant costs to become certified as an EMT and Paramedic and the consuming time commitment for training . Her EMS staff are 100% career and the community feels services should be free because they are a volunteer fire department. She explained that to run a basic life support call costs $1,000 but they only get reimbursed $150 from Medicaid. Commissioner Thomas brought up the number of calls that are mental health related, he believes the percentage is 5-10% of the calls they receive. Ms. Heller responded that some of their calls for chest pains are actually panic attacks. Commissioner Thomas wanted to point out that in the old days when EMT was new and whole lot more complicated today because of dealing with a lot more mental health issues in addition to the physical issues. Ms. Heller said that last year the fatalities for career staff were heart attacks, cancer and other diseases and third was suicide. Commissioner Thomas suggested that our Mental Health Department can help but the ch said even if they eliminate all mental health calls there is still a crisis since the typical unger workers or identify other solutions. Ms. Heller said that Fayetteville Fire Department runs a program for young people and there is even an Emergency Services Club at the Chambersburg High School that tries to recruit students. EMS attempted to have a that cost. She said she does not have an answer. Commissioner Thomas said the er asked about the average wage for EMS workers and Ms. Heller responded its $11 for Basic Life Services and $16.50 for Paramedics. She said most workers hold more than one job. Everyone introduced themselves and provided their years of service. Bill Little of the other issues and new challenges they face today with recruitment and retention. that these people put up with. He does have high hopes with the new State EMS Director Continued on page 2 that he met yesterday. He thinks he will be an EMS advocate and will go to bat for the workers. The Board thanked everyone for attending the meeting today. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas; unanimously approved to sign Franklin County Proclamation #2018-15 proclaiming the week of May 20-26, 2018 as National Emergency Medical Services Week and that the attached proclamation be made a part of these minutes. The minutes of the May 17, 2018 meeting was reviewed. These will be decided upon on Thursday, May 24, 2018. The Board reviewed Agreements, Contracts and Reports. Carrie Gray, County Administrator, explained the amendments with Keystone Health and Pyramid that are for the Jail to Community Treatment Program which provides vivitrol and therapy while the participants are in Jail and when they get out. These amendments are to extend the contracts by a week. The following items were approved today while the remaining items will be approved Thursday, May 24, 2018. The Board reviewed Grants matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas; unanimously approved the contract amendment between the County of Franklin and Keystone Health for the Jail To Community Treatment Program to extend the contract that was executed on September 14, 2017 to April 24, 2018. All other terms of the original agreement shall remain unchanged. The Board reviewed additional Grants matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas; unanimously approved the contract amendment between the County of Franklin and Pyramid Healthcare, Inc. for the Jail To Community Treatment Program to extend the contract that was executed on September 14, 2017 to April 24, 2018. All other terms of the original agreement shall remain unchanged. The Board reviewed Information Technology Services matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas; unanimously approved the quote from Dell for the annual refresh of County Computers in the amount of $61,322.38. County policy replaces approximately one quarter of machines every year, this is the largest of the four year replacement cycle and has been broken into two orders. This is the first of the two orders. Kurt Hoffeditz, Chief Information Officer, provided a presentation on Laserfiche. He explained that he wanted to convey the return on investment of Laserfiche, a document management and workflow solution that the County has used for a long time. He explained that Laserfiche is a software platform that Franklin County uses to manage records, image documents, and automate business processes. Mr. Hoffeditz explained that the County has used Laserfiche since 2000 and at that time it organized document storage and structure. In 2010 Laserfiche workflows were added and in 2015 Laserfiche forms were added. We now have more complex workflows for business automation. We currently have over 5,000,000 documents in Laserfiche, and that figure is growing. Total hours saved to date annually is 11,590 and this is growing as well. This is a conservative number as not all departments responded to the questionnaire. The following are programs that use Laserfiche: Employee Benefits Open Enrollment with 75 staff hours saved annually; Human Service Training Days with 150+ staff hours saved annually. Bekah Laws said that this process saves the coordinator lots of time. She also described the process and explained that when the participant signs in and completes an evaluation, they automatically receive a certificate at the end of the Continued on page 3 session; Retirement contribution changes with 16 staff hours saved; Employee Wellness program with 1,000+ hours saved annually. Sarah Hamel, Wellness Coordinator, explained how much time this saves her since employees now scan the barcode on the back of their badge when they attend wellness events and they automatically get credited for attending the event as well as an email confirmation. The employees no longer have to submit anything when they get back to their desk. Registration for the Wellness Program has increased significantly since this process has been streamlined and has become easier to use. This has also reduced her emails significantly due to employees entering information themselves; Aging Cost Share tracking with 30 hours saved annually; Veterans Affairs contacts with 2,880 staff hours saved annually; employee probation system with 240 staff hours saved annually; and event registration system with 2,000 staff hours saved annually. Mr. Hoffeditz provided the projects that are in progress which include: Quote forms; elections; travel request forms and the Children & Youth project. He explained the following results of using Laserfiche: Reshaping of our workforce: county staff now have more time to focus on the primary tasks of their position instead of being tied up with repetitive manual processes; the applications staff is evolving from only supporting outside vendor-developed applications to developing and supporting our own applications and processes; less reliance on solutions from outside vendors who are not intimately aware of our internal processes, interdependencies and procedures; reduced paper footprint in the County and reduction of space needed to store it. These county accomplishments are being noticed by Laserfiche at National and Regional levels. Commissioner Ziobrowski asked if a lot of other counties in PA use Laserfiche and how are we comparing with other counties. Ed Yonker provided a few of the other counties and boroughs in our area that are using or considering Laserfiche. It is widely used in local government locally and across the Commonwealth, it is used in Harrisburg by the Commonwealth and in other states and even internationally. Mr. Hoffeditz next explained where we are headed: County IT resources are being prioritized and aligned to meet the increased demand for these projects and to continue the momentum of increased efficiency; continued push for widespread implementation of business automation and process efficiency in additional areas and departments; and continue the reduction of paper in the County. Chairman Keller said that he has been looking forward to this presentation for a long while. This highlights investments we have made and we continue to make. He thinks ITS department deserves tremendous amount of credit for these accomplishments and staff countywide have embraced this program. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas; unanimously approved to enter an executive session at 10:40 a.m. this date for the purpose to review the Tax Assessment Appeal of Washington Jewish Community Camp Corporation (WJCCC) v. Franklin Co. Board of Assessment and Revision of Taxes matters. Andrew Benchoff, Conflict Counsel, was present for the executive session. This executive session is also to review real estate matters. No action was required after the executive session. The Board reconvened into regular session at 12:11 p.m. The Board recessed at 12:12 p.m. The Board reconvened at 1:30 p.m. for the Retirement Board meeting. Chairman Keller left the board meeting at 2:05 p.m. Michael Shone, Marquette Associates President, met with the Board to provide a report of the Franklin County Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB) Fund. Continued on page 4 The meeting was adjourned at 3:15 p.m. with a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by Robert L. Thomas. Carrie E. Gray County Administrator/Chief Clerk FRANKLIN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ____________________________________ David S. Keller, Chairman ____________________________________ Robert L. Thomas ___________________________________ Robert G. Ziobrowski