Resource Needs for the Division Sample Clauses

Resource Needs for the Division. State Senate Bill 03-276 required that the Division consult with the WQCC, BOH and interested parties in addressing a list of identified questions that addressed implementation of the Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act at the State level. After an extensive outreach and stakeholder process, the Division issued the SB 276 Report, which answered the identified questions and also projected a resource gap between the Division’s available staffing and resources at the time and what was needed to fulfill that gap in demand. In the 2006 and 2007 legislative sessions, the legislature provided a total of 22 FTE (10 drinking water, 12 clean water) using a combination of fee and general funds. Since 2008 the Division has provided an annual report to the General Assembly that provides an estimate of resource needs. During the 2013 legislative session the General Assembly provided the Division with an additional 16 general funded positions. The majority of these positions were in our Clean Water Program. The remaining 2.5 positions were allotted to the Drinking Water and Operations Programs. No additional resources were provided in the 2014 legislative session.
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Resource Needs for the Division. State Senate Bill 03-276 required that the Division consult with the WQCC, BOH and interested parties in addressing a list of identified questions that addressed implementation of the Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act at the State level. After an extensive outreach and stakeholder process, the Division issued the SB 276 Report, which answered the identified questions and also projected a resource gap between the Division’s available staffing and resources at the time and what was needed to fulfill that gap in demand. In the 2006 and 2007 legislative sessions, the legislature provided a total of 22 FTE (10 drinking water, 12 clean water) using a combination of fee and general funds. Since 2008 the Division has provided an annual report to the General Assembly that provids an estimate of resource needs The 2011 report identified the need for an additional 61.5 FTE over the next 3 years.
Resource Needs for the Division. ‌ State Senate Bill 03-276 required that the division consult with the Water Quality Control Commission, Board of Health and interested parties to address a list of identified questions evaluating the implementation of the Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act at the state level. After an extensive outreach and stakeholder process, the division issued the Senate Bill 276 Report which responded to these questions and projected a resource gap between available division staffing and resources and what was needed at that time. In the 2006 and 2007 legislative sessions, the legislature provided a total of 22 full-time exempt positions (12 clean water, 10 drinking water) using a combination of fees and general funds. Since 2008 the division has provided an annual report to the state general assembly that provides an estimate of resource needs. During the 2013 legislative session, the general assembly provided the division with an additional 16 positions via general funds. The majority of these positions were assigned to the division’s Clean Water Program. The remaining 2.5 positions were allotted to the Safe Drinking Water and Administration programs. During the 2014 Colorado legislative session, the Joint Budget Committee proposed Senate Bill 14-134 to modernize the Clean Water Program’s outdated fee structure and to increase fees to sustain the program over a three-year period. The bill was postponed indefinitely with direction from the legislature to establish a fee stakeholder process between the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and the regulated community. The stakeholder process began in July 2014. Following introductory meetings, the department worked with stakeholders and held individual meetings for distinct wastewater generating sectors in order to more thoroughly address specific concerns within each area and to improve financial transparency. Six sector workgroups were formed: Commerce and Industry (C&I); Construction; Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4); Public and Private Utilities (PPU); Pesticides; and Water Quality Certification. Over a six-month period, the department held 34 meetings totaling 56 hours of formal dialogue between the department and its stakeholders. At the conclusion of the stakeholder process, the department requested each participant to complete a sector- specific survey to gain feedback on the overall stakeholder process, modernization of the fee structure and implementation of a fee increase...

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