Plumas County Grand Jury • 2007-2008

Inal Eport Lake Almanor/Chester Greenville/Indian Valley Sierra Valley Portola Quincy Graeagle/Blairsden Plumas County*

Published: July 02, 2008 51 pages
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Note: Missing finding numbers detected: F10, F11, F12, F13, F14, F15, F16

Findings and Recommendations 10 findings

F1
– Timely posting of minutes of meetings held by the Plumas County Board of Supervisors. California Government Code Section 25150 requires the Board Of Supervisors to publish a fair statement of all of its proceedings within ten (10) days of each The current policy and procedures of the Plumas County Board of meeting. Supervisors, with regard to posting of minutes, are not in compliance with this statute.
Related Recommendations (1)
R1
– Timely posting of minutes of meetings held by the Plumas County Board of Supervisors. It is this jury's recommendation that The Plumas County Board Of Supervisors take immediate steps to implement policies and procedures necessary to bring posting of minutes into conformance with California Government Code Section 25150.
F2
– Communication Consistent and reliable communication among the Fair Board, the Fair Manager and the Board of Supervisors is lacking. > Consistent and reliable communications are the cornerstone of good management practice. Ill feelings among some members of The Board of Supervisors, The Fair Board, and the Fair Manager exist. A culture of mistrust has developed that tends to exacerbate an existing communications gap between them. This has had an adverse effect on the operation of the fairgrounds. The Fair Manager has not communicated effectively with the Fair Board and the Board of Supervisors. All significant information should be equally shared among all parties. Several members of the Fair Board complained of learning about significant Fair issues in the local newspaper, not from the Board of Supervisors or the Fair Manager. This problem is directly related to the poorly defined chain of command as outlined in Finding No. 1.
Related Recommendations (1)
R2
- Plumas LAFCo - Relationships with Constituent Agencies The Commissioners should immediately establish a schedule to meet with officials of the City of Portola and with board members of a representative cross-section of the special services districts in Plumas County, without the presence of the Executive Officer, to listen to candid feedback regarding their relationship with Plumas LAFCo and the Executive Officer. Based upon this feedback, the Commissioners should determine whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the relationship between Plumas LAFCo and its constituents can be satisfactorily mended under the present Executive Officer. If so, a specific plan of action to resolve the matter should be undertaken and should become a key part of the Executive Officer's performance evaluation going forward. If not, the Commission should take appropriate action to resolve the issue.
F3
– Facilities Planning and Maintenance There is no evidence of a Facilities and Maintenance Master Planning Document associated with the future development of facilities at the fairgrounds. > The only document presented to the Grand Jury was an aerial photograph that had been provided by the Plumas County Museum in conjunction with a proposed historical project to be housed at the fairgrounds. There are signs of disrepair associated with many of the facilities observed during a tour of the fairgrounds by members of the Grand Jury. Buildings need repair and repainting (with the exception of the Tulsa Scott building and the Mineral Building). One member of the jury leaned against a metal railing at the racetrack grandstands and the railing gave way due to deterioration of the concrete holding the support post. ➤ The Plumas County Fairgrounds' yearly operational budget is not sufficient for the maintenance operation to proceed at more than a minimal level. An active fundraising mechanism is listed as a goal in the existing Policy Manual. This would be accomplished through grants and charitable donations. There is no evidence that an active effort exists in this area.
Related Recommendations (1)
R3
-Plumas LAFCo Financial Audit It is recommended that the Commissioners publish a Request for Proposal to be sent to Certified Public Accounting firms in Northern California to initiate steps to obtain an independent financial audit.
F4
– Equipment and Supplies No consistent system for tracking of equipment and supplies purchased by the fairgrounds exists. ➤ Having no consistent system for the inventory and tracking of equipment and supplies, creates an atmosphere with the potential for misuse of public funds. > Previous fair managers established a verbal policy that stated, items purchased, having a value of less than $100 dollars were classified as consumables.
Related Recommendations (1)
R4
Special Districts and Plumas LAFCo While it is recognized that the board members of the special districts are primarily volunteers and have numerous commitments for their time, it is imperative that the various districts, perhaps through the Plumas Special Districts Association, make the effort to better understand the purposes, powers, limitations and mission of Plumas LAFCo as they affect the ability of the districts to effectively and efficiently deliver services to their constituents. The Plumas County Special Districts Association and the Boards of the individual Special Districts in Plumas County need to become much more pro-active with Plumas LAFCo, whether, or not, they decide to join and appoint 2 Commissioners.
F5
– Management Practices The yearly audit of the County's finance and management practices, conducted by the Accounting Firm of Smith and Newell revealed numerous deficiencies associated with the Fairgrounds accounting practices. Some of these items have been recurrent issues that were not dealt with by previous managers. The five (5) general areas identified were; Statement of Operations, Accounting for Capital Assets, Admission Revenue, Bank Reconciliation, and Cash On Hand. > The Statement of Operations is a report required by the State of California Department of Agriculture, supplying information about the state of the County Fair. It is necessary to file this report on time in order to receive State funds. The fairgrounds accounting technician is in the process of developing a financial tracking system to bring the fairgrounds into compliance with requirements of the Audit Report. No such system was in place prior to the hiring of the new management staff.
Related Recommendations (1)
R5
– Management Practices 1. Finish the development of a reliable fiscal tracking program. 2. Ensure that all issues identified with the audit management report be corrected. 3. The Board of Supervisors should ensure the timely filing of the Statement of Operations with the State Department of Agriculture.
F6
The Director of Emergency Services has not sought reimbursement from the state and federal governments for Hazardous Spills, Fire Fighting efforts by the Special District responders, or for the Claremont Dynamite incident in Quincy.
Related Recommendations (1)
R6
The Director of Emergency Services should seek reimbursement through the State and Federal Governments and follow the procedures set forth in the document that was adopted by the Plumas County Board of Supervisors on September 13, 2005 by Resolution No. 05-7200.
F7
The Director of Emergency Services has left the grant seeking process to individual departments.
Related Recommendations (1)
R7
The Director should also be responsible for the coordination of grant writing activities for the different departments to insure that all needs are being addressed.
F8
The new communication system at the Sheriff's Office is truly state of the art. The system is hooked up to all agencies in California so that help can be requested quickly. The Communication Center is fully staffed with eight operators. They have two people on duty 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Currently they are working on: • The reverse 911 system • Voting receivers that will select the strongest receiver signal automatically · Wireless broadband communications
Related Recommendations (1)
R8
Plumas County Counsel.
F9
Four separate user groups of fairgrounds facilities. Members of the Grand Jury attended multiple sessions of the Board Of Supervisors and the Fair Board meetings. Research was conducted concerning the legislation that governs the operation of county fairs in California and the recent financial history of the Plumas-Sierra County Fair as reported in the Plumas County Budget Book. The findings contained in this report are a direct result of the correlation of evidence obtained through the interviews, research and first-hand observations by members of the Grand Jury.
Related Recommendations (1)
R9
Four separate user groups of fairgrounds facilities. Members of the Grand Jury attended multiple sessions of the Board Of Supervisors and the Fair Board meetings. Research was conducted concerning the legislation that governs the operation of county fairs in California and the recent financial history of the Plumas-Sierra County Fair as reported in the Plumas County Budget Book. The findings contained in this report are a direct result of the correlation of evidence obtained through the interviews, research and first-hand observations by members of the Grand Jury.
F17 Page 41
American Red Cross 18. Plumas District Safety Officer 19. City of Portola Administrator 20. Director of Plumas County Office of Emergency Services California State Government Code, Section 8613 states that “Should an accredited disaster council fail to comply with the rules and regulations of the Office of Emergency Services in any material degree, the office may revoke its certification”. The Plumas County Office of Emergency Services, working with the Plumas County Environmental Health Department is responsible for overall pre- emergency planning and coordination among the various emergency responders. This includes coordination of emergency assistance between contiguous jurisdictions. The State and Federal Governments help local jurisdictions cover the cost of disasters. To get this help, Plumas County must declare a local emergency within 10 days of the actual occurrence of a disaster. The County must then assess damages, and apply for aid within 60 days after the Proclamation of a Local Emergency and contact the State Office of Emergency Services for assistance information. Federal aid, coordinated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), is given at the request of the Governor. The Office of Emergency Services is responsible for assisting the various county departments in the preparation and tracking of such claims, and should coordinate the filing of claims. As with all mandated government activities an adequate level of funding is critical. During the interview process it became apparent that there are many funding gaps in the Plumas Office of Emergency Services. The various agencies have been left to seek their own funding through grants, special district allocations and fund raising efforts. During the Grand Jury interview process the interviewees were asked if the Office of Emergency Services has conducted full, "in the field" countywide preparedness drills to test the system. The general response was that “the personnel in each department are responsible to make sure that their own departments are safe, properly trained, know the OES rules, and know their responsibilities in emergency situations”. Apparently there was a "table top" OES exercise conducted within the past two years when the only full field exercise was cancelled because of inclement weather. It should be noted that on March 11, 2008 the Plumas County Board of Supervisors accepted the resignation of the Director of the Plumas OES and also his resignation as the County Fire Marshall. Findings and Recommendations Finding #1 The Plumas County Organizational Chart obtained from the Human Resources Department by the Grand Jury, dated June 12, 2007 does not include the Plumas Office of Emergency Services, which calls into question the historical chain of command and the extent of the OES assimilation into Plumas County operations.
No recommendations for this finding

Additional Recommendations 3

These recommendations are not explicitly linked to specific findings.

Conclusions 15

Agency Responses 1

Government agencies' official responses to this report's findings and recommendations. Click on a response to see the structured breakdown.

No Responses Found 2

Government entities assigned to respond to this report. No response documents have been linked in our database.

Plumas County Board of Supervisors Elected County Office
Plumas County District Attorney Elected County Office

* This report's PDF did not contain easily extractable text and required Optical Character Recognition (OCR) for analysis. There may be minor errors in the extracted findings and recommendations due to OCR limitations with scanned documents.