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SETTING STATE PRIORITIES South Carolina Initiative. Bob King, Deputy Commissioner, SC DHEC Jim Joy, Assistant Deputy Commissioner, SC DHEC ECOS Strategic Planning Workshop June 10-11, 2008. SC Priority Setting Initiative. Drivers:
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SETTING STATE PRIORITIESSouth Carolina Initiative Bob King, Deputy Commissioner, SC DHEC Jim Joy, Assistant Deputy Commissioner, SC DHEC ECOS Strategic Planning Workshop June 10-11, 2008
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Drivers: • The Department finalized its 2005-2010 Strategic Plan in early 2005 • Beginning July 2005, Air, Water and Land Bureaus went through review of existing EQC Operational Plan, respective Bureau Operational Plans and EPA Strategic Plan • Continuing reductions in federal and state funding resources • Desire to focus limited resources on areas that were state priorities
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Bureau managers conducted discussions with staff both within Bureau and in regional offices to narrow potential environmental priorities for their areas • Discussions led senior managers to identify priority focus areas for 2 purposes: • Drive internal planning, decision making and alignment of strategic and operational plans • Be a strong factor in future negotiations with EPA in developing PPA
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Identified priority focus areas: • Compliance assistance • Emergency response • Information management efforts • Innovative strategies • Interstate/Intrastate issues • Legacy impacts, activities • Local governments/sustainability • Public participation • Resources • Staff retention/development • Toxics
SC Priority Setting Initiative • March 24, 2006 – EQC Management Meeting • Priority focus areas discussed in more depth • Smaller workgroups sorted and ranked focus areas using following criteria: • Environmental impact • Ease of implementation • Budget/resource implications • Free up DHEC time? • Change public perception/behavior? • Environmental benefit
SC Priority Setting Initiative • High priorities: • Staff retention/development • Local government/sustainability • Resources • Emergency response/preparedness • High-medium priorities: • Information management • Public participation • Compliance assistance • Toxics and interstate/intrastate issues
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Letter went from Bob King to Regional Administrator on priorities • Also reiterated need for State and Region 4 to better utilize/share resources through: • Priority-driven allocations • Partnering and work-sharing • Training and technical assistance • Innovations • Flexibility • Laid foundation for PPA discussions
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Items that were key to success: • Continued involvement of Deputy Commissioner and Asst. Deputy Commissioner • Change in top management staff in program areas allowed better focus of priorities across EQC and away from silos • Grant and contractor support provided external driver to meet deadlines • Time – Patience - Perseverance
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Obstacles: • Didn’t have separate planning staff • Time constraints of key program management staff • Day-to-day crises • Comfort zones • Fear of giving up something
SC Priority Setting Initiative • Successes: • Identified state priorities were focus of PPA discussion • Acceptance of priorities by EPA not traditionally identified through grant negotiations • Shift in focus to actions taken before air or water quality standards are violated • Inclusion of staff retention and development demonstrated our continued commitment to staff • Walking the talk – part of Agency Strategic Plan and EQC Operation Plan and now PPA • PPA acknowledged future grant work plans will reflect and complement priority focus areas in PPA