Posts Tagged ‘Butler County Commission President Chuck Furmon’

ThuJun21

Butler County hires administrator

Posted by akiefaber June 21st, 2012, 5:34 pm Post a Comment

Sheila McLaughlin reports

Charles Young, the former Hamilton deputy city manager, became Butler County’s new administrator on Thursday.

Without a hitch, and despite infighting over the appointment, commissioners unanimously gave Young the $125,000-a-year job.

Even Commissioner Chuck Furmon, who objected in Monday’s meeting against the way Young’s hiring occurred, voted in his favor.

“I’ve never been against him” Furmon said after Thursday’s meeting. “I didn’t approve of the way (Commissioners Don Dixon and Cindy Carpenter) did it. They had everything all laid out, the contract and everything and all this was done last Friday prior to the Monday meeting. I was not informed,” Furmon said after the meeting.

Young, 53, started the job immediately. According to his contract with commissioners, he has the job for two years but can be fired without cause because he serves at the whim of commissioners.

Besides his salary, the county will pay Young a $500-a-month car allowance but he has to provide his own car and insurance.

Young becomes Butler County’s fourth administrator since 2008, when former long-time administrator DerekConklin resigned amid a scandal involving a $209,000 early-retirement buyout deal for his county-employed wife.

Young was commissioner’s fourth choice for the hire in a process that took more than a year and involved a $23,000 contract with the search firm, Mercer Group.

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Would you work for the Butler County commissioners?

Posted by akiefaber June 21st, 2012, 2:24 pm Post a Comment

Sheila McLaughlin reports

Picture three people who argue frequently.

One has been accused of screaming obscenities at workers. One accuses the others of hiding important meetings from him. The third solicits signed statements from staff to prove the other wrong in the press.

Now imagine they’re all your bosses.

These are Butler County’s elected commissioners, and it took them a year to find a county administrator, the fourth in four years at a time of significant budget challenges. The search was marked by months of infighting that revealed itself in public earlier this week.

The discord past and present led one job candidate to call Butler County “a political environment that’s anything but stable.” Even one commissioner agrees there are, as he put it, “elements of dysfunction.”

Accusations are still flying about disagreements that slowed down the hiring process even though Charles Young, a former deputy city manager in Hamilton, is expected to be appointed today as the commissioner’s fourth choice for the administrator’s job.

Three candidates who earlier received offers from among more than 29 applicants walked away for one reason or another.

One of them, Michael Hinnenkamp, who is the administrator in Springfield Township, said commissioners couldn’t offer him enough money.

He said he asked “north of $150,000” a year. County officials said it was more like $175,000 and a car. Hinnenkamp makes $135,000 annually in his current job. Young will be paid $125,000.

“It never made sense financially to … leave for the same (money) and have to drive up there and deal with a political environment that’s anything but stable,” Hinnenkamp said this week. “They’ve got some difficult challenges and personalities. It’s a long, long culture (of infighting) there.”

Commissioner Chuck Furmon refused to vote on Young’s job offer earlier this week. He said the number of qualified applicants fell short of what he expected.

“They’re going to be smart enough to do their research. There’s been elements of dysfunction and just nitpicking and what have you,” Furmon said. “I’m sure it’s in the back of their minds.” (more…)

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TueJun19

County official: Where’s the meeting?

Posted by akiefaber June 19th, 2012, 11:32 am Post a Comment

Sheila McLaughlin reports

A special meeting on Monday to approve an offer for a new county administrator erupted into a squabble and accusations that lame duck Butler County Commissioner Chuck Furmon was intentionally snubbed from an executive session when his colleagues changed the usual meeting place without telling him.

Chuck Furmon

Chuck Furmon. Photo taken during the Republican primary race for Butler County commissioner by Joseph Fuqua II. Furmon lost the primary in March.

At the end of the day, however, Commissioners Don Dixon and Cindy Carpenter decided to offer the administrator’s job to former Hamilton deputy city manager Charles Young.

They also clarified the county’s pay scales to accommodate a $125,000-a-year salary for Young. That figure was $44,000 more than what commissioners approved when a consultant put together a pay study and recommended wage scales last year.

“You know as well as I do everything is all precast. It’s a dog and pony show,” Furmon charged at his fellow commissioners, adding that resolutions involving Young’s hire were drawn up before the meeting and he wasn’t privy to them.

The meeting was marked by interruptions from Dixon and Carpenter to go to a vote on the salary as Furmon tried to express his opinion about the job offer to Young.

Twenty-nine people applied for the administrator’s position and two applicants received job offers but turned them down. The job has been vacant for just more than a year.

“For someone who didn’t attend all the meetings for the interviews in the past, I find it kind of ironic that you want to have a discussion,” Dixon chastised Furmon.

“I’ve attended 99 percent of those meetings,” Furmon fired back.

“I disagree,” said Carpenter.

Furmon’s final words: “The whole thing’s a joke.”

Furmon voted against going into executive session, but lost out. (more…)

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FriJun8

Butler County leaders clash over expletives, yelling

Posted by akiefaber June 8th, 2012, 12:25 pm Post a Comment

Sheila McLaughlin reports

They might both be Republicans, but that doesn’t mean Butler County Commissioners Chuck Furmon and Cindy Carpenter agree on everything, especially when it comes to throwing F-bombs and yelling at staff.

Cindy Carpenter

Cindy Carpenter. Photo provided.

Furmon fired off a letter this week to Carpenter chastising her about swearing at interim County Administrator Mike Campbell and engaging in a “very loud and angry professional rant” that could even be heard in the public elevators.

It’s the second time that Carpenter has been accused of berating employees.

Pete Landrum, Director of the Management and Budget Office, hired an attorney last November to stop Carpenter from making further threats against him.

The latest tirade involved Carpenter telling Campbell that she was a “(expletive) commissioner,” said the letter The Enquirer obtained from the board of commissioners.

“Your tirades and tantrums are becoming the norm rather than the exception. You seem to be driven to continually create a hostile work environment,” Furmon wrote in his letter to Carpenter.

“Our staff does not deserve your hostile behavior. Day after day they live with the threat of your outbursts.”

Chuck Furmon

Chuck Furmon. Photo taken during the Republican primary race for Butler County commissioner by Joseph Fuqua II. Furmon lost the primary in March.

Reached Wednesday for comment, Furmon said, “I’m just disappointed in what she does. If it was an employee, we have zero tolerance for that. She should understand that.”

He was referring to the county’s personnel policy on threatening behavior and workplace violence. The policy does not apply to Carpenter because she is an elected official.

Carpenter did not return a call for comment, but sent a copy of her e-mail response to Furmon.

She said she considers Furmon’s letter “a political attack in light of the fact that you distributed the letter to the press prior to giving it to me.”

Carpenter also said she expressed her “frustration” to Campbell over an unfinished report that she wanted on establishing a Land Bank project in Butler County.

In Landrum’s case, Carpenter was accused of defaming him in public meetings, verbally abusing him and threatening his job security. His attorney warned Carpenter against further attacks.

Landrum was among a handful of employees Carpenter and Commissioner Don Dixon were jockeying to fire and replace as Carpenter was taking office in January 2011. Dixon backed out of the plan at the last minute.

Carpenter’s subsequent threats about firing certain employees in the commissioner’s office and shooting them prompted Landrum to file a formal complaint that Furmon, who was then commission president, forwarded to Butler County Prosecutor Michael Gmoser for advice.

Nothing was done.

At the time, Carpenter told The Enquirer that she was dissatisfied with Landrum’s performance.

“He doesn’t understand he is not a county commissioner,” she said.

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TueOct18

West Chester officially hires away Butler County director

Posted by akiefaber October 18th, 2011, 2:09 pm Post a Comment

The West Chester Township Board of Trustees Tuesday approved the appointment of Mike Juengling to the vacant position of Community Development Director last week. Juengling, who is the Butler County Director of Development, will lead West Chester’s economic development and planning & zoning efforts in his new position.

“Mr. Juengling brings a wealth of public sector experience and knowledge in the fields of economic development, community planning, code enforcement and other related disciplines,” West Chester Township Administrator Judi Boyko said. “His competency and acumen will serve our community well now and as we move forward.”

Juengling has 30 years of experience in planning and development for Middletown and Butler County having most recently served as director of Butler County Department of Development. In this position, he led the County’s planning, building, community development and economic development divisions.

Juengling fills a vacancy created in January with the departure of Brian Elliff. Since January, many of the responsibilities of the position have been managed by Township Planner Bryan Behrmann.

Mr. Juengling is a 20-year resident of West Chester Township.

Mr. Juengling’s appointment is effective December 2,2011 and he will be compensated $75,000 annually.

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MonOct10

West Chester hires away Butler Co. development director

Posted by akiefaber October 10th, 2011, 11:10 am Post a Comment

West Chester Township is hiring away Butler County’s director of development, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Michael Juengling is expected to be named the township’s community development director at Tuesday night’s trustee meeting, according to the meeting agenda. He would start the $75,000-a-year job on Dec. 1.

Butler County Commission President Chuck Furmon said Juengling submitted a letter of resignation last month.

In West Chester, Juengling would replace Brian Eliff, who left for a job as Symmes Township administrator in Hamilton County earlier this year.

Juengling, who lives in West Chester, told the Enquirer that he feels the job will be a good fit.

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