Position Title Senior Associate Dean of Students
Classification Title Administrative Full Time (.75-1.0 FTE)
Benefits Eligibility Benefits Eligibility
Department Student Development
Job Description
The Senior Associate Dean of Students reports to the Vice President for Student Formation/Dean of Students and creates and directs a comprehensive strategic approach to student community life that is rooted in the historic Christian faith, attentive to restorative justice, and collaborative and caring within a dynamic residential learning community. The Senior Associate Dean sets direction for an exemplary approach to fostering belonging that includes excellent leadership of community through developing and leading a restorative conduct and resolution process. The Senior Associate Dean attends to a vibrant community life at Hope College by cultivating ethical and generous student leaders who are committed to their own flourishing and flourishing of others in a global society. To accomplish this work the Senior Associate Dean of Students holds primary responsibility for the conduct and care work on campus and supervises the Associate Dean of Student Life in order to provide support and collaboration in the work of first year experience, community life and student leadership.
Conduct and Care
Serves as primary student conduct officer, and collaborates with various offices to develop and maintain a robust, faith-based and culturally intelligent approach to student conduct and conflict resolution.
Directs proactive educational efforts to increase students’ awareness and demonstration of ethical community behavior, particularly relating to Hope College’s mission, Virtues of Public Discourse, Christian Aspirations, and Hope Forward Pillars.
Oversees in the administration and interpretation of policies, and procedures relevant to student conduct and conflict resolution matters for individual students (on and off campus) and student groups. Coordinate and/or direct conduct investigations regarding student organizations, including clubs, organizations, fraternities, and sororities.
Manages annual and bi-annual reporting related to student development learning outcomes and KPIs, Drug-Free Act Report, Public Record Requests, and additional reports, as needed.
Serves as the primary point of contact for all student conduct records.
Develops and manages an on-going assessment model to track and report student conduct and behavioral trends for purposes of planning.
Oversees the maintenance and updating of the Maxient database system and the processing of student conduct cases, with administrative support.
Develops, supervises and implements conduct training and presentations related to the student conduct process. Functioning within a matrixed organization, oversees the marketing, recruiting, selection, training, and ongoing development of the Student Standing and Appeals Committee members. Supports the selection, training and ongoing development of college conduct officers (including Residential Life Staff), and advisors. Supervises the conduct-related functions of the Residential Life Staff.
Coordinates the development, review, and revision of all rules, regulations, and procedures relating to student conduct, including Housing policies (in collaboration with the Associate Dean for Residential Life).
Chairs the CARE Team, with direct support from the Student Support Manager. Supervises functions within the Student Support and Retention office, Counseling and Psychological Services, and other offices pertaining to matters of student care, specifically cross-functional work of the CARE team.
Collaborates closely with Disability and Accessibility Resources, Equity and Compliance (Title IX) and other offices that support student accessibility and equity.
Serves as primary threat assessment leader, coordinating threat assessment. Maintains training and certification in threat and risk assessment.
Acts at the direct liaison to campus safety, Holland Police Department, Equity and Compliance office (Title IX) and various campus departments in matters related to student conduct, conflict resolution and campus safety. Assists with data collection for the annual Clery Report.
Represents the department on various divisional, university, state, regional and national committees.
Assists in the preparation and administration of the annual operating budget for student formation.
On behalf of the office of the dean of students, responds to critical student conduct concerns in coordination with campus entities, both internal and external to the College.
Belonging and First Year Experience
In collaboration with the Associate Dean of Student Life, who has direct oversight of orientation, ensures that the college maintains an integrated top-notch onboarding experience for students entering a liberal arts residential collegiate environment.
Collaborates with the Student Support and Retention Office on matters related to first year experience.
With the Student Formation Council, sustains a holistic vision for belonging, hospitality and welcome that is connected to the overall vision for student formation at Hope College and educates students toward the outcomes of Hope Forward.
Community Life and Student Leadership
Works closely with student life and other offices to create and cultivate opportunities for student leadership and service in a global society.
Collaborates with key campus partners to develop student formation-wide student leadership initiatives, collaborating with curricular partners and other partners such as Boerigter Center and Center for Leadership.
Collaborates with the VP/Dean of Students to advise Student Congress, including direct advisement of the Student Congress Appropriations Committee.
Oversees the staff in student life to continue to develop club and organization advising structures, and works to expand those structures to the Student Formation Division.
Supports the Associate Dean of Student Life in maintaining and developing a robust and effective fraternity and sorority life program and cultivate social traditions, student activities, and student engagement across the collegiate community.
Develops and implements tools to measure student engagement across the Student Formation Division and tell the story of the Hope student experience in light of Hope Forward.
General Duties
Act as Vice President for Student Formation/Dean of Students’ designee when needed.
Serve as a key member of the Student Formation Council.
Serve on College governance committees as assigned.
Serve in on-call capacity
Work closely with campus and community partners to ensure that all students are supported throughout their Hope College experience. Engage students personally and through presence at appropriate collegiate events.
Qualifications Requirements
Master’s Degree in Higher Education Administration, Counseling, Clinical Psychology, Social Work or related field.
7-10 years professional experience in student conduct, mediation, Title IX. Experience to include resolution of complex student issues including interfacing with families and other constituents.
Demonstrated commitment to the Christian mission of Hope College, and ability to develop and enact policies, procedures and programs that reflect Hope College’s mission, virtues of public discourse and Christian Aspirations.
Supervisory experience, to include leading and developing effective training.
Ability to cultivate relationships with a wide range of stakeholders.
Experience and knowledge in student conduct administration, policy development, ethics.
Demonstrated ability to work with a diverse campus population.
Demonstrated ability to manage multiple tasks and exercise sound judgment in complex situations.
Strong written and verbal communication skills.
Strong analytical skills.
Excellent emotional intelligence.
Ability to create contexts for belonging, understanding and grace in conduct and resolution processes.
Preferred:
Maxient, NABITA, ASCA knowledge and engagement.
Earned doctorate degree.
Physical Demands This position requires remaining in a sitting or standing position for frequent periods of time; uses office machinery such as a computers, printers, copy machines; Occasionally involves moving items over 10 pounds; frequently will move between different offices/workspaces/buildings; and requires effective communication abilities. In the case of temporary or permanent condition(s) that require(s) accommodation(s), reasonable accommodation(s) may be requested.
Pre-employment Screenings All offers of employment are contingent upon a background check. Some positions may have position specific requirements, such as education/licensure/certification verification, a physical, drug screening, credit checks and/or transportation record review.
Posting Detail Information
Posting Number 2023-208SR
Job Posting Open Date 03/05/2024
Job Posting Close Date
Open Until Filled Yes
Is this position available for sponsorship No
Special Instructions to Applicants
Mar 13, 2024
Full time
Position Title Senior Associate Dean of Students
Classification Title Administrative Full Time (.75-1.0 FTE)
Benefits Eligibility Benefits Eligibility
Department Student Development
Job Description
The Senior Associate Dean of Students reports to the Vice President for Student Formation/Dean of Students and creates and directs a comprehensive strategic approach to student community life that is rooted in the historic Christian faith, attentive to restorative justice, and collaborative and caring within a dynamic residential learning community. The Senior Associate Dean sets direction for an exemplary approach to fostering belonging that includes excellent leadership of community through developing and leading a restorative conduct and resolution process. The Senior Associate Dean attends to a vibrant community life at Hope College by cultivating ethical and generous student leaders who are committed to their own flourishing and flourishing of others in a global society. To accomplish this work the Senior Associate Dean of Students holds primary responsibility for the conduct and care work on campus and supervises the Associate Dean of Student Life in order to provide support and collaboration in the work of first year experience, community life and student leadership.
Conduct and Care
Serves as primary student conduct officer, and collaborates with various offices to develop and maintain a robust, faith-based and culturally intelligent approach to student conduct and conflict resolution.
Directs proactive educational efforts to increase students’ awareness and demonstration of ethical community behavior, particularly relating to Hope College’s mission, Virtues of Public Discourse, Christian Aspirations, and Hope Forward Pillars.
Oversees in the administration and interpretation of policies, and procedures relevant to student conduct and conflict resolution matters for individual students (on and off campus) and student groups. Coordinate and/or direct conduct investigations regarding student organizations, including clubs, organizations, fraternities, and sororities.
Manages annual and bi-annual reporting related to student development learning outcomes and KPIs, Drug-Free Act Report, Public Record Requests, and additional reports, as needed.
Serves as the primary point of contact for all student conduct records.
Develops and manages an on-going assessment model to track and report student conduct and behavioral trends for purposes of planning.
Oversees the maintenance and updating of the Maxient database system and the processing of student conduct cases, with administrative support.
Develops, supervises and implements conduct training and presentations related to the student conduct process. Functioning within a matrixed organization, oversees the marketing, recruiting, selection, training, and ongoing development of the Student Standing and Appeals Committee members. Supports the selection, training and ongoing development of college conduct officers (including Residential Life Staff), and advisors. Supervises the conduct-related functions of the Residential Life Staff.
Coordinates the development, review, and revision of all rules, regulations, and procedures relating to student conduct, including Housing policies (in collaboration with the Associate Dean for Residential Life).
Chairs the CARE Team, with direct support from the Student Support Manager. Supervises functions within the Student Support and Retention office, Counseling and Psychological Services, and other offices pertaining to matters of student care, specifically cross-functional work of the CARE team.
Collaborates closely with Disability and Accessibility Resources, Equity and Compliance (Title IX) and other offices that support student accessibility and equity.
Serves as primary threat assessment leader, coordinating threat assessment. Maintains training and certification in threat and risk assessment.
Acts at the direct liaison to campus safety, Holland Police Department, Equity and Compliance office (Title IX) and various campus departments in matters related to student conduct, conflict resolution and campus safety. Assists with data collection for the annual Clery Report.
Represents the department on various divisional, university, state, regional and national committees.
Assists in the preparation and administration of the annual operating budget for student formation.
On behalf of the office of the dean of students, responds to critical student conduct concerns in coordination with campus entities, both internal and external to the College.
Belonging and First Year Experience
In collaboration with the Associate Dean of Student Life, who has direct oversight of orientation, ensures that the college maintains an integrated top-notch onboarding experience for students entering a liberal arts residential collegiate environment.
Collaborates with the Student Support and Retention Office on matters related to first year experience.
With the Student Formation Council, sustains a holistic vision for belonging, hospitality and welcome that is connected to the overall vision for student formation at Hope College and educates students toward the outcomes of Hope Forward.
Community Life and Student Leadership
Works closely with student life and other offices to create and cultivate opportunities for student leadership and service in a global society.
Collaborates with key campus partners to develop student formation-wide student leadership initiatives, collaborating with curricular partners and other partners such as Boerigter Center and Center for Leadership.
Collaborates with the VP/Dean of Students to advise Student Congress, including direct advisement of the Student Congress Appropriations Committee.
Oversees the staff in student life to continue to develop club and organization advising structures, and works to expand those structures to the Student Formation Division.
Supports the Associate Dean of Student Life in maintaining and developing a robust and effective fraternity and sorority life program and cultivate social traditions, student activities, and student engagement across the collegiate community.
Develops and implements tools to measure student engagement across the Student Formation Division and tell the story of the Hope student experience in light of Hope Forward.
General Duties
Act as Vice President for Student Formation/Dean of Students’ designee when needed.
Serve as a key member of the Student Formation Council.
Serve on College governance committees as assigned.
Serve in on-call capacity
Work closely with campus and community partners to ensure that all students are supported throughout their Hope College experience. Engage students personally and through presence at appropriate collegiate events.
Qualifications Requirements
Master’s Degree in Higher Education Administration, Counseling, Clinical Psychology, Social Work or related field.
7-10 years professional experience in student conduct, mediation, Title IX. Experience to include resolution of complex student issues including interfacing with families and other constituents.
Demonstrated commitment to the Christian mission of Hope College, and ability to develop and enact policies, procedures and programs that reflect Hope College’s mission, virtues of public discourse and Christian Aspirations.
Supervisory experience, to include leading and developing effective training.
Ability to cultivate relationships with a wide range of stakeholders.
Experience and knowledge in student conduct administration, policy development, ethics.
Demonstrated ability to work with a diverse campus population.
Demonstrated ability to manage multiple tasks and exercise sound judgment in complex situations.
Strong written and verbal communication skills.
Strong analytical skills.
Excellent emotional intelligence.
Ability to create contexts for belonging, understanding and grace in conduct and resolution processes.
Preferred:
Maxient, NABITA, ASCA knowledge and engagement.
Earned doctorate degree.
Physical Demands This position requires remaining in a sitting or standing position for frequent periods of time; uses office machinery such as a computers, printers, copy machines; Occasionally involves moving items over 10 pounds; frequently will move between different offices/workspaces/buildings; and requires effective communication abilities. In the case of temporary or permanent condition(s) that require(s) accommodation(s), reasonable accommodation(s) may be requested.
Pre-employment Screenings All offers of employment are contingent upon a background check. Some positions may have position specific requirements, such as education/licensure/certification verification, a physical, drug screening, credit checks and/or transportation record review.
Posting Detail Information
Posting Number 2023-208SR
Job Posting Open Date 03/05/2024
Job Posting Close Date
Open Until Filled Yes
Is this position available for sponsorship No
Special Instructions to Applicants
Clark College
Clark College, 1933 Fort Vancouver Way, Vancouver, WA
Clark College is currently accepting applications for a full-time, 12-month, exempt Director position in the Security and Safety department. This position is responsible for ensuring a safe and orderly environment in which all members of the college community can pursue their educational and professional goals. This position plans, implements and evaluates programs that protect life and property; provides services and assistance to students, faculty, staff, and community members; provides fair and equitable access to college facilities; and assures compliance with state, federal, and college regulations. About the Department: Clark College’s Security & Safety Department is comprised of non-sworn personnel that includes a Director, a Sergeant, an Administrative Manager, an Emergency Management Specialist, Communications Officers (dispatchers), Campus Security Officers and Office Aides that support the Lost and Found function. The department supports main campus with 24/7/365 coverage as well as support for our satellite campus in eastern Vancouver during that facility’s operational hours.
JOB DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
Administer, plan and implement security services for all college properties, including oversight of the hiring, training, and supervision of all department personnel.
Oversee and manage the operating budgets for the department.
Oversee, revise and enforce college policy related to security and emergency management.
Oversee, revise, and enforce department Standard Operating Procedures.
Serve as a subject matter expert to support projects, policy development or other college operations, as needed.
Ensure college compliance with federal and state requirements and serve as the college’s Compliance Officer with respect to the Jeanne Clery Act .
Maintain and distribute public information, including the publication of the college’s Annual Security Report. Provide timely warnings to the college in accordance with the Jeanne Clery Act.
Serve as a liaison between the college and local response agencies such as law enforcement, fire services, emergency medical services, public health and the Clark Regional Emergency Management Agency (CRESA).
Represent the college on formal and informal committees involved in local public safety issues.
Serve as a member of the SBCTC Safety, Security and Emergency Management Council (SSEMC).
Prepare and conduct safety and security awareness trainings and serve as a presenter during orientation sessions.
Develop written safety training materials for brochures, catalogs, and faculty/student handbooks.
Oversee or conduct investigations as needed.
Participate and support in several interdisciplinary groups such as the Safety Committee, Title IX Team, Bias Response Team, Safety and Compliance Team, Emergency Management Planning Committee, Student Care and Commencement Planning Committee.
Working with the VP of Operations, coordinate and facilitate meetings related to inclement weather as well as monitor campus conditions and weather forecasts/alerts from Clark County, the National Weather Service, and other sources.
Maintain close ties with administration and security at Hudson’s Bay High School and Washington State University Vancouver.
Oversee the college’s parking enforcement program. Review and respond to appeals of parking citations.
Oversee the authorization and production of employee identification credentials and electronic access cards.
Supervise the Emergency Management Specialist and oversee the college’s emergency response program and protocols.
Ensure that the college’s Emergency Operations Plans, and continuity of operations (COOP) plans are in place and regularly updated.
Provide leadership and guidance during emergencies or other incidents that affect the safety of the college community or college operations.
Work closely with Facilities Services to plan, coordinate, and implement improvements and modifications to college facilities that involve safety and security.
Work closely with Events Scheduling, Facilities Services, and Student Life to ensure compliance of on-campus events with college rules and regulations, building use rules, and fire regulations.
Coordinate and monitor First Amendment Activities that occur on college property.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS:
Bachelor’s degree in criminal justice or related field AND four (4) years of experience in security, law enforcement, or related field, OR Associate’s degree in criminal justice or related field AND six (6) years of experience in security, law enforcement, or related field, OR ; a minimum of ten (10) years of experience in security or law enforcement with a minimum of five (5) of those years in a formal supervisory or managerial role.
Ability to work well with people of all ages from academically, culturally, and socioeconomically diverse backgrounds.
Ability to navigate complex circumstances, often with incomplete or inaccurate information.
Ability to receive calls and potentially respond to campus emergencies at all times, day, or night.
SALARY RANGE: $94,571-$109,502 annually (commensurate with qualifications and experience). Successful candidates are typically hired at the beginning of the salary range and receive scheduled salary increment increases. Clark College offers an exceptional benefits package that includes vacation/sick leave; medical, dental, life and long-term disability insurance; retirement; and tuition waiver. APPLICATION PROCESS Required Online Application Materials:
Clark College Online Application
Current resume, with a minimum of three (3) references listed.
Cover letter describing background and experience related to qualifications and responsibilities of the position.
Responses to the supplemental questions included in the online application process.
Please apply online at www.clark.edu/jobs To contact Clark College Human Resources, please call (360) 992-2105 or email recruitment@clark.edu . APPLICATION DEADLINE: Required application materials must be completed and submitted online by 3 p.m., March 25, 2024. CONDITION OF EMPLOYMENT: Prior to a new hire, a background check including criminal record history will be conducted. Information from the background check will not necessarily preclude employment but will be considered in determining the applicant’s suitability and competence to perform in the position. Completion of academic degrees will also be verified through receipt of official transcripts. DISABILITY ACCOMMODATIONS Upon request, accommodations are available to persons with disabilities for the application process. Contact Human Resources at (360)992-2105 or by video phone at (360)991-0901. SECURITY The security of all the members of the campus community is of vital concern to Clark College. Information regarding crime prevention advice, the authority of the Security/Safety Department, policies concerning reporting of any crimes which may occur on or near college property, and crime statistics for the most recent 3-year period may be requested from the Clark College Security/Safety Department, (360) 992-2133 or security.requests@clark.edu . The most recent Annual Security Report, written in compliance with the Clery Act, can be reviewed here: http://www.clark.edu/campus-life/student-support/security/report.php . ELIGIBILITY VERIFICATION If you are hired, you will need proof of identity, and documentation of U.S. citizenship or legal authorization to work. CORRECTIONS OR EXTENDED NOTICES Corrected or extended notices will be posted online and in the Human Resources Office. Clark College’s Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (ODEI) supports individuals with their academic, personal, and professional development, as well as provides training and educational resources for all members of the college community around diversity, inclusion, power, privilege, inequity, social equity, and social justice. The college offers further professional development for our employees through opportunities such as Employee Resource Groups, Social Justice Leadership Institute, Cross Institution Faculty of Color Mentorship program, Administrators of Color Leadership Program, and Faculty and Staff of Color Conference. Clark College values diversity and is an Equal Opportunity Employer and Educator. Protected group members are strongly encouraged to apply. Clark College provides equal opportunity in education and employment and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, genetic information, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, creed, religion, honorably discharged veteran or military status, citizenship, immigration status or use of a trained guide dog or service animal. Prohibited sex discrimination includes sexual harassment (unwelcome sexual conduct of various types). The college considers equal opportunity, affirmative action, and non-discrimination to be fundamental to the mission, vision, and values of the college. All faculty and staff hired at Clark College are encouraged to embrace, continually support, and enhance social equity on our campus and in our community. The college provides reasonable accommodations for qualified students, employees, and applicants with disabilities in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act and Federal Rehabilitation Act. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding non-discrimination policies, Title II and Title IX, and Affirmative Action: Gerald Gabbard, Director of Labor and Compliance, 360-992-2317, ggabbard@clark.edu , 1933 Fort Vancouver Way, Baird 142, Vancouver, Washington 98663. Clark College is a smoke-free/drug free environment. This recruitment announcement does not reflect the entire job description and can be changed and or modified without notice. Clark College Human Resources
March 4, 2024
24-00031
Mar 04, 2024
Full time
Clark College is currently accepting applications for a full-time, 12-month, exempt Director position in the Security and Safety department. This position is responsible for ensuring a safe and orderly environment in which all members of the college community can pursue their educational and professional goals. This position plans, implements and evaluates programs that protect life and property; provides services and assistance to students, faculty, staff, and community members; provides fair and equitable access to college facilities; and assures compliance with state, federal, and college regulations. About the Department: Clark College’s Security & Safety Department is comprised of non-sworn personnel that includes a Director, a Sergeant, an Administrative Manager, an Emergency Management Specialist, Communications Officers (dispatchers), Campus Security Officers and Office Aides that support the Lost and Found function. The department supports main campus with 24/7/365 coverage as well as support for our satellite campus in eastern Vancouver during that facility’s operational hours.
JOB DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
Administer, plan and implement security services for all college properties, including oversight of the hiring, training, and supervision of all department personnel.
Oversee and manage the operating budgets for the department.
Oversee, revise and enforce college policy related to security and emergency management.
Oversee, revise, and enforce department Standard Operating Procedures.
Serve as a subject matter expert to support projects, policy development or other college operations, as needed.
Ensure college compliance with federal and state requirements and serve as the college’s Compliance Officer with respect to the Jeanne Clery Act .
Maintain and distribute public information, including the publication of the college’s Annual Security Report. Provide timely warnings to the college in accordance with the Jeanne Clery Act.
Serve as a liaison between the college and local response agencies such as law enforcement, fire services, emergency medical services, public health and the Clark Regional Emergency Management Agency (CRESA).
Represent the college on formal and informal committees involved in local public safety issues.
Serve as a member of the SBCTC Safety, Security and Emergency Management Council (SSEMC).
Prepare and conduct safety and security awareness trainings and serve as a presenter during orientation sessions.
Develop written safety training materials for brochures, catalogs, and faculty/student handbooks.
Oversee or conduct investigations as needed.
Participate and support in several interdisciplinary groups such as the Safety Committee, Title IX Team, Bias Response Team, Safety and Compliance Team, Emergency Management Planning Committee, Student Care and Commencement Planning Committee.
Working with the VP of Operations, coordinate and facilitate meetings related to inclement weather as well as monitor campus conditions and weather forecasts/alerts from Clark County, the National Weather Service, and other sources.
Maintain close ties with administration and security at Hudson’s Bay High School and Washington State University Vancouver.
Oversee the college’s parking enforcement program. Review and respond to appeals of parking citations.
Oversee the authorization and production of employee identification credentials and electronic access cards.
Supervise the Emergency Management Specialist and oversee the college’s emergency response program and protocols.
Ensure that the college’s Emergency Operations Plans, and continuity of operations (COOP) plans are in place and regularly updated.
Provide leadership and guidance during emergencies or other incidents that affect the safety of the college community or college operations.
Work closely with Facilities Services to plan, coordinate, and implement improvements and modifications to college facilities that involve safety and security.
Work closely with Events Scheduling, Facilities Services, and Student Life to ensure compliance of on-campus events with college rules and regulations, building use rules, and fire regulations.
Coordinate and monitor First Amendment Activities that occur on college property.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS:
Bachelor’s degree in criminal justice or related field AND four (4) years of experience in security, law enforcement, or related field, OR Associate’s degree in criminal justice or related field AND six (6) years of experience in security, law enforcement, or related field, OR ; a minimum of ten (10) years of experience in security or law enforcement with a minimum of five (5) of those years in a formal supervisory or managerial role.
Ability to work well with people of all ages from academically, culturally, and socioeconomically diverse backgrounds.
Ability to navigate complex circumstances, often with incomplete or inaccurate information.
Ability to receive calls and potentially respond to campus emergencies at all times, day, or night.
SALARY RANGE: $94,571-$109,502 annually (commensurate with qualifications and experience). Successful candidates are typically hired at the beginning of the salary range and receive scheduled salary increment increases. Clark College offers an exceptional benefits package that includes vacation/sick leave; medical, dental, life and long-term disability insurance; retirement; and tuition waiver. APPLICATION PROCESS Required Online Application Materials:
Clark College Online Application
Current resume, with a minimum of three (3) references listed.
Cover letter describing background and experience related to qualifications and responsibilities of the position.
Responses to the supplemental questions included in the online application process.
Please apply online at www.clark.edu/jobs To contact Clark College Human Resources, please call (360) 992-2105 or email recruitment@clark.edu . APPLICATION DEADLINE: Required application materials must be completed and submitted online by 3 p.m., March 25, 2024. CONDITION OF EMPLOYMENT: Prior to a new hire, a background check including criminal record history will be conducted. Information from the background check will not necessarily preclude employment but will be considered in determining the applicant’s suitability and competence to perform in the position. Completion of academic degrees will also be verified through receipt of official transcripts. DISABILITY ACCOMMODATIONS Upon request, accommodations are available to persons with disabilities for the application process. Contact Human Resources at (360)992-2105 or by video phone at (360)991-0901. SECURITY The security of all the members of the campus community is of vital concern to Clark College. Information regarding crime prevention advice, the authority of the Security/Safety Department, policies concerning reporting of any crimes which may occur on or near college property, and crime statistics for the most recent 3-year period may be requested from the Clark College Security/Safety Department, (360) 992-2133 or security.requests@clark.edu . The most recent Annual Security Report, written in compliance with the Clery Act, can be reviewed here: http://www.clark.edu/campus-life/student-support/security/report.php . ELIGIBILITY VERIFICATION If you are hired, you will need proof of identity, and documentation of U.S. citizenship or legal authorization to work. CORRECTIONS OR EXTENDED NOTICES Corrected or extended notices will be posted online and in the Human Resources Office. Clark College’s Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (ODEI) supports individuals with their academic, personal, and professional development, as well as provides training and educational resources for all members of the college community around diversity, inclusion, power, privilege, inequity, social equity, and social justice. The college offers further professional development for our employees through opportunities such as Employee Resource Groups, Social Justice Leadership Institute, Cross Institution Faculty of Color Mentorship program, Administrators of Color Leadership Program, and Faculty and Staff of Color Conference. Clark College values diversity and is an Equal Opportunity Employer and Educator. Protected group members are strongly encouraged to apply. Clark College provides equal opportunity in education and employment and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, genetic information, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, creed, religion, honorably discharged veteran or military status, citizenship, immigration status or use of a trained guide dog or service animal. Prohibited sex discrimination includes sexual harassment (unwelcome sexual conduct of various types). The college considers equal opportunity, affirmative action, and non-discrimination to be fundamental to the mission, vision, and values of the college. All faculty and staff hired at Clark College are encouraged to embrace, continually support, and enhance social equity on our campus and in our community. The college provides reasonable accommodations for qualified students, employees, and applicants with disabilities in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act and Federal Rehabilitation Act. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding non-discrimination policies, Title II and Title IX, and Affirmative Action: Gerald Gabbard, Director of Labor and Compliance, 360-992-2317, ggabbard@clark.edu , 1933 Fort Vancouver Way, Baird 142, Vancouver, Washington 98663. Clark College is a smoke-free/drug free environment. This recruitment announcement does not reflect the entire job description and can be changed and or modified without notice. Clark College Human Resources
March 4, 2024
24-00031
Please use Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox when accessing Candidate Home. By joining the American Red Cross you will touch millions of lives every year and experience the greatness of the human spirit at its best. Are you ready to be part of the world's largest humanitarian network? Join us—Where your Career is a Force for Good! Job Description: Why Choose Us? As one of the nation’s premier humanitarian organizations, the American Red Cross is dedicated to helping people in need throughout the United States and, in association with other Red Cross networks, throughout the world. When you join our team, you have a direct impact on a meaningful mission, and you can help save lives every day. If you share our passion for helping people, join us in this excellent career opportunity. Work where your career is a force for good. We are committed to the diversity of our workforce and to delivering our programs and services in a culturally competent manner reflecting the communities we serve. Our work environment is collaborative, respectful, and inclusive with a focus on building allyship and a culture of belonging that empowers all team members. Come to learn, grow, and succeed while sharing your passion for making a difference. The Red Cross supports a variety of cultural and community resource groups for employees and volunteers. From the Ability Network, our Asian American & Pacific Islander Resource Group, the Latino Resource Group, and Red Cross PRIDE, to the Umoja African American Resource Group, our Veterans+ Resource Group, and the Women’s Resource Group, these networks provide connections, mentoring and help give voice to important concerns and opinions. At the American Red Cross, your uniqueness can shine! The American Red Cross is currently seeking a Regional Chief Operating Officer to support the Connecticut and Rhode Island Region. The location for this dynamic opportunity is at the regional HQ office in Farmington, CT. WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: The Regional COO provides leadership, vision, and strategic planning for a region with mobile collections or non-biomed facilities only. Direct, administer and coordinate the region’s organizational and business activities to ensure goals, priorities and timelines are met. Lead all regional administrative functions. Provide support, development and/or leadership guidance to all volunteers. Perform all duties and responsibilities in compliance with standard operating procedures and other applicable Federal, State and local regulations. WHERE YOUR CAREER IS A FORCE GOOD: 1. Supervise, coach and mentor management, employees, and volunteers in multiple areas throughout a region with mobile collections or non-biomed facilities only. 2. Provide ongoing analysis, monitor, forecast, and interpret financial reports and fundraising budgets for chapter boards and executives within region to ensure fiduciary responsibility and compliance. 3. Liaise with corporate functions (Finance, Human Resources, Information Technology, Real Estate, Facilities/Fleet Management, Risk Management, Office of General Counsel, etc) to ensure responsibilities correlating to these functions are accomplished within the region. Oversee the upkeep and safe operations of all vehicles and trailers within the region’s fleet. Ensure that real estate transactions are carried out in accordance with policies and procedures. Ensure maintenance of buildings and grounds for all facilities within the region. Ensure Continuity of Operations (COOP) plans are in place and updated for all facilities within the region. 4. Serve as the service delivery regional liaison ensuring that a collaborative partnership is maintained with Preparedness, Health and Safety Services (PHSS) and Biomed to ensure a One American Red Cross approach to service delivery within the Region. Facilitates the planning process including all stakeholders in the event a community service program is transitioned from the Red Cross to another organization. 5. Oversee personnel management, program development, operations, revenue, and expense targets for all Community Service programs within the region. Establish operating policies and procedures that affect departments and subordinate sections and work units. Interpret company-wide policies and procedures. Develop budgets, schedules, and performance standards. The salary range for this position is ( CT ): $122,000- 130,000. Note that American Red Cross salaries are aligned to the specific geographic location in which the work is primarily performed. Other factors that may be used to determine your actual salary may include your specific skills, how many years of experience you have and comparison to other employees already in this role. WHAT YOU NEED TO SUCCEED: Education: Bachelor's degree required. Experience: Minimum 7 years of related experience or equivalent combination of education and related experience required. Management Experience: 5 years of management experience. Skills & Abilities: Ability to work on a team. Ability to plan, prioritize and organize work to maximize team performance and meet customer expectations. Excellent organizational skills and ability to work with attention to detail. Strong project management skills. Strong interpersonal skills and the ability to create and maintain collaborative work relationships within the organization and with external stakeholders. Refined critical thinking, analysis and problem-solving skills and the ability to establish and adjust to current and emerging priorities and negotiate multiple complex activities. Travel: Travel is required throughout the Region. Some out-of-region travel may also be required. *Combination of candidate’s education and general experience satisfies requirements so long as the total years equate to description’s minimum education and general experience years combined (Management experience cannot be substituted). ------------------------- Physical Requirements Physical requirements are those present in normal office environment conditions. Operational flexibility is required to meet sudden and unpredictable needs. Ability to use a personal computer, applicable software, and office equipment for sustained periods of time. May include sitting for long periods of time, driving a vehicle, and working under challenging conditions. DISCLAIMER: The above statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed by individuals assigned to this position. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified. *LI-MM1 IND123 Apply now! Joining our team will provide you with the opportunity to make a difference every day. The American Red Cross is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, religion, national origin, disability, protected veteran status, age, or any other characteristic protected by law. Interested in Volunteering? Life’s emergencies don’t stop, and neither do American Red Cross volunteers, who represent more than 90 percent of our workforce to help prevent and alleviate human suffering. You can make a difference by volunteering in a position that appeals to you and allows you to use your unique skills and talents. The Red Cross relies on generous volunteers who give their time and talent to help fulfill our lifesaving mission. Visit redcross.org/volunteertoday to learn more, including our most-needed volunteer positions. To view the EEOC Summary of Rights, click here: Summary of Rights
Feb 14, 2024
Please use Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox when accessing Candidate Home. By joining the American Red Cross you will touch millions of lives every year and experience the greatness of the human spirit at its best. Are you ready to be part of the world's largest humanitarian network? Join us—Where your Career is a Force for Good! Job Description: Why Choose Us? As one of the nation’s premier humanitarian organizations, the American Red Cross is dedicated to helping people in need throughout the United States and, in association with other Red Cross networks, throughout the world. When you join our team, you have a direct impact on a meaningful mission, and you can help save lives every day. If you share our passion for helping people, join us in this excellent career opportunity. Work where your career is a force for good. We are committed to the diversity of our workforce and to delivering our programs and services in a culturally competent manner reflecting the communities we serve. Our work environment is collaborative, respectful, and inclusive with a focus on building allyship and a culture of belonging that empowers all team members. Come to learn, grow, and succeed while sharing your passion for making a difference. The Red Cross supports a variety of cultural and community resource groups for employees and volunteers. From the Ability Network, our Asian American & Pacific Islander Resource Group, the Latino Resource Group, and Red Cross PRIDE, to the Umoja African American Resource Group, our Veterans+ Resource Group, and the Women’s Resource Group, these networks provide connections, mentoring and help give voice to important concerns and opinions. At the American Red Cross, your uniqueness can shine! The American Red Cross is currently seeking a Regional Chief Operating Officer to support the Connecticut and Rhode Island Region. The location for this dynamic opportunity is at the regional HQ office in Farmington, CT. WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: The Regional COO provides leadership, vision, and strategic planning for a region with mobile collections or non-biomed facilities only. Direct, administer and coordinate the region’s organizational and business activities to ensure goals, priorities and timelines are met. Lead all regional administrative functions. Provide support, development and/or leadership guidance to all volunteers. Perform all duties and responsibilities in compliance with standard operating procedures and other applicable Federal, State and local regulations. WHERE YOUR CAREER IS A FORCE GOOD: 1. Supervise, coach and mentor management, employees, and volunteers in multiple areas throughout a region with mobile collections or non-biomed facilities only. 2. Provide ongoing analysis, monitor, forecast, and interpret financial reports and fundraising budgets for chapter boards and executives within region to ensure fiduciary responsibility and compliance. 3. Liaise with corporate functions (Finance, Human Resources, Information Technology, Real Estate, Facilities/Fleet Management, Risk Management, Office of General Counsel, etc) to ensure responsibilities correlating to these functions are accomplished within the region. Oversee the upkeep and safe operations of all vehicles and trailers within the region’s fleet. Ensure that real estate transactions are carried out in accordance with policies and procedures. Ensure maintenance of buildings and grounds for all facilities within the region. Ensure Continuity of Operations (COOP) plans are in place and updated for all facilities within the region. 4. Serve as the service delivery regional liaison ensuring that a collaborative partnership is maintained with Preparedness, Health and Safety Services (PHSS) and Biomed to ensure a One American Red Cross approach to service delivery within the Region. Facilitates the planning process including all stakeholders in the event a community service program is transitioned from the Red Cross to another organization. 5. Oversee personnel management, program development, operations, revenue, and expense targets for all Community Service programs within the region. Establish operating policies and procedures that affect departments and subordinate sections and work units. Interpret company-wide policies and procedures. Develop budgets, schedules, and performance standards. The salary range for this position is ( CT ): $122,000- 130,000. Note that American Red Cross salaries are aligned to the specific geographic location in which the work is primarily performed. Other factors that may be used to determine your actual salary may include your specific skills, how many years of experience you have and comparison to other employees already in this role. WHAT YOU NEED TO SUCCEED: Education: Bachelor's degree required. Experience: Minimum 7 years of related experience or equivalent combination of education and related experience required. Management Experience: 5 years of management experience. Skills & Abilities: Ability to work on a team. Ability to plan, prioritize and organize work to maximize team performance and meet customer expectations. Excellent organizational skills and ability to work with attention to detail. Strong project management skills. Strong interpersonal skills and the ability to create and maintain collaborative work relationships within the organization and with external stakeholders. Refined critical thinking, analysis and problem-solving skills and the ability to establish and adjust to current and emerging priorities and negotiate multiple complex activities. Travel: Travel is required throughout the Region. Some out-of-region travel may also be required. *Combination of candidate’s education and general experience satisfies requirements so long as the total years equate to description’s minimum education and general experience years combined (Management experience cannot be substituted). ------------------------- Physical Requirements Physical requirements are those present in normal office environment conditions. Operational flexibility is required to meet sudden and unpredictable needs. Ability to use a personal computer, applicable software, and office equipment for sustained periods of time. May include sitting for long periods of time, driving a vehicle, and working under challenging conditions. DISCLAIMER: The above statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed by individuals assigned to this position. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified. *LI-MM1 IND123 Apply now! Joining our team will provide you with the opportunity to make a difference every day. The American Red Cross is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, religion, national origin, disability, protected veteran status, age, or any other characteristic protected by law. Interested in Volunteering? Life’s emergencies don’t stop, and neither do American Red Cross volunteers, who represent more than 90 percent of our workforce to help prevent and alleviate human suffering. You can make a difference by volunteering in a position that appeals to you and allows you to use your unique skills and talents. The Red Cross relies on generous volunteers who give their time and talent to help fulfill our lifesaving mission. Visit redcross.org/volunteertoday to learn more, including our most-needed volunteer positions. To view the EEOC Summary of Rights, click here: Summary of Rights
Water for People
Bolivia, Great Britain, United States, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Malawai, Peru, Rwanda, Uganda
Water For People is a global nonprofit working across nine countries, bringing together communities, local entrepreneurs, and governments to build and maintain water and sanitation services that will last. We have a sustainable solution to end the global water and sanitation crisis, and our employees across the world help drive this solution.
ABOUT THIS ROLE
In this dynamic role, the Chief Growth Officer (CGO) will be not only responsible for achieving revenue targets but will also take a holistic approach to the growth of the organization, going beyond traditional fundraising. This person will hold the vision and execution for the powerful role philanthropy can play at Water For People and in the broader water and sanitation sector.
The Chief Growth Officer is responsible for:
What the goals are (and making sure the team is always focused on them).
Setting of priorities (around projects, prospects, and plans).
Strategies we will pursue. (This role may not generate all the strategy, but it needs to confirm/enrich it and provide both support and a framework for its execution).
Who will do what.
How and at what point individual and team performance will be measured
With a primary focus on delivering the growth plan aligned with our Destination 2030 vision which includes growing revenue to $75M annually, increasing awareness of the urgency of the global water crisis and Water For People’s role, and leveraging organizational priorities to drive impact, the CGO will lead in five priority growth areas: More dollars, more donors, more engagement, more awareness, and more intentionality. The CGO will be responsible for implementing and adapting Water For People’s global growth strategy.
IN THIS ROLE YOU WILL
Form strong partnerships with Co-CEOs, Chief Finance and Administration Officer (CFAO), Chief Impact Officer (CIO), Senior Director of Finance (SDF), and Regional Directors to develop multi-year organizational fundraising priorities, revenue targets and projections, effective engagement plans for high-level current and potential supporters and the media, and accurate and timely updates to the Board.
Work with the Donor Impact team and the Global Leadership Team (GLT) to execute the current growth plan aligned with the strategic plan tied with Destination 2030 and with the One For All Alliance; key emphasis will be on growing the number of new prospects/donors and strengthening the portfolio in the long-term into a greater number of key donors/funders.
Ensure performance, strategy, and alignment of the organization's revenue-generating activities and external relations including brand and communications.
Lead analysis of fundraising strategies and approaches to align with current market trends while staying flexible and innovative.
Work closely with the CFAO & SDF on the revenue budget process, including budget formation, evaluating risk, generating reports and creating revenue budget for two-year revenue plans.
Support on the identification of funding opportunities that match the organization’s strategy and priorities, including high wealth individuals, corporations, and/or private foundation and/or institutional funding, and as requested, support in the engagement of current donors across all funding levels to promote long-term funding relationships.
Lead the Donor Impact team in establishing a strong culture, a people-first mentality that focuses on staff retention and growth, and work with the members of the Donor Impact team on meeting their individual and team annual goals and targets.
Partner with Regional Directors in LATAM, Africa, and India, build capacity of regional teams to grow and attract potential in-country fundraising. Oversee the development and implementation of policies and systems that support growth.
Keep abreast of developments in marketing, communications, philanthropy and fund development, and share and inform GLT, Board, and Donor Impact
Ensure compliance with all relevant regulations and laws, maintain accountability standards to donors, and follow code of ethical principles and standards of professional conduct for fundraising executives.
Serve as GLT representative on the Board Development Committee, bringing practical insight and best-practice strategy to the work of the Board in the realm of revenue generation; support and partner with the Board around elevating the organization on the driving focus areas of more dollars, more donors, more engagement, more awareness, and more intentionality.
Promote and inspire increased brand recognition for the organization while expanding global understanding of the water crisis.
Gives vision and framing on the goals, structure, growth, and strategy of the Donor Impact Team.
YOU WILL EXCEL IN THIS ROLE IF YOU HAVE
15+ years of general experience that show progressively responsible and relevant experience in fundraising, business development, marketing, communications, and revenue growth.
10 years of remarkable experience with Business Development / Fundraising in nonprofits, managing multi-million-dollar budgets exceeding $15 million USD.
Demonstrated evidence of outstanding results and achievements working with multi-lateral, individual, foundation, and/or corporate funding of multi-million-dollar grants.
At least 7 years of people management experience.
Experience collaborating and building partnerships with senior leadership, board members, and other key internal and external stakeholder groups.
Experience working in international development and familiarity with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Strong analytical skills and data-driven mindset.
Bold and effective networker to introduce and strengthen relationships which promote increasing revenue and/or the recognition and messaging of Water For People.
BONUS POINTS IF YOU HAVE
Experience working at the intersection of WASH and cross-cutting issues, such as climate change, gender and social inclusion, health, etc.
Spanish language skills.
Don’t meet every single requirement but you are excited about this role? Water For People is committed to building a diverse, inclusive and authentic workplace, so we encourage to apply even if your past experience does not align perfectly with every qualification listed above.
MORE ABOUT THIS ROLE
Ability to travel up to 15% of the time domestically and internationally including to developing countries where travel is rugged.
Ability to work outside typical offices hours at times to collaborate across multiple time zones.
This position has the option to work from an office or remotely in one of the following countries where Water For People is present: Guatemala, Honduras, Bolivia, Peru, India, Malawi, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, the United Kingdom or the United States. Candidates must be a citizen or legally authorized to work in the country in which they live.
Water For People will not support remote work from other countries besides those listed above and from the following states: NY, NJ, WA, VT and CA.
Note: This job description is not intended to be an exhaustive list of all duties, responsibilities, or qualifications associated with the job.
HOW YOU WILL APPLY:
If Water For People and this position interest you, please visit our Career Center and apply with your resume and cover letter to this position.
OUR BENEFITS:
Benefits are one of the ways we encourage healthy living for you and your family. Our generous package includes medical, dental and vision coverage. But health is more than a well-working body: it encompasses body, mind, and social well-being. To that end, we provide a global Telehealth benefit, flexible time off and a generous retirement savings plan. If the position is based outside the US, benefits will be dictated by the country in which the selected candidate is located.
Water For People cannot provide immigration sponsorship for this position.
Water For People is committed to protecting children encountered during our work and by our employees, preventing sexual abuse and exploitation of all individuals with a particular focus on women and children and other marginalized communities in the performance of our work, preventing human trafficking in the performance of our work and in our supply chain and to having a drug-free workplace. During the recruitment processes, additional documentation will be requested to comply with our policies and in accordance with the legal requirements in your country of residency, this includes a background check. If you apply for employment, we want you to be aware of our recruitment, selection and hiring processes including important policies regarding employee conduct.
Water For People is an equal opportunity employer who is committed to creating a culture of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion in our workplace. For this position we strongly encourage women and people with disabilities to apply. Water for people strives to create and maintain a level of diversity that reflects the communities we serve. Achieving this—regardless of race, ethnicity, ancestry, tribal affiliation, age, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, veteran status, disability, socioeconomic class, educational attainment, or other social identities is critical to our ability to have a world where every person has access to reliable and safe water and sanitation services.
Our commitment ensures that we:
Have a different array of thinking that comes from diverse backgrounds and cultures, enabling us to solve some of the world’s greatest challenges
Strive for a culture of inclusion and belonging by treating each other with dignity, respect, and appreciation enabling us to feel welcome, supported, and valued
Effectively connect, communicate, and build long-lasting relationships with stakeholders within our diverse communities
Have diversity of thought, perspectives, backgrounds, identities, and talents that will support our mission to develop high-quality drinking water and sanitation services are available to Everyone Forever
Dec 15, 2023
Full time
Water For People is a global nonprofit working across nine countries, bringing together communities, local entrepreneurs, and governments to build and maintain water and sanitation services that will last. We have a sustainable solution to end the global water and sanitation crisis, and our employees across the world help drive this solution.
ABOUT THIS ROLE
In this dynamic role, the Chief Growth Officer (CGO) will be not only responsible for achieving revenue targets but will also take a holistic approach to the growth of the organization, going beyond traditional fundraising. This person will hold the vision and execution for the powerful role philanthropy can play at Water For People and in the broader water and sanitation sector.
The Chief Growth Officer is responsible for:
What the goals are (and making sure the team is always focused on them).
Setting of priorities (around projects, prospects, and plans).
Strategies we will pursue. (This role may not generate all the strategy, but it needs to confirm/enrich it and provide both support and a framework for its execution).
Who will do what.
How and at what point individual and team performance will be measured
With a primary focus on delivering the growth plan aligned with our Destination 2030 vision which includes growing revenue to $75M annually, increasing awareness of the urgency of the global water crisis and Water For People’s role, and leveraging organizational priorities to drive impact, the CGO will lead in five priority growth areas: More dollars, more donors, more engagement, more awareness, and more intentionality. The CGO will be responsible for implementing and adapting Water For People’s global growth strategy.
IN THIS ROLE YOU WILL
Form strong partnerships with Co-CEOs, Chief Finance and Administration Officer (CFAO), Chief Impact Officer (CIO), Senior Director of Finance (SDF), and Regional Directors to develop multi-year organizational fundraising priorities, revenue targets and projections, effective engagement plans for high-level current and potential supporters and the media, and accurate and timely updates to the Board.
Work with the Donor Impact team and the Global Leadership Team (GLT) to execute the current growth plan aligned with the strategic plan tied with Destination 2030 and with the One For All Alliance; key emphasis will be on growing the number of new prospects/donors and strengthening the portfolio in the long-term into a greater number of key donors/funders.
Ensure performance, strategy, and alignment of the organization's revenue-generating activities and external relations including brand and communications.
Lead analysis of fundraising strategies and approaches to align with current market trends while staying flexible and innovative.
Work closely with the CFAO & SDF on the revenue budget process, including budget formation, evaluating risk, generating reports and creating revenue budget for two-year revenue plans.
Support on the identification of funding opportunities that match the organization’s strategy and priorities, including high wealth individuals, corporations, and/or private foundation and/or institutional funding, and as requested, support in the engagement of current donors across all funding levels to promote long-term funding relationships.
Lead the Donor Impact team in establishing a strong culture, a people-first mentality that focuses on staff retention and growth, and work with the members of the Donor Impact team on meeting their individual and team annual goals and targets.
Partner with Regional Directors in LATAM, Africa, and India, build capacity of regional teams to grow and attract potential in-country fundraising. Oversee the development and implementation of policies and systems that support growth.
Keep abreast of developments in marketing, communications, philanthropy and fund development, and share and inform GLT, Board, and Donor Impact
Ensure compliance with all relevant regulations and laws, maintain accountability standards to donors, and follow code of ethical principles and standards of professional conduct for fundraising executives.
Serve as GLT representative on the Board Development Committee, bringing practical insight and best-practice strategy to the work of the Board in the realm of revenue generation; support and partner with the Board around elevating the organization on the driving focus areas of more dollars, more donors, more engagement, more awareness, and more intentionality.
Promote and inspire increased brand recognition for the organization while expanding global understanding of the water crisis.
Gives vision and framing on the goals, structure, growth, and strategy of the Donor Impact Team.
YOU WILL EXCEL IN THIS ROLE IF YOU HAVE
15+ years of general experience that show progressively responsible and relevant experience in fundraising, business development, marketing, communications, and revenue growth.
10 years of remarkable experience with Business Development / Fundraising in nonprofits, managing multi-million-dollar budgets exceeding $15 million USD.
Demonstrated evidence of outstanding results and achievements working with multi-lateral, individual, foundation, and/or corporate funding of multi-million-dollar grants.
At least 7 years of people management experience.
Experience collaborating and building partnerships with senior leadership, board members, and other key internal and external stakeholder groups.
Experience working in international development and familiarity with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Strong analytical skills and data-driven mindset.
Bold and effective networker to introduce and strengthen relationships which promote increasing revenue and/or the recognition and messaging of Water For People.
BONUS POINTS IF YOU HAVE
Experience working at the intersection of WASH and cross-cutting issues, such as climate change, gender and social inclusion, health, etc.
Spanish language skills.
Don’t meet every single requirement but you are excited about this role? Water For People is committed to building a diverse, inclusive and authentic workplace, so we encourage to apply even if your past experience does not align perfectly with every qualification listed above.
MORE ABOUT THIS ROLE
Ability to travel up to 15% of the time domestically and internationally including to developing countries where travel is rugged.
Ability to work outside typical offices hours at times to collaborate across multiple time zones.
This position has the option to work from an office or remotely in one of the following countries where Water For People is present: Guatemala, Honduras, Bolivia, Peru, India, Malawi, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, the United Kingdom or the United States. Candidates must be a citizen or legally authorized to work in the country in which they live.
Water For People will not support remote work from other countries besides those listed above and from the following states: NY, NJ, WA, VT and CA.
Note: This job description is not intended to be an exhaustive list of all duties, responsibilities, or qualifications associated with the job.
HOW YOU WILL APPLY:
If Water For People and this position interest you, please visit our Career Center and apply with your resume and cover letter to this position.
OUR BENEFITS:
Benefits are one of the ways we encourage healthy living for you and your family. Our generous package includes medical, dental and vision coverage. But health is more than a well-working body: it encompasses body, mind, and social well-being. To that end, we provide a global Telehealth benefit, flexible time off and a generous retirement savings plan. If the position is based outside the US, benefits will be dictated by the country in which the selected candidate is located.
Water For People cannot provide immigration sponsorship for this position.
Water For People is committed to protecting children encountered during our work and by our employees, preventing sexual abuse and exploitation of all individuals with a particular focus on women and children and other marginalized communities in the performance of our work, preventing human trafficking in the performance of our work and in our supply chain and to having a drug-free workplace. During the recruitment processes, additional documentation will be requested to comply with our policies and in accordance with the legal requirements in your country of residency, this includes a background check. If you apply for employment, we want you to be aware of our recruitment, selection and hiring processes including important policies regarding employee conduct.
Water For People is an equal opportunity employer who is committed to creating a culture of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion in our workplace. For this position we strongly encourage women and people with disabilities to apply. Water for people strives to create and maintain a level of diversity that reflects the communities we serve. Achieving this—regardless of race, ethnicity, ancestry, tribal affiliation, age, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, veteran status, disability, socioeconomic class, educational attainment, or other social identities is critical to our ability to have a world where every person has access to reliable and safe water and sanitation services.
Our commitment ensures that we:
Have a different array of thinking that comes from diverse backgrounds and cultures, enabling us to solve some of the world’s greatest challenges
Strive for a culture of inclusion and belonging by treating each other with dignity, respect, and appreciation enabling us to feel welcome, supported, and valued
Effectively connect, communicate, and build long-lasting relationships with stakeholders within our diverse communities
Have diversity of thought, perspectives, backgrounds, identities, and talents that will support our mission to develop high-quality drinking water and sanitation services are available to Everyone Forever
Please use Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox when accessing Candidate Home. By joining the American Red Cross you will touch millions of lives every year and experience the greatness of the human spirit at its best. Are you ready to be part of the world's largest humanitarian network? Join us—Where your Career is a Force for Good! Job Description: CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, GREATER NEW YORK REGION Applications including cover letters and resumes, as well as nominations, should be sent to the attention of Susan Meade and Paul Spivey at RedCrossNY@PhillipsOppenheim.com . STOP and READ! DO NOT APPLY VIA THIS RED CROSS CAREERS WEBSITE. NO ONE WILL BE REVIEWING RESUMES FOR THIS POSITION HERE. YOU WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED UNLESS YOU APPLY USING THE ABOVE EMAIL ADDRESS. Why Choose Us? The American Red Cross is currently seeking the Regional CEO for the Greater New York Region. Headquartered in New York City, the Greater New York Region serves more than 12 million people in New York City, Long Island, Rockland and Westchester Counties, and Greenwich, Connecticut, and is the highest-profile Region in the Red Cross network. As one of the nation’s premier humanitarian organizations, the American Red Cross is dedicated to helping people in need throughout the United States and, in association with other Red Cross networks, throughout the world. As a member of the team, the CEO has a direct impact on a meaningful mission and can help save lives every day. The Red Cross is committed to the diversity of its workforce and to delivering programs and services in a culturally competent manner, reflecting the communities it serves. Its work environment is collaborative, respectful, and inclusive, with a focus on building allyship and a culture of belonging that empowers all team members. The Red Cross offers the opportunity to learn, grow, and succeed while making a difference. It supports a variety of cultural and community resource groups for employees and volunteers. From the Ability Network, the Asian American and Pacific Islander Employer Resource Group, the Latino Resource Group, and Red Cross PRIDE, to the Umoja African American Resource Group, the Veterans+ Resource Group, and the Women’s Resource Group, these networks provide connections, mentoring and help give voice to important concerns and opinions. At the American Red Cross, your uniqueness can shine! The Red Cross responds to approximately seven emergencies and disasters a day across the region – home fires, floods, building collapses – and more, providing shelter, food, clothing, and emotional support at no cost to those in need. WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: THE POSITION The Regional CEO leads a team of paid and volunteer staff to prevent and alleviate human suffering in the face of emergencies and support resilient communities throughout the Region by mobilizing the power of volunteers and the generosity of donors. The successful candidate should have demonstrated experience building relationships with key external stakeholders, being the face of an organization, and demonstrating strong fund development skills. WHERE YOUR CAREER IS A FORCE FOR GOOD: Responsibilities Core mission delivery, fundraising and representing the Red Cross to media and donors and in communities throughout the region. Managing community resilience programs, working with community partners to ensure that the communities build local capacity to prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover from disasters. Ensuring that volunteers, including youth, are engaged in Red Cross service. Supervising executive directors (EDs) who provide local leadership and serve as the face of the Red Cross in their communities. Achieving performance targets for the Region, including service delivery, fundraising/revenue, and expense targets. In conjunction with the Division Fundraising Vice President (DFVP), the CEO has primary responsibility across the region for achievement of fundraising goals. Utilizing the support activities of HR, IT, Finance, Communications, and Marketing through a matrix project management system to ensure that all operating units have the necessary resources to execute on their community mission. Regional Board and Advisory Board recruitment. PRIORITIES Fundraising In conjunction with the DFVP, the Regional CEO is responsible for achieving fundraising goals and acts as the chapters’ and/or Region’s chief fundraiser. They are charged with developing and growing financial resources within the Region, ensuring adequate and diversified financial resources. They will lead and participate in strategies to raise and leverage funds, including working with Regional and community boards. External Relationships and Partnerships The CEO is responsible for building strong relationships with key organizations and community leaders. They will cultivate relationships and partnerships with external constituents to further the Red Cross mission. Those partners include donors, governments, corporations, civic organizations, and other community charitable and nonprofit agencies. Visibility and Community Presence The CEO will ensure strong visibility for the American Red Cross in the Region. They will work to increase community awareness, participation, and commitment to the Red Cross by being an active community participant. They will ensure regular local media communications regarding Red Cross services and regional/national activities consistent with regional/national communication strategies. They will leverage relationships with local/regional media to ensure that the communities in the Region are provided access to information about Red Cross services/programs. Dual Responsibility for Regional Performance and Assigned Chapter and/or Region Performance Delivery of overall targets/goals of the Region any directly assigned chapters. This includes strategic and operational management/oversight of reporting chapter(s), including the effective delivery of services; meeting fundraising, revenue and expense targets; compliance with corporate governance, policies and governmental regulations. The CEO will ensure sound financial management and public accountability for contributions, income, and all Red Cross assets. They are responsible for approving any Chapter annual revenue and expense budgets and working with Division Vice President (DVP) to establish regional revenue and expense budgets. Workforce Management Hires, manages, and evaluates any EDs within Region. This is carried out in collaboration and consultation with community boards. Provides regional oversight and support of EDs within the Region. Identifies opportunities for sharing knowledge and resources between regional groups and provides access to best practices and training opportunities available through national headquarters. Internal Collaboration and Feedback Hires, manages, and evaluates any EDs within Region. This is carried out in collaboration and consultation with community boards. Provides regional oversight and support of EDs within the Region. Identifies opportunities for sharing knowledge and resources between regional groups and provides access to best practices and training opportunities available through national headquarters. Builds strong collaboration and consensus environment between all units in the Region, including any chapters. Regularly shares feedback on chapter performance with EDs in Region, community boards, and DVP. Provides direction and strategy for improved performance. Works with DVP and other regional executives to ensure coordinated outreach/ partnerships with external constituents within the Division (local and state government, donors, corporate partners, other community agencies); collaborative relationships and activities with local Red Cross Biomedical units; positive interactions with Community Boards, and management presence in local communities within the region. Service Delivery Manages and grows the community resilience programs, working with community partners to ensure that the communities build local capacity to prepare for, prevent, respond, and recover from disasters. Grows and ensures consistent, responsive delivery of high-quality chapter services throughout the Region. This includes emergency and disaster response services, services to armed forces, and international services based on regional strategies and local community needs and objectives. Increases community awareness, participation, and commitment. Builds regional capacity for service delivery through engagement and retention of volunteers and partners. Ensures that youth and young adults are engaged through a network of Red Cross clubs which are also integrated into the service delivery plans. Treats all clients, volunteers, guests, and other employees in a courteous and respectful manner at all times while maintaining a cooperative atmosphere for all. It is expected that each member of the regional management team will work with a volunteer counterpart to ensure depth within the function and that key volunteers are utilized. WHAT YOU NEED TO SUCCEED: Organizational Agility Understands how organizations work; knows how to get things done both through formal channels and informal networks; understands the origin and reasoning behind key policies, practices, and procedures; understands the cultures of organizations – able to manage up and manage down. Nimble, with ability to deliver results in a complex matrixed environment, with three boards and over 100 staff and 6,000 volunteers. Ability to Deal with Ambiguity and Manage Complexity Can effectively cope with change and shift gears comfortably; can decide and act without the total picture; not upset by unresolved issues; doesn’t have to finish before moving on; can comfortably handle risk and uncertainty. Able to effectively deliver results in complex environments, incorporating factors such as a large geographic area, high disaster risk, major media, multiple government or political entities, large fundraising goals, and a diverse community population. Interpersonal Strengths Relates well to all kinds of people – inside and outside the organization; builds appropriate support; builds constructive and effective relationships; uses diplomacy and tact; can defuse even high-tension situations comfortably. Professionalism and Integrity Evaluates lessons learned from both successes and failures; demonstrates willingness to make commitments based on information known at the time; delivers on commitments; models a can-do attitude and takes initiative; is a self-starter; inspires and motivates others to do the same. Embraces rather than resists additional responsibilities. Adheres to enterprise policies; acts with integrity; settles rather than creates conflict. Manage Vision and Purpose Communicates a compelling and inspired vision or sense of core purpose; talks beyond today and about possibilities; is optimistic; creates mileposts and symbols to rally support behind the vision; makes the vision sharable by everyone; can inspire and motivate units or organizations. Qualifications and Experience Four-year college degree (BS/BA). Master’s degree preferred. Experience in the for-profit or not-for-profit sector in business, sales, or corporate administration; proven track record raising significant financial resources. Able to develop effective work teams and build consensus within the organization and community. Strong influencing skills along with public speaking and writing. Exercises good judgment in difficult situations. Track record directing workforce and program management. Demonstrated ability to develop effective work teams and build consensus within the organization and community. Knowledge of the region – established contacts with funders, community groups, and government officials. Other Travel within communities served in the region and division; participation in meetings and conferences throughout the Red Cross system. Work Conditions Work is performed indoors with some exposure to safety and health hazards related to emergency services relief work. Since the Red Cross is a disaster response organization, staff may be asked to be on 24-hour call during major disasters. COMPENSATION RANGE AND BENEFITS FOR YOU: The salary range for this position is $285,000 to $300,000. At the American Red Cross, we recognize and reward exceptional performance. In addition to the base salary, you will have the opportunity to earn an annual performance-based incentive. We take care of you, while you take care of others. As a mission-based organization, we believe our team needs great support to do great work. Our comprehensive benefits help you in balancing home and work. With our resources and perks, you have amazing possibilities at the American Red Cross to advance the learn. Medical, Dental Vision plans Health Spending Accounts & Flexible Spending Accounts PTO + Holidays 401K with 5% match Paid Family Leave Employee Assistance Disability and Insurance: Short + Long Term Service Awards and recognition The American Red Cross is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, religion, national origin, disability, protected veteran status, age, or any other characteristic protected by law. Applications including cover letters and resumes, as well as nominations, should be sent to the attention of Susan Meade and Paul Spivey at RedCrossNY@PhillipsOppenheim.com . DO NOT APPLY VIA THE RED CROSS WEBSITE. YOU WILL NOT BE NOT BE CONSIDERED. YOU MUST APPLY USING THE ABOVE EMAIL ADDRESS. Apply now! Joining our team will provide you with the opportunity to make a difference every day. The American Red Cross is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, religion, national origin, disability, protected veteran status, age, or any other characteristic protected by law. Interested in Volunteering? Life’s emergencies don’t stop, and neither do American Red Cross volunteers, who represent more than 90 percent of our workforce to help prevent and alleviate human suffering. You can make a difference by volunteering in a position that appeals to you and allows you to use your unique skills and talents. The Red Cross relies on generous volunteers who give their time and talent to help fulfill our lifesaving mission. Visit redcross.org/volunteertoday to learn more, including our most-needed volunteer positions. To view the EEOC Summary of Rights, click here: Summary of Rights
Aug 29, 2023
Please use Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox when accessing Candidate Home. By joining the American Red Cross you will touch millions of lives every year and experience the greatness of the human spirit at its best. Are you ready to be part of the world's largest humanitarian network? Join us—Where your Career is a Force for Good! Job Description: CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, GREATER NEW YORK REGION Applications including cover letters and resumes, as well as nominations, should be sent to the attention of Susan Meade and Paul Spivey at RedCrossNY@PhillipsOppenheim.com . STOP and READ! DO NOT APPLY VIA THIS RED CROSS CAREERS WEBSITE. NO ONE WILL BE REVIEWING RESUMES FOR THIS POSITION HERE. YOU WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED UNLESS YOU APPLY USING THE ABOVE EMAIL ADDRESS. Why Choose Us? The American Red Cross is currently seeking the Regional CEO for the Greater New York Region. Headquartered in New York City, the Greater New York Region serves more than 12 million people in New York City, Long Island, Rockland and Westchester Counties, and Greenwich, Connecticut, and is the highest-profile Region in the Red Cross network. As one of the nation’s premier humanitarian organizations, the American Red Cross is dedicated to helping people in need throughout the United States and, in association with other Red Cross networks, throughout the world. As a member of the team, the CEO has a direct impact on a meaningful mission and can help save lives every day. The Red Cross is committed to the diversity of its workforce and to delivering programs and services in a culturally competent manner, reflecting the communities it serves. Its work environment is collaborative, respectful, and inclusive, with a focus on building allyship and a culture of belonging that empowers all team members. The Red Cross offers the opportunity to learn, grow, and succeed while making a difference. It supports a variety of cultural and community resource groups for employees and volunteers. From the Ability Network, the Asian American and Pacific Islander Employer Resource Group, the Latino Resource Group, and Red Cross PRIDE, to the Umoja African American Resource Group, the Veterans+ Resource Group, and the Women’s Resource Group, these networks provide connections, mentoring and help give voice to important concerns and opinions. At the American Red Cross, your uniqueness can shine! The Red Cross responds to approximately seven emergencies and disasters a day across the region – home fires, floods, building collapses – and more, providing shelter, food, clothing, and emotional support at no cost to those in need. WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: THE POSITION The Regional CEO leads a team of paid and volunteer staff to prevent and alleviate human suffering in the face of emergencies and support resilient communities throughout the Region by mobilizing the power of volunteers and the generosity of donors. The successful candidate should have demonstrated experience building relationships with key external stakeholders, being the face of an organization, and demonstrating strong fund development skills. WHERE YOUR CAREER IS A FORCE FOR GOOD: Responsibilities Core mission delivery, fundraising and representing the Red Cross to media and donors and in communities throughout the region. Managing community resilience programs, working with community partners to ensure that the communities build local capacity to prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover from disasters. Ensuring that volunteers, including youth, are engaged in Red Cross service. Supervising executive directors (EDs) who provide local leadership and serve as the face of the Red Cross in their communities. Achieving performance targets for the Region, including service delivery, fundraising/revenue, and expense targets. In conjunction with the Division Fundraising Vice President (DFVP), the CEO has primary responsibility across the region for achievement of fundraising goals. Utilizing the support activities of HR, IT, Finance, Communications, and Marketing through a matrix project management system to ensure that all operating units have the necessary resources to execute on their community mission. Regional Board and Advisory Board recruitment. PRIORITIES Fundraising In conjunction with the DFVP, the Regional CEO is responsible for achieving fundraising goals and acts as the chapters’ and/or Region’s chief fundraiser. They are charged with developing and growing financial resources within the Region, ensuring adequate and diversified financial resources. They will lead and participate in strategies to raise and leverage funds, including working with Regional and community boards. External Relationships and Partnerships The CEO is responsible for building strong relationships with key organizations and community leaders. They will cultivate relationships and partnerships with external constituents to further the Red Cross mission. Those partners include donors, governments, corporations, civic organizations, and other community charitable and nonprofit agencies. Visibility and Community Presence The CEO will ensure strong visibility for the American Red Cross in the Region. They will work to increase community awareness, participation, and commitment to the Red Cross by being an active community participant. They will ensure regular local media communications regarding Red Cross services and regional/national activities consistent with regional/national communication strategies. They will leverage relationships with local/regional media to ensure that the communities in the Region are provided access to information about Red Cross services/programs. Dual Responsibility for Regional Performance and Assigned Chapter and/or Region Performance Delivery of overall targets/goals of the Region any directly assigned chapters. This includes strategic and operational management/oversight of reporting chapter(s), including the effective delivery of services; meeting fundraising, revenue and expense targets; compliance with corporate governance, policies and governmental regulations. The CEO will ensure sound financial management and public accountability for contributions, income, and all Red Cross assets. They are responsible for approving any Chapter annual revenue and expense budgets and working with Division Vice President (DVP) to establish regional revenue and expense budgets. Workforce Management Hires, manages, and evaluates any EDs within Region. This is carried out in collaboration and consultation with community boards. Provides regional oversight and support of EDs within the Region. Identifies opportunities for sharing knowledge and resources between regional groups and provides access to best practices and training opportunities available through national headquarters. Internal Collaboration and Feedback Hires, manages, and evaluates any EDs within Region. This is carried out in collaboration and consultation with community boards. Provides regional oversight and support of EDs within the Region. Identifies opportunities for sharing knowledge and resources between regional groups and provides access to best practices and training opportunities available through national headquarters. Builds strong collaboration and consensus environment between all units in the Region, including any chapters. Regularly shares feedback on chapter performance with EDs in Region, community boards, and DVP. Provides direction and strategy for improved performance. Works with DVP and other regional executives to ensure coordinated outreach/ partnerships with external constituents within the Division (local and state government, donors, corporate partners, other community agencies); collaborative relationships and activities with local Red Cross Biomedical units; positive interactions with Community Boards, and management presence in local communities within the region. Service Delivery Manages and grows the community resilience programs, working with community partners to ensure that the communities build local capacity to prepare for, prevent, respond, and recover from disasters. Grows and ensures consistent, responsive delivery of high-quality chapter services throughout the Region. This includes emergency and disaster response services, services to armed forces, and international services based on regional strategies and local community needs and objectives. Increases community awareness, participation, and commitment. Builds regional capacity for service delivery through engagement and retention of volunteers and partners. Ensures that youth and young adults are engaged through a network of Red Cross clubs which are also integrated into the service delivery plans. Treats all clients, volunteers, guests, and other employees in a courteous and respectful manner at all times while maintaining a cooperative atmosphere for all. It is expected that each member of the regional management team will work with a volunteer counterpart to ensure depth within the function and that key volunteers are utilized. WHAT YOU NEED TO SUCCEED: Organizational Agility Understands how organizations work; knows how to get things done both through formal channels and informal networks; understands the origin and reasoning behind key policies, practices, and procedures; understands the cultures of organizations – able to manage up and manage down. Nimble, with ability to deliver results in a complex matrixed environment, with three boards and over 100 staff and 6,000 volunteers. Ability to Deal with Ambiguity and Manage Complexity Can effectively cope with change and shift gears comfortably; can decide and act without the total picture; not upset by unresolved issues; doesn’t have to finish before moving on; can comfortably handle risk and uncertainty. Able to effectively deliver results in complex environments, incorporating factors such as a large geographic area, high disaster risk, major media, multiple government or political entities, large fundraising goals, and a diverse community population. Interpersonal Strengths Relates well to all kinds of people – inside and outside the organization; builds appropriate support; builds constructive and effective relationships; uses diplomacy and tact; can defuse even high-tension situations comfortably. Professionalism and Integrity Evaluates lessons learned from both successes and failures; demonstrates willingness to make commitments based on information known at the time; delivers on commitments; models a can-do attitude and takes initiative; is a self-starter; inspires and motivates others to do the same. Embraces rather than resists additional responsibilities. Adheres to enterprise policies; acts with integrity; settles rather than creates conflict. Manage Vision and Purpose Communicates a compelling and inspired vision or sense of core purpose; talks beyond today and about possibilities; is optimistic; creates mileposts and symbols to rally support behind the vision; makes the vision sharable by everyone; can inspire and motivate units or organizations. Qualifications and Experience Four-year college degree (BS/BA). Master’s degree preferred. Experience in the for-profit or not-for-profit sector in business, sales, or corporate administration; proven track record raising significant financial resources. Able to develop effective work teams and build consensus within the organization and community. Strong influencing skills along with public speaking and writing. Exercises good judgment in difficult situations. Track record directing workforce and program management. Demonstrated ability to develop effective work teams and build consensus within the organization and community. Knowledge of the region – established contacts with funders, community groups, and government officials. Other Travel within communities served in the region and division; participation in meetings and conferences throughout the Red Cross system. Work Conditions Work is performed indoors with some exposure to safety and health hazards related to emergency services relief work. Since the Red Cross is a disaster response organization, staff may be asked to be on 24-hour call during major disasters. COMPENSATION RANGE AND BENEFITS FOR YOU: The salary range for this position is $285,000 to $300,000. At the American Red Cross, we recognize and reward exceptional performance. In addition to the base salary, you will have the opportunity to earn an annual performance-based incentive. We take care of you, while you take care of others. As a mission-based organization, we believe our team needs great support to do great work. Our comprehensive benefits help you in balancing home and work. With our resources and perks, you have amazing possibilities at the American Red Cross to advance the learn. Medical, Dental Vision plans Health Spending Accounts & Flexible Spending Accounts PTO + Holidays 401K with 5% match Paid Family Leave Employee Assistance Disability and Insurance: Short + Long Term Service Awards and recognition The American Red Cross is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, religion, national origin, disability, protected veteran status, age, or any other characteristic protected by law. Applications including cover letters and resumes, as well as nominations, should be sent to the attention of Susan Meade and Paul Spivey at RedCrossNY@PhillipsOppenheim.com . DO NOT APPLY VIA THE RED CROSS WEBSITE. YOU WILL NOT BE NOT BE CONSIDERED. YOU MUST APPLY USING THE ABOVE EMAIL ADDRESS. Apply now! Joining our team will provide you with the opportunity to make a difference every day. The American Red Cross is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, color, religion, national origin, disability, protected veteran status, age, or any other characteristic protected by law. Interested in Volunteering? Life’s emergencies don’t stop, and neither do American Red Cross volunteers, who represent more than 90 percent of our workforce to help prevent and alleviate human suffering. You can make a difference by volunteering in a position that appeals to you and allows you to use your unique skills and talents. The Red Cross relies on generous volunteers who give their time and talent to help fulfill our lifesaving mission. Visit redcross.org/volunteertoday to learn more, including our most-needed volunteer positions. To view the EEOC Summary of Rights, click here: Summary of Rights
The Director of Battery Manufacturing will oversee ZincFive’s global battery manufacturing operations, ensuring effective and efficient use of facilities and staff. The initial focus for this role will be establishing a manufacturing presence in the United States using ZincFive’s current capability in China as the starting point. The Director of Battery Manufacturing will ultimately drive the transition of ZincFive from relatively low volume, semi-automated production capability today to a fully automated high-volume battery manufacturer with a global footprint, ensuring battery capacity keeps pace with quickly accelerating customer demand. This position reports to the SVP Operations and Planning and will be performed remotely until a final location is determined for the manufacturing facility and then will transition to an onsite role.
Director of Battery Manufacturing Job Duties:
Responsible for establishing and growing a manufacturing footprint in the United States, including site selection, staff development, process knowledge transfer, environmental and safety compliance, equipment specifications and sourcing, and raw materials management
Works closely with China team to establish 2-way channel for knowledge transfer, process automation, and development of global manufacturing process and quality standards
Recruits, trains, manages, and professionally develops manufacturing personnel, establishing a fully ready team for the implementation of the U.S. production line
Develops future capability for global facilities, equipment, and workforce to ensure capacity meets business needs on a regional basis
Manages and communicates manufacturing activities within a collaborative cross-functional environment, communicating risk, and recovery activities when necessary
Develops manufacturing strategies to minimize product cost; drives cost reduction programs through improved process controls, automation, and improved material utilization
Creates and implements production reports to ensure safety, quality, financial, and delivery goals and standards are met
Ensures a healthy and safe working environment, and compliance with federal and state regulations, through collaboration with environmental, health, and safety staff.
Assists COO and SVP of Operations and Planning with long-range operating goals, expansion efforts, and implementation of new and advanced technology
Identifies and shares training opportunities for staff to build and improve skills
Organizes departmental management structure and teams for optimal, efficient operations
Works with chief financial officer to develop operating budget
Delivers progress and production reports to executive team members as requested
Supervises equipment purchase, maintenance, and layout and manages global network of key suppliers
Performs other related duties as assigned
Domestic and international travel as needed
Job Requirements:
Bachelor’s degree in relevant field
Minimum 10 years of experience in battery manufacturing
Excellent verbal and written communication skills
Excellent organizational and managerial skills
Thorough understanding of the policies and practices used in the manufacturing division
Ability to set long-term goals and communicate them to others
Ability to motivate and organize multiple efforts to accomplish goals
Preferred Skills:
Advanced degree
ISO 9000 and SAP experience
Physical Requirements and Working Conditions:
Work involves constant sitting at a computer, occasional walking, and lifting to 10 pounds
Working within home and office environments
Travel by air, car, bus or train both domestic and international as need
Salary offers will depend on factors that include the location you work from, your level, education, training, specific skills, years of experience and comparison to other employees already in this role.
In addition, the successful candidate for this position will become eligible for a comprehensive set of outstanding benefits, including medical, dental, vision, life insurance, 401k, paid sick time, paid time off for vacation, paid holidays, paid community service days, professional/personal learning program, and applicable state/federal paid family leave.
ZincFive is committed to employing a diverse workforce. As an Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran status. We maintain a safe workplace and perform pre-employment testing. ZincFive is a participant in E-Verify and receives employment authorization of new hires through Social Security and the Department of Homeland Security databases.
Feb 23, 2023
Full time
The Director of Battery Manufacturing will oversee ZincFive’s global battery manufacturing operations, ensuring effective and efficient use of facilities and staff. The initial focus for this role will be establishing a manufacturing presence in the United States using ZincFive’s current capability in China as the starting point. The Director of Battery Manufacturing will ultimately drive the transition of ZincFive from relatively low volume, semi-automated production capability today to a fully automated high-volume battery manufacturer with a global footprint, ensuring battery capacity keeps pace with quickly accelerating customer demand. This position reports to the SVP Operations and Planning and will be performed remotely until a final location is determined for the manufacturing facility and then will transition to an onsite role.
Director of Battery Manufacturing Job Duties:
Responsible for establishing and growing a manufacturing footprint in the United States, including site selection, staff development, process knowledge transfer, environmental and safety compliance, equipment specifications and sourcing, and raw materials management
Works closely with China team to establish 2-way channel for knowledge transfer, process automation, and development of global manufacturing process and quality standards
Recruits, trains, manages, and professionally develops manufacturing personnel, establishing a fully ready team for the implementation of the U.S. production line
Develops future capability for global facilities, equipment, and workforce to ensure capacity meets business needs on a regional basis
Manages and communicates manufacturing activities within a collaborative cross-functional environment, communicating risk, and recovery activities when necessary
Develops manufacturing strategies to minimize product cost; drives cost reduction programs through improved process controls, automation, and improved material utilization
Creates and implements production reports to ensure safety, quality, financial, and delivery goals and standards are met
Ensures a healthy and safe working environment, and compliance with federal and state regulations, through collaboration with environmental, health, and safety staff.
Assists COO and SVP of Operations and Planning with long-range operating goals, expansion efforts, and implementation of new and advanced technology
Identifies and shares training opportunities for staff to build and improve skills
Organizes departmental management structure and teams for optimal, efficient operations
Works with chief financial officer to develop operating budget
Delivers progress and production reports to executive team members as requested
Supervises equipment purchase, maintenance, and layout and manages global network of key suppliers
Performs other related duties as assigned
Domestic and international travel as needed
Job Requirements:
Bachelor’s degree in relevant field
Minimum 10 years of experience in battery manufacturing
Excellent verbal and written communication skills
Excellent organizational and managerial skills
Thorough understanding of the policies and practices used in the manufacturing division
Ability to set long-term goals and communicate them to others
Ability to motivate and organize multiple efforts to accomplish goals
Preferred Skills:
Advanced degree
ISO 9000 and SAP experience
Physical Requirements and Working Conditions:
Work involves constant sitting at a computer, occasional walking, and lifting to 10 pounds
Working within home and office environments
Travel by air, car, bus or train both domestic and international as need
Salary offers will depend on factors that include the location you work from, your level, education, training, specific skills, years of experience and comparison to other employees already in this role.
In addition, the successful candidate for this position will become eligible for a comprehensive set of outstanding benefits, including medical, dental, vision, life insurance, 401k, paid sick time, paid time off for vacation, paid holidays, paid community service days, professional/personal learning program, and applicable state/federal paid family leave.
ZincFive is committed to employing a diverse workforce. As an Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran status. We maintain a safe workplace and perform pre-employment testing. ZincFive is a participant in E-Verify and receives employment authorization of new hires through Social Security and the Department of Homeland Security databases.
Eastern Florida State College is currently seeking applications for the full-time position of Public Safety Coordinator on the Melbourne Campus in Melbourne, Florida.
This position involves planning, implementing, scheduling, administrative duties, student interaction, and the overall supervision of basic recruit academies and other public safety criminal justice programs.
The following minimum qualifications for this position must be met before any applicant will be considered: ➢ Associate’s degree from a regionally-accredited institution; ➢ Or - FDLE State Certified training - both Basic and Advanced and five years’ experience as a law enforcement/correctional probation officer, or related public safety service. ➢ Currently or previously employed with a Criminal Justice agency or college/training center where basic recruit training for law enforcement and corrections is administered and you assigned or worked within the organization’s training/instructional discipline. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Florida Administrative Code (F.A.C.), Rule 11-B. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s (FDLE) rules and regulations, governing law enforcement related training. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Basic Recruit Officer education and officer/instructor certification standards. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Florida Statue 943, Department of Law Enforcement. ➢ Possess and articulate strong administrative/organizational skills. ➢ Must be currently certified or eligible to obtain FDLE Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission instructor general certification. ➢ Valid Florida Motor Vehicle Operator’s license required. ➢ This position will require successful fingerprinting and the candidate chosen will be required to pay the associated fee (currently $37.25). This fingerprinting fee is non-refundable. ➢ Understanding of and commitment to Equal Access/Equal Opportunity. ➢ Official transcripts of all collegiate work will be required to be considered beyond the application phase. *
*High School Diploma or GED or transcripts or official transcripts of all collegiate work (as appropriate for the position) must be sent directly from the attended institution to the Human Resources Office prior to the first day of employment. All foreign degrees must have a course-by-course official evaluation and translation sent to the Human Resources Office directly from an evaluation company affiliated with the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services, Inc.
Minimum physical qualifications: ➢ Works inside in an office environment and in the field. ➢ May work outside when firearms or driving training is in progress in various weather conditions. ➢ May be exposed to noisy conditions while at the EFSC Firearms Training Complex or other training locations.
The annual salary is $40,000. Successful internal candidates for external job postings should be aware that their current salary does not transfer to the new position. Salary will be as advertised in the job announcement. Full-time employees of Eastern Florida State College receive fringe benefits including health insurance and a retirement plan.
Applications will be accepted from January 23, 2023 through February 1, 2023 ; however, the College reserves the right to extend or conclude searches without notice. Applications must be submitted prior to 5:00 p.m. on the closing day. This is a covered position under Chapter 295 Florida Statutes, which provides for Veterans’ Preference in employment for eligible veterans and eligible spouses of veterans.
HOW TO APPLY
All applicants must apply on-line at the Eastern Florida State College Website in order to be considered for employment. If an applicant needs assistance in completing the on-line application, he/she should contact Human Resources. With at least 24 hours advance notice, EFSC can provide readers, Braille, audio cassettes, computer readers, sign language interpreters, and Scribes.
NOTE TO APPLICANT
Applications will not be considered after the deadline date unless justified and approved for exception by the Associate Vice President, Human Resources. All successful applicants must complete New Employee Orientation prior to beginning work.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES
Eastern Florida State College, Human Resources, 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922
Telephone: (321) 433-7070 FAX: (321) 433-7065 Florida Relay: 1-800-955-8770
Email: resources@easternflorida.edu
Website: https://www.easternflorida.edu/administration-departments/human-resources/employment-needs-opportunities/employment-opportunities.cfm
Eastern Florida State College is dedicated to providing a nondiscriminatory environment which promotes equal access, equal educational opportunity and equal employment opportunity to all persons regardless of age, race, national origin, color, ethnicity, genetic information, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, pregnancy, disability, marital status, veterans status, ancestry, or political affiliation in its programs, activities, or employment.
Jan 23, 2023
Full time
Eastern Florida State College is currently seeking applications for the full-time position of Public Safety Coordinator on the Melbourne Campus in Melbourne, Florida.
This position involves planning, implementing, scheduling, administrative duties, student interaction, and the overall supervision of basic recruit academies and other public safety criminal justice programs.
The following minimum qualifications for this position must be met before any applicant will be considered: ➢ Associate’s degree from a regionally-accredited institution; ➢ Or - FDLE State Certified training - both Basic and Advanced and five years’ experience as a law enforcement/correctional probation officer, or related public safety service. ➢ Currently or previously employed with a Criminal Justice agency or college/training center where basic recruit training for law enforcement and corrections is administered and you assigned or worked within the organization’s training/instructional discipline. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Florida Administrative Code (F.A.C.), Rule 11-B. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s (FDLE) rules and regulations, governing law enforcement related training. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Basic Recruit Officer education and officer/instructor certification standards. ➢ Possess a working knowledge of Florida Statue 943, Department of Law Enforcement. ➢ Possess and articulate strong administrative/organizational skills. ➢ Must be currently certified or eligible to obtain FDLE Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission instructor general certification. ➢ Valid Florida Motor Vehicle Operator’s license required. ➢ This position will require successful fingerprinting and the candidate chosen will be required to pay the associated fee (currently $37.25). This fingerprinting fee is non-refundable. ➢ Understanding of and commitment to Equal Access/Equal Opportunity. ➢ Official transcripts of all collegiate work will be required to be considered beyond the application phase. *
*High School Diploma or GED or transcripts or official transcripts of all collegiate work (as appropriate for the position) must be sent directly from the attended institution to the Human Resources Office prior to the first day of employment. All foreign degrees must have a course-by-course official evaluation and translation sent to the Human Resources Office directly from an evaluation company affiliated with the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services, Inc.
Minimum physical qualifications: ➢ Works inside in an office environment and in the field. ➢ May work outside when firearms or driving training is in progress in various weather conditions. ➢ May be exposed to noisy conditions while at the EFSC Firearms Training Complex or other training locations.
The annual salary is $40,000. Successful internal candidates for external job postings should be aware that their current salary does not transfer to the new position. Salary will be as advertised in the job announcement. Full-time employees of Eastern Florida State College receive fringe benefits including health insurance and a retirement plan.
Applications will be accepted from January 23, 2023 through February 1, 2023 ; however, the College reserves the right to extend or conclude searches without notice. Applications must be submitted prior to 5:00 p.m. on the closing day. This is a covered position under Chapter 295 Florida Statutes, which provides for Veterans’ Preference in employment for eligible veterans and eligible spouses of veterans.
HOW TO APPLY
All applicants must apply on-line at the Eastern Florida State College Website in order to be considered for employment. If an applicant needs assistance in completing the on-line application, he/she should contact Human Resources. With at least 24 hours advance notice, EFSC can provide readers, Braille, audio cassettes, computer readers, sign language interpreters, and Scribes.
NOTE TO APPLICANT
Applications will not be considered after the deadline date unless justified and approved for exception by the Associate Vice President, Human Resources. All successful applicants must complete New Employee Orientation prior to beginning work.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES
Eastern Florida State College, Human Resources, 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922
Telephone: (321) 433-7070 FAX: (321) 433-7065 Florida Relay: 1-800-955-8770
Email: resources@easternflorida.edu
Website: https://www.easternflorida.edu/administration-departments/human-resources/employment-needs-opportunities/employment-opportunities.cfm
Eastern Florida State College is dedicated to providing a nondiscriminatory environment which promotes equal access, equal educational opportunity and equal employment opportunity to all persons regardless of age, race, national origin, color, ethnicity, genetic information, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, pregnancy, disability, marital status, veterans status, ancestry, or political affiliation in its programs, activities, or employment.
Eastern Florida State College is currently seeking applications for the full-time position of Dean of STEM on the Cocoa Campus in Cocoa, Florida.
The Dean of STEM is responsible for the general oversight, strategic vision, operational and active leadership of the academic departments that comprise STEM throughout the four campuses of Eastern Florida State College. The dean will also provide administrative leadership for the Cocoa Campus. Provides overall direction, leadership, supervision, and evaluation for staff and Collegewide Chair administrators for programs, operations, and activities. As Campus Administrator, serves as the chief administrative officer of the campus, providing leadership and direction for all campus activities. Promotes the creation and maintenance of a learner-centered campus. Acts as a liaison between the College and the community in the area of the campus(es).
The following minimum qualifications for this position must be met before any applicant will be considered:
Doctorate degree from a regionally accredited institution in a STEM-related discipline.
Minimum of three (3) years of college administrative experience and a record of scholarly and/or professional achievement.
Minimum of Five (5) years of teaching experience in a STEM discipline.
Valid Florida Motor Vehicle Operator’s license required.
This position will require successful fingerprinting and the candidate chosen will be required to pay the associated fee (currently $37.25). This fingerprinting fee ($37.25) is non-refundable.
Understanding of and commitment to Equal Access/Equal Opportunity.
Official transcripts of all collegiate work will be required to be considered beyond the application phase.*
*High School Diploma or GED or transcripts or official transcripts of all collegiate work (as appropriate for the position) must be sent directly from the attended institution to the Human Resources Office prior to the first day of employment. All foreign degrees must have a course-by-course official evaluation and translation sent to the Human Resources Office directly from an evaluation company affiliated with the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services, Inc.
Minimum physical qualifications:
Ability to safely and successfully perform the essential job functions consistent with the ADA, FMLA and other federal, state and local standards, including meeting qualitative and/or quantitative productivity standards.
Ability to maintain regular, punctual attendance consistent with the ADA, FMLA and other federal, state and local standards.
Must be able to lift and carry up to 30 lbs.
Must be able to talk, listen and speak clearly on telephone.
The annual salary is $144,905.85 . Successful internal candidates for external job postings should be aware that their current salary does not transfer to the new position. Salary will be as advertised in the job announcement. Full-time employees of Eastern Florida State College receive fringe benefits including health insurance and a retirement plan.
Applications will be accepted until filled ; however, the College reserves the right to extend or conclude searches without notice.
HOW TO APPLY
All applicants must apply on-line at the Eastern Florida State College Website in order to be considered for employment. If an applicant needs assistance in completing the on-line application, he/she should contact Human Resources. With at least 24 hours advance notice, EFSC can provide readers, Braille, audio cassettes, computer readers, sign language interpreters, and Scribes.
NOTE TO APPLICANT
Applications will not be considered after the deadline date unless justified and approved for exception by the Associate Vice President, Human Resources. All successful applicants must complete New Employee Orientation prior to beginning work.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES
Eastern Florida State College, Human Resources, 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922
Telephone: (321) 433-7070 FAX: (321) 433-7065 Florida Relay: 1-800-955-8770
Email: resources@easternflorida.edu
Website: https://www.easternflorida.edu/administration-departments/human-resources/employment-needs-opportunities/employment-opportunities.cfm
Eastern Florida State College is dedicated to providing a nondiscriminatory environment which promotes equal access, equal educational opportunity and equal employment opportunity to all persons regardless of age, race, national origin, color, ethnicity, genetic information, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, pregnancy, disability, marital status, veterans status, ancestry, or political affiliation in its programs, activities, or employment.
About the college
Eastern Florida State College, located in the heart of Florida’s Space Coast, is a co-educational, publicly supported post-secondary institution that adopted its current name on July 1, 2013 with the addition of four-year Bachelor's Degrees.
An accredited institution, EFSC is recognized as one of America's leading state colleges for quality instruction, organization and innovative, leading-edge programs.
Aug 31, 2022
Full time
Eastern Florida State College is currently seeking applications for the full-time position of Dean of STEM on the Cocoa Campus in Cocoa, Florida.
The Dean of STEM is responsible for the general oversight, strategic vision, operational and active leadership of the academic departments that comprise STEM throughout the four campuses of Eastern Florida State College. The dean will also provide administrative leadership for the Cocoa Campus. Provides overall direction, leadership, supervision, and evaluation for staff and Collegewide Chair administrators for programs, operations, and activities. As Campus Administrator, serves as the chief administrative officer of the campus, providing leadership and direction for all campus activities. Promotes the creation and maintenance of a learner-centered campus. Acts as a liaison between the College and the community in the area of the campus(es).
The following minimum qualifications for this position must be met before any applicant will be considered:
Doctorate degree from a regionally accredited institution in a STEM-related discipline.
Minimum of three (3) years of college administrative experience and a record of scholarly and/or professional achievement.
Minimum of Five (5) years of teaching experience in a STEM discipline.
Valid Florida Motor Vehicle Operator’s license required.
This position will require successful fingerprinting and the candidate chosen will be required to pay the associated fee (currently $37.25). This fingerprinting fee ($37.25) is non-refundable.
Understanding of and commitment to Equal Access/Equal Opportunity.
Official transcripts of all collegiate work will be required to be considered beyond the application phase.*
*High School Diploma or GED or transcripts or official transcripts of all collegiate work (as appropriate for the position) must be sent directly from the attended institution to the Human Resources Office prior to the first day of employment. All foreign degrees must have a course-by-course official evaluation and translation sent to the Human Resources Office directly from an evaluation company affiliated with the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services, Inc.
Minimum physical qualifications:
Ability to safely and successfully perform the essential job functions consistent with the ADA, FMLA and other federal, state and local standards, including meeting qualitative and/or quantitative productivity standards.
Ability to maintain regular, punctual attendance consistent with the ADA, FMLA and other federal, state and local standards.
Must be able to lift and carry up to 30 lbs.
Must be able to talk, listen and speak clearly on telephone.
The annual salary is $144,905.85 . Successful internal candidates for external job postings should be aware that their current salary does not transfer to the new position. Salary will be as advertised in the job announcement. Full-time employees of Eastern Florida State College receive fringe benefits including health insurance and a retirement plan.
Applications will be accepted until filled ; however, the College reserves the right to extend or conclude searches without notice.
HOW TO APPLY
All applicants must apply on-line at the Eastern Florida State College Website in order to be considered for employment. If an applicant needs assistance in completing the on-line application, he/she should contact Human Resources. With at least 24 hours advance notice, EFSC can provide readers, Braille, audio cassettes, computer readers, sign language interpreters, and Scribes.
NOTE TO APPLICANT
Applications will not be considered after the deadline date unless justified and approved for exception by the Associate Vice President, Human Resources. All successful applicants must complete New Employee Orientation prior to beginning work.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES
Eastern Florida State College, Human Resources, 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922
Telephone: (321) 433-7070 FAX: (321) 433-7065 Florida Relay: 1-800-955-8770
Email: resources@easternflorida.edu
Website: https://www.easternflorida.edu/administration-departments/human-resources/employment-needs-opportunities/employment-opportunities.cfm
Eastern Florida State College is dedicated to providing a nondiscriminatory environment which promotes equal access, equal educational opportunity and equal employment opportunity to all persons regardless of age, race, national origin, color, ethnicity, genetic information, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, pregnancy, disability, marital status, veterans status, ancestry, or political affiliation in its programs, activities, or employment.
About the college
Eastern Florida State College, located in the heart of Florida’s Space Coast, is a co-educational, publicly supported post-secondary institution that adopted its current name on July 1, 2013 with the addition of four-year Bachelor's Degrees.
An accredited institution, EFSC is recognized as one of America's leading state colleges for quality instruction, organization and innovative, leading-edge programs.
Eastern Florida State College is currently seeking applications the part-time position of Career & Technical Program Specialist on the Melbourne Campus in Melbourne, Florida.
The Career & Technical Program (CTP) Specialist will work with continuing education students, adjunct instructors and the Public Safety Coordinator of the Public Safety Institute’s (PSI) Advanced and Specialized training program. The PSI Advanced and Specialized training program provides various trainings to law enforcement officers so they can maintain their mandatory retraining requirements, remain current in law enforcement trends, and enhance their skills and improve their knowledge. The CTP Specialist will help to maintain the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission (CJSTC) grant that funds the Advanced and Specialized trainings and all associated records/documentation related to those trainings.
The following minimum qualifications for this position must be met before any applicant will be considered:
High School Diploma or GED.
Associate’s degree from a regionally accredited institution preferred.
Proficiency in Microsoft Office Applications, including Word and Excel required.
Knowledge of PSI academies and Advanced and Specialized training programs preferred.
Administrative office experience preferred.
Valid Florida Motor Vehicle Operator’s license required.
This position will require successful fingerprinting and the candidate chosen will be required to pay (currently $37.25). This fingerprinting fee is non-refundable.
Understanding of and commitment to Equal Access/Equal Opportunity
Official transcripts of all collegiate work will be required to be considered beyond the application phase*
*High School Diploma or GED or transcripts or official transcripts of all collegiate work (as appropriate for the position) must be sent directly from the attended institution to the Human Resources Office prior to the first day of employment. All foreign degrees must have a course-by-course official evaluation and translation sent to the Human Resources Office directly from an evaluation company affiliated with the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services, Inc.
Minimum physical qualifications:
Works inside in an office environment.
Some travel may be required.
Weekend and nights may be required.
Ability to communicate verbally and in writing.
The hourly rate is $14.00 . This position has been approved for up to 28 hours per week. This position is eligible for regular part-time benefits (i.e. vacation, life insurance, etc.).
Applications will be accepted from July 28, 2022 through August 7, 2022 ; however, the College reserves the right to extend or conclude searches without notice. Applications must be submitted prior to 5:00 p.m. on the closing day. This is a covered position under Chapter 295 Florida Statutes, which provides for Veterans’ Preference in employment for eligible veterans and eligible spouses of veterans.
HOW TO APPLY
All applicants must apply on-line at the Eastern Florida State College Website in order to be considered for employment. If an applicant needs assistance in completing the on-line application, he/she should contact Human Resources. With at least 24 hours advance notice, EFSC can provide readers, Braille, audio cassettes, computer readers, sign language interpreters, and Scribes.
NOTE TO APPLICANT
Applications will not be considered after the deadline date unless justified and approved for exception by the Associate Vice President, Human Resources. All successful applicants must complete New Employee Orientation prior to beginning work.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES
Eastern Florida State College, Human Resources, 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922
Telephone: (321) 433-7070 FAX: (321) 433-7065 Florida Relay: 1-800-955-8770
Email: resources@easternflorida.edu
Website: https://www.easternflorida.edu/administration-departments/human-resources/employment-needs-opportunities/employment-opportunities.cfm
Eastern Florida State College is dedicated to providing a nondiscriminatory environment which promotes equal access, equal educational opportunity and equal employment opportunity to all persons regardless of age, race, national origin, color, ethnicity, genetic information, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, pregnancy, disability, marital status, veterans status, ancestry, or political affiliation in its programs, activities, or employment.
About the college
Eastern Florida State College, located in the heart of Florida’s Space Coast, is a co-educational, publicly supported post-secondary institution that adopted its current name on July 1, 2013 with the addition of four-year Bachelor's Degrees.
An accredited institution, EFSC is recognized as one of America's leading state colleges for quality instruction, organization and innovative, leading-edge programs.
Jul 28, 2022
Part time
Eastern Florida State College is currently seeking applications the part-time position of Career & Technical Program Specialist on the Melbourne Campus in Melbourne, Florida.
The Career & Technical Program (CTP) Specialist will work with continuing education students, adjunct instructors and the Public Safety Coordinator of the Public Safety Institute’s (PSI) Advanced and Specialized training program. The PSI Advanced and Specialized training program provides various trainings to law enforcement officers so they can maintain their mandatory retraining requirements, remain current in law enforcement trends, and enhance their skills and improve their knowledge. The CTP Specialist will help to maintain the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission (CJSTC) grant that funds the Advanced and Specialized trainings and all associated records/documentation related to those trainings.
The following minimum qualifications for this position must be met before any applicant will be considered:
High School Diploma or GED.
Associate’s degree from a regionally accredited institution preferred.
Proficiency in Microsoft Office Applications, including Word and Excel required.
Knowledge of PSI academies and Advanced and Specialized training programs preferred.
Administrative office experience preferred.
Valid Florida Motor Vehicle Operator’s license required.
This position will require successful fingerprinting and the candidate chosen will be required to pay (currently $37.25). This fingerprinting fee is non-refundable.
Understanding of and commitment to Equal Access/Equal Opportunity
Official transcripts of all collegiate work will be required to be considered beyond the application phase*
*High School Diploma or GED or transcripts or official transcripts of all collegiate work (as appropriate for the position) must be sent directly from the attended institution to the Human Resources Office prior to the first day of employment. All foreign degrees must have a course-by-course official evaluation and translation sent to the Human Resources Office directly from an evaluation company affiliated with the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services, Inc.
Minimum physical qualifications:
Works inside in an office environment.
Some travel may be required.
Weekend and nights may be required.
Ability to communicate verbally and in writing.
The hourly rate is $14.00 . This position has been approved for up to 28 hours per week. This position is eligible for regular part-time benefits (i.e. vacation, life insurance, etc.).
Applications will be accepted from July 28, 2022 through August 7, 2022 ; however, the College reserves the right to extend or conclude searches without notice. Applications must be submitted prior to 5:00 p.m. on the closing day. This is a covered position under Chapter 295 Florida Statutes, which provides for Veterans’ Preference in employment for eligible veterans and eligible spouses of veterans.
HOW TO APPLY
All applicants must apply on-line at the Eastern Florida State College Website in order to be considered for employment. If an applicant needs assistance in completing the on-line application, he/she should contact Human Resources. With at least 24 hours advance notice, EFSC can provide readers, Braille, audio cassettes, computer readers, sign language interpreters, and Scribes.
NOTE TO APPLICANT
Applications will not be considered after the deadline date unless justified and approved for exception by the Associate Vice President, Human Resources. All successful applicants must complete New Employee Orientation prior to beginning work.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES
Eastern Florida State College, Human Resources, 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922
Telephone: (321) 433-7070 FAX: (321) 433-7065 Florida Relay: 1-800-955-8770
Email: resources@easternflorida.edu
Website: https://www.easternflorida.edu/administration-departments/human-resources/employment-needs-opportunities/employment-opportunities.cfm
Eastern Florida State College is dedicated to providing a nondiscriminatory environment which promotes equal access, equal educational opportunity and equal employment opportunity to all persons regardless of age, race, national origin, color, ethnicity, genetic information, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, pregnancy, disability, marital status, veterans status, ancestry, or political affiliation in its programs, activities, or employment.
About the college
Eastern Florida State College, located in the heart of Florida’s Space Coast, is a co-educational, publicly supported post-secondary institution that adopted its current name on July 1, 2013 with the addition of four-year Bachelor's Degrees.
An accredited institution, EFSC is recognized as one of America's leading state colleges for quality instruction, organization and innovative, leading-edge programs.
Chief Justice and Equity Officer
Executive Department
Union of Concerned Scientists
Cambridge, MA
The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) is an independent national nonprofit that uses science to protect our health, safety, and environment. We are scientists, engineers, economists, activists and everyday people who develop and advocate for innovative, practical solutions to some of our planet’s most pressing problems—from combating global warming and developing sustainable ways to feed, power, and transport ourselves, to fighting misinformation, advancing racial equity, and reducing the threat of nuclear war.
The new Chief Justice and Equity Officer will become a focal point for knowledge-sharing and momentum, and will help coordinate, unify, and enhance UCS’s internal and external equity and justice commitments. The Chief Justice and Equity Officer, partnering with other staff throughout the organization, will help define and implement measurable indicators for the Chief Justice and Equity Officer/Environmental Justice (EJ) progress and embed these within organizational strategic plans, performance management and competency systems, and programming.
Responsibilities
The Chief Justice and Equity Officer will launch and lead the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office.
The CJEO will report to the President and serve as a member of the Executive and Leadership teams, and as JEDI liaison to the Board. The CJEO will foster JEDI understanding, commitment, and transformation. The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS adopt a new paradigm, in which science, advocacy, and anti-racism are integrated throughout UCS culture, campaigns, and partnerships.
The CJEO will establish the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office as a valued center for learning and for evolving best practices and transformative change in systems, processes, and behaviors. The office will partner with the BIPOC, Black Caucus, White Ally & Accountability Groups, and other JEDI-engaged groups, leaders, staff, and Board members across the organization. The JEDI office will be a hub of expertise and knowledge exchange, coordination, and momentum. The office will model and impart clear expectations, accountability, and transparency.
CJEO will foster shared definitions, visions, plans, and results. The CJEO will guide refinement and finalization of the draft Racial Equity Plan, and will develop and implement UCS JEDI strategies and norms. The CJEO will help clarify shared aspirations and expectations, and will foster deeper JEDI understanding and commitment across the organization.
The CJEO will help UCS infuse strong JEDI practices into important systems and processes including, but not limited to, performance management, program milestones, monitoring, and evaluation. The CJEO will foster a culture of innovation and learning in which bold initiatives are piloted, rolled out, evaluated, and evolved to accomplish ongoing progress and transparency. The CJEO will help achieve JEDI results that are measurable, perceived, and experienced internally across the organization and externally, eventually across all UCS programmatic work.
The CJEO will be an authentic, trustworthy expert able to help UCS navigate conflict to achieve breakthroughs and meaningful transformation. The CJEO will engage, listen to, and elevate people and ideas across UCS. The CJEO will be a sought-after partner, mentor, and advisor, and an accessible, frontline source of ideas and information for staff, senior leaders, and the Board.
While the CJEO’s primary focus is internal transformation, as head of the JEDI office the CJEO will support the Director in advancing equity and EJ efforts in UCS’s external partnerships. The CJEO will help deepen UCS’s ability to bring an anti-racist lens to existing or proposed legislation, policies, communications, and relationships and partnerships with public and private entities, donors and funders, the Science Network, and other stakeholders.
The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS develop an aspired future, in which JEDI principles are understood, centered, and authentically lived. The CJEO will help UCS become more inclusive across all differences, including race, ethnicity, abilities, generations, genders, sexual orientations, socioeconomic and regional backgrounds—a place where each individual feel “I belong here.”
Personal Assets and Abilities:
The CJEO will have experience developing and fostering JEDI principles and capacities, with proven results, as well as passion for the mission and potential of UCS. The CJEO will have a record of advancing trust, fairness, and inclusion. Personal assets and abilities will include:
A style that is authentic, approachable, humble, and self-confident
Relationship-building, high emotional intelligence, and active listening skills—an inspiring, inclusive person who values all people and their ideas
Strengths in vision, strategy, and innovation
Skills in building consensus
Ability to constructively and collaboratively engage in, and navigate, conflict
Ability to clarify, communicate, and manage clear, realistic expectations
A record of changing policies and systems to overcome marginalization
Ability to create and balance short- and long-term progress
More about the team:
Our team is made up of a dedicated group of researchers, scientists, communicators, campaigners, and advocates from wide-ranging backgrounds and experiences. We are committed to building a diverse and inclusive team and a collaborative and supportive work environment where all staff can thrive. We continually strive to create an environment which is a welcoming place for the LGBTQ+ community, people of color, parents, empty-nesters, and people with a wide variety of interests and backgrounds.
A note on the pandemic:
During the coronavirus pandemic our staff are working from home. We will resume working from our offices, travel, and in-person meetings when it is safe to do so.
To Apply: We know there are great candidates who won’t check all of these boxes, and we also know you might bring important skills that we haven’t considered. If that’s you, don’t hesitate to apply and tell us about yourself. Please upload a cover letter and resume. Upload materials in Word or PDF format only. No phone calls, please. https://apply.workable.com/j/89A0A1B286
Deadline : Until filled
Feb 18, 2022
Full time
Chief Justice and Equity Officer
Executive Department
Union of Concerned Scientists
Cambridge, MA
The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) is an independent national nonprofit that uses science to protect our health, safety, and environment. We are scientists, engineers, economists, activists and everyday people who develop and advocate for innovative, practical solutions to some of our planet’s most pressing problems—from combating global warming and developing sustainable ways to feed, power, and transport ourselves, to fighting misinformation, advancing racial equity, and reducing the threat of nuclear war.
The new Chief Justice and Equity Officer will become a focal point for knowledge-sharing and momentum, and will help coordinate, unify, and enhance UCS’s internal and external equity and justice commitments. The Chief Justice and Equity Officer, partnering with other staff throughout the organization, will help define and implement measurable indicators for the Chief Justice and Equity Officer/Environmental Justice (EJ) progress and embed these within organizational strategic plans, performance management and competency systems, and programming.
Responsibilities
The Chief Justice and Equity Officer will launch and lead the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office.
The CJEO will report to the President and serve as a member of the Executive and Leadership teams, and as JEDI liaison to the Board. The CJEO will foster JEDI understanding, commitment, and transformation. The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS adopt a new paradigm, in which science, advocacy, and anti-racism are integrated throughout UCS culture, campaigns, and partnerships.
The CJEO will establish the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office as a valued center for learning and for evolving best practices and transformative change in systems, processes, and behaviors. The office will partner with the BIPOC, Black Caucus, White Ally & Accountability Groups, and other JEDI-engaged groups, leaders, staff, and Board members across the organization. The JEDI office will be a hub of expertise and knowledge exchange, coordination, and momentum. The office will model and impart clear expectations, accountability, and transparency.
CJEO will foster shared definitions, visions, plans, and results. The CJEO will guide refinement and finalization of the draft Racial Equity Plan, and will develop and implement UCS JEDI strategies and norms. The CJEO will help clarify shared aspirations and expectations, and will foster deeper JEDI understanding and commitment across the organization.
The CJEO will help UCS infuse strong JEDI practices into important systems and processes including, but not limited to, performance management, program milestones, monitoring, and evaluation. The CJEO will foster a culture of innovation and learning in which bold initiatives are piloted, rolled out, evaluated, and evolved to accomplish ongoing progress and transparency. The CJEO will help achieve JEDI results that are measurable, perceived, and experienced internally across the organization and externally, eventually across all UCS programmatic work.
The CJEO will be an authentic, trustworthy expert able to help UCS navigate conflict to achieve breakthroughs and meaningful transformation. The CJEO will engage, listen to, and elevate people and ideas across UCS. The CJEO will be a sought-after partner, mentor, and advisor, and an accessible, frontline source of ideas and information for staff, senior leaders, and the Board.
While the CJEO’s primary focus is internal transformation, as head of the JEDI office the CJEO will support the Director in advancing equity and EJ efforts in UCS’s external partnerships. The CJEO will help deepen UCS’s ability to bring an anti-racist lens to existing or proposed legislation, policies, communications, and relationships and partnerships with public and private entities, donors and funders, the Science Network, and other stakeholders.
The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS develop an aspired future, in which JEDI principles are understood, centered, and authentically lived. The CJEO will help UCS become more inclusive across all differences, including race, ethnicity, abilities, generations, genders, sexual orientations, socioeconomic and regional backgrounds—a place where each individual feel “I belong here.”
Personal Assets and Abilities:
The CJEO will have experience developing and fostering JEDI principles and capacities, with proven results, as well as passion for the mission and potential of UCS. The CJEO will have a record of advancing trust, fairness, and inclusion. Personal assets and abilities will include:
A style that is authentic, approachable, humble, and self-confident
Relationship-building, high emotional intelligence, and active listening skills—an inspiring, inclusive person who values all people and their ideas
Strengths in vision, strategy, and innovation
Skills in building consensus
Ability to constructively and collaboratively engage in, and navigate, conflict
Ability to clarify, communicate, and manage clear, realistic expectations
A record of changing policies and systems to overcome marginalization
Ability to create and balance short- and long-term progress
More about the team:
Our team is made up of a dedicated group of researchers, scientists, communicators, campaigners, and advocates from wide-ranging backgrounds and experiences. We are committed to building a diverse and inclusive team and a collaborative and supportive work environment where all staff can thrive. We continually strive to create an environment which is a welcoming place for the LGBTQ+ community, people of color, parents, empty-nesters, and people with a wide variety of interests and backgrounds.
A note on the pandemic:
During the coronavirus pandemic our staff are working from home. We will resume working from our offices, travel, and in-person meetings when it is safe to do so.
To Apply: We know there are great candidates who won’t check all of these boxes, and we also know you might bring important skills that we haven’t considered. If that’s you, don’t hesitate to apply and tell us about yourself. Please upload a cover letter and resume. Upload materials in Word or PDF format only. No phone calls, please. https://apply.workable.com/j/89A0A1B286
Deadline : Until filled
Chief Justice and Equity Officer
Executive Department
Union of Concerned Scientists
Cambridge, MA
The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) is an independent national nonprofit that uses science to protect our health, safety, and environment. We are scientists, engineers, economists, activists and everyday people who develop and advocate for innovative, practical solutions to some of our planet’s most pressing problems—from combating global warming and developing sustainable ways to feed, power, and transport ourselves, to fighting misinformation, advancing racial equity, and reducing the threat of nuclear war.
The new Chief Justice and Equity Officer will become a focal point for knowledge-sharing and momentum, and will help coordinate, unify, and enhance UCS’s internal and external equity and justice commitments. The Chief Justice and Equity Officer, partnering with other staff throughout the organization, will help define and implement measurable indicators for the Chief Justice and Equity Officer/Environmental Justice (EJ) progress and embed these within organizational strategic plans, performance management and competency systems, and programming.
Responsibilities
The Chief Justice and Equity Officer will launch and lead the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office.
The CJEO will report to the President and serve as a member of the Executive and Leadership teams, and as JEDI liaison to the Board. The CJEO will foster JEDI understanding, commitment, and transformation. The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS adopt a new paradigm, in which science, advocacy, and anti-racism are integrated throughout UCS culture, campaigns, and partnerships.
The CJEO will establish the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office as a valued center for learning and for evolving best practices and transformative change in systems, processes, and behaviors. The office will partner with the BIPOC, Black Caucus, White Ally & Accountability Groups, and other JEDI-engaged groups, leaders, staff, and Board members across the organization. The JEDI office will be a hub of expertise and knowledge exchange, coordination, and momentum. The office will model and impart clear expectations, accountability, and transparency.
CJEO will foster shared definitions, visions, plans, and results. The CJEO will guide refinement and finalization of the draft Racial Equity Plan, and will develop and implement UCS JEDI strategies and norms. The CJEO will help clarify shared aspirations and expectations, and will foster deeper JEDI understanding and commitment across the organization.
The CJEO will help UCS infuse strong JEDI practices into important systems and processes including, but not limited to, performance management, program milestones, monitoring, and evaluation. The CJEO will foster a culture of innovation and learning in which bold initiatives are piloted, rolled out, evaluated, and evolved to accomplish ongoing progress and transparency. The CJEO will help achieve JEDI results that are measurable, perceived, and experienced internally across the organization and externally, eventually across all UCS programmatic work.
The CJEO will be an authentic, trustworthy expert able to help UCS navigate conflict to achieve breakthroughs and meaningful transformation. The CJEO will engage, listen to, and elevate people and ideas across UCS. The CJEO will be a sought-after partner, mentor, and advisor, and an accessible, frontline source of ideas and information for staff, senior leaders, and the Board.
While the CJEO’s primary focus is internal transformation, as head of the JEDI office the CJEO will support the Director in advancing equity and EJ efforts in UCS’s external partnerships. The CJEO will help deepen UCS’s ability to bring an anti-racist lens to existing or proposed legislation, policies, communications, and relationships and partnerships with public and private entities, donors and funders, the Science Network, and other stakeholders.
The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS develop an aspired future, in which JEDI principles are understood, centered, and authentically lived. The CJEO will help UCS become more inclusive across all differences, including race, ethnicity, abilities, generations, genders, sexual orientations, socioeconomic and regional backgrounds—a place where each individual feel “I belong here.”
Personal Assets and Abilities:
The CJEO will have experience developing and fostering JEDI principles and capacities, with proven results, as well as passion for the mission and potential of UCS. The CJEO will have a record of advancing trust, fairness, and inclusion. Personal assets and abilities will include:
A style that is authentic, approachable, humble, and self-confident
Relationship-building, high emotional intelligence, and active listening skills—an inspiring, inclusive person who values all people and their ideas
Strengths in vision, strategy, and innovation
Skills in building consensus
Ability to constructively and collaboratively engage in, and navigate, conflict
Ability to clarify, communicate, and manage clear, realistic expectations
A record of changing policies and systems to overcome marginalization
Ability to create and balance short- and long-term progress
More about the team:
Our team is made up of a dedicated group of researchers, scientists, communicators, campaigners, and advocates from wide-ranging backgrounds and experiences. We are committed to building a diverse and inclusive team and a collaborative and supportive work environment where all staff can thrive. We continually strive to create an environment which is a welcoming place for the LGBTQ+ community, people of color, parents, empty-nesters, and people with a wide variety of interests and backgrounds.
A note on the pandemic:
During the coronavirus pandemic our staff are working from home. We will resume working from our offices, travel, and in-person meetings when it is safe to do so.
To Apply: We know there are great candidates who won’t check all of these boxes, and we also know you might bring important skills that we haven’t considered. If that’s you, don’t hesitate to apply and tell us about yourself. Please upload a cover letter and resume. In the cover letter, please confirm that the listed salary meets your expectations. Upload materials in Word or PDF format only. No phone calls, please. https://apply.workable.com/j/89A0A1B286
Deadline : Until filled
Jan 19, 2022
Full time
Chief Justice and Equity Officer
Executive Department
Union of Concerned Scientists
Cambridge, MA
The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) is an independent national nonprofit that uses science to protect our health, safety, and environment. We are scientists, engineers, economists, activists and everyday people who develop and advocate for innovative, practical solutions to some of our planet’s most pressing problems—from combating global warming and developing sustainable ways to feed, power, and transport ourselves, to fighting misinformation, advancing racial equity, and reducing the threat of nuclear war.
The new Chief Justice and Equity Officer will become a focal point for knowledge-sharing and momentum, and will help coordinate, unify, and enhance UCS’s internal and external equity and justice commitments. The Chief Justice and Equity Officer, partnering with other staff throughout the organization, will help define and implement measurable indicators for the Chief Justice and Equity Officer/Environmental Justice (EJ) progress and embed these within organizational strategic plans, performance management and competency systems, and programming.
Responsibilities
The Chief Justice and Equity Officer will launch and lead the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office.
The CJEO will report to the President and serve as a member of the Executive and Leadership teams, and as JEDI liaison to the Board. The CJEO will foster JEDI understanding, commitment, and transformation. The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS adopt a new paradigm, in which science, advocacy, and anti-racism are integrated throughout UCS culture, campaigns, and partnerships.
The CJEO will establish the Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) office as a valued center for learning and for evolving best practices and transformative change in systems, processes, and behaviors. The office will partner with the BIPOC, Black Caucus, White Ally & Accountability Groups, and other JEDI-engaged groups, leaders, staff, and Board members across the organization. The JEDI office will be a hub of expertise and knowledge exchange, coordination, and momentum. The office will model and impart clear expectations, accountability, and transparency.
CJEO will foster shared definitions, visions, plans, and results. The CJEO will guide refinement and finalization of the draft Racial Equity Plan, and will develop and implement UCS JEDI strategies and norms. The CJEO will help clarify shared aspirations and expectations, and will foster deeper JEDI understanding and commitment across the organization.
The CJEO will help UCS infuse strong JEDI practices into important systems and processes including, but not limited to, performance management, program milestones, monitoring, and evaluation. The CJEO will foster a culture of innovation and learning in which bold initiatives are piloted, rolled out, evaluated, and evolved to accomplish ongoing progress and transparency. The CJEO will help achieve JEDI results that are measurable, perceived, and experienced internally across the organization and externally, eventually across all UCS programmatic work.
The CJEO will be an authentic, trustworthy expert able to help UCS navigate conflict to achieve breakthroughs and meaningful transformation. The CJEO will engage, listen to, and elevate people and ideas across UCS. The CJEO will be a sought-after partner, mentor, and advisor, and an accessible, frontline source of ideas and information for staff, senior leaders, and the Board.
While the CJEO’s primary focus is internal transformation, as head of the JEDI office the CJEO will support the Director in advancing equity and EJ efforts in UCS’s external partnerships. The CJEO will help deepen UCS’s ability to bring an anti-racist lens to existing or proposed legislation, policies, communications, and relationships and partnerships with public and private entities, donors and funders, the Science Network, and other stakeholders.
The CJEO and JEDI office will help UCS develop an aspired future, in which JEDI principles are understood, centered, and authentically lived. The CJEO will help UCS become more inclusive across all differences, including race, ethnicity, abilities, generations, genders, sexual orientations, socioeconomic and regional backgrounds—a place where each individual feel “I belong here.”
Personal Assets and Abilities:
The CJEO will have experience developing and fostering JEDI principles and capacities, with proven results, as well as passion for the mission and potential of UCS. The CJEO will have a record of advancing trust, fairness, and inclusion. Personal assets and abilities will include:
A style that is authentic, approachable, humble, and self-confident
Relationship-building, high emotional intelligence, and active listening skills—an inspiring, inclusive person who values all people and their ideas
Strengths in vision, strategy, and innovation
Skills in building consensus
Ability to constructively and collaboratively engage in, and navigate, conflict
Ability to clarify, communicate, and manage clear, realistic expectations
A record of changing policies and systems to overcome marginalization
Ability to create and balance short- and long-term progress
More about the team:
Our team is made up of a dedicated group of researchers, scientists, communicators, campaigners, and advocates from wide-ranging backgrounds and experiences. We are committed to building a diverse and inclusive team and a collaborative and supportive work environment where all staff can thrive. We continually strive to create an environment which is a welcoming place for the LGBTQ+ community, people of color, parents, empty-nesters, and people with a wide variety of interests and backgrounds.
A note on the pandemic:
During the coronavirus pandemic our staff are working from home. We will resume working from our offices, travel, and in-person meetings when it is safe to do so.
To Apply: We know there are great candidates who won’t check all of these boxes, and we also know you might bring important skills that we haven’t considered. If that’s you, don’t hesitate to apply and tell us about yourself. Please upload a cover letter and resume. In the cover letter, please confirm that the listed salary meets your expectations. Upload materials in Word or PDF format only. No phone calls, please. https://apply.workable.com/j/89A0A1B286
Deadline : Until filled
Oregon Youth Authority (OYA) welcomes you to join the Office of Inclusion and Intercultural Relations (OIIR) team as their new Youth Services Coordinator to help coordinate and deliver services to youth and their families and to assure culturally sensitive service delivery by others in the Portland, Oregon metro area - Clackamas County, Multnomah County, and Washington County. You will be responsible for providing training and consultation to agency staff; networking with the community regarding youth and other minority youth concerns.
A Day In The Life:
Assists youth and families in understanding Rogue Valley Youth Correctional Facility and Camp Florence Youth Transition Facility and OYA Services, programs, and expectations.
Provides cultural education for minority youth in need of cultural awareness.
Facilitates group intervention and one on one activities with youth in secure facilities and community settings.
Meet with intake youth individually upon arrival at least once a week to discuss behavior, personal issues, progress, problem -solving skills, goal setting, and by using various techniques to confront, guide and support the youth during the intake process and after they transfer to their permanent living units. Introduce Family Engagement and opportunities youth and family will have to participate.
Consult and assist OIIR staff and statewide regional liaisons in delivering direct program services, cultural awareness, and special projects.
Collaborate with probation officers managing the youth case plan for youth’s individual transition plans.
Provides emotional support for minority youth/families at case reviews and Multi-Disciplinary Meetings (MDT’s).
Works collaboratively and assists the OIIR Statewide Services Coordinator to provide services for non-citizen youth.
Assists to respond and communicate any issues related to youth immigration concerns at Eastern Youth Facility and provides support and guidance to youth and their families.
Assists OIIR Director, Manager, and staff in delivering cultural, diversity service to youth in closed custody, community residential programs, and community support for surrounding counties in Eastern Oregon and OYA staff statewide.
Coordinate and facilitate cultural events.
Networks with all minority community to provide educational, cultural, inspirational events for youth and staff at Eastern Oregon Youth Facility.
Makes speeches and presentations to community groups.
Keeps Oregon minority community informed about Eastern Oregon programs/services.
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator facilitate/explains/provides Spanish translation between youth, staff, and physicians.
This position is represented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU/OPEU).
Working Conditions:
Must be able to work under the following condition with or without reasonable accommodations:
Oregon Youth Authority is a tobacco free environment.
Work in a team environment. Help promote and maintain a harmonious work environment.
Daily face-to-face contact with adjudicated youth, some of which frequently resist instruction and exhibit verbally hostile or physically assaultive behavior. May be subject to a hostage situation.
Physical exertion to subdue out-of-control, combative, belligerent, hostile youth. May require use of reasonable force (including restraint equipment) during course of duties or during disturbances or other emergencies.
Staff may have potential exposure to communicable diseases. The consistent and effective use of appropriate infection-control materials and techniques is required.
Staff is expected to be a positive example and role model for the other staff and youth. The staff is to be supportive toward OYA, RVYCF and Camp Florence, their policies and procedures. Being a positive role model includes, but is not limited to: no excessive absenteeism, personal appearance is neat, treats all human beings with respect, is a law abiding citizen.
Each employee is to provide a positive, affirming environment which values fellow employees and the people they serve.
Will adhere to OYA Policy Memo II-D-3.4 regarding interpersonal relationships with youth.
All OYA employees are expected to work using safe work practices and to follow all policies regarding safe work practices.
ABOUT OYA
At OYA, diversity, equity, and inclusion are more than just words on a page. To meet our mission and live our values as an agency, DEI must be at the heart of all we do. We support cultural competence, develop teams and cultivate leaders in ways that are equitable to everyone, especially people of color, those who identify as LGBTQ+, or those from other marginalized communities. We are explicit and intentional as we identify resources that all our youth and staff need to grow and prosper. Our DEI work connects closely with our culture of positive human development, with safe and supportive environments where everyone is held accountable and connected to their community. The end goal is to protect the public and reduce crime by holding youth accountable and providing opportunities for reformation in safe environments.
If you are looking to join a team that values individual and cultural differences, with the opportunity to contribute to youth reformation by enriching our workforce with diversity, OYA wants to hear from you! People of color, women, and other members of historically marginalized communities are strongly encouraged to apply!
Please take a moment to watch this quick video about Oregon Youth Authority, our team and our culture bit.ly/work4OYA . For more information please visit www.oregon.gov/oya .
What's in it for You? OYA values our employees. We believe that your time outside of the workplace is as valuable as it is inside the workplace. We offer a great work/life balance with flexible work schedules on most positions and a competitive benefits package , including low-cost, high-coverage health insurance , generous time-off, and a competitive retirement plan .
Discover more about working in Oregon state government by clicking here .
What We Are Looking For:
a Bachelor's degree in a behavioral science or a related field with major courses in a behavioral science and one year of professional Juvenile Counseling experience in a correctional facility setting.
Three years experience providing professional counseling services directly to clientele or having direct client or inmate contact in a social service/rehabilitative setting may substitute for the Bachelor's degree. NOTE: Professional counseling experience must include providing supportive counseling to clients on a one-to-one basis with full responsibility for monitoring each case plan. To receive credit for a degree or coursework in a related field, you must submit a photocopy of your transcripts.
The State of Oregon requires all executive branch employees to complete their COVID-19 vaccination series or have an approved exception to the requirement due to a medical condition or sincerely held religious belief. Successful candidates for this position must submit vaccination documentation or be approved for an exception prior to their first day of employment. Failure to provide proof of full documentation or receipt of an approved exception will lead to withdrawal of the job offer. For more information, visit our policy listed here .
Special Qualifications:
Driver’s License: Driving/travel is an essential function of the position. You must possess a valid Oregon Driver's License and acceptable driving record.
DESIRED ATTRIBUTES/APPLICATION SCORING CRITERIA : In addition to your related work experience and education, we will use the attributes below as part of final scoring to advance those that qualify to the interview portion.
Lived and/or demonstrated experience working with at-risk population and marginalized population.
Experience working with community members/partners, internal and external stakeholders, and peers.
Strong computer skills, Microsoft Office, ability to create analyze and track data for reports and documentation.
How to apply:
Complete the application fully by going to oregonjobs.org and search job announcement REQ-85257 or click here: https://oregon.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/SOR_External_Career_Site/job/Portland--OYA--Multnomah-PP-Office/Youth-Services-Coordinator_REQ-85257
A resume will not be accepted in lieu of a completed application.
Complete the questionnaire / supplemental questions.
COVER LETTER: Submit a cover letter describing how you meet the qualifications and the desired attributes above.
After you submit your application please respond to the public records request authorization and gender identity questionnaire. This step will come after you submit and will complete the process. If you are an employee, the tasks will come to your Workday inbox.
If you are a veteran, you may receive preference. Click here for more information about veterans’ preference . The task to claim preference will come after the public records request and gender identity questionnaire tasks. Click here for a guide on how to upload your documents. For privacy reasons, please do not attach your DD214/DD215/civil service preference letter to your application or combine it with any other required document attachments.
Our goal is to be a diverse workforce that is representative, at all job levels, of the citizens we are here to serve. OYA is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer. All aspects of employment including the decision to hire, promote, discipline, or discharge, will be individualized based on merit, competence, performance, and business need.
We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, marital status, age, national origin, ancestry, physical or mental disability, medical condition, pregnancy, genetic information, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, or any other status protected under federal, state, or local law.” The more diverse we are, the better our work will be.
Jan 11, 2022
Full time
Oregon Youth Authority (OYA) welcomes you to join the Office of Inclusion and Intercultural Relations (OIIR) team as their new Youth Services Coordinator to help coordinate and deliver services to youth and their families and to assure culturally sensitive service delivery by others in the Portland, Oregon metro area - Clackamas County, Multnomah County, and Washington County. You will be responsible for providing training and consultation to agency staff; networking with the community regarding youth and other minority youth concerns.
A Day In The Life:
Assists youth and families in understanding Rogue Valley Youth Correctional Facility and Camp Florence Youth Transition Facility and OYA Services, programs, and expectations.
Provides cultural education for minority youth in need of cultural awareness.
Facilitates group intervention and one on one activities with youth in secure facilities and community settings.
Meet with intake youth individually upon arrival at least once a week to discuss behavior, personal issues, progress, problem -solving skills, goal setting, and by using various techniques to confront, guide and support the youth during the intake process and after they transfer to their permanent living units. Introduce Family Engagement and opportunities youth and family will have to participate.
Consult and assist OIIR staff and statewide regional liaisons in delivering direct program services, cultural awareness, and special projects.
Collaborate with probation officers managing the youth case plan for youth’s individual transition plans.
Provides emotional support for minority youth/families at case reviews and Multi-Disciplinary Meetings (MDT’s).
Works collaboratively and assists the OIIR Statewide Services Coordinator to provide services for non-citizen youth.
Assists to respond and communicate any issues related to youth immigration concerns at Eastern Youth Facility and provides support and guidance to youth and their families.
Assists OIIR Director, Manager, and staff in delivering cultural, diversity service to youth in closed custody, community residential programs, and community support for surrounding counties in Eastern Oregon and OYA staff statewide.
Coordinate and facilitate cultural events.
Networks with all minority community to provide educational, cultural, inspirational events for youth and staff at Eastern Oregon Youth Facility.
Makes speeches and presentations to community groups.
Keeps Oregon minority community informed about Eastern Oregon programs/services.
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator facilitate/explains/provides Spanish translation between youth, staff, and physicians.
This position is represented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU/OPEU).
Working Conditions:
Must be able to work under the following condition with or without reasonable accommodations:
Oregon Youth Authority is a tobacco free environment.
Work in a team environment. Help promote and maintain a harmonious work environment.
Daily face-to-face contact with adjudicated youth, some of which frequently resist instruction and exhibit verbally hostile or physically assaultive behavior. May be subject to a hostage situation.
Physical exertion to subdue out-of-control, combative, belligerent, hostile youth. May require use of reasonable force (including restraint equipment) during course of duties or during disturbances or other emergencies.
Staff may have potential exposure to communicable diseases. The consistent and effective use of appropriate infection-control materials and techniques is required.
Staff is expected to be a positive example and role model for the other staff and youth. The staff is to be supportive toward OYA, RVYCF and Camp Florence, their policies and procedures. Being a positive role model includes, but is not limited to: no excessive absenteeism, personal appearance is neat, treats all human beings with respect, is a law abiding citizen.
Each employee is to provide a positive, affirming environment which values fellow employees and the people they serve.
Will adhere to OYA Policy Memo II-D-3.4 regarding interpersonal relationships with youth.
All OYA employees are expected to work using safe work practices and to follow all policies regarding safe work practices.
ABOUT OYA
At OYA, diversity, equity, and inclusion are more than just words on a page. To meet our mission and live our values as an agency, DEI must be at the heart of all we do. We support cultural competence, develop teams and cultivate leaders in ways that are equitable to everyone, especially people of color, those who identify as LGBTQ+, or those from other marginalized communities. We are explicit and intentional as we identify resources that all our youth and staff need to grow and prosper. Our DEI work connects closely with our culture of positive human development, with safe and supportive environments where everyone is held accountable and connected to their community. The end goal is to protect the public and reduce crime by holding youth accountable and providing opportunities for reformation in safe environments.
If you are looking to join a team that values individual and cultural differences, with the opportunity to contribute to youth reformation by enriching our workforce with diversity, OYA wants to hear from you! People of color, women, and other members of historically marginalized communities are strongly encouraged to apply!
Please take a moment to watch this quick video about Oregon Youth Authority, our team and our culture bit.ly/work4OYA . For more information please visit www.oregon.gov/oya .
What's in it for You? OYA values our employees. We believe that your time outside of the workplace is as valuable as it is inside the workplace. We offer a great work/life balance with flexible work schedules on most positions and a competitive benefits package , including low-cost, high-coverage health insurance , generous time-off, and a competitive retirement plan .
Discover more about working in Oregon state government by clicking here .
What We Are Looking For:
a Bachelor's degree in a behavioral science or a related field with major courses in a behavioral science and one year of professional Juvenile Counseling experience in a correctional facility setting.
Three years experience providing professional counseling services directly to clientele or having direct client or inmate contact in a social service/rehabilitative setting may substitute for the Bachelor's degree. NOTE: Professional counseling experience must include providing supportive counseling to clients on a one-to-one basis with full responsibility for monitoring each case plan. To receive credit for a degree or coursework in a related field, you must submit a photocopy of your transcripts.
The State of Oregon requires all executive branch employees to complete their COVID-19 vaccination series or have an approved exception to the requirement due to a medical condition or sincerely held religious belief. Successful candidates for this position must submit vaccination documentation or be approved for an exception prior to their first day of employment. Failure to provide proof of full documentation or receipt of an approved exception will lead to withdrawal of the job offer. For more information, visit our policy listed here .
Special Qualifications:
Driver’s License: Driving/travel is an essential function of the position. You must possess a valid Oregon Driver's License and acceptable driving record.
DESIRED ATTRIBUTES/APPLICATION SCORING CRITERIA : In addition to your related work experience and education, we will use the attributes below as part of final scoring to advance those that qualify to the interview portion.
Lived and/or demonstrated experience working with at-risk population and marginalized population.
Experience working with community members/partners, internal and external stakeholders, and peers.
Strong computer skills, Microsoft Office, ability to create analyze and track data for reports and documentation.
How to apply:
Complete the application fully by going to oregonjobs.org and search job announcement REQ-85257 or click here: https://oregon.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/SOR_External_Career_Site/job/Portland--OYA--Multnomah-PP-Office/Youth-Services-Coordinator_REQ-85257
A resume will not be accepted in lieu of a completed application.
Complete the questionnaire / supplemental questions.
COVER LETTER: Submit a cover letter describing how you meet the qualifications and the desired attributes above.
After you submit your application please respond to the public records request authorization and gender identity questionnaire. This step will come after you submit and will complete the process. If you are an employee, the tasks will come to your Workday inbox.
If you are a veteran, you may receive preference. Click here for more information about veterans’ preference . The task to claim preference will come after the public records request and gender identity questionnaire tasks. Click here for a guide on how to upload your documents. For privacy reasons, please do not attach your DD214/DD215/civil service preference letter to your application or combine it with any other required document attachments.
Our goal is to be a diverse workforce that is representative, at all job levels, of the citizens we are here to serve. OYA is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer. All aspects of employment including the decision to hire, promote, discipline, or discharge, will be individualized based on merit, competence, performance, and business need.
We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, marital status, age, national origin, ancestry, physical or mental disability, medical condition, pregnancy, genetic information, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, or any other status protected under federal, state, or local law.” The more diverse we are, the better our work will be.
Oregon Youth Authority (OYA) welcomes you to join the Office of Inclusion and Intercultural Relations (OIIR) team as their new Multicultural Coordinator, Youth Services Coordinator to help coordinate and deliver services to youth and their families and to assure culturally sensitive service delivery by others at Rogue Valley Youth Correctional Facility (RVYCF) in Grants Pass, Oregon and Camp Florence in Florence, Oregon. You will be responsible for providing training and consultation to agency staff; networking with the community regarding youth and other minority youth concerns.
A Day In The Life:
Assists youth and families in understanding Rogue Valley Youth Correctional Facility and Camp Florence Youth Transition Facility and OYA Services, programs, and expectations.
Provides cultural education for minority youth in need of cultural awareness.
Facilitates group intervention and one on one activities with youth in secure facilities and community settings.
Meet with intake youth individually upon arrival at least once a week to discuss behavior, personal issues, progress, problem -solving skills, goal setting, and by using various techniques to confront, guide and support the youth during the intake process and after they transfer to their permanent living units. Introduce Family Engagement and opportunities youth and family will have to participate.
Consult and assist OIIR staff and statewide regional liaisons in delivering direct program services, cultural awareness, and special projects.
Collaborate with probation officers managing the youth case plan for youth’s individual transition plans.
Provides emotional support for minority youth/families at case reviews and Multi-Disciplinary Meetings (MDT’s).
Works collaboratively and assists the OIIR Statewide Services Coordinator to provide services for non-citizen youth.
Assists to respond and communicate any issues related to youth immigration concerns at Eastern Youth Facility and provides support and guidance to youth and their families.
Assists OIIR Director, Manager, and staff in delivering cultural, diversity service to youth in closed custody, community residential programs, and community support for surrounding counties in Eastern Oregon and OYA staff statewide.
Coordinate and facilitate cultural events.
Networks with all minority community to provide educational, cultural, inspirational events for youth and staff at Eastern Oregon Youth Facility.
Makes speeches and presentations to community groups.
Keeps Oregon minority community informed about Eastern Oregon programs/services.
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator facilitate/explains/provides Spanish translation between youth, staff, and physicians.
This position is represented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU/OPEU).
Working Conditions:
Must be able to work under the following condition with or without reasonable accommodations:
Oregon Youth Authority is a tobacco free environment.
Work in a team environment. Help promote and maintain a harmonious work environment.
Daily face-to-face contact with adjudicated youth, some of which frequently resist instruction and exhibit verbally hostile or physically assaultive behavior. May be subject to a hostage situation.
Physical exertion to subdue out-of-control, combative, belligerent, hostile youth. May require use of reasonable force (including restraint equipment) during course of duties or during disturbances or other emergencies.
Staff may have potential exposure to communicable diseases. The consistent and effective use of appropriate infection-control materials and techniques is required.
Staff is expected to be a positive example and role model for the other staff and youth. The staff is to be supportive toward OYA, RVYCF and Camp Florence, their policies and procedures. Being a positive role model includes, but is not limited to: no excessive absenteeism, personal appearance is neat, treats all human beings with respect, is a law abiding citizen.
Each employee is to provide a positive, affirming environment which values fellow employees and the people they serve.
Will adhere to OYA Policy Memo II-D-3.4 regarding interpersonal relationships with youth.
All OYA employees are expected to work using safe work practices and to follow all policies regarding safe work practices.
ABOUT OYA
At OYA, diversity, equity, and inclusion are more than just words on a page. To meet our mission and live our values as an agency, DEI must be at the heart of all we do. We support cultural competence, develop teams and cultivate leaders in ways that are equitable to everyone, especially people of color, those who identify as LGBTQ+, or those from other marginalized communities. We are explicit and intentional as we identify resources that all our youth and staff need to grow and prosper. Our DEI work connects closely with our culture of positive human development, with safe and supportive environments where everyone is held accountable and connected to their community. The end goal is to protect the public and reduce crime by holding youth accountable and providing opportunities for reformation in safe environments.
If you are looking to join a team that values individual and cultural differences, with the opportunity to contribute to youth reformation by enriching our workforce with diversity, OYA wants to hear from you! People of color, women, and other members of historically marginalized communities are strongly encouraged to apply!
Please take a moment to watch this quick video about Oregon Youth Authority, our team and our culture bit.ly/work4OYA . For more information please visit www.oregon.gov/oya .
What's in it for You? OYA values our employees. We believe that your time outside of the workplace is as valuable as it is inside the workplace. We offer a great work/life balance with flexible work schedules on most positions and a competitive benefits package , including low-cost, high-coverage health insurance , generous time-off, and a competitive retirement plan .
Discover more about working in Oregon state government by clicking here .
What We Are Looking For:
a Bachelor's degree in a behavioral science or a related field with major courses in a behavioral science and one year of professional Juvenile Counseling experience in a correctional facility setting.
Three years experience providing professional counseling services directly to clientele or having direct client or inmate contact in a social service/rehabilitative setting may substitute for the Bachelor's degree. NOTE: Professional counseling experience must include providing supportive counseling to clients on a one-to-one basis with full responsibility for monitoring each case plan. To receive credit for a degree or coursework in a related field, you must submit a photocopy of your transcripts.
The State of Oregon requires all executive branch employees to complete their COVID-19 vaccination series or have an approved exception to the requirement due to a medical condition or sincerely held religious belief. Successful candidates for this position must submit vaccination documentation or be approved for an exception prior to their first day of employment. Failure to provide proof of full documentation or receipt of an approved exception will lead to withdrawal of the job offer. For more information, visit our policy listed here .
Special Qualifications:
Driver’s License: Driving/travel is an essential function of the position. You must possess a valid Oregon Driver's License and acceptable driving record.
DESIRED ATTRIBUTES/APPLICATION SCORING CRITERIA : In addition to your related work experience and education, we will use the attributes below as part of final scoring to advance those that qualify to the interview portion.
Lived and/or demonstrated experience working with at-risk population and marginalized population.
Experience working with community members/partners, internal and external stakeholders, and peers.
Strong computer skills, Microsoft Office, ability to create analyze and track data for reports and documentation.
How to apply:
Complete the application fully at oregonjobs.org and search job announcement REQ-84410 or click here: https://oregon.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/SOR_External_Career_Site/job/Grants-Pass--OYA--Rogue-Valley/MULTICULTURAL-COORDINATOR---YOUTH-SERVICES-COORDINATOR_REQ-84410
Our goal is to be a diverse workforce that is representative, at all job levels, of the citizens we are here to serve. OYA is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer. All aspects of employment including the decision to hire, promote, discipline, or discharge, will be individualized based on merit, competence, performance, and business need.
We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, marital status, age, national origin, ancestry, physical or mental disability, medical condition, pregnancy, genetic information, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, or any other status protected under federal, state, or local law.” The more diverse we are, the better our work will be.
Dec 28, 2021
Full time
Oregon Youth Authority (OYA) welcomes you to join the Office of Inclusion and Intercultural Relations (OIIR) team as their new Multicultural Coordinator, Youth Services Coordinator to help coordinate and deliver services to youth and their families and to assure culturally sensitive service delivery by others at Rogue Valley Youth Correctional Facility (RVYCF) in Grants Pass, Oregon and Camp Florence in Florence, Oregon. You will be responsible for providing training and consultation to agency staff; networking with the community regarding youth and other minority youth concerns.
A Day In The Life:
Assists youth and families in understanding Rogue Valley Youth Correctional Facility and Camp Florence Youth Transition Facility and OYA Services, programs, and expectations.
Provides cultural education for minority youth in need of cultural awareness.
Facilitates group intervention and one on one activities with youth in secure facilities and community settings.
Meet with intake youth individually upon arrival at least once a week to discuss behavior, personal issues, progress, problem -solving skills, goal setting, and by using various techniques to confront, guide and support the youth during the intake process and after they transfer to their permanent living units. Introduce Family Engagement and opportunities youth and family will have to participate.
Consult and assist OIIR staff and statewide regional liaisons in delivering direct program services, cultural awareness, and special projects.
Collaborate with probation officers managing the youth case plan for youth’s individual transition plans.
Provides emotional support for minority youth/families at case reviews and Multi-Disciplinary Meetings (MDT’s).
Works collaboratively and assists the OIIR Statewide Services Coordinator to provide services for non-citizen youth.
Assists to respond and communicate any issues related to youth immigration concerns at Eastern Youth Facility and provides support and guidance to youth and their families.
Assists OIIR Director, Manager, and staff in delivering cultural, diversity service to youth in closed custody, community residential programs, and community support for surrounding counties in Eastern Oregon and OYA staff statewide.
Coordinate and facilitate cultural events.
Networks with all minority community to provide educational, cultural, inspirational events for youth and staff at Eastern Oregon Youth Facility.
Makes speeches and presentations to community groups.
Keeps Oregon minority community informed about Eastern Oregon programs/services.
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator
Assists the Tattoo Removal Program Coordinator facilitate/explains/provides Spanish translation between youth, staff, and physicians.
This position is represented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU/OPEU).
Working Conditions:
Must be able to work under the following condition with or without reasonable accommodations:
Oregon Youth Authority is a tobacco free environment.
Work in a team environment. Help promote and maintain a harmonious work environment.
Daily face-to-face contact with adjudicated youth, some of which frequently resist instruction and exhibit verbally hostile or physically assaultive behavior. May be subject to a hostage situation.
Physical exertion to subdue out-of-control, combative, belligerent, hostile youth. May require use of reasonable force (including restraint equipment) during course of duties or during disturbances or other emergencies.
Staff may have potential exposure to communicable diseases. The consistent and effective use of appropriate infection-control materials and techniques is required.
Staff is expected to be a positive example and role model for the other staff and youth. The staff is to be supportive toward OYA, RVYCF and Camp Florence, their policies and procedures. Being a positive role model includes, but is not limited to: no excessive absenteeism, personal appearance is neat, treats all human beings with respect, is a law abiding citizen.
Each employee is to provide a positive, affirming environment which values fellow employees and the people they serve.
Will adhere to OYA Policy Memo II-D-3.4 regarding interpersonal relationships with youth.
All OYA employees are expected to work using safe work practices and to follow all policies regarding safe work practices.
ABOUT OYA
At OYA, diversity, equity, and inclusion are more than just words on a page. To meet our mission and live our values as an agency, DEI must be at the heart of all we do. We support cultural competence, develop teams and cultivate leaders in ways that are equitable to everyone, especially people of color, those who identify as LGBTQ+, or those from other marginalized communities. We are explicit and intentional as we identify resources that all our youth and staff need to grow and prosper. Our DEI work connects closely with our culture of positive human development, with safe and supportive environments where everyone is held accountable and connected to their community. The end goal is to protect the public and reduce crime by holding youth accountable and providing opportunities for reformation in safe environments.
If you are looking to join a team that values individual and cultural differences, with the opportunity to contribute to youth reformation by enriching our workforce with diversity, OYA wants to hear from you! People of color, women, and other members of historically marginalized communities are strongly encouraged to apply!
Please take a moment to watch this quick video about Oregon Youth Authority, our team and our culture bit.ly/work4OYA . For more information please visit www.oregon.gov/oya .
What's in it for You? OYA values our employees. We believe that your time outside of the workplace is as valuable as it is inside the workplace. We offer a great work/life balance with flexible work schedules on most positions and a competitive benefits package , including low-cost, high-coverage health insurance , generous time-off, and a competitive retirement plan .
Discover more about working in Oregon state government by clicking here .
What We Are Looking For:
a Bachelor's degree in a behavioral science or a related field with major courses in a behavioral science and one year of professional Juvenile Counseling experience in a correctional facility setting.
Three years experience providing professional counseling services directly to clientele or having direct client or inmate contact in a social service/rehabilitative setting may substitute for the Bachelor's degree. NOTE: Professional counseling experience must include providing supportive counseling to clients on a one-to-one basis with full responsibility for monitoring each case plan. To receive credit for a degree or coursework in a related field, you must submit a photocopy of your transcripts.
The State of Oregon requires all executive branch employees to complete their COVID-19 vaccination series or have an approved exception to the requirement due to a medical condition or sincerely held religious belief. Successful candidates for this position must submit vaccination documentation or be approved for an exception prior to their first day of employment. Failure to provide proof of full documentation or receipt of an approved exception will lead to withdrawal of the job offer. For more information, visit our policy listed here .
Special Qualifications:
Driver’s License: Driving/travel is an essential function of the position. You must possess a valid Oregon Driver's License and acceptable driving record.
DESIRED ATTRIBUTES/APPLICATION SCORING CRITERIA : In addition to your related work experience and education, we will use the attributes below as part of final scoring to advance those that qualify to the interview portion.
Lived and/or demonstrated experience working with at-risk population and marginalized population.
Experience working with community members/partners, internal and external stakeholders, and peers.
Strong computer skills, Microsoft Office, ability to create analyze and track data for reports and documentation.
How to apply:
Complete the application fully at oregonjobs.org and search job announcement REQ-84410 or click here: https://oregon.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/SOR_External_Career_Site/job/Grants-Pass--OYA--Rogue-Valley/MULTICULTURAL-COORDINATOR---YOUTH-SERVICES-COORDINATOR_REQ-84410
Our goal is to be a diverse workforce that is representative, at all job levels, of the citizens we are here to serve. OYA is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer. All aspects of employment including the decision to hire, promote, discipline, or discharge, will be individualized based on merit, competence, performance, and business need.
We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, marital status, age, national origin, ancestry, physical or mental disability, medical condition, pregnancy, genetic information, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, or any other status protected under federal, state, or local law.” The more diverse we are, the better our work will be.
Description
We strongly encourage people of color, transgender and non-binary people to apply. HRC is an equal opportunity employer and welcomes everyone, including non-LGBTQ+ people, to join our team.
Position Summary:
The Major Gifts Officer – Greater New York/Western New York is a regular, full-time position responsible for the identification, cultivation and solicitation of contributions from major donors and major donor prospects (in coordination with the Deputy Director of Major Gifts, the Leadership Giving program and the other major gifts officers). This position will play an important role in significantly growing an engagement strategy for the Greater New York area and Western New York areas, while building and managing a portfolio of regional major gift prospects, expanding the scope and scale of HRC’s philanthropic efforts, and helping formulate strategy and implementation of plans to achieve fundraising goals.
Position Responsibilities:
Implement programs and activities to identify, cultivate, solicit and steward donors at the major gift level ($5,000 level and above), with a specific emphasis on growing the base of donors making gifts of at least $25,000 annually. The candidate will actively participate in the identification and qualification of new major gift and leadership gift ($100,000+) prospects. There shall be an emphasis on identifying and cultivating prospects in the BIPOC community.
Cultivate and grow a visible presence within the LGBTQ+ community in Greater New York and Western New York areas and be seen as a part of the engaged donor community in the state of New York.
Regularly attend and represent HRC at important events in the LGBTQ+, BIPOC and non-LGBTQ+ communities and build a robust network of donors and prospects.
Develop and steward relationships with HRC’s already robust and dynamic donor base in the state of New York.
Work strategically with the Greater New York and Western New York Board of Directors, major donor committee, development and political department staff and other major gift officers to ensure donors feel connected to the organization.
Develop a comprehensive plan to include upgrading current donors and identifying and soliciting new donors to meet budgeted goals for Greater New York and Western New York.
Identify opportunities for further engagement with donors and prospects to support HRC, the HRC Foundation, the HRC PAC and the HRC Equality Votes Super PAC.
Identify prospects to become Equality Circle members, a group of supporters of HRC’s Planned Giving program.
Assist in identifying prospects in the Greater New York and Western New York areas that are potential matches with HRC’s other development programs including corporate partnerships, foundation fundraising and Federal Club giving.
Foster opportunities for other HRC staff leadership with donors and other community leaders in the Greater New York and Western New York areas. Provide background for in-depth briefing documents in advance of such meetings. Execute events and other fundraising activities that advance HRC’s relationship with donors and prospects.
Preparation and staffing of principal and other senior leaders at events and individual meetings, with a strong ability to represent HRC as needed.
Prepare written documents in support of solicitation, cultivation and development events, including correspondence, strategic plans, invitations, reports and highly tailored proposals.
Provide reporting to board members and volunteers related to major donor fundraising including, but not limited to, active major donor reports, prospect reports and progress toward budgeted goals.
Manage current donor and prospect cultivation and solicitation plans by using donor software.
Work collaboratively with HRCs major gifts team, participating in regular conference calls and meetings, attend and participate in HRC board meetings in Washington, DC and attend other events in Washington, DC as needed.
Actively share information on planned giving opportunities as appropriate.
Other duties as assigned.
Position Qualifications:
Bachelor’s degree required with a minimum of five years of experience in fundraising. Emphasis in the major donor arena, as well as experience in solicitation of political contributions for federal candidates and/or party committees required.
Preferred that this candidate will have an emphasis on identifying and cultivating prospects in the BIPOC community.
Candidate should be comfortable working independently but as part of a larger team.
Candidate must be well organized, detail-oriented and have a proven experience in securing major gifts.
Applicants must be able to prioritize multiple assignments and be able to handle complex tasks in a fast-paced environment.
Individuals should have demonstrated proficiency in writing and strong communications skills.
In particular, the individual should have public speaking experience or skills, be able to represent HRC in a variety of settings and exceptional strength in the area of donor relations.
When travel is safe, if the candidate lives in DC, the ability to travel up to 50% of the time is required. If the candidate lives in NY, the ability to travel up to 25% of the time is required. This includes potential evening and weekend travel.
Strong interest in the rapidly changing LGBTQ+ equality movement and a working knowledge of LGBTQ+ issues.
All positions at the Human Rights Campaign may require travel on a regular basis or periodically. Where the need arises for business travel, appropriate compensation as outlined by the Fair Labor Standards Act will apply.
No phone calls or emails, please. Due to the volume of applications we receive, we are unable to respond to queries about application status.
Oct 13, 2021
Full time
Description
We strongly encourage people of color, transgender and non-binary people to apply. HRC is an equal opportunity employer and welcomes everyone, including non-LGBTQ+ people, to join our team.
Position Summary:
The Major Gifts Officer – Greater New York/Western New York is a regular, full-time position responsible for the identification, cultivation and solicitation of contributions from major donors and major donor prospects (in coordination with the Deputy Director of Major Gifts, the Leadership Giving program and the other major gifts officers). This position will play an important role in significantly growing an engagement strategy for the Greater New York area and Western New York areas, while building and managing a portfolio of regional major gift prospects, expanding the scope and scale of HRC’s philanthropic efforts, and helping formulate strategy and implementation of plans to achieve fundraising goals.
Position Responsibilities:
Implement programs and activities to identify, cultivate, solicit and steward donors at the major gift level ($5,000 level and above), with a specific emphasis on growing the base of donors making gifts of at least $25,000 annually. The candidate will actively participate in the identification and qualification of new major gift and leadership gift ($100,000+) prospects. There shall be an emphasis on identifying and cultivating prospects in the BIPOC community.
Cultivate and grow a visible presence within the LGBTQ+ community in Greater New York and Western New York areas and be seen as a part of the engaged donor community in the state of New York.
Regularly attend and represent HRC at important events in the LGBTQ+, BIPOC and non-LGBTQ+ communities and build a robust network of donors and prospects.
Develop and steward relationships with HRC’s already robust and dynamic donor base in the state of New York.
Work strategically with the Greater New York and Western New York Board of Directors, major donor committee, development and political department staff and other major gift officers to ensure donors feel connected to the organization.
Develop a comprehensive plan to include upgrading current donors and identifying and soliciting new donors to meet budgeted goals for Greater New York and Western New York.
Identify opportunities for further engagement with donors and prospects to support HRC, the HRC Foundation, the HRC PAC and the HRC Equality Votes Super PAC.
Identify prospects to become Equality Circle members, a group of supporters of HRC’s Planned Giving program.
Assist in identifying prospects in the Greater New York and Western New York areas that are potential matches with HRC’s other development programs including corporate partnerships, foundation fundraising and Federal Club giving.
Foster opportunities for other HRC staff leadership with donors and other community leaders in the Greater New York and Western New York areas. Provide background for in-depth briefing documents in advance of such meetings. Execute events and other fundraising activities that advance HRC’s relationship with donors and prospects.
Preparation and staffing of principal and other senior leaders at events and individual meetings, with a strong ability to represent HRC as needed.
Prepare written documents in support of solicitation, cultivation and development events, including correspondence, strategic plans, invitations, reports and highly tailored proposals.
Provide reporting to board members and volunteers related to major donor fundraising including, but not limited to, active major donor reports, prospect reports and progress toward budgeted goals.
Manage current donor and prospect cultivation and solicitation plans by using donor software.
Work collaboratively with HRCs major gifts team, participating in regular conference calls and meetings, attend and participate in HRC board meetings in Washington, DC and attend other events in Washington, DC as needed.
Actively share information on planned giving opportunities as appropriate.
Other duties as assigned.
Position Qualifications:
Bachelor’s degree required with a minimum of five years of experience in fundraising. Emphasis in the major donor arena, as well as experience in solicitation of political contributions for federal candidates and/or party committees required.
Preferred that this candidate will have an emphasis on identifying and cultivating prospects in the BIPOC community.
Candidate should be comfortable working independently but as part of a larger team.
Candidate must be well organized, detail-oriented and have a proven experience in securing major gifts.
Applicants must be able to prioritize multiple assignments and be able to handle complex tasks in a fast-paced environment.
Individuals should have demonstrated proficiency in writing and strong communications skills.
In particular, the individual should have public speaking experience or skills, be able to represent HRC in a variety of settings and exceptional strength in the area of donor relations.
When travel is safe, if the candidate lives in DC, the ability to travel up to 50% of the time is required. If the candidate lives in NY, the ability to travel up to 25% of the time is required. This includes potential evening and weekend travel.
Strong interest in the rapidly changing LGBTQ+ equality movement and a working knowledge of LGBTQ+ issues.
All positions at the Human Rights Campaign may require travel on a regular basis or periodically. Where the need arises for business travel, appropriate compensation as outlined by the Fair Labor Standards Act will apply.
No phone calls or emails, please. Due to the volume of applications we receive, we are unable to respond to queries about application status.
Job Title: Program Manager, Condition Management - Mount Sinai Health Partners
Summary
Mount Sinai is one of the largest non-profit health systems in the U.S. with a strong reputation for quality of care (18th ranked academic medical center) and research/education (22nd ranked medical school). Our health system has ~40,000 employees working together to provide billions of dollars in high-quality care for millions of patients each year.
We are accelerating a transition to a business model focused on population health management – our goal is to keep entire communities healthy and out of the hospital. Mount Sinai Health Partners (MSHP) is the team driving this transformation within Mount Sinai. The team includes 400+ employees with clinical, contracting, finance, IT, analytics, operations, and product development expertise.
MSHP is a fast growing business unit within Mount Sinai and is looking for team members who:
Are comfortable “playing up” and “playing down” as needed to accomplish business objectives
Thrive in fast-paced work environments
Seek to improve the status quo
Within MSHP, the Pharmacy Team drives the implementation and ongoing improvement of initiatives that enable Mount Sinai to deliver better value to its patients, its customers (i.e., plan sponsors and payers), its providers, and its partners. At Mount Sinai, value is defined broadly and encompasses improved health outcomes, more efficient operations, better patient experience, more joyful care team environment, and improved financial performance. The Pharmacy Team works directly with the Clinical Operations Leadership Team, Population Health and Chief Medical Officer, Population Health.
Role Summary
MSHP seeks a Program Manager for Condition Management.
The Program Manager reports to the Director of Condition Management to provide operational leadership for the program. The program provides remote monitoring device connectivity for patients and related condition management for high risk patient populations across MSHS. Working with MSHP leadership, the Manager will support all activities related to the program’s daily operations, operational and clinical metrics, supporting implementation and expansion. The manager is responsible for maintaining the clinical operations, workflows, informatics tools, training and managing efficiencies of staff, analytics and program dashboards. The manager will serve as a point of contact for MSHS IT, Digital Health, Consumer Digital and other partnering stakeholders. The manager will serve as the primary point of contact for key cross-functions for the condition management and effectively communicate the goals, vision, and methods for achieving desired outcomes. The manager will develop content for education and initiatives and support issue identification, resolution.
Responsibilities
Responsibility #1 Clinical Operations
Serves as an operations owner for condition management and contributes to all aspects, including process implementation, and ongoing evaluation and improvement
Develop relationships with strategic vendors to execute complex workflow operations involving multiple team members
Supports with training for all new condition management programs and initiatives
Lead related clinical informatics design and workflows in collaboration with IT
Manage billing, IT, analytics tools to maintain efficient operations
Maintain relationships with leaders across the system to advance condition management programs and obtain inputs for clinical workflows
Implement methods to hotspot populations who would benefit from condition management as related to MSHP VBC goals and outreach workflows
Interface with teams from across the health system (including clinical, IT, legal, operations, compliance, and connected devices) to advance condition management program
Develops and reviews staff, patient and provider satisfaction feedback to inform program improvement and provide stakeholder updates
Responsibility #2 Personnel Management
Exhibits strong interpersonal skills to influence and indirectly manage team members to maintain smooth operations.
Is an empathetic listener, proactive problem solver and brings a positive team-building approach to management
Exercises management skills such as coaching, effective and clear communicator, effective planner, good listener
Supports weekly staff huddles to listen for barriers
Supports the development of staff career goals
Supports in performance review feedback for the director on an ongoing basis
Responsibility #3 Project Management
Manages weekly, monthly and quarterly meetings to run smooth operations for the clinical department
Develops effective project work plans, providing updates efficiently across multiple stakeholders
Facilitates meetings, ensuring initiatives are accomplished effectively and on time
Serve as operational support for quality initiatives, contributing to strategy, process design, implementation, and ongoing evaluation and improvement
Develop communications and marketing materials for the program
Develops operational, financial and clinical program dashboards with analytics and monitors related performance on an ongoing basis
Manages EHR optimization, billing workflows and data capture to improve operations
Implements methodology to assess long-term impact to populations served
Supports with other areas as directed
Qualifications
Education and Experience
Bachelors' degree with at least 4 years of experience at a management consulting firm, in healthcare management, or in a similar environment with demonstrated excellence in managing high-stakes, complex initiatives and in client and executive-facing roles
Advanced analytical capabilities required; experience with healthcare claims analysis and clinical quality measures highly preferred
Experience mentoring and developing junior employees
Demonstrated passion for improving healthcare is a requirement; experience with population health, healthcare delivery systems, payers, and startups is a plus
Additional Skills and Qualities
Analytic skillset – ability to build models and perform data analysis across finance and strategic business needs (e.g., market sizing), and healthcare topics with guidance from Condition Management Director
Effective communicator – excellent written and verbal communication; able to summarize analyses in a way that simplifies complex ideas and synthesizes research into actionable insights
Organized – meticulous and detail-oriented; consistently meets timelines and objectives
Reliable – delivers high-quality work and accurate analyses; raises questions or concerns in a timely manner
Mature professional – seen as a senior team member, interacts with internal and external stakeholders independently and in a poised and professional manner
Ethical leader – models behavior rooted in respect for patients
Strategic thinker – adept at understanding how individual project activities fit within and contribute to overall initiatives
Problem solver – proactively responds to problems with suggested solutions; sound judgment and decision-making abilities; takes initiative
Flexible team player – able to collaborate well with diverse set of team members, comfortable working in a startup environment (which requires all team members to have the willingness to get things done)
Passionate innovator – desire to join a fast-paced, growth-oriented environment with a passion for delivering superior health value and improving health care in the US
About the Mount Sinai Health System
The Mount Sinai Health System is New York City's largest integrated delivery system, encompassing eight hospitals, a leading medical school, and a vast network of ambulatory practices throughout the greater New York region. Mount Sinai's vision is to produce the safest care, the highest quality, the highest satisfaction, the best access and the best value of any health system in the nation.
The Health System includes approximately 7,480 primary and specialty care physicians; 11 joint-venture ambulatory surgery centers; more than 410 ambulatory practices throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island, and Florida; and 31 affiliated community health centers. The Icahn School of Medicine is one of three medical schools that have earned distinction by multiple indicators: ranked in the top 20 by U.S. News & World Report's "Best Medical Schools", aligned with a U.S. News & World Report's "Honor Roll" Hospital, No. 12 in the nation for National Institutes of Health funding, and among the top 10 most innovative research institutions as ranked by the journal Nature in its Nature Innovation Index. This reflects a special level of excellence in education, clinical practice, and research. The Mount Sinai Hospital is ranked No. 18 on U.S. News & World Report's "Honor Roll" of top U.S. hospitals; it is one of the nation's top 20 hospitals in Cardiology/Heart Surgery, Gastroenterology/GI Surgery, Geriatrics, Nephrology, and Neurology/Neurosurgery, and in the top 50 in six other specialties in the 2018-2019 "Best Hospitals" issue. Mount Sinai's Kravis Children's Hospital also is ranked nationally in five out of ten pediatric specialties by U.S. News & World Report. The New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai is ranked 11th nationally for Ophthalmology and 44th for Ear, Nose, and Throat. Mount Sinai Beth Israel, Mount Sinai St. Luke's, Mount Sinai West, and Mount Sinai South Nassau are ranked regionally.
The Mount Sinai Health System is an equal opportunity employer. We promote recognition and respect for individual and cultural differences, and we work to make our employees feel valued and appreciated, whatever their race, gender, background, or sexual orientation.
Strength Through Diversity
The Mount Sinai Health System believes that diversity, equity and inclusion are drivers for excellence. We share a common devotion to delivering exceptional patient care. Yet we’re as diverse as the city we call home- culturally, ethically, in outlook and lifestyle. When you join us, you become a part of Mount Sinai’s unrivaled record of achievement, education, and advancement as we revolutionize medicine together and participate actively as a leader within the Mount Sinai Health System by:
Serving as the primary resource management representative of the Mount Sinai leadership teams, committees, etc., and acting as the primary executive leader interface between Mount Sinai and key executives from the health systems’ vendors and partners.
Engaging with relevant thought leaders and policy-makers at the federal and state levels, and representing the Health System as assigned.
Using a lens of equity in establishing and promoting policies and procedures and providing opportunities for all to thrive.
Confronting racist, sexist or other inappropriate behavior and challenges exclusionary organizational practices and serving as a role model to promote anti-racist behaviors.
Inspiring and fostering an environment of anti-racist behaviors among and between departments and co-workers.
We work hard to acquire and retain the best people, and to create a welcoming, nurturing work environment where you can develop professionally. We share the belief that all employees, regardless of job title or expertise, can make an impact on quality patient care.
Explore more about this opportunity and how you can help us write a new chapter in our story!
Who We Are
Over 42,000 employees strong, the mission of the Mount Sinai Health System is to provide compassionate patient care with seamless coordination and to advance medicine through unrivaled education, research, and outreach in the many diverse communities we serve.
Formed in September 2013, The Mount Sinai Health System combines the excellence of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai with seven premier hospital campuses, including Mount Sinai Beth Israel, Mount Sinai Beth Israel Brooklyn, The Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai West (formerly Mount Sinai Roosevelt), Mount Sinai Morningside (formerly Mount Sinai St. Luke’s), and New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai.
The Mount Sinai Health System is an equal opportunity employer. We comply with applicable Federal civil rights laws and does not discriminate, exclude, or treat people differently on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, religion, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression.
EOE Minorities/Women/Disabled/Veterans
Sep 16, 2021
Full time
Job Title: Program Manager, Condition Management - Mount Sinai Health Partners
Summary
Mount Sinai is one of the largest non-profit health systems in the U.S. with a strong reputation for quality of care (18th ranked academic medical center) and research/education (22nd ranked medical school). Our health system has ~40,000 employees working together to provide billions of dollars in high-quality care for millions of patients each year.
We are accelerating a transition to a business model focused on population health management – our goal is to keep entire communities healthy and out of the hospital. Mount Sinai Health Partners (MSHP) is the team driving this transformation within Mount Sinai. The team includes 400+ employees with clinical, contracting, finance, IT, analytics, operations, and product development expertise.
MSHP is a fast growing business unit within Mount Sinai and is looking for team members who:
Are comfortable “playing up” and “playing down” as needed to accomplish business objectives
Thrive in fast-paced work environments
Seek to improve the status quo
Within MSHP, the Pharmacy Team drives the implementation and ongoing improvement of initiatives that enable Mount Sinai to deliver better value to its patients, its customers (i.e., plan sponsors and payers), its providers, and its partners. At Mount Sinai, value is defined broadly and encompasses improved health outcomes, more efficient operations, better patient experience, more joyful care team environment, and improved financial performance. The Pharmacy Team works directly with the Clinical Operations Leadership Team, Population Health and Chief Medical Officer, Population Health.
Role Summary
MSHP seeks a Program Manager for Condition Management.
The Program Manager reports to the Director of Condition Management to provide operational leadership for the program. The program provides remote monitoring device connectivity for patients and related condition management for high risk patient populations across MSHS. Working with MSHP leadership, the Manager will support all activities related to the program’s daily operations, operational and clinical metrics, supporting implementation and expansion. The manager is responsible for maintaining the clinical operations, workflows, informatics tools, training and managing efficiencies of staff, analytics and program dashboards. The manager will serve as a point of contact for MSHS IT, Digital Health, Consumer Digital and other partnering stakeholders. The manager will serve as the primary point of contact for key cross-functions for the condition management and effectively communicate the goals, vision, and methods for achieving desired outcomes. The manager will develop content for education and initiatives and support issue identification, resolution.
Responsibilities
Responsibility #1 Clinical Operations
Serves as an operations owner for condition management and contributes to all aspects, including process implementation, and ongoing evaluation and improvement
Develop relationships with strategic vendors to execute complex workflow operations involving multiple team members
Supports with training for all new condition management programs and initiatives
Lead related clinical informatics design and workflows in collaboration with IT
Manage billing, IT, analytics tools to maintain efficient operations
Maintain relationships with leaders across the system to advance condition management programs and obtain inputs for clinical workflows
Implement methods to hotspot populations who would benefit from condition management as related to MSHP VBC goals and outreach workflows
Interface with teams from across the health system (including clinical, IT, legal, operations, compliance, and connected devices) to advance condition management program
Develops and reviews staff, patient and provider satisfaction feedback to inform program improvement and provide stakeholder updates
Responsibility #2 Personnel Management
Exhibits strong interpersonal skills to influence and indirectly manage team members to maintain smooth operations.
Is an empathetic listener, proactive problem solver and brings a positive team-building approach to management
Exercises management skills such as coaching, effective and clear communicator, effective planner, good listener
Supports weekly staff huddles to listen for barriers
Supports the development of staff career goals
Supports in performance review feedback for the director on an ongoing basis
Responsibility #3 Project Management
Manages weekly, monthly and quarterly meetings to run smooth operations for the clinical department
Develops effective project work plans, providing updates efficiently across multiple stakeholders
Facilitates meetings, ensuring initiatives are accomplished effectively and on time
Serve as operational support for quality initiatives, contributing to strategy, process design, implementation, and ongoing evaluation and improvement
Develop communications and marketing materials for the program
Develops operational, financial and clinical program dashboards with analytics and monitors related performance on an ongoing basis
Manages EHR optimization, billing workflows and data capture to improve operations
Implements methodology to assess long-term impact to populations served
Supports with other areas as directed
Qualifications
Education and Experience
Bachelors' degree with at least 4 years of experience at a management consulting firm, in healthcare management, or in a similar environment with demonstrated excellence in managing high-stakes, complex initiatives and in client and executive-facing roles
Advanced analytical capabilities required; experience with healthcare claims analysis and clinical quality measures highly preferred
Experience mentoring and developing junior employees
Demonstrated passion for improving healthcare is a requirement; experience with population health, healthcare delivery systems, payers, and startups is a plus
Additional Skills and Qualities
Analytic skillset – ability to build models and perform data analysis across finance and strategic business needs (e.g., market sizing), and healthcare topics with guidance from Condition Management Director
Effective communicator – excellent written and verbal communication; able to summarize analyses in a way that simplifies complex ideas and synthesizes research into actionable insights
Organized – meticulous and detail-oriented; consistently meets timelines and objectives
Reliable – delivers high-quality work and accurate analyses; raises questions or concerns in a timely manner
Mature professional – seen as a senior team member, interacts with internal and external stakeholders independently and in a poised and professional manner
Ethical leader – models behavior rooted in respect for patients
Strategic thinker – adept at understanding how individual project activities fit within and contribute to overall initiatives
Problem solver – proactively responds to problems with suggested solutions; sound judgment and decision-making abilities; takes initiative
Flexible team player – able to collaborate well with diverse set of team members, comfortable working in a startup environment (which requires all team members to have the willingness to get things done)
Passionate innovator – desire to join a fast-paced, growth-oriented environment with a passion for delivering superior health value and improving health care in the US
About the Mount Sinai Health System
The Mount Sinai Health System is New York City's largest integrated delivery system, encompassing eight hospitals, a leading medical school, and a vast network of ambulatory practices throughout the greater New York region. Mount Sinai's vision is to produce the safest care, the highest quality, the highest satisfaction, the best access and the best value of any health system in the nation.
The Health System includes approximately 7,480 primary and specialty care physicians; 11 joint-venture ambulatory surgery centers; more than 410 ambulatory practices throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island, and Florida; and 31 affiliated community health centers. The Icahn School of Medicine is one of three medical schools that have earned distinction by multiple indicators: ranked in the top 20 by U.S. News & World Report's "Best Medical Schools", aligned with a U.S. News & World Report's "Honor Roll" Hospital, No. 12 in the nation for National Institutes of Health funding, and among the top 10 most innovative research institutions as ranked by the journal Nature in its Nature Innovation Index. This reflects a special level of excellence in education, clinical practice, and research. The Mount Sinai Hospital is ranked No. 18 on U.S. News & World Report's "Honor Roll" of top U.S. hospitals; it is one of the nation's top 20 hospitals in Cardiology/Heart Surgery, Gastroenterology/GI Surgery, Geriatrics, Nephrology, and Neurology/Neurosurgery, and in the top 50 in six other specialties in the 2018-2019 "Best Hospitals" issue. Mount Sinai's Kravis Children's Hospital also is ranked nationally in five out of ten pediatric specialties by U.S. News & World Report. The New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai is ranked 11th nationally for Ophthalmology and 44th for Ear, Nose, and Throat. Mount Sinai Beth Israel, Mount Sinai St. Luke's, Mount Sinai West, and Mount Sinai South Nassau are ranked regionally.
The Mount Sinai Health System is an equal opportunity employer. We promote recognition and respect for individual and cultural differences, and we work to make our employees feel valued and appreciated, whatever their race, gender, background, or sexual orientation.
Strength Through Diversity
The Mount Sinai Health System believes that diversity, equity and inclusion are drivers for excellence. We share a common devotion to delivering exceptional patient care. Yet we’re as diverse as the city we call home- culturally, ethically, in outlook and lifestyle. When you join us, you become a part of Mount Sinai’s unrivaled record of achievement, education, and advancement as we revolutionize medicine together and participate actively as a leader within the Mount Sinai Health System by:
Serving as the primary resource management representative of the Mount Sinai leadership teams, committees, etc., and acting as the primary executive leader interface between Mount Sinai and key executives from the health systems’ vendors and partners.
Engaging with relevant thought leaders and policy-makers at the federal and state levels, and representing the Health System as assigned.
Using a lens of equity in establishing and promoting policies and procedures and providing opportunities for all to thrive.
Confronting racist, sexist or other inappropriate behavior and challenges exclusionary organizational practices and serving as a role model to promote anti-racist behaviors.
Inspiring and fostering an environment of anti-racist behaviors among and between departments and co-workers.
We work hard to acquire and retain the best people, and to create a welcoming, nurturing work environment where you can develop professionally. We share the belief that all employees, regardless of job title or expertise, can make an impact on quality patient care.
Explore more about this opportunity and how you can help us write a new chapter in our story!
Who We Are
Over 42,000 employees strong, the mission of the Mount Sinai Health System is to provide compassionate patient care with seamless coordination and to advance medicine through unrivaled education, research, and outreach in the many diverse communities we serve.
Formed in September 2013, The Mount Sinai Health System combines the excellence of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai with seven premier hospital campuses, including Mount Sinai Beth Israel, Mount Sinai Beth Israel Brooklyn, The Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai West (formerly Mount Sinai Roosevelt), Mount Sinai Morningside (formerly Mount Sinai St. Luke’s), and New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai.
The Mount Sinai Health System is an equal opportunity employer. We comply with applicable Federal civil rights laws and does not discriminate, exclude, or treat people differently on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, religion, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression.
EOE Minorities/Women/Disabled/Veterans
PeopleTec is currently seeking a Theater Air and Missile Defense Planner to support our our CENTCOM operations in MacDill Air Force Base, Florida.
-
The candidate will be responsible for providing support for to USCENTCOM operations and exercises, including national assets and those from U.S. services and allies and must have experience as a mid-level or senior staff officer at a Combatant Command or Service staff.
-
Duties Include:
Conduct air and missile defense planning for contingency and steady state CONPLAN/ OPLAN development and updates utilizing current and emerging U.S. and partner technologies
Leverage operational experience to develop, analyze and evaluate USCENTCOM IAMD and BMD plans, goals, and objectives in support of current and future operations. This support requires 24/7 and/or surge support on an occasional basis
Support Counter Unmanned Aerial Systems (C-UAS) strategy, policy, governance, and staff/resolve issues
Facilitate working groups
Synchronize theater missile defense architecture programs, policies, and procedures that support subordinate commands, other geographical combatant commands, and regional partners
-
Required Skills/Experience:
Ability to securely handle/safeguard classified information
5-8+ Years relevant work experience
Experience with high-level military staff briefing and action items
Highly experienced with Microsoft Office O365 products
Excellent written and verbal communication skills and is required to have high level public speaking abilities.
Must be available for travel to both domestic and international locations (Qatar); no combat zone travel is authorized on this contract
Ability to support a dynamic, fast-paced work environment
Ability to interact professionally and successfully with Government operational representatives.
Ability to cross-train on other Operational Enterprise Services (OES) positions and support for short duration surge/contingency
Travel: 10%
Must be a U.S. Citizen
An active DoD Top Secret clearance with SCI eligibility is required to perform this work. Candidates are required to have an active Top Secret clearance with SCI eligibility upon hire, and the ability to maintain this level of clearance during their employment.
-
Education Requirements:
4 Year College Degree and 5 to 8 years of experience or 4 Years additional experience in lieu of a college.
-
Desired Skills :
SharePoint specialist
-
* This opportunity is contingent upon an anticipated July 2021 contract award to PeopleTec*
-
People First. Technology Always.
PeopleTec, Inc. is an employee-owned small business founded in Huntsville, AL that provides exceptional customer support by employing and retaining a highly skilled workforce.
Culture: The name "PeopleTec" was deliberately chosen to remind us of our core value system - our people. Our company's foundation was built on placing our employees and customers first. With an award-winning atmosphere, we have matured into a company that boasts the best and brightest across multiple technical fields.
Career: At PeopleTec, we value your long-term goals. Whether it's through our continuing-education opportunities, our robust training programs, or our "People First" benefits package, PeopleTec truly believes that our best investments are our people.
Come Experience It.
#cjpost #dpost
EOE/Minorities/Females/Veterans/Disabled
PeopleTec, Inc. is an Equal Employment Opportunity employer and provides reasonable accommodation for qualified individuals with disabilities and disabled veterans in its job application procedures. If you have any difficulty using our online system and you need an accommodation due to a disability, you may use the following email address, HR@peopletec.com and/or phone number (256.319.3800) to contact us about your interest in employment with PeopleTec, Inc.
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, age, genetic information, citizenship, ancestry, marital status, protected veteran status, disability status or any other status protected by federal, state, or local law. PeopleTec, Inc. participates in E-Verify.
Jun 24, 2021
Full time
PeopleTec is currently seeking a Theater Air and Missile Defense Planner to support our our CENTCOM operations in MacDill Air Force Base, Florida.
-
The candidate will be responsible for providing support for to USCENTCOM operations and exercises, including national assets and those from U.S. services and allies and must have experience as a mid-level or senior staff officer at a Combatant Command or Service staff.
-
Duties Include:
Conduct air and missile defense planning for contingency and steady state CONPLAN/ OPLAN development and updates utilizing current and emerging U.S. and partner technologies
Leverage operational experience to develop, analyze and evaluate USCENTCOM IAMD and BMD plans, goals, and objectives in support of current and future operations. This support requires 24/7 and/or surge support on an occasional basis
Support Counter Unmanned Aerial Systems (C-UAS) strategy, policy, governance, and staff/resolve issues
Facilitate working groups
Synchronize theater missile defense architecture programs, policies, and procedures that support subordinate commands, other geographical combatant commands, and regional partners
-
Required Skills/Experience:
Ability to securely handle/safeguard classified information
5-8+ Years relevant work experience
Experience with high-level military staff briefing and action items
Highly experienced with Microsoft Office O365 products
Excellent written and verbal communication skills and is required to have high level public speaking abilities.
Must be available for travel to both domestic and international locations (Qatar); no combat zone travel is authorized on this contract
Ability to support a dynamic, fast-paced work environment
Ability to interact professionally and successfully with Government operational representatives.
Ability to cross-train on other Operational Enterprise Services (OES) positions and support for short duration surge/contingency
Travel: 10%
Must be a U.S. Citizen
An active DoD Top Secret clearance with SCI eligibility is required to perform this work. Candidates are required to have an active Top Secret clearance with SCI eligibility upon hire, and the ability to maintain this level of clearance during their employment.
-
Education Requirements:
4 Year College Degree and 5 to 8 years of experience or 4 Years additional experience in lieu of a college.
-
Desired Skills :
SharePoint specialist
-
* This opportunity is contingent upon an anticipated July 2021 contract award to PeopleTec*
-
People First. Technology Always.
PeopleTec, Inc. is an employee-owned small business founded in Huntsville, AL that provides exceptional customer support by employing and retaining a highly skilled workforce.
Culture: The name "PeopleTec" was deliberately chosen to remind us of our core value system - our people. Our company's foundation was built on placing our employees and customers first. With an award-winning atmosphere, we have matured into a company that boasts the best and brightest across multiple technical fields.
Career: At PeopleTec, we value your long-term goals. Whether it's through our continuing-education opportunities, our robust training programs, or our "People First" benefits package, PeopleTec truly believes that our best investments are our people.
Come Experience It.
#cjpost #dpost
EOE/Minorities/Females/Veterans/Disabled
PeopleTec, Inc. is an Equal Employment Opportunity employer and provides reasonable accommodation for qualified individuals with disabilities and disabled veterans in its job application procedures. If you have any difficulty using our online system and you need an accommodation due to a disability, you may use the following email address, HR@peopletec.com and/or phone number (256.319.3800) to contact us about your interest in employment with PeopleTec, Inc.
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, age, genetic information, citizenship, ancestry, marital status, protected veteran status, disability status or any other status protected by federal, state, or local law. PeopleTec, Inc. participates in E-Verify.
National Wildlife Federation
MISSOULA, MT; or SEATTLE, WA
Founded in 1936, the National Wildlife Federation has grown into America's largest and most trusted grassroots conservation organization with 53 state/territorial affiliates and more than six million members and supporters. The mission of the National Wildlife Federation is to unite all Americans to ensure wildlife thrive in our rapidly changing world. The National Wildlife Federation believes that in order to save wildlife and ourselves, we need to ensure that everyone in America has clean air and water, safe communities, easy and equitable access to the daily benefits of nature, and protection from the ravages of climate change. These basic needs, equally necessary and urgent for all people, are foundational to bringing the conservation movement and ethos into the 21st century.
Our organization operates from offices across the country, including our headquarters in Reston, Virginia; a National Advocacy Center in Washington, D.C.; and seven regional centers. The Federation also works with our 53 state and territory affiliates—autonomous, nonprofit organizations that take the lead in state and local conservation efforts and collaborate with the National Wildlife Federation to conduct grassroots activities on national issues.
Through conservation policy oversight, program development, fundraising, collaboration and personnel management, the Regional Executive Director (RED) provides organizational leadership in the Northern Rockies, Prairies and Pacific Region. The RED collaborates with affiliate partners and other organizations within the region in support of the National Wildlife Federation's strategic plan ( A Common Agenda for Wildlife ) and our Equity and Justice Strategic Plan . The RED strategically engages NWF Board members and collaborates with regional center staff to help identify and cultivate potential new leaders for NWF.
The RED reports to the Chief Program Officer and works collaboratively with other senior leaders to advance the strategic direction of the organization. This position may be based in Missoula, MT or Seattle, WA . Please Note: Due to COVID-19 all employees are working remotely until we make return to work decisions.
About Our Region:
The Northern Rockies, Prairies & Pacific Region spans a large and diverse geographic landscape across the states of Alaska, Hawai’i, Oregon, Washington and California in the Pacific; Montana and Idaho in the Rockies; and North and South Dakota in the Great Plains. Our work is based out of two primary offices, in Missoula and Seattle, and a smaller office near Portland, Oregon.
Our regional team has proven its commitment to wildlife and people by advancing landscape-scale conservation through four decades of successful campaigns to protect grizzly bears, restore bison on public and Tribal lands, secure safe habitat for bighorn sheep, and fight for runs of wild salmon. Working closely with our affiliates, Tribal/Native/Indigenous entities and other conservation and community partners, our programs help expand Monarch migration pathways, restore beavers for riparian health, expand protection for Native Hawaiian seabirds, and connect children and families with nature, and more. Some of our conservation programs extend beyond our region, including work on western water, wildlife habitat connectivity, and youth and adult education. Details on these and other program priorities can be found on our regional website: https://www.nwf.org/Northern-Rockies-and-Pacific-Region .
Principal Duties of the Regional Executive Director:
The RED is accountable for developing and implementing programs and strategies that enable the National Wildlife Federation to achieve outcomes articulated in our Strategic and Equity and Justice Plans and serves as an important “face and voice” for the organization in the Northern Rockies, Prairies & Pacific Region.
Additionally, the RED:
Provides organizational leadership, program development, and targeted campaign management that effectively advances our mission and objectives;
Fosters an inclusive, and collaborative workplace culture that supports staff in functioning as a highly integrated and effective team across a geographically diverse, highly matrixed organization;
Achieves the organization’s regional philanthropic and fundraising goals by working with staff to engage current and potential funders, individuals, foundations, and corporations to support our work;
Manages the Regional Center’s budget and stewards the organization’s financial resources;
Builds and maintains authentic relationships with political, affiliate, business, education, indigenous, governmental and community leaders with a diverse and representative range of group identities;
Demonstrates a personal and professional commitment to and experience in advancing equity and justice within the organization and in external program delivery, partnerships, and communications;
Advances the National Wildlife Federation's long-term conservation goals as well as our values of collaboration, empowerment, inclusivity, mindfulness, and mission-focused work.
Qualifications:
Strong candidates for this position will bring experience in organizational leadership, including demonstrated proficiency in personnel management, teambuilding and delegation; strategic planning and program implementation; conservation advocacy and policy advancement; developing and engaging partners from diverse communities; non-profit fundraising, and working with non-profit boards, government and Tribal agencies, and corporate entities. These proficiencies are typically consistent with approximately ten years of professional experience.
Conservation Policy, Advocacy and Implementation
Familiar with fundamental conservation principles and practices, with educational background and/or professional expertise in conservation, environmental justice or a related field
Comfortable leading and participating in advocacy campaigns and activities, including public speaking and press interviews as well as written communications
Shows insights about diverse tools to achieve conservation goals, including advocacy, education/outreach, and direct work on the ground (implementation); able to help staff prioritize which tools are appropriate given different opportunities.
Exhibits insights about how diverse program activities can be integrated for long-term conservation success
Fundraising and Fiscal Accountability:
Demonstrates proficiency and success in cultivating donor relationships, soliciting gifts and stewarding ongoing support from new and existing major donors, in cooperation with philanthropy staff
A track record of foundation and corporate fundraising success
Familiar with successful approaches to expand support though events, digital format fundraising and one-on-one engagement
Desired Leadership Competencies:
Self-Awareness & Learning
Exhibits a commitment to continuous learning and growth and models this approach with others
Dedicated to deepening understanding of cultural and systemic racism and the intersectionality of multiple forms of social inequality
Demonstrates awareness of positional power and privilege (both personally and professionally) and its attendant impacts
Consistently brings a high level of empathy and social skills to work and interpersonal interactions
Authentic Relationships & Community Partnerships
Maintains a sophisticated understanding of how group dynamics impact supervisory relationships, organizational culture, partnerships, campaigns and coalition work
Demonstrates capacity to maintain relationships across difference and create greater psychological safety in the workplace
Acknowledges when mistakes are made and harm is done; works to repair breaches in relationships
Openly holds space, and invites others into conversations during sensitive engagements, exhibiting a responsible and respectful demeanor with colleagues and partners
Demonstrates inclusive leadership through collaboration, active listening skills and authentic team building abilities
Seeks to build authentic community partnerships, encouraging diverse approaches to advocacy
Direct Communication
Exhibits strong interpersonal skills rooted in teamwork, diplomacy, and respect
Provides clear and direct communication with colleagues
Strives to match intent and impact in all interactions
Works proactively to resolve conflicts and misunderstandings toward restorative solutions; attends to conflicts as opportunities for learning and growth
Supervision & Power Sharing
Supports the leadership, success, and professional development of staff members, with a commitment to utilizing power to ensure equitable access and opportunities for staff of color and with other marginalized identities
Consistently provides positive and developmental feedback to support growth of team members
Actively seeks feedback, direction, and guidance from all team members and keeps staff informed of decisions that impact them
Intentionally shares power through decision-making, clear definition of roles and responsibilities, effective delegation, and equitable access to resources
Innovation
Actively seeks new solutions to persistent problems by engaging a diversity of perspectives and experiences
Practices both/and thinking and the ability to accept ambiguity
Demonstrates willingness to take risks, pilot new approaches, learn from failure, and continually improve efforts
Equity Analysis & Action :
Motivated by values of equity and responsibility to those most marginalized
Committed to deepening an environmental justice approach in policy priorities, program development and partner engagement
Demonstrates awareness of the attributes associated with a white dominant culture and takes actions to dismantle hierarchies of oppression within that culture
Dedicated to advancing NWF’s internal equity transformation and compelling partners and allies to incorporate equity into their work
Travel:
Once safe travel resumes, extensive travel throughout the region and to national meetings will be required. Anticipate 5-8 days every month, 30-60 nights per year.
Compensation and Benefits:
The starting salary for this position is $130,000 annual salary, and is based upon a wage analysis across the organization. The National Wildlife Federation values work-life balance and a family-friendly atmosphere. Our paid time-off includes 3 weeks of vacation leave, open wellbeing leave, 10 paid holidays, 3 floating holidays, a week-long winter break, and additional leave options, per year. In addition, our benefits package includes medical, dental, and vision insurance, company paid life insurance, AD&D, short and long-term disability, 16 weeks of paid FMLA leave, 403b retirement plan with employer matching and annual contribution, adoption benefits, and flexible work options including telecommuting, non-traditional work hours, and compressed work weeks. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s benefits package at https://www.nwf.org/About-Us/Careers .
Application:
Candidates must submit a cover letter and resume.
The National Wildlife Federation is committed to increasing diversity, equity, inclusion and justice in all elements of our work and with our partners to support the interdependent needs of wildlife and people in a rapidly changing world. We recruit, employ, train, compensate, and promote regardless of race, religion, creed, national origin, ancestry, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation, gender identity, age, physical or mental disability, citizenship, genetic information, past, current, or prospective service in the uniformed services, or any other characteristic protected under applicable federal, state, or local law. We are proud to be an equal opportunity employer. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion at nwf.org/equity .
If you have a disability and require an accommodation or assistance with our online application process, please tell us how we can help by calling us at 703-438-6244.
The requirements listed in our job descriptions are guidelines, not hard and fast rules, and if you have 75% of the qualifications listed we encourage you to apply. Applying gives you the opportunity to be considered. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis and will be accepted through July 9th.
If selected for this position, a background check will be conducted.
Jun 04, 2021
Full time
Founded in 1936, the National Wildlife Federation has grown into America's largest and most trusted grassroots conservation organization with 53 state/territorial affiliates and more than six million members and supporters. The mission of the National Wildlife Federation is to unite all Americans to ensure wildlife thrive in our rapidly changing world. The National Wildlife Federation believes that in order to save wildlife and ourselves, we need to ensure that everyone in America has clean air and water, safe communities, easy and equitable access to the daily benefits of nature, and protection from the ravages of climate change. These basic needs, equally necessary and urgent for all people, are foundational to bringing the conservation movement and ethos into the 21st century.
Our organization operates from offices across the country, including our headquarters in Reston, Virginia; a National Advocacy Center in Washington, D.C.; and seven regional centers. The Federation also works with our 53 state and territory affiliates—autonomous, nonprofit organizations that take the lead in state and local conservation efforts and collaborate with the National Wildlife Federation to conduct grassroots activities on national issues.
Through conservation policy oversight, program development, fundraising, collaboration and personnel management, the Regional Executive Director (RED) provides organizational leadership in the Northern Rockies, Prairies and Pacific Region. The RED collaborates with affiliate partners and other organizations within the region in support of the National Wildlife Federation's strategic plan ( A Common Agenda for Wildlife ) and our Equity and Justice Strategic Plan . The RED strategically engages NWF Board members and collaborates with regional center staff to help identify and cultivate potential new leaders for NWF.
The RED reports to the Chief Program Officer and works collaboratively with other senior leaders to advance the strategic direction of the organization. This position may be based in Missoula, MT or Seattle, WA . Please Note: Due to COVID-19 all employees are working remotely until we make return to work decisions.
About Our Region:
The Northern Rockies, Prairies & Pacific Region spans a large and diverse geographic landscape across the states of Alaska, Hawai’i, Oregon, Washington and California in the Pacific; Montana and Idaho in the Rockies; and North and South Dakota in the Great Plains. Our work is based out of two primary offices, in Missoula and Seattle, and a smaller office near Portland, Oregon.
Our regional team has proven its commitment to wildlife and people by advancing landscape-scale conservation through four decades of successful campaigns to protect grizzly bears, restore bison on public and Tribal lands, secure safe habitat for bighorn sheep, and fight for runs of wild salmon. Working closely with our affiliates, Tribal/Native/Indigenous entities and other conservation and community partners, our programs help expand Monarch migration pathways, restore beavers for riparian health, expand protection for Native Hawaiian seabirds, and connect children and families with nature, and more. Some of our conservation programs extend beyond our region, including work on western water, wildlife habitat connectivity, and youth and adult education. Details on these and other program priorities can be found on our regional website: https://www.nwf.org/Northern-Rockies-and-Pacific-Region .
Principal Duties of the Regional Executive Director:
The RED is accountable for developing and implementing programs and strategies that enable the National Wildlife Federation to achieve outcomes articulated in our Strategic and Equity and Justice Plans and serves as an important “face and voice” for the organization in the Northern Rockies, Prairies & Pacific Region.
Additionally, the RED:
Provides organizational leadership, program development, and targeted campaign management that effectively advances our mission and objectives;
Fosters an inclusive, and collaborative workplace culture that supports staff in functioning as a highly integrated and effective team across a geographically diverse, highly matrixed organization;
Achieves the organization’s regional philanthropic and fundraising goals by working with staff to engage current and potential funders, individuals, foundations, and corporations to support our work;
Manages the Regional Center’s budget and stewards the organization’s financial resources;
Builds and maintains authentic relationships with political, affiliate, business, education, indigenous, governmental and community leaders with a diverse and representative range of group identities;
Demonstrates a personal and professional commitment to and experience in advancing equity and justice within the organization and in external program delivery, partnerships, and communications;
Advances the National Wildlife Federation's long-term conservation goals as well as our values of collaboration, empowerment, inclusivity, mindfulness, and mission-focused work.
Qualifications:
Strong candidates for this position will bring experience in organizational leadership, including demonstrated proficiency in personnel management, teambuilding and delegation; strategic planning and program implementation; conservation advocacy and policy advancement; developing and engaging partners from diverse communities; non-profit fundraising, and working with non-profit boards, government and Tribal agencies, and corporate entities. These proficiencies are typically consistent with approximately ten years of professional experience.
Conservation Policy, Advocacy and Implementation
Familiar with fundamental conservation principles and practices, with educational background and/or professional expertise in conservation, environmental justice or a related field
Comfortable leading and participating in advocacy campaigns and activities, including public speaking and press interviews as well as written communications
Shows insights about diverse tools to achieve conservation goals, including advocacy, education/outreach, and direct work on the ground (implementation); able to help staff prioritize which tools are appropriate given different opportunities.
Exhibits insights about how diverse program activities can be integrated for long-term conservation success
Fundraising and Fiscal Accountability:
Demonstrates proficiency and success in cultivating donor relationships, soliciting gifts and stewarding ongoing support from new and existing major donors, in cooperation with philanthropy staff
A track record of foundation and corporate fundraising success
Familiar with successful approaches to expand support though events, digital format fundraising and one-on-one engagement
Desired Leadership Competencies:
Self-Awareness & Learning
Exhibits a commitment to continuous learning and growth and models this approach with others
Dedicated to deepening understanding of cultural and systemic racism and the intersectionality of multiple forms of social inequality
Demonstrates awareness of positional power and privilege (both personally and professionally) and its attendant impacts
Consistently brings a high level of empathy and social skills to work and interpersonal interactions
Authentic Relationships & Community Partnerships
Maintains a sophisticated understanding of how group dynamics impact supervisory relationships, organizational culture, partnerships, campaigns and coalition work
Demonstrates capacity to maintain relationships across difference and create greater psychological safety in the workplace
Acknowledges when mistakes are made and harm is done; works to repair breaches in relationships
Openly holds space, and invites others into conversations during sensitive engagements, exhibiting a responsible and respectful demeanor with colleagues and partners
Demonstrates inclusive leadership through collaboration, active listening skills and authentic team building abilities
Seeks to build authentic community partnerships, encouraging diverse approaches to advocacy
Direct Communication
Exhibits strong interpersonal skills rooted in teamwork, diplomacy, and respect
Provides clear and direct communication with colleagues
Strives to match intent and impact in all interactions
Works proactively to resolve conflicts and misunderstandings toward restorative solutions; attends to conflicts as opportunities for learning and growth
Supervision & Power Sharing
Supports the leadership, success, and professional development of staff members, with a commitment to utilizing power to ensure equitable access and opportunities for staff of color and with other marginalized identities
Consistently provides positive and developmental feedback to support growth of team members
Actively seeks feedback, direction, and guidance from all team members and keeps staff informed of decisions that impact them
Intentionally shares power through decision-making, clear definition of roles and responsibilities, effective delegation, and equitable access to resources
Innovation
Actively seeks new solutions to persistent problems by engaging a diversity of perspectives and experiences
Practices both/and thinking and the ability to accept ambiguity
Demonstrates willingness to take risks, pilot new approaches, learn from failure, and continually improve efforts
Equity Analysis & Action :
Motivated by values of equity and responsibility to those most marginalized
Committed to deepening an environmental justice approach in policy priorities, program development and partner engagement
Demonstrates awareness of the attributes associated with a white dominant culture and takes actions to dismantle hierarchies of oppression within that culture
Dedicated to advancing NWF’s internal equity transformation and compelling partners and allies to incorporate equity into their work
Travel:
Once safe travel resumes, extensive travel throughout the region and to national meetings will be required. Anticipate 5-8 days every month, 30-60 nights per year.
Compensation and Benefits:
The starting salary for this position is $130,000 annual salary, and is based upon a wage analysis across the organization. The National Wildlife Federation values work-life balance and a family-friendly atmosphere. Our paid time-off includes 3 weeks of vacation leave, open wellbeing leave, 10 paid holidays, 3 floating holidays, a week-long winter break, and additional leave options, per year. In addition, our benefits package includes medical, dental, and vision insurance, company paid life insurance, AD&D, short and long-term disability, 16 weeks of paid FMLA leave, 403b retirement plan with employer matching and annual contribution, adoption benefits, and flexible work options including telecommuting, non-traditional work hours, and compressed work weeks. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s benefits package at https://www.nwf.org/About-Us/Careers .
Application:
Candidates must submit a cover letter and resume.
The National Wildlife Federation is committed to increasing diversity, equity, inclusion and justice in all elements of our work and with our partners to support the interdependent needs of wildlife and people in a rapidly changing world. We recruit, employ, train, compensate, and promote regardless of race, religion, creed, national origin, ancestry, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation, gender identity, age, physical or mental disability, citizenship, genetic information, past, current, or prospective service in the uniformed services, or any other characteristic protected under applicable federal, state, or local law. We are proud to be an equal opportunity employer. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion at nwf.org/equity .
If you have a disability and require an accommodation or assistance with our online application process, please tell us how we can help by calling us at 703-438-6244.
The requirements listed in our job descriptions are guidelines, not hard and fast rules, and if you have 75% of the qualifications listed we encourage you to apply. Applying gives you the opportunity to be considered. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis and will be accepted through July 9th.
If selected for this position, a background check will be conducted.
Founded in 1936, the National Wildlife Federation has grown into America's largest and most trusted grassroots conservation organization with 52 state/territorial affiliates and more than six million members and supporters. The mission of the National Wildlife Federation is to unite all Americans to ensure wildlife thrive in our rapidly changing world. The National Wildlife Federation believes that in order to save wildlife and ourselves, we need to ensure that all Americans have access to clean air and water, safe communities, easy and equitable access to nature, and protection from the ravages of climate change. These basic needs, equally necessary and urgent for all people, are foundational to bringing the conservation movement and ethos into the 21st century.
The National Wildlife Federation is seeking an Innovation and Growth Administrative Assistant to ensure the effective and efficient operations of the Innovation and Growth division, working out of our office in Reston, VA. (Due to COVID-19 all employees are working remotely until we make return to work decisions.)
In this role you will report into, and support, the Chief Innovation & Growth Officer (CIGO) and represent the CIGO with internal and external audiences. You will develop and manage division-wide systems and assist Innovation and Growth department leads with administrative work as needed. You will be trusted with high-level and confidential information and have an important voice in the effective management of the division.
In this role you will:
Effectively coordinate and manage the Chief Innovation & Growth Officer’s calendar and schedule
Clearly capture and communicate meeting minutes and ensure follow-ups are completed for Innovation and Growth leadership, Board Innovation Committee, and other high-level meetings as needed
Write, submit, track, finalize, and file contract requests for CIGO and other Innovation & Growth department heads and staff as needed
Coordinate travel and submit travel expenses and reimbursements on behalf of the CIGO
Work closely with CIGO and other Innovation & Growth department leaders to develop and communicate meeting agendas, as well as document and ensure any follow ups are communicated and acted upon
Develop new systems and processes for the department, streamlining and organizing current systems and processes in order to create efficiencies
Manage the process for the Ranger Rick costumes usage by affiliates and regional offices as needed
Create, review and/or edit presentations and documents as needed
Seek out opportunities to add value to the overall operations of the Innovation & Growth division
Experience
At least one years of work experience, preferably with operational and/or administrative responsibilities
Key Success Factors:
Strong work ethic and entrepreneurial spirit
Detail orientated with exceptional organizational abilities
Good communication skills
Demonstrated ability to work with people at all levels of an organization
Your actions are expected to reflect the staff values of the National Wildlife Federation: collaboration, mindfulness, empowerment, inclusivity, and mission focus.
Travel Requirements:
Minimal travel will be required.
Application:
Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis. This is a non-exempt position, annualized the range is between $42,000 to $45,000.
The National Wildlife Federation values work-life balance and a family-friendly atmosphere. Our paid time-off includes 3 weeks of vacation leave, open wellbeing leave, 10 paid holidays, 3 floating holidays, a week-long winter break, and additional leave options, per year. In addition, our benefits package includes medical, dental, and vision insurance, company paid life insurance, AD&D, short- and long-term disability, 16 weeks of paid FMLA leave, 403b retirement plan with employer matching and annual contribution, adoption benefits, and flexible work options including telecommuting and non-traditional work hours. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s benefits package at https://www.nwf.org/About-Us/Careers .
We strive to increase diversity, equity, inclusion and justice (DEIJ) in all elements of our work and with our partners to support the interdependent needs of wildlife and people in a rapidly changing world. We recruit, employ, train, compensate, and promote regardless of race, religion, creed, national origin, ancestry, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation, gender identity (including gender nonconformity and status as a transgender or transsexual individual), age, physical or mental disability, citizenship, genetic information, past, current, or prospective service in the uniformed services, or any other characteristic protected under applicable federal, state, or local law. We are proud to be an equal opportunity employer. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion at nwf.org/equity .
If you have a disability and require an accommodation or assistance with our online application process, please tell us how we can help by calling us at 703-438-6244.
The requirements listed in our job descriptions are guidelines, not hard and fast rules, and if you have 75% of the qualifications listed we encourage you to apply. Applying gives you the opportunity to be considered. If selected for this position, a background check will be conducted.
Candidates should submit a cover letter and resume.
Nov 12, 2020
Full time
Founded in 1936, the National Wildlife Federation has grown into America's largest and most trusted grassroots conservation organization with 52 state/territorial affiliates and more than six million members and supporters. The mission of the National Wildlife Federation is to unite all Americans to ensure wildlife thrive in our rapidly changing world. The National Wildlife Federation believes that in order to save wildlife and ourselves, we need to ensure that all Americans have access to clean air and water, safe communities, easy and equitable access to nature, and protection from the ravages of climate change. These basic needs, equally necessary and urgent for all people, are foundational to bringing the conservation movement and ethos into the 21st century.
The National Wildlife Federation is seeking an Innovation and Growth Administrative Assistant to ensure the effective and efficient operations of the Innovation and Growth division, working out of our office in Reston, VA. (Due to COVID-19 all employees are working remotely until we make return to work decisions.)
In this role you will report into, and support, the Chief Innovation & Growth Officer (CIGO) and represent the CIGO with internal and external audiences. You will develop and manage division-wide systems and assist Innovation and Growth department leads with administrative work as needed. You will be trusted with high-level and confidential information and have an important voice in the effective management of the division.
In this role you will:
Effectively coordinate and manage the Chief Innovation & Growth Officer’s calendar and schedule
Clearly capture and communicate meeting minutes and ensure follow-ups are completed for Innovation and Growth leadership, Board Innovation Committee, and other high-level meetings as needed
Write, submit, track, finalize, and file contract requests for CIGO and other Innovation & Growth department heads and staff as needed
Coordinate travel and submit travel expenses and reimbursements on behalf of the CIGO
Work closely with CIGO and other Innovation & Growth department leaders to develop and communicate meeting agendas, as well as document and ensure any follow ups are communicated and acted upon
Develop new systems and processes for the department, streamlining and organizing current systems and processes in order to create efficiencies
Manage the process for the Ranger Rick costumes usage by affiliates and regional offices as needed
Create, review and/or edit presentations and documents as needed
Seek out opportunities to add value to the overall operations of the Innovation & Growth division
Experience
At least one years of work experience, preferably with operational and/or administrative responsibilities
Key Success Factors:
Strong work ethic and entrepreneurial spirit
Detail orientated with exceptional organizational abilities
Good communication skills
Demonstrated ability to work with people at all levels of an organization
Your actions are expected to reflect the staff values of the National Wildlife Federation: collaboration, mindfulness, empowerment, inclusivity, and mission focus.
Travel Requirements:
Minimal travel will be required.
Application:
Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis. This is a non-exempt position, annualized the range is between $42,000 to $45,000.
The National Wildlife Federation values work-life balance and a family-friendly atmosphere. Our paid time-off includes 3 weeks of vacation leave, open wellbeing leave, 10 paid holidays, 3 floating holidays, a week-long winter break, and additional leave options, per year. In addition, our benefits package includes medical, dental, and vision insurance, company paid life insurance, AD&D, short- and long-term disability, 16 weeks of paid FMLA leave, 403b retirement plan with employer matching and annual contribution, adoption benefits, and flexible work options including telecommuting and non-traditional work hours. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s benefits package at https://www.nwf.org/About-Us/Careers .
We strive to increase diversity, equity, inclusion and justice (DEIJ) in all elements of our work and with our partners to support the interdependent needs of wildlife and people in a rapidly changing world. We recruit, employ, train, compensate, and promote regardless of race, religion, creed, national origin, ancestry, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation, gender identity (including gender nonconformity and status as a transgender or transsexual individual), age, physical or mental disability, citizenship, genetic information, past, current, or prospective service in the uniformed services, or any other characteristic protected under applicable federal, state, or local law. We are proud to be an equal opportunity employer. Applicants are invited to learn more about National Wildlife Federation’s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion at nwf.org/equity .
If you have a disability and require an accommodation or assistance with our online application process, please tell us how we can help by calling us at 703-438-6244.
The requirements listed in our job descriptions are guidelines, not hard and fast rules, and if you have 75% of the qualifications listed we encourage you to apply. Applying gives you the opportunity to be considered. If selected for this position, a background check will be conducted.
Candidates should submit a cover letter and resume.