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Schlegel Takes Helm of OEM After Restructuring

Operations to remain largely the same

 

Over the past few years Howell has experienced snowstorms that dumped more than two feet of snow on the ground, two hurricanes and flooding resulting in the need for the Office of Emergency Management to be activated. 

In that time Township Manager Helene Schlegel and OEM Director Ron Sanasac were two of the most prominent faces of the township during emergency situations. At last Tuesday's meeting the Township Council approved a restructuring of the office that puts Schlegel as the new coordinator and Sanasac as one of three deputies. 

After Tuesday's meeting Schlegel said she did not believe the changes would result in the township handling things differently in emergency situations. "We're just restructuring, just like we've been restructuring every department and taking a look at things we're restructuring," she said. "We'll still remain a fully supporting agency to all our emergency services."

Schlegel will not take any additional salary from the new responsibility. Sanasac is scheduled to make $3,000 in salary as a deputy along with George Gravatt who is also in charge of the Department of Public Works. The manager said Sanasac will be serving as an important part of the agency because "he's obviously a key factor in OEM."

Deputy Mayor Robert Nicastro will serve as the liaison to the council as well as a deputy coordinator. Like Schlegel he will also not take a salary for the position. "It just gives a little bit more input from the governing body to the Office of Emergency Management," he said. 

Nicastro said as the agency has been used more it has become more important for all the parts of the town to work together. "We have great volunteers in the OEM. They're well trained, they're well prepared, our plans are all set in place," he said.

He also said with such a large town one coordinator was not as effective for the overall operation of the organization. "We realized that for one coordinator it's a lot to do for a town this size with planning, logistics and administration," he said. The three deputies will each play their own role in helping with those specific areas. "It just gives a little more responsibility to everyone instead of just one person."

With Schlegel's experiences Nicastro said it made sense for her to be at the top. "OEM is a management coordination agency. We're not the ones out there fighting the fires or saving people's lives," he said. "Having a manager who has experience running a municipality of this size, it's no different than running any other operation."

Mayor Bill Gotto also said he believed the move would be beneficial for the township. "We're just pulling the talent of the administrative staff and the resources of the manger's office to be able to get back to the function of what OEM really should be and do a better job," he said. 

The changes in OEM came just before the council voted to restructure the operations of the Howell Fire Bureau and Gotto said that the two changes are part of what has been a larger process. "Every department in this town has been reviewed and looked at and asked if there's a better way of doing things," he said. "When there's times that we realize that there's better ways to do things and 30 years of history don't adequately address the needs of the citizens today or might not be the correct way of doing things, we have changed them every single time."

Mayor Gotto said Nicastro's role as liaison will be to assist in situations rather than "directing resources," calling him the "planning section chief." He added, "He's the guy that's going to make sure the plans are there, updated, correct, and that when we have an issue that book comes off the shelf and the plan gets executed."

Nicastro said the council is also hoping to encourage more volunteers to help out with the OEM during emergency situations. "We realize government isn't going to be able to help us in major crises and we have to help ourselves," he said. That can be anything from sharing information door to door or cooking meals for other volunteers, he said. "That's one of the things we're hoping for, to get more people involved."

To learn more about the OEM check out its page on the township's website

Related Topics: Howell Township News and OEM

kilowatt

11:03 am on Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Through out the past year or so, I have been impressed with the Township Manager's performance. Given that you have access to the Township website, email and telephone broadcast alerts, you have almost up to the minute info on events that affect the township.

The advent of cable telephone service and use, puts many in jeopardy for, without power to the home modem, your phone is out and not available for township broadcast messages. Fortunately, for that reason, I stuck with the Verizon land line and was never without phone service (you need to plug in a non-wireless home phone to make this work) during power outages.

I was in Europe post "Sandy" and based upon Helene Schlegel's township email alerts was able to telephone my house sitters about the availability of ice at the Wall Circle outlets. Otherwise, they may not have never known.

Bottom line is that it looks like a positive move and hopefully with the assistance of the former OEM Director will not be overwhelming to the Township Manager.

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Jaded

6:44 pm on Tuesday, January 29, 2013

So now Helene is in charge of the town, the Fire Bureau and Director of OEM. What's next, make her the Chief of police (Director of Public Safety)? Is their seriously no one else in this town qualified to do this position? How much can this woman handle before she goes on overload? Either she's a control freak or she needs to hire more qualified people so she can delegate some of this responsibility and focus on her main job which is to run the town.

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Always Right

5:23 pm on Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Perhaps it's only temporary until a more permanent replacement can be selected

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grace abramov

12:55 pm on Wednesday, February 6, 2013

or maybe things and people are in the right places doing their job which frees Ms Schlegel to do other things that maybe more important. as long as she is not taking extra pay the taxpayers should be grateful. i saw Ms Schlegel on the road during Sandy and she was in contact with her staff.

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