AAC County Lines
County Lines [(ISSN 2576-1137 (print) and ISSN 2576-1145 (online)] is the official publica- tion of the Association of Arkansas Counties. It is published quarterly. For advertising inquiries, subscriptions or other information, please con- tact Christy L. Smith at 501.372.7550.
Executive Director/Publisher Chris Villines
Communications Director/ Managing Editor Christy L. Smith
Communications Coordinator/ Editor
Holland Doran AAC Executive Board:
Debbie Wise – President Brandon Ellison – Vice President Rhonda Cole – Secretary-Treasurer
Tommy Young Debra Buckner Kevin Cleghorn Debbie Cross Ellen Foote
Gerone Hobbs
John Montgomery David Thompson
Terri Harrison Sandra Cawyer Terry McNatt
Brenda DeShields Jimmy Hart Marty Boyd
Heather Stevens
National Association of Counties (NACo) Board Affiliations
Debbie Wise: NACo board member. She is the Randolph County Circuit Clerk and presi- dent of the AAC Board of Directors.
Brandon Ellison: NACo board member. He is the Polk County Judge and vice-president of the AAC Board of Directors.
Ted Harden: Finance & Intergovernmental Af- fairs Steering Committee. He serves on the Jefferson County Quorum Court.
David Hudson: Chair of NACo’s Justice and Public Safety Steering Committee. He is the Sebastian County Judge and member of the Rural Action Caucus Steering Committee.
Barry Hyde: Justice and Public Safety Steering Committee. He is the Pulaski County Judge.
Gerone Hobbs: Membership Committee. He is the Pulaski County Coroner.
Kade Holliday: Arts and Culture Committee and International Economic Development Task Force. He is the Craighead County Clerk.
Paul Ellliot: Justice and Public Safety Steering Committee,
vice-chair of law enforcement
subcommittee. He serves on the Pulaski County Quorum Court.
Ellen Foote: Community, Economic & Work- force Development Steering Committee. She is the Crittenden County Tax Collector.
Tawanna Brown: Telecommunications & Technol- ogy Steering Committe. She is the Crittenden County Chief Computer Operator.
COUNTY LINES, SUMMER 2019
DIRECTOR’S DESK
Programs address the risks you face in county government
September heat and a dewpoint soaring around 55 degrees. Of course, I think we in the South should copyright and use profusely this new description of our normal transition into fall. Over time, we simply get used to this tug of war between seasons, and since this is my 21st year in county government, I’m also used to the rite of passage that the beginning of school and our annual AAC Conference represents. Tinking back on our AAC Conference provides some wonderful memories of a great time in Garland County, and I want to thank our Hot Springs area hosts for making us feel at home. To me, having attended the last 21 conferences, it always mentally signals a shift into fall. In this issue you will find a number of recap pages of our conference, and I want to thank an incredible AAC Board of Directors and staff for making it one of our most successful ones. Tere is always some room for improvement, and we will aim to continue to make it better year after year, but one shining light of this year’s conference was our Jail Track training. For those of you in our Risk Management Program, you are aware of our growth in the legal department at the AAC. By adding four in-house attorneys over the last few years and commensurate support staff, we have created yet another nation- ally leading enterprise within this division. One of the most frustrating things we encounter as elected officials are lawsuits, frivolous or not. When you are sued, it becomes not only a legal issue, but also an issue of public opinion. By adding a legal team with a focus on training and lawsuit response, we are offering the tools you need to not only win these lawsuits, but to prevent them in the first place — a goal that Risk Management Director Debbie Norman, the Risk Management Board of Directors and I have had for a number of years. Te fruits of our labor are events like this Jail Track training at conference, something that we plan to continue and expand in the future. To further enhance our training, all four of our risk management attorneys — Bran-
I
dy McAllister, JaNan Tomas, Colin Jorgensen and Melissa Hollowell — have become certified CLEST instructors, giving our law enforcement valuable training hours toward their certification. Te Jail Track training was not only CLEST certified, but it also provided CLE hours for lawyers toward their continuing education requirements. Tis new world of risk prevention for us doesn’t confine itself to law enforce- ment though. Many of you have gained valuable employment knowledge from Brandy as she burns up the state roads to speak at your conferences or individually with your office-holders to help develop policies for your counties. I am excited about the fruits of this labor as we move into the future. Tis transition within our office has made the Association of Arkansas Counties a formidable law firm, and the vision of our Board of Directors to make this hap- pen has been laser beam focused and right on target. Your county board members
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saw something the other day that made me happy and sad at the same time. It was the newly coined word “Hotumn.” Tis probably was devised by some- body up North suffering through mid-80-degree late
Chris Villines AAC
Executive Director
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