Dayton Daily News

NEW ADMINISTRA­TOR SET TO LEAD IN MONTGOMERY

Michael Colbert adds county needs to follow up on its commitment­s.

- By Chris Stewart Staff Writer

The new Montgomery County administra­tor takes over next week, and he is focused on stabilizin­g revenue.

“The future for Montgomery County is great, but our goal right now is to shore up our revenue,” said Michael Colbert, the new Montgomery County administra­tor. “We can’t depend on things happening at the federal level or things happening at the state level. We have to take charge of our own destiny.”

On Sept. 1, Colbert, 52, will replace the retiring Joe Tuss, 62, who was county administra­tor for more than five years.

Colbert said the county must deliver on promises of new infrastruc­ture and workforce developmen­t investment­s made when county commission­ers raised water and sewer rates 14 percent last year and recently voted to increase the retail sales tax rate 0.25 percent. County commission­ers also raised the vehicle registrati­on fee in the county by $5 this year.

“We’ve got to implement the things we’ve asked the taxpayers for,” Colbert said. “When taxpayers support you, you’ve got to do what you said you were going to do.”

Tuss ends a 35-year career in local government — more than 17 with the county — that included the last five-plus years as the top administra­tor working with the same three Democratic county commission­ers, Judy Dodge, Dan Foley and Debbie Lieberman.

“They’ve been nothing but absolutely supportive and have shown tremendous leadership and direction in terms of making sure the county is focused on the right things and moving in the right direction, and giving me the clear sense of the things they needed the entire organizati­on to do in order to achieve the policy goals and the strategic initiative­s,” Tuss said earlier this year.

With a five-year planning project called MCOFuture wrapped up, Tuss said the timing was right to turn over leadership to a new administra­tor before a new planning phase kicks in.

“We are really at the end of that

cycle and so from my perspectiv­e, the commission­ers really need a county administra­tor that’s going to be able to sit down with them and really work through what the next strategic work plan looks like,” he said. “That’s a three- to five-year commitment at a minimum. So it’s really a good time for me to transition.”

During the last months of his tenure, Tuss shep- herded through the retail sales tax increase that has now become an election issue for at least two Repub- lican candidates this fall.

Ohio State Rep. J. Todd Smith, a Republican, spoke against the sales tax increase at a news conference earlier this month. Smith’s 43rd District opponent in the fall is current Montgomery County Commission­er Dan Foley, who voted for the sales tax increase. Foley, a Democrat, decided to run for the Ohio House seat, leaving an open County Commission seat.

Doug Barry, the Republi- can candidate for the open County Commission seat, ran an unsuccessf­ul referendum effort of the sales tax increase. Barry faces current Montgom- ery County Treasurer Carolyn Rice, a Democrat, this fall for Foley’s current seat.

The sales tax increase goes into effect Oct. 1 and is expected to generate an additional $19.1 million. The cost per person in Montgomery County is estimated to be about $36 more a year. The new vehicle registrati­on fee beginning Jan. 1 is expected to generate about $2 million for road improvemen­ts, but has also drawn fire from some Republican­s.

Colbert will also inherit a county coping with the costs of lawsuits alleging mistreatme­nt of inmates and overcrowdi­ng at the county jail. While one suit has gone to trial and four have been settled, at least eight other claims brought against jail staff are outstandin­g. About $1.4 million has been paid out so far, including $888,000 in settlement­s.

County commission­ers did not search far and wide for Tuss’ replacemen­t and interviewe­d few candidates before hiring Colbert inter- nally, Lieberman said.

Colbert, currently Mont- gomery County’s assistant county administra­tor for Developmen­t Services, will oversee an overall budget of $892 million and 4,368 authorized workers. He will receive a base salary of $178,000, according to the county.

In 2017, Colbert had a base salary of $119,442 and made $141,582 in gross pay. Gross 2017 compensati­on for Tuss was $202,408, according to the Dayton Daily News I-Team’s Payroll Project.

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 ??  ?? Michael Colbert (left) will succeed the retiring Joe Tuss on Sept. 1 as administra­tor of Montgomery County.
Michael Colbert (left) will succeed the retiring Joe Tuss on Sept. 1 as administra­tor of Montgomery County.

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