VDH spends a great deal of time lobbying public health without implementing achievable goals.
For an agency who collects approximately 20 percent of the administrative cost for an application,
the debt erodes any possibility of administering a public health program.
"From: Roadcap, Dwayne (VDH)
Sent: Tuesday, September 13, 2011 7:33 AM
To: Knapp, Allen (VDH)
Cc: Hicks, Robert (VDH); Bowles, James (VDH); Bolling, Patrick (VDH)
Subject: Update on HB 2185 Meetings
Allen,
At the Franklin and Washington County meetings, we heard some interesting thoughts, many of which I have included below. I will be reviewing our notes soon but wanted to give you a quick glimpse of what we are hearing. I could use a second travel partner this Thursday to Shenandoah County. Patrick can’t make it because of the scheduled hearing next week.
Patrick, feel free to add or augment to the list of thoughts below.
Notes in brief:
The majority of the private sector does not want to do any repair work (mandated or voluntary).
One person (Tony Bible) in far SW suggested that some OSEs would be willing to do “pro-bono” work and that licensees should have a mandate to do a certain amount of repair work. Others expressed concerns about how such a program would work and how that work could be tracked.
Tony also reported that he prefers being a “second point of contact.” If health department tells property owner they must have secondary treatment, then people come to him for that service. If he were the first point of contact, then people would not trust the answer.
There are not enough OSEs.
A phased in approach would not be sufficient to work.
In Franklin County:
In Washington County:
The Indoor Plumbing Rehab (IPR) program fixes about 22 -40 homes per year for peoplewho do not have a bathroom and need a structure replacement. These people routinely get ATUs and cannot afford the O&M costs. Failures of ATUs creates a greater public health threat than a conventional system failing. At least with conventional systems, it’s under the ground. Several people working in this type of work felt that they would be “rehabbing the rehabs” because of the requirement for treatment and the inability to pay for O&M.
Fees are a problem.
The EH fees support another series of services for the community (e.g., complaint investigations, rabies, vaccinations, etc.). If the fees are taken away or reduced, then replacement funding is needed.
VDH must keep oversight and control of the private sector so “bad actors” are promptly removed and owners required “to do the right thing.” (Enforcement issues)
The Franklin County meeting focused on this topic---not any of this in Washington: