- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Supervisors appoint Portney as new Lake County Health Services director
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Board of Supervisors voted on Tuesday to appoint a new Health Services director, an action that came nearly two months after the previous director resigned in the face of a potential termination action.
Emerging from a closed session during its special Tuesday meeting, the Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to approve the hiring of Jonathan C. Portney, MPH, CPH, as the county’s new Health Services director.
“I look forward to serving the community as the Health Services director,” Portney said.
It’s his goal to do everything he can to ensure the betterment of health of all Lake County residents, Portney said. “It’s truly an honor to be here.”
The board applauded and County Administrative Officer Carol Huchingson, who has served as interim Health Services director for the past two months, pumped her fist in the air.
Portney’s appointment is effective Jan. 10.
He will start at the second step on the salary scale, which is $10,993 a month, or $131,916 a year, based on the updated salary schedule the board approved in September.
“We are very excited to partner with Jonathan Portney to further our efforts to fight COVID-19, and promote the health and well-being of every Lake County resident,” said Board Chair Bruno Sabatier in a written statement issued by the county following the meeting. “Mr. Portney is a highly motivated and energetic health executive that has shown great capacity in recent years as a community-based public health practitioner in San Francisco and San Mateo County.”
The county reported that, since April of 2020, Portney has been actively engaged in pandemic response as executive director of Daly City Health Center, “ensuring quality care and services in historically complex circumstances.”
His other recent leadership experiences have included a stint from 2018 to 2020 as director of the Community Health Ambassador Program for San Francisco’s Urban Services YMCA, and a two-year term as director of the Hospital Family Resource Center and Rural Mobile Clinic for Waterloo Adventist Hospital in Sierra Leone.
His education includes receiving a master’s degree and pursuing his doctoral degree at Loma Linda University in Southern California, where emphases in his study included health technology and organizational development, program planning and health education training development, as well as treatment of respiratory disorders.
The county reported that Portney also recognizes certain population groups are more vulnerable to adverse health outcomes, due to environmental, behavioral, social and biological factors.
The diversity of contributors to people’s health is a key reason Portney emphasizes a community-focused approach to public health.
“Inclusive and participatory practices are the best way to hear the community’s voice, and for staff to foster meaningful partnerships that build community capacity and bring about community empowerment. I’m truly excited to partner with residents to promote the best possible health outcomes for Lake County,” Portney said in the written statement issued by the county.
In his new job, Portney will work with the county’s Public Health officer.
The county also has been working to hire a new, permanent Public Health officer after Dr. Gary Pace left the job on a full-time basis in the spring.
So far, that effort has not yielded a new hire, with the county in the fourth round of its recruitment.
However, Pace is continuing to provide services to the county in an interim capacity, with the most recent amendment to the agreement between he and the county approved by the board as part of its consent agenda at the Nov. 16 meeting.
That amendment extends the agreement to June 30, 2022, and will be terminated should the board hire a new full-time Public Health officer in the meantime.
Board action regarding previous director
Portney succeeds Denise Pomeroy, who served as Health Services director for nearly five and a half years before her resignation in October, after the board had appeared prepared to terminate her.
On Oct. 5, the board — at Huchingson’s request — added extra items to its agenda including a closed session evaluation of Pomeroy.
Later in the meeting, after the board had emerged from closed session and the video broadcast had stopped, it added several more items to the agenda, including reestablishing the deputy Health Services director as a county classification, the appointment of Jennifer Baker to interim Deputy Health Services director effective Tuesday and the appointment of Huchingson as the interim Health Services director.
Then, on Oct. 7, an addendum was made to the agenda for a special meeting scheduled specifically for department head evaluations. That addendum read, “Public Employee Evaluation/Termination: Title: Director: Health Services Director.”
Later that same day, Sabatier acknowledged that the board had accepted Pomeroy’s resignation.
Then, on Oct. 9, Pomeroy’s husband of 24 years, Arnold, died, following a lengthy illness.
On Oct. 12, Lake County News served the county, including Sabatier and County Counsel Anita Grant, with a cure and correct demand letter due to its belief that the Board of Supervisors had violated the Ralph M. Brown Act in its handling of those extra items at the Oct. 5 meeting out of the public view. The letter requested the items be withdrawn and reagendized in order to be reconsidered at the Oct. 19 meeting.
The county did not acknowledge receipt of the letter. However, on the Oct. 19 agenda was the withdrawal of those items and actions to readopt them. The items were placed on the consent agenda, which normally is not discussed. As such, Lake County News requested the items be pulled and explained for the public’s benefit.
At that time, Sabatier asked Huchingson to explain the situation. She said the board had emerged from closed session on Oct. 5 at 5:15 p.m. and announced its action from closed session.
As a result, she said they needed to add the extra items. All of that was done after support staff had left for the day, and they couldn’t restart the Granicus and Zoom programs.
“On the advice of counsel, it was recommended that we bring it back to you when the public can comment on it, if they wish to,” Huchingson said.
Grant noted, “Everyone realized immediately after that evening that these steps should be taken and so this has been in the works since the very next morning, just in case anybody has any questions in that regard.”
She apologized to the board for how it had been handled. “The important thing going forward is it’s very clear, transparent and visible to the public with this item.”
Sabatier said communications had begun the same night as the Oct. 5 meeting and that it was taken up again on that day to clear it up.
Since then, Huchingson served as the interim director, the latest in a series of interim director posts — including for the Registrar of Voters Office and Community Development — that the supervisors have given her when an issue has arisen with a department head vacancy.
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