The Adams County Training and Development department has received the Outstanding Achievement in Local Government Innovation Award from the Alliance for Innovation for the Impact Adams program. County representatives accepted the award today at the 2017 Transforming Local Government Conference in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Impact Adams has three distinct programs dedicated to helping county employees learn, grow, and contribute to the community—Evolve U, Develop Us, and We Care.
Evolve U is a training program dedicated to providing engaging training to develop employees both professionally and personally.
“We have transformed training and development to be about the entire employee, and we’re training them for life, not just for work skills,” said Nick Kittle, Adams County’s chief innovation officer. “In the last year, we’ve had more than a 75% increase in the number of people who have gone through training here in Adams County because of the diversity and volume of the training offered to them.”
Develop Us provides opportunities in the form of team facilitation, team building, organizational mentoring, and succession planning. Through Develop Us, the county runs the Emerging Leaders Mentoring Program, pairing new hires with veteran county employees.
“I feel empowered to make a difference in the county,” said Kelsey Hicks, a recording tech in the Clerk & Recorder’s Office who is participating in the Emerging Leaders program. “I feel more connected, not just within my department but also with the county as a whole.”
We Care represents the county's partnership with its community through the employee volunteer program, called Heart at Work, and county internship opportunities.
Kittle, together with Heather McDermott, chief development officer, and Jeff Newsome, talent development specialist, created the Impact Adams program.
Suncor’s Emergency Response Team (ERT) will conduct fire extinguisher training Wednesday, July 8, 2020, from approximately 1-3 p.m. The fire extinguisher training will take place at the Plant 1 fire training grounds on the western edge of the Commerce City refinery property. During the training there will likely be flames and smoke produced. Local stakeholders, regulatory agencies, and local government officials have been notified.
A Jefferson County judge ordered the City and County of Denver to pay Adams County more than $33 million for violations of an intergovernmental agreement (IGA) regarding noise levels at Denver International Airport (DIA) during the years of 2014, 2015, and 2016. DIA was found in violation of 67 Class II noise exposure performance standards (NEPS) during the aforementioned years.

