Victor sees staff turnover tetonvalleynews.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tetonvalleynews.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Rob Heuseveldt, the Victor public works director and city engineer, submitted his two weeks notice to the Victor City Council and mayor on April 13.Â
Heuseveldt was hired to hold those two roles as well as city administrator in 2012. He had previously worked on contracted projects with the city through Sunrise Engineering. When current city administrator Olivia Goodale was hired in 2016, Heuseveldt was able to focus solely on engineering and public works.Â
He wrote in an email to the Victor government that he would be leaving his post on April 28. He plans to return to the private sector as the development director for a local company.Â
At a virtual meeting on the evening of Dec. 9, the Victor City Council reviewed the results of a survey regarding the future of the townâs public works facility and new town hall. Based on the feedback from councilors, community members, and staff, the council agreed to move ahead with the next step of consulting an architect on the projects.
In the spring of 2019, it came to light that the City Hall â then located at 32 Elm Street â was not up to safety codes, and was no longer an option for the office and meeting space required by the city. Built in the 70s, and expanded in the 80s, the metal building was never really intended for office use. Since then, the City Hall has been operating out of the Victor Crossroads building; a solution that has been workable in the short term, but is not viable logistically nor financially for the indefinite future. The council, Mayor Will Frohlich, and community members all echoed the need for the process to be not only well-planne