E-mail Story   Print Story
  Comments (1) Total Thursday May. 23, 2013
 
Three Longtime City Staffers Retire
Finance director, assistant police chief and public works project manager bow out of successful care
Sitting in a conference room in Kalispell City Hall, Kalispell Public Works Department Manager Fred Zavodny reflects on his 33 years working in Kalispell city government. - Lido Vizzutti/Flathead Beacon
There are fundamental aspects of every city government. Finances, public safety and public works are three of them. Each provides elemental and essential services within a community. Their importance usually goes unnoticed until the need arises. But it's at those critical times when their worth is fully realized.

Kalispell's city government is experiencing a transition. As a new city manager is arriving, three longtime city employees with almost 100 years of collective experience are retiring. Fred Zavodny is retiring from the public works department after 33 years. Amy Robertson is retiring as the finance director after 27 years. Roger Krauss is retiring as full-time assistant police chief after 38 years but will remain working for the city part-time.

The retirements represent a changing of the guard of sorts. Thirty years ago barely 10,000 people lived in Kalispell. Hutton Ranch still resembled a ranch. City infrastructure and finances were noticeably outdated.

Robertson, who was lured to Kalispell by Glacier National Park, began in 1985 and helped establish the city's modern finances, which at the time were a mess. Since becoming finance director, Kalispell has received good, clean audits. She recently oversaw the refinancing of several general obligation bonds that is estimated to save the city roughly $2.5 million over the next 15 years. The refinancing will begin reducing residents' property taxes and show up on November's bill.

“We are reducing taxes. Not by a lot, but we are doing it,” Mayor Tammi Fisher said at a recent council meeting. “This is a fabulous way for Amy to go out on retirement.”

Zavodny, who was also lured by the local amenities, namely fly fishing, joined the city's public works department when a sizeable chunk of the city's infrastructure dated back almost 100 years.

It felt like "they handed me this giant puzzle with thousands of pieces but with no picture of what it's supposed to look like," he said. "I finally put the last piece in. Some pieces have taken years and year to get in."

And as he learned through the years, "Every scoop of dirt you take on a construction project is an adventure."

Zavodny's fingerprints are all across town, from sidewalks to streets to crosswalks. There have been big, noticeable developments, like Meridian and Hutton Ranch. But like a puzzle, every piece, small or large, is important.

"I think that's the accomplishment: all those small pieces put together to complete a puzzle, from one corner of town to the other," he said. "I think that's the big picture. The small accomplishments add up to so much more."
 
On 06-27-12, thinker commented....
Is Zavodny the guy we should thank for the unnavigable maze called Hutton Ranch?
 
Kellyn Brown
Kellyn Brown1h
@kellynbrown
@jfranz88 Please stop hashtagging your Twitter posts #snowpocalypse
Dillon Tabish
Dillon Tabish2h
@djtabish
Glacier’s Softball Sluggers: The conference champs are swinging for the fences at today's state tournament http://t.co/Y43SoMPcY4
Molly Priddy
Molly Priddy21 May
@mollypriddy
@NPDXReporter I think I'll start strategically calling it "pre-lunch" too, and then "forget" to eat my real lunch later. #dessertforlunch
Myers Reece
Myers Reece21 May
@myersreece
Environmental groups file lawsuit to halt logging project in Northwest Montana. http://t.co/fwwB2gyWND
Flathead Beacon
FB Headlines2h
@flatheadbeacon
House Passes GOP Bill to Speed Pipeline Approval http://t.co/61Hh4DVI07