County staff provided updates on multiple planning and public-service items, including a draft local safety action plan produced with the New Jersey Transportation Planning Authority (NJTPA), a county trails grant solicitation timeline, mosquito-control surveillance results, a new mobile health clinic funded by the American Rescue Plan Act, and facilities-maintenance workload.
The Department of Engineering and Planning reported that it has worked with the NJTPA since June 2023 to develop a local safety action plan to help prioritize safety improvements on county roadways with the future goal of zero serious injuries and fatalities. The plan included public outreach to municipalities, law enforcement, emergency responders and residents; staff said the final plan was released by the authority earlier this month. County staff will review the plan over the next few months and present a recommendation to the board on possible county implementation; commissioners were told formal action to adopt the plan is anticipated at a future meeting.
The division of planning said it is compiling information for the next Sussex County trails grant solicitation and expects to coordinate with the open-space committee and municipalities; the county is targeting release of the program details to coincide with the fiscal-year 2026 budget process.
Public-health and operations updates included: the new mobile health clinic — financed with American Rescue Plan Act funds — will offer immunizations, screenings, health education and chronic-disease support and has a ribbon-cutting scheduled; the county’s office of mosquito control reported one aerial application covering 829 acres on July 16 to combat floodwater mosquitoes, two positive West Nile virus pools and one positive La Crosse virus pool for 2025, 218 mosquito pools submitted for testing and more than 134,000 adult mosquitoes identified to species.
County administrative staff (identified in the meeting as Ron) also reported that the Statewide Executive Management Meeting approved an insurance claim payout of about $21,000 to replace four voting machines damaged by water in leased storage, and that the county has applied for a $31,000 grant to reimburse certain safety initiatives. Facilities staff reported completing 2,137 work orders year-to-date and 708 preventive-maintenance jobs through June; staff have been prioritizing air-conditioner repairs during recent heat.
Why this matters: the safety-action plan could reshape county road-safety priorities; the trails-grant timing affects municipal project funding; mosquito surveillance affects public-health planning; and the mobile clinic expands access to services in underserved areas.
What the board did: these items were presented for information; no final board action on the safety action plan or trails program was taken at this meeting. Staff provided contact information for departments and said follow-up recommendations will come to the board.