Park County commissioners discussed implementing a hiring freeze on June 3 as a tool to manage an identified budget shortfall, but they did not adopt a countywide freeze. Human Resources Director Maritza Redington told commissioners they could define a freeze several ways and that county practice already requires commissioner approval for job postings in many cases.
"If the county would like to implement this policy, it would be up to the commissioners to decide what that looks like," Maritza said, adding that the county already has processes in place to evaluate job descriptions prior to posting. She recommended a collaborative, equitable approach aligned with county goals.
Commissioners broadly agreed to a case-by-case approach: they will evaluate each hiring request with department heads, HR and finance rather than impose an immediate blanket freeze. Commissioner Waltz said a hiring freeze would be preferable to layoffs if it helps bridge the shortfall. Commissioners asked for a workshop with HR and finance to define criteria and timelines.
County staff and commissioners noted immediate operational needs in departments such as information technology and solid waste, and commissioners emphasized careful review so core services are not compromised. No formal freeze policy was adopted; direction was to return with a refined proposal and to review individual postings as they arise.
Action: direction to staff to review hiring requests on a case-by-case basis and to schedule a workshop with HR and finance; no formal policy enacted at this meeting.