In Touch with Tennessee

CTAS - Celebrating 50 Years

Susan Robertson Season 2 Episode 10

Six former executive directors and Jon Walden, the agency's current executive director sit down to talk about 50 years of history at the County Technical Assistance Service (CTAS). 

Audio file

ctas history_mixdown.mp3

 

Transcript

00:00:10 Susan Robertson

Hi and welcome to In Touch with Tennessee.

00:00:13 Susan Robertson

A podcast of the University of Tennessee Institute for Public Service.

00:00:19 Susan Robertson

The County Technical Assistance Service, or CTAS, one of six institute agencies, is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year.

00:00:29 Susan Robertson

The agency was formed when Dan McKinnis, former executive director of the Tennessee County Services Association, wanted to establish an organization to provide counties with technical assistance, much like its sister agency, the Municipal Technical Advisory Service provides for cities.

00:00:50 Susan Robertson

The former executive director secured the support of a senator who agreed to sponsor legislation to create CTAS, and the legislation became law in 1973.

00:01:01 Susan Robertson

We're honored to have joining us today, former CTAS executive directors, as well as the current executive director.

00:01:08 Susan Robertson

Welcome gentlemen.

00:01:12 Jon Walden

Thank you.

00:01:16 Susan Robertson

So can I have each of you introduce yourselves and give the dates of your tenure as CTAS director?

00:01:22 Susan Robertson

Mr. Westbrook, we'll start with you.

00:01:24 Jim Westbrook

Well, I'm. I'm a little fuzzy on that. I believe that I became director on April 1 75.

00:01:32 Jim Westbrook

And I left, I think June, January, the 31st of.

00:01:37 Jim Westbrook

What was it, Bob?

00:01:42 Jim Westbrook

88 I think or.

00:01:44 Bob Wormsley

Yeah, that's right.

00:01:47 Jim Westbrook

So whatever how long that was, I guess that's 13 years plus.

00:01:52 Jim Westbrook

Our minus

00:01:57 Susan Robertson

OK, next.

00:02:00 Bob Wormsley

I thought of Jim when Jim left, I became CTAS director and was there until I left in 1993.

00:02:15 Susan Robertson

OK.

00:02:17 Rodney Carmical

And I'm Rodney Carmical. I followed Bob. I was director from 1993 until 2020.

00:02:29 Mike Garland

I'm Mike Garland.  I followed Rodney and I was the executive director from 2001 until 2014.

00:02:39 Robin Roberts

And I'm Robin Roberts. I was the director from 2014 until 2002.

00:02:47 Jon Walden

And I'm Jon Walden and I'm the current director, I.

00:02:50 Jon Walden

Was appointed interim director of May of 2020 and permanently December of 21.

00:02:58 Susan Robertson

OK.

00:02:59 Susan Robertson

Well, thank you.

00:03:01 Susan Robertson

So for those.

00:03:03 Susan Robertson

Of you who are in, and I know even before.

00:03:07 Susan Robertson

Some of your directors, were CTAS consultants, so feel free to jump in on any of these questions.

00:03:15

Of you who?

00:03:16 Susan Robertson

Were with the agency kind of near the time.

00:03:18 Susan Robertson

It was established.

00:03:20 Susan Robertson

Can you talk about the early days of CTAS ?

00:03:24

OK.

00:03:24 Jim Westbrook

I guess I'm probably the only one that has been here since it was established I was.

00:03:31 Jim Westbrook

And it's altogether different.

00:03:33 Jim Westbrook

Our client group is different and not to say it's better or worse, but it's a, it's a different ball game.

00:03:40 Jim Westbrook

We were just getting organized and everybody in the world was in the technical assistance businesses, so the Director, I mean the chairman of the Finance Committee.

00:03:51 Jim Westbrook

In the house.

00:03:53 Jim Westbrook

Said everybody's trying to get into it and what development districts, TVA university, other universities.

00:04:03 Jim Westbrook

Everybody and their brother, the state planning and everything, we're trying to get into that was the mention was pretty competitive back.

00:04:11 Jim Westbrook

There was some.

00:04:13 Jim Westbrook

I was new in the business going into it, but of course we all had some experience in county government, which some of those other agencies didn't have, which was a great big advantage.

00:04:24 Susan Robertson

Right. So how were counties?

00:04:27 Susan Robertson

What was their reaction to CTAS?

00:04:29 Susan Robertson

Were they very, you know?

00:04:31 Susan Robertson

Were they excited to welcome the assistance that was available to them at this point?

00:04:36 Jim Westbrook

Well, I think so, although they weren't used to this and we had the first county officials orientation program and down at UT at that time.

00:04:46 Jim Westbrook

UT Nashville, which is a part of the system at that time.

00:04:51 Jim Westbrook

And we were expecting about 100 people there and about 300 showed up.

00:04:55 Susan Robertson

Oh wow.

00:04:58 Jim Westbrook

Kind of got the ball rolling and had a few good licks and and then now it's second nature I just talking to Mike about some work that he was doing and he accounted down at.

00:05:08 Jim Westbrook

West Tennessee and.

00:05:11 Jim Westbrook

You know, it's usual business now, which is fine.

00:05:15 Jim Westbrook

That's the way it should be.

00:05:18 Bob Wormsley

But we at CTAS were very fortunate.

00:05:21 Bob Wormsley

In my opinion.

00:05:25 Bob Wormsley

Became Ralph Harris was short time director, but then Jim came up.

00:05:31 Bob Wormsley

And Jim?

00:05:33 Bob Wormsley

Rather than instant, what I would think was an instant credibility to CTAS because he had been in the county audit division, he had established relationships with the county officials all.

00:05:45 Bob Wormsley

Across the state.

00:05:47 Bob Wormsley

And that gave.

00:05:49 Bob Wormsley

Us some real instant credibility.

00:05:53 Bob Wormsley

Jim had a vision for how CTAS should be organic.

00:05:58 Bob Wormsley

And I think the organization has changed somewhat over the years, but basically that same basic structure is still there, although technologies added a lot of enhancements to it, but I'd like to give him a lot of credit for getting this thing off the ground and really.

00:06:19 Bob Wormsley

Giving confidence to county officials that they could rely on us if Jim said so.

00:06:25 Bob Wormsley

Jim had some great rules that if you got a phone call, you returned it that day or no later than the next day.

00:06:33 Bob Wormsley

And it was very important to him that those of us who were in the field at the time.

00:06:40 Bob Wormsley

That we got out and got into counties and began to get acquainted and work with county officials.

00:06:47 Bob Wormsley

One-on-one.

00:06:49 Bob Wormsley

And Rodney, can Rodney could testify to that.

00:06:54 Rodney Carmical

I started with CTAS in 1978, it had only been in existence.

00:06:58 Rodney Carmical

Five years and.

00:07:00 Rodney Carmical

Jim Westbrook brought me on as a field consultant.

00:07:04 Rodney Carmical

I had worked with him prior to that time at the county audit division in West Tennessee, and without question, he had a lot of contacts in county government

00:07:12 Rodney Carmical

And he expected a lot from his staff and we were small staff at that time.

00:07:18 Rodney Carmical

But you know we did a lot of traveling, a lot of car miles, a lot of telephone calls, payphones not cell phones.

00:07:27 Rodney Carmical

But it was it was a great organization because people just county officials just opened their arms to you because you were there.

00:07:35 Rodney Carmical

To help and it didn't cost them anything and we were providing service in their shop.

00:07:41 Rodney Carmical

And I think that was the key to getting us started.

00:07:43 Rodney Carmical

We were on the ground.

00:07:44 Rodney Carmical

We were part of them and we knew everybody.

00:07:46 Rodney Carmical

Jim wanted to make sure you knew everybody in a courthouse and when you went to a courthouse, you were supposed to see everybody in that

00:07:54 Rodney Carmical

facility and not just the one you went to see, but everybody and you talked about the service that was provided, the professional services we offered at that time and we built a rapport with county officials that I think today it's still

00:08:08 Rodney Carmical

There, the rapport is still there, but it all started from the groundwork and and back in 73 when that started, because it was started with all non-elected county people, county professional people. I mean at that time county government was a kind of an unknown factor, you know nobody.

00:08:29 Rodney Carmical

Any service to county officials until CTAS came on, and it was just one-on-one.

00:08:36 Mike Garland

Yeah, this Mike Garland, I came to work in 1977, just a short period before Bob or Rodney did. And they're both right, Jim emphasized.

00:08:49 Mike Garland

Personal contacts with county officials.

00:08:52 Mike Garland

See you say you do business.

00:08:54 Mike Garland

With who you.

00:08:56 Mike Garland

So we were kind of like a start up.

00:08:57 Mike Garland

Business at that time.

00:08:59 Mike Garland

We didn't know what all we were going to do, but we knew we were going to do good and so basically the way we did that was through our staff.

00:09:10 Mike Garland

We started visiting each courthouse and every county official and got to know them on a personal basis.

00:09:18 Mike Garland

And once we did that, then they would open up to you and and share their problems and ask for your assistance.

00:09:26 Mike Garland

So we just, it was an organization that we just kind of built from the ground up.

00:09:32 Robin Roberts

I'm Robin Roberts and I started in 95 and I will say that when I started, Mike and Rodney hired me and that same.

00:09:43 Robin Roberts

Mantra from what Jim started with, making the customer contacts and being in the field was stressed to us and I was very fortunate in that when I came on we had people like Roger Atkins and Johnny Hedrick and Billy Rodgers and Gary Hayes and who had a lot of experience in the field and were excellent at helping.

00:10:04 Robin Roberts

New people get started and thedepth of their knowledge was unbelievable to me and  the welcome that we received because of what had been established by.

00:10:16 Robin Roberts

Our predecessors was just remarkable on how well we were received in the counties.

00:10:23 Susan Robertson

And how many employees did CTAS have?

00:10:25 Susan Robertson

In the early years.

00:10:28 Jim Westbrook

Ohh, we had three what were called Field Advisors, one in Knoxville, one in Jackson, one in Nashville.

00:10:35 Jim Westbrook

And we had a.

00:10:38 Jim Westbrook

Engineering specialist, the so-called and that really didn't work out. That was probably one of the things that didn't work out that we altered and then.

00:10:50 Jim Westbrook

We had the the director and an assistant director who wasn't me.

00:10:57 Jim Westbrook

He had a law license.

00:10:59 Jim Westbrook

I don't think he.

00:11:00 Jim Westbrook

Practiced law

00:11:01 Jim Westbrook

And then we had a volunteer who was doing private acts, Chief MacIntyre, former Fire Chief at Davidson County, Nashville, Davidson County and then a a legal intern, not an intern.

00:11:15 Jim Westbrook

She didn't have her license she hadn’t passed the bar yet, but had graduated

00:11:21 Jim Westbrook

From law school so ever how many of that was plus about 3 or we had more secretaries then they've got now, because now everybody's got a computer back then nobody had a computer, but we went from there to.

00:11:37 Jim Westbrook

And the staffing up by the staff I inherited.

00:11:41 Jim Westbrook

Was  probably not as good as the the ones that followed, not because of me, but because Ralph.

00:11:48 Jim Westbrook

Was very careful who he selected and.

00:11:52 Jim Westbrook

Had some they weren't bad people, they just wouldn't, but wasn't on the job every day to put it that way.

00:12:01 Jim Westbrook

But they got on their jobs, so everything worked out to the best, I think.

00:12:08 Jim Westbrook

So ever I don't have any name.

00:12:10 Jim Westbrook

They're just about constituted the whole style.

00:12:15 Susan Robertson

Just a few more these days I guess.

00:12:19 Jim Westbrook

Then after the first year, I was promoted to a position called Director of Field Services.

00:12:26 Jim Westbrook

But I still lived in West Tennessee and that's where I wanted to live and.

00:12:32 Jim Westbrook

We hired a that's when we hired started staffing up for the field of what was called back then.

00:12:37 Jim Westbrook

I guess it still is field advisor.

00:12:39 Jim Westbrook

And and the finance person just specialized in finance.

00:12:46 Jim Westbrook

And we staffed up pretty good not and then got better whole time.

00:12:51 Susan Robertson

So this question I guess is for all of you. What were some of the

00:12:55 Susan Robertson

Challenges that you did see?

00:12:58 Susan Robertson

In those early years.

00:13:01 Mike Garland

Well, in the early years, like I said, it was kind of like a.

00:13:04 Mike Garland

Start-up business.

00:13:06 Mike Garland

We didn't have some kind of elaborate business plan saying we're going to go from A to B to C.

00:13:14 Mike Garland

We simply we knew we could help county governments improve.

00:13:19 Mike Garland

There was a lot of areas where they needed improvement and we just set about.

00:13:25 Mike Garland

To work with them and show them ways to be more efficient and we helped them in a variety of ways with accounting, budgeting, finance and so forth and legal issues where they never had any of that before.

00:13:41 Mike Garland

So it was just a really a nuts and bolt operation when we started.

00:13:46 Mike Garland

We didn't do anything exotic or anything like that.

00:13:50 Mike Garland

It was just day-to-day management issues that we assisted them with where they had never had any assistance before.

00:13:58 Bob Wormsley

Really identifying things that were left undone, that should have been done those early years, we were the field staff and through Jim's direction, we were able to identify areas that had.

00:14:14 Bob Wormsley

Totally been neglected things that counties were supposed to be done, that they were not.

00:14:19 Bob Wormsley

And when we had a staff meeting the various field representatives would, we would brainstorm.

00:14:28 Bob Wormsley

And unlike a lot of meetings, 90 percent of the time when we got together, we were discussing how we could help counties and laying out plans to push forward

00:14:40 Bob Wormsley

To do that.

00:14:42 Bob Wormsley

You know, just one of the things was like board bills, many counties across the state at that time were not filing.

00:14:48 Bob Wormsley

Board bills for housing state prisoners.

00:14:51 Bob Wormsley

And they were leaving a lot of money on the table.

00:14:54 Bob Wormsley

And so that's one of the little projects that we got into that generated some revenue for counties, right?

00:15:03 Rodney Carmical

One thing I want to mention too is this organization is still in existence. In 1977, the University of Tennessee Institute for Public Service

00:15:11 Rodney Carmical

with the partnership with MTAS and CTAS and TVA actually formed the local government Data Processing Corporation, which is in existence today.

00:15:23 Rodney Carmical

At that time, when I came on in 78, CTAS was doing all the field work for local government data processing corporation.

00:15:31 Rodney Carmical

We were out telling people about it.

00:15:33 Rodney Carmical

Was it called a batch system at that time, a batch system in the county.

00:15:37 Rodney Carmical

And we were actually installing batch systems accounting you just batch your work up and send it to the local government and they would duplicate it and send it back to you in a computerized.

00:15:45 Rodney Carmical

Form and we were loading payrolls for school systems with five to 600 employees and we were doing the first computerized payrolls for local governments.

00:15:57 Rodney Carmical

And as I said, CTAS and MTAS actually put it in TVA, put into seed money to start that corporation and that corporation.

00:16:05 Rodney Carmical

Today has over 2,100.

00:16:09 Rodney Carmical

Individual governmental customers.

00:16:13 Susan Robertson

Oh wow.

00:16:14 Rodney Carmical

And that is, It's a big scale operation now have over 100 and have over 100. They have about 150 employees today.

00:16:22 Rodney Carmical

And I think the budget somewhere around $3 to $4 million and that may be low, it may be closer to 5 million.

00:16:29 Rodney Carmical

But you know MTAS and CTAS started that and I don't think CTAS and MTAS get the credit they deserve today, because that corporation is a nonprofit corporation.

00:16:41 Rodney Carmical

Gold medal nonprofit corporation.

00:16:43 Rodney Carmical

And they're doing tremendous work even into the in the state of Alabama.

00:16:48 Rodney Carmical

So that's the tremendous legacy that CTAS and MTAS actually started that I think has been forgotten along the way because it's so independent now.

00:16:58 Rodney Carmical

But back when I started in 78 it was just like Mike said it was a start-up company and and now it's and now it's matured to way beyond anybody's expectations.

00:17:05 Susan Robertson

Right.

00:17:12 Rodney Carmical

And on the and I happen to be on the board of the local government and in in their balance sheet, they still show where CTAS and MTAS contributed $50,000 apiece.

00:17:24 Rodney Carmical

On the balance sheet today.

00:17:27 Mike Garland

That was back when $50,000 was

00:17:29 Mike Garland

Quite a bit of money.

00:17:32 Bob Wormsley

Jon is smiling real big, like he wants to get it back.

00:17:39 Mike Garland

But I think it's safe to say, had it not been for us.

00:17:44 Mike Garland

Yes, I doubt if local government would have ever gotten off the ground because we were the ones who marketed the program and helped get it established and they just they didn't have any staff back then.

00:17:57 Mike Garland

To do that.

00:17:59 Jim Westbrook

Who all exactly right, the person that was working back then 50 years ago and went into a courthouse and the person they have working now.

00:18:08 Jim Westbrook

It's the quality of the people is not all this.

00:18:11 Jim Westbrook

It's not because of CTAS, but a lot of it is because of CTAS, the quality of the official and the work that they do and a whole lot of difference now.

00:18:21 Jim Westbrook

And it was back then, matter of fact, it was unhealthy to go in some courthouses,

00:18:28 Jim Westbrook

It would help let anybody, I guess or anything, but they literally were filthy and unhealthy to even go in them.

00:18:38 Jim Westbrook

But it's not that way now.

00:18:43 Susan Robertson

So that's one of the things that has changed obviously, what are and and I think all of you can speak to this, what are some of the changes that you've seen at CTAS or you know even within county government over time?

00:18:58 Jon Walden

Well, I'll speak to our perspective Susan and before I say this, I'd like to thank all of these gentlemen because of the foundation they laid for CTAS.

00:19:00 Jim Westbrook

Hey, Bob.

00:19:12 Jon Walden

The concept that Jim started and everybody else continued to do is still present here today as we,

00:19:20 Jon Walden

We're now at eight county government consultants, two Assessor Consultants, two criminal justice consultants.

00:19:28 Jon Walden

A jail management consultant, four legal consultants.

00:19:34 Jon Walden

An IT department with our media specialists and director of communications.

00:19:43 Jon Walden

Our communication specialist, our IT consulting, our training we have two different training departments now. So from the 10 that Jim mentioned started, when we become fully staffed, we'll have a total of 38 staff members at CTAS and that's all because of the foundation that each of them.

00:20:03 Jon Walden

Laid and put us in good financial position to do things that we can do to take care of things that are needed today.

00:20:12 Jon Walden

That same concept that Rodney mentioned about being in the county office.

00:20:18 Jon Walden

It still happens today.

00:20:19 Jon Walden

Matter of fact the one out of West Tennessee and he's there with Jim now,

00:20:24 Jon Walden

Mike Galey, had he not been helping Jim today, he would be in Lake County, which he seemed to be in this whole.

00:20:32 Jon Walden

Last couple of weeks because of.

00:20:34 Jon Walden

The need they have and his expertise is very beneficial to what they need at this time.

00:20:40 Jon Walden

And and that happens not only with him being in Lake County, one of the major changes that have happened over the years is the use of cell phones.

00:20:50 Jon Walden

So not only is he helping Lake County, he's still getting calls from his other 10 or 11 counties as well and having to help them.

00:20:59 Jon Walden

Well after 5:00 in the evening on a lot of days. So the

00:21:03 Jon Walden

implementation of technology has been good but,

00:21:08 Jon Walden

In some cases like that,  they can reach you at times that maybe you don't want

00:21:12 Jon Walden

them to reach you.

00:21:13 Susan Robertson

24/7 it sounds like.

00:21:17 Bob Wormsley

One of the things that I think the CTAS staff.

00:21:22 Bob Wormsley

Assisted in doing or.

00:21:25 Bob Wormsley

And so.

00:21:26 Bob Wormsley

TCSA, the Tennessee County Services Association and establishing a couple of programs that are invaluable.

00:21:33 Bob Wormsley

To county governments and one of them is the Tennessee County Services loan program and the other is Local Government Insurance

00:21:44 Bob Wormsley

And these.

00:21:46 Bob Wormsley

The CTAS field stuff did a lot of the leg work and gathering the data to show the need for the creation of those organizations and.

00:21:58 Bob Wormsley

And I can.

00:21:59 Bob Wormsley

Speak from the insurance perspective in particular.

00:22:04 Bob Wormsley

That counties would today be at the mercy of

00:22:10 Bob Wormsley

For profit insurance companies for.

00:22:14 Bob Wormsley

Was that if that organization were not in existence and it's a real cost saving.

00:22:21 Bob Wormsley

measure for county governments. I have continued to work with the insurance program  and can attest to how valuable it is for counties.

00:22:35 Mike Garland

I think that's one of the things sometimes people forget.

00:22:38 Mike Garland

We talked about CTAS and counties and we were created to provide technical assistance to all the Tennessee counties

00:22:45 Mike Garland

But we were also created to provide assistance to TCSA, which represents Tennessee counties and all other county officials associations, so CTAS provides a valuable service not only directly to the counties, but also to all the associations that represent county officials.

00:23:04 Susan Robertson

Right.

00:23:05 Susan Robertson

So what are some of the?

00:23:06 Susan Robertson

Other big changes that you all have seen.

00:23:11 Rodney Carmical

It's already been stated.

00:23:13 Rodney Carmical

I think technology is the biggest change and and that's in everything today, but county officials are more in tune to technology now than they ever have been.

00:23:23 Rodney Carmical

And that allows CTAS to utilize that way of delivering service, but at the same time.

00:23:30 Rodney Carmical

still maintaining their grassroots of  contact with elected officials and encouraging elected officials to use technology that's available to them.

00:23:41 Rodney Carmical

which allows CTAS to provide more various types of.

00:23:45 Rodney Carmical

And then what?

00:23:46 Rodney Carmical

We started, you know, most of the service we provided was in the the financial service areas and things of that nature.

00:23:53 Rodney Carmical

But today it is.

00:23:55 Rodney Carmical

It's such a wide variety of things that can be offered by CTAS through using technology, but yet there's there's still maintaining your base of county officials.

00:24:04 Rodney Carmical

Contacts and that's I think that's the important thing to remember.

00:24:08 Rodney Carmical

That's is part of the services is having somebody you can call by name.

 

 

00:24:14 Robin Roberts

I think some of the other areas that have created some changes are some legislation and some regulatory changes that have been required, the comptroller's office is now requiring people to go through a CFO program for finance officers for the counties.

00:24:34 Robin Roberts

Also, requiring county commissioners to get some training which prior to that they didn't have to have any training, but now.

00:24:43 Robin Roberts

There is a requirement for county commissioners to get training, so it's elevated.

00:24:48 Robin Roberts

The number of county commissioners that are coming into contact with CTAS and its training programs, and I think that's very beneficial for both counties and for CTAS to deliver better services.

00:25:00 Robin Roberts

To the counties.

00:25:04 Mike Garland

Yeah, I think that's one of the biggest changes.

00:25:06 Mike Garland

That I've seen.

00:25:08 Mike Garland

From the time I started back in the 70s.

00:25:10 Mike Garland

Is that the level of training

00:25:14 Mike Garland

And professionalism of Tennessee county officials has grown dramatically from 50 years.

00:25:22 Mike Garland

Ago and I.

00:25:25 Mike Garland

I think CTAS played a big part in that happening.

00:25:29 Bob Wormsley

One thing, Susan, that shouldn't be that in my opinion.

00:25:32 Bob Wormsley

And that's just my opinion, that shouldn't be overlooked.

00:25:35 Susan Robertson

Right.

00:25:36 Bob Wormsley

Is the importance of the field staff at CTAS.

00:25:42 Bob Wormsley

Sometimes, particularly in the medium and rural size counties.

00:25:47 Bob Wormsley

When a CTAS representative calls on them, that is the only personal contact they have with the University of Tennessee.

00:25:55 Bob Wormsley

So I think in that respect CTAS becomes a very important ambassador for the university and fulfilling its land grant obligations.

00:26:07 Bob Wormsley

In the area of public service.

00:26:10 Bob Wormsley

You know it's.

00:26:11 Bob Wormsley

I've always felt that that's.

00:26:13 Bob Wormsley

A big 

00:26:14 Bob Wormsley

advantage for the University of Tennessee is for somebody from the University of Tennessee say.

00:26:19 Bob Wormsley

I'm here from the University of Tennessee and I'm going to help you.

00:26:21 Bob Wormsley

It’s not like I'm from the.

00:26:24 Bob Wormsley

Government. I'm going.

00:26:24 Bob Wormsley

To help you, we're going to have.

00:26:27 Jon Walden

And that alludes to what we talked about a little earlier with Mike Galey helping that particular county.

00:26:35 Jon Walden

And one in the ring, one of the main reasons is they don't have the expertise. That particular person left.

00:26:41 Jon Walden

So he's really filling a void until they can hire expertise to take care of that particular

00:26:47 Jon Walden

void that they're trying to fill.

00:26:49 Jon Walden

And I'm sure,

00:26:51 Jon Walden

Of course, Mike is not a part of this conversation, but I would.

00:26:55 Jon Walden

Think one of the first people they called when they needed help was him because they knew him and had his say on them.

00:27:03 Robin Roberts

To build on what Bob said too, not only with the University of Tennessee, but CTAS has interacted with many of the state departments to help them meet their needs.

00:27:15 Robin Roberts

And he had mentioned earlier about board bills.

00:27:19 Robin Roberts

I came on, we were still do.

00:27:20 Robin Roberts

Being a lot of the board bill work for counties to get that money from the Department of Corrections, we were also doing a lot of work with the litter grants with the TDOT litter grant, and then we also did a lot of work with the business taxes with the Department of Commerce.

00:27:41 Robin Roberts

Insurance and also.

00:27:45 Robin Roberts

The automobile.

00:27:49 Robin Roberts

Renewals and and work like that.

00:27:53 Robin Roberts

So, we help the state.

00:27:55 Robin Roberts

Interact with the county officials and we were a medium to help that go more smoothly and to also provide some consistency statewide for those state departments to operate more effectively too.

00:28:06 Robin Roberts

So it 

00:28:08 Robin Roberts

adds a lot to the state of Tennessee and  we were somewhat ambassadors for those state departments.

00:28:15 Robin Roberts

Help that transition and those changes be implemented effectively.

00:28:25

OK well this.

00:28:26 Susan Robertson

Question is, for each one of you.

00:28:29 Susan Robertson

What would you say is?

00:28:34 Susan Robertson

Your most memorable moment with CTAS.

 

00:28:52 Jim Westbrook

I don't know.

00:28:54 Jim Westbrook

I have several moments while I was there and I'm serious

00:28:59 Jim Westbrook

I don't think I’ve really thought about that.

00:29:02 Jim Westbrook

I think about serious moments all time, but not that they expressing what was most memorable

00:29:12 Jim Westbrook

But it was a very pleasant time, my career, my life.

00:29:16 Jim Westbrook

I enjoyed it, enjoyed my association with the university, and I agree with everything that's been said here about the time for that.

00:29:24 Jim Westbrook

I was thinking about a county in East Tennessee large, pretty large county, not Knox or

00:29:31 Jim Westbrook

Hamilton, a pretty large county they got in the computer business and bought a computer that you couldn't even put in one floor of the courthouse didn't have one sole who operated, or knew anything about programming or anything else.

00:29:44 Jim Westbrook

And that was when we decided to go with the local government data process.

00:29:49 Jim Westbrook

And that was a way to go.

00:29:51 Jim Westbrook

And Mike, accept our Rodney.

00:29:53 Jim Westbrook

I guess he was absolutely right.

00:29:55 Jim Westbrook

That was one of the

00:29:57 Jim Westbrook

Best things we've done and all the other things that they've alluded to,

00:30:06 Jim Westbrook

I couldn't tell you anyway.

00:30:10 Bob Wormsley

I don't see it from my perspective and this may not be what you

00:30:14 Bob Wormsley

were getting at but.

00:30:17 Bob Wormsley

It gave me an opportunity to visit every county in this state and over a long period of time to get acquainted with numerous county officials, and  that's been a very rewarding personal experience for me to have been able to.

00:30:37 Bob Wormsley

To meet people from Davidson and Shelby

00:30:40 Bob Wormsley

County, Pickett County and Clay County to be with them and their offices and it.

00:30:46 Bob Wormsley

It almost felt like that when I left CTAS

00:30:49 Bob Wormsley

And I think I said when I left CTAS that I felt like that I could almost if I had a flat tire in any county, it would be easy to reach out to somebody and say, hey, I need some help.

00:31:00 Bob Wormsley

Because I learned this from Mr. Westbrook

00:31:03 Bob Wormsley

I don't know how

00:31:03 Bob Wormsley

To change the tire.

00:31:09 Jim Westbrook

Falling along that line, we used to have the retreat.

00:31:12 Jim Westbrook

Folks called at the at the prison of war camp up in Crossville

00:31:21 Jim Westbrook

And the vice president at that time.

00:31:26 Jim Westbrook

I said I've got to go up to Crossville and

00:31:28 Jim Westbrook

Cash a check

00:31:30 Jim Westbrook

He said we you cash a check in Crossville?

00:31:32 Jim Westbrook

I say I can cash a check anywhere in the state of Tennessee from what Bob said, that's one of the rewarding things, I guess, to have know that you could.

00:31:45 Jim Westbrook

Cash a check anywhere in the state of Tennessee or any county in state of Tennessee.

00:31:50 Jim Westbrook

OK.

00:31:52 Rodney Carmical

I would say, this is Rodney.

00:31:53 Rodney Carmical

I would say from a personal standpoint, my personal highlight.

00:31:57 Rodney Carmical

First of all have been employed at CTAS which I was very grateful to and for Jim allowing me and hired me to be part of CTAS

00:32:05 Rodney Carmical

But I guess I was thinking back to the time that I was actually appointed as director of CTAS and 

00:32:14 Rodney Carmical

How it was to feel like that you have earned a spot as to follow Jim Westbrook and Bob Wormsley, who I consider two of the most knowledgeable people of county government alive today.

00:32:28 Rodney Carmical

And to be in that position where you were following their footsteps and they set the path for me and I continued that path as much as I could in my own.

00:32:38 Rodney Carmical

OK.

00:32:39 Rodney Carmical

But that that was a personal highlight for me.

00:32:41 Rodney Carmical

Just being allowed to be the executive director of an organization like CTAS it was just overwhelming to me at that.

00:32:49 Rodney Carmical

Time and it was a great tenure.

00:32:54 Rodney Carmical

I I enjoyed my whole tenure and we had at that time we had.

00:32:59 Rodney Carmical

A great group.

00:33:00 Rodney Carmical

It wasn’t as large as the one Jon's got now and the management issues probably weren't as massive as they are now, but we had people in UT cars all over the state of Tennessee and never once in my

00:33:12 Rodney Carmical

Time did I have to discharge anybody or have a person that was reprimanded in any form?

00:33:20 Rodney Carmical

Maybe some minor problems along the way, but nothing major that would cause any problem that would be adversely seen by the University of Tennessee.

00:33:30 Rodney Carmical

And I think that's great and it still happens today.

00:33:32 Rodney Carmical

It's still going on today and I think that's a great legacy.

00:33:35 Rodney Carmical

That has been.

00:33:36 Rodney Carmical

Left for Jon and his staff to follow.

00:33:40 Mike Garland

I guess I'll follow up with that

00:33:42 Mike Garland

I would agree with that.

00:33:43 Mike Garland

One of the highlights of my career of course was being appointed the Executive Director and from a program standpoint.

00:33:51 Mike Garland

I think one of my highlights with CTAS was the county official's, new county

00:33:58 Mike Garland

Officials program when you stop and think about that every four years, this state elects.

00:34:04 Mike Garland

New county officials and they turn over by the hundreds and we are the only organization

00:34:12 Mike Garland

That brings them together and it's, I think kind of like you do with the military, with boot camp, we bring in the new recruits and we start trying to train them up.

00:34:24 Mike Garland

And about time we get them trained up real good, they have an election and get beat and leave, but that has been a valuable service that CTAS has provided the county government having all these new officials come in and really not knowing where to go or what to do and having CTAS as the organization that they can turn to and that will help them.

00:34:46 Mike Garland

With their day-to-day problems.

00:34:51 Robin Roberts

I think one of the highlights of my time at CTAS

00:34:56 Robin Roberts

In addition to being the director, but one of the jobs that I dearly loved and and still tell people the best job I ever had in the world was working for CTAS as a field consultant because you.

00:35:08 Robin Roberts

Saw it 

00:35:11 Robin Roberts

Gave you so much positive feedback when you helped the officials and they were so appreciative of the help that you provided them and I think.

00:35:20 Robin Roberts

That it alludes to what goes back to what Jim started as far as providing a high level of service and providing help to the people that really needed

00:35:31 Robin Roberts

Help and connect them with all the areas that they needed to be connected with, whether it was the comptroller's office.

00:35:38 Robin Roberts

Solving an audit issue or working with one of the other state departments or just helping them comply with all the laws that they had to comply with, and you built such really strong friendships and relationships that you know, until that person passes that friendship is still there.

00:35:59 Robin Roberts

With you and I think that is one of the things that I've always loved about this organization is that they were truly here to help others and it gave you so much positive feedback.

00:36:13 Jon Walden

And for me, Susan, my highlight started in 93 and it continues this day from the fact that I've been able to work with such a great group of individuals for almost 30 years.

00:36:25 Jon Walden

And even with the group we have now sitting across the table now from Rodney Carmichael that hired me.

00:36:33 Jon Walden

And I'm very, very blessed to and I I don't know of many statewide organizations that the current executive director has the phone number of five or six former directors.

00:36:45 Jon Walden

And and I do use it on the occasion that they call them and run things by them

00:36:50 Jon Walden

So my highlight continues on a daily basis.

00:36:54 Jon Walden

Just I I'm.

00:36:55 Jon Walden

Blessed to be able to work with a bunch of coworkers now that.

00:36:58 Jon Walden

They're not only great professionals, but they're great people.

00:37:02 Jon Walden

And I can see.

00:37:03 Jon Walden

Family members because I'm with them a lot more in some cases, more time than my own family members.

00:37:09 Jon Walden

So yeah, my highlight continues and it continues from the standpoint and we talk about it in our staff meetings even today we came up with a purpose statement for CTAS which is 

00:37:23 Jon Walden

‘Helping Tennessee County governments better serve as citizens.’

00:37:27 Jon Walden

And for me, that's why I get up every day is to help Tennessee county governments better serve citizens and

00:37:34 Jon Walden

They don't have a clue that we're doing it.

00:37:36 Jon Walden

We can walk past them in the grocery stores and the restaurants, and these individuals don't realize that the work we do on a daily basis in most cases helps better their lives on a daily

00:37:46 Jon Walden

Basis here in Tennessee.

00:37:50 Jon Walden

So my highlight continues.

00:37:52 Susan Robertson

Yeah, absolutely.

00:37:55 Susan Robertson

So Jon and you know and the rest of you?

00:37:58 Susan Robertson

I'd like for you to.

00:37:59 Susan Robertson

To chime in on this.

00:38:01 Susan Robertson

As well, but what do you see?

00:38:03 Susan Robertson

For CTAS moving.

00:38:05 Susan Robertson

Into the future?

00:38:07 Jon Walden

Well, and you mentioned earlier, what were some of the challenges and it's not really challenges and opportunity, I think we've had a quite a bit of retirement over the last few years.

00:38:19 Jon Walden

So we're bringing on new staff members.

00:38:22 Jon Walden

In a lot of cases, they hadn't been involved in county government. So not only are we teaching them what we do at CTAS, we're teaching them about county government, but we're trying to develop a team environment so that each of us work together as we need to.

00:38:38 Jon Walden

But that that retirement cycle doesn't only affect CTAS within CTAS, but also with the state.

00:38:45 Jon Walden

Robin mentioned a lot of departments that we work with throughout the state they're having.

00:38:50 Jon Walden

Individuals that are retiring, that were long term state employees and they're retiring.

00:38:55 Jon Walden

So we're actually having to educate those individuals to the services.

00:39:00 Jon Walden

Right.

00:39:00 Jon Walden

So that the partnerships between us and those state agencies

00:39:05 Jon Walden

Could hopefully maintain and become stronger, or at least maintain the the level of success we've had over the years with each other, and one of the challenges today is that.

00:39:17 Jon Walden

When I started and those before we went to an organization and and utilized it or looked at it as a career.

00:39:24 Jon Walden

A lot of the younger generation.

00:39:28 Jon Walden

Are looking at it as an opportunity to gain experience and then move on.

00:39:32 Jon Walden

So those are some of the challenges that we face today.

00:39:36 Jon Walden

But and I can't say it enough, the staff we presently have today.

00:39:41 Jon Walden

Are and over the years have been some great people that they want to get up every day and make county government better?

00:39:49 Susan Robertson

Well, thank you all for joining us today.

00:39:52 Susan Robertson

It's been a true honor to talk to six of the seven directors that have

00:40:00 Susan Robertson

Guided CTAS through the last 50 years.

00:40:04 Jon Walden

Thank you for having us, Susan.

00:40:06 Jim Westbrook

Thank you for having me.

00:40:08 Bob Wormsley

Been our pleasure, Susan

00:40:11 Susan Robertson

And thank you listeners.

00:40:12 Susan Robertson

You can find our podcast on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

 


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