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Flood Adaptation Facilitator

In-person
$70,000 - $75,000 / year
Full-time
Contract
Experienced
Posted 2 days ago

FLOOD ADAPTATION FACILITATOR

Position: Full Time contract position

Available: January 2025

Term: January 2025 - March 2027

Salary & Benefits:

  • $70,000-$75,000 per year, based on experience and qualifications
  • Eligible for a comprehensive extended health & dental plan
  • Employer RSP contribution
  • Eligible for hybrid remote work/office model
  • Wellness allowance and professional development opportunities

Scope: The Flood Adaptation Facilitator requires an organized, results-driven individual who can work independently to produce the deliverables associated with the project. The position will assist municipalities to understand and adapt to flood hazards. The Flood Adaptation Facilitator will work with various cross-sector stakeholders including administrators, elected officials in local government, subject matter experts, and the provincial government to coordinate, package, and deliver resources related to flood mitigation. The position will play a lead role in building municipal capacity to respond to both inland and coastal flooding.

Qualifications:

  • A self-directed individual with the ability to meet deliverables outlined in a workplan
  • Education/experience in planning, sustainability, environmental science, engineering or a related field considered an asset
  • Experience with GIS applications, including StoryMaps considered an asset
  • Knowledge of flood hazards and related mitigation and adaptation strategies, including impacts to infrastructure considered an asset
  • Knowledge or experience with zoning, by-law development and other aspects of land-use planning
  • Project management experience with the ability to meet deadlines and provide quarterly reporting to the provincial funder
  • Strong facilitation skills, including working with various stakeholders from academia, environmental organizations, and municipal government

Education: Post secondary degree in planning, sustainability, environmental science, engineering, or a related field

Hours of Work:

  • 8:30 am - 4:30 pm
  • Monday-Friday
  • Some evening and weekend work required from time to time

To Apply: Submit a cover letter, resume, and list of three professional references to:

Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities
1809 Barrington Street, Suite #1304
Halifax NS B3J 3K8
Att: Selection Committee
E-mail: [email protected]

Apply by: January 10, 2025 @ 4:00 pm (Atlantic)

Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities values diversity and inclusiveness and encourages applications from all qualified candidates, including Aboriginal/Indigenous persons, racially visible persons, persons with disabilities, and women. Any job applicant requiring accommodation in order to ensure equal access to employment, remuneration, promotion, and training is encouraged to make their accommodation needs known, to the extent that they are able.

We thank all applicants, however only those invited for an interview will be contacted.

Full job description is available here.

Competition Number: FloodAdaptation-1211CB
Company Website: http://www.nsfm.ca

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About Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities

About Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities

The Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities (NSFM) is the collective voice of municipalities in the province. We are a non-profit organization that represents all 375 municipally elected officials and all 49 municipalities.
We are governed by a 13-member board of directors. Twelve are elected by our members at our annual general meeting, and one is appointed from our sister organization, the Association of Municipal Administrators of Nova Scotia (AMANS)
Formerly known as the Union of Nova Scotia Municipalities (UNSM), NSFM was established on August 15, 1906, during the Convention of the Union of Canadian Municipalities in Halifax, Nova Scotia, when Mayor Black of Wolfville motioned that a Provincial Union of Nova Scotia Municipalities be formed.
After the benefits of a municipal union were discussed, the motion passed unanimously. Mayor R.T.MacIlreith of Halifax, and Halifax City Engineer F.W.W. Doane, were appointed President and Secretary, respectively. At the first meeting, a constitution similar to those adopted by other provincial associations, was read clause by clause, and then approved.
Fees were set in the following manner: Counties would pay $10; towns, $2 per thousand population (not less than $10 total); and cities, $2 per thousand population (not to exceed $50 total). After its first year in operation, the Union generated $180 in fees from its 12 members. By August 1908, membership grew to 18 with $210 generated from fees. A membership of 50 was achieved at the time of the Seventh Annual Convention in 1912.
The Union was established to protect the interests of municipal units in Nova Scotia. On August 28, 1907, at the Second Annual Convention, Mayor MacIlreith succinctly stated the raison d'etre of provincial unions of municipalities by noting that "organizations such as this (the UNSM) are charged with the particular duty of watching all legislation affecting the interests of municipalities." President A.E. McMahon noted at the UNSM Annual Convention on August 24, 1910, that the time will come when the government would rely more extensively on the Union's services and expertise.
McMahon's premonition proved accurate, and, with time, an interactive decision-making process developed between the Province and the Union. The NSFM increased its membership from 12 units to a high of 55 municipalities in the mid-1990s. Over time and through municipal amalgamation, the membership stands now at 49.
While, in its present role, the NSFM does not assign committees to examine municipal expenses incurred in the suppression of infectious diseases as was the case in 1907, its mandate has not diverged greatly from Mayor MacIlreith's era.
Although the visages of staff and elected officials have changed, the Federation's mandate is still, as much as ever, to protect the interests of Nova Scotia's municipalities.

LEGISLATION

The Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities, formerly the Union of Nova Scotia. Municipalities, was incorporated in 1981 under the Act to Incorporate the Union of Nova Scotia_Municipalities.

The Act was amended on May 22, 2003.

2019 REBRANDING

A request was made to the Province of Nova Scotia to amend the legislation to incorporate our new name, Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities. That request was granted by an Order In Council on September 3, 2019.