Napa Planning Office Stuck In Red Tape And Glitches, Grand Jury Warns

Napa’s Planning Division is, in the words of a civil grand jury, stuck in a rut of staff turnover, outdated procedures and a still not fully functional permitting software system. Those problems are dragging out permit approvals and leaving several downtown properties sitting vacant more than a decade after the 2014 earthquake. The jury’s report pairs quick fixes with longer term technology and policy changes it says the city needs to tackle.

Grand jury delivers blunt findings

The Napa County Civil Grand Jury spent about six months interviewing officials and reviewing documents before concluding that churn among senior staff and slow permit processing have put a noticeable brake on development, according to the Napa Valley Register. The outlet reports that jurors issued 14 recommendations, zeroing in on better coordination across departments, more precise billing and clearer project tracking.

Years long software rollout still unfinished

The report singles out the multi-year rollout of the Energov permitting system as a central culprit in the slowdowns. City records trace the Energov agreement to a 2020 contract amendment, with cross-department implementation work getting underway in 2022, according to City of Napa council documents.

Staff churn left big gaps

Jurors also point to a run of retirements and leadership changes that left key management seats empty or temporarily filled, making it harder to keep projects moving and to train newer hires. The review notes that recruiting suffered and that the department went without a clear succession plan, leaving too much institutional knowledge in the hands of single employees. The Napa County Civil Grand Jury report urges more cross-training and calls for a dedicated project manager to steer the software transition to the finish line…

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