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Dianne Jacob gives 'State of County' address, outlines improvements

County also launches mobile app to reach officials
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SAN DIEGO (CNS) - Board of Supervisors Chairwoman Dianne Jacob Wednesday outlined seven ways to better serve the public in the annual "State of the County" address, including improving streets, building parks, tackling the pension problem, serving seniors, increasing technology, maintaining public safety and building bonds in the community.
 
"Sacramento and Washington are often snake pits. That's not us," Jacob said, referring to her colleagues on the board. "We're not about chaos, we're about competence. We're not about gridlock. We get things done."
 
Jacob said the board faces new and emerging challenges, but has come a long way.
 
"The state of our county is stronger today, more resilient, more financially sound, because when it matters most, we pull together," Jacob said. "And we may need to pull together this year like never before, if cuts and shifts at the state level proposed by Governor Brown go through."
 
The county budget may face a $100 million hit if Brown's state budget is approved and anticipated changes in California's health insurance marketplace are made, according to Jacob.
 
"Shift and shaft by the state is nothing new. We've seen it before," Jacob said. "And we stand ready to fight once again and we will fight back."
 
In her roughly 35-minute speech to a standing-room-only crowd at the County Operations Center in Kearny Mesa, Jacob enumerated the seven areas that the board will focus on in 2017.
 
"Seven ways we can build an even better county government, seven ways that we can better serve the public and lay out a road map for the future," said Jacob, who is in her seventh four-year term on the board. "Seven ways we make sure we pass on a county government that serves the people and does the people proud."
 
The first item was maintaining the county's 2,000 miles of streets.
 
"We've got a big problem now where the rubber meets the road," she said. "Our main source of money for maintenance is running out."
 
The county's parks system was next on the list. She said the supervisors need to strip away barriers to building more parks.
 
Confronting the county's pension challenge was third. Jacob said recent changes to the system will save the pension fund $1 billion over the next 20 years.
 
Preparing for the so-called "silver surge" was another top priority, because residents aged 65 and older are the fastest growing segment of the county, according to Jacob, and expected to double in 20 years.
 
Jacob said she will propose establishing a new position at the county that will be focused on serving the senior community and become the top advocate for the elderly.
 
"A high-profile leader is needed to make sure that all the appropriate arms of county government are working together the best that they can to meet the needs of seniors," Jacob said.
 
The county has established a smart phone application "Tell Us Now" for county residents to communicate with officials in its effort to become more tech-friendly.
 
"We're all about better, cheaper, faster, and this is another way to do just that," Jacob said.
 
While it was mentioned sixth on her list, Jacob said it was the supervisors' "most important" job to keep the public safe and vowed that the county would "stay battle-ready" on both the law enforcement and firefighting fronts.
 
Building bonds in divided communities was the final item on the Jacob to- do list. She mentioned cultural differences, race relations and tensions between some ethnic groups and law enforcement that hit home last fall with the officer involved shooting of a black man in El Cajon.
 
"That's the job in front of us, now let's get to work," Jacob said.