Madison County supervisors voted to temporarily delegate supervision of the county’s environmental health officer from the Board of Public Health to the zoning department to allow hiring and coverage of immediate needs, while staff and public‑health representatives urged a careful, longer‑term review.
Erin, who spoke for the health side during discussion, urged a coordinated approach: "I think my preference would be that the boards and the departments look at this altogether as a long term decision about the future of those departments," she said, adding that statutory responsibilities and ordinances may limit what can be shifted without further legal work.
Supporters of the temporary delegation said the move is intended as a short‑term fix to get qualified staff in place quickly so the county can continue environmental‑health functions. Board members discussed scheduling joint meetings of the two boards to sort out permanent structure and legal authority. One supervisor said the objective was to "get immediate needs met so that we can move on to the long term." The board passed the resolution after extended discussion and a voice vote.
Board members and staff agreed the temporary delegation was not the final organizational decision: several requested legal review, recommended committee input with public‑health and environmental‑health expertise, and signaled that ordinances and regulatory responsibilities will need explicit treatment before any permanent reassignment.
The county did not adopt permanent structural changes in this meeting; it approved the temporary delegation to permit hiring and immediate supervision while further review proceeds.