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City chief of staff says efficiency study produced changes but warns major IT, facilities and staffing investments remain

February 11, 2026 | Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut


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City chief of staff says efficiency study produced changes but warns major IT, facilities and staffing investments remain
The City of Norwalk presented an update Feb. 10 on a 2022 efficiency study that, officials said, has informed operational improvements across departments but still requires major investment to fully realize its recommendations.

Chief of Staff Jim Daniels told the council the study was used as a working reference during the COVID recovery and has led to actions including records digitization, a grants tracking database, position control alignment, procurement guideline updates, a new purchasing officer, HR job‑description modernization and new customer intake tracking. Daniels said those changes “did not sit on a shelf” and that an internal tracker records completed and outstanding items.

Daniels highlighted one concrete fiscal result the administration cited: a reconciliation project that recovered approximately $730,000 from the state. He said the study’s most substantial recommendations—enterprise technology modernization, capital investment in aging facilities and workforce capacity—cannot be solved exclusively by operational changes and will require deliberate, sustained investments.

Council members asked for more detail about Board of Education actions under the study, for quantification of fiscal benefits tied to specific implementations, and whether newer technologies such as AI could accelerate results. Daniels and other staff said some board‑side work had been done and that staff would follow up with more detailed breakdowns from the tracker and departmental spreadsheets.

What’s next: Staff said they will provide deeper follow‑ups on Board of Education items, shared‑services opportunities (IT, HR, purchasing) and any fiscal notes that quantify savings or benefits from implemented recommendations.

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