Sept. 14, 2007
Explore career opportunities at King County’s wastewater utility
King County’s Wastewater Treatment Division has career opportunities
available for qualified, motivated professionals who share the
agency’s passion for clean water, a healthy environment and
technical innovation.
King County is nestled between the Cascade Mountains and Puget
Sound in western Washington state. With a population of 1.8 million
people, the county is a major Pacific Northwest business center
that boasts an exceptional quality of life with easy access to
both urban amenities and rugged natural beauty.
“There’s been dramatic population growth in the Puget Sound region
over the past 20 years, and that’s increased demand for wastewater services,” said
Wastewater Treatment Division Director Christie True, noting the agency’s
ambitious $4.5 billion capital program to add needed capacity and ensure the
system continues operating reliably.
“At the same time, we created several new positions during
a recent reorganization of our agency,” said True. “We’re
seeking people to help us meet new forward-thinking goals that
include creating resources from the wastewater we treat, increasing
business efficiencies and expanding our focus on stakeholders and
the public.”
Current job opportunities include a wastewater treatment plant
manager to oversee the management of a regional wastewater treatment
plant and offsite facilities serving 1.4 million people, as well
as an assistant plant manager to provide leadership and direct
overall operation and administration.
Other positions include a strategic policy planning officer position
to advise the division’s director on intergovernmental and
other external affairs, and two upper-level professional engineering
positions in the county’s
Operations and Maintenance Reliability Program to help develop
a long-term asset management plan for the division’s non-equipment
assets, such as conveyance pipelines, buildings and structures.
There will also be several positions available in the division’s
newly established Project Planning and Delivery Section.
More information about these and other positions is available Web
at
http://dnr.metrokc.gov/wtd/hr/career.htm or
by calling the King County Application Request Line at 206-205-8782.
People enjoy clean water and a healthy environment because of King
County's wastewater treatment program. The county’s Wastewater
Treatment Division protects public health and water quality by
serving 17 cities, 17 local sewer districts and more than 1.4 million
residents in King, Snohomish and Pierce counties. Formerly called
Metro, the regional clean-water agency now operated by King County
has been preventing water pollution for more than 40 years.