2016 Annual Conference Seminar Proposals

Events on 29 Jan , 2016

Mark Krassan of Burlington County during MAPS seminarFriday – January 29th, 2016 – was the last day to submit your proposal for a 2016 NJAC Annual Conference seminars.  At this time, NJAC Executive Director John G. Donnadio, Esq. and the Conference Committee are in the process of reviewing the proposals and will be submitting them to the proper State agencies and Rutgers University for approval of continuing education credits.  Please keep in mind that this process takes quite some time.  Loren Wizman, NJAC Business Development Director, will reach out to you via email and/or telephone to notify you if your proposal was accepted and approved for continuing education credits once she is receives word. At that time, Ms. Wizman will also notify nyou of the time, location, and other important detials concerning your seminar.

Below is a reminder of the requirements that were needed for seminar proposal submission:

Requirements

  1. Seminar sessions must be at least 55 minutes long but no more than 60 minutes.
  2. Proposals must be typewritten and submitted in Garamond font and 9 pitch.
  3. Proposals must include the name, title, and company information of those individuals participating in the presentation.
  4. Proposals must contain a title and one-page informative summary of the seminar, so that we may include these details in the 2016 NJAC Annual Conference Journal.
  5. Should your seminar have handouts, PowerPoint presentations, and other similar materials, then they must be included with your proposal.

To make sure that our elected officials, administrators, finance officers, purchasing officials, planners, engineers, attorneys, public works employees, and other county officials actively participate in the conference, the NJAC Conference Committee will give priority consideration to seminars approved for continuing education credits by the appropriate State agencies and Rutgers Center for Local Government Services.  Keep in mind that it takes the review committees a couple of months to determine if the requirements were met for accreditation.