Full-Time

HNS Compliance Specialist

Posted on 10/10/2025

Deadline 10/13/25
City of Charlotte

City of Charlotte

1,001-5,000 employees

Official city portal for public services

Compensation Overview

$65.2k - $81.5k/yr

Charlotte, NC, USA

In Person

Category
Legal & Compliance (1)
Required Skills
Data Analysis
Requirements
  • In-depth understanding of environmental review processes, as well as familiarity with other relevant local, state, and federal regulations.
  • Strong analytical and problem-solving skills to interpret complex requirements, identify compliance gaps, and recommend effective corrective actions.
  • Excellent oral and written communication skills for delivering training, facilitating discussions, and preparing detailed reports or documentation.
  • Ability to establish productive working relationships with internal teams, external partners, and community stakeholders.
  • Organizational skills to manage multiple projects simultaneously, prioritize tasks, and meet deadlines.
  • Proficiency in using multiple software platforms, including HUD’s online environmental review system (HEROS), Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, Outlook), and other tools for data entry, analysis, and reporting.
  • Initiative and collaboration skills, working effectively both independently and within cross-functional teams to adapt to evolving regulations.
Responsibilities
  • Conduct and complete Part 58 environmental reviews for HUD-funded projects, ensuring correct documentation related to all regulatory requirements and proper communication and notifications are completed per ER requirements.
  • Serve as a subject matter expert for environmental review questions, offering guidance and support to internal teams and external partners.
  • Acts as a subject matter expert on HUD’s online environmental review system (covering both Part 50 and Part 58), providing training and on-screen guidance to staff and partners to ensure accurate and thorough completion of HUD environmental reviews.
  • Review and assess contracts between the City and mission-focused partners for alignment with federal, state, and local regulations.
  • Coordinate risk assessments with the contracts team, identify contracts to be monitored and work with assigned monitoring partners to schedule various types of monitoring activities.
  • Oversee HNS compliance management and reporting to ensure we meet federal requirements, including Section 3 (promotes job opportunities for low-income persons), Davis-Bacon (requires prevailing wage standards on federally funded construction projects), and Section 504 (protects individuals with disabilities from discrimination).
  • Compile findings into detailed reports for supervisor review, highlighting areas of non-compliance and recommending corrective actions.
  • Collaborate with partners to address and resolve compliance issues, ensuring accountability and transparency.
  • Develop and deliver training programs and workshops to internal staff and external partners, clarifying regulatory requirements and best practices.
  • Provide ongoing technical assistance related to contract terms, compliance obligations, and project implementation.
  • Offer support throughout the grant lifecycle, including early in the application or project planning process, to ensure all requirements and changes in regulations are understood and followed.
  • Ensure accurate and timely entry of data related to environmental reviews, contract monitoring, and related processes.
  • Maintain and update records across multiple technology systems, verifying data integrity and completeness.
  • Coordinate with internal teams and external partners to resolve data discrepancies and improve overall data quality.
  • Collaborate with other ER reviewers and contract monitors to prepare and maintain a report that details the current status of ER and monitoring workload. Act as the lead maintainer of these records.
  • Communicate progress updates and identified risks to assigned working groups, offering recommendations for process improvements.
  • Apply project management skills to develop and implement new processes and procedures in response to changing laws, regulations, or best practices.
  • Emphasize thorough and well-organized documentation, preparing written findings and presenting recommendations supported by facts.
Desired Qualifications
  • Bachelor’s degree in related field with an emphasis in finance or public administration.
  • Experience administering or reviewing federal grants (particularly HUD-funded programs).
  • Bilingual (Spanish) experience a plus but not required.

Charlotte.gov is the official city portal for Charlotte, North Carolina, providing residents with access to live and on-demand government information and services. Residents can watch live streams of city council, county, and school board meetings, as well as emergency briefings, and read news, educational content, and city codes. The site also covers stormwater management, public safety, and community events, and includes leadership details and a Charlotte Crown Store for local merchandise. Funded by municipal budgets, taxes, and grants, its goal is to inform residents, provide easy access to city services and codes, and support civic engagement.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Grant

Total Funding

$10K

Headquarters

Charlotte, North Carolina

Founded

N/A

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Nearly 800,000 residents create scale for recurring municipal service demand.
  • Public streaming strengthens transparency, engagement, and rapid emergency communication.
  • Tree, housing, and public-safety programs support visible community improvements.

What critics are saying

  • Broadcast outages would damage trust during council meetings and emergency briefings.
  • Budget pressure from fire, police, and housing commitments squeezes discretionary spending.
  • Nonprofit-dependent violence intervention and tree programs face staffing and funding fragility.

What makes City of Charlotte unique

  • Charlotte combines city services with live-streamed civic meetings and emergency briefings.
  • The city pairs public-sector operations with resident-facing digital content and educational programming.
  • Charlotte leverages municipal branding through the Charlotte Crown Store and official web channels.

Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?

Your Connections

People at City of Charlotte who can refer or advise you

Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

-1%

1 year growth

-1%

2 year growth

-1%
Keyence
May 4th, 2026
Supporting the City of Charlotte's Landscape Management Division.

Supporting the City of Charlotte's Landscape Management Division. Keyenvi is excited to share that Key Environmental Consulting has been selected to support the City of Charlotte's Landscape Management Division on an initiative that involves expanding street tree planting in neighborhoods. Its work will focus on engaging with communities to identify new street tree planting locations across Charlotte to help: - Expand tree canopy - Reduce urban heat - Improve air quality - Support stormwater management - Strengthen neighborhood resilience Keyenvi is excited to contribute to Charlotte's ongoing investment in nature-based solutions, green infrastructure, and healthier communities. Keyenvi look forward to working alongside community leaders and residents to help bring this effort to life.

Yahoo
Mar 23rd, 2026
CLT airport parking garage operator loses contract, will lay off nearly 200 workers.

CLT airport parking garage operator loses contract, will lay off nearly 200 workers. Desiree Mathurin Mon, March 23, 2026 at 7:14 AM PDT A national parking services and management company will lay off over 180 workers when it stops operating at the Charlotte airport. By June 30, AmeriPark and Republic Parking will no longer manage parking operations at Charlotte Douglas Airport. With AmeriPark losing its airport contract, 188 employees will be laid off, according to an N.C. Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) report received on March 20 by the North Carolina Department of Commerce. The report was posted on Monday, March 23. Such notices are required by federal law during mass layoffs. In 2014, AmeriPark was chosen to take over curbside valet at Charlotte Douglas. And AmeriPark currently operates the Express Deck Preferred Parking garage at 5625 Wilkinson Blvd. Airport officials said the facility put out a Request for Proposals last year searching for an airport parking and valet services contractor. ACE Parking was selected as the contractor and Charlotte City Council approved the $6.65 million annual contract last month. ACE will take over operations on July 1. AmeriPark did not return a request for comment Monday. AmeriPark notes that some of the impacted employees may be hired by the new management company, if they meet the operator's qualifications, according to the report. If not, the workers will be laid off. The site is a non-union location and there are no bumping rights. Airport officials echoed the sentiment, stating ACE will handle all hiring decisions. Mecklenburg County layoffs for March near 650. This is the third layoff announcement in Mecklenburg County this month. On March 11, Kenco Logistic Services announced it would be laying off 86 employees by May 17 due to a cancelled contract. And last week, Family Dollar said it was closing its distribution center in Matthews and laying off 373 employees. That's a total of 647 layoffs for the county so far this month that required WARN notices. About AmeriPark and Republic Parking. AmeriPark and Republic Parking are owned by Reimagined Parking. Reimagined also owns Impark, Lanier Parking and Park One. The New York-based parking operator has over 6,500 employees and manages 2,500 parking garages at commercial, retail, hospitality and airport facilities. Annually, the company generates 34 million transactions throughout 275 cities, according to Reimagined's website.

City of Charlotte
Mar 17th, 2026
Digital kiosk program set to launch with community input phase.

Digital kiosk program set to launch with community input phase. Published on March 17, 2026 What. The City of Charlotte is partnering with IKE Smart City to install interactive digital kiosks around the city. Attendees will have the opportunity to speak directly to city staff and IKE Smart City representatives about the project and interact with a kiosk. A survey seeking community input to help inform content priorities for the digital kiosks will be live. Who. * City of Charlotte elected officials * Charlotte Department of Transportation staff * IKE Smart City representatives When. Monday, March 23, 10-10:45 a.m. Where. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center lobby 600 E. Fourth St. Charlotte, NC 28202 Tagged as:

Youth Advocate Programs, Inc.
Feb 26th, 2026
YAP(R)'s Charlotte and Baltimore Violence Intervention Teams Connect to Share Best Practices

YAP(R)'s Charlotte and Baltimore Violence Intervention teams connect to share best practices. February 26, 2026 Mecklenburg County, N.C. - Supported by generous donors and partners, members of Youth Advocate Programs (YAP(R), Inc. Baltimore and Charlotte Community-Based Violence Intervention teams met up to exchange best practices on reducing neighborhood violence. YAP(R) Alternatives to Violence (ATV) is a partnership with the City of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County. YAP(R) is one of two nonprofits working with city and county partners to mediate conflicts, prevent escalation and connect high-risk individuals and their families with housing, mental health, education and employment resources. YAP(R) Group Violence Reduction Strategy (GVRS) program is an initiative of the Baltimore Mayor's Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement (MONSE). YAP(R) is one of two nonprofits connecting Baltimoreans at the greatest risk of violence engagement to life-changing resources. "We're doing incredible work," said Southeast Executive Vice President LaVeisha Cummings who oversees both YAP(R) ATV and YAP(R) GVRS programs. "We are interrupting violence and we are saving lives with both teams in the four locations that we're serving; two in Baltimore and two at the Charlotte sites." Meeting in Charlotte, the violence reduction practitioners shared success stories and discussed their boots on the ground approaches. The nonprofit's Baltimore GVRS team accompanied its ATV teams to West Charlotte High School, canvassed neighborhoods together. They also visited both Charlotte offices and shared how wraparound support with literacy initiatives, a community closet, mentorship, gaming, and sports and other activities reduce the risk of violence among youth and adults who are at the greatest risk of engagement. Activities hosted by GVRS and ATV teams are used to facilitate increased buy-in from participants. A national nonprofit in 32 states and Washington, D.C., YAP(R) partners with juvenile justice, child welfare, and behavioral health entities. In recent years, the organization has also partnered with local public safety systems using its community-based model as part of cities to reduce violence. YAP(R) ATV Outreach Worker Tomicia Gray shared how she uses social engagement as an avenue to support young women to help them feel seen and heard. She said many of the program participants have experienced violence or sexual assault. "What we provide is needed," Gray said. "We're stronger in numbers." "A lot of times when we go into the schools that's where the outreach starts, but it's not where it finishes," said YAP(R) ATV Beatties Ford Road Outreach Worker Larry Mims regarding playing video games. It just makes its outreach work a little easier, and it also helps with consistency. A lot of young people and people in general don't have consistency in their life. So, the more consistent TheNeighborhoodAdvocate can be, the more they can see TheNeighborhoodAdvocate and earn its trust, it helps. TheNeighborhoodAdvocate open that door with gaming." YAP(R) GVRS staff said they also use gaming to connect with youth and adults by hosting tournaments every other Friday. Being intentional about having a presence in school, recreational center and at the team office provides structure, said YAP(R) Maryland Regional Director Sean Robinson. "A lot of what is being said is organic, but it's also organized," Robinson added. "You have school, you have the rec center and this center (ATV team office) that is structured. The game is the relational aspect. You have to have those foundations in the community, too. Baltimore is set up a little different than Charlotte, although the proximity is similar." GVRS Service Partnership Manager Dr. Raymond Greene-Joyner shared that, much like YAP(R) ATV, GVRS offers monthly engagement activities including retreats, outdoor events, recreational experiences, and other outings intentionally designed to expose participants to new opportunities and positive environments. "I am very proud of the work YAP-GVRS has accomplished," Greene-Joyner said. "This is a collaborative effort that involves not only service providers like YAP, but also law enforcement, community-based organizations, and key community stakeholders. It truly takes a unified approach to ensure the success of this initiative." YAP(R) ATV started in 2019 on Beatties Ford Road and expanded to the West Boulevard location in 2021. GVRS began in 2022.

Smart Cities World Ltd
Jan 14th, 2026
Charlotte seeks early-stage health innovation start-ups

Charlotte seeks early-stage health innovation start-ups. The programme aims to drive meaningful change in the Charlotte community and beyond The City of Charlotte is partnering with Advocate Health to launch gBETA Charlotte Health, the region's first health innovation pre-accelerator programme.

INACTIVE