WANTED: "A dynamic and energetic professional to continue Gloucester's transformation".
Pay? A tidy £70,000 per annum for the right candidate to become Gloucester City Council's head of regeneration and economic development.
The council is advertising now for the right man or woman to carry out some of the key duties fulfilled by its former corporate director of regeneration, Phil Staddon.
Union leaders, who were not happy that he was suspended then paid off six months ago, have told the council they are disappointed at the advert when rank and file jobs have been shed over the past few years.
"There was consultation over this when the new structure was brought out and there is one less director," said a Unison spokesman.
"But effectively this is a similar job, particularly with the regeneration aspect.
"Mr Staddon went, and with that the expertise in that area. The council now has to try and employ someone new."
He left the council in March and was paid off with a sum understood to be around £100,000. It followed an investigation into nepotism at the council, where one manager was sacked, another resigned and one more was disciplined after a post was apparently filled unfairly. It is understood two more sackings were made in the council's regeneration directorate over separate nepotism allegations.
Mr Staddon, pictured, was suspended a year ago in a move which saddened and surprised many inside and outside the council.
He was a key figure in getting the regeneration of Gloucester Docks off the ground over the past 10 years. The council couldn't confirm any wrongdoing on his part and it is understood none has been proven. His departure coincided with the council needing to lose one directorship as part of cost cutting measures.
Mr Staddon now runs his own planning consultancy and remains an active member of the Llanthony Secunda Priory Trust. The council clearly needs a high flyer to deliver in this new role.
"Reporting directly to the chief executive, you will act as the council lead on major schemes, asset and property management and economic development," reads the job advert. "The role sits at the heart of an important phase of growth and development of Gloucester and is critical to the achievement of Gloucester's potential."
A city council spokeswoman said: "This new post is part of the management realignment which is dedicated to the delivery of regeneration projects and partly as a result of the end of the GHURC (Gloucester Heritage Urban Regeneration Company) and confirms the city council's commitment to transforming the city.
"We look forward to receiving a wide range of applications."