pziecina,
Thank you for your thoughts! I was just hoping that there would be a group of people in this community looking for work or at least know someone in need. There was a time when it seemed like all web developers wanted work, but I think I am dating myself. I still get an email every day from someone different asking to build my site... but that scares me. In my sheltered world, I thought I would eventually come to a site where DW builders gathered, and I would post my job, they would reply, I would research their portfolio, and then I could pick. I did this very thing 10 years ago, but it sounds like times have changed.
Thanks so much for everyone's help. I have other routes to pursue (although limited) and it sounds like that is what you guys are recommending. In short, stay away from the internet and search local. Ugggh. Finding a developer who uses DW locally is going to be like finding a needle in a haystack.
Thanks again!
Web design & development is a set of skills. It's not about any one tool or technology. In the end it's all about the code, the method -- static or database driven, and the frameworks we use -- Bootstrap, Foundation, Flexbox, WordPress, etc...
Editing static pages in DW Design View falls within your comfort zone. I fully get that. But making that your primary focus is impractical for the developer. Why? Because this is 2017. You want somebody to build you a great modern website AND facilitate a way for you to keep using a 10 year old approach in an outdated Design View with legacy CS5 and no coding skills to speak of.
Working around Design View limitations are the least of the challenges. I could simply tell you to disable CSS and work with plain, un-styled pages. But as soon as I introduce server-side & client-side technologies which are essential for a site this large, you will be completely lost and I dare say very unhappy with what you see in Design View. Add to that the uncertainty of letting an unskilled coder have access to all that complex code and this quickly becomes a train wreck waiting to happen. What will you do when things go wrong? You can't work with the code.
The reality is you can't keep doing business as usual. What you want is not in line with what you need. Forget about hiring a Dreamweaver person. Focus less on the tool and more on the project. You'll get a lot more interested people that way.
PS. You can post jobs on Adobe Behance