Elorza Administration Exodus - 100% of Senior Staff Has Left

Thursday, August 11, 2016

 

View Larger +

Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza has been hit hard by staff turnovers in many of his key positions. While many elected officials see a natural transition of their staff as their terms move forward, Elorza has had resignations at each of his top positions in his first 19 months. David Ortiz to Brett Smiley, Sheila Dormody and Tony Simon have all departed. These four were Elorza's top staffers and all have left the Administration in the first 20 months.

See Who Has Left the Mayor's Team Below

View Larger +

Mayor Elorza

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

What does the turnover mean?

For Elorza who has never held public officer before, the loss of all of his senior staff as well as their collective experience puts tremendous pressure on the Mayor. Presently, the city seems to be fighting a multi-front war. Now, the city is in the midst of a protracted litigation relating to the management of the fire staffing. The result has been hundreds of thousands in additional legal fees and millions in additional overtime.

Moreover, during the battle with the Firefighter's Union, the Fire Department has gone through multiple fire chiefs, brought back former Department leadership as consultants, and seen upwards of 80 firefighters retire in an effort to preserve their pension benefits.  After Chief Operating Officer Brett Smiley announced his resignation and acceptance of the Chief of Staff position with Governor Gina Raimondo, fire union chief blasted Elorza.

“Brett Smiley’s departure is an unmistakable signal confirming that Elorza is incompetent and destined to drive the city toward insolvency,” said Paul Doughty, the Providence Firefighter Local 799 President. “When your chief operating officer leaves under these circumstances, there is only one conclusion — the Elorza administration is a complete and utter failure. Politically, he’s lost the voter-rich East Side, which will leave him vulnerable in the next election,” told GoLocal.

Elorza continues to battle to keep the city solvent -- some of that conflict's future is tied to the outcome of arbitration that is now being guided by former Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank Williams, but bigger issues may be pending. The structural issues tied to unfunded liabilities, long-term healthcare obligations, and the decreasing tax base may all finally force the city to a financial tipping point.

Who is left from the original staff?

There are only two members of the the original staff with senior titles still working for the City of Providence.

Marisa O'Gara and Theresa Agonia, both with the title Deputy Chief of Staff, worked on Elorza's campaign. O'Gara graduated from URI in 2012 and Agonia is a 2013 graduate of Roger Williams University and they have the most tenure with the Mayor.

View Larger +

Courtney Hawkins, New Chief Policy Officer for Elorza PHOTO: Providence Talks

Who is coming in?

 To date, Elorza has brought in two new faces. "Mayor Jorge Elorza today announced that Chief of Policy and Innovation Nicole Pollock will transition to serve as Chief of Staff as part of an ongoing restructuring of the Mayor's executive staff," the administration announced two weeks ago. She formerly headed Innovation for the city and was a staffer at Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management. Last week, the Mayor filled another hole when he named Courtney Hawkins to serve as Chief Policy Officer. She will oversee "the city's sustainability program, Healthy Communities Office, workforce development programs, partnerships, education policy and serve as senior advisor to the mayor." The South Kingstown native ran the Providence Talks program -- which received funding under the Taveras Administration to increase the verbal skills of Providence's children.

What is next?

With Elorza facing the end of the first half of his term, the first-time Mayor will need to start looking for a political arm to help build towards a re-election. With literally upwards of a dozen names swirling as potential candidates, the Mayor will be faced with multiple financial and political challenges.

 

Related Slideshow: Elorza’s Staff Exodus

View Larger +
Prev Next

Clarence Cunha

Fire Chief - Left June, 2015

In January of 2015, Chief Clarence Cunha announced his leaving the Department. He had orginally been appointed by in February of 2014. He served less than 18-months as Chief.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Sheila Dormody

Policy Director - Left March, 2016

Sheila Dormody left Elorza to take on the role as the Nature Conservancy's first Providence Metro Program Manager.

Dormody had served as Elorza's Director of Policy for the City of Providence. Previously, she served as Rhode Island's Director and New England Co-Director of Clean Water Action for over a decade.

View Larger +
Prev Next

David Ortiz

Senior Adviser and Director of Strategic Communications - Left August, 2015

David Ortiz served as the number three position for Elorza after having served as in communication for Angel Taveras for nearly four-years.

Ortiz did not make it 9 months with Elorza and left for a communications position with Treasurer Seth Magaziner.

Photo: via Twitter

View Larger +
Prev Next

Scott Mello

Fire Chief - Left in July, 2016

Announced his retirement after serving just a year as Chief of the Fire Department. He joined the Department in 1984.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Tony Simon

Chief of Staff - Left in July, 2016

The former staffer with U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse served a stressful 20 months. He had to oversee the ongoing legal battle and arbitration with the Firefighter's Union. He resigned to start a consulting business.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Brett Smiley

Chief Operating Officer - Left in August, 2016

The former candidate for Mayor of the City of Providence dropped out of the race and then endorsed Elorza for Mayor. He promised that the endorsement included no quid pro quo, but within three months he had signed on as the top operations man for the Capitol city. Now, he moves on to the Governor's staff.

 
 

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

 
 

Sign Up for the Daily Eblast

I want to follow on Twitter

I want to Like on Facebook