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City Hall brain drain

Never star-studded, Mayor Menino’s executive team continues to shrink
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  September 5, 2006

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The city of Boston is running on empty. The jobs of police commissioner and superintendent of schools are being held by temporary replacements. A fire commissioner was named just this Tuesday after a seven-month search. The city lacks a permanent homeland-security chief, city planner, and transportation director. The mayor’s chief of staff has left to become a judge, and his press secretary has returned to his writing career.

This is not the first time in Menino’s 13-year tenure that job vacancies have stacked up: he is notoriously slow to fill positions in his administration. But the number and nature of the current openings is staggering. Of the 16,500 or so Bostonians working for the city government, more than 13,000 had an “acting” boss. In addition to the premiere positions, mid-level vacancies clog almost every department, most notably the Boston Redevelopment Authority. Boards and commissions function with vacancies or “holdovers” whose terms technically expired months and even years ago.

Some of these vacancies cropped up unexpectedly, such as the sudden departure last spring of Police Commissioner Kathleen O’Toole and the reported resignation, expected to become official next month, of homeland-security chief Carlo Boccia. But Chief of Staff Merita Hopkins’s pursuit of a judgeship was no secret to Menino. The city-planner job has been vacant well over a year, and the city has been without an Empowerment Zone director for even longer.

Whether any of these posts is close to being filled is impossible to tell because Menino is shrouding his searches, for the most part, in secrecy. Paul Christian resigned as fire commissioner in January, and his replacement’s name never surfaced before Tuesday’s announcement — Menino even denied rumors of an impending hire as recently as Friday, August 25, during a phone conversation with the Phoenix.

The hiring of retired Navy commander Roderick Fraser is consistent with Menino’s promise to shake things up by naming a civilian commissioner for the first time, a city-commission recommendation that he rebuffed when promoting Christian five years ago. Yet the secrecy of Menino’s search left the department wondering whether the mayor had the stomach for such a controversial change — and now that he has proven that he does, yet another important appointment remains: that of fire chief, who will run the operation for Fraser. For that, Menino will almost certainly hire from within.

Similarly, the hush-hush police-commissioner search leaves department insiders and community activists speculating whether Menino will bring in an outsider or promote from within, either of which has ramifications for the highly factionalized force.

But we can expect more secrecy to surround these searches, not less, thanks to a search for a new school superintendent that turned into a fiasco. With more than a year’s notice, Menino hoped to make a new hire before Thomas Payzant’s June retirement. But then, four of the five finalists retracted their names after the list was leaked on June 27. A frustrated Menino had to go back to square one — just as his to-do list of appointments was growing: Hopkins’s judicial appointment came April 27; O’Toole announced her plans to leave for Ireland May 7; and press secretary Seth Gitell announced his resignation in mid-June.

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Related: Citizen arrest, Women on the verge, Providence city solicitor organizes for AG run in 2010, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Politics, Domestic Policy, Political Policy,  More more >
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Comments
City Hall brain drain
What's the story with the Boston Finance Commissioners?... Who is chairman?... Why do they not make available their reports on city government?... Is the head of the Boston Finance Commission's office the a relative of the Suffolk County District Attorney?... Does that relatinship compromise Boston Finance Commission reports?...
By dsaklad@zurich.csail.mit.edu on 08/31/2006 at 8:11:30
City Hall brain drain
What's the story with the Boston Finance Commissioners?... Who is chairman?... Why do they not make available their reports on city government?... Is the head of the Boston Finance Commission's office a relative of the Suffolk County District Attorney?... Does that relationship compromise Boston Finance Commission reports?...
By dsaklad@zurich.csail.mit.edu on 08/31/2006 at 8:12:17

ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
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    In recent weeks, Governor Deval Patrick has been receiving some of his best press in a long time — which is to say, he’s gotten very little coverage at all.
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    The stakes are high in the battle for Massachusetts’s first new US senatorship in a quarter-century.
  •   HOLDING HIS PUNCHES  |  October 21, 2009
    All year, Boston’s political observers have been watching for signs of an anti-Menino tipping point in the mayoral race.
  •   KHAZEI, LIKE A FOX?  |  October 16, 2009
    If there is to be a candidate in the Massachusetts US Senate race who inspires the sort of grassroots, progressive following that propelled Governor Deval Patrick into office three years ago — an insurgent candidacy, if you will — it figures to be idealistic public-service advocate Alan Khazei, co-founder of City Year and founder of Be the Change, Inc.
  •   FINAL FOUR?  |  September 30, 2009
    Some of Boston's savviest political insiders were confident of one thing going into last week's preliminary election: the top four finishers in the at-large City Council race would not be the same quartet to actually win those four seats in November.

 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN

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