Fasten your seat belts
The
Town Council voted to hire a new Town Administrator Monday night. He is Mark
Stankiewicz, the former Town Manager of Plymouth, MA.
Stankiewicz will relieve acting Town Administrator Pat Anderson so Pat can go back to the job she really loves, that of Town Treasurer.
Stankiewicz will relieve acting Town Administrator Pat Anderson so Pat can go back to the job she really loves, that of Town Treasurer.
Town
Administrators (and Managers) are a lot like the coaches of professional sports
teams.
When they’re hired, they’re hailed as the best possible person for the job, as geniuses and as the one to lead the town to greatness.
When they’re hired, they’re hailed as the best possible person for the job, as geniuses and as the one to lead the town to greatness.
In
time, unless that manager truly is a genius with a consistent, outstanding record who doesn't piss off the Town Council,
that changes. The day inevitably comes when it’s time for the Town Manager, or in Charlestown's case, Administrator, to go. When that time
comes, nobody mentions how much they used to love the guy – at that point, they’d just as
soon forget they ever hired him[1].
Stankiewicz’s career is very similar to former Town Administrator Bill DiLibero’s. Both have worked for many different towns around the region. Stankiewicz was hired by Plymouth roughly the same time Charlestown hired DiLibero to high praise and with great expectations. Click here to read Stankiewicz’s resume.
The Council's praise for Stansiewicz sounds eerily like the kinds of things they used to say about Bill DiLibero |
DiLibero was hounded out of office by the Charlestown Citizens Alliance’s trumped up “Kill Bill” campaign.
The reasons for Stankiewicz’s departure are much
cloudier, although one Plymouth Selectman, a supporter of Stankiewicz, candidly
said “The
situation is that current, and past, members of the Board of Selectmen don’t
understand what their role is in this form of government. Some think they’re
omnipotent. Others are just angry at what happened at Town Meeting, but they
know they can’t fire Town Meeting representatives, and they can’t fire
department heads so, instead, they are lashing out at the town manager.”
According to one
of the local newspapers in Plymouth, the Board of Selectmen majority decided to offer
Stankiewicz “a dignified departure.”
Both
DiLibero and Stankiewicz were given severance packages worth more than $100,000
and agreed to “gag order” terms in their severance agreements where they
promised not to speak publicly about the reasons or details of their
departures.
Both
Bill DiLibero and Stankiewicz have been looking for new gigs ever since.
As
part of the severance deal, Plymouth bought
out the remaining months left on Stankiewicz’s contract (click here to read his Plymouth
contract) plus additional months’ salary including unused leave time and benefits.
Stankiewicz
was making in excess of $146,000 a year in Plymouth. According to the
Westerly Sun,
Charlestown will pay him $110,000.
Before
Stankiewicz worked for Plymouth, he was town manager in Stoughton MA for six
years. Throughout that period, the town was rocked by
scandals and corruption in the police department that split the
town and roiled the town government. These did not appear to be problems of
Stankiewicz’s making, but they certainly made his work in Stoughton all the
more challenging.
But despite his work to clean up the town, Stankiewicz ran out his string in Stoughton. As the Boston Globe reported on November 6, 2008: "Turmoil and tension appear to be eroding the corner office at Stoughton Town Hall, where Mark Stankiewicz's run as town manager could be coming to a bitter close. And though little is being said publicly, behind the scenes it is believed a majority of the five-member Board of Selectmen would like to show the 50-year-old Stankiewicz the door, either with a pink slip or severance package."
But despite his work to clean up the town, Stankiewicz ran out his string in Stoughton. As the Boston Globe reported on November 6, 2008: "Turmoil and tension appear to be eroding the corner office at Stoughton Town Hall, where Mark Stankiewicz's run as town manager could be coming to a bitter close. And though little is being said publicly, behind the scenes it is believed a majority of the five-member Board of Selectmen would like to show the 50-year-old Stankiewicz the door, either with a pink slip or severance package."
I don't consider any of this past history as black marks against Stankiewicz. Like a professional coach, they love you today, but sooner or later, they'll show you the door. It's part of the job.
I hope Stankiewicz has a successful run as Charlestown’s Town Manager. A friend of mine who is a long-time Plymouth resident and political activist called Stankiewicz “a decent guy who can be worked with” and noted that he has a quirky sense of humor. That’s a pretty good sign – especially the sense of humor part.
I hope Stankiewicz has a successful run as Charlestown’s Town Manager. A friend of mine who is a long-time Plymouth resident and political activist called Stankiewicz “a decent guy who can be worked with” and noted that he has a quirky sense of humor. That’s a pretty good sign – especially the sense of humor part.
But
according to the few details that leaked out about his resignation in Plymouth, the Board of Selectmen differed sharply with Stankiewicz over how much
governance the Selectmen (their equivalent of our Town Council) would exercise. They wanted to micromanage and he resisted.
And,
oh boy, that is a huge issue here in
Charlestown.
Stankiewicz apparently gave all the right answers during his interviews with the town, no doubt saying he would defer to the Council on any judgment calls. But during most of Stankiewicz’s career, he worked as a Town Manager where the job involved far more authority - and autonomy - than Charlestown’s Town Administrator form of government.
Stankiewicz apparently gave all the right answers during his interviews with the town, no doubt saying he would defer to the Council on any judgment calls. But during most of Stankiewicz’s career, he worked as a Town Manager where the job involved far more authority - and autonomy - than Charlestown’s Town Administrator form of government.
Since
Stankiewicz was booted[2]
from Plymouth because the Selectmen wanted more detailed control than he did, I
see trouble for Stankiewicz here in Charlestown. We've all seen how much the Charlestown Town
Council majority loves to
micromanage.
Stankiewicz
says he plans to move from his family's current home in Stoughton (assessed at $352,900) to somewhere closer to
Charlestown. Otherwise, it's a 64 mile, 90 minute one-way trip.
He ought to consider a short-term rental. If he can find one.
He ought to consider a short-term rental. If he can find one.
If
Stankiewicz hopes to stick around for a while, or at least through this current
Council’s term, here’s some advice.
- Be totally deferential to the Town Council – or at least the three CCA Councilors (Tom Gentz, Dan Slattery and George Tremblay) who constitute the majority.
- Send them copies of everything and do nothing without asking for their permission first.
- If the Councilors say not to send them everything – don’t believe it. The failure to cc the Council on everything was Bill DiLibero’s undoing.
- Try to work the phrase, “yes, Tom, whatever you say” at least three or four times into every conversation.
- It would also help if you laugh at each and every one of Town Council Boss Tom Gentz’s jokes.
- Under no circumstances should you piss off the most powerful person in town, Planning Commissar Ruth Platner. DiLibero was praised to the high heavens by the Town Council until Commissar Platner decided he had violated CCA orthodoxy on wind energy and sports lighting at Ninigret Park. From that point on, DiLibero was toast.
I
felt that Bill DiLibero was an honest, decent guy who worked hard for the
greater good of Charlestown. So did the Town Council majority until they turned
on him. They went from publicly commending DiLibero and giving him a big raise to wanting him to clean out his desk forthwith.
Now
comes Mark Stankiewicz with credentials and experience remarkably similar to
DiLibero’s. Like DiLibero, he is a veteran of the kind of small town wars where
you ride the job approval roller coaster. Today, the CCA majority on the Town
Council thinks he’s the greatest thing since sliced cheese.
But will they love him tomorrow?
But will they love him tomorrow?
FOOTNOTES:
[1] I
make no apology for using the masculine pronoun since it usually is a “him” and
not a “her.”
[2] From the Boston
Globe: “By no means should this be considered as a voluntary
resignation,’’ said selectmen vice chairman John Mahoney. “This was a termination.’’