FOILed Again: Mayor’s Impact Team Audit Requested
Delaware District Councilmember Mike LoCurto, South District Councilmember Mickey Kearns, and Lovejoy District Councilmember Rich Fontana have filed a resolution asking City Comptroller Andy SanFilippo to audit the Mayor’s Impact Team.
Last Monday I spoke with Tony Farina in the Comptroller’s office, who told me that he knew of no past audit of the Mayor’s Impact Team, and added that none was likely to be done without an external request.
Here’s that external request:
RESOLUTION
BY: MR. LoCURTO
COSPONSORS: MR. FONTANA, MR. KEARNSRE: Requesting an Audit of Mayor’s Impact Team
WHEREAS: three city workers with the Mayor’s Impact Team were recently suspended without pay pending an investigation for allegedly performing landscaping work during regular working hours Friday at the private property of one of the individuals; and
WHEREAS: these actions represent the misuse of City workers and City vehicles; and
WHEREAS: unfortunately, this is not the first time misuse of City vehicles by the Mayor’s Impact Team has been documented; and
WHEREAS: because of the involvement of many different departments, allocations to the Mayor’s Impact Team are not itemized in the City’s Annual Budget; and
WHEREAS: the actions of a select few should not damage the reputation and work ethic of the Mayor’s Impact Team and the good that it has been able to accomplish; and
WHEREAS: the misuse of taxpayer money breeds mistrust of and cynicism in government.
NOW, THEREFOR BE IT RESOLVED THAT:
The Common Council requests that the City Comptroller performs an immediate audit of the Mayor’s Impact Team’s operations and financial expenditures including equipment and cell phone use; and that given the gravity of the allegations, that this report be returned to this honorable body as soon as possible.
AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT:
This matter be referred to the appropriate committee of the Common Council for further consideration.
___________________ ___________________ _____________________
Michael J. LoCurto Michael P. Kearns Richard A. Fontana
FOILed Again: Day 2
This is the quickest response to a FOIL request Artvoice has ever received from the City of Buffalo. Less than two business days after I requested by email that the city give me all records related to the budget and expenditures of the Mayor’s Impact Team since January 1, 2006, Assistant Corporation Counsel Cavette Chambers has acknowledged receipt of my request:
Mr. Kelly:
Pursuant to Public Officers Law section 89(3), this correspondence will serve as an acknowledgment of your Freedom of Information Law request.
Please be advised that your request has been forwarded to the department of Administration and Finance, Public Works Parks & Streets, and the director of the Quality of Life Programs for a response. Each respective department will conduct a diligent search of its records to determine whether it is in possession of the requested records. Wherein sufficient time is needed to locate, compile, and review the requested records, please allow ten (10) business days from the date of this correspondence for a determination regarding your request.
Should you have any questions regarding the status of your request, you may contact the following individuals:
Donna Estrich with the Dept of Administration and Finance, Charles Masi with the Department of Public Works Parks & Streets, and/or Thomas Smith with Quality of Life Programs.Sincerely,
Cavette A. Chambers
Assistant Corporation Counsel
City of Buffalo Department of Law
65 Niagara Square
1113 City Hall
Buffalo, New York 14202
Office: 716.851.4316
Fax: 716.851.4105
Email: cchambers@city-buffalo.com
So the wheels are turning, and the city now has to determine whether such records exist (which, if they don’t, would be a inexcusable), and, assuming they do, to compile them and send them to me (which, if that isn’t half an hour’s work, suggests some pretty poor bookkeeping methods).
The day after I FOILed these documents, of course, Bill Buyers, the head of the Mayor’s Impact Team was caught by TV crews with two city laborers working on his own house on city time. Mayor Byron Brown suspended Buyers for 15 days without pay and removed him as the team’s supervisor, and suspended his subordinates for five days without pay…and now people are beginning to roll out their Bill Buyers stories: that he’s the guy who got Anthony Capozzi arrested for a rape and murder that he didn’t commit but for which he served 22 years in jail; that Buyers last got in trouble when neighbors complained he dragged his dog on a leash hanging out his truck window; that he foots the bill for big breakfasts for 200 people once a month at the VFW post on Amherst Street; that he is protected by strong political ties.
Plus there’s the rumor that led me to file my FOIL in the first place, before Buyers got busted using the Mayor’s Impact Team to spring-clean his own front yard. More on that soon, I hope.
April 26, 2008
FOILed Again: Funny You Should Ask…
Day 1 of my FOIL watch was a bust: Friday flew by with nary a word from Peter Cutler, director of communications for Mayor Byron Brown. I filed a request with Cutler Thursday evening under New York’s Freedom of Information Law for all budget and expenditure records for the Mayor’s Impact Team since January 1, 2006. By law he’s got five business days just to acknowledge my email request, then a month to fulfill it or explain why he won’t.
Of course, Cutler must have had a busy day on Friday, what with TV crews taping Mayor’s Impact Team head Bill Buyers and two of his crew working in Buyers’ yard on city time, yielding a followup story in the Buffalo News. Who knew my request would be so timely?
Buyers and his two underlings received 15-day suspensions for the offense, because, according to Cutler, it was a first offense. I’m betting here that a careful audit of the Mayor’s Impact Team, which begins with Cutler acknowledging and fulfilling my FOIL request, will suggest it was not the first time the Mayor’s Impact Team used city time and city-purchased materials for private benefit.
Day 2 of my FOIL watch begins Monday morning.







