Providence Journal
Providence, R. I.
Cuomo: City Played No Role In
Alviti's Turnabout
By Richard Salit Journal Staff Writer
Aug 4, 1999
CRANSTON - Stephen Cuomo, the city's director of
administration, acknowledges that he contacted leaders of the Laborers International Union
after receiving a request for an extensive number of public records from one of its
employees, Peter Alviti, the city's former public works director.
Late last month, a couple of weeks after Alviti presented the city
a two-page list of records he wanted, he withdrew his request.
The sudden reversal raised questions among City Hall observers as
to whether Alviti had been pressured by his union at the request of the administration of
Mayor John O'Leary. The union represents city laborers and reportedly would like to also
represent municipal workers seeking to secede from the National Association of Government
Employees.
Cuomo said yesterday that he telephoned union representative
Manuel Sousa, after receiving Alviti's request for records concerning hirings and
dismissals and city finances.
The only question I asked him was if {Alviti's} position reflected
the laborers', Cuomo said. That's all. Basically he said no, and we accepted that. I was
very adamant to tell Manny Sousa, as I have told you, he {Alviti} has every right to
request the records. We just wanted to ensure that he was acting independently.
Alviti's letter, written on plain stationery, included his home
address on Scituate Avenue and nowhere mentioned the laborers union. In fact, he wrote
that this request is being made by me as a concerned City of Cranston resident.
Cuomo said that, after he spoke with Sousa, he received a phone
call from Armand E. Sabitoni, the union's vice president and regional manager, who wanted
to make sure that Alviti was not doing it on union time. Among other things, Cuomo said,
Sabitoni asked if Alviti's request had been written on union stationery.
Sabitoni, recalled Cuomo, said that Alviti has his constitutional
rights, and I agreed with him. And he said he didn't want to exert any undue influence on
him. Sousa, when asked if Cuomo applied any pressure to have Alviti withdraw his request
for records, replied, None whatsoever. Sousa, who is the union liaison to the Cranston
local, said he could not remember details of his conversation with Cuomo and that Peter
Alviti and my department have nothing do with one another. Alviti withdrew his records
request a short time after Cuomo's conversations with the two union officials.
Alviti, who worked for six years under Republican Mayor Michael A.
Traficante, was retained by Democrat O'Leary's incoming administration in January. But he
resigned in March and took a job in the union's New England office, as an engineer dealing
with health and safety issues. A former member of the executive board of the Republican
City Committee, he now serves only on the party's Ward 5 committee.
Alviti initially sought information from the administration on
recent hirings, dismissals and city finances. In withdrawing his request, he said, that
nonprofit groups such as Cranston United Taxpayers (CUT) have requested similar
information.
Therefore, rather than duplicate such efforts, I am withdrawing my
request, he wrote O'Leary. In the future, I will therefore leave such requests to
civic-minded organizations and individuals so that I may pursue my interests in the
private sector.
He has declined to comment beyond that.