November 15, 2024

Top Aide to Cuomo Rebukes State Worker Who Talked to the Press

In the interview, Mr. Fayette praised Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and the transportation workers who had labored to repair roads and bridges washed out by Tropical Storm Irene in 2011. No matter. His supervisors said he had not been authorized to speak to the press, and they moved to fire him; he retired instead and left in February.

The story might have ended there — strange but small — but for the Cuomo administration’s reaction to an article about it that appeared on Wednesday in The Daily Enterprise.

On Thursday, livid that an engineer in the Adirondacks was being portrayed as a victim of Mr. Cuomo’s penchant for control, a top aide to the governor, Howard B. Glaser, took to the airwaves. He read aloud Mr. Fayette’s disciplinary history, describing him as a troubled employee who had previously been penalized for having an improper relationship with a subordinate, misusing his work e-mail to send sexually explicit messages and using his state-assigned vehicle for personal errands.

“It is not the policy of this administration to terminate people solely for improper contact with the press,” said Mr. Glaser, the director of state operations, adding, “If that were the issue here, the only issue, there would not have been a termination.”

Mr. Fayette, who had worked for the state for 29 years, was stunned. “It’s absolutely outrageous,” he said Thursday. “The governor needs to say, ‘Hey, look, guys, you’re embarrassing me, you’re embarrassing the state, you’re going after this guy like he’s freaking killed somebody.’ ”

Mr. Fayette said he believed that Mr. Glaser had broken the law by disclosing his record.

“If anything, someone should be investigating that clown,” Mr. Fayette said. “You can’t do that. That is so over the line it’s not funny.”

He added, “He’s just daring me to hire an attorney and sue him.”

Mr. Glaser said all of the information he disclosed on WGDJ-AM, in Albany, had come from a document that was a public record.

“Some in the press were breathless to fit this incident into a favored narrative about Cuomo administration control of information,” Mr. Glaser wrote in an e-mail. “But the facts turn out to be inconvenient to that tired story line. If reporters had taken the time to get the whole story, a much different picture would have emerged of a quirky but basically routine personnel matter.”

The case began in August, when a reporter at the newspaper, writing a series of articles on the first anniversary of Tropical Storm Irene, asked to speak to Transportation Department workers.

A spokeswoman for the department did not respond, according to the newspaper, so the reporter called Mr. Fayette, who is the agency’s resident engineer in Essex County.

Mr. Fayette, 55, who grew up on a farm near the Canadian border, had worked for the department since college graduation. He agreed to an interview, saying he feared the newspaper would otherwise accuse the department of “blowing off” its request. The resulting article, which was published on Aug. 30 with the headline “D.O.T. Engineer on Irene: ‘We Were Up for It,’ ” suggested that the department had worked valiantly after the storm.

Six days later, Mr. Fayette received a letter ordering him to attend a “disciplinary interrogation” in Albany, which he said he later found out was a result of the interview he had granted. He was soon told that the state would seek to fire him; after lining up witnesses, including local elected officials, to vouch for him at a hearing, he decided to retire instead.

Cuomo administration officials said no one in the governor’s office had known about Mr. Fayette’s case until it was reported in the paper.

As for the Transportation Department, whose silence in response to an inquiry from a reporter set off the chain of events? Its communications office did not respond to a request for comment on Thursday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/22/nyregion/top-aide-to-cuomo-rebukes-state-worker-who-talked-to-the-press.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Stock Indexes Are Mixed

Wall Street opened mixed on Wednesday, staying close to multiyear highs for stock indexes.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index rose 0.3 percent in morning trading, the Dow Jones industrial average slipped 0.1 percent and the Nasdaq composite index jumped 0.5 percent. European markets were up moderately in afternoon trading.

Equities have been strong performers of late, buoyed largely by healthy growth in corporate earnings, with the S.P. 500 gaining 6.5 percent so far this year. The Dow is about 1 percent from an all-time intraday high, reached in October 2007.

The recent gains could leave the market vulnerable to a pullback as investors take profit amid a dearth of new trading catalysts. While analysts continue to see an upward bias in markets, recent daily moves have been small and trading volumes have been light.

“This is a market that refuses to go down, and the trend suggests that we’ll not only hit a new high on the Dow, but move well beyond it,” said Adam Sarhan, chief executive of Sarhan Capital in New York.

Industrial and construction shares will be in focus following President Obama’s State of the Union address on Tuesday, during which he called for a $50 billion spending plan to create jobs by rebuilding degraded roads and bridges. He also backed higher taxes for the wealthy.

Deere Co. reported earnings that beat expectations and raised its full-year profit outlook. After initially rallying in premarket trading, the stock turned 1 percent lower.

Comcast agreed late Tuesday to buy General Electric’s remaining 49 percent stake in NBCUniversal for $16.7 billion. Comcast jumped 8.9 percent while G.E., one of the stocks in the Dow average, was up 3.1 percent.

According to the latest Thomson Reuters data, of 353 companies in the S.P. 500 that have reported fourth-quarter results, 70.3 percent have exceeded analysts’ expectations, above a 62 percent average since 1994 and 65 percent over the past four quarters.

Retail sales rose 0.1 percent in January, as expected, as tax increases and higher gasoline prices restrained spending. The data barely moved the markets.

Wall Street stocks closed modestly higher Tuesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/14/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss