The Day

New London hires new IT director as it embarks on citywide upgrades

Mayor says he expects Genovese to provide ‘fresh set of eyes’ and to help put together strategic plan

- By GREG SMITH Day Staff Writer

New London — New Informatio­n Technology Director Richard Genovese joins the city during what Mayor Michael Passero said is a pivotal time.

The city had been without an IT director since the retirement of Robert Pia in 2016 and during that time has approved spending $1.2 million in citywide upgrades to its aging IT infrastruc­ture.

The State Bond Commission in June additional­ly approved $758,133 for upgrades to the city police department's software system to help jumpstart a stalled plan to consolidat­e its emergency dispatch services with Waterford.

“We've sorely needed this position,” Passero said. “He's coming on at just the right time to lead this upgrade of our IT infrastruc­ture and the initiative­s like the dispatch.”

Passero said he expects Genovese to provide a “fresh set of eyes” on citywide IT needs and help put together an overall strategic plan.

Genovese also will play some yetto-be-determined role in the rollout of a new financial software system that will link the city government with the school district finances. That process is now underway.

Passero announced Genovese's hiring Monday to the City Council. The council had budgeted $120,000 for the position and Genovese was hired with a $105,000 annual salary. He was expected to start on Sept. 24.

Genovese lives in Wallingfor­d and is a former project manager at ESPN in Bristol, where he worked between 1997 and 2016 and was responsibl­e for hardware and infrastruc­ture

“We’ve sorely needed this position. He’s coming on at just the right time to lead this upgrade of our IT infrastruc­ture like the dispatch.” MICHAEL PASSERO, NEW LONDON MAYOR

at remote events held worldwide, according to his job applicatio­n with the city.

He was laid off from ESPN and started his own project management consulting business that ended when a co-owner left the business earlier this year. He was working as the IT manager at Hartley & Parker Limited in Stratford, a wine and spirit distributi­on company, before he accepted the position in New London.

New London Personnel Administra­tor Tina Collins said Finance Director Don Gray used the profession­al recruitmen­t service of the Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties to obtain applicants for the IT director position. Four people were interviewe­d for the position by Passero and Gray, Collins said.

Genovese was offered the job and appointed by Passero after a standard background check was completed.

New London police Chief Peter Reichard said he expects Genovese eventually will become an integral part of the switch-over to the department’s new software system, which will allow New London police, fire and EMS services to access shared informatio­n with Waterford.

The new TriTech software coming to New London already is used in Waterford and will set the stage for future negotiatio­ns on a consolidat­ed dispatch system. It will take one year to 16 months before the software system is in place and training is completed.

Reichard said the software system will act as the “backbone” for the regionaliz­ation initiative. The department also is suffering from outdated equipment and Reichard said Genovese will help provide direction and set priorities for future upgrades and modernizat­ion efforts.

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