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Eric Adams pads cash-strapped NYC payroll with 293 ‘special assistants’

Mayor Adams padded the city payroll with 293 “special assistants” during his first full fiscal year in office — a more than 20% increase over his predecessor Bill de Blasio, The Post has learned.

The bloated band of vaguely titled aides, accountable only to Adams, comprised roughly one-third of th🔴e Mayor’s Office staff during the yearly period ending June 30 and cost taxpayers $24.3 million, according to payroll records🎀.

Eighty-five✨ pocketed six-figure earnings in fiscal 2023 – including 13 who took in more than $🌃200,000.

They include Edward Mermelstein, a real estate exec with , former Deputy Comptroller Marjorie Lander, and Sideya Sherman, a one-time exec with the city’s Housing Authority.

Mermelstein, who along with his wife Rose donated $7,100 to Adams’ 2021 campaign and post-election transition, earned $228,659 working under the unofficial title of the city’s “Commissioner of International Affairs.”

The city’s even though he’s

Sideya Sherman, a special assistant who serves as Mayor Adams’ chief equity officer. nyc.gov
Adams special assistant Edward Mermelstein heads the Mayor’s Office of International Affairs Brigitte Stelzer

Lander and Sherman both pocketed $227,161 hea🍌ding two ไnewly created offices.

Lander runs the Mayor’s Office o🃏f Risk Management and Compliance, and Sherman the Mayor’s Office of Equity and Racial Justice.

Topping the list of high-earning spec൲ial assistants are two honchos no longer on the city payroll.

M💦elanie LaRocca, the city’s ex-chief efficiency officer, resigned in June, 🥃and Jessica Katz, Adams’ former chief housing officer, stepped down in July. Both earned $246,898.

Former Deputy Comptroller Marjorie Lander is also included in those who took in more than $200,000. David McGlynn

De Blasio infamously usꦡꦅed the special-assistant gigs in part to take care of ✤political operatives biding their time waiting for the next campaign — a kind of publicly funded farm system ꦆakin to the ones used by Major League Baseball teams.

The fact that the jobs aren’t covered by civil service ru✃les also gives mayors the latitude to dole out salaries and raises beyond the established ranges for comparable positions.

Now, some pols and City Hall insiders 📖are questioning whether Adams is following the same playbook heading into his 2025 r♚e-election campaign.

Former Mayor Bill Blasio speaks to Sheriff Soliman in 2014, who worked as a top city aide under his administration, and Adams. Shannon DeCelle

Some top senior aides and other political operatives hired by Adams as special assistan📖ts include:

  • Ex-state Sen. Diane Savino (D-Staten Island), left Albany and was at a $201,000 salary — nearly double what she previously made as a senator. She works directly with Adams’ chief advisor, Ingrid Lewis-Martin.
  • Stefan Ringel, a longtime Adams top aide and campaign advisor arrived at City Hall with the mayor in January 2022 and 10 months later got a upping his salary to $154,442.
  • Winnie Greco, another Adams ally who earns $100,000 yearly as his Asian community affairs liaison. Greco allegedly promised an Adams campaign volunteer a City Hall job if he completed renovation work on her home — and asked another for a hefty donation in exchange for Gracie Mansion access, last month. The Department of Investigation is reviewing the matter.
  • Rana Abbasova, who allegedly lied to investigators amid an ongoing federal corruption probe into Adams’ 2021 campaign fundraising. Abbasova, one of Adams’ key links to the Turkish community, working out of the Office for International Affairs, but she was put on leave last month for “acting improperly.”

“A lot of these people are being kept in orbit, so they don’t leave the Adams fold and are available for the campaign,” said Republican Curtis Sliwa, who lost the 2021 mayoral race to Adams.

“It sends a horrible message – especially with the NYPD, Fire Department and other city agencies facing heavy cuts” to help cover New York’s migrant crisis, Sliwa added. “He’s got to show he’s cutting his own fat — all these special assistants, advisors that he created jobs for that never existed. It’s time to clean house.”

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-Staten Island/Brooklyn) agreed, saying “For every special assistant, there’s at least two less cops on the street.”

Melanie LaRocca resigned in June as the city’s chief efficiency officer. The “special assistant” postition paid her $246,899 in fiscal 2023 LINKEDIN Melanie La Rocca

“Whether it’s offering illegal immigrants free housing while cutting services from citizens or hiring more assistants at City Hall while cutting public safety officers, Mayor Adams is showing his priorities are backwards,” said Malliotakis.

De Blasio had come under fire for allegedly inflating his use of special assistants to get around civil service rules and take care of political operatives, with a high of 339 special assistants in fiscal 2019 — more than triple the 109 ex-Mayor Michael Bloomberg had when he left office in 2013, according to records.

By𒁃 fiscal 2021, de Blasio trimmed his number of special assistants to 243, costing taxp𒁃ayers $21.1 million. 

The city spent a similar amount on special assistants in fiscal 2022 but saw the number of these aides rise to 321 — largely because the 12-month period covered the last six months of the de Blasio administration and the first six months of Adams’ administration. 

Jessica Katz, the city’s former chief housing officer, earned $246,898 in fiscal 2023 — tying her with Melanie LaRocca as Adams’ highest-paid special assistant during that yearly period Paul Martinka

Ken Girardin, with the taxpayer-watchdog group Empire Center for Public Policy, said Adams’ desire to “bloat” his payroll with fringe special assistants “only weakens his case for more federal and state support” to help the city deal with the migrant crisis.

Adams last month announced he’s mov🦩ing ahead with across-the-board 5% cuts at all city agencies, with another 10% cut set for early next year, to 🍬offset an expected $12 bil🦩lion tab for helping asylum seekers.

“This isn’t just about dollars being wasted” on special assistants and other Adams aides, “it’s about the message it sends to every department head being asked to stretch their pennies,” said Girardin.

Although payroll records show Mer🌃melstein is a speci♑al assistant, City Hall spokesperson Charles Lutvak insisted Mermelstein’s official title is “commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of International Affairs.”

Lutvak also defen๊ded Adams’ overall hiring🐬 practices.

“Mayor Adams has always hired the right pe🐈ople for the right jobs, and the p♓ublic servants in our administration are ‘Getting Stuff Done’ for New Yorkers every day,” he said in a statement.

“At the same time, fiscal respo𒁃nsibility has been a hallmark of this administration, with a [strong AA] bond rating from Fitch amid significant budgetary challenges,” he added. “Every city agency, including the Mayor’s Office, has dug deep into their own budgets to find savings, and we will continue to do what is necessary to balance the budget as required by law.”