Former RI State Trooper Trinque Moved to Elorza’s Personal Staff, Gets Raise

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Former RI State Trooper Trinque Moved to Elorza’s Personal Staff, Gets Raise

Former Rhode Island State Trooper William Trinque — who had served as the City of Providence’s Director of Communications and had been on loan to the city’s Fire Department — was transferred to Providence Mayor Elorza’s personal staff, with a raise, after it was determined the city had erroneously assigned two people to the same communications line-item in the budget.

“We raised the issue with the Finance Committee,” said Providence Internal Auditor Matt Clarkin. “If you look [Trinque] up, he had been listed as the Director of Communications still.  I know he’s been working in the fire department, but you can’t have two people paid out of the same position.”

“So the city decided to move him to the Mayor’s office, where he got a raise,” said Clarkin.

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Former Providence Firefighter Tom Kenney wrote about Trinque’s constantly-moving position in a recent column.

“[Trinque] is acting as the department’s Investigative Chief. He is being paid over $112,000…in addition there is another person in his old job being paid the same salary. Mr. Trinque is working under the PFD even though he is 62 years old. A City ordinance states that all (union and nonunion) employees under the PFD must retire by the end of the year in which they turn 60," wrote Kenney.

Documents signed by Tony Simon show that effective February 8, 2016 that Trinque was moved from Director of Communications to special advisor in the Mayor’s office from $2,155.82 weekly to $2,536.60 weekly. 

The City did not respond to request for comment on the transfer. 

Keeping Tabs

City Councilman John Igliozzi, who chairs the finance committee, said that it was the council’s continued role in overseeing staffing and payroll issues that led to the action. 

“Because of the council's continued role of checks and balances, as it continues to evaluate departments and the money the council appropriates to them -- and how they spend it,” said Igliozzi. “The team discovered this issue, and the council brought it to the administration’s attention, and it resulted in them addressing it.”

“Whether or not they knew the rules and whether it was done intentionally or not, if you take a position of responsibility, you have to be responsible with the position,” said Igliozzi. 


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