SHARON — It’s official: Sharon hired its first city manager Thursday.
Thomas D. Lavorini starts Monday as interim city manager. He was hired by a unanimous council vote to serve for up to a year.
“I’m very excited,” Lavorini said about taking the job.
“This is truly a great day for the city of Sharon,” said council member Frank Connelly, who was also part of the home rule study commission that recommended the charter voters approved 2-1 in November 2007 that created the job.
Lavorini’s salary is $67,500 plus benefits estimated at about $12,000.
“I’m looking forward to coming here. It’s not going to be easy, for any of us, obviously you already know that,” Lavorini said.
He reminded council and the voters who chose the new form of government that “we’re all agents of change.”
About 50 people packed council chambers, a great turnout for monthly meeting.
“It’s nice to see a council meeting with a lot of people,” said Mayor Bob Lucas, whom history will remember as the city’s final mayor.
Council President Mike Donato said Lavorini will be a very big help to the mayor and council as they finalize the city’s 2010 budget.
Lavorini said he’s read the charter and the 2006 Early Intervention Report on the state of the city’s finances and made some notes.
When asked about goals for the city, he said “I have some thoughts” but stressed that “the mayor is the mayor until the first of the year.”
Lavorini, 58, also said it’s “too early” to know if he’d be interested in staying on long-term and relocating to the city from Butler Township, Butler County, where he and his wife Amy live.
Donato thanked the transition and hiring committees who put a lot of time and effort into the search for a professional manager.
Council member Bob Messina called it a “grueling process” but said he thinks they found the right man for the job and said he hopes Lavorini will bring new ideas to the table. “I’m sure the city and citizens won’t be disappointed,” said council member Darin Flower, whose term is up next month.
Lavorini applied for the job late in the game and said he heard about the opening in the spring, but a “cascade of events at that time” kept him from sending in his resume. He was still interested when he heard this fall that the position hadn’t yet been filled.
Lavorini, who has a bachelor’s degree in economics and political science from St. Vincent College in Latrobe, Pa., has 30 years of experience in municipal management and spent 18 years as administrator in Ross Township, Allegheny County.
He’s been in retirement and “playing golf badly” since township commissioners dismissed him from that job in August 2008 for what some transition committee members have said were “political reasons.”
Lavorini also worked in Aliquippa, an Act 47 community, so he is familiar with the state program that helps financially distressed communities. Rumors have circulated for years that Sharon is on the verge of entering the program.
Local News
City manager hired as Sharon enters a new era
- Local News
-
-
Store owner busted again for fake pot sales
The owner of a Grove City store already facing charges related to the sale of synthetic marijuana has been arrested a second time for selling the drug.
Ala H. Nassar, 27, of 125 S. Seventh St., Sharpsville, was arrested Thursday on charges of delivery, possession and possession with intent to deliver synthetic pot, criminal use of a cellular telephone and conspiracy to commit delivery.
Abdallah H. Matariyeh, 27, of the same address, also was arrested on charges of delivery and possession with intent to deliver.
-
Bids opened for work to widen Rt. 760
PennDOT officials opened bids Thursday for the first two sections of a three-section widening of Route 760 in Wheatland, Farrell and Sharon.
-
Timeline now at center of negligence lawsuit
A jury will decide whether the normal statute of limitations applies in a lawsuit filed by a Sharon man accusing a Sewickley agency of negligence that resulted in numerous injuries to his disabled son.
-
Social media alert first responders
The Mercer County Fire/EMS alerts’ Facebook page is two years strong and continues to attract followers who want the latest updates on traffic accidents, fires and other emergencies.
-
State cuts trickle down to township
Brookfield Township “is in a world of hurt.”
-
Toth takes $30k to settle lawsuit
It’s typical for lawsuit settlement agreements to include a confidentiality clause that bars the parties from discussing the terms of the settlement.
-
Taking flight
Some kids probably daydream about sending their homework up into the atmosphere, but that really happened this week for a few classes of Jamestown Area High School students.
-
GC man called suspect in Jan. 27 bank robbery
A Grove City man charged with robbing a Zelienople bank Monday is a suspect in the Jan. 27 robbery of a Sandy Lake bank.
-
Committee to focus on finances for future
Sharon city leaders have money on their minds as they look to the future of the once-vibrant town struggling with a limited tax base and higher costs of doing business.
-
Summer work turns into year-round part-time job
A Sharpsville resident asked council members this week why the man hired as summer help is still on the payroll in the middle of winter.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Store owner busted again for fake pot sales






