logo
City of Boston CFO Ashley Groffenberger named BBJ CFO of the Year Rising Star honoree

City of Boston CFO Ashley Groffenberger named BBJ CFO of the Year Rising Star honoree

There are a lot of variables when it comes to being the chief financial officer for the city of Boston. In addition to overseeing and developing the budget, there's a five-year capital plan that needs to be created and revised, assessments, payment collections and managing the treasury. It's safe to say that the job comes with its share of stresses.
Sometimes, there are so many moving pieces that Ashley Groffenberger wishes her team could simplify it all and just turn everything into an easy math equation. Which is exactly why her staff got her an algebra workbook, which she keeps on her desk.
'When we're dealing with these really difficult decisions, I sometimes look at my team and I'm like, 'I wish we could just sit here and solve for X,'" said Groffenberger. "When I need to decompress, I solve for X. That's how I unwind.'
Groffenberger's career has been filled with more constants than variables. Since graduating from Northeastern in 2010, she has been working in government finance, seeking a mission-driven organization that has a tangible impact on the surrounding community. That goal led her from her initial role as an analyst in the State House to her current role at City Hall.
And most recently, Groffenberger has been named the 2025 Rising Star awardee at the Boston Business Journal's CFO of the Year awards.
Coming into the position was somewhat familiar for Groffenberger. She had spent the past eight years in California's Bay Area, where she worked as the budget director for the city and county of San Francisco for seven of those eight years. The time in San Francisco helped prepare her for her role with the city of Boston — and the Dunkin' Donuts that opened an hour away from her San Fransisco office offered a small reminder of home.
After Michelle Wu 's successful bid to become the mayor of Boston in 2021, Groffenberger's name was floated as a potential candidate for the CFO role. When Wu's administration reached out with an offer, Groffenberger called the decision to return to the place she once thought of as the apex of the world a 'no-brainer.'
'I like to think about the dream jobs I have, and it was always a really short list,' said Groffenberger. 'This job was always at the top of that list.'
The job is not without its variables, probably more than most people realize she says. Groffenberger says that a major misconception people have about the job of CFO is that it's easy to find solutions, or that it's just a matter of allocating funds. In reality, the job involves an 'incredible amount' of consideration and analysis before making a decision.
When you have more than one variable to solve for, things can get complicated. But Groffenberger knows she isn't going at it alone. She makes it a point to acknowledge the significant contributions her team makes to her overall success and the success of the city.
'I will attribute all of my success to the people that I work with. I mean, this job is not singular,' Groffenberger said. 'So I attribute it to the team and the leadership here in the city, for you know, the success that we all enjoy.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What will the new White Stadium actually cost?
What will the new White Stadium actually cost?

Boston Globe

time20 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

What will the new White Stadium actually cost?

Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up The 50-50 split with the soccer club was a bargain at its original cost to the city of $50 million. Then some six months later that number rose to $91 million. Advertisement Now Mayor Michelle Wu insists she won't know until 'later this calendar year,' presumably well after the Nov. 4 general election, what the ultimate cost of the project will be — but admits it is likely to escalate once all the bids are 'out the door.' And had it not been for her chief mayoral rival, Josh Kraft, raising the issue with a document he said came 'from folks on the inside at City Hall,' that pegged the city's ultimate likely cost at $172 million, voters would have remained in the dark about further cost escalations. Advertisement 'Not sure where those numbers are coming from,' The very next day she Then last week in an interview on WBUR she acknowledged there have already been some price increases. 'There's always some level of cost escalation, unfortunately,' she said. 'In major construction projects, we end up putting out bids, and whatever the price in the market is at that moment is what the city pays, for any construction project.' 'We are seeing cost escalations in terms of the cost of steel, for example,' The city's The bids are not scheduled to be opened until October. In all, the city has spent $11.3 million on the renovation project so far, a spokesperson said, but only $5.6 million on 'construction-related activities.' Delays to the project mean the soccer team will play its inaugural 2026 season at the 65,000-seat Gillette Stadium. It plans to move to its new 11,000-seat venue in Franklin Park for the 2027 season beginning that March. But costing out that final number for Boston taxpayers gets even trickier because as its own 'supplier diversity dashboard' notes, 'This is one project being managed by two teams. Contracts awarded by the City are subject to state law regulating the procurement of services on public projects. BLFC is not subject to the same constraints, which allows them to award contracts without public procurement law constraints.' Most of those BLFC-generated bids for concrete, steel, facade restoration, utilities, and site work close Aug. 15, city officials said. Advertisement Which still begs the question of why the project's new bottom line will remain a mystery until the end of the year. And while the dashboard represents an attempt at transparency, especially for minority and female vendors and contractors looking for a piece of the stadium action, even if it were up to date, it represents at best half a loaf. It's a point not lost on Ed Gaskin, director of Greater Grove Hall Main Streets, who wrote in a recent He's not wrong. The 'City officials need to make all the construction bids they've received public, so that residents can know just how far over-budget the White Stadium project is,' Jessica Spruill, a Dorchester resident and member of the Franklin Park Defenders, wrote in a Advertisement Others in the group have raised broader questions about the project's financial viability and whether the team can meet its financing deadlines. 'The old White Stadium has been demolished, but construction of its replacement hasn't started, and it's clear that the professional soccer stadium plans are on shaky ground,' former METCO director Jean McGuire of Roxbury wrote in a Rebuilding White Stadium could still be a good idea that leaves a long-term legacy for Boston — a long-overdue first-rate facility for Boston's high school athletes and a showcase for professional women's soccer. But voters — whether they love or hate the idea of the stadium — deserve more than the promise of a post-election big reveal of its final cost. Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us

Aurora to welcome delegation from city in Mexico on Monday
Aurora to welcome delegation from city in Mexico on Monday

Chicago Tribune

time5 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Aurora to welcome delegation from city in Mexico on Monday

The city of Aurora and Mayor John Laesch are set to host on Monday a delegation from Morelia, Michoacan, Mexico that includes Morelia Mayor Alfonso Martinez Alcazar. Aurora city officials said in a news release Friday that the meeting set for 4 p.m. is planned to strengthen cultural ties, open lines of communication and spark discussions on how to build a stronger relationship between Aurora and Morelia. Leaders of both cities are expected to promote future collaboration and support a shared vision of greater connection, according to the city news release. The meeting will be an opportunity for Aurora to 'expand its international footprint, participate in a valuable exchange of ideas, and increase the opportunity for collaboration between Morelia and Aurora in the future,' Laesch said in the news release. Morelia is the Mexican state of Michoacen's capital and most populous city, with over 740,000 residents according to Mexico's 2020 census, Aurora's news release said. Plus, Morelia is also known for being a UNESCO World Heritage Site with its well-preserved historical buildings and layout of its historic center, Aurora officials said in the news release. The meeting, which was planned in partnership with El Club Morelia de Illinois, is set to take place at Aurora City Hall at 44 E. Downer Place. The event will be open to the public, and Aurora officials are encouraging residents who have ties to Michoacan to attend.

Wu has boosted Boston neighborhoods. But downtown still struggles with post-COVID blues.
Wu has boosted Boston neighborhoods. But downtown still struggles with post-COVID blues.

Boston Globe

time6 days ago

  • Boston Globe

Wu has boosted Boston neighborhoods. But downtown still struggles with post-COVID blues.

The impact of Wu's strategy can be felt on last year far surpassed 2019 levels, according to credit-card data tracked by the Boston Planning & Development Agency. To many small business owners in these thriving districts, City Hall's influence made a crucial difference during the pandemic and the rocky years that followed. Advertisement 'The city of Boston has provided me, provided our restaurant, with the help to stay open,' said Fernando Rosas, owner of Bono, a Latin American restaurant and caterer in East Boston. 'Without that help, I don't think we would be open.' Advertisement In January, city officials held a ribbon cutting at Jadu, a new cafe in Jamaica Plain that received a city storefront grant and was one of the first businesses to receive one of the new 225 liquor licenses the state created for Boston. Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff But that same BPDA research also highlights the downsides of Wu's approach. small businesses that remain say they're struggling to survive. 'We are fighting for customers,' said Julie King, co-owner of Villa Mexico Cafe on Of course, much of this stark reversal of fortune is spurred by economic forces beyond any big city mayor's control. The post-COVID shift toward hybrid work has buildings near King's restaurant — have decamped from downtown entirely. That has created an emptier central business district. While foot traffic has improved since 2020, Related : Advertisement And it's not just downtown retailers that feel the impact. High vacancy rates are because commercial property tax, much of it from downtown, fuels a lion's share of the city's $4.8 billion budget. Indeed, the city's third ward, a slice of downtown that includes the Financial District, has a taxable real estate value of $43.7 billion, according to the Boston Municipal Research Bureau, while properties in Jamaica Plain and Roslindale together are valued at $6.6 billion. So when it comes to the city's budget, even small declines downtown can have big implications. Business leaders have criticized Wu for not using her bully pulpit — as some other big-city mayors have — to prod employers to bring workers back to the office. And even as the Fernando Rosas is the owner of Bono Restaurant and Catering in East Boston. Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff Still, Wu notes, major companies have continued to come to Boston, such as 'You can't have one without the other, especially today when office buildings don't exist on their own as magnets for activity,' Wu added. 'When we make every neighborhood a destination, when we make every neighborhood exciting and safe and activated, that also means that residents, people, employees are staying in Boston." Advertisement Mayoral challenger Josh Kraft hasn't released a plan for small business or for downtown, but has said he wants to make Boston more business-friendly in general and that Boston is hardly alone in the struggle to revive its downtown, cities from Washington to San Francisco are wrestling with similar trends. And shops and restaurants outside commercial cores of cities are flourishing everywhere, observed Jesse Baerkahn, president of Graffito SP, a Boston real estate advisory firm. 'People are shopping and dining less near where they work than where they live,' he said. 'From a community economic development to retail real estate ... there's really just one thing you need — which is human beings.' Yet at the same time Wu is trying to boost small businesses in residential neighborhoods, she is also trying to spur more people to live downtown. The city closed down Summer Street downtown for a "Boston Blooms" event to celebrate spring and a lull in the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2022. Lane Turner/Globe Staff In 2023, the city began offering 'It's just a question of how realistic is it to bring that idea to scale. Is there enough demand?' said Poftak. 'Can you do it quickly enough to make a difference?' Wu has also stepped up events that aim to to bring people downtown, from Advertisement Those have helped boost foot traffic at Boston Public Market, which houses about 30 vendors on Congress Street near City Hall Plaza. The market draws about 1.7 million visitors a year, said Boston Public Market CEO Cheryl Cronin, but that's still down 25 percent from before the pandemic. 'This is what everyone downtown needs to bear in mind,' Cronin said. 'You need to work harder to get the same people here.' The nonprofit market has weathered the downturn, Cronin said, thanks largely to state funding and philanthropy. But downtown business owners don't have that kind of safety net. General manager Elias Khoury at Pita Thyme in downtown Boston. David L Ryan/ Globe Staff Pita Thyme, Business has improved slightly year over year, Khoury said, but is still down 40 percent compared to before the pandemic. He doesn't think Wu can do much to convince more workers to return to office, but she could make the area safer and cleaner. Khoury points to how a nearby restaurant that shuttered months ago was broken into recently, and had to be boarded up. When he gets in at 6 a.m. to prep food, he often finds homeless people sleeping in stoops and stairwells. 'Let's say I own a company and I want to move into Boston, and I come and see that in the morning. It's just makes you think twice,' said Khoury. Advertisement A homeless person slept in the doorway at the shuttered 2Twenty2 bar on the corner of Liberty Square and Water Street. David L Ryan/ Globe Staff Yet in business districts that ring downtown, the optimism is palpable, despite broader headwinds such as inflation and tariffs. At Latino Beauty Salon in Egleston Square, owner Rosana Rivera said she's busier than ever. Her client base has doubled since she got a Rivera bought new furniture and invested in other upgrades that she believes attracted new customers. Noting that before the mayor got into politics, Wu had opened her own tea shop, Rivera said, 'She knows what it's like to have a business.' In Jamaica Plain, restaurants such as Tres Gatos, Casa Verde, and The Haven have expanded and seen their businesses grow since the pandemic. Meanwhile, new spots are opening, like coffee and wine bar Even Jason Waddleton, owner of the Scottish pub The Haven, plans to offer a gameday shuttle to the stadium in Franklin Park, just 1 mile away. 'I anticipate us being a hub for supporters,' said Waddleton. 'I want to get that same vibe pre-game that you see in European cities.' And up in East Boston, Rosas is hopeful, too. He first Business has been good, Rosas said, though on days there are immigration raids customers stay home. More than anything, he's bullish about the future of East Boston. 'I imagine East Boston in 10 years it's going to become the new, probably Back Bay,' said Rosas. 'You're closer to the city, you have a train. You still can find the same amenities in a condo here that you probably have in the Back Bay at a much lower price.' People played soccer at LoPresti Park in East Boston. Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff Shirley Leung is a Business columnist. She can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store