Poloncarz Appointments

Erie County Executive-elect Mark C. Poloncarz announced his appointees for the senior positions of Commissioners of Health, Emergency Services and Environment and Planning, Director of Budget and Management, and County Attorney.

The appointees are:

· Gale R. Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP, FSAHM, Commissioner of Health
· Robert W. Keating, Director of Budget and Management
· Daniel Neaverth Jr., Commissioner of Emergency Services
· Michael A. Siragusa, JD, County Attorney
· Maria R. Whyte, Commissioner of Environment and Planning

Poloncarz stated, “I am pleased to nominate these outstanding individuals for leading positions in my administration. These nominees demonstrate the amazing amount of diversity and wealth of knowledge right here in Erie County and I am proud that they have agreed to serve the County. These talented individuals reflect my commitment to bringing in people who will help develop new policy ideas and innovations and promoting strong candidates from within who have a proven record of success and accomplishment serving Erie County.”

Transition Chairman Michael Joseph added, “The transition team’s executive committee was pleased to recommend these candidates to the County Executive-elect. Based on our interviews and reviews of the nominees’ credentials, we believe that Dr. Burstein, Mr. Keating, Mr. Neaverth, Mr. Siragusa and Ms. Whyte represent the very best our community has to offer and will ably serve the county’s residents and taxpayers in their respective departments.”

Each of these nominations requires confirmation by the Erie County Legislature pursuant to the Erie County Charter.

Commissioner of Health—Dr. Gale R. Burstein is a pediatrician at Women and Children’s Hospital of Buffalo. She received her Doctor of Medicine from the University of Buffalo and her Masters Degree in Public Health from the Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health. Dr. Burstein is also an associate clinical professor at the University of Buffalo’s School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, an assignee for the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, medical director of the Erie County Department of Health’s STD Clinic and a research assistant professor at the University of Buffalo’s School of Public Health and Health Professions. Dr. Burstein has worked in various medical director capacities for the County’s Department of Health since 2005 and is a member of a number of professional organizations as well as widely published.

Director of Budget and Management—Robert W. Keating is currently the Director of Grant Accounting Services for the Erie County Comptroller, where he serves as the County’s chief accountant. Mr. Keating has served in Erie County government in the Comptroller’s Office as a competitive career civil servant since 1985. During his career, Mr. Keating has advanced in increasingly senior roles managing the County’s finances including daily liaison with the Division of Budget and Management, county departments, Erie County Medical Center Corporation, and state agencies.

Commissioner of Emergency Services—Daniel Neaverth Jr. has been a member of the Orchard Park Fire District for the past 22 years, during which time he has also served an instructor for the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services and the Deputy Commissioner of Emergency Medical Services and Regional Strategic National Stockpile (“SNS”) Coordinator within the Erie County Department of Emergency Services. In these roles Mr. Neaverth lead division operations for emergency medical services branch coordinating training and response of more than 5,000 first responders, while assisting the Commissioner of Emergency Services in management of department-wide operations. Additionally, Neaverth developed, implemented and exercised the regional SNS plan for the ten surrounding counties in Western New York. Since leaving County government, Neaverth has served as Vice President of Operations for Orchard Park EMS Inc. and the Game Day Operations and Emergency Management Consultant for the Buffalo Bills.

County Attorney—Michael A. Siragusa received his Juris Doctorate from Rutgers University School of Law in 1992; after which, he practiced corporate law and commercial litigation at a top tier Philadelphia, PA law firm for several years. Siragusa later returned home to Western New York where he served as Deputy Assistant Attorney General In-Charge for the Buffalo Regional Office of the New York State Attorney General. Among his responsibilities as the deputy head included management responsibilities and a range of state and federal litigation for the largest regional office of the Attorney General. Additionally, in 2007, Mr. Siragusa was the recipient of the Attorney General’s highest award, the Louis J. Lefkowitz Memorial Award, for his involvement in the statewide liquor industry investigation.

Commissioner of Environment and Planning—Maria R. Whyte is the outgoing Majority Leader of the Erie County Legislature, where she served as legislator for six years. During that time, Ms. Whyte served as Chair of the Legislature’s Government Affairs Committee where she ushered the Framework for Regional Growth, the Department of Environment and Planning’s guiding document, through unanimous passage in April 2007. Whyte also served two years on the Energy and Environment Committee where she provided oversight and approval of all matters related to environmental compliance, sewerage management, watershed protection and household hazardous waste disposal. She is formerly executive director of the Coalition for Economic Justice and is known for her legislation and policy ideas regarding smart growth, regional planning and cultural tourism.

Related articles

This Trumpist threat proved itself a danger — now it’s forming again



By Alexander Lowie, Postdoctoral associate in Classical and Civic Education, University of Florida

Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the Oath Keepers, a far-right militia, announced in November 2025 that he will relaunch the group after it disbanded following his prison sentence in 2023.

Rhodes was sentenced to 18 years in prison for seditious conspiracy and other crimes committed during the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.

In January 2025, President Donald Trump granted clemency to the over 1,500 defendants convicted of crimes connected to the storming of the Capitol.

Trump did not pardon Rhodes — or some others found guilty of the most serious crimes on Jan. 6. He instead commuted Rhodes’ sentence to time served. Commutation only reduces the punishment for a crime, whereas a full pardon erases a conviction.

As a political anthropologist I study the Patriot movement, a collection of anti-government right-wing groups that include the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and Moms for Liberty. I specialize in alt-right beliefs, and I have interviewed people active in groups that participated in the Capitol riot.

Rhodes’ plans to relaunch the Oath Keepers, largely composed of current and former military veterans and law enforcement officers, is important because it will serve as an outlet for those who have felt lost since his imprisonment. The group claimed it had more than 40,000 dues-paying members at the height of its membership during Barack Obama’s presidency. I believe that many of these people will return to the group, empowered by the lack of any substantial punishment resulting from the pardons for crimes committed on Jan. 6.

In my interviews, I’ve found that military veterans are treated as privileged members of the Patriot movement. They are honored for their service and military training. And that’s why I believe many former Oath Keepers will rejoin the group – they are considered integral members.

Their oaths to serving the Constitution and the people of the United States are treated as sacred, binding members to an ideology that leads to action. This action includes supporting people in conflicts against federal agencies, organizing citizen-led disaster relief efforts, and protesting election results like on Jan. 6. The members’ strength results from their shared oath and the reverence they feel toward keeping it.

Who are the Oath Keepers?

Rhodes joined the Army after high school and served for three years before being honorably discharged after a parachuting accident in 1986. He then attended the University of Nevada and later graduated from Yale Law School in 2004. He founded the Oath Keepers in 2009.

Oath Keepers takes its name from the U.S military Oath of Enlistment, which states:

“I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States …”

Informed by his law background, Rhodes places a particular emphasis on the part of the oath that states they will defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.

He developed a legal theory that justifies ignoring what he refers to as “unlawful orders” after witnessing the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Following the natural disaster, local law enforcement was assigned the task of confiscating guns, many of which officers say were stolen or found in abandoned homes.

Rhodes was alarmed, believing that the Second Amendment rights of citizens were being violated. Because of this, he argued that people who had military or law enforcement backgrounds had a legal duty to refuse what the group considers unlawful orders, including any that violated constitutionally protected rights, such as the right to bear arms.

In the Oath Keepers’ philosophy, anyone who violates these rights are domestic enemies to the Constitution. And if you follow the orders, you’ve violated your oath.

Explaining the origin of the group on the right-wing website The Gateway Pundit in November 2025, Rhodes said: “We were attacked out of the gate, labeled anti-government, which is absurd because we’re defending the Constitution that established the federal government. We were labeled anti-government extremists, all kinds of nonsense because the elites want blind obedience in the police and military.”

Rebuilding and restructuring

In 2022, the nonprofit whistleblower site Distributed Denial of Secrets leaked more than 38,000 names on the Oath Keepers’ membership list.

The Anti-Defamation League estimated that nearly 400 were active law enforcement officers, and that more than 100 were serving in the military. Some of these members were investigated by their workplaces but never disciplined for their involvement with the group.

Some members who were not military or law enforcement did lose their jobs over their affiliation. But they held government-related positions, such as a Wisconsin alderman who resigned after he was identified as a member.

This breach of privacy, paired with the dissolution of the organization after Rhodes’ sentencing, will help shape the group going forward.

In his interview with The Gateway Pundit, where he announced the group’s relaunch, Rhodes said: “I want to make it clear, like I said, my goal would be to make it more cancel-proof than before. We’ll have resilient, redundant IT that makes it really difficult to take down … And I want to make sure I get – put people in charge and leadership everywhere in the country so that, you know, down the road, if I’m taken out again, that it can still live on under good leadership without me being there.”

There was a similar shift in organizational structure with the Proud Boys in 2018. That’s when their founder, Gavin McInnes, stepped away from the organization. His departure came after a group of Proud Boys members were involved in a fight with anti-fascists in New York.

Prosecutors wanted to try the group as a gang. McInnes, therefore, distanced himself to support their defense that they weren’t in a gang or criminal organization. Ultimately, two of the members were sentenced to four years in prison for attempted gang assault charges.

Some Proud Boys members have told me they have since focused on creating local chapters, with in-person recruitment, that communicate on private messaging apps. They aim to protect themselves from legal classification as a gang. It also makes it harder for investigators or activist journalists to monitor them.

This is referred to as a cell style of organization, which is popular with insurgency groups. These groups are organized to rebel against authority and overthrow government structures. The cell organizational style does not have a robust hierarchy but instead produces smaller groups. They all adhere to the same ideology but may not be directly associated.

They may have a leader, but it’s often acknowledged that they are merely a figurehead, not someone giving direct orders. For the Proud Boys, this would be former leader Enrique Tarrio. Proud Boys members I’ve spoken to have referred to him as a “mascot” and not their leader.

Looking ahead

So what does the Rhodes interview indicate about the future of Oath Keepers?

Members will continue supporting Trump while also recruiting more retired military and law enforcement officers. They will create an organizational structure designed to outlive Rhodes. And based on my interactions with the far-right, I believe it’s likely they will create an organizational structure similar to that of the cell style for organizing.

Beyond that, they are going to try to own their IT, which includes hosting their websites and also using trusted online revenue generators.

This will likely provide added security, protecting their membership rolls while making it more difficult for law enforcement agencies to investigate them in the future.

Joe Andreessen: “A Bunch Of Memories” | Buffalo Bills

Linebacker Joe Andressen addressed the media after...

Headlines for January 9, 2026

Portland Mayor Calls on ICE to Halt Operations in...

First Thoughts on Trump’s Excellent Venezuela Adventure

Let me share a few thoughts about the U.S. action overnight in Venezuela. I say “action” because it’s not clear...