Oneida County Legislature Griffo served in the Oneida County Legislature from 1989 to 1991.
Mayor of Rome, New York Griffo was elected mayor of his hometown of
Rome, New York in 1991, and won two subsequent elections in 1995 and 1999. As mayor, Griffo eliminated Rome's special one-quarter percent sales tax. Also, Griffo "was able to prevent a tax hike there in all but one of his years in office, despite the crippling loss of
Griffiss Air Force Base in 1993 – perhaps the worst single economic blow the county has ever seen." Griffo merged the parks and recreation departments and handed over the city's weights and measures and emergency management departments to the county, resulting in savings. To prevent closures and service cuts, he privatized Rome Hospital, the Erie Canal Village, and city trash collection services. Griffo brought
Woodstock '99 to Rome; this effort earned him the nickname "The Rock N' Roll Mayor."
Oneida County executive Griffo was appointed Oneida County executive in June 2003 to serve out the term of his predecessor. Griffo was then elected to the post in November 2003. After raising taxes 16% for 2003, his predecessor had announced that taxes for 2004 might need to be raised by as much as 26% due to skyrocketing Medicare costs and retirement benefits. However, after Griffo was appointed county executive, he was able to balance the 2004 budget while raising taxes by 2.9%. In 2005, he implemented a prescription drug plan that cut drug costs for Oneida county residents by up to 38%. Griffo increased the county sales tax 1.5% in the 2005 budget to cover Medicaid costs. Normally, sales tax revenues are split amongst state, county and townships/cities. However, in order to cover mandated Medicaid costs, the 1.5% increase would all go to the county government. Utica Mayor Tim Julian began claiming a share of the revenues. Griffo remained adamant in refusing to split the revenues. Griffo tried to disarm the situation by offering the city of Utica $800,000 in debt forgiveness, which Julian refused. Griffo eventually won out and the county did not split the extra sales tax revenues with Utica. Griffo helped stop the New York Regional Interconnect (NYRI) plan to run electricity from Canada through Oneida County. Concerned citizens feared the project would increase electricity costs in the area and pose health and safety risks to residents. A grassroots effort formed opposing the plan, and Griffo supported that effort with $50,000 of county money.
New York State Senate In 2006, Griffo ran for the
New York State Senate. Utica Mayor Tim Julian ran against Griffo in the Republican primary for State Senator. While Julian lost the primary, he secured a spot on the Independence Party ticket and continued his campaign. A week before the election, Julian dropped out of the race. Griffo was elected in 2006 to represent the
47th district in the New York State Senate. who instead ran unsuccessfully for Congress that year. Among Griffo's significant legislation was a law that created the website ResultsNY.gov, which allowed residents to monitor how state funds were being used. Griffo voted against same-sex marriage legislation on December 2, 2009. In 2011, Griffo voted against allowing same-sex marriage in New York during a Senate roll-call vote on the Marriage Equality Act, which the Senate passed in a close 33–29 vote. In December 2018, Griffo was appointed deputy minority leader of the State Senate. In January 2019, he was appointed acting minority leader after Minority Leader
John J. Flanagan sought treatment for alcoholism. == Personal life ==