Currently based in Yorktown, NY, Andrew Maniglia has overseen several multifamily developments valued at more than $250mm. As the managing director of Ginsburg Development Companies, LLC, he navigated a complex regulatory environment that has led to considerable success and growth for the company.
Mr. Maniglia has become adept at securing local, state and federal permits and delivering consistent investment results. His experience extends from serving as assistant vice president with Chemical Bank in the 1980s and as a Vice President with marine Midland Bank in the early 1990's. In his role as a Bank Compliance Officer, Mr. Maniglia represented these financial institutions before the Federal Reserve and in the legislative halls of Capitol Hill.
in 1992, Mr. Maniglia was recruited to leave banking and become the first Deputy Mayor of the City of Yonkers. IN his role as Deputy Mayor, Mr. Maniglia held responsibilities was the Chief Fiscal Officer and managed all economic development from 1992 to 1995. He balanced budgets and executed fiscal oversight of the local school district. Ensuring financial probity while generating minimal tax increases, Andrew Maniglia was responsible for upgrading the municipality’s fiscal outlook raising it from Stable to Positive. This accomplishment significantly reducing costs of accessing the capital markets to the City of Yonkers. He also set a template that bore fruit in resolving the challenging, affordable housing desegregation issue and testified before Judge Leonard Sands in the landmark case.
While in his last year of college and while playing in a Club/Show Band (Sounds Unlimited), Mr. Maniglia composed several commercial jingles and arranged numerous more songs for various commercial entities. His greatest success came with the composition of a jingle that was incorporated into a national campaign for a greeting card company in 1979. Andrew Maniglia wears many hats and shares his talents. He most certainly does not bury them in the ground. He continues to compose and arrange on a weekly basis. Most of his compositions are now for the Catholic Church.