Bridgeport, CT — The city is mourning the sudden loss of Robert Kennedy, a Marine Corps veteran and a force in Bridgeport’s public works department for nearly four decades.
Kennedy, 74, died two weeks ago, leaving behind a legacy of grit, loyalty, and no-nonsense leadership.
He started in 1985 as a road maintenance worker, shoveling asphalt and clearing debris.
Over the years, he climbed to supervisor of district operations, overseeing the very streets he once repaired. His name carried weight in city yards, job sites, and offices.
Jorge Garcia, a longtime colleague, saw Kennedy’s influence up close. “He gave everything to Bridgeport,” Garcia said. “People in public works across Connecticut and the East Coast knew his name.”
Kennedy didn’t do politics. He backed the laborers in the trenches, the ones sweating in the heat and freezing in the cold.
He fought to get them what they needed—equipment, support, fair treatment. His presence on a job site meant things got done.
“He believed in the workers,” Garcia said. “And he made sure they had a voice.”
Kennedy never asked for recognition. His work was in the roads, the sidewalks, the flood barriers.
Bridgeport rolled on, in no small part, because of him.