Tag: annual town meeting

  • Tracking Wellesley Select Board’s plan to split town, school budgets

    The Wellesley Select Board recently came to consensus about splitting the school budget from the town’s overall spending plan, ending a decades-long practice of consolidating Wellesley’s municipal finances into a single budget. 

    Town Meeting member Michael Tobin proposed the separation at this past spring’s Annual Town Meeting. “This motion is a necessary step,” he said, “toward responsible governance and fiscal transparency.”  

    While some Town Meeting members look forward to more accessible and digestible information about Wellesley’s budgets when Annual Town Meeting begins on March 3, others in town are wary of possible repercussions. 

    The FY26 school budget is $94,035,026, just over 44% of the town’s overall spending plan.

    Town Meeting members for years have been forced to wait until after all town department and School Committee presentations to debate and vote on the entire budget, a process that can take more than one session.

    The school budget is often presented last. If a department item is an issue, a Town Meeting member would need to recall it and refresh the group’s memory.

    Tobin said a dedicated motion for school finances would help members stay organized and lead to better debates. “I expect and hope we’re gonna have better conversations and debates in Town Meetings,” he said, “It’ll be richer conversation … and I think it’s gonna lead to a better outcome.” 

    Katherine Babson proposed the omnibus budget at Town Meeting in 1986. She initially opposed splitting the budget, but describes herself as “agnostic” about the change. She said she would fight any effort to break down the budget further.

    Before 1986,Town Meeting members reviewed as many as 80 separate articles for individual departments. “It went on forever,” Babson said, and in the end, when the voting body got to the last few articles, no one was listening.  

    School Committee Chair Niki Ofenloch and former chair Linda Chow attempted to safeguard the omnibus budget’s original intent. 

    They argued that the omnibus budget has continued to provide a clear representation of school costs. Chow said the School Committee worked hard to sift through and vet the school system’s 426-page budget.

    “We talk a lot about … ‘One Wellesley’ and wanting to approach things with a whole community focus,” said Ofenloch, “and I think that dividing the motions … siloes the schools from the rest of the town.”

    Chow said splitting the budgets may have severe, unintended consequences when uncertainty around school funding continues to swirl. “What message is the Select Board sending by creating this separation?” she asked. 

    During a Sept. 30 meeting about preparation for the 2027 fiscal year, the board confirmed it would be moving forward with the split. Select Board Chair Marjorie Freiman said Town Meeting members wanted “more clarity on how the [school’s] numbers are derived” and to “fully and fairly reflect the cost of schools.” 

    The change may create logistical problems, Chow said. What would happen, for example, if one budget passes and the other doesn’t?

    “If there’s cuts, for some reason, there’s dates … built into the contract by which we need to notify staff members,” she said. “And if we don’t have a balanced budget by any of those dates … in theory, then we don’t have any money past June 30 by which to pay our staff.” 

    Select Board members presented four options for handling unbalanced budgets: requiring the School Committee to prepare a list of potential cuts, drawing on free cash reserves, voting down the town budget, or overriding it.

    Vice Chair Tom Ulfelder told the board the School Committee needs to actively participate in developing the budget from the beginning.

    Many people don’t understand the “extraordinary complexity of educating children in the public school system in Massachusetts today,” Ulfelder said, so they cannot comprehend why the costs are increasing while enrollment is decreasing. 

    Some members of the community still view school as simply reading, writing, and arithmetic, he said. “It’s not just the requirements under special education,” he said, “but it’s the impact of COVID, it’s the social emotional learning, it’s the impact of so many factors that are affecting these children in their safe and healthy development.”

    Wellesley’s foray into splitting the budgets has attracted attention from other regional elected officials. Natick Select Board Chair Bruce Evans said he’ll be monitoring the change. Most Massachusetts municipalities use combined budgets. 

    Evans said there’s a fine line between information overload and the concise information that people are looking for, and Natick is still finding the balance. “I’ll be curious to see how it plays out,” he said.

    Babson, the architect of the combined budget in Wellesley, suggested the revised approach to finances may make it easier for new Town Meeting members.“Older Town Meeting members have been through it a million times,” she said, “while new Town Meeting members might not know … when to say or how to express their questions.”  

    Transparency in the budgeting process, she said, is a reasonable desire. “Maybe we need to do a better job of educating everybody.”

  • Concord youth drawn to political activism — but not Town Meeting?

    The kids are concerned — but not necessarily about Concord’s municipal budget or what’s next for the decommissioned prison. They’re more worried about issues like climate change and wealth disparities.

    The younger set doesn’t often get involved in local politics or Annual Town Meeting. Some local leaders would like to see that change, but the answer may not be around the corner. 

    Concord and several other municipalities petitioned the state legislature to allow them to decide whether 16- and 17-year-olds could vote on certain local issues. 

    That measure failed last year.

    And Concord-Carlisle High School students say they’re more focused on national and global issues — and there’s little time in their packed schedules to get involved in those local politics.

    “I feel like it’s less about making a change rather than just, like, being like a citizen,” CCHS student Sadie Kokoszka told The Concord Bridge.

    She participates in four politically focused clubs at CCHS: Junior State of America, History Reading Group, Rho Kappa, and Model UN. During club meetings, students discuss sweeping, perhaps existential issues that may range from indigenous land rights to climate change. 

    Kokoszka, who has lived in both Concord and Carlisle, said that compared to topics such as local recycling policies, national issues can just feel more pressing. 

    Reaching out?

    Julie Leary, 16, said Town Meeting can seem daunting to students like her.

    “It feels like they don’t really want the kids there,” Leary said. “They’re like, ‘You can go if you want,’ but like, they’re not going to make an effort [to] reach out and bring us in.”

    Leary belongs to Junior State of America, History Reading Group, Kappa and Moot Court. Despite all that, she can feel intimidated by local politics.

    “I just… don’t really know how to get into the town politics,” Leary said. “I feel like it’s more geared towards adults — especially in Concord.”

    Overall, Americans’ views on politics are bleak, with nearly 65% of Americans saying they feel exhausted when thinking about politics according to a 2023 Pew Research Center study. Only 10% said they feel hopeful.

    CCHS student Elise McMurrow belongs to Rho Kappa, Moot Court, History Reading Group, and Innocence Club, which raises money for people who are wrongfully incarcerated. 

    She’d like to work in the community at some point — yet hyperlocal matters pale compared to national and world issues.

    “When you look at all the issues that are facing our country and the world right now, it just seems a little bit less, you know, pressing,” McMurrow said. “I don’t want to speak for everyone, but it feels almost like it isn’t necessary for us to get involved.”

    Votes that matter

    As Concord ponders ways to make its brand of self-governance more accessible, Town Moderator Carmin Reiss said there’s been a strong desire to find ways to include younger people in the Town Meeting process. 

    “Their vote would make a difference,” she said.

    The Massachusetts Moderators Association provides educational materials so schools can conduct mock Town Meetings and follow articles through local government. However, there wasn’t much interest in adding more to the students’ curriculum, Reiss said.

    “When I was first elected, I looked up one of the history teachers at the … high school and went and met with him and asked, ‘Well, can we do something here?’” Reiss said. “Everything was so packed already that there wasn’t a lot of interest in adding more.”

    While Reiss allows that not everything discussed at Town Meeting is “scintillating,” she also believes it’s the nation’s purest form of direct democracy.

    “There is a lot of self determination that we have an ability to make happen through our Town Meeting, and you often think it’s people at their best, really thinking about things and offering their points of view, and they don’t always agree,” Reiss said.

    “And a result comes out of it, and it’s a peaceful result, which is a wonderful thing about democracy when it works.”