BOS dedicating Thursday night to budget: 6.37% tax increase recommended to board; several groups asking for increased funding (Updated-again)

Above: The Town’s Admin and Finance team is presenting it’s recommended budget to selectmen tomorrow night. (excerpt cropped from packet)

With Annual Town Meeting slated to open earlier than in past years, Town officials need to finalize budgets soon. As I previously posted, the Board of Selectmen carved out this Thursday night to focus on fiscal issues.

The Admin and Finance team will present it’s budget recommendation. The meeting packet previews a budget projected to increase the tax rate by 6.37%. That is estimated as an average residential household increase of $645.23.

Only 3.15% of that is due to new operational/capital expense increases. The rest is for “debt service”, with 2.62% attributed to the new Public Safety Building project.

Reaching that budget required saying no to a lot of budget requests. To avoid going in circles, the board asked to have all the facts and arguments that night. Any departments or committees with objections to their budgets were to make them known more than two days in advance. Based on the agenda and packet posted yesterday, there were quite a few.

Several committees and two departments are apparently pushing back on the team’s denial of $168,810 in additional spending. The team’s presentation states “Each additional $50,000 in funding is equivalent to: $12.19 or .12%”.

Following the budget presentation, selectmen will hear five presentations to consider more funding. Below, I listed those departments and related discrepancies:

  • Historical Commission ($500 – $1,000* for operating budget – based on needs for managing the preservation restriction and the demolition delay bylaw)
  • Municipal Technology Committee ($5,000 for an operating budget – MTC has no budget and argues one is needed to save the Town more than that amount through improved efficiencies)
  • Open Space Preservation Commission ($1,500 to double its operating budget)**
  • Police Department ($48,764 for a 2nd new police cruiser under Capital Expenses)
  • Southborough Youth & Family Services ($36,046 for additional staffing hours)

[Editor’s Note: A presentation by the Economic Development Committee was added in a revised agenda released on the morning of January 10th.]***

The budget also lists discrepancies with boards not listed as presenting tomorrow night:

  • Advisory Committee ($500 for an additional .4% increase for its operating budget,** plus another $70,000 discrepancy for the Reserve Fund is likely addressing a recommendation by Advisory)
  • Planning Board ($6,000 for an additional 3.94% increase for its operating budget)**

It is possible that selectmen may question representatives of those boards attending. (It looks like if anyone is attending for either committee, it won’t be a quorum. No agendas are posted.****)

Department heads not listed were also asked to attend, in case selectmen have questions. 

At last week’s meeting, Town Administrator Mark Purple reiterated that departments and committees requests are reasonable. Taken individually, each one has a case to make for a bigger budget. But putting all the requests together, the asks are too much. (You can read more about the Town’s financial challenges this year in my previous post on the issues here.)

The presentation clarifies that some figures are still potentially in flux. There may be updates for the regional schools, Assabet technical school and the Retirement Assessment.

You can preview the budget presentation and the email communications about objections in the meeting packet here. (It includes a preview of SYFS’ formal presentation they will be making to the board.)

Following the presentations, selectmen will discuss their recommendation on the numbers. The board may not decide on final numbers this week.

Selectmen intend to schedule a follow up meeting with the Advisory Committee. Advisory will have it’s own positions on the budget to share with voters at Town Meeting. If opinions differ, they’ll likely try to hash out compromises in advance. (The officials are willing to go to voters with differing positions. But they prefer to have a united front when possible.)

Of course, even if selectmen and Advisory agree on the budget, the final outcome is determined by voters.

2019 Annual Town MeetingResidents aren’t invited to comment tonight. But there will be a chance to comment on spending, vote up or down, and even make motions to amend the figures on Town Meeting floor. So, save the date. Annual Town Meeting opens on Saturday, March 23 at 1:00 pm.

*The budget presentation listed a $1,000 discrepancy with the Historical Commission. The recommended budget calls for cutting $1,000 from their current funding level. An email from Chair Joe Hubley states “I’d be able to get bye with a $500 cut.”

**The presentation doesn’t indicate if the budget cuts OSPC, Advisory, or the Planning Board were intended to represent cutting any specific items or just keeping down their overall budget increases. (The packet does include an email outlining Planning’s budget. The others weren’t detailed in the packet.)

***Updated (1/10/19 11:10 am): This morning a revised agenda added a budget presentation by the EDC. You can read more about that in a dedicated post.

****Updated (1/10/19 1:55 pm): I have to add another update. This time it’s to correct my error in sloppy reporting. I wrote that Planning posted an agenda saying it would be there. I don’t know what I misread or misrecalled – but that isn’t the case. Planning’s next meeting is 1/28/19. There is no agenda for them to be at tonight’s meeting. (Though, one member may attend without posting an agenda.)

Updated (1/15/19 8:51 am): After hearing from Historical’s Treasurer Kate Battles, I realized my original wording above was probably misleading. It didn’t clarify that Historical was seeking to reduce the cut being made to its current funding level.

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arborist
5 years ago

WOW, where did this come from, My yearly tax bill is coming closer and closer to my yearly income, give us a brake on this unnecessary spending please. What has happened to our town?

Richard Hertz
5 years ago

Excuse me, a 6.37 percent tax hike, resulting in an average household tax bill increase of $654.23?

Are these people kidding? Apparently, they have complately lost their grip on reality while plotting to tighten their grip on our wallets. Good thing the town election is just four months away.

Matthew Brownell
5 years ago

A 6.37% tax increase??

Question –

Where are the adults on the Board of Selectmen and Adisory Committee who have the backbone to invoke the word “NO!” to spiraling funding demands for non-essential budget line items?

More ,ridiculous is the Board Of Selectmen’s ask of Mr. Ballantine – to embark on a multi-week Excel crunch and “what if” impact scenario- with assumed budget increases of 5%, (choke), 6% (huh?), and 7% ( please send a pallet of anti-psychotics to this year’s Annual Town Meeting)

A 5, 6, or 7% budget increase ? These are the lame and contrived budget parameters set before us by our Town leaders – many of whom have been avoiding tough choices for years.

Keeping my fingers crossed for the appearance of several hundreds of aggravated and curious Southborough taxpayers , who will summarily shout out “HOLD” at the Town Meeting on any department, commission, or project budget line item that is more than 3.5% higher than last year.

Concerned Voter
5 years ago

Could not agree with you more on your observation:
“More ridiculous is the Board of Selectmen’s ask of Mr. Ballentine — to embark on a mult-week Excel crunch and “what if” impact scenario- with assumed budget increases of 5%, (choke), 6% (huh?), and 7% ( please send a pallet of anti-psychotics to this year’s Annual Town Meeting). . . .A 5, 6, or 7% budget increase ? These are the lame and contrived budget parameters set before us by our Town leaders — many of whom have been avoiding tough choices for years. . .”

Exactly right, which has what has placed the taxpayers into this boat in the first place. . . avoiding tough choices, combined with perhaps budgetary mismanagement? How does this dire situation even be allowed to happen? Overspending has to stop. Better and tougher budgetary decisions must be made. The voters must get familiar with this budget fast and push hard for common sense measures.

M
5 years ago

WOW is right! Fair warning to every board and facet of Town Government: Get this down to a reasonable percentage or expect EVERY item on the budget to be argued at Town Meeting. I can see the wheels turning now with every special interest group.

Neil Rossen
5 years ago

Correct me if I’m wrong, but do school costs rise while there are fewer students?

Townie
5 years ago

Southborough schools, who’s budget is by far the biggest, couldn’t cut a penny? That’s ridiculous. Why is the BOS not coming down on them to help with cuts?

n
5 years ago
Reply to  Townie

Schools increased 0.9% from FY19. They are not the problem. Look at slide 8 of the BOS package.

Mom24
5 years ago
Reply to  n

The schools are the problem. They should be cutting and they are not. If you had any idea of the spending that goes on to spend down the budget at the end of the year, it would make you sick. Johnson believes she should be able to spend freely and does. Does anybody even look at the school budgets or does school committee just give her carte blache? Does Advisory or the BOS? They could easily lower the budget and stop gouging us with unnecessary spending but they refuse. Time to wake up people. The schools are killing us. Although we have to fund them and we want our kids to have a great education, we don’t have to go broke doing it. I have kids in the elementary schools and want them to have a good education but sometimes the word is “no”. It is time for some fiscal responsibility in the schools and it starts with the Superintendent. Sad that she is too entitled to admit it.

Townie
5 years ago
Reply to  n

N, you’re right. 0.9%. Most of that was school debt, which we should have seen a decrease in the budget. The school budget has a 2.9% increase for next year. Schools have always been the problem when it comes to frivolous spending. Student enrollment has been on a steady decrease, but we’re still dumping money into schools. The BOS needs to grow a set and tell the schools to restructure. Close Neary and reconsolidate resources.

Frank Crowell
5 years ago
Reply to  n

Let’s see if I’m reading slide 8 correctly……………the schools debt is down almost 40%. I wonder if that’s the reason the total increase is only 0.9%………no that can’t be right… I’ll do some more reading……..oh look at this a $329,000 increase in benefits…….and that would be a 7.5% increase.

Nope, nothing to cut in that school budget. I’m sure it’s a “bare bones” budget. Per student expense cannot be cut even if it’s $2000 more per student than neighboring towns.

School population decrease for over ten years – nope no savings to be had there either. And no change for foreseeable future since another superintendent has been found from within (how lucky could we get). It’s a teacher’s union and school admin paradise.

Matthew Brownell
5 years ago
Reply to  Frank Crowell

Frank ,

Spot- on.

Teacher’s Union graft in Southborough ?? !! Say it ain’t so!!!

Kind of reminds me of our imploding heath care system. . . where, of all tax dollars spent on medical service delivery, only 20% is spent on direct patient care. The rest? Bloated “Administration” and paper pushing.

Kelly Roney
5 years ago

The private sector is where the bureaucratic bloat is in the US healthcare system – insurance companies trying to deny valid claims to keep more of the money we all pay for coverage. Your 20% patient care number is completely false.

how_many?
5 years ago
Reply to  Frank Crowell

Look at ARHS – one (1) principal and three (3) ‘assistant’ principals!!!

THREE?!?! How about ONE!

Ridiculous…

A full year’s salary for a maybe 10 month per year job. As they say, “nice work if you can get it…”

Robbery.

southsider
5 years ago
Reply to  how_many?

Hopkinton has two Assistant Principals for 1175 students.
Algonquin has three for 1425 students.
Shrewsbury has four for 1800 students.

I stopped my research after that

Kelly Roney
5 years ago
Reply to  how_many?

I believe those specific people you’re accusing of criminality already work 12-month contracts. My mother did when she was an elementary school principal.

Downtown Resident
5 years ago
Reply to  Townie

My question regarding schools is why do we pay so much to Assabet Valley? There is generally less than a dozen Southborough students attending that school but our budget is $367,672 and they are asking for a 3% increase. Our we required to pay a minimum amount to Assabet?

arborist
5 years ago

How many town department heads live in another town? If they lived in southboro they would think twice before they asked the voters to spend beyond their means. It is easy to ask for huge amounts of money and not to have to foot the bill. sure everyone wants the best for their program or department I understand that, but where does it stop.? The town has to live within their means just like us homeowners/land owners.

n
5 years ago

Questions that I hope are addressed at tonight’s BOS meeting….

Slide 8 – What would a FY2021 forecast column reflect?
• Town staff indicated at the December BOS meetings that FY2021 is going to be as, or more difficult.
• Why not share a best estimate for FY2021? THIS is critical. Please show us what you know and /or can reasonably expect.

Slide 8 – Other available revenue decreases 38.9% from $3,389,405 to $2,071,185.
• What is this?
• Why has it decreased?
• Was the BOS & TA aware of this and if they were, how did they take it into consideration over the past year?

Slide 8 – Total schools increased $374,822 (1.1%?) from $35,373,784 to $35,748,606.
• How much did the overall regional budget increase?
• How did the allocation percentage between Northborough and Southborough change from FY 2019 to FY 2020?
• Are we are benefiting from a lower percentage of students in the regional system?

Slide 11 – fire department increasing from $2,156,758 to $2,163,324.
• Does this include the additional compensation for the new chief?
• Does it include any new employees (assistant or deputy chief)?

n
5 years ago

• Are we are benefiting from a lower percentage of students in the regional system?

Clarification: a lower percentage of students as compared to FY 2019?

Beth – in regards to the “other revenue” question:

A $1.3 million reduction in state reimbursements from the state is more than a bit material at 2.5% of our FY2019 total expenditures of $53.647 million.

How does the impact of something like that get overlooked? Years of visibility into when the reimbursements get reduced and we failed to plan for it?

FWIW, I do not know if the impact is due to the SBAB grant or not (suspect it is, and not arguing with you).

Kelly Roney
5 years ago

Am I reading this right? An operating budget increase at the rate of inflation, plus new capital expenses, more than 80% of which is the public safety building – is that the size of it?

Not to minimize this since it is real pain in the pocketbook, and it would still be good to look for chances to cut the budget, but it doesn’t look as though it’s anything we haven’t repeatedly voted for.

Matthew Brownell
5 years ago
Reply to  Kelly Roney

Kelly Roney-

I didn’ vote for a $26 million Public Safety building.

And I’ll wager that fewer than than 20% of Southborough’s eligible voters did.

While Southborough police , firefighters and EMT’s definitely deserve better digs than what they currently have, I ask again – what did the BOS specifically do to ensure a competitive bidding process for the new Public Safety building?

Can’t help but recollect a hilarious episode of “Family Guy”, where Mayor West of the fictitious town “Quohog” makes an impetuous decision to use taxpayer monies to erect a 20-ft, gold-plated statue of “Dig-‘Em”, the Sugar Smacks Frog – on the village square.

Kelly Roney
5 years ago

That ship has sailed, Matt.

Whether you skipped Town Meeting or voted against, 90% of the voters who attended voted in favor, and it passed a capital override vote at the polls. That’s how we decide what to do.

Complaining after that is sour grapes.

Matthew Brownell
5 years ago
Reply to  Kelly Roney

Kelly Roney-

Sour Grapes?

Just tired of working each year from January 1st to roughly July 1st , before I realize the first dime of my income.

So much the decades – old myth of New England frugality .

BTW- usually I hear the most frequent Tax & Spend war drums in Southborough people who live in an apartment and pay no property taxes.

It’s easy and exceeding cheap to promote the spending of other people’s money, when the advocate has no skin or equity in the game, and is not a stakeholder in paying the resulting bills.

Having attended many Southborough Annual Town Meeting over the last 20 years, it is very much a stretch to spin the narrative that the decisions made in this anachronistic throwback to scrimshaw, oil lamps, and the Town Criers is in any way representative majority local opinion or desired direction for the Town.

Kelly Roney
5 years ago

Did you google my living arrangements or find out some other way? Enjoy yourself and your veiled ad hominem attacks. I guess you want to go back to the days when only property owners could vote. Of course, the reality is that my landlord figures property taxes into my rent, while your bank (I’m guessing here) probably figures your property taxes into your escrow, and the difference in how the money gets to the town is inconsequential, which is so obvious you really should understand it. (I did own property in Southborough for nearly 30 years, if that helps you get over your misconceptions about whether I’m a taxpayer, but my comments would be legitimate even if I’d always rented.)

The claim you make that your total tax rate is 50% is something you could prove – if it’s true, which I seriously doubt. I could then recommend tax professionals to you to help reduce your burden legally.

Unfortunately, there’s no escape for you from state and local taxes similar to those you face now, since the fact is that Massachusetts is in the middle of the pack of other states. Even the lowest tax state wouldn’t save you very much in taxes. Too bad about that. It would be great if it were all free!

Maybe it is time for Town Meeting be a memory, but that has to pass Town Meeting first. Have fun with your petition. Though you don’t seem to be a fan of our elected boards either… Enjoy your campaign!

And, still, the public safety building passed at the polls, not only at Town Meeting. Next maybe you’ll say that elections aren’t representative either. How are we going to get more people to vote? Increasing turnout could be something we agree on, as long as you’re not trying to deprive me of the vote.

southsider
5 years ago

we asked for much of this when we ok’d that colossal Public Safety building complete with a solar paneled parking area for 19 vehicles even tho we only own 12…. $300k or more just for the parking canopy is the latest estimate, if I recall correctly.

as for revenue increases… is it FINALLY time when we’ll realize the need for split tax rates??

Concerned Voter
5 years ago
Reply to  southsider

Exactly. And the parking “add-on” was after the fact. It was a no bid situation after that committee made a claim of “no bidders.” One commenter on this blog came up with literally scores of examples of how other municipalities managed to get this done at less cost (and in one case, free). Maybe Beth can post the link to that comment, as it serves as a good reminder. The galling part of paying for the colossal project, outsized in every way including the gym, is the 19 vehicle parking when there are only 12 vehicles. (After watching Chronicle’s report on the Chelsea police, it seems that most other communities do not provide these types of accommodations.) This implies the town is paying for MORE vehicles and MORE salaried persons to sit in those vehicles including pensions. The seniors in this town can barely afford existing past tax bills, food, cost of living. Talk about insensitivities. The time for split tax rate is now.

southsider
5 years ago

thanks for the support. As for the garage, I think the extravagance gets even more pronounced when you consider that it would be an extreme rarity when all vehicles are at the Police Station. After all, shouldn’t several of them ( at least ) be patrolling our streets?

Matthew
5 years ago
Reply to  southsider

You would be surprised at the number of parked cruisers that are at the station at any given time. Stop in yourself and see. There are always cruisers in the lot, sometimes you see one left running outside for periods of time.
By the way…we need another one.

HonestAbespeaks@gmail.com
5 years ago
Reply to  Matthew

The police may want a new cruiser.The police can go without the shiny new car for another year. The police and Boards here wanted a multi million dollar building that could virtually house every New York City Police precinct with room left over. A practical building, with great thought and respect for the tax payers and their money. Thank you Boards.
Now after The “TAJ” has become a reality and a testament to all things unnecessary, overdone, and frivolous, here’s some other police/fire new builds/renovated builds that you should read. Norfolk, Ma. $12.2 million, population 11,000. Buffalo, N.Y., certainly can’t compare to us, 258,00 population ,spending $6.2 million to renovate an existing building, and finally Raymond, N.H. 10,000 population, spending $7.8 million. Raymond N.H. must be using our contractors and our boards. Just a little sampling to make you question…..Kaching, kaching. The Southborough police chief stated BOS meeting, our cruisers were “decrepit” Make due chief.. You should see and hear my car. The chief also stated that he wouldn’t use personal cars for details, because of liability. Excuse me. A cruiser sitting on the side of the road is safer than a car sitting on the side of the road, just sitting. Who comes up with these ridiculous ideas. Use what you must. REPAIR and rotate where you MUST. Enough is enough. In other states police details don’t exist. This became a sweet deal for police in Ma. Stand around while road construction is going on. I’m NOT anti police for sure. Just anti town and police wasteful spending.

HonestAbespeaks@gmail.com
5 years ago
Reply to  Beth Melo

Beth, I am comparing equal size and not so equal size towns and pointing out that those other towns USE fiscal constraint, when considering municipal facilities, have a keen interest and respect for the citizens wallets, realize that overbuilding brings many hardships to the taxpayers i.e.elderly, those on fixed incomes. A new cruiser is great, but for $40 k, rehab, rotate, and hold.

HonestAbespeaks@gmail.com
5 years ago
Reply to  Beth Melo

Correction. The police cruiser is $48, 000.

Townie
5 years ago

HonestAbespeaks, I can’t help but notice that your posts are written awfully like a couple other posters on here. All with the same negativity and sourness towards the BOS, the “TAJ”, and every penny that is spent in town.

HonestAbespeaks@gmail.com
5 years ago
Reply to  Townie

Perhaps, negative, angry, sour. Don’t want my hard earned money (as yours is) taken from me by overspending, careless, wasteful folks. You’ll see soon enough my pretty, when you blow your lid at your tax bill. How about an extra $90,000.00 for epoxy flooring for the “Taj”. Not figured into the budget. You OK with that. Not me. How about an extra $10,000.00 for a TOP OF THE LINE printer, scanner, copier. Gee, we simply must have TOP OF THE LINE. (she said that) suggested by Cathy Cook at Building Committee Meeting Jan. 14, 2019. More added expenses. Showers, equipment lockers. Is this extra also, over the budget.
This isn’t sound government. This is a shame.
Citizen Abe

Kelly Roney
5 years ago
Reply to  Townie

Showers and equipment lockers!? The galling nerve of such a budget request!

LOL.

Matthew Brownell
5 years ago

Concerned Voter –

Interesting post about the new Public Safety building.

I’m far from an expert in construction estimates, but a $26 million price tag seems crazy to me for a ~40,000 square foot building holding approx 130 public employees. . . . especially when you consider that a few years ago, Northborough and Southborough spent about $57 million to renovate an entire Regional High School, serving 2,000 students and a couple hundred employees.

My curiosity on this increased when
– over the Holidays, I had an after hours conversation with a co-worker , who was a former Selectman for the Town of Merrimac, MA. . . a town with 2500 or so fewer people than Southborough .

Merrimac also was in need of a new Public Safety building.
ironically, the initial price tag came out to $26 million, which the voters flatly rejected.
after several more months and rounds of competitive bidding, negotiations and Come-to-Jesus meetings with Merrimac residents and the Town, pencils were sharpened down to somewhere in the $17 million neighborhood.

Perhaps my co-worker is full of it, or has a faulty recollection of facts. But it DID get me thinking on what exactly Southborough’s BOS did to aggressively ensure a competitive bidding environment for a building that ended beyond the pale on expenses to taxpayers.

southsider
5 years ago

Not trying to pour gasoline on your fire, Matt, but I think that this building is meant to serve ONLY the Police and Fire Departments. I suspect there’ll never be more than 20 or so employees in it at any one time…. nowhere close to the 130 you mention in your comment.

Frank Crowell
5 years ago
Reply to  southsider

If there is room for 130 people and not all of it being used, how about moving the school admin office there? This would make Neary less worthy of keeping. Reconfigure the schools, domolish Neary and we now have more open space for future use.

Publius
5 years ago

Merrimac has not build anything yet. And now the proposals are even higher per square foot. The cost of construction has risen greatly in the past 4 or 5 years with all the construction happening it seems everywhere in the country not to mention the tariff talk.
https://www.newburyportnews.com/news/local_news/merrimac-residents-urged-to-attend-police-station-forum/article_50191a2b-9996-570b-b0cb-2fcbd774a977.html

Dan Bradley
5 years ago

Glad I got out of town when I did in fact we moved out of Tax A Two Sh*ts all together. Any place in North America is cheaper than the Norteast.

Kelly Roney
5 years ago
Reply to  Dan Bradley

Good luck to ya, Dan. Despite trying this fruitlessly in the past, I’ll provide some facts.

Massachusetts is expensive, no doubt. It’s also a high income state. My priority to make Massachusetts better and less expensive would be to make it easier to build middle class housing by relaxing overly restrictive zoning laws.

How does our state and local tax burden stack up against the other states in America? Depends who you ask, probably due to varying methodologies, but we are no longer Taxachusetts (the usual gibe that wasn’t ugly enough for you).

A few links for people who are open to facts:
https://taxfoundation.org/publications/state-local-tax-burden-rankings/ – Mass. is 12th in 2012, with 10.3% of income as taxes and a national average of 9.8%
https://money.cnn.com/pf/features/lists/total_taxes/total.html – Mass. is 40th in 2002, with 9.59% of income paid in all state and local taxes
https://wallethub.com/edu/states-with-highest-lowest-tax-burden/20494/ (who’s this?) – Mass. is 18th in 2018 (allegedly, but I doubt they could have good number in April) with 9.03%

Carl Guyer
5 years ago

Well, this is what happens when you only think about spending and don’t pay attention to how you can improve your income. Is it a surprise to anyone that you can afford a lot more when you make more? We ask the residential taxpayers to pay a tax rate more then what is paid on 80% of the residential property in the state and then think giving our commercial property tax payers the benefit of only paying more than 25% of their competitors. Add in the high property values here in Southborough and annual tax bills are within the top 30 of the 351 communities in the state. Trying to maintain a subsidy like this can only cause financial heartache for residents.

It was again this year the BOS was treated to a fantasy by the Board of Assessors and their recommendation that a single tax rate is the best tax policy model for the residents of Southborough. Right behind them is our Economic Development Committee championing the fear of change and a misguided belief that a community with relatively high residential property values needs more commercial and industrial development as a means for lowering tax rates.

The Massachusetts Department of Revenue, with it’s online demographic tax data, has ended the time when could not know what other communities do in regard to tax policy. The Genie is out of the bottle, and fumbling along in ignorance or being lead by those working on a belief or agenda is no longer viable.

NEIL ROSSEN
5 years ago

The bottom line is this. Those who want the boondoggles (like lighting playing fields for the few) and excessive allocations to the schools show up at Town Meeting and vote for it. The rot started years ago with the schools annual increases with reductions in students. Take look at salaries. Our selectmen are in interminable meetings and should be thanked. But the miss the forest for the trees. See how much time is spent on trivial stuff. We don’t really have an effective Town Manager with any teeth. It will get worse. Believe me.

Publius
5 years ago

Asland looking at $30 million for similar size building. Construction is expensive. Residents demand a safe community with good schools this costs money. Lets be honest some folks may be better off moving. And there is no fiscal bullet. Some have floated dual rate. Dual rate is short sighted. Long term big business gets tax breaks called TIF and DIF and the little pizza shop or auto shop get stuck paying. See Framingham and Worcester for examples. Services cost money.

Carl Guyer
5 years ago
Reply to  Publius

I am assuming you are expressing an opinion here. The fact is that residential tax payers in split rate communities pay a lower average tax rate than those in single rate communities. Just as another reminder, 78% of the commercial and industrial property resides in split rate communities and amazingly they comprise only 30% of the states 351 communities. That is a 10 fold higher density than exists in single rate communities. By the way, I have the data for Framingham and Worcester and you would be surprised by what is happening there.

SB Resident
5 years ago
Reply to  Publius

First, Ashland has almost twice the number of households as us, but second and more importantly from MWDN, “The majority of the project’s cost – …- will be paid for through a $25 million state grant allocated from a $3.9 billion bond bill signed by Gov. Charlie Baker in July. Town officials have said that the typical homeowner can expect to see a $30 increase in their tax bills to cover the debt exclusion.” I’d gladly overspend on a project if it was mostly free too! Not one person would be complaining here if we were in their position. How’d they get money for this and we got nothing. PS- No one here is saying construction isn’t expensive, we are complaining that we bought the Bentley when a Toyota would do.

Arborist
5 years ago

Has any town official looked into a state grant to help pay for another police vehicle? Given the amount of ware and tare that southboro’s police vehicles get on rt 9 it would only make sense. after reading the police log on this site there seems to be some sort of a justification, seeing RT,9 is a state highway the state should do something in return.

Publius
5 years ago

Every town has a small percentage of the population who are opposed to anything but bares bones spending. Typically the subject of the opposition is the schools and usually it is because this small percentage no longer have school age children. And there is a typically much smaller percentage who would spend without limit. Most of us are in the middle. Southborough is a wonderful town and to maintain what makes Southborough special requires spending on services. Rehashing the public safety building after it has been fully vetted is just a sign of sour grapes. Offering real solutions is hard. Venting on a blog is easy.

Downtown Resident
5 years ago
Reply to  Publius

Yes, Southborough is a wonderful town. Recently, as I was driving over one of our causeways at dusk, my 17y old son said, “it’s just so pretty.” How fortunate we are to live in a pretty, peaceful and safe town.

Kelly Roney
5 years ago
Reply to  Publius

Well said, Publius.

And if public comment is the same naysayers saying no over and over again forever, they’re blocking the chance the rest of us should have to give our opinions to town boards.

SB Resident
5 years ago
Reply to  Publius

I disagree. I don’t think all the people that are upset are only the people that oppose everything. We are building what is the most expensive public safety complex in the state. Our town isn’t anywhere near big enough to have that honor and it demonstrates that your small percentage that would spend without limit are the ones in charge. It is not sour grapes, it’s sadness and anger that the real solutions we must now make are to lose out on other services as a result of that overspending.

Concerned Voter
5 years ago
Reply to  Beth Melo

Beth,
The total cost for any type of construction project of a new development is land plus building.

Also, there are many towns that have built projects like this for much less, Acton being one. So for those who point to more expensive projects, there are many more that are less expensive. Just a point of balance and fairness. Thanks

NEIL ROSSEN
5 years ago

So easy to be generous with other people’s money. Fun too. This will continue unless we go to TM and VOTE.

Kelly Roney
5 years ago
Reply to  NEIL ROSSEN

You’re only promised taxation with representation, not the zero taxation you want. In this case, you’re your own representation. If you haven’t shown up, it’s your own fault.

It’s our money, too.

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