Tuesday, June 16, 2015


BOARD OF SELECTMEN

APRIL 13, 2015

Page 1 of 6


APPROVED

Attendance:  First Selectwoman Derrylyn Gorski, Selectman Donald Shea, Selectwoman Magda

Visitors:  Larry Eisner, Ann Eisner, Fran Doba, Ruth MacDonnell, Barry Collins, Sally Huyser, Bruce Loomis, Nancy Spagnola, David Forman, Nick Poulmas, Bart Piccarelli, Art Slicer,  Clark Hurlburt, Steve Worth, Todd Ryker,  Attorney Kevin McSherry, Melissa Spear, Jean Swanson, Amy Arnsten, Margaret Foley, Rob White, Cate Horton, Stu Horton, Mary Schurtleff, Elsa Worth, Sue Hurlburt, Frank Pfeiffer,  Eileen Ede, Sheila Wade, Pua Ford,  Kathryn Sylvester, Nancy Spagnola, Linda Saffrin,  Lynette White, Peg Foley, Paulette Clinton, Mena Argentari, Ruth Beardsley, Gail Sweet

APPROVAL OF MINUTES

First Selectwoman Gorski called for a motion of approval for the minutes of the special meeting of April 6, 2015.  The motion was moved by Selectwoman Magda and seconded by Selectman Shea.  The vote was called.  The minutes were approved on a unanimous vote by the Selectmen

First Selectwoman Gorski called for a motion of approval for the minutes of the meeting of March 23, 2015.  The motion of approval was moved by Selectwoman Magda and seconded by Selectman Shea.  Selectwoman Magda moved to put quotations around the question asked by Selectman Shea about the RFP for Solid Waste.  The vote was unanimous for approval.

BUDGET UPDATE

First Selectwoman Gorski went over the draft of the budget with the other Selectmen.  The budget is up 3.6% due mostly to Amity School budget, Resident Trooper Program and repair of roads, to try and make up for the cuts of last year. 

CONSERVATION COMMISSION

Bruce Loomis spoke to the Board of Selectmen regarding contributions not being made in a timely fashion to the Land Acquisition Fund by the Town Treasurer. 

Bruce indicated to the Board of Selectmen how disappointed he is with Selectman Shea and Selectwoman Magda for voting last year to bring the budget to referendum, when there was only 8% of the budget that could be changed.  The changes were to cut the road budget and the Land Acquisition Fund to reduce the budget.  The balance of the budget is fixed and cannot be changed.  The question was raised about the cost of holding a referendum.  The cost for two referendums was approximately $6,000.  The suggestion was made to put more effort and dollars into getting people out to attend Town Meeting (which seemed to be the consensus of those present), rather than a referendum where you can vote only yes or no.  The budget can be adjusted down at Town Meeting, that way you would know what the people would like to cut, rather than the Board of Finance doing it.  Selectman Shea and Selectwoman Magda were asked why they supported a referendum.  They indicated that it allowed more people to vote because of the small attendance at a Town meeting. Bruce had the numbers that indicated there was not a large turnout voting at referendum either. 

April 13, 2015

 

Bethany Board of Selectman

Bethany Town Hall

40 Peck Road

Bethany, Ct. 06524

Dear Selectperson Gorski, Magda and Shea,

 

Subjects: Land Acquisition Fund (LAF) and Budget Referendum

 

Land Acquisition Fund balance

 

In preparing for the March 26, 2015 Special Town Meeting regarding using the LAF to partially fund the purchase of the Carrington Preserve to be ready for the inevitable question of “How much is in the fund?” I found that the actual LAF balance is not what it should be and would like to ask that my information be verified and, if correct, be rectified.

 

For fiscal 2013-2014 I find that there appears to never have been a contribution made even though the approved budget called for a $25,000 contribution.  Also, according to the auditor’s report money should have been deducted (presumably for the appraisals) and was not. 

 

Fiscal 2013-14 should be a “done deal” and these transaction should not be hanging incomplete.  I would like to ask that the facts be checked and if I am correct that immediate action be taken to rectify the error or oversight.

 

Additionally, I found that the $25,000 contribution for fiscal 2014-15 has not yet been made.  Admittedly the fiscal year is not over so there is still time.  On this item I would ask that the fact be verified, and if correct that a time table be obtained for the contribution and then followed up to be sure the money is in place by the end of fiscal 2014-15.

 

The auditor’s report for 2013-14 does not agree with the account balance and the above appears to be the reason.  The only changes in value of the fund that I could find were because of the monthly interest earned.  Otherwise the fund is virtually unchanged for the past 2 (two) years.

 

Budget Referendum

 

Last year the Board of Finance listened to residents at the Annual Budget Hearing and increased the LAF contribution from $25,000 to $100,000.  Subsequently the budget was moved from the Annual Town Meeting to a referendum without an exit poll.  The budget was then voted down and the BOF was left scratching their heads with no idea why it was rejected.  The two biggest cuts they made were the LAF (75%) and the road repair budget even though these may or may not have been cause for the negative vote.

 

The Town had the expense of 2 (two) referendum votes and an extra town meeting and never learned why the negative vote or whether the changes really made the vote change.

In my view this is irresponsible and a waste of money.  We need to know why so the BOF can make responsible changes based on actual public opinion. 

 

I thought last years budget was very responsible and I feel that many who voted did not understand how much of the budget is “locked in” and cannot be changed and which items make up that majority portion of the budget.

 

While I do not agree with moving the budget to referendum (last year only 18% voted in the 1st referendum (11.5% voted no) and only 10% voted in the 2nd) I do understand that it is a legal option. My first preference is not to go to referendum and let the Town Meeting vote and decides the budget.  The people who attend the meeting are the interested and informed voters.  If we are to have a referendum PLEASE HAVE AN EXIT POLL!!!!  Let us not make the same costly, irresponsible mistake as last year and have a straight yes/no vote and walk away not knowing why there is a rejection and again leave the BOF not knowing the proper areas to address. It is not fair to the BOF and does not properly serve the residents of Bethany and their best interests.

 

There are important issues that people may not and probably do not fully understand when they go to the polls and vote in a “yes/no” budget referendum:

1)      Over 90% of the budget is locked in items and essential services that are absolutely necessary and cannot be reduced.

2)      Even after approval the budget can be reduced at the subsequent Town Meeting by voting to reject or reduce certain capital line items.

3)      By rejecting the budget they may not get a reduction in the item(s) that they feel are too high. 

 

One of the first cuts they will make with no direction will again be the Land Acquisition Fund.

 

Our Town Budget is not the budget of one person.  It is laboriously crafted over a long time by a bi-partisan group of involved citizens with budget experience and then fine tuned by this dedicated group after meetings and input from the citizens who are interested and go to the Budget Hearing followed by the Budget Hearing.  It is only then that the budget is finalized and presented to our “Legislative Body”, the Town Meeting.

 

The end result will better serve all town residents if the budget is voted by the interested and informed residents who attend the Town Meeting than it will be by a greater number of less informed voters casting a yes/no vote with an incomplete understanding of what the budget really represents.

 

Thank you for reviewing my concerns and for your time in doing so.

 

Bruce Loomis – Resident and Chairman, Bethany Conservation Commission

 

2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
A) Budget
20,383,921
20,838,716
21,882,854
   Amity
8,439,785
8,591,647
8,670,180
   BCS
6,276,791
6,368,791
6,559,417
   Debt
805,555
680,799
694,824
   L/P
217,311
285,923
231,914
B) Sub total-a
15,739,442
77.20%
15,927,160
76.40%
16,156,335
73.80%
   Ins & Ben.
775,407
870,510
959,898
   Solid Waste
383,700
386,154
390,266
   Gen Govt
1,046,131
1,130,215
1,168,489
   Public Safety
498,755
516,453
532,431
   Public Works
1,143,204
1,220,338
1,745,621
   Sub total-b
3,847,199
18.90%
4,123,670
19.80%
4,967,705
21.90%
C) 80% St-b
3,077,758
15.10%
3,298,936
15.80%
3,974,164
18.20%
D) B + C)
18,817,200
92.30%
19,226,224
92.30%
20,130,499
92%
A) - D)
1,566,721
7.60%
1,612,492
7.70%
1,752,355
8%
L/P = Lease/Purchase contractural agreements
B) Locked in, cast in stone, cannot change
C) Minimun essential services to run the Town with no frills
D) Minimum amount not actually being voted on
Items NOT included in either B) or C) that would increase the non-changeable and decrease what we are
what we are actually able to vote on:
1-Library
 
 
2-Land Acquisition Fund
3-Cemetaries
 
 
4-Park & Recreation
5-Human Services Adm.
6-QVHD

 

APPOINTMENT TO CONSERVATION COMMISSION

First Selectwoman Gorski announced that she had appointed Mathew Pop as an alternate to the Conservation Commission.-

TAX REFUNDS

Selectman Shea moved to refund to April Amellin the sum of $47.98, to Daimler Trust the sum of $306.86, to Richard McCurdy the sum of $34.37, to Marshal Kamai or Tara Barbieri the sum of $115.55, to Taylor Kelsey the sum of $146.45, to Walter and Sarah Briggs the sum of $2,999.98, to Arthur or Melita Willoughby the sum of $11.66, to Corelogic the sum of $4,096.82, to Dorothy Dierolf the sum of $78.99, to Industrial Materials Group the sum of $4.32, toJohn & Susan Wolanic the sum of $294.97, to Kathryn Garre the sum of $100, to Linda Greco the sum of $206.01, to Michael & Roseann Esposito the sum of $118.64, to Old Amity LLC the sum of $171.80, to Paul Manger the sum of $50.85, to Paul or Edwina Weston the sum of $24.99, to Peter Dileo the sum of $68.41 and to Toyota Lease Trust the sum of $674.74 all for over payment of taxes.  Selectwoman Magda seconded the motion.  The vote taken was unanimous. 

EARLY COURT MAINTENANCE BOND RELEASE

Isabel Kearns, Alan Green and David Nafis all met at Early Court for a road inspection.  The group determined that the road was in good condition and the bond should be released.  Selectwoman Magda moved to release the maintenance bond for Early Court.  The motion was seconded by Selectman Shea.  The vote taken was unanimous.

ROOF REPLACEMENT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

First Selectwoman Derrylyn Gorski reported that the RFQ for the Elementary School roof replacement has gone out to bid. 

TREE TRIMMING

The Town has met with EverSource regarding the tree problems on the side of the roads where there are wires.  They are going to start tree work in the Downs Road area where the wires are the oldest and work from there throughout the Town.   The Town is organizing a plan and will go out to bid for the trees that are the Town’s responsibility. 

OTHER

 Attorney McSherry has just about completed the RFQ for the curbside recycling. 

INTENTIONS TO GO TO REFERENDUM FOR TOWN BUDGET

 Selectman Shea and Selectwoman Magda indicated their desire to bring the Town budget to referendum.  Dave Forman commented that a referendum only brings the responsibility of the budget cuts back to the Board of Finance. It should be changed at the Town Meeting.  Reduction can be addressed at the Town Meeting. The Rev. Elsa Worth and member of the newly formed Heart of Bethany group likes the Town Meeting form of government as it gives the people civic participation and allows for a more democratic  society.

Barry Collins feels that Bethany has had Town Meetings for 175 years and they have always worked. 

Art Slicer commented that each referendum costs approximately $3,000.  If we used that money to better inform the people it would be money well spent instead of wasted.    

ADJOURNMENT

Adjournment was called at 9:20 p.m. after a motion was moved by Selectman Shea and seconded by Selectwoman Magda.

                                                                                                Respectfully submitted,

                                                                                                June G. Riley

                                                                                                Secretary, Board of Selectmen