Low
controversy yields low turn-out
Charlestown
voters, such few as there were, approved
the town’s new budget by a vote of 144 to 55, a more than three to one
margin. Less than 200 registered voters, 199 to be exact, turned out to vote. I voted just before 3 PM when the vote count was only 115, so I could tell then
that it was going to be a slow day.
While
the annual town financial referendum rarely draws big numbers, this turn-out
was especially low. Almost three times as many voters (576) turned
out in 2011 to vote to support building the new town beach pavilions that
the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA Party) had attempted to block.
Despite
the incredibly low turn-out this year, the CCA Party couldn’t wait to send out
an e-bleat
to celebrate its victory that will raise your taxes once again.
While it’s nice to lower long term debt,
it comes at the expense of loading more tax burden on embattled Charlestown
working families now when their ability to pay is hampered by the economy and Charlestown's high unemployment (8.7%).
The
CCA Party Town Council majority also tamped down voter turn-out by changing
their position on two warrant items that were slated to be on the ballot.
One
was the god-awful proposal brought forward by Town Administrator Mark
Stankiewicz to permit
a group of mostly non-resident beach property owners to buy a town-owned beach
right of way so they could block it off. The CCA Party majority initially
approved this matter as one to put before the voters, but after hearing the outcry
from actual residents about this plan at the May budget hearing, the CCA
Party boys flipped and the item was removed.
If that item had stayed on the ballot, I believe a lot more voters would have turned out to crush it.
If that item had stayed on the ballot, I believe a lot more voters would have turned out to crush it.
They
also removed a proposal from the Budget Commission to allow voters to make a
separate decision about whether to spend $260,000 to rebuild four of the eight
tennis courts at Ninigret Park.
Though this matter had some support among users and a reasonable argument given the courts’ poor construction, the CCA Party Councilors again flip-flopped from approving the item to voting to pull it from the ballot.
Though this matter had some support among users and a reasonable argument given the courts’ poor construction, the CCA Party Councilors again flip-flopped from approving the item to voting to pull it from the ballot.
After
those two items were pulled from the ballot, that left voters without a whole
lot of incentive, other than civic duty, such as it is, to come out to vote.
That,
plus a growing sense of “what’s the use?”, adds to a sense of drift in
Charlestown. The CCA Party had a firm grip on all the levers of power and uses
it to load up town volunteer positions with its political appointees. These
appointees, plus the CCA control of the Council and Planning Commission, mean
that CCA Party supporters and campaign contributors get first preference and
top priority treatment while CCA Party opponents, at best get ignored and, at
worst, get screwed.
Form your own "fire" district - ya gotta be a member to benefit |
In
case you’re wondering, I voted “yes” on the budget despite my critique of it.
The town doesn’t need constituents to adopt the “budget nihilism” attitude that
has been plaguing the Chariho School District. Despite my criticisms about the
tax hike and the misplaced priority of paying cash for long-term capital
projects instead of offering tax release, the town needs a budget to operate.
Your
new property tax bills will hit your mailbox in early July and you’ll get to
see how much the CCA Party’s misadventures will cost you.
Please
do check
out my series on practical ways you might be able to reduce your property
tax bill.
Also,
if you and your neighbors can pull themselves together, there’s also the newly
discovered tax deal where you form your own “fire” district. You don’t even need
to fight fires, but you can find some terrific tax benefits, not just on
property taxes, but on your state and federal income taxes too. Click
here
to learn more.