South County Chamber Gets
the Nod – Budget Passes
Is it a PAC or a charity? |
The South Kingstown Town Council, in a session often resembling a
scene from a junior high lunch table, passed the Town budget for fiscal year
2012 – 2013 in total. In a 4-0 vote, with one recusal, the budget was adopted –
inclusive of a contentious $7000 line item allowance to the South County Chamber of
Commerce.
Refereeing council
members and town residents, Council Chair Ella Whaley urged all to stay on task
in getting issues resolved and the budget passed.
From the outset, the meeting was heated as Council
member Polly Eddy was asked to recuse herself from the vote, due to her
position on the Executive Committee of Thundermist Health Center.
Eddy who presently sits on the Executive Committee of the private
non-profit organization, has held the position of President of the organization
in past years, as well as sitting as a senior member of the South Kingstown
Town Council.
In anticipation of the
budget adoption, which in accordance with the Town Charter has to be completed
by May 1, town resident and democratic committee member, Deborah Bergner
submitted a letter requesting the removal of $7000 from the preliminary budget,
slated for the South Kingstown Chamber of Commerce.
In addition to the petition she garnered, already an agenda item, Bergner’s letter received
just prior to the meeting, repeated her ongoing contention that the South
Kingstown Chamber of Commerce was acting in dual capacities, as a chamber and a
political PAC.
“I feel that no
taxpayer money should be given to a political organization. By forming a pack
with little or no separation from the chamber itself, and becoming actively
involved in local politics, they forfeited their right to receive money from
the taxpayers,” Bergner corresponded.
Rebutting the contents
of the letter on behalf of the Chamber of Commerce was Richard Pike, Chair of
the South Kingstown Political Action Committee, explaining that the PAC
operates separately from the chamber, was adamant that any funds appropriation
from the Town would not be seen by the PAC.
“The $7000 – I can
assure you, not one penny would go toward the political action committee.” Pike
went on to add. “Anybody that thinks it’s not a good idea really needs to wake
up and listen to some of the [things] that are going on. Businesses are
hurting. They need help.”
In a tete-a-tete battle
between council members and residents alike, the sometimes pathetic posturing
of a political battle to come was revealed.
Maureen Martin: "Chamber does not provide services to the needy." |
Supporting Bergner’s
position was Maureen Martin, also a town resident, admonishing the council’s
bantering in deciding the fate of Bergner’s petition and the Town’s budget
before them for passage. Referencing councilman, James O’Neill’s comments with
regards to the petition, Martin spoke.
“As I sit here as a
citizen, I feel totally disrespected already. To refer to the petition that
several South Kingstown residents signed as
pathetic, is in and of itself, pathetic.” In addressing the petition before the
Council in opposition to the Chamber expenditure, Martin expressed her belief
that the funds were not appropriate for an organization not deemed non-profit.
“I do not think that
the taxpayers of South Kingstown should be
footing the bill for administrative costs of an organization that does not
provide services to the needy, but instead participates in lobbying
activities.”
Challenged by Carol
Hagen McEntee, Council Vice President, Martin was asked to answer why the
expenditure had never been questioned in the past. “Last year at this time we
gave the $7000 unanimously. By your own admission, you have been a resident for
[many] years. This has been going on for 21 years and you have never come
forward and felt that this appropriation should be challenged. Why this year?”
“A couple of things –
one is I didn’t know,” responded Martin. “I admittedly have not been actively
involved in local politics. Had I known, it may have been different.”
After 2 hours, two
motions were presented to the Council. The first, a motion to deny the resident
petition in opposition to the Chamber appropriation, passed in a 4-1 vote, with
member Polly Eddy the sole nay. Council member, Kathleen Fogarty, in a
surprising turn of events, voted in support of the line item for the Chamber.
The second motion, the Town’s annual budget adoption,
passed in a unanimous action, with Mrs. Eddy’s recusal on record.
At the end of it all,
Town Manager, Steven Alfred was pleased with the outcome. “We have adopted a
budget that supports our ability to provide for the Town and residents based on
the financial situation before us. We are providing residents with the maximum
benefit we can.”