As
the clock ticks down to Monday’s vote, the bovine excrement flies!
The update adds information on the Attorney General's office decision on Jim Mageau's open meetings complaint against the Town Council and also adds links to Sun letters to the editor that appear in Saturday's edition.
On Monday June 1, a small portion of Charlestown’s electorate will turn out at Town Hall between 8 AM and 8 PM to vote on the town’s budget and on three hot ballot questions. Campaigning is intensifying.
On Monday June 1, a small portion of Charlestown’s electorate will turn out at Town Hall between 8 AM and 8 PM to vote on the town’s budget and on three hot ballot questions. Campaigning is intensifying.
The
supporters of Petition #1 to authorize $1 million to act on the long-delayed
Ninigret Park Master Plan have their yard signs out. Hopefully, this is generating
more support from voters for work on the Plan and on long neglected maintenance
problems at Ninigret Park, Charlestown’s Jewel in the Crown.
Turn
out will be critical next Monday to pass this measure to support Ninigret Park
and to block the CCA Party’s Terrible Two warrant questions.
UPDATED:Mageau claims
Council violated Open Meetings Act, but the Attorney General disagrees
According to the
Westerly Sun,
Jim Mageau has filed a formal complaint against the Charlestown Town Council
for stonewalling questions from the public at the special hearing the town held
on the budget and ballot questions. As you may recall, Council Boss Tom Gentz
and his Greek chorus of fellow CCA Party Councilors essentially turned away
public questions on the two CCA warrant questions, basically saying they didn’t
have to answer.
The
CCA Party Councilors’ conduct was so awful, it was singled out for criticism in
a Westerly Sun
editorial.
The Sun rightly noted that this is the kind of arrogance that arises from
one-party rule.
In
his complaint, Mageau is arguing that, yes, they do have to because that’s the whole idea behind a public hearing. However, the Attorney General's office says that public officials are NOT required to answer or engage in any exchange with citizens. Mageau told the Westerly Sun that he will look into filing suit in Superior Court.
What the CCA Party Town Councilors did isn't illegal, according to the Attorney General's office, it still reflects that arrogance of power that was condemned by the Westerly Sun in their editoral.
Non-resident
buys ad supporting CCA initiative
Here is D'Alcomo's Charlestown Press ad. She ALMOST pulled off the Y-Gate con job and now she's pushing this! |
Some
of you may remember Joanne D’Alcomo, the de facto mayor of the Sonquipaug
neighborhood, from the Y-Gate Scandal. D’Alcomo is a Boston lawyer and
Massachusetts resident. She owns one of the houses in the Sonquipaug
neighborhood adjacent to the old abandoned Westerly YMCA campground that almost
ended up being bought by Charlestown taxpayers and then given away to the
Charlestown Land Trust.
The mostly
non-resident Sonquipaug people wanted that land bought with everyone’s money
except their own
to keep it as a free extension of their backyards.
D’Alcomo
was in on the backdoor deals that were the
hallmark of the Y-Gate Scandal and the reason why there was such an uproar that
actually forced the CCA Party to back down. She is also a major donor to the
Charlestown Citizens Alliance.
D’Alcomo
has re-surfaced by paying for the placement of a display ad in support of
Warrant Question #2, another sleazy CCA Party land deal this time involving the
former Whalerock property that the town purchased for $2.14 million.
Interestingly enough, although in the ad the couple identifies themselves as
Charlestown homeowners, in the posting
on the CCA website about the ad, the CCA elevates them to “residents.”
We’ll
see whose campaign finance report her expensive, in-kind donation ends up being
listed on. The last time she did something like this, the expense was
listed on the CCA Party’s report to the Board of Elections.
CCA doubles down
on anti-family rhetoric
From the CCA Party's mailer: their "proof" that open space saves money while eradicating those pesky rug-rats |
You
probably received the 8.5 by 11 inch chock-a-block full CCA Party mailing about
Warrant Questions #1 and #2.
It looks to me like Planning Commissar Ruth
Platner and her husband, Zoning Commissioner Cliff Vanover, did this piece
without an editor. They really got carried away both on the dense verbiage and on the
rhetoric.
Especially
their continuing claim that open space reduces taxes because otherwise the land
would automatically be used for high-density housing for families with school age children, which they claim would increase taxes. As the lawyers would say,
all this “assumes facts not in evidence.”
We’ve
been calling out the CCA for weeks to produce evidence that by taking land off
the tax rolls, you reduce tax burden. They finally posted a 2010 study from
Long Island
that supposedly supports their position. Except the report has little to do
with Charlestown, given that it addresses open space’s effect in an area that
is heavily developed and where open space is rare.
Charlestown
could actually be used as a case study for the bad things that happen when you
pass the point of diminishing returns and end up with too much untaxed land (we
have more than 50% of the town’s land as open space, not counting at least 400
additional acres recently added).
Our
assessments around those open space lands have not risen. We have built no
affordable housing for families. Our Chariho student population has declined
and so has our Chariho cost. Our overall population has declined. We have more
deaths than births. Our average age is increasing. Despite all these factors
and having more than 50% of our land as open space, our taxes
have gone up every year for the past seven years. If more open
space is so good for the taxpayers, why is that?
Mike
Chambers claimed that properties within 2.5 miles of open space benefit from
the presence of open space. Well in Charlestown, Mickey, everybody is within 2.5
miles of open space and that has neither changed our assessments nor prevented
seven years of tax hikes.
Here’s
the dirty little secret the CCA will never tell you: Yes, open space does lower
taxes—for the large landholders among them, their friends, and supporters who either
play the easement game to get reduced taxes on their land (like Platner and
Vanover) or claim the Farm, Forest, and Open Space exemption like CCA Town
Councilor George Tremblay, all the while continuing to get to use and enjoy their
land at a fraction of the taxes. For the rest of us, taxes go up to make up for
what the large landholders aren’t paying.
Links to Sun
opinions supporting Petition #1 to fund maintenance and improvements at
Ninigret Park
On
its official website, the CCA Party only presents opinions supporting its two
Warrant Questions (give Ruth Platner $2 million more to play with and give away
the rights to the Whalerock land we taxpayers purchased). A lot of that stuff
was printed in the Westerly Sun.
However,
the Sun also ran a lot of opinion pieces supporting Petition #1, the ballot
question asking you to authorize $1 million to give Ninigret Park a desperately
needed face lift. Here are links to those pieces:
- Guest commentary: Yes to rec bond; no to land transfer May 26, 2015
- Guest commentary: Make Ninigret a park for all May 23, 2015
- Letter: Primiano worked for all of Charlestown May 29, 2015
- Letter: Vote yes to make Ninigret Park plan a reality May 28, 2015
- Letter: A tale sad, but true; work in the Park is long overdue May 27, 2015
- Letter: Please vote ‘yes’ for Ninigret Park on June 1 May 29, 2015
- Letter: Enough of lost opportunities for recreation May 30, 2015
Sure, that’s true to an extent, except if a bunch of little kids
decided to start running, racing and playing in her beloved open spaces, you
can bet your ass she’d make sure there was an age limit and rules of conduct
for those areas.
Anyway, the CCA Party knows it is vulnerable for sitting on the Ninigret Park Master Plan and doing virtually nothing to implement it for the past seven years.
When former Town
Administrator Bill DiLibero and former Parks and Recreation Director Jay
Primiano tried to move pieces of the Master Plan forward, the CCA Party forced them out
of their jobs … with the addition insult to the taxpayers of needing to pay Jay
and Bill large severance packages because there really was no good cause for
the town to push them out.
So what’s the CCA Party position on Petition #1 – opposition disguised
as tepid support. They say the general concepts in the Ninigret Park Master Plan – which, by the way, has been kicking around for more than 10 years now –
are OK, but that more time – much more time – is needed to hold meetings and
study.
Links to Sun
opinion pieces opposing CCA Warrant Questions #1 and #2
- Guest commentary: Yes to rec bond; no to land transfer May 26, 2015
- Guest opinion: Open space site is already protected May 15, 2015
- Letter: Land transfer not a good deal May 27, 2015
- Letter: Can’t disguise this give-away of town land May 24, 2015
- Letter: We should have confidence in CCA why? May 23, 2015
- Letter: Time to start using open space for recreation May 21, 2015
- Letter: Where’s the open government promised? May 21, 2015
- Letter: Land easement should be seen as a red flag May 16, 2015
- Letter: Vote no on two Charlestown land questions May 8, 2015
- Letter: Charlestown land give-away is plain wrong May 1, 2015
- Letter: CCA hypocrisy is alive and well in Charlestown May 30, 2015
Don’t forget to vote!
Special
elections, especially town financial elections, tend to draw very few voters.
Charlestown has over 6,000 registered voters – actually, we have more
registered voters than the number of adults over 18, according to the Census
Bureau. But we’re lucky if 700 come out to vote in a special election – 702
came out to vote to pass the Chariho School
District’s budget
this year.
We
have a bad budget in front of us, one that raises taxes for the seventh
straight year with no apparent justification, given that our Chariho bill is
smaller by more than $87,000 and so is the town payroll.
When
Planner Ashley Hahn left, she was replaced by part-timer Jane Weidman, and when
Jay Primiano was pushed out as Parks & Rec Director, he was replaced by his
deputy, Vicky Hilton, and his job has not been posted (the word is that it
won’t be). That's a big cost savings right there.
We’re unnecessarily increasing the amount of capital expenditures we’re making –
paying cash instead of using low-interest financing like most towns, indeed
most households do. Oh, and hey, does anyone remember two years ago when the
CCA-controlled Budget Commission recommended paying cash to retire the low-interest
federal loan on the Police Station? They said that was going to save the
taxpayers money, too.
I
swear that if they keep saving us all money this way, we’re all going to be
bankrupt before they’re through.
We’re
setting aside an added $250,000 because our Budget Commission thinks that
Chariho made a mistake by dipping into its surplus so it could present a budget
voters would approve, unlike last year.
I
can find no good reason to vote for this budget. If voters turn down the budget
proposal on June 1, Charlestown will operate using the same budget as last year
which, I believe, would have no effect on town operations or employees.
Then
there are the Terrible Two CCA Warrant Questions. We’ve covered those. You can
expect a block turn-out of YES voters for the CCA proposals from Precinct Three
(Quonnie and environs), the CCA’s stronghold.
Finally,
there’s the great Petition #1 item to fund what all the people in town need at
Ninigret Park.
See
you at the polls!