CCA
budget fails to keep promise to let taxpayers decide how to spend $3 million
surplus
By
Kenneth Robbins
NOTE: This year's budget vote will be done by mail. Every registered Charlestown voter should receive a mail-in ballot by May 15. You need to send it back by June 1.
History repeats itself and those who ignore history are condemned to repeat it. The truth of those two hackneyed clichés was not more in evidence than at the Charlestown Town Council's recent meeting.
Last
year, the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA) was decisively rebuffed by
Charlestown voters when the CCA-dominated Town Council attempted to deplete a
roughly $3 million dollar surplus in the town coffers with a proposal to build
an unneeded community center.
They then
promised to leave the surplus intact until the taxpayers of Charlestown could determine
how they wished the surplus to be used.
They even allocated $75,000 for a survey and had selected a Company to
conduct the survey until the pandemic put that effort on temporary hold.
Not
content with failing to use up the $3 million in this fashion, and in blatant
disregard of their promise to the citizens of Charlestown, they returned this
year with a different strategy to accomplish the same goal.
This year they divided the $3 million into several smaller pieces and allocated those pieces to pay for things that were either not necessary or whose payments could easily be delayed into a future budget when the economy had recovered.
Once
they depleted the $3 million, they could then argue that the remaining surplus
must remain to meet auditor’s requirements for a minimum town surplus,
especially in the face of what will likely be still a slow and incomplete
economic recovery.
Thus the
wishes of the town residents, if they were even solicited at that point, would
be moot.
The lone
voice on the Council trying make these
points and come up with a more acceptable compromise, Deb Carney, was, as usual,
ignored and voted down. Many of her
proposals did not even receive a second to open a discussion.
Why is
the Town Council so opposed to our citizens determining how they want their tax
dollars, obtained from years of over-taxation, spent?
The obvious
answer is that the CCA and their supporters are afraid of what the citizens
will direct the Town to do with the surplus.
For
instance, there seems to be strong town support for improving and modifying
Charlestown’s asset gem, Ninigret Park, to support more events for the
entertainment and financial benefit of the entire town.
That use
of the funds would impact nearby residents with increased noise and lights a
few days a year. I do wonder where many
CCA supporters live!
The
bottom line is that we Charlestown voters will once again have to vote down
this damaging budget. I do not take any
pleasure or satisfaction in recommending this.
But the Council’s total disregard for the wishes of the town citizens
makes no other course possible.
Hopefully,
in November, a more responsive and responsible Council (as well as members of
other Town committees) will be elected.
A version of this article ran in the Westerly Sun's Letters to the Editor column HERE.
A version of this article ran in the Westerly Sun's Letters to the Editor column HERE.