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Date: Fri 03-May-1996

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Date: Fri 03-May-1996

Publication: Bee

Author: KAAREN

Quick Words:

charter-budget-Rosenthal

Full Text:

Charter Panel Suggestion For Split Budget Votes

Legislative Council member Jack Rosenthal would like the town charter to be

revised to allow residents to vote separately on the municipal and school

budgets.

Although state statutes require the town to vote on one budget, Mr Rosenthal

said Newtown could follow the lead of Ridgefield which this year has split the

budget into two questions on the ballot.

"If we had two questions, and one was voted down, it would be much easier to

definitely know what to do," he said. "And if both budgets were defeated, then

we'd know the voters were dissatisfied with both. As it is, we are just

guessing now."

Mr Rosenthal made his suggestion at a meeting of the Charter Revision

Commission last week. He said the defeat, by 85 votes, of the $50.3 million

municipal/school budget in the April 23 referendum did not give the council

any clear indication of where to make cuts.

The evening after the referendum, the council met and voted to cut $700,000

from the budget - $350,000 from the road reconstruction account and $350,000

from debt service for proposed school projects. Mr Rosenthal said the $350,000

debt service reduction, combined with the $250,000 that the council had

earlier trimmed from the school board's requested budget, amounted to a

$600,000 cut in proposed school funding, far more than an 85-vote defeat

should have mandated.

Mr Rosenthal said Ridgefield also has put separate questions about spending

for large capital projects on the ballot, something Newtown might want to

consider.

Former council chairman Lyndon Thomas also addressed the Charter Revision

Commission during the public participation portion which preceded the regular

meeting. Mr Thomas said he does not recommended changing the local government

to go back to a Board of Selectmen, Board of Finance and town meeting format,

as some town officials have proposed.

Poor turnout at town meetings make this proposal inappropriate, he said.

"The Legislative Council should be at least the size it is now - 12 - but if

the commission decides to do away with the council and have a Board of

Finance, there should also be an (elected) representative town meeting (RTM).

Fairfield has a RTM composed of 50 elected members, Mr Thomas said.

Speaking later as the chairman of the Economic Development Commission, Mr

Thomas requested that the EDC remain mandated by ordinance rather than be

included in the charter. The EDC is still relatively new and is still

formulating policies and making changes, he said, and it's much simpler to

make changes to an ordinance rather than wait five to 10 years for a charter

revision.

The EDC is composed of nine members appointed by the Board of Selectmen with a

term limitation of two full terms of three years. The commission is mandated

by state statutes to determine the best use of the town's economic resources,

including alternate uses of non-residential land.

In a letter to the commission, Stephen Adams, the chairman of the Planning and

Zoning Commission, said the charter should be revised to simplify land swaps

of under one acre. He also would like P&Z to have the authority to hire legal

representation when required rather than having to go to the Board of

Selectmen and the Legislative Council for approval.

The Charter Revision Commission was scheduled to meet again on Thursday, May

2, for presentations by the Conservation Commission, the Building Appeals

Board and the Zoning Board of Appeals. This meeting will be held in the

Alexandria Room at Edmond Town Hall.

A public participation portion is included at the beginning of each meeting.

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