This is a repost of a blog that was posted a few days ago - I didn't want it to get lost in the archives because it is very very important. The Special Town Meeting is on Thursday November 15th 7:00PM at the NRMS Auditorium and the Citizens Petition asking for an investigation is Article 8. See you there, Pauly
Pauly
has tried to get an answer or an investigation into some of the activities in
town for quite a while. The citizen’s petition asking for an investigation by
the Attorney General has been turned into the town clerk’s office. We are
waiting for the signatures to be certified. Hurricane Sandy isn’t helping out.
(Stay
safe!)
One
of the great concepts of town government is the citizens’ right to petition its
town government. If you, as a citizen, feel something is wrong and is not being
addressed by your BOS or other department, you can collect signatures of
registered voters for warrant articles at town meetings and special town
meetings. You, as a citizen, can even gather enough signatures to call for a
special town meeting.
The
citizen petition asking for an investigation by the Attorney General’s office
into “wrong doings” in Templeton include:
An investigation into the
activities and actions of the Templeton Board of Selectmen and the Templeton
Municipal Light Department to enact Chapter 93 Acts of 2000.
Please
keep in mind when this merger of light and water took place. The Light
department was located at 2 School St. There were apartments on the top floor
of the building. The garages out back were under construction. The water
commissioners were the Board of Selectmen. I believe Harry Aldrich was the
water, sewer and highway superintendent at this time. Gerald Skelton was
manager of the light department. Chris Ryan was town coordinator. Glenn Eaton,
Edie Kosakowsi, Tom Martin, Pat Dunlavey and Gladys Salame were members of the
BOS.
There
are certain rules you need to follow when you initiate a citizen’s
petition. The Office for Campaign and
Political finance has a number of documents to help guide people through the
process. The most informative publication is Campaign Finance Guide:
Public Employees, Public Resources and Political Activity. I have to be
careful as an elected official to keep my activities with Citizens4Templeton
separate from my activities as a selectman. I can’t use public resources for
this citizen’s petition. And I don’t. As an elected official, I don’t give up
my right to participate in government as a citizen. I need to be careful and I
am. I was collecting signatures for a warrant article, not an article that
would go to a ballot election.
Chapter 93
Acts of 2000 was initiated by the Light department. The minutes from the September
7,1999 Light
department reference a “negative letter” from Chris Ryan (Town
Coordinator). At this meeting, I believe
the light department manager, Gerald Skelton (municipal employee), and the
commissioners Dana Blais, and Sean Hamilton (also municipal employees) voted to
have an attorney draft a legal petition for insertion in the town warrant or
ballot…using municipal funds from the municipal light department. Legal
invoices.
The
“Citizen
Petition” for Chapter 93 Acts of 2000
called for a special town meeting. You need 200 signatures from registered
voters to call for a special town meeting. I believe these signatures were
collected by the (municipal) employees of the (municipal) Light department.
These signatures were not collected by someone or a group of citizens asking to
merge light and water departments. I signed on line 231. I believe I signed it
when asked by an employee.
The
special town meeting was held on March 8, 2000. There were 84 people present. March 8,
2000 Special Town Meeting warrant. The special town meeting
vote was the first step in the process. Once the special legislation was
enacted, there had to be a vote by ballot. The September
11, 2000 Light
department minutes indicate that the vote to merge passed by a vote of 230 in
favor to 83 against. The Light department paid for the ballot election. Schedule of
Payments to Treasurer.
So
why ask for the Attorney General to investigate the actions and activities of
the BOS and the Light department to enact Chapter 93 Acts of 2000? I’ll quote from
the May
2, 2000 Light Department minutes. Page 2 “ The manager [Mr. Skelton] told
the Commissioners that if the merger takes place we will have some serious work
to return the Water Department to a viable entity of the Town. The
Commissioners agreed but felt it can be accomplished.”
It’s
been over ten years since the merger of the Light and Water departments. In
those ten years my water bill has increased dramatically. The managerial
positions at the TMLWP have increased at substantial cost and are unsustainable
(see October 30,
2000 and October 30,
2000 ). The debt
burden by the department has increased dramatically as well. I guess I have a
different definition of “viable”.
My
opinion …supported by FACTS ! !
Julie
Farrell
For
more information, please review the documents on the Citizens4Templeton website
– Important
Documents page. There is a Timeline for Chapter 93 Acts of 2000, which has
links to the Light minutes and the Water minutes.
These documents tell a tale, You may ask why the water bills keep going up, but it is a department that is loosing money? There is alot of information in these records. Pull up your easy chair, and take a look at how your town is run. You may have more questions than answers, but atleast you will have a clue. Bev.
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