Selectmen wish to transfer $500.00 from Town Clerk expense to Town Clerk CMMT account. CMMT is an extra money incentive to some employees who attend classes and get educated and show professionalism at their position, such as treasurer, collector, Town clerks. So first question is this, has the Town Clerk been certified for the entire fiscal year of 2016? If so, why did the selectmen not ask for the entire $1000.00? Why is there no CMMTC for the assistant treasurer/collector. I believe Carol Lee Eaton is certified. Why was there $500.00 CMMTC for the treasurer in fiscal year 2016 when she is not certified? At last notice, the treasurer may become certified this August. Also, at this past Town Meeting, selectmen stated there was a 50 thousand dollar surplus or unallocated funds within their budget so why were the vests and tanks not paid for out of that money? Perhaps the great, superior elected ones do not know the process or did not pay attention. Hopefully, that will change going forward, but for now, I lean to telling the selectmen that since it is your budget, you are stuck with it. Next time ask for what you need and learn that just moving money around is not the solution.
posted by Jeff Bennett
All material on this blog is directed to members of the general public and is not intended to be read by my fellow Board members, nor do I intend for any readers to convey such material directly or indirectly to my fellow Board members.
Friday, July 1, 2016
Templeton Town officials try to put all blame on fire chief Ray LaPorte with regards to spending. However, it was those same officials who said it was okay to transfer $111,000.00 from fire/ems to pay for snow & ice deficit back on November 9, 2015 special town meeting. Then in March 2016 special town meeting, put back $45,000.00 into fire/ems salary account and now they wish to transfer another $7,000.00 into fire/ems salary to cover salaries through end of the fiscal year. Guess they should have left that salary account alone and paid for the deficit out of FY2017 state aid. Maybe it is those officials who need to be fired rather than the fire chief.
posted by Jeff Bennett
posted by Jeff Bennett
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
this should open and show the transfers from what account (s) to account (s)
posted by Jeff Bennett
Year End Transfers FY 2016
posted by Jeff Bennett
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
from the MMA website:
We are reviewing all of the amendments that have been filed, and in the meantime would like to highlight the MMA’s position on a number of the amendments that you will be debating this afternoon, and offer a summary below.
Please SUPPORT the following amendments:
Amendment #4 – This amendment filed by Rep. Jones would eliminate requirements that state agencies limit certain grants to cities and towns that are pursuing regionalization projects.
Amendment #15 – This amendment filed by Rep. Jones would close two significant loopholes in the municipal unemployment system, addressing the situation that allows school employees funded in the municipal budget to collect unemployment during summer vacations and holiday breaks, and closing the loophole that allows retirees on a public pension to also collect unemployment benefits once they reach the 960-hour cap on post-retirement work. This is not a new issue – the House has already voted to support these reform provisions in previous legislation.
Amendment #19 – This amendment filed by Rep. Peisch would add a municipal representative on the State Retiree Benefits Trust Fund Board of Directors, a needed step, as an increasing number of cities and towns are investing their OPEB with that agency.
Amendment #28 – This amendment filed by Rep. Dykema would clarify that cities and towns can establish water and sewer banks to help finance needed improvements to critical environmental infrastructure systems.
***Amendment #29 – This amendment filed by Rep. Dykema would establish a commission to study the issue of veterans’ preference within the civil service system.
Number 29 is another attempt to take away another promise made to veterans, please call your state representation and ask to oppose this amendment.
posted by Jeff Bennett
We are reviewing all of the amendments that have been filed, and in the meantime would like to highlight the MMA’s position on a number of the amendments that you will be debating this afternoon, and offer a summary below.
Please SUPPORT the following amendments:
Amendment #4 – This amendment filed by Rep. Jones would eliminate requirements that state agencies limit certain grants to cities and towns that are pursuing regionalization projects.
Amendment #15 – This amendment filed by Rep. Jones would close two significant loopholes in the municipal unemployment system, addressing the situation that allows school employees funded in the municipal budget to collect unemployment during summer vacations and holiday breaks, and closing the loophole that allows retirees on a public pension to also collect unemployment benefits once they reach the 960-hour cap on post-retirement work. This is not a new issue – the House has already voted to support these reform provisions in previous legislation.
Amendment #19 – This amendment filed by Rep. Peisch would add a municipal representative on the State Retiree Benefits Trust Fund Board of Directors, a needed step, as an increasing number of cities and towns are investing their OPEB with that agency.
Amendment #28 – This amendment filed by Rep. Dykema would clarify that cities and towns can establish water and sewer banks to help finance needed improvements to critical environmental infrastructure systems.
***Amendment #29 – This amendment filed by Rep. Dykema would establish a commission to study the issue of veterans’ preference within the civil service system.
Number 29 is another attempt to take away another promise made to veterans, please call your state representation and ask to oppose this amendment.
posted by Jeff Bennett
- June 28, 2016
Gov. Charlie Baker announced yesterday that fiscal 2017 tax revenues are now projected to be $650 million to $950 million lower than the consensus projection that the administration and the House and Senate used when building their budget plans.
The revision is largely due to widespread financial volatility stemming from the Brexit vote, combined with lower-than-expected tax collections as the state closes fiscal 2016. Capital gains taxes are particularly sluggish and vulnerable to economic instability.
A revenue loss of this magnitude will force deep cuts across all areas of the state budget for fiscal 2017. The budgets set by the governor, House and Senate were all based on the original, higher revenue growth projection of $1.1 billion, which means that all of the plans are out of balance.
The governor yesterday signed a one-month, temporary budget to cover state obligations through the end of July and provide some breathing room for legislators while they dramatically scale back their budget bills for fiscal 2017, which begins on July 1.
The grim news comes at a time when cities and towns have already set their budgets based on estimates of local aid and education funding that were contained in the three budget bills. Any cuts to municipal or school accounts would trigger major budget problems in all 351 cities and towns.
“Any local aid reductions at this point would be incredibly disruptive, and would force communities to reopen their already-passed budgets and impose mid-year cuts,” said MMA Executive Director Geoff Beckwith. “Reliance on the property tax to fund municipal and school services is at a 30-year high, and it is too late to pursue tax overrides to replace lost local aid. Any local aid reduction would translate into cuts in essential services and programs that are necessary for our economic growth and stability.”
A gap approaching $1 billion is relatively small portion of a nearly $39.5 billion state budget. But roughly two-thirds of state spending is locked in, for items such as health care, debt service and pensions, leaving little room to maneuver in order to bridge the gap.
State law requires the budget to be balanced, and doing so is the biggest challenge facing the Legislature before the formal session is scheduled to close on July 31.
from the MMA website
posted by Jeff Bennett
from last nights selectmen meeting:
John Caplis submits resignation letter as Templeton Veteran service Officer.
Town Administrator has submitted his resignation effective July 11, 2016.
Fiscal Year 2013 financials are complete and the Town is awaiting the auditors to come to Templeton to begin their work. Maybe this will be the time this actually happens, as this has been put out numerous times by the administrator. The Abrahams group has completed their work and fiscal 2014 work will be completed by the Town Accountant sometime in August.
John Caplis submits resignation letter as Templeton Veteran service Officer.
Town Administrator has submitted his resignation effective July 11, 2016.
Fiscal Year 2013 financials are complete and the Town is awaiting the auditors to come to Templeton to begin their work. Maybe this will be the time this actually happens, as this has been put out numerous times by the administrator. The Abrahams group has completed their work and fiscal 2014 work will be completed by the Town Accountant sometime in August.
There may be more end of year financial transfers by July 15, 2016 to balance out the FY16 budget.
It was stated that 21 applications for fire chief in Templeton have been received at Templeton Town Hall.
Selectmen voted to not release the written legal opinion concerning the election issue with regards to a candidate for the light & water commission.
posted by Jeff Bennett
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