This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Politics & Government

Sign the Petition for the Groton Town Charter

As submitted in New London DAY 12/25/17

New London Day - 12/25/17 - reposted on PATCH by Edward R. Johnson of Groton, CT

Op-Ed/Guest Opinions

Monday, December 25th, 2017

Find out what's happening in Grotonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Groton Charter changes would improve fiscal efficiency Published December 24. 2017 12:01AM

by Robert K. Frink

When taken together the Groton Charter Revision Commission recommendations provide a very balanced approach that recognizes and strategically places the significant roles that citizens,
elected leaders and professional staff contribute to efficient and
effective town government. The recommendations specifically accomplish
the following.
• Maintain the Town Council/Town Manager
form of government. Town Council, sets policy for the town and, elected
at-large, stays at nine members. Town manager executes policy and runs
the town.
• Provides for a transparent annual budget development process, including a formal setting for citizen input.
• Puts significant emphasis on budget guidance prior to budget development.
• Staff personnel maintain ownership of budget development and management of resources.
• Puts the Town Council as the final approver of the annual recommended budget.
• Gives resident voters a voice in final budget approval.
• Provides for a bifurcated budget, one for town government, one for education.

Provides for a Board of Finance, a stand-alone elected body, to support
the Town Council in financial matters and keep the public informed.
The three big recommendations would eliminate the RTM, implement an Annual Budget Referendum, and create a Board of Finance.
Eliminate the RTM
The
RTM was included on the list of items the Town Council asked the
Charter Revision Commission to look at. The commission recommended
eliminating the RTM because it does not function in a proactive way, it
performs its duties after the town manager and council have acted.
It
would be different if the RTM committee work was shared with the Town
Council in a formal way so it could be applied to decision making up
front, but it isn’t.
Second is redundancy. There is
almost complete redundancy between the RTM and the Town Council. Having
both bodies go through the budget using identical processes adds very
little value while duplicating the use of staff resources.
Third, Groton is the only town in Connecticut, and perhaps anywhere, that has a Town Council and an RTM.
Institute an Annual Budget Referendum
An
Annual Budget Referendum (ABR) gives voters the final say one way or
the other. The ABR recommendation has no triggering mechanism, requires
no minimum voter turnout or limit on the number of votes necessary to
approve a budget.
It provides for citizen feedback, asking "no" voters to answer if the proposed budget is too high or too low?
This
requirement for mandatory citizen approval is an important factor in
guiding the separation of the "wants" from the "needs" in the early
stages of budget development.
Board of Finance
A
Board of Finance (BOF) would provide Groton with an elected body solely
dedicated to the deep understanding of the town’s financial matters and
able to translate that understanding to the Town Council and the
public. The Town Council is not able to adequately perform this function
due to the significant legislative workload placed on it. Simply put,
the Town Council doesn’t have the time to do what a Board of Finance
would do.
Its monthly meetings will be open to the public
and will provide a forum for bringing transparency to the town's
financial status.
It will create and maintain a five-year financial forecast for the town.
The
statement from which this was abridged was endorsed by Charter Revision
Commission members Scott Aument, Kathy Chase, Rosanne Kotowski and
Daniel Mello. Jenn White also expressed her endorsement with an
exception for the commission’s recommendation for an Annual Budget
Referendum, which she does not endorse.

Find out what's happening in Grotonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?