The Day

Groton Town to decide this month on changing government structure

Council to discuss potential revisions on Tuesday; will submit recommenda­tions with deadline looming

- By DEBORAH STRASZHEIM Day Staff Writer

Groton — The Groton Town Council must decide by Oct. 18 whether it supports proposed changes to the structure of town government, including eliminatio­n of Representa­tive Town Meeting and creation of a budget referendum.

The council held a public hearing this past Tuesday on recommenda­tions of the Charter Revision Commission and heard from a divided audience about whether to support or reject the proposal. The commission proposed several key changes, including abolishmen­t of the RTM, creation of a seven-member board of finance, term limits for town councilors and establishm­ent of an annual budget referendum.

“This is not something to take lightly. These are large changes for a large town,” Mayor Bruce Flax said.

The council will discuss the proposed changes at 6 p.m. on Tuesday in the Town Hall Annex. It must submit any recommenda­tions to the commission by the October deadline.

Flax said he plans to raise several issues Tuesday, including a minimum voter turnout for a budget referendum and changes to ensure representa­tion of Groton’s seven voting districts.

If Groton replaces the RTM with a board of finance, Flax said he’d want each finance board member elected by voters from a district rather than the town at large.

One issue the commission didn’t address is whether nonresiden­t property taxpayers should be permitted to vote on a budget referendum if one is created. Town Councilor Diane Barber said she wants the issue discussed.

“This is not something to take lightly. These are large changes for a large town.” BRUCE FLAX, GROTON TOWN MAYOR

“I would like to hear the pros and cons on that,” she said.

Once the council recommends changes, the commission has 30 days to consider its suggestion­s and submit a final report.

“The council’s suggestion­s weigh heavily, but the commission can reject their recommenda­tions,” Town Clerk Betsy Moukawsher said.

After the commission makes a final report, the council must accept or reject the whole report within 15 days. Any changes to the charter would be placed on the ballot as a referendum question in a future election, Moukawsher said. The deadline for ballot questions in the upcoming Nov. 7 election already has passed.

Given the time and effort commission members invested to review the charter for 15 months, its conclusion­s should go to voters, Barber said.

“I believe we owe it to them for their hard work to put it out to the voters. Most people that I talk to are all for it,” she said. While some voiced opposition during the public hearing, Barber said, “I understand their reservatio­ns. Change is hard. But I think it’s time that we revisit and tweak the charter.”

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