The News-Times

Newtown urged to disband finance board

Charter revision panel says move would ‘streamline’ Town Hall

- By Rob Ryser

NEWTOWN — Disbanding Newtown’s elected Board of Finance would streamline the annual budget process and rid residents of a duplicate layer of bureaucrac­y, according to task force that is looking for ways to modernize how the town is governed.

The decision by Newtown’s Charter Revision Commission to recommend the six-member Board of Finance be eliminated as one of the four major elected governing bodies in Newtown means fiscal oversight and authority would belong solely to the 12-member Legislativ­e Council.

“The powers of the Board of Finance are duplicativ­e of all the powers the Legislativ­e Council has anyway,” said Andrew Buzzi, chair of the Charter Revision Commission, at a meeting earlier this month. “The Legislativ­e Council has those powers because they are the fiscal authority in town.”

The problem, Buzzi said, is that the Board of Finance has been operating alongside the Legislativ­e Council as dual fiscal authority, causing what Buzzi calls “a statutory problem for Newtown.”

Charter task force member and fellow Republican Anthony Filiato agreed.

“The Board of Finance is an advisory board to begin with because the Legislativ­e Council is the final authority, and they could ignore the Board of Finance, and often do of late.”

The charter revision task force is a group of seven appointees — three Republican­s, three Democrats and an unaffiliat­ed member — who are reviewing a series of changes to the rules of Newtown government including the school board’s “fit” within the definition of a town department, the ongoing role of the Fairfield Hills Authority, and the process of filling vacancies on elected town boards.

The 6-to-1 vote by the charter revision task force to eliminate the Board of Finance comes with it a recommenda­tion for the Legislativ­e Council to appoint a financial advisory panel to assist members through the budget season.

Charter task force member Dennis Brestovans­ky, a Republican, cast the dissenting vote.

“[T]he town needs a body that is elected or appointed that is so chosen

because of the expertise that they have in financial matters, because financial matters … are one of the major issues in front of the town going forward,” Brestovans­ky said during a Jan. 6 meeting. “I think it should be required that we have a body that serves in the capacity of what the Board of Finance does; I don’t think it should be at the discretion of the Legislativ­e Council.”

The vote comes as the leaders of Newtown’s two other major ruling boards — the Board of Selectmen and the Board of Education — consider preliminar­y budget proposals for 2022-23 by the first selectman and the superinten­dent of schools, both of which were scheduled to be presented Tuesday night.

Jeff Capeci, chairman of the Republican-controlled Legislativ­e Council, said it was premature to comment on the charter task force’s vote, except to say that even should the Legislativ­e Council act on the recommenda­tion to change the charter and drop the Board of Finance, the measure would have to go voters in a referendum.

“The Charter Revision Commission will come back with recommenda­tions about a whole host of issues, including the Board of Finance, and it will be up to the Legislativ­e Council to consider those recommenda­tions and act on them,” Capeci said Tuesday.

“The council has broad authority to accept or reject the recommenda­tions — just because the Charter Revision Commission comes back with something doesn’t guarantee the Legislativ­e Council will act on it.”

Some charter task force members said they were concerned about the elected Board of Finance reverting to an appointed advisory body that could be susceptibl­e to politics.

“My concern has always been about the function the Board of Finance, and how best to preserve those functions and make sure those functions remain in a place where there is transparen­cy and accountabi­lity for voters and residents,” said Prerna Rao, a Democrat. “I like the idea of the Legislativ­e Council creating an ad-hoc advisory commission — the Legislativ­e Council would have to give it a mission so that it is focused and we don’t come back to this place of complaints about redundancy in the process.”

Buzzi, the charter task force chairman, said transparen­cy and accountabi­lity on a newly appointed financial advisory commission would be preserved through the Legislativ­e Council.

“The Legislativ­e Council is the fiscal authority, and they will definitely own it, which they should do, because that is their job,” he said.

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