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The town has already collected $4 million of a possible $13 million in extra money hidden from the budget process.
The town has already collected $4 million of a possible $13 million in extra money hidden from the budget process.
Tiverton's red-hot taxes didn't stop increasing much faster than inflation because of climate change. Empowering residents to vote for their tax increases at the annual financial town referendum (FTR) did that. Reading Tom Killin Dalglish's Sakonnet Times report from a special Town Council meeting on November 6 (video here) makes clear that some Town Council Members have had enough with democracy: Councilor [John Edwards, the Fifth], raising the issue of costs for elections, questioned whether the Financial Town Referendum (FTR) and the election of charter review members, made sense. Tiverton is an "outlier," he said, in terms of the way it governs itself. "The way the FTR has been structured allows a minority to control the process," he said. He spoke in favor of more authority for the elected town council to set policy and the budget. "We do need the budget committee to do the work, but they shouldn't have the final say," said Councilor Randy Lebeau. Councilors Denise deMedeiros, LeBeau, and Edwards volunteered to serve on a committee to "look at this." Beware this trio's "looking." Take away the political spin, and the objective of Edwards and his posse is clearly to limit the ability of voters to have control over town government more often than every two years at a heated election with state and national races on the ballot. Because their political friends have an advantage during regular November elections, that's when they want the key decisions made. Every budget for the past six years of…
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Links to documents relevant to town government that may or may not be available elsewhere.
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