China select board approves purchase of second-hand ambulance

China Town Officeby Mary Grow

At their June 2 meeting, China select board members unanimously approved China Rescue Unit’s request to buy a second-hand ambulance.

Benjamin Loubier, from China Rescue, explained that the unit recently received a $50,000 state grant, with no local match required, which can be used for equipment. Members found a used four-wheel-drive 2013 Ford ambulance with under 100,000 miles on it, for $80,000.

Autotronics, the Bangor dealership that has the vehicle, will provide a three-month warranty, Loubier said. Loubier and Webb Shaw took it for a test drive and were satisfied.

Loubier asked for and got select board approval to spend $30,000 from the rescue reserve account, which he said has $56,000 available. For now, the new unit will be housed in the China Village fire station with the rescue truck.

Also on the select board’s June 2 agenda were three bids to finish the building at the China School Forest, behind China Primary School. Board members unanimously accepted the lowest, $4,285, from Wentworth Enterprises, LLC, doing business as J & J Home Improvements, on Branch Mills Road, in China.

Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood said she and resident Jacinth Allard had continued to collect information on hanging flags on existing power poles to honor veterans through the Hometown Heroes program (see the May 22 issue of The Town Line, p. 3).

Hapgood described Central Maine Power Company’s policy as “Don’t ask, don’t tell.” She said CMP employees ignore flags attached to their poles unless they need to use a pole; then they’ll remove the flag.

Board members again discussed where in town the flags should go, reaching no conclusion.

Hapgood announced that all China town departments will be closed Thursday, June 19, for the Juneteenth federal holiday. On Monday, June 30, the town office will close at noon so staff can finish end-of-fiscal-year financial work.

The select board meeting was followed by visits to China’s three fire stations, in China Village, South China and Weeks Mills. Hapgood said members of China Rescue and the volunteer fire departments gave board members tours of the buildings and equipment.

The next regular China select board meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, June 16.

Vassalboro select board hears plans for fishway enlargement at Webber Pond dam

Vassalboro Town Officeby Mary Grow

Vassalboro select board members’ June 5 meeting featured an update on planned enlargement of the fishway at the Webber Pond outlet dam from Matt Streeter, of Maine Rivers.

Streeter previously reported to board members in February and March, when he explained that closing Dam Road between Webber Pond Road and the southwest shore of the pond will be necessary, because big construction equipment will be on site.

The closure means residents will have to detour and come in from the southeast over the private McQuarrie Road. After discussions with area residents, Streeter said he has reached agreement with five of six McQuarrie Road residents; one is still considering.

Plans include improvements intended to make McQuarrie Road safer, he said. The project also includes enlarging the parking lot at the dam, extending it into a grassy area, to make more space for boat trailers.

Closing the road requires select board approval. Board members and Town Manager Aaron Miller had several questions that Streeter answered. He told them work is scheduled to start July 15, but he would like to start preparations a week earlier.

Board members recommended consultation with the town’s attorney; Streeter offered to meet with him. They plan a final decision at their next meeting, which is scheduled for Thursday, June 26 (a three-week gap because the June 5 meeting was a week earlier than usual).

Later in the meeting, there was a brief discussion of providing electricity at the dam, to operate power gates and a security camera. Select board chairman Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr., did not think the town should pay for it, because “It’s not our dam.” The Webber Pond Association was suggested as the power customer.

In other business June 5, board members:

Reviewed the town’s remote participation policy, created during Covid days when many meetings were on-line only, and the related topic of broadcasting and recording live meetings. Miller plans to ask the town’s attorney to review the document.
Spent another half-hour discussing more changes and clarifications in the town’s personnel policy, which has been reviewed repeatedly this spring with input from town employees.
Planned to meet only once a month in July and August, as usual, and scheduled the meetings for Thursday evenings, July 17 and Aug. 14.

Vassalboro voting results (June 2025)

by Mary Grow

At the polls on June 10, Vassalboro voters filled local offices and endorsed the 2025-26 school budget approved at the June 2 portion of their annual town meeting.

Those re-elected or elected are:

— For the select board for three years, incumbent Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr., with 207 votes.
— For the school committee for three years, incumbents Jessica Clark, 205 votes, and Amy French, 199 votes.
— For Sanitary District trustee for one year, incumbent Ericka Roy, 251 votes.
— For Sanitary District trustee for two years, incumbents Donna Daviau, 207 votes, and Lisa Miller, 222 votes.
— For Sanitary District trustee for three years, write-in candidates Timothy Connelly and Raymond Breton, with two votes each.

The school budget was reapproved by a vote of 193 in favor to 106 opposed.

Town Clerk Cathy Coyne said 299 ballots were cast.

China voting results (June 2025)

by Mary Grow

The small number of China voters who came to the polls on June 10 approved all ballot questions presented.

A 34-article annual town business meeting ballot authorized town government funding and various select board actions for the 2025-26 fiscal year, plus repealing two ordinances and amending two others.

Town Clerk Angela Nelson’s tally said 277 voters filled out these ballots. Of the 34 questions, only three received fewer than 200 “yes” votes.

The vote to repeal China’s recreational marijuana ordinance (because state regulations supersede it, Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood had explained) was 156 in favor, 112 opposed.
The vote to repeal China’s quorum ordinance (because it is not legal, Hapgood had said) was 163 in favor, 107 opposed.
The vote to appropriate $64,000 for community support organizations was 199 in favor, 76 opposed.

On the two-question Regional School Unit #18 ballot, 192 voters approved the annual budget referendum, endorsing the 2025-26 school budget approved in May. Seventy-nine voters were opposed; five left the question blank.

The second question, whether to continue the annual referendum for another three years, was approved 199 to 68, with nine blank ballots.

Complete results from the June 10 voting are on the town website, chinamaine.org, by clicking on the Elections tab on the right-hand side of the main page.

China town meeting to be held via written ballot June 10

China Town Officeby Mary Grow

China’s annual town business meeting will be held by written ballot on Tuesday, June 10. Polls in the portable building in the town office complex will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Absentee ballots are available at the town office until 4:30 p.m. Thursday, June 5, for voters unable to come to the polls.

Voters will act on 2025-26 municipal and school budgets, on two separate warrants. The municipal warrant was developed by China select board members with input from the town’s budget committee, municipal employees and other interested parties.

The RSU (Regional School Unit) 18 budget for 2025-26 was developed by school officials, including the 10-member school board. China’s representatives on the board are Dawn Castner and John Soifer.

China’s June 10 meeting begins with election of a moderator at 6:55 a.m. Following articles include action on proposed expenditures for the fiscal year that begins July 1; policy decisions; and four ordinance changes.

As in past years, major expenses are to run the town. Relevant articles include:

Art. 4, requesting $1,208,981 for municipal services (town office employees and their services, with related items like insurance and software). The comparable figure in the June 2024 warrant was $1,184,525.
Art. 7, $467,493 for public safety, including support for local fire departments and China Rescue, animal control, Kennebec County Sheriff’s Office services and Delta Ambulance. The article includes $154,280 for Delta Ambulance, as the 2025-26 fee to member towns will increase from $25 to $35 per capita. Art. 29 authorizes the select board to negotiate for ambulance service, in case Delta finances fail.

Last year’s public safety request was $420,931. Art. 28 in last year’s warrant was the same as this year’s Art. 29.

Art. 8, $646,799 for the transfer station, down from $666,325 last year. Much of the change is due to rearranging staff-sharing with public works.
Art. 9, $1,818,420, for public works (including appropriating state road funds), down from last June’s appropriation of $1,848,100 for the current year.

The largest proposed decreases in public works are for paving, capital equipment and truck repairs.

Town employees’ pay is part of the administration, transfer station and public works budgets. After debate among themselves and with budget committee members, the select board majority recommends a 3.5 percent cost of living increase. Board member Blane Casey voted against the increase as too generous and therefore does not recommend voters approve articles including town salaries.

After smaller appropriations requests come policy articles asking permission for the select board to carry out its functions – deal with foreclosed property, apply for and use grants, sign contracts, buy and sell items as needed. Budget discussions showed no striking changes from last year’s warrant articles.

Art. 32 is another appropriations request, for $30,000 to finish improving Town Landing Road in South China Village, primarily to reduce erosion into China Lake.

Voters are asked to amend two chapters of the town’s Land Development Code, to complete removal of unneeded provisions (Art. 31); to repeal two complete ordinances, one obsolete and one illegal; and to re-amend the Budget Committee Ordinance.

The Land Development Code amendments will match China’s ordinance with state requirements for timber harvesting, Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood said.

The ordinance dealing with retail (as opposed to medical) marijuana facilities (Art. 30) should be repealed because it has been superseded by state law. China’s ordinance requiring a quorum for town meeting should also be repealed: it has been deemed illegal under state law.

The final article on the town warrant asks voters to amend the Budget Committee Ordinance to restore the committee membership to seven (instead of five, as in the version approved in November 2024). Committee members will continue to be appointed by the select board, not elected by districts (leaving untouched two other changes approved last fall).

The shorter RSU #18 warrant asks only two questions:

Will China voters approve the FY 26 budget adopted by the RSU board and approved at the most recent RSU budget meeting (this question is the “annual budget referendum”)?
Do China voters want to continue the annual budget referendum vote for another three years?

The 2025 RSU budget meeting was held the evening of May 22, in Oakland. If the second question is defeated this year, the final budget decision will be made at the annual budget meeting for at least three future years, without a follow-up referendum.

The RSU budget for 2025-26, found on the RSU website, totals $45,563,358.69. The document says this figure is an increase of $1,185,863.98, or 2.67 percent, over the current year’s budget.

China’s share is listed at $3,728,828.33 for local EPS (Educational Programs and Services) plus $2,249,442.19 in local additional funds, for a total of $5,978,270.52. The budget document says China’s EPS figure is a $241,301.99, or 6.92 percent, increase over the current year; the town’s local additional figure is an increase of $82,865.47, or 3.82 percent.

The total increase for China is $324, 167.46. At an April select board meeting, RSU Superintendent Carl Gartley explained the main reason is a legislatively-authorized increase in the Insured Value Factor, the amount allowed to private schools, like Erskine Academy, for facilities maintenance.

The annual school budget is divided among RSU #18’s five member towns – Belgrade, China, Oakland, Rome and Sidney – according to a formula based on student numbers and municipal valuations.

Vassalboro town meeting: Voters make no drastic changes to recommendations

More than 100 voters attended Vassalboro’s town meeting on June 2. (photo courtesy of Aaron Miller)

Vassalboro’s annual town meeting, held Monday evening, June 2, in the Vassalboro Community School gymnasium, had many familiar elements.

More than 100 voters attended, as usual, including all of the select board and school board and most of the budget committee. They went through about the usual number of articles, 41 this time, in about the same amount of time, from 6:30 to 9:50 p.m.

As usual, many articles asked for funds for the next fiscal year. Amounts were in some cases higher than in the past, as voters pointed out. As usual, voters made no drastic changes in officials’ recommendations.

The frequent cries of “Can’t hear you!” were also familiar, as the microphone passed from speaker to speaker.

Two differences were a new (to Vassalboro) moderator, Jeffrey Frankel from Windsor, and at intervals a new tone, a repetition of the spring’s differences among the select board, budget committee and school board. Budget committee members participated more than usual, explaining their positions as a committee and occasionally as individuals.

Town Manager Aaron Miller had arranged for Frankel to run the meeting, since former moderator Richard Thompson has retired.

Miller’s introductory statement summarized proposed expenditures and explained why he and select board members recommend increases, especially in capital reserve funds, needed to avoid even larger future increases.

Miller said town officials intend to “factor” – increase all property values by a selected percentage – this year. Otherwise, he said, Vassalboro’s valuation will be so low that the town’s state revenue sharing and other benefits would be cut.

Town officials anticipate a tax increase for the fiscal year that begins July 1 (with the first quarterly payment due Sept. 29). However, Miller said, the figures calculated in the 2024 town report (page 19) are not final.

After Frankel’s election and preliminary explanations of procedures, voters elected five budget committee members for two-year terms. They are returning members Donald Breton, William Browne, Phillip Landry and Peggy Schaffer and new member, Ben Loiko.

Voters then approved a $2.9 million municipal budget, covering town departments, after a motion to reduce the recreation and library accounts by $35,000 – mostly aimed at the recreation director’s position — was defeated.

Five requests to raise money from taxes for capital reserve accounts (Art. 6) were debated individually. Voters approved $21,600 for a public works reserve account, without discussion; and accepted the budget committee’s lower recommendations on two plow truck reserves, $50,000 (instead of the select board’s $78,000) to replace truck #6 and nothing to replace truck #2; and added $11,250 to the capital improvement reserve.

They authorized $53,738 for a new backhoe at the transfer station, although the budget committee had recommended no money this year. Budget committee member Breton said the transfer station task force has not yet made recommendations that might affect the kind of equipment needed.

Budget committee member Frank Richards said the recommendation for no money was not unanimous. “If you go cheap, you sure get beat,” he quoted, recommending action now to get a three-year no-interest financing deal.

Former select board member Lauchlin Titus commented that he had served on the select board for 12 years and been off five – and remembered discussing the backhoe during his first year on the board.

After explanations by select board chair Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr., and budget committee member Breton, $125,000, to be kept on hand in case the Mill Hill Road bridge fails before it can be replaced, was deleted from the capital reserve article. Instead of raising the money from taxes, voters approved transferring it from the existing surplus, under the following article.

In another familiar move, voters approved a motion to discuss and vote on Art. 8 through Art. 24 as a group. They approved all after a couple questions, giving town officials typical authorizations, amending the Vassalboro Sanitary District’s charter and approving more expenditures.

Art. 25, authorizing funds for “health and welfare outside agencies” was approved at the budget committee’s recommended level of $41,116.03. That sum excludes $4,000 for Window Dressers, a group that helps low-income area residents better insulate their windows. Local head Holly Weidner explained that funds are not needed next year, though she is likely to request money in 2026-27.

To pay Delta Ambulance’s 2025-26 bill, voters approved the budget committee’s recommended $46,932. Denico said the figure will cover the bill with the offered early payment discount. Select board members had recommended the undiscounted amount, fearing Delta’s bill would be due before the Sept. 29 tax payments come in and the town would be short of ready money.

School Superintendent Alan Pfeiffer introduced the 2025-26 school budget, reminding voters of the maintenance needs of the 33-year-old building in which they were sitting. School board members distributed a letter from board chair Jolene Gamage and a two-page explanation of relations between the school board and budget committee.

Budget committee member Dallas Smedberg chastised the school board for not sharing a detailed budget in time for budget committee members’ review. Gamage replied that budget committee members had been welcome at all school board budget discussions, and added that school board members themselves had not had all the figures they needed on time.

Voters then approved the $10.4 million school budget as presented. Frankel said state law required a counted vote on three articles: he counted one or two negative votes on Art. 38, none on Art. 39 or Art. 40.

Town meeting will reconvene at 8 a.m. Tuesday, June 10, in the town office meeting room. Voters will decide whether to affirm the 2025-26 school budget they approved June 2, and will conduct local elections.

To be elected are one select board member, two school board members and (because the amended Sanitary District charter was approved) five members of the Sanitary District board of trustees.

The list of candidates is on the town website, Vassalboro.net, under the absentee ballots notice and also under the Elections heading, subheading absentee ballots.

Planners approve only application before the board

China Town Officeby Mary Grow

China Planning Board members approved the only application on their May 27 agenda and postponed everything else.

Natasha Littlefield, owner/operator of Littlefield’s Gym, in the former Farrington building, at 9 Legion Memorial Drive, in South China, applied to use office space in the building for her accounting business.

She’s run the business remotely from her home since 2013, she said. She plans no changes to disturb neighbors – no additional lights or noise, no changes to landscaping or parking, no additional employees, maybe a few more clients’ cars during the day.

The three planning board members present decided no public hearing was required. They found the application met all ordinance criteria and unanimously approved it.

The gym, Littlefield said, has about 150 members. It is open 24 hours a day, but seldom used between early evening and early morning.

The agenda for May 27 included discussion with members of China’s comprehensive planning committee and review of two draft ordinances, a new one to prohibit new high-speed power transmission lines through town and a new section of the subdivision ordinance.

Board chairman Toni Wall said she invited five comprehensive planning committee members to the meeting. None responded and none came.

Wall had not had time to continue work on ordinances.

The next China Planning Board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, June 10, in the town office meeting room. Wall said Town Clerk Angela Nelson does not expect the board meeting will interfere with voting in the adjourning portable building, or vice versa.

China’s June 10 annual town business meeting will be by written ballot, with polls open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Angry budget committee members confront select board

Vassalboro Town Officeby Mary Grow

Vassalboro select board members were confronted by three angry budget committee members at their May 29 meeting. (See the May 22 issue of The Town Line, p. 2, for related information.)

Committee chairman Peggy Schaffer, supported by members Douglas Phillips and Frank Richards, told select board members they failed to provide timely financial information this spring. As a result, budget committee members made recommendations they likely would not have made, had they been properly informed.

Schaffer’s main issue was the question of Vassalboro’s undesignated fund balance (commonly known as surplus), money in reserve for emergencies.

During the budget process, resident John Melrose and others recommended a municipality have enough money in reserve for three months’ expenditures.

Budget committee members did not know where Vassalboro’s reserve fund stood, so they hesitated to recommend drawing from it for 2025-26 expenses. They also wanted to minimize increasing local taxes. A third option was to recommend less spending than some members would have preferred.

The lack of information, Schaffer said, was because town officials had not received annual audit reports for either 2023-24 or 2022-23. Now that last year’s report is in town officials’ hands, it shows a comfortable surplus – information that budget committee members should have had when they began deliberations.

Now, Schaffer said, budget committee members might have to make amended recommendations from the floor during the June 2 annual town meeting, a process she does not like.

Richards was surprised that town officials did not have current figures on surplus in town accounts, instead of relying on audits.

Select board chairman Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr., said he began nagging the auditors in January. Their response: Other towns were three years behind getting their reports.

Town Manager Aaron Miller explained later that Vassalboro’s auditors, RHR Smith and Company, in Buxton, fell behind during the Covid epidemic – like many other Maine auditing firms, he added – and have been trying to catch up ever since. This spring, Vassalboro paid the company an additional $6,000 to complete the audit.

An additional complication is that Dawn Haywood is Vassalboro’s third bookkeeper since 2021, Miller said. Part of the bookkeeper’s job is working with the auditors.

Budget committee members Donald Breton and Dallas Smedberg also attended the May 29 meeting. Both asked procedural questions.

In other business May 29, Miller introduced summer intern Peter Lefresne, who will work 15 hours a week through August, courtesy of the internship program at the University of Southern Maine’s Muskie School of Public Service.

Board members voted unanimously to authorize engineer Jeff Senders to go ahead with long-discussed plans to redesign the traffic pattern at the transfer station.

They agreed to forward a draft revised TIF (Tax Increment Financing) document, prepared by board member Michael Poulin, to the town’s attorney for review. The outline of expenditures from Vassalboro’s TIF funds, derived from taxes on the gas pipeline through town, also needs approval from state officials and town voters before it can replace the present version.

In response to select board member Chris French’s repeated proposal to expand the select board from three to five members, Miller had found state requirements. Chapter 121, subchapter 2, Section 4A of paragraph 2526, says:

“A town may determine at a meeting held at least 90 days before the annual meeting whether 3, 5 or 7 will be elected to each board and their terms of office.

(1) Once the determination has been made, it stands until revoked at a meeting held at least 90 days before the annual meeting.
(2) If a town fails to fix the number, three must be elected. If a town fails to fix the term, it is for one year.”

Board members authorized the manager to draft a ballot question to be submitted to town voters.

Miller and Lefresne are looking into the possibility of installing an outdoor fitness park in Vassalboro. The manager showed a brief video from National Fitness Campaign and said a $50,000 grant is available toward the $250,000 cost.

Miller emphasized he does not plan to ask for tax money for the project. The idea might be “pie in the sky,” he allowed, but he saw no harm in looking into it. Farmington, Lewiston and Hampden have installed such parks, he said.

The manager is also exploring new ways, mostly technological, to communicate with residents. Denico recommended for now, putting more information, like town meeting reminders, on the Vassalboro Facebook page.

Discussion continued on two on-going topics, the town’s personnel policy and the foreclosed property adjoining the transfer station on Lombard Dam Road.

The next regular Vassalboro select board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, June 5 (only one week after the prior one). After that, the board is not scheduled to meet until Thursday evening, June 26.

Vassalboro cemetery committee satisfied with summer plans

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro Cemetery Committee members are satisfied with their plans for summer maintenance work.

Four members who met May 19 expect the annual professional help from Grave Stone Matters, in Hoosick Falls, New York, from July 10 to 14. Joseph Ferrannini is scheduled to repair stones in the large North Vassalboro Village cemetery, committee chair Savannah Clark said.

Clark said Town Manager Aaron Miller has arranged insurance for local volunteers, who can begin work when the weather permits.

Tree removal is scheduled for the Nelson Road cemetery, near the south end of Nelson Road, and the Farwell-Brown cemetery, on Riverside Drive not far north of the Augusta city line. Bids to do the work are due at the town office by 3:30 p.m. Monday, June 16, according to the town website.

Committee members settled two issues discussed previously.

The document titled “Trees and Stones: A Balancing Act in Vassalboro Cemeteries”, is now on the Vassalboro website, for public information. It is under the heading Cemeteries, the second item under “Rules for Vassalboro Cemeteries.”

This statement, approved by the town select board, makes it clear that the cemetery committee is responsible for trees in cemeteries, including removing those that are potential hazards to stones, fences or other structures.

In a related matter, David Jenney found a 2010 town ordinance, repeated in December 2023 cemetery rules, forbidding planting trees or invasive plants in any Vassalboro cemetery.

The second issue, raised at the committee’s April 28 meeting, was how deep cremains should be buried in cemeteries. Committee members’ research had found no law or other firm requirement. They decided to stay with what seems to be consensus: three feet deep preferred when feasible, but not a strict requirement.

Committee member Jane Aiudi had two more concerns.

Referring to a state law she found saying municipal authorities are responsible for marking veterans’ graves for Memorial Day, she asked what arrangements town officials have made to make sure the graves are properly marked.

Clark said later that currently, Vassalboro volunteer fire department member Don Breton (who served on the select board some years ago) has assumed the task.

Also, Aiudi was concerned with the reach of right-to-know laws. Committee members are aware that if three (or more) meet outside a meeting (at the supermarket, for instance), they cannot legally talk committee business: such discussions can only be held in a properly announced meeting.

Aiudi, citing a conversation with Miller, feared her telephone calls might be subject to right-to-know laws if she mentioned committee issues to anyone. Members also wondered whether, when they are working together on cemetery repairs, they can discuss what they’re doing.

Jody Kundreskas suggested they could talk about the work they were doing, but not about policy matters. Clark reminded the group that last year, at least some of their work days were publicized in advance for anyone who wanted to come.

The next regular Vassalboro Cemetery Committee meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, June 16.

Vassalboro town meeting will be held in two sessions

Vassalboro Town Officeby Mary Grow

Vassalboro’s annual town meeting for 2025 will be in two sessions, eight days apart and in two different locations.

On Monday, June 2, voters will assemble in the Vassalboro Community School gymnasium, at 6:30 p.m., to talk about and vote on articles number one through 41. On Tuesday, June 10, polls will be open at the town office for written-ballot voting on Articles 42 and 43.

The open meeting decisions cover the 2025-26 budgets for the town and the school and a variety of policy issues. At the polls, voter will decide whether to affirm the 2025-26 school budget approved June 2; and they will elect municipal officials: one select board member, two school board members and five members of the Vassalboro Sanitary District board of trustees.

Vassalboro’s annual town meeting for 2025 will be in two sessions, eight days apart and in two different locations.

The town meeting warrant is on the town website, vassalboro.net. The list of candidates for local offices is also on the website, under the heading absentee ballots.

At the June 2 open meeting, the first article asks voters to elect a moderator to run the meeting. Richard Thompson, who has moderated Vassalboro’s meetings for years, has retired. Town Manager Aaron Miller said in April he has arranged for Jeff Frankel, from Windsor, to be available.

Art. 2 calls for election of five members of the budget committee. According to the website, current members whose terms end at this meeting are William Browne, Donald Breton, Dallas Smedberg, Peggy Schaffer, and Phillip Landry. Those elected last year and continuing in office to June 2026 are Frank Richards, Nate Gray, Douglas Phillips, Laura Jones and Richard Bradstreet.

Voters are then asked to approve 2025-26 tax due dates (Art. 3) and more than $2 million in non-tax revenues (Art. 4). Requests for expenditures begin with Art. 5, asking for more than $2.9 million to run town departments next year, and continue at intervals through many other articles.

Select board members began discussing expenditures in February. They and budget committee members held many long meetings, some including discussions with town employees and people requesting funds for organizations or otherwise affected by budget recommendations.

The two committees’ recommendations for capital reserve funds (Art. 6) disagree substantially. The budget committee majority does not recommend any funds be set aside for transfer station equipment or to replace plow truck #2; the select board recommends $53,738 and $50,000, respectively. For replacing truck #6, the select board recommends $78,000, the budget committee $50,000.

At their May 15 meeting, select board members made plans to amend Art. 6 and Art. 7 from the meeting floor. They plan to ask voters to take $125,000 to be used for the Mill Hill bridge (under Art. 7), if it fails before repairs are organized, from unexpended fund balance, not raise the money from taxes under Art. 6.

Select board and budget committee members also disagree on their recommendations for outside agencies (Art. 25) and Delta Ambulance (Art. 26).

Art. 25 includes $4,000 for the Window Dressers program, endorsed by the select board and not the budget committee. For ambulance service, select board members recommend voters appropriate the full bill, $154,665. Budget committee members recommend taking advantage of the early-payment discount, and therefore appropriating $146,932.

School board members reduced the first budget they sent to the budget committee by $75,000. The result is that both boards recommend the 2025-26 school budget totaling $10,414,498.24 (in Articles 28 through 41).

New this year is Art. 13, asking voters to approve amendments to the charter of the Vassalboro Sanitary District. This article is the result of months of discussion among town and sanitary district officials and several lawyers.

Other articles Town Manager Miller included in the meeting warrant ask voters to allow select board members to sign contracts, accept insurance settlements, grants and gifts and carry out other appropriate actions during the year.