Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

Major increase in town spending

The Board of Finance (BOF) formally accepted the proposed 2013-14 spending plans from the Board of Selectmen (BOS) and Board of Education (BOE) at a meeting March 19.BOF Chairman Barbara Prindle said in an interview that, “The proposed selectmen’s budget for the new fiscal year shows an increase of 17.9 or 21.2 percent.” Prindle explained the difference between the two percentages depends on whether it is calculated based on total expenditures or net expenditures. Net expenditures are the total after miscellaneous revenues (such as town clerk fees and rental income from 67 Main St.) are taken into account.The municipal budget shows total proposed expenditures of $4,063,396 for the 2013-14 fiscal year, which begins July 1. The main reasons for the huge percentage jump in the proposed budget are interest and payments on the bond issue used to finance the recent road repair project. Those funds ($742,850) will be due in the new fiscal year. That amount is $422,050 higher than the $320,800 to be paid for that line item in the 2012-13 fiscal year.The education budget includes the amount needed to operate Sharon Center School and the town’s contribution to the six-town Region One School District budget.The Region One budget includes Houstasonic Valley Regional High School, the region’s Pupil Services office and the Region One administrative office.The regional budget is determined by the regional Board of Education. For a story with details of that budget and hearing and voting dates, see Page A1.For the 2013-14 fiscal year, the proposed education budget for Sharon Center School is $4,033,689, a 5.3 percent increase over this year’s budget. However, the town’s contribution to the Region One budget for 2013-14 is slated to decrease by $250,150 to $2,212,885, a 10.16 percent reduction. That is due to fewer Sharon students attending Housatonic this year.The amount of a town’s tuition paid to the regional high school is based on the number of the town’s students enrolled in the preceding fiscal year.The increase in the local budget plus the decrease in the amount the town contributes to Region One results in a net proposed total decrease of $47,204 or 0.75 percent.Prindle said the meeting on March 19 was only a chance for the board to hear the proposals. The education and municipal budgets are handled differently.The finance board can instruct the selectmen to make changes in line items in their proposed budget. They do not have that opportunity with the education budget. The finance board can instruct the Board of Education to change its total proposed spending plan by a certain percentage, but can not dictate which line items those changes impact. “We look at the Board of Education budget in total, but at the Board of Selectmen’s budget line by line,” Prindle saidA special meeting of the Board of Finance will be held March 28; the public is encouraged to attend and to comment on the spending plans. A public hearing will be held on Friday, April 26, at 7 p.m. That is another opportunity for public comments. Immediately after that hearing, on the same night, the Board of Finance meets to vote on the proposed budgets, which will then move forward to a town meeting on Friday, May 10, at 8 p.m. at Town Hall. Taxpayers in the town will vote to accept or reject the budgets that night.If the proposed budgets are accepted, the finance board meets immediately afterward to set the mill rate for the new fiscal year.Prindle encouraged town residents to attend meetings of the town boards and commissions.“If someone is really interested in the workings of a particular board or commission, they should regularly attend its meetings and become very familiar with its work. With that knowledge, they become good candidates when openings come up.”Schedules of meetings are published on the Sharon page of The Lakeville Journal each week and are available at the town website at www.sharonct.org.

Latest News

Sharon Audubon Birdfest

Sharon Audubon Center naturalist and volunteer coordinator Bethany Sheffer shows off Mandala, a red-tailed hawk who lost an eye after being hit by a car more than a decade ago.

Alec Linden

SHARON – Drizzle and chill couldn’t quell bird enthusiasts Saturday, May 9, for the Sharon Audubon Center’s Birdfest, an all-out avian fete in celebration of World Migratory Bird Day.

The internationally recognized effort is meant to bring awareness to the safety and wellbeing of the billions of migratory birds that return to their summer breeding grounds each spring.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sharon voters reject controversial school budget, 114-99

The May 8 town meeting and budget vote were moved from Sharon Town Hall to Sharon Center School to accommodate what officials said was the largest turnout for a Sharon budget meeting in recent years.

Alec Linden

SHARON – More than 200 residents packed the Sharon Center School gymnasium Friday, May 8, where voters narrowly rejected the Sharon Board of Education's proposed 2026-2027 spending plan by a vote of 114-99, sending the budget back to the Board of Finance after weeks of heated debate over school funding.

The rejected proposal – the ninth version of the budget since deliberations began months ago – carried a bottom line of $4,165,513 for the elementary school, unchanged from last year. The flat budget came after the BOF ordered the BOE in early April to remove nearly $70,000 from its spending plan.

Keep ReadingShow less

Liane McGhee

Liane McGhee
Liane McGhee
Liane McGhee

Liane McGhee, a woman defined by her strength of will, generosity, and unwavering devotion to her family, passed away leaving a legacy of love and cherished memories.

Born Liane Victoria Conklin on May 27, 1957, in Sharon, CT, she grew up on Fish Street in Millerton, a place that remained close to her heart throughout her life. A proud graduate of the Webutuck High School Class of 1975, Liane soon began the most significant chapter of her life when she married Bill McGhee on August 7, 1976. Together, they built a life centered on family and shared values.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

‘Women Laughing’ celebrates New Yorker cartoonists

Ten New Yorker cartoonists gather around a table in a scene from “Women Laughing.”

Eric Korenman

There is something deceptively simple about a New Yorker cartoon. A few lines, a handful of words — usually fewer than a dozen — and suddenly an entire worldview has been distilled into a single panel.

There is also something delightfully subversive about watching a room full of women sit around a table drawing them. Not necessarily because it seems unusual now — thankfully — but because “Women Laughing,” screening May 9 at The Moviehouse in Millerton, reminds us that for much of The New Yorker’s history, such a gathering would have been nearly impossible to imagine.

Keep ReadingShow less

By any other name: becoming Lena Hall

By any other name: becoming Lena Hall

In “Your Friends and Neighbors,” Lena Hall’s character is also a musician.

Courtesy Apple TV
At a certain point you stop asking who people want you to be and start figuring out who you already are.
Lena Hall

There is a moment in conversation with actress and musician Lena Hall when the question of identity lands with unusual force.

“Well,” she said, pausing to consider it, “who am I really?”

Keep ReadingShow less
Remembering Todd Snider at The Colonial Theatre

“A Love Letter to Handsome John” screens at The Colonial Theatre on May 8.

Provided

Fans of the late singer-songwriter Todd Snider will have a rare opportunity to gather in celebration of his life and music when “A Love Letter to Handsome John,” a documentary by Otis Gibbs, screens for one night only at The Colonial Theatre in North Canaan on Friday, May 8.

Presented by Wilder House Berkshires and The Colonial Theatre, the 54-minute film began as a tribute to Snider’s friend and mentor, folk legend John Prine. Instead, following Snider’s death last November at age 59, it became something more intimate: a portrait of the alt-country pioneer during the final year of his life.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.