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Town spending plan shows 1.9% rise

The Board of Finance (BOF) received a proposed spending plan from the Board of Selectmen (BOS) at a special meeting Monday, March 25.The plan for municipal spending for the 2013-14 fiscal year calls for $1,595,753 in total municipal spending, an increase of $29,388 (1.9 percent).Most town employees get 2 percent raises in the spending plan. Highway department workers get increases as determined by a step increase system and by the recommendation of a supervisor.The selectmen receive no salary increase. First Selectman Pat Mechare makes $34,001, and Selectmen Chuck Lewis and Greg Marlowe make $5,335.As the meeting wound down, Lewis made what he called his “annual appeal to bring the first selectman’s salary into the real world.”Lewis said the job should entail a salary of at least $40,000. “And at $40,000 she would still be the lowest-paid first selectman in the state.”Mechare started to say she did not want a raise and Lewis countered. “Ignore her appeal.”The selectmen asked for an additional $5,000 for the heavy equipment capital account. Mechare said that the town’s tractor is a 1981 model and nearing the end of its useful life. A new one costs between $55,000 and $65,000. The selectmen also asked that a separate reserve account be established for the Water Street bridge. Mechare asked for $50,000 initially and the same next year.She explained that, the way things stand now, the town’s share of the repair or replacement of the bridge will be about $100,000.Mechare also told the finance board that a below-ground heating oil tank at the firehouse was going to need attention soon. The tank was installed decades ago, possibly as far back as 1956, she said. It is currently in use.Finance Co-chairman John Allyn, a member of the Falls Village Volunteer Fire Department, agreed the tank is old and should be replaced. “It’s a ticking time bomb,” he said.Mechare said she would ask GeoInsight, the company that did a recent survey of hazardous materials stored in town (the “Tier II” survey), to come look at the tank.The finance board asked that $500 be added to the auditing line to reflect a cost increase approved at a past meeting.Mechare asked that board members study the proposed spending plan and make any recommendations as soon as possible, so a public hearing can be scheduled.At the last Board of Finance meeting, Lou Timolat made a motion (which was seconded) recommending a 2 percent increase for the Lee H. Kellogg School — a total of $1,810,000.The school board’s proposed spending plan, discussed with the finance board earlier this month, called for a 5.8 percent increase for a total of $1,886,334.At the last meeting the motion was tabled; at the March 25 meeting, it remained tabled.The school and finance boards met the following night at a special Board of Education meeting at Kellogg.

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