Finance Committee Budget Recommendation

WaylandSealRelease on March 27, 2014

The Wayland Finance Committee is pleased to recommend a budget to Annual Town Meeting that pays for our valued services and meets our financial obligations. We urge you to read the Warrant and plan to attend Annual Town Meeting beginning April 3 at 7:30 pm at the High School.

Our operating budget fully funds the School Committee’s budget request, including the
proposed elementary school reconfiguration. We recommended funding almost all of the town-side budget requests submitted by the Board of Selectmen and other boards, including the Fire Department’s request for the first new firefighter position since 1970.

Our capital budget is backed by a long-term capital improvement program and many years of planning. Overall, our capital budget reflects a solid assessment of our needs, removing or delaying requests that are not either essential at this time or fully vetted.

Over the past four years, the Finance Committee and Town Meeting cut taxes and minimized tax increases by approving tighter expense budgets and demanding better revenue estimates. Assuming our FY15 budget passes, our general fund expense budget will have increased less than two percent a year since FY12, lower than the rate of inflation.

We drew down our free cash reserves to offset the operating budget each year from FY12 to FY14. Our free cash reserves accumulated in past years helped Wayland taxpayers bridge the gap created by the recession and its aftermath. We understood that taxes would have to go up eventually. During those years, Town Meeting had a choice: raise taxes a bit each year as spending increased (less than the rate of inflation, as it turned out), or pay for the likely steeper increased spending later.

This year, we recommend a budget that would increase property taxes by about 10 percent over last year, which is more than the 3.5 percent increase in the expense budget. The reason for this difference: we must raise in taxes what we covered with free cash over the past few years. All of us engaged in town government and Town Meeting knew this day was coming. Almost no-one in Wayland has called for any service cuts, let  alone the drastic cuts required to sustain last year’s property tax levy.

We respectfully ask taxpayers not to look only at this year’s proposed tax increase. Those who focus on this year alone miss the bigger picture:

  • Look back: If our recommended budget passes, the tax rate will have gone up less than one percent per year over thepast four years, and we get to pay for the four-year increase at the back end, in FY2015, just as Special Town Meeting wanted in 2011. Expenses went up less than the rate of inflation over that same period.
  • Look forward: After this catch-up year, we project that our tax levy will grow at only about 2-3% annually over the next three fiscal years, in line with current inflation expectations.

The Finance Committee takes the long view. We urge members of Town Meeting to do the same.

Again this year, we saw continued savings after years of hard work controlling health
care expenses. Thanks in large part to healthcare changes for employees and retirees, not only do our current healthcare expenses continue to run lower than our peers and nationwide averages, but our annual actuarial obligation to fund Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB) remains much lower than it was in past years. The OPEB Committee built on this success, proposing to fund OPEB this year at no current cost to Wayland taxpayers. We support the OPEB Committee’s proposal.

Wayland residents should be proud of our town’s finances. The bond market prices our debt as among the safest in the world, and our auditors gave us another unqualified opinion on our most recent financial statements, as usual. Wayland’s finances are sound in large part because of the hard work of our town officials, employees, volunteer board members, and committed residents.

We are lucky to live in a town where so many people care so much about local government. Make your voice heard. Read the warrant, attend Annual Town Meeting, and please support our recommended budget. Your vote matters.

Finance Committee

Nancy Funkhouser
Thomas Greenaway, Chair
David J. Gutschenritter
Cherry C. Karlson
Carol Martin
Bill Steinberg
Gil Wolin

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