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01/24/2022 11:00 PM

Clinton Sets Calendar for 2022-’23 Budget Process


At its Jan. 18 meeting, the Town Council unanimously approved a budget calendar that calls for the council to hold a series of workshops during the month of February before providing a proposed budget on Wednesday, March 2 and holding a public hearing on Wednesday, April 6.

The Town Council will receive budget presentations across different days. First, on Wednesday, Feb. 9, Town Manager Karl Kilduff will provide a brief overview of his proposed town budget and Superintendent of Schools Maryann O’Donnell will present the proposed Board of Education budget at 6 p.m. at Town Hall.

Next, department heads will present their proposed budgets at 6 p.m. workshops on Thursday, Feb. 17, Tuesday, Feb. 22, and Thursday, Feb. 24. Kilduff told the Harbor News that at press time the schedule for which department are reviewed on which date is still being determined. In addition to the town departments and the education budget, the capital and debt budgets will also be discussed.

Besides the public workshops, citizens can provide input by participating in budget surveys. Last year in order to better gauge what town services citizens value most, the town partnered with a Morgan School math class to conduct a survey to assess how people feel about certain services provided by the town. Kilduff said those surveys will be done again and would be launched soon.

Following all the workshops, the council will hold a special meeting scheduled for March 2 at 6 p.m. to vote on Kilduff’s proposed budget. At the meeting, the council can accept or ask for changes to be made to the budget. The council will vote that night to forward a proposed budget to a public hearing scheduled for April 6 at 6 p.m.

At the public hearing, speakers can voice their opinions for or against either the education or town budget. Immediately following the public hearing, the Town Council will hold a special meeting at which it can make any last changes to either the budget before sending it to a referendum scheduled for Wednesday, May 11.

At the referendum, residents vote to approve or reject the proposed town and education budgets individually. Voters cast their vote for each budget separately, which means it is possible for voters to pass one budget and reject the other in the same referendum.

If one or both of budgets fail, it is revised by the Town Council immediately following the vote. Another public hearing is held the following week and another referendum is held the week after the public hearing.

For most of the last decade, budget season has been a thorny issue in town,one that caused tension and,, occasionally tempers to flare on occasion. Turnout in Clinton’s referendum was usually higher than that of surrounding towns as reasons to support or reject the budgets were passionately debated. In fact, from 2009 to 2019, only during 2019 and 2016 were town leaders able to get both the town and education budget passed during the first referendum.

Things have been markedly different the past few years, however. In 2020, the budget referendum was canceled. An executive order from Governor Ned Lamont gave the legislative bodies of each municipality the authority to set its own budget due to concerns about the ability to safely vote during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. The council then unanimously approved its own proposed budget in late May 2020.

The in-person referendum returned in 2021, but the passion that usually goes with it did not. The vote drew 1,575 people, a turnout of 17 percent in 2021, the lowest turnout in over a decade.