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Showing posts with label budget workshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label budget workshop. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2013

Fishbein’s action causes council stir

As published in the Record Journal on Friday April 12, 2013

By Andrew Ragali
Record-Journal staff
aragali@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2224
Twitter:@AndyRagz

Photo by Christopher Zajac courtesy of the Record-Journal

Wallingford Town Councilor Craig Fishbein sits in the back of the Town Hall auditorium during a recent Town Council meeting.

image

WALLINGFORD - To the dismay of his fellow Republicans, Town Councilor Craig Fishbein refused to take his assigned seat during Wednesday’s Town Council budget hearing, opting instead to attend the meeting as a member of the public.

Fishbein sat by himself in the back row of Robert Earley Auditorium during the public hearing, protesting a decision made by Town Council Chairman Robert Parisi, also a Republican, a night earlier.

“My opposition to the chairman’s dictatorial rule is quite evident,” Fishbein said Thursday.

Fishbein’s opposition arose when Parisi would not allow him to make a comment during the public question and answer portion of Tuesday’s council meeting.

“I can see if the conduct was disruptive,” Fishbein said Thursday. “As a councilor, I was attempting to bring a condition to the attention of a body.”

Fishbein said there is no rule against councilors speaking during the public comment portion of meetings. In the past few meetings, Fishbein said, he has asked Parisi for permission to make comments during that part of the meeting and “got his graces to speak.”

On Tuesday, Fishbein said he did not approach Parisi before the meeting to ask him permission to speak, but during the public comment period he asked Republican Vice Chairman Vincent Cervoni to pass along his request to Parisi. Fishbein said he wanted to express his displeasure that booklets outlining the mayor’s budget were only made available on Tuesday, a day before the public hearing.

“That is not good government,” said Fishbein, adding that it gave the public only one day to examine the 92-page document and formulate questions. Wednesday’s public hearing was the only opportunity for residents to question the budget.

Parisi told Fishbein Tuesday night that he is an elected official and has no place speaking during the public comment portion of the meeting.

“I thought I told him (Tuesday) that I don’t care where he sits; he’s an elected official of this town, and as such he’s a town councilor,” Parisi said Thursday. “You might as well say he was absent (Wednesday) because he didn’t take part as he was supposed to and as all his colleagues did.”

Parisi has more than 20 years of experience as a town councilor, and several terms as chairman. He said he’s “never had a problem with councilors wanting to speak.”

“Most know when they’re supposed to speak and where,” he said. “If (Fishbein) has a problem with rules or precedent, I can’t help him. I take a lot of pride in my meetings. I’m not going to change. I’m not going to have people running roughshod, debating when it’s not time to debate.”

“I’m not going to be censored,” Fishbein responded Thursday. “I see the chairman employing rules only when he wants to.”

Parisi said he regretted departing from his usual approach by allowing councilors to speak during the public comment portion of meetings during the last few months.

“That’s my fault,” he said. “I broke precedent. When I was on the council and others were chairman, I didn’t speak.”

Parisi said that it’s an “unwritten rule” of the Town Council that councilors aren’t to speak during the public comment period of meetings. From now on, Parisi said, councilors won’t be allowed to comment during the public question-and-answer period whatsoever.

As for Wednesday’s meeting, Fishbein said he disagreed with Parisi’s assertion that he was “absent.”

“The duty of a councilor is to be in attendance and hear from the public,” Fishbein said. “Certainly I was in attendance and heard from the public.”

Cervoni said Thursday that he didn’t think Fishbein’s actions were appropriate. “I think there was a more constructive way to deal with his displeasure of Chairman Parisi,” he said. “I think historically the public question-and answer period is for the benefit of the public. They have a much more limited ability to get issues on the council agenda.”

If a councilor is to make a brief statement, it’s courtesy to tell the chairman before the council meeting, Cervoni said. As for Parisi’s decision to disallow Fishbein from speaking during the public comment period, Cervoni said “the chairman exercised his discretion.”

“I felt that as an elected official (Fishbein) should have been at the council bench,” Republican Town Councilor John Letourneau said Thursday. “He should have been with the rest of the councilors at the table. It’s our duty to be here, not in the audience.”

LeTourneau said, “It’s upsetting having a councilor stray from his duties.”

Town Councilor Tom Laffin, a Republican, said that for Fishbein to sit out the meeting while fellow Councilor John Sullivan is “apologizing profusely for missing meetings with cancer” is insulting.

I don’t have time for the games,” Laffin said. “I think it’s insulting to the public but it’s insulting to the rest of us up there.”

Sullivan, a Democrat, began a leave of absence after Tuesday’s meeting to undergo cancer treatment.

In response, Fishbein said his fellow councilors “can’t think for themselves.”

Parisi said he’s not sure whether disciplinary action against Fishbein is “appropriate, necessary or constructive.”

“My opinion and my feeling is that the public will discipline councilors when in fact they don’t uphold their duty,” Parisi said.

While Cervoni said he didn’t agree with Fishbein’s actions, he did agree with his fellow councilor on the availability of budget booklets, and said “it’s probably more beneficial to the public to have these books available in advance of the hearing.”

In the future, Cervoni said, he will look at “padding the time” between the release of the book and the public hearing.

On Wednesday night, a resident complained that the booklets weren’t available in time. Comptroller Jim Bowes said that the booklets were supposed to be in from the printer on Friday, but the company the town contracts with ran into an unexpected delay. Bowes said the company has been reliable for the last six years.

Looking back, Parisi said he should have scheduled the public hearing at a later date to give residents more time to inspect the budget, but he was “rushing to get it in.”

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

PUBLIC HEARING on the 2013-2014 BUDGET

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

WEDNESDAY

APRIL 10, 2013 - 6:30 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

PUBLIC HEARING

on the

FY 2013 – 2014 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Pledge of Allegiance

2. Roll Call

3. PUBLIC HEARING


Ambulance/EMS Transport Fund
Animal Control

Board of Assessment Appeals
Board of Education
Board of Ethics
Board of Selectmen
Building Department

Cafeteria
Capital Appropriations Reserve
Capital and Non-Recurring
Capital and Non-Recurring Fund
Civil Preparedness
Conservation Commission
Contingency Account

Debt Services

Economic Development Commission
Employee Insurance and Other Benefits
Engineering Department

Finance Department
Fire Department
Fire Marshal

Government TV

Health Department

Inland Wetlands
Insurance-Property & Casualty

Law Department
Library

Mayor

Parks and Recreation
Pension Fund
Personnel, Pensions, & Risk Management
Planning & Zoning
Police Department
Probate Court
Program Planning
Public Utilities Commission
Public Works Department

Registrars of Voters

Six-Year Capital
Social Services Contributions

Town Council
Town Clerk

Utilities –Electric, Water & Sewer Divisions

Veterans Service Center

Youth & Social Services Bureau

Zoning Board of Appeals

Friday, April 13, 2012

Wallingford Superintendent Menzo defends lacrosse

As published in the Record Journal, Friday April 13, 2012

By Russell Blair
Record-Journal staff

WALLINGFORD — School Superintendent Salvatore Menzo defended the inclusion of lacrosse in the 2012-13 school budget during a Board of Education budget workshop before the Town Council Thursday.

The school board received $614,000 less than what it had requested in Mayor William W. Dickinson Jr.’s budget proposal, but when it comes to possible cuts, the board has remained firm in its commitment to lacrosse. Republican Town Councilor Craig Fishbein was critical of adding the sport at the two high schools, at the expense of other items, in tough economic times. “When you get less than you ask for, and you promise that you’re adding lacrosse ... I have a problem,” he said. “The economy stinks. I think sometimes people don’t realize that.”

But Menzo said Wallingford Youth Lacrosse, the town’s youth club program, has shown that a high school program for both girls and boys would be sustainable. Members of the group were in the audience Thursday.

“I’m personally committed to lacrosse,” Menzo said. “They followed the process appropriately. We have a responsible to teach at all levels, some of the best lessons learned outside of the classroom.”

Adding junior varsity lacrosse for boys and girls at Lyman Hall and Sheehan would cost $81,058 in the first year. The second-year cost is expected to be $66,932.

Lyman Hall and Sheehan are the only schools in the Southern Connecticut Conference without lacrosse teams. An estimated140 students would be involved town wide.

Menzo said that the inclusion of lacrosse was not at the expense of staff jobs. The budget does call for the reduction of 11 teaching positions, but those jobs are being cut due to declining enrollment, he said.

Board of Education Chairwoman Roxane McKay, a Republican, said the school board supports the addition of the sport.

“All nine board members support this program,” she said. “There’s a lot of ways that people get educated. This is a component of education.”

McKay said the district is losing local students to private schools that have lacrosse programs.

Earlier Thursday, councilors expressed concern over the cafeteria budget, which projects a deficit of more than $200,000 being covered by a fund balance. The cafeterias are self-sustaining, but may require a subsidy from the school board beginning in the 2013-14 school year. Republican Vincent Cervoni asked Food Service Director Sharlene Wong to explain a trend of deficits in the cafeteria budget.

“Since 2008, we’ve had a downturn in the economy. We’ve had difficult times in terms of balancing revenues and expenditures,” Wong said, adding that state and federal mandates limit what foods can be sold, hurting a la carte sales. After a number of budget workshops, the school board sent Dickinson a proposed budget of $90,188,048, an increase of 3.91 percent, or $3.4 million. Dickinson countered with $89,573,916, a 3.2 percent increase representing $2.8 million in additional funding.

The council will continue budget workshops next week.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Wallingford Officials to discuss necessity of uptown police officer post

As published in the Record Journal, Tuesday April 10, 2012

By Russell Blair
Record-Journal staff
rblair@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2225

WALLINGFORD — Republican Town Councilor Craig Fishbein believes stationing a police officer at the corner of Center and North Main streets is a waste of taxpayer dollars, and says he will raise the issue at Wednesday’s public hearing on the 2012-13 budget.

Last month, Fishbein requested under the Freedom of Information Act the duties, hours and compensation paid to officers who work at the uptown intersection. Police Chief Douglas Dortenzio said at the time he believed the position was covered under the police union contract, but a letter from Lt. Marc Mikulski to Fishbein says it is not.

“The specifics of this post are not mentioned in the current Wallingford Police Union Local 1570 Collective Bargaining Agreement,” Mikulski wrote in his response to Fishbein’s request.

Dortenzio, chief since 1990, declined to comment on the position Monday, but said last month that an officer working at the corner predated his time on the job and the primary responsibility of the post was to assist school children in crossing the street. The officer is also available to handle service calls.

Dortenzio said he would address the matter further on Wednesday.

Mayor William W. Dickinson Jr. said Monday that he believed the settlement of a grievance filed by the union many years ago led to an officer maintaining the post. He said the decision to assign an officer there was a judgment for the chief to make, and he heard people say they like seeing an officer uptown.

Fishbein said he thinks that the electronic crossing signs at the intersection are enough, and he didn’t think anybody is needed at the intersection to assist the schoolchildren. He would like to see the officer reassigned until the need for someone at the intersection is established. But Republican Councilor John LeTourneau disagreed.

“I like having the officer there, especially when the kids are crossing,” LeTourneau said. “I think it’s too big for a crossing guard. It’s a main intersection; there’s always a lot going on.”

LeTourneau, who owns Wallingford Lamp and Shade on Center Street, said having an officer there helps keep an eye on what’s happening uptown and downtown.

Democratic Councilor Jason Zandri, who has several young children, said he doesn’t think the “walk/don’t walk” signs are enough.

“I don’t think it’s enough for small children,” he said. “They look both ways, but then they walk out into the street.”

But Zandri that he believes a crossing guard could do the same job for less money. Of the people he’s talked to, he says about half support the officer on the corner and half think it’s a waste of money.

“I think if people understand the cost, we should leave it,” he said.

According to Mikulski’s letter, an officer is at the corner from 8:30 a.m. to 9:15 a.m., from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. and again from 2:15 p.m. to 4:15 p.m. The post is filled Monday through Friday, but not during the summer or school holidays. Officers rotate to cover the intersection.

Wednesday’s public hearing on Dickinson’s proposed budget is scheduled for 6 p.m. in the auditorium of Town Hall, 45 S. Main St.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

AGENDA – SPECIAL WALLINGFORD TOWN COUNCIL MEETING – FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET – May 5, 2011

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

May 5, 2011

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. BUDGET WORKSHOP

Personnel

Risk Management

Employee Insurance & Benefits

Insurance Property & Casualty

Pension Funds

Monday, May 2, 2011

AGENDA – SPECIAL WALLINGFORD TOWN COUNCIL MEETING – FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET – May 3, 2011

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

May 3, 2011

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. BUDGET WORKSHOP

Public Works

Engineering

Cap & Non-Recurring

Capital Appropriations

Parks & Recreation

Friday, April 29, 2011

AGENDA – SPECIAL WALLINGFORD TOWN COUNCIL MEETING – FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET – May 2, 2011

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

May 2, 2011

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. BUDGET WORKSHOP

Board of Assessment Appeals

Board of Ethics

Board of Selectmen

Civil Preparedness

Probate Court

Registrars of Voters

Zoning Board of Appeals

Monday, April 25, 2011

Special Wallingford Town Council Meeting - FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET - APRIL 27, 2011

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

APRIL 27, 2011

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. BUDGET WORKSHOP

Library

Economic Development Commission

Social Services

     Spanish Community of Wallingford (SCOW)

     Wallingford Center Inc. (WCI)

     Senior Center

     Master’s Manna

     Police Department

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Special Wallingford Town Council Meeting - FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

APRIL 25, 2011

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. BUDGET WORKSHOP

Public Utilities Commission

Water-Sewer Divisions

Electric Division

Program Planning

Government Television

Youth & Social Services

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

AGENDA – Wallingford Town Council – Special Meeting – April 14, 2011 – FY 2011-2012 BUDGET

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

APRIL 14, 2011

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

FY 2011 – 2012 BUDGET

AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. B U D G E T W O R K S H O P

Health

Building

Planning & Zoning

Inland Wetlands & Watercourses

Conservation Commission

Law Department

Animal Control

Town Council

Thursday, July 22, 2010

VIDEO – BUDGET WORKSHOP - Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 20, 2010

Since the mayor has given the order to stop providing the Town Council and other meetings online, I have decided that in light of fact that there are other towns coming online to do this that I will provide the meetings as I am able to.

It’s your town – get informed and get involved.

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 20, 2010 - PART 1

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 20, 2010 - PART 2

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 20, 2010 - PART 3

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 20, 2010 - PART 4

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

VIDEO – BUDGET WORKSHOP - Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 19, 2010

Since the mayor has given the order to stop providing the Town Council and other meetings online, I have decided that in light of fact that there are other towns coming online to do this that I will provide the meetings as I am able to.

It’s your town – get informed and get involved.

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 19, 2010 - PART 1

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 19, 2010 - PART 2

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 19, 2010 - PART 3

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

VIDEO – BUDGET WORKSHOP - Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 15, 2010

Since the mayor has given the order to stop providing the Town Council and other meetings online, I have decided that in light of fact that there are other towns coming online to do this that I will provide the meetings as I am able to.

It’s your town – get informed and get involved.

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 15, 2010 - PART 1

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 15, 2010 - PART 2

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 15, 2010 - PART 3

Monday, July 19, 2010

VIDEO – BUDGET WORKSHOP - Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 14, 2010

Since the mayor has given the order to stop providing the Town Council and other meetings online, I have decided that in light of fact that there are other towns coming online to do this that I will provide the meetings as I am able to.

It’s your town – get informed and get involved.

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 14, 2010 - PART 1

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 14, 2010 - PART 2

Wallingford Town Council Meeting - April 14, 2010 - PART 3

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Dickinson budget examined in workshop

By Dave Moran
Record-Journal staff
dmoran@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2224

As published in the Record Journal Tuesday May 4, 2010

Follow all the news directly on the Record Journal Website for the most up to date information. www.myrecordjournal.com

Write a letter to the editor letters@record-journal.com

WALLINGFORD — The Town Council continued to scour Mayor William W. Dickinson Jr.’s budget proposal for the coming fiscal year in a workshop meeting Monday, reviewing, among others, the budgets of the Tax, Finance, Youth and Social Services and Animal Control departments as well as the office of the mayor.

When the Economic Development Commission came before the council with its proposed budget, Democrat John Sullivan said he would like to see the town increase the amount it allotted for that expense, but the council ultimately voted to approve the commission’s $62,908 budget request without any alterations.

“I would really like to see thousands of more dollars put toward the EDC,” Sullivan said. “We need a very, very aggressive game plan if we are going to be bringing in new business — not just from Wallingford, not just from Connecticut, but from all over the country.”

While reviewing the Youth and Social Services Department’s $366,290 budget request, Republican Craig Fishbein made a motion to halve the $1,200 budgeted to the department for transportation reimbursement after Director Craig Turner told the council that his department rarely exhausts that expense. The council approved that motion, but rejected one by Fishbein to halve the $500 budgeted for gas and oil expenses for the department’s van.

When Government Access TV’s $132,497 budget request came up, several councilors expressed concern that more than $40,000 spent to install an automated camera system in the Robert Earley Auditorium of Town Hall did not allow the department to reduce the amount it budgeted for employee salaries, which was almost $119,000.

“I had high hopes when we installed the new camera systems that we would be able to cut our costs,” said Robert Parisi, Republican chairman of the council.

Scott Hanley, who manages the town’s TV station, said that part of the purpose of the camera upgrade was to reduce the number of hours he worked, because, as the station’s lone fulltime employee, he often finds his duties call for him to log far more than 40 hours a week.

During the review of the proposed budget for Dickinson’s office, Democrat Nick Economopoulos asked the Republican mayor point blank if he would ever support widespread Internet access for town employees.

“I think it’s what I said before: I want to see where we save money and that’s the measuring stick,” Dickinson said.

Dickinson’s $141,509,858 budget proposal for the 2010-11 fiscal year reflects a 0.8 percent increase over the town’s current spending plan, but raises property taxes by 3.88 percent. In addition to the proposed tax increase, Dickinson’s budget proposal cuts funding requests to both the general government and the Board of Education.

The council will continue its workshop review of the mayor’s proposal Wednesday at 6 p.m., when it is scheduled to review the budgets of the Electric, Water and Sewer divisions, among others.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Special Town Council Meeting – Monday MAY 3, 2010

TOWN OF WALLINGFORD, CONNECTICUT

Special Town Council Meeting

MONDAY

MAY 3, 2010

6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

BUDGET WORKSHOP AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. Budget Workshop

      Finance Department

    Tax Department

    Assessor’s Office

    Purchasing Department

    Economic Development

    Youth & Social Services

    Government Television

    Program Planning

    Probate

    Veterans’ Service Center

    Animal Control

    Town Clerk

    Mayor

    Debt Services

    Contingency

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

WALLINGFORD - Special Town Council Meeting #2

FY 2010 – 2011 BUDGET WORKSHOP 

Special Town Council Meeting

THURSDAY APRIL 15, 2010 6:00 P.M.

Town Council Chambers

BUDGET WORKSHOP AGENDA

1. Moment of Silence

2. Pledge of Allegiance and Roll Call

3. Budget Workshop - Board of Education, Cafeteria