Tuesday, March 2, 2010

What's Your Pleasure?

In a town where more than 95% of the people are eligible for AARP, I was expecting a quiet and to-the-point meeting. Well Ryegate you surprised me, with your feisty and rather rambunctious crew.

Starting promptly at 1 p.m., a packed house of Ryegate residents crowded into the Town Building. After the initial pomp and circumstance which included the reading of the Town Warning, Pledge of Allegiance, and an opening prayer by Rev. Catherine Cook of the Barnet Center Presbyterian Church the meeting began.

Article 1 started with the election of moderator and clerk. This was followed by the reading of Roberts Rules of Order, which led to Article 2 being opened for discussion.

The next hour and a half was strongly debated amongst the citizens. Money was the name of the game. Citizens showed great concern toward the large amount of unaccounted money, and were puzzled as to why the numbers did not add up. Although auditor Holly McClure assured no money was missing despite the differences. She further explained that the money might have been moved into a different account.

Further frustration arose once an angry citizen brought up that the minutes from 2009's Article 2 did not get published with the town's annual report. However, one resident was against amending the Annual Report. He cited the minutes' inaccuracies calling it dangerous, but was unable to elaborate. He also insinuated the selectboard, moderator, and clerk might have an ulterior motive. It was a charge Marsha Nelson, the town clerk, steadfastly denied.

The last debate for article 2 was whether or not to have an outside auditor review the city books. Since the last audit was done over ten years ago, all were in support. The divergence occurred when deciding how to fund it. One resident motioned the money come from the highway/transportation fund. The motion was voted down with a resounding "NO" from the residents, quickly followed by a thank you from the road crew, who had remained silent, until then. In the end the town voted to have the approximately $15,000 audit come from the budget. They gave the selectboard the task of finding the money from elsewhere in the budget.

After Article 2, the remaining seven passed without any resistance from the residence allowing the meeting to finish in less than thirty minutes.

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