The Northfield News

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The Northfield News
Winner of the Vermont Centennial Business Award for Continuous Publication for over 100 years • Founded in 1878
Published weekly, USPS #385300. Periodicals postage paid at Northfield, Vermont 05663. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to 7 S. Main Street, Unit D, Northfield, Vermont 05663-6712, e-mail: thenorthfieldnews@gmail.com • Copyright 2013
VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 1
NORTHFIELD, VERMONT, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014
PRICE 75 CENTS
How to Deal with a Town Budget after
Merger Presents Major Problems
BY KATHLEEN LOTT
The Northfield News
Town Manager Rob Lewis in
his proposed budget for 20142015 for the merged town of
Northfield points out that merger will result in the loss of
approximately $1,300,000 on
the grand list and this, in turn,
means that the town has to
make severe cuts in the budget
to avoid raising property taxes
once again this year.
We need to either take about
$106,000 from reserves or, in
the alternative, reduce staffing
and avoid paying for new equipment that the town and village
have purchased over the last
year. The manager points out
that if the town takes money
from its reserves, it will have to
continue doing that in future
years and this could result in
the elimination of needed
reserves over the next couple of
years.
The other alternative would be
to reduce staffing levels and stop
equipment purchases for the
time being.
The village purchased two dump trucks last
year and both the town manager
and the village manager have
recommeded that the town not
fund these purchases: A tamper,
a street sweeper, a hot patch
machine, and a back hoe and a
rescue truck. Also, the town
manager
is
recommending
reductions in the operations of
the municipal pool and the
library.
It will not be cuts in the fire
department that fuel further
reductions in next year’s proposed consolidated budget,
Northfield’s first in over 100
years.
The trustees and selectmen
met for the fourth time Monday
and closely scrutinized the line
items for the fire department,
reserving the right to return and
reduce the department’s hose
and equipment $3,000 capital
improvement (CIP) contribution
for next year.
This is the first budget that will
be for the merged community.
The
proposed
2014-2015
expenses budget is already
about $470,000 less than this
year’s budget that was approved
by voters at last year’s Town
meeting. The amount raised by
taxes, however, is proposed to
remain
level
at
about
$2,880,350, according to the
proposed budget documents.
In his budget introduction,
Town Manager Rob Lewis says
that the budget does not provide
funding for the two six-wheel
dump trucks the Town will
inherit from the Village, the
large tamper, the Village’s street
sweeper, the hot patch machine,
and the fire department’s rescue
truck. He recommends the sale
or transfer of the backhoe to the
water and sewer departments.
The challenges he outlines are
the $44,000 loss from the pool,
the $21,000 match for the
Northfield commuter bus, and
$26,000 borrowing for the
Village’s one ton truck purchase.
Mr. Lewis also challenged the
library’s hours. “I’m not trying to
funny here. It is important to
have the Library, but it doesn’t
need to be open more hours per
year
than
the
Municipal
Building,” he wrote.
Mr. Lewis wrote that opera-
tions and management expenditures have been reduced by
about two percent, or almost
$76,000. He said that “there is
little or no remaining savings” in
operations and management. He
said that about $102,000 can be
taken from the projected
$349,000 fund balance, but
than “you will be looking at the
same picture this time next year
and the year after.” “You need to
keep as much of the $349,000,”
he wrote.
Budget documents show that
about $96,400 is proposed for
use from surplus. The budget
also shows about $60,000 as
income from the utilities, payments in lieu of taxes (PILOT).
Finance
Manager
Laurie
Baroffio told board members
that the expenses for personnel
were for a variety of stipends for
two fire marshals, the chief, two
captains, and partial payment of
the emergency management
director. She said when those
are subtracted and moneies for
holiday and weekend coverage
and drill night, there is about
$11,410 to actually fight fires.
She said that would pay for
about 15 fire fighters to fight 85
fires for the year.
Chief Peter Demasi said that
there are, on average, about 150
fires per year, and that the average number of fire fighters is
about eight to nine per fire.
Selectman Chris Bradley said
that in the current year about
62 percent has been spent, “with
a lot of winter to go.” He said
that he is willing to look at
reducing any other budget
items, but those for the fire
department.
Don George, President and CEO of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont, center,
Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin, right, and Nicole Ravlin, left, of Cabot Hosiery Mills
of Northfield, kick-off the 2013 Blue Socks for Kids project.
Darn Tough Provides Socks for the Needy
Thousands of needy Vermont
youngsters will be able to enjoy
warm, high-quality socks again
this winter, the sixth year that
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Vermont,
Cabot
Hosiery
Mills/Darn Tough Vermont, and
the state’s community action
agencies and homeless shelters
have joined forces to improve the
health and comfort of Vermont
children.
“Blue Socks for Kids” project
volunteers will deliver 8,400
pairs of premium, Vermont-made
merino wool socks to the state’s
community action agencies and
homeless shelters for distribution to children in need of warm
clothing this holiday season.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Vermont, through its charitable
foundation, the Vermont Caring
Foundation, provided $21,000 to
finance 8,400 pairs of the wool
socks made specifically for “Blue
Socks for Kids” by Cabot Hosiery
Mills of Northfield, Vermont, the
state’s (and Northeast’s) only
sock manufacturer.
“Blue Socks for Kids” has now
distributed more than 50,000
pairs of socks at a cost of nearly
$150,000 over the six years the
project has operated. The funding through the Vermont Caring
Foundation uses non-premium
sources to generate funds to benefit Vermont children.
“This initiative has been very
successful and warmly received
by everyone involved,” noted Don
George, Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Vermont President and
CEO. “We are particularly proud
to celebrate the fifth year of the
project and the positive impact it
has had on many Vermont kids’
health and comfort.”
Research from Canada and the
United States indicates that
warm underclothing is high on
the list of needs among the low
income and homeless living in
cold climates. An Oregon summit
on the needs of low income folks
and the homeless in winter came
up with two priorities – socks
and healthcare.
Everyone deserves access to
warm, high-quality socks during
the winter,” added Ric Cabot,
owner of Cabot Hosiery Mills and
Darn Tough Vermont. “As a company that’s been a part of the
Vermont community for over 30
years, the Blue Socks for Kids
program is a great way to thank
the community for all its support
and to help give back. It brings
us a lot of joy and satisfaction to
help Vermont’s children.”
Cabot Hosiery Mills, Inc. is a
Northfield, Vermont-based sock
manufacturer that makes socks
for a broad range of private-label
customers including J. Crew and
L.L. Bean. In 2004, the Cabot
family formed the premium, performance brand Darn Tough
Vermont under the direction of
third-generation sock maker Ric
Cabot. Darn Tough Vermont’s
Specialty line offers footwear in
six active wear categories:
ski/ride, hike/trek, run/bike,
lifestyle, hunt and kid’s styles –
all of which carry the industry’s
only unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Photo Courtesy of Jonathan Hoffman
A friend of Northfield’s Jonathan Hoffman of Direct Aid International who Jonathan
describes as a serious World traveler was in the Congo on one of her many trips when she
came across this bus from Northfield which had temporarily broken down along the side
of the road. The word is that it was back up and running in a couple of hours. How the
bus got to Africa is a puzzlement. Perhaps one of our readers can enlighten us about the
story behind this conundrum.
Photo by John Knox
Northfield’s United Church under a clear sky just before the candle light service
Christmas Eve just at dusk as captured by well known Vermont photographer John
Knox of Northfield.
The Northfield News
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