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Our goal is to protect the characteristics, qualities and features that define our community and our town… to educate ourselves and our neighbors … to create a greater awareness of the issues that affect our community.

Supreme Court Hears Final Arguments in Solar DisputeBy Cynthia Drummond for the BRVCAMarch 6, 2026PROVIDENCE – The Rhode...
06/03/2026

Supreme Court Hears Final Arguments in Solar Dispute

By Cynthia Drummond for the BRVCA

March 6, 2026

PROVIDENCE – The Rhode Island Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Thursday in the case of a large solar energy facility on Beaver River Road.

Opponents of the project, in this case, the Town of Richmond and an abutting property owner, asked the Supreme Court to reexamine and overturn a decision in 2023 by Superior Court Justice Sarah Taft-Carter, directing the Richmond Zoning Board to issue a special use permit allowing the project, submitted by GD Beaver River LLC, to be built.

While under appeal, Green Development began and completed construction of the solar energy facility.

In June, 2023, the abutter, John Peixinho, represented by attorney Tom Dickinson, and Karen Ellsworth, the Richmond Town Solicitor at the time, each submitted a petition for a Writ of Certiorari, which asked the Supreme Court to review the lower court decision. The Supreme Court granted the writs in April 2024 and heard the oral arguments on Thursday.

The attorneys appearing before the court on Thursday were Tom Dickinson for Peixinho, Kathleen Daniels, for the Town of Richmond, and John Mancini for the developers, GD Beaver River, LLC, which is owned by Green Development, and William Stamp the owner of the former field where the facility was built.

The Project Historic Location

The solar installlation is located on Beaver River Road, which, in 2021, was added to the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places, and the Beaver River is part of the federally-designated Wild and Scenic Rivers System.

Neither of those national designations prevented the developer from moving ahead with the project.

Peixinho, who purchased and restored the historic Samuel Clark farm on Lewiston Avenue, has fought to protect the Beaver River Valley from industrial solar development. The farm, which includes one of the oldest timber frame houses in Rhode Island, is also on the National Register of Historic Places.

Project History and Approval

GD Beaver River and William Stamp first applied in 2018 for a special use permit, which was required because the property, at 172 Beaver River Road, is in a low-density residential, or R-3 zone.

Russel “Bo” Brown, the zoning official at the time, denied the application, because the project did not meet a town requirement that solar arrays be no more than two miles from a utility substation.

The application was also denied by the Planning Board, because the proposed facility would not be consistent with provisions in the town’s comprehensive plan that protect the town’s rural landscapes and cultural and historic heritage.

GD Beaver River appealed the Zoning Board decision to Superior Court, which remanded the case to the Zoning Board. When the board denied the application a second time, the developers appealed once more to Superior Court, and this time, they won. Justice Taft-Carter ruled that the Zoning Board’s reasons for denying the application were “unsupported” and directed the town to immediately issue the special use permit.

The Oral Arguments

The parties disagree on two issues: whether the facility was, in fact within two miles of a substation, and whether the project is compatible with the town’s comprehensive plan.

Kathleen Daniels presented the town’s argument.

“Not only did the court overlook the evidence that was in the Planning Board’s record, the Planning Board’s conclusions, but the Superior Court also misconceived the law by ignoring two legal predicates,” she said. “One is is…that the Planning Commission findings may be considered evidence. The second is the fact that zoning boards do not observe strict evidentiary rules when accepting evidence and rendering decisions and findings. By stating that the conclusion was based on a speculative statement by the Town Planner, the Superior Court simply ignored the fact that they could rely upon the Planning Board’s findings and conclusion, which specifically incorporated or specifically referenced the letter by the Commission of Historic Places [Rhode Island Preservation and Heritage Commission] and also the fact that strict rules do not apply.”

Chief Justice Paul Suttel asked,

“The Zoning Board is required, are they not, to refer this to the Planning Board as part of the process?”

“They are,” Daniels replied, before making her argument on the second point, which concerns the vegetated buffer planted to mitigate the visual impact of the solar panels.

Justice Taft-Carter had concluded that the town’s zoning ordinance required a buffer.

“The problem with that conclusion is the ordinance also requires the finding of consistency with the comprehensive plan, and the Zoning Board’s problem with the vegetative [sic] buffer wasn’t the size, it wasn’t the location,” Daniels said. “It was consistent with what the Planning Board found, with the pastoral setting of this, was going to be plopped right in the middle of a field and was going to look out of place, and the whole comprehensive plan requires the town to identify and protect scenic rural landscapes and keep cultural, historic resources.”

So, the issue, Daniels concluded, was that the buffer was also required to be consistent with Richmond’s comprehensive plan, which it is not.

“I just respectfully ask that this court reverse the judgment of the Superior Court,” Daniels said. “…Placing a vegetative [sic] buffer would be out of place, such that it would be inconsistent with the comprehensive plan and maintaining the rural character and cultural, historical aspect.”

Thomas Dickinson, representing Peixinho, spent considerable time addressing the issue of whether the Superior Court Justice had erred in defining the term “within” regarding the distance of the solar facility from a substation.

“Essentially, the controlling language here is language within the zoning ordinance that requires solar a solar energy system shall be within two miles of a utility substation,” he said. “And that same ordinance defines a solar energy system that consists of a ground mounted solar panel array and its associated structures and components.”

Dickinson then considered the question of the definition of the word “within.”

“A solar energy system is defined as, like I said, the whole kit and kaboodle, in the ordinance, and the word ‘within’ the dictionary that the trial Justice selected, says ‘enclosure or containment.’”

Justice Melissa Long said,

“So, Mr. Dickinson, does that mean that you can read this in different ways and therefore, there’s ambiguity, and then we have to look to our rules of construction around ambiguity?” she asked, noting that in the case of ambiguity, “then you’ve got to construe it in favor of the landowner.”

Dickinson replied,

“I think we’re going to see, in cases as they go along, is what the Supreme Court and what the federal court are doing is what this court has been doing all along, which is, not a slavish adherence to what the administrative agency says, but a recognition and acknowledgment of the administrative agency and their interpretation, and some deference to it.”

There was, Dickinson insisted, no ambiguity.

“It isn’t ambiguous,” he said. “It’s two different interpretations, but it’s not ambiguous when it’s put in the context of the whole ordinance.”

John Mancini presented the developer’s arguments.

“The R-3 zone is essentially three-acre zoning, and it allows for solar energy systems to be permitted by special use, and special use is exactly that. It’s special,” he said. “It allows for an exemption from what would be permitted and what would be not permitted. And the special use exemption also comes with specific criteria that the town has to establish for the Zoning Board to review and determine whether or not the special use should be granted.”

A solar energy system, Mancini said, is not a single entity but rather, a collection of components, including wires.

Justice Erin Lynch Prata asked,

“Are you saying, Mr. Mancini, that those wires are inclusive of the system, are part of the system, and therefore, it would be impossible for a system to be within a two-mile [distance]?”

Mancini responded that the solar energy facility was made up of many different components and therefore could not be “dropped into containment.”

“And that’s where the distinction arises, as to when the word ‘within’ can be used as containment and when the word ‘within’ can be construed as in proximity of, or in range of, and I think that was the distinction the Superior Court was making,” he concluded.

Justice William Robinson asked,

“Mr. Mancini, isn’t that overcome by the specific definition in the ordinance: ‘ground mounted solar panel energy and its associated structures and components’ - that’s a very concise and rather specific definition.”

Regarding the Zoning Board’s decision that the project would not be compatible with the town’s comprehensive plan, Mancini described the testimonies of five land use experts, all of whom found that the facility would not be incompatible. Editor’s note: It should be noted that, as is common in development applications, the experts were paid to testify in support of the project.

Justice Robinson asked,

“You go through all the improper, and inadmissible, perhaps, speculation, aren’t they also to rely upon their personal knowledge of the historic nature of the community, its pastoral qualities and the those features that they have lived with over the years?”

“They are, Your Honor, but in this instance, you have a conditionally permitted use, and the conditionally permitted use is already determined to be harmonious with the comprehensive plan,” Mancini replied.

Robinson appeared unconvinced.

“Don’t they have the discretion to say ‘yes, it is permitted by special use, but in this particular lot, where they define it as historically valuable, scenic value, it’s eligible for registration even if it’s not in a historic district?” he asked.

Mancini concluded that “the applicant followed the prescribed standard in the town zoning ordinances. The town’s zoning ordinances permitted this use initially, subject to a special use permit, the applicant in following the ordinance, presented all the evidence it needed to do so in order to satisfy the record that the special use permit should be granted, and I think the Superior Court was correct in granting the special use permit, reversing the errors of the Planning Board and Zoning Board of the Town of Richmond and for those purposes, we think the decision should not be disturbed.”

Post-Hearing Reaction

Dickinson said he was satisfied with how his arguments had been received.

“On our side, we were able to make the arguments pretty clearly,” he said. “We got questions that were good questions, and I think we answered them well, and I’m very hopeful that the court’s going to come out our way.”

Peixinho agreed that the Justices had asked good questions.

“I thought the Justices were extremely well-prepared for the case and asked some very difficult questions of both sides,” he said. “I felt that my attorney, Tom Dickinson, did an excellent and highly professional job. Attorney Mancini, however, I disagreed with almost everything he said. He tried to claim that the Planning and Zoning Boards’ criteria for inclusion of the area on the National Register was based on whim and conjecture, which is simply not true. The Beaver River Agricultural area has been clearly designated as worthy of consideration for inclusion by the Secretary of the Interior since at least 1977, when the first historic survey report for Richmond was completed by the state preservation office.”
Peixinho also took issue with Mancini’s statements pertaining to the vegetated buffer around the facility.
“Mancini also focused much of his argument on testimony related to the construction of a ‘vegetated buffer,’ which seemed like a real distraction,” he said. “I wish the court could see the reality of this buffer today. It is a complete failure — nothing but a few thin, dead evergreens and some wood chips. Even if it was a of a relevant scale, how can the town really monitor and enforce proper planting and regular maintenance?”
Peixinho ended his comments with a reminder of the continued and pervasive community resistance to the project.
“One thing was really underscored again for me, based on the testimony and questions, and that is: Richmond residents do not and have not wanted this solar installation for a long time,” he said. “For the sake of our community, and our historic structures, landscapes, and view sheds, I sincerely hope the court rules in our favor.”

What Happens Now?

The Supreme Court Justices will discuss the case and issue an opinion. One of the Justices will be chosen to write the opinion, which will likely be issued in May, or even later.

There is no further appeal of the decision, which could be complicated by the absence of Justice Maureen McKenna Goldberg, who was not present for the oral arguments and is retiring soon. That left four Justices to hear the arguments, and the possibility of a tie, which would result in either a new Supreme Court hearing once a new Justice has been appointed, or, the Superior Court decision will stand.

Council Approves Grant Application for Wyoming ImprovementsBy Cynthia Drummond for BRVCAMarch 5, 2026RICHMOND – The Town...
05/03/2026

Council Approves Grant Application for Wyoming Improvements

By Cynthia Drummond for BRVCA

March 5, 2026

RICHMOND – The Town Council, at Tuesday’s meeting, authorized Town Administrator Erin Liese to apply for a grant from the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank and the Department of Transportation’s 2026-2027 Municipal Bridge and Road Revolving Fund. The funds, if awarded, would be allocated to improving safety on Main Street (Route 138) in Wyoming, which is a state-owned road.

Richmond officials, including Liese, council Vice President Mark Reynolds and councilor Dan Madnick, met last July with RIDOT officials in an effort to move Richmond higher on the list of state priorities.

“The Wyoming Plaza needs improvements,” Liese explained. “Some of the curb cuts in there are very difficult, and as we create more economic development down there, Main Street’s going to have to be improved, so, the state did say that this was a project on their list, however, it’s pretty low on the priority list.”

Liese said the approval to move forward would be the first step in the submission process, adding that the application would have to be submitted soon.

Madnick, who previously served on the Planning Board, said new economic development in the downtown corridor would require a traffic study which would show that the road could not handle a greater volume of automobile and even pedestrian traffic.

“It’s not very safe for pedestrians, not very safe for bicyclists, so we ended up finally getting a meeting with RIDOT with town staff on July 7 of last year, and that’s what kicked off the effort to put comments into the most recent iteration of the state transportation improvement plan,” he said. “The town came through, we did that, and we got on their radar, and now, we’re on the list. This is just one step in getting recognition down here to get some investment in our state roads to help with economic development and moving forward Wyoming and Chariho Plaza.”

The question of how the funds, $4.4 million, would be awarded caused some concern among council members.

“We have to be careful here, because this funding avenue, if it’s awarded, it’s a $4.4 million loan that may or may not be forgivable and you can offset that with other funding,” Madnick said.

Council members agreed that the town should not go into debt for a state project.

Council President Samantha Wilcox added,

“I think that we should have some kind of safety, because I don’t necessarily think that we should go into so much debt over a state road,” she said. “I’m happy to partner with them if we need to, but we obviously can’t afford something like that.”

Madnick made a motion, which the council approved, to authorize Liese to submit an application for funding under the state revolving fund.



More Funding Applications



Erin Liese asked the council to approve congressional funding requests to the office of Rep. Seth Magaziner, D-District 2, for two projects.

The first project would involve upgrading the town’s camera systems to improve security and monitoring.

The second project would relocate the front door of the Town Hall, install electronic doors to improve accessibility and improve the roof lines above the new entrance.

“We’re hopeful to go forward with those two projects,” Liese said. “It is a very tight timeline for Chief [Police Chief Elwood Johnson] because I do need his assistance, obviously in the camera program to apply. That’s a Monday deadline.”

The amounts of the funding requests were not specified.

The council approved a motion by Wilcox to application for congressional funding.



Other Business



The council approved a bid of $455,305.50 from T. Miozzi LLC for the re-paving of Wilbur Hill Road.

With councilor Jeffrey Dinsmore opposed, the council approved the reappointment of Nancy Hess to the Planning Board.

The council authorized Erin Liese to sign a lease with the Washington County Fair for use of part of the fairgrounds for the town’s 250th Celebration Field Day.

The council approved a request from Police Chief Elwood Johnson to promote Patrolman Adam Andrukiewicz to the position of Detective.

The council approved, with regret, the resignation of Human Services Director Kate Schimmel.

The council approved the promotion of Kendra Tanguay to Town Clerk.

Supreme Court to Hear Solar Suit ArgumentsBy Cynthia Drummond for BRVCAMarch 4, 2026RICHMOND – With the construction of ...
04/03/2026

Supreme Court to Hear Solar Suit Arguments

By Cynthia Drummond for BRVCA

March 4, 2026

RICHMOND – With the construction of a disputed solar energy facility completed, the Rhode Island Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on March 5 that might reverse a lower court decision that ordered the Town of Richmond to allow the project.

A ruling in March 2023, by Superior Court Justice Sarah Taft-Carter, directed the Richmond Zoning Board to issue a special use permit allowing the project, submitted by GD Beaver River LLC, to be built.

The solar array is located on Beaver River Road, which, in 2021, was added to the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places, and the Beaver River is part of the federally-designated Wild and Scenic Rivers System.

Neither of those national designations prevented the developer from moving ahead with the project, and neighbors could only look on as the heavy equipment moved in, stripped the field, and workers began installing the racks that would support the solar panels.

As construction proceeded in the former corn field owned by William Stamp Jr. of Cranston, two objectors, the owner of an abutting property, and the Town of Richmond, initiated legal proceedings asking the Supreme Court to reconsider the Taft-Carter decision.

John Peixinho, who purchased and restored the historic Samuel Clark farm on Lewiston Avenue, has fought to protect the Beaver River Valley from industrial solar development. The farm, which includes one of the oldest timber frame houses in Rhode Island, is also on the National Register of Historic Places.

“It’s just devastating that they are charging ahead with this massive installation while the case remains unsettled,” Peixinho said when construction began. “But I believe that’s also a clear indication of what little regard these out-of-town property owners and solar companies have for our community.”

In June, 2023, as the construction continued, Peixinho, represented by attorney Tom Dickinson, and Karen Ellsworth, the Richmond Town Solicitor at the time, each submitted a petition for a Writ of Certiorari, which asks the Supreme Court to review the lower court decision. The Supreme Court granted the writs in April 2024.

Project History

GD Beaver River and William Stamp first applied in 2018 for a special use permit, which was required because the property, at 172 Beaver River Road, is in a low-density residential zone.

Russel “Bo” Brown, the zoning official at the time, denied the application, because the project did not meet a town requirement that solar arrays be no more than two miles from a utility substation.

The application was also denied by the Planning Board, because the proposed industrial solar energy facility would not be consistent with provisions in the town’s comprehensive plan that protect the town’s rural landscapes and cultural and historic heritage.

GD Beaver River appealed the Zoning Board decision to Superior Court, which remanded the case to the Zoning Board. When the board again denied the application, the developer appealed once more to Superior Court and this time, he prevailed, with Justice Taft-Carter stating that the Zoning Board’s reasons for denying the application were “unsupported” and directing the town to immediately issue the special use permit.

The Writs

Peixinho’s petition argued that the writ should be granted to correct the error made by the Superior Court:

“A Justice of the Superior Court reviewing a zoning decision is bound by the limits of R.I. Gen. L. sec. 45-24-69, which prohibits the court from substituting its judgment for that of the zoning board of review. On certiorari, this Court will

reverse if it can be shown ‘that the justice misapplied the law, misconceived or overlooked material evidence, or made findings that were clearly wrong.’ Kenlin Properties v. City of East Providence, 139 A.3d 491, 500 (R.I. 2016) (reversing a trial justice who overturned zoning board).”

The petition further states:

“Here the trial justice misapplied the law and was clearly wrong in the failure to apply this Court’s precedents.

With regard to the two-mile requirement, the trial justice substituted her interpretation of the ordinance for the zoning official’s interpretation and the board of review’s interpretation as well.”

Once the Supreme Court has rendered a decision on the lower court decision, there is no avenue for further appeal. Should the court rule in favor of the town and Peixinho, it is unclear whether the developer would be required to dismantle the equipment and remediate the site.

“No Easy Button:” Richmond Recovers From Historic StormBy Cynthia Drummond for BRVCAFebruary 25, 2026RICHMOND – The Town...
25/02/2026

“No Easy Button:” Richmond Recovers From Historic Storm

By Cynthia Drummond for BRVCA

February 25, 2026

RICHMOND – The Town Hall remained closed on Wednesday as crews from the Department of Public Works slogged through the cleanup of the most severe winter storm in Rhode Island history.

The town received about 33 inches of snow, but the snow removal work is going well.

By late morning on Wednesday, all town roads had at least one lane open, and work to open all roads completely was progressing.

Challenges for Town Staff

For Town Administrator Erin Liese, the storm was the biggest test since her appointment in December 2025.

“I thought that the boil-water ban [last September] would have been, but yes, this far exceeds that, for sure,” she said.

After spending Tuesday working from the DPW building, Liese is now working from home, because the town has prioritized clearing the roads. and has not yet plowed the Town Hall parking lot.

“We didn’t want to pull resources off the road to clear parking,” she said.

DPW employees, eight full time and one seasonal, worked through the storm.

“We make sure that, because there’s nothing open, obviously, we purchased a lot of cold cuts, sandwiches,” Liese said. “The garage, they have their tradition of ‘garage ham,’ meatballs. A lot of the spouses are really great. They bring in food to share and because of our previous efforts in the community, we still had the Gatorade, the water and a lot of the snacks that weren’t utilized in the last storm, so they were well fed throughout.”

Liese said the DPW employees were directed to go home at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday evening.”

“We’re very lucky, because we have so many people that are local residents that have worked in conjunction with Carolina Fire. All the emergency needs were met very swiftly, so there was no delay that way,” she said. “They needed to get some sleep, so, to make the call last night, I had to say ‘no more. You guys have got to go home and sleep.’”

Blizzards are Expensive

Snowstorms are notorious town budget-busters. Liese said that with the cleanup ongoing, she had not calculated the total amount spent on supplies and overtime, but she said the cost was significant.

“It’s another Sunday storm event, so that’s overtime, double time costs, but it was 44 hours straight with every staff member of public works,” she said. “As well, we had five additional vendors. They’re high.”

The town also ordered more salt and gravel before the storm. The materials are mixed and applied together to add traction to road surfaces and further stretch the salt supply.

“We got three loads of salt Friday, which we can’t do straight salt here,” Liese explained. “We mix with gravel, so we got the same amount of that and that bill, for Friday, is $15,000 alone, I think, just for the salt portion of it.”

Liese noted that administrators were keeping detailed records of storm-related expenses.

“We’re accounting for every dollar of this storm, should FEMA [Federal Emergency Management Agency] have a snow reimbursement,” she said. “The benchmark on snow removal at FEMA is not great; however, we’re going to try.”

The Police Response

Police Chief Elwood Johnson said Wednesday that the department was fully staffed and prepared for the storm.

“We had ample crew,” he said. “We did bring in one or two on overtime, but we had enough staffing to manage the storm and fortunately, because of the conditions and people heeding the advice to stay sheltered inside, we really were able to manage keeping the parking lot clear, the cruisers and fleet fueled and ready to go.”

There were a few snow-related automobile accidents, but no serious incidents.

Johnson said his department worked closely with the DPW, the Emergency Management Agency and Rhode Island Energy.

“I think the public did the best by preparing themselves, sheltering in place, staying off the road, that helps everybody out, because what happens with one or two people venturing out, out of curiosity, thinking they can have an adequate vehicle to travel, they get caught up and they go off the road into a bank, and now you’re trying up police, potentially rescue, and snowplows,” he said. “Snowplows actually struggled with this storm. It was so intense. There is no easy button. I didn’t expect that there would be.”

There was one fatality on Monday evening, but Johnson said it was unrelated to the storm.

“We had a request by a family member to check on their parent, who they hadn’t seen in 24 hours, and that person lived in the northern end of town [and] was a 67-year-old male with a significant list of health problems,” he said.

The road had not been cleared, but police went to the home and confirmed that the man was deceased.

“We had a police officer at that site, waiting for the funeral home to arrive, so we dedicated one person to that property for almost 24 hours,” Johnson said. “Our thoughts are with that family.”

A State of Emergency

On Tuesday, Town Council President Samantha Wilcox signed a declaration of a State of Emergency, renewing the declaration for the town signed on Feb. 22 by Gov. Dan McKee.

The town declaration will ensure that Richmond is eligible for disaster relief funds, even if the state declaration expires.

“As per our ordinance, the Town Council President has the full authority to make this type of declaration,” Wilcox said. “We felt like it was the best course of action moving forward for securing funds, in case the state doesn’t keep their state of emergency going, so we can qualify for relief funds, as well as to empower our staff to be able to effectively handle emergencies.”

Please Stay at Home

Liese said she hoped residents would be patient as the cleanup continues.

“I feel you,” she said. “I’m a resident myself. I’m on a private road. We snow-blowed our entire [road]. … If people can stay home, we’re doing the best we can, and snow is not intentionally being put in anybody’s driveways. If you have an asset as a neighbor, a snowblower, and you haven’t seen your neighbor cleared and you could help, all of this would go a lot faster - and don’t put snow in the road.”

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School Committee Approves BudgetFebruary 12, 2026 By Cynthia Drummond for BRVCA RICHMOND – The Chariho School Committee ...
13/02/2026

School Committee Approves Budget

February 12, 2026

By Cynthia Drummond for BRVCA

RICHMOND – The Chariho School Committee approved the proposed Fiscal year 2027 Chariho budget Tuesday. The committee will now consider further cuts to the spending plan, which totals, $62,223,858, a 4.99% increase, including state aid.
The committee also agreed to table a vote on the language of the $110.2 million capital improvement bond for a single unified elementary school and voted to send the Stage 1 application for the new school to the Rhode Island Department of Education.
The meeting was punctuated by disagreements over how the towns’ shares of the budget should be calculated, as well as a testy exchange between Hopkinton Town Manager Brian Rosso and Superintendent of Schools Gina Picard.

The “Thirds” Proposal

Under the Chariho Act, the contributions of the three towns are determined by their enrollment in the school district. Enrollment is fluid, so the contributions fluctuate from year to year, although Charlestown, with the lowest enrollment, about 23% this year, contributes the least.
The proposed contributions of the three towns in the new budget, before state aid, are:
Charlestown: $13,070,130, an increase of 5.02% over the current year
Richmond: $17,270,025, an increase of 7.82%.
Hopkinton: $16,143,089, an increase of 2.11%.
In what has become a chronic sore point between the towns, Richmond and Hopkinton have proposed that the towns divide the contributions into equal thirds while Charlestown refuses to consider the idea. The discussion has continued for several years.
Charlestown, the wealthiest of the three towns, has the lowest property tax rate, $5.93 per $1,000 valuation compared to Richmond, at $14.67 and Hopkinton at $15.29.
The question of the towns paying equal shares resurfaced at Tuesday’s meeting, during the discussion of the language of the capital improvement bond.
Member Diane Tefft, of Hopkinton, proposed that the three towns share the bond cost equally.
“I would like to make a motion in the language that all three towns must share the expense of the one new school equally,” she said.
Chariho Solicitor Jon Anderson noted that the Rhode Island General Assembly would consider the bond whether the towns’ shares were based on enrollment or divided in equal thirds.
“However you decide to do it, it will be incorporated in the bond language,” he said.
Anderson also noted that the General Assembly “typically follows the request of the community.”
The suggestion that the towns pay equal thirds, whether in their annual contributions or the capital improvement bond, faces strong opposition from Charlestown.
“Personally, I want to recommend that the Town Councils come to this decision,” Charlestown member Craig Louzon said. “For this group to force Charlestown to an equal third, I think you’re putting yourself at risk, liability-wise.”
Another Charlestown member, Linda Lyall, said,
“I don’t trust the towns, especially one, to actually support this new bond, so why should I trust that if I was magnanimous enough to say ‘okay, I think 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 would be fair,’ the bond would get passed. Are we all in on this? I don’t know.”
Charlestown Town Council President Deborah Carney told the committee that the town would oppose any initiative to divide the contributions into equal thirds.
“Charlestown will vehemently oppose you trying to inflict one third of the cost on us,” she said. “This is approximately a quarter million dollars a year, in addition to what we should be paying, based on the Chariho Act. We’re looking at approximately $7 million over the life of the bond, and my question for people that are advocating for this: would your town be willing to pay an additional quarter million dollars a year if you did not have to, if it was not what was required in the Chariho Act?”
Carney noted that state aid was “the equalizer” since Richmond and Hopkinton received more aid than Charlestown.
“Right now, Charlestown pays more per student than Hopkinton, and we pay more per student than Richmond,” she said. “…Rest assured, we are not going to sit by and let you subject us to paying a third, when it’s not what the Chariho Act says.”
The other towns were not swayed.
Immediately following Carney’s comments, Hopkinton Town Council President Mike Geary said it was time to reopen the Chariho Act, which would make it possible to reconsider how the towns contribute to the school district.
“This is a damn good time to re-think about open [sic] up the Chariho Act,” he said.
However, Richmond Town Council President Samantha Wilcox said she understood Carney’s arguments.
“While a one-third split on bond payments may seem reasonable for shared facilities and investments, it is not the formula established in the Chariho Act, as President Carney pointed out,” she said. “Charlestown already goes above and beyond in its support of the schools. The School Committee should decide together what is best for the district.”
The committee voted to table the vote on the bond language.

The Budget

The discussion opened with a statement from Picard who took exception to comments from a town official that there are errors in the proposed budget, as presented.
“It makes it look like we don’t have accurate information, which is not okay, because now, as your Superintendent, I need to ensure that accurate information is clearly articulated,” she said.
Committee member Jessica Purcell said she missed the summary page that used to be included with the budget.
She also commented that the new presentation was difficult to understand.
Hopkinton Town Manager Brian Rosso, who previously served as the town’s Finance Director, said the summary sheet on the budget, which is not included this year, had been helpful.
“The summary sheet in any sort of budget - in my professional career, there’s always a summary, right?” he said. “This budget is gigantic. We’re talking thousands and thousands of line items, so for the average person to digest that is impossible, so that’s where a summary sheet comes into play. At a high level, I think it’s easy for residents, taxpayers, School Committee members and everybody to digest.”
In doing his analysis of the proposed budget, Rosso said he had found an increase in Hopkinton’s share that was more than double what the town had anticipated from the numbers presented at the Omnibus meeting. He then contacted Director of Administration and Finance, Gregory Zenion for clarification.
“It’s very confusing,” Rosso said. “It’s not representative of what the town increase is. So, we’re looking at these percent increases, these dollar increases year over year at the Omnibus meeting that aren’t reflective of what we’re actually going to increase.”
Picard responded that voters approve or reject the budget, not specific numbers.
“This is where the confusion is coming in,” she told Rosso. “Voters don’t approve a number, they approve a budget. …So, that’s why, when you’re regional, you’re yes or no. It’s not about a number, because you can’t oversee that General Assembly. They have the power.”
Rosso suggested the numbers were misleading. Picard said his use of the word “misleading” was, itself, misleading,
but Rosso persisted, saying that he had been unable to reconcile the numbers for Hopkinton.
“Somewhere, it has to be illustrated what the actual …” he said, before Picard interjected that Rosso should have called her for an explanation. Rosso replied that he had contacted Zenion and Picard replied that he should have spoken with her.
Rosso, becoming visibly irritated, said,
“Why are you telling us how to operate?” he said.
“With all due respect, Brian, stop telling me how to operate,” Picard responded.
It was then that School Committee Chair Louise Dinsmore stepped in and ended the exchange.
“We’re all coming at this with the best of intentions. We are all trying to absorb and understand numbers. We have to approve a budget tonight,” she said.
The committee, with Dinsmore opposed, voted to approve the budget. Members will now consider further cuts as the process continues.
Wilcox said she hoped the discussions could take place without acrimony.
“We are all working to improve the balance of affordability and a strong school system and a clear explanation on what caused the difference would help us reach that goal,” she said. “This question and all questions on the budget deserve a transparent and collaborative conversation grounded in facts and free from accusations or hostility.”

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