Town meeting tonight at 7

Town meeting is tonight at 7. Check in begins at 6 p.m.

Because of the ongoing COVID-19 state of emergency, check in will be a little different this year.

Precinct lists will be posted outside, with voters from Precinct 1 and 2 asked to go to the left, and voters from Precinct 3 and 4 to the right.

There will be markings on the floor for distancing.

Seating will also be socially distanced, but families can sit together.

Participants are asked to wear a mask for their safety and the safety of others. Anyone who does not wear a mask will be asked to go to the balcony in a section set up for them.

Microphones will be cleaned after each speaker.

For more information, including copies of the town meeting warrant and proposed FY21 budget, please visit the town meeting page on Clintonma.gov.

 

Walking the walk when it comes to lowering property taxes

Looks like the campaign is getting real. There’s been a lot of chatter online about how we can get lower property taxes.

The easiest way would be to lay people off, or cut services. If that’s what you’re interested in, there are other candidates.

If you’re interested in making Clinton a better place to live and work while still keeping property taxes reasonable, then we need to look at broadening our tax base, expanding the number of commercial and industrial properties so that the burden on residential property taxpayers isn’t so high.

I looked at this in 2018, when I chaired an ad hoc subcommittee on our property tax split. Working with town employees and members of the community, we came up with two recommendations:

  1. Reduce the town’s tax rate split at the rate of 2 percentage points a year until a single rate is achieved.​​ Making an all-at-once leap to a single rate of $19.45 would result in a jarring increase of $883 to the average residential taxpayer. Chipping away at the split would spread out that impact to residential property owners over time, and demonstrate that the town is committed to improving the climate for businesses here.
  2. Continue to expand exemption programs as allowed by law.​​ Publicize the availability of these programs, and the senior work program, to increase participation among those potentially affected by a tax increase.

I’m proud to say our board adopted these recommendations (although, sadly, not unanimously). And you know what? Because of an expanded commercial, industrial and personal property assessment, residential property taxes (that’s the 101 classification) went down for the first time in more than 20 years.

tax rate

Everyone wants more for less. Unfortunately, that’s not how life works. We can talk about lowering taxes by using cheap political tricks like maximizing the split (and alienating businesses, ultimately crippling us longterm) or waving some magic wand, or we can actually do the work and make it happen.

Here are the facts: There is one candidate in this race who has lowed your taxes, and who is committed to doing so in the long term. A vote for me on June 29 is a vote for broadening our tax base and giving REAL tax relief, not cheap lip service, to everyone in Clinton.


Would you like to read our committee’s report on how Clinton can see real residential property tax relief by broadening our tax base?

Check it out here: tax-classification-subcommittee-recommendations-11-15-18-final-1

Kerrigan for Clinton

I announced I’d be running for reelection on March 6.

Back then, I talked about all the progress we’ve made: Growing our tax base, how Town Hall was now more accessible and responsive, and how we’ve all moved toward a Clinton that embraces tradition while evolving to compete in today’s world. I thought I had a good idea of what this election would be about.

Four days later, of course, everything changed.

We’ve gone from arguing about parking on High Street to blocking off spots so that restaurants can reopen with outdoor dining. We’ve re-examined how we run the town, how we can better serve you in a remote-access world, and how we can keep everyone who lives and works here safe.

The world is different now. So being a selectman has to change, too.

Experience matters, but in a time when the rules are changing by the hour, a cut-and-paste approach to leadership will not work.

You deserve local officials who are competent and curious. Modern leaders who are willing to make a bunch of low-risk, high-reward bets on our town. Someone who is brave enough to fail, and smart enough to learn from those mistakes.

You deserve someone who’s resilient and relentless, who’ll never quit no matter how challenging things get.

Over the past three years, making our town, and your life, better has been my job.

Now it’s time for my review.

Three years ago, I told you I’d work for better streets and more sidewalks.

We’ve gotten both, using creative funding sources to supplement state aid and give you more than $5 million in improved local infrastructure at no additional increase in your taxes.

I promised you access, accountability and transparency, and delivered a revamped town website and a new Facebook page, online meeting broadcasts so cord-cutters could follow along at home, and personal access to me across every platform I could get my hands on.

Finally, I pledged smart, aggressive economic development. In the three years since, we have forged a new partnership with downtown business owners, reclaimed a long-vacant property that has the potential to house sorely needed modern manufacturing facilities, and set course on the largest downtown infrastructure project in town history. And, as a response to the challenges of COVID-19, my board took unprecedented steps to reopen Clinton without cutting corners, giving local business owners the chance to serve you safely without the burden of unnecessary red tape.

Clinton is not perfect. Neither am I. But no one has higher standards for this town or our board than I do, and no one is more frustrated when we fail to meet them.

Still, despite all of the challenges of the past three months, we are headed in the right direction. So I ask for your vote on June 29, a vote for the kind of small-town politics you deserve: Not for a name, but for results. A vote for access, transparency and daring. A vote to keep Clinton moving forward.

Cutting red tape, not corners

When Governor Charlie Baker announced Phase 2 of the state’s Reopening Plan, many restaurants were caught by surprise. Early speculation predicted restaurants would be restricted to 25 percent capacity, but the official plan nixed all indoor dining, allowing outdoor table service only.

While some Clinton establishments had outdoor seating already, in most cases it wasn’t enough to justify opening. And many others had no established outdoor seating whatsoever, leaving them wondering how long it would take to secure the necessary permitting and permissions.

That’s why I’m proud our Board of Selectmen, as the local licensing authority and superintendents of the public ways, granted emergency powers this past week to our director of community and economic development and town administrator, giving them the freedom to work with local business owners and give them every tool available to get back to work safely.

This isn’t cutting corners. It’s cutting red tape. The COVID-19 pandemic has changed everything, so why can’t it change the way we do business in Clinton — for the better?

For the next 90 days, High Street will be a laboratory for low-risk, high-reward change. Already, Clinton’s Bar and Grill has worked with the DPW to block off some parking spots and expand its outdoor seating. Others will certainly soon follow. And shutting down part of High Street altogether for a Friday night or Saturday has been suggested, and I think it’s a great idea to try.

Because that’s the point: This state of emergency has forced us to try new things and, if we’re afraid to take some smart risks or make some responsible mistakes, we will miss a great chance to make our downtown truly someplace special, and maybe lose some dedicated local businesses in the process.

You deserve local leadership that is daring enough to try something new, brave enough to get out of the way, and humble enough to admit that local merchants might have some ideas that we haven’t thought of. Instead of micromanaging, let’s step back and think seriously about how we can make a resilient Clinton that will still be standing tall when this crisis is over.


If you’re a local business owner with questions about expanding open dining, or other aspects of the governor’s reopening plan, contact the Office of Community and Economic Development, or leave me a note and I’ll get you in touch with someone who can help. Together, we’re going to make it through this thing.

Black Lives Matter

I’ve been quiet for too long. I cannot be quiet any more.

We’re lucky to live in Clinton. Our Police Department is full of people who have grown up here, who know this town, who care for us no matter what we look like.

That doesn’t mean you can’t be frustrated with what’s happening in our country right now. Or that your frustration hasn’t turned to anger. I understand. I’m angry as hell.

Please, don’t let that anger turn to violence. The right to gather in public and protest nonviolently is a cornerstone of our nation. We need to work together to change the world, to fix the injustice so many face every day, even doing simple things we all take for granted.

I have no solutions. Frankly, what the world needs right now is fewer white guys talking and more of them listening. What I do have is privilege, and a voice. So if you’re frustrated, or angry, use me. I want to hear from you. If you need a place to vent, plot, plan, strategize, organize or mobilize, I will do whatever I can to help you find it. If you want to talk to Clinton PD to see what they’re doing to keep you, and all of us, safe, I will do everything in my power to make that happen.

I have many friends who are first responders and correctional officers. I appreciate everything they do more than they probably know. With all due respect, this moment isn’t about them, just like it isn’t about me.

This is about you. This is about making sure you know you have a voice and you and your family feel safe, no matter where you come from or what you look like.

Stay strong.

Questions for the candidate, May 30 edition

Got some great questions from Clinton resident Mariah Hunt about the upcoming selectman’s race and wanted to post my answers here. I tried responding in the Facebook post but the lack of paragraph breaks made it tough to read.


Dear Mariah,

Thanks for your note. It’s always good to hear from members of the community about what’s concerning them. Sorry I’m late to this. I was outside catching up on yardwork, and then watching the rocket launch with my kids. I’ll do my best to answer your questions but, as you know, I’m always available on Facebook or at kerriganforclinton@gmail.com. If phone’s easier, please call me at home at 978-368-1725.

 

  1. With the assumption of budgets tightening due to the Covid-19 shutdown, what suggestions do you have to help trim the $76 million dollar town budget?

I guess I’d start with the fact that $76 million isn’t the annual town budget. The amount approved for appropriation at the 2019 town meeting included transfers from enterprise funds — including $4.5 million from the Capital and Infrastructure Stabilization Fund for the downtown project — and other one-time borrowing articles. This year’s draft operating budget is around $56 million, but that is VERY much a work in progress since, as you know, we have no idea what state aid will be. As a member of the board’s Budget Subcommittee, I can tell you that the board and the Finance Committee are working with the best numbers we have, and are prepared to go forward with a 1/12 budget to maintain town government until we have a better idea of what our aid will be. But until we have better numbers from the state it would be irresponsible to talk about a budget.

 

  1. With thr addition of new apartments and condo building in town, what are the biggest challenges you see with that and how would you address them?

I’m sorry but I don’t understand this question. Happy to answer if you can be more clear.

 

  1. What makes you different from the other candidates? How is that a strength?

I’m probably the shortest, but I don’t know if that’s a strength. Honestly, I’ve tried to focus on the work I’m doing, now how I match up to other people running for this job. I was the new kid a few years ago, and I know how easy it is to poke holes in what you think is wrong. In reality, governing can be a grind sometimes. You can show up and yell a lot or you can find consensus, pick your fights when they really matter, and actually get some things done. One example of how I’ve helped make a real difference is how we’ve broadened the tax base in town since I’ve been on the board. There’s always been a lot of talk about this but we hadn’t made much progress until a couple of years ago, when I chaired a subcommittee of town officials and members of the community that looked at how we could take some of the long-term burden off of residential taxpayers by encouraging businesses to move into town:

Tax Classification Subcommittee Recommendations 11-15-18

I’m proud to say that, as a result, our property tax split has gone down every year since I’ve been on the board and now is at an historic low. And, since we realized that shifting a little more of the short-term burden onto residential taxpayers might cause some hardships, especially to those on fixed incomes, we increased exemptions and doubled funding for the Senior Tax Rebate Program to $30,000 a year. It’s a win-win that encourages economic development while setting the table for real, long-term tax relief.

In my 35 months on the board, I’ve tried to ask a lot of questions and listen to a lot of answers. And suggestions. And complaints. As a former reporter, I’ve always made myself available to the public, with a dedicated Facebook page, website and Twitter feed since before I was elected. No one has higher standards for this town, and no one is more disappointed when we don’t reach those standards.

 

  1. What do you feel is the biggest challenge facing the town in the next 2 years? And how do you plan on addressing it?

Obviously, the biggest challenge (and it’ll easily be for the next five years, not two) is the fact that we’re living in a pandemic that has changed the way all of us live and work. This isn’t a problem that has an answer, at least until our national public health officials come up with a long-term medical solution. Locally, I’ve been very encouraged with our Board of Health’s effort to keep the public informed on how the virus is spreading in Clinton, how we can stay safe, and what we’ll all need to do if we want to get back on the path to whatever the new normal will be.

Budget implications aside, what I’ve tried to find is silver linings: How we can get better results outside of what we used to consider standard operating procedure. Can members of our community have better access to Town Hall, even if they can’t leave the house? Can we share the work our board and other town departments are doing through different media? These are extraordinary times, so doing things the old way probably won’t work. What I’m willing to do is try things, and to make mistakes. If restaurants can only open to 25 percent capacity, why not give up some sidewalk so they can spread out and offer curbside dining? Sometimes we chase a shiny new thing and ignore the easy, incremental changes that are right in front of us.

 

  1. What makes you the best Candidate for the selectman?

Again, this depends on what you think makes a good selectman. If you want someone you knew in high school, I’m probably not your candidate. But if you want someone who knows how to do this job, who knows what kind of challenges we face every day with both big problems and small, and who has consistently shown they can not only survive but succeed, I hope you’ll give me a look.

Thanks again for the questions. If you or your friends have any follow-ups, I do regular office hours on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and am available otherwise whenever needed.

 

Board of Selectmen candidates night June 8

I’m happy to announce that I’ll be talking issues with the other two Clinton Board of Selectmen candidates, Matt Kobus and Joe Notaro, at a virtual candidates night on June 8 at 7 p.m.

Like everything these days, details are subject to change, but I’ll keep you posted if and when they do. But if you’re interested in submitting a question, you can do so HERE.

The most important thing is that the three candidates for Board of Selectmen are getting together to talk about issues. You deserve a public servant who isn’t afraid to talk about their record, their vision for the town, and why they want to be on the board. It’s the very least any of us can do.

 

Unafraid

A candidate who doesn’t respect you enough to defend their record or explain their vision can’t be taken seriously.

No one is entitled to your vote. It has to be earned.

You deserve a selectman who is accessible, accountable and transparent. Someone who will stand by their decisions, explain why they made them, and tell you clearly where they stand.

So while we sort out who’s willing to debate and who isn’t, I’m holding virtual office hours on Tuesdays and Thursdays until Election Day. 

Stop by with your questions or send them when it’s convenient for you. I’m on Facebook, email, and Twitter

The coronavirus has changed everything. Clinton is on the right path, and we can continue moving forward with leaders who aren’t afraid to make the tough decisions, or answer the tough questions.

I’ll talk to you soon.

Have a (virtual) cocktail with the candidate!

Sean Kerrigan for Clinton Selectman

These are unsettling, isolated times for all of us.

Campaigning, like everything, is different now, and will be for a while. Door knocking and hand shaking are on hold, so over the next several weeks we’ll be trying new ways to get our word out to you and your neighbors. Some most likely won’t work. Hopefully some will. Regardless of what we try, I know I can count on you. You’ve never let me down before, and I don’t expect you’ll let me down now.

In that spirit of resilience, community and appreciation, I’m holding a virtual Cocktails with the Candidate event this Thursday, April 30, at 5:30 p.m. It’s a low-key, informal way for us to catch up with old friends or introduce ourselves to new ones. We can pour ourselves a drink (mocktails welcome, too), pull up a screen and see what’s going on in Clinton.

I’ve done some dry runs, so hopefully technical glitches will be kept to a minimum, but we’re all learning this new normal together so apologies in advance if it’s not perfect. I just want to show you all that I’m willing to take a chance and try new things if it means bringing our community a little closer together.

I’ll be hosting on Zoom, which you can access by computer or smartphone. The links are below (along with a password), but if you have any questions please don’t hesitate to message or email me.

This isn’t a rally or a fundraiser. I miss a bunch of you, and I’m always looking to get to know other Clintonians better. Since we won’t be meeting up in real life for a while, this will have to do for now. We’ll make the best of this together.


What: Cocktails with Candidate Sean Kerrigan

When: Thursday, April 30, 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Where: Zoom Meeting LINK

Meeting ID: 848 6167 1133
Password: 201883