WILTON ā The Wilton Select Board during its Tuesday, Sept. 6, meeting discussed concerns around how the Franklin County Commissioners divvy up the county budget and allocate services to its towns, unorganized territories and plantations.
Town Manager Perry Ellsworth raised the concerns, explaining he is soon meeting with Franklin County town managers and Franklin County Administrator Amy Bernard to discuss the budget.
Ellsworth told the board currently Wilton, Farmington, Carrabassett Valley, Jay and Rangeley pay 55% of the county budget. Meanwhile, the unorganized territories account for 6% of the budget which is funded by the state.
But, he said, Wilton is not always seeing the services the town is funding.
Ellsworth referenced the Franklin County Sheriffās Department, which will only come to Wilton for emergency calls, despite open shifts, he said Wilton Police Chief Heidi Wilcox was told.
āItās time the county stepped up to the plate because we provide all of the services, all of the services [for unorganized territories],ā Ellsworth said. āI fought this battle a little bit before when I was in Rangeley [as town manager] and Iām ready to fight it again.ā
Ellsworth told the board Wilton needs to ābe really careful, as we look at next yearās budget, what we ask for.ā
āWe need to not just ask but we need to demand,ā Ellsworth said. āWhy arenāt we getting some of that coverage? I think the battleās worth it.ā
Selectperson Tiffany Maiuri also brought up the discrepancies in valuations of the unorganized territories versus the municipalities.
What a town owes to the county budget is based on its valuation.
Maiuri referenced the Kibby Wind Power Project in Kibby Township, from which revenue goes to a Tax Increment Financing fund that is subsequently not counted in the valuation.
āWeāre all not going to survive in any of our towns, whether weāre Wilton or Strong or Phillips, or one of these other small towns, unless we starting banding together and using the opportunity to share some services or do some things for us here,ā Ellsworth said.
Selectperson Mike Wells asked about how this issue can be addressed through the county budget committee, which Maiuri and Selectperson Keith Swett are members of.
āIs that where it can be addressed, this disparity of what we pay and what we receive for services from the county,ā Wells asked.
The budget committee is not in charge of where or how funds are allocated, Maiuri responded.
The selectpersons hinted at local towns and the budget committee having little control over county commissionersā decisions.
Swett referenced recent issues with the county commissioners no longer funding local organizations.
In 2021, two of three county commissioners voted to not allocate ā$58,001 raised in two previous budgets to pay three nonprofit organizations,ā according to the Sun Journal.
āAs towns, we sent letters to them, Farmington, Wilton, others saying we want you to support these [organizations] and continue to pay them and they said āno, we refuse to,'ā Swett said.
Swett added that āa few years ago, the budget passed the committee and the commissioners said no, weāre not going to do that, weāre going to do what we want to do.ā
The current county commissioners are Terry Brann for District 1, Lance Harvell for District 2 and Bob Carlton for District 3.
Wells asked if the budget committee can raise the issue and take action to āchange the rate.ā
Maiuri said they canāt because thereās no charter in Franklin County. A charter āoutline[s] what the process is for certain items.ā
Franklin County is the only county in Maine without a charter, she said, adding itās also the only county of 16 that is not a member of the Maine County Commissioners Association.
When Wells asked who sets the allocations, Ellsworth and Maiuri said itās still up to the commissioners.
ā[The Franklin County Commissioners] make their own recommendation [on the budget] after listening to the department heads,ā Ellsworth said. āThereās no charter that says they have to follow anything.ā
Maiuri said that there needs to be āchangeā to the āformula for how they tax each municipality.ā
āGoing from their current formula, how theyāre doing it to a formula thatās more equitable,ā she said.
āāItās frustratingā is a good way to say it,ā Swett said.
Ultimately, Ellsworth said āweāre all paying our fair share.ā
In an interview, Ellsworth said he wants to find a solution to āhow can we diversify the county budget to be fairer.ā
āCan the county commissioners again start funding and dividing equally amongst everyone,ā he questioned in the interview. ā[Having these conversations] may not change anything. But I think we need to at least be having discussions about it.ā
He told the board that town managers are meeting with Bernard to discuss these issues soon.
āIām passionate about this,ā he said.
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