Committee members raised repeated questions about the town's enhanced law-enforcement contract with the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office (PBSO), which in recent years the record shows cost roughly $675,000–$680,000 annually.
Todd McClendon, a resident who spoke during public comment, questioned whether the charter and contract approvals had been properly followed in the past and urged additional legal review. Town attorney Jeff Curts said he had not found statutory or case law cited by PBSO to support claims that the town was in violation of the charter and that the governor and cabinet had not acted on the matter.
Committee members asked PBSO for a clearer breakdown of what the town receives for the enhanced-service fee (labeled patrol cars and dedicated personnel were mentioned in the contract) and requested a baseline-vs-enhanced comparison to show what countywide services would include versus the labeled, dedicated contract. Staff provided limited short-term data: 911 calls rose from 42 to 61 in a like comparison period and average response time in the sample moved from about 8 minutes 38 seconds to 8 minutes 52 seconds (an increase of roughly 14 seconds). The committee cautioned that the five-month data set is too small to draw strong conclusions and asked for location-level CAD/incident detail.
No formal direction to terminate or renew the contract was adopted; instead the committee recommended staff seek clearer service-definition documentation and present a focused analysis to the council so elected officials can decide whether the enhanced contract provides value compared with countywide services.