Councilors discussed whether to reduce the town’s annual transfer to its public‑safety reserve during budget deliberations at the June 8 special meeting.
Town staff reported an unaudited public‑safety reserve of roughly $542,000 and noted the recurring budget transfer in the draft was $50,000. One council member proposed cutting that FY transfer to $25,000 to free up revenue for a property‑tax reduction; another council member and staff urged caution, saying the reserve is intended to soften the budgetary impact if the town ever needed to provide its own dedicated law‑enforcement contract or service.
Finance staff explained the scale: “One cent on the property tax rate equates to about $70,000,” a staffer said, and establishing full standalone police services would require significantly more — potentially in the high‑hundreds of thousands to multiple millions of dollars in the first year when equipment, benefits and facilities are counted. Several councilors said they were open to a smaller contribution for the coming year but not to eliminating the reserve entirely.
Next steps: Council discussed middle‑ground options (cut the transfer to $25,000 or reduce less aggressively) and asked staff to show the fiscal impact of different transfer levels and the resulting tax‑rate changes in the revised budget.