WESTFORD — Welcome to the March 24 edition of Weekend Wrap-Up. Here, we highlight the most important news you may have missed this week in Westford.
Town Meeting rescheduled due to capacity concerns
WESTFORD — After a surge of voters flocked to Westford Academy for Annual Town Meeting, capacity restrictions forced officials to reschedule the meeting to later this spring.
At approximately 9:20 a.m., Town Moderator Angela Harkness announced that the Westford Academy Gymnasium and Performing Arts Center had reached capacity. The capacity for an indoor meeting between both facilities is 1,600 people, according to officials.
This marks the second time since 1990 that Town Meeting has been rescheduled due to capacity concerns. According to former Town Moderator Ellen Harde, one meeting was adjourned in the early 1990s due to fire capacity concerns.
“We [had] held it at the Abbot, but the fire chief said we exceeded the capacity and had to adjourn and reconvene at Westford Academy,” Harde said.
Voters share thoughts
The meeting would have had voters consider whether to approve a budget with up to a $6.8 million Proposition 2 ½ Override in mind as well as a zoning bylaw that would allow for additional multifamily housing in Westford.
Some residents expressed frustration at Town Meeting’s abrupt ending as they exited the WA gymnasium.
“It’s not fair to the people that are here and have been waiting so long,” Shankar Hegde said. “And now I have to go back [home]. Now half the day is gone.”
Jeannie Kilcher felt the rescheduling was “ridiculous.” She had arrived two hours earlier and been waiting since then.
“They should’ve said if you’re not here by 9 or 9:15, we’re closing the doors,” Kilcher said.
However, Jason Blacksburg felt the rescheduling was “great, because it allows more people to come and represent [the town].” To his right was Liz Persico, who said the family is “dressing up as Star Wars characters and bringing lightsabers if allowed,” in honor of ‘May the Fourth be With You.’
Others, like residents Nate Mackinnon and Sarah Glatt, shared Blacksburg’s positive outlook on voter turnout.
“I think it’s great that people care about so many important issues,” Mackinnon said. “The good news is people showed up. The bad news is they have to give up another Saturday.”
“I think we need to give credit where credit is due, and there is a lot of credit,” Glatt said. “They made the process smoother for what they thought would be a lot of people.”
WA students, alumni in attendance
Students and alumni also attended to represent Westford Public Schools. Although she will graduate soon, WA student Tara Morris says she wanted “to ensure the generation coming up are able to have a continued good experience at school.”
Class of 2023 alumna Audrey Fletcher was involved with the arts programs at WA. Now a student at University of Massachusetts Amherst, she says she chose to “declare her major based on the electives [she] took here.”
Fletcher decided to attend after seeing the projected course cuts in the budget, saying, “the reports I was seeing made it seem like … [there would be] a bare minimum education left for people who are passionate for the arts.”
Although Morris is able to attend on the rescheduled date, Fletcher cannot due to scheduling conflicts. However, she plans to “vote by mail” in the Annual Town Election on May 7.
A new, efficient process
Despite capacity concerns, the Town of Westford expanded its check-in and aimed to create a more efficient voting process in the wake of an October 2023 Special Town Meeting that saw nearly 1,200 voters in attendance — more than double the number of voters of 2022’s Special Town Meeting and triple that of 2023’s Annual Town Meeting.
“[We checked in] 1,600 people in an hour and 20 minutes,” Warden Joseph Roy told WestfordCAT.
The town has already spent over $50,000 in American Rescue Plan Act funds to purchase an additional 800 clickers, audiovisual equipment and additional poll pads.
Even with an expanded check-in process and technology upgrades, Harkness believes these issues, such as parking and venue capacity, “are not going to go away.”
“As participation goes up as I hope it will, we have to accommodate,” she said. “I’m really happy that so many people were interested enough to come out in bad weather and participate, but it is disappointing that we couldn’t accommodate them all. We’ll work on how we’re going to do that next time.”
She added, “I hope people will come to the rescheduled meeting on May 4.”
Officials say they may explore borrowing or purchasing additional clickers to accommodate more voters in May.
The rescheduled meeting will be held on May 4 at 9 a.m. at the Westford Academy Trustees Field, with a rain date of May 5.
Westford Academy students voice support for override
As Westford residents grapple with whether to support a $6.8 million override, Westford Academy students voice their support for the proposal.
With looming budget cuts if an override fails, some students fear they could lose opportunities in their education. This holds true among music ensembles, journalism and the WA Ghostwriter, ceramics, and Mandarin – which could face cuts next year.
Students support override
Senior Noah Brown, editor at Westford Academy’s student newspaper the Ghostwriter and a student in Mandarin, says getting rid of classes will “get rid of a Westford high school experience.”
“Underclassmen […] won’t get the same experience or opportunities that I will. It’s unfair to everybody, if [the cuts] go through,” Brown said.
Brown and others believe underclassmen deserve the same level of education they were able to receive during their high school career.
“Students need and are entitled to exploring areas that interest them,” senior Estella Cui said. “[They] should not be hindered by the monetary value that the community places on each of these opportunities.”
“Westford prides itself on our school system, so it should not be the future generations’ education that we dissolve,” she added.
One department facing many cuts is the Visual and Performing Arts program. Senior Jake Bluestein, equipment manager for the vocal music department and choir representative on the Performing Arts Council, says cuts to the program will have dire consequences.
“Within the department, the prognosis is grim. Even after plenty of discussion it’s difficult to see a way the department can move forward without losing staff, and providing the same quality of arts education will be impossible,” Bluestein said.
A temporary solution
However, students and alumni recognize the override is a temporary solution problem in education funding.
“Budgets are moral documents; we fund what we value,” WA alum and Cornell University freshman Eric Plankey said. “Whenever budget cuts are imminent, our schools are the first ones on the chopping block. […] My time on the Massachusetts State Board of Education showed me that our school funding needs a lot of work.”
“We cannot let this cycle repeat itself,” he added.
For students like Bluestein, he says WA has been a place where students had the opportunity to grow and pursue their interests. Without an override, Bluestein believes this would not be possible.
“We have visited town meetings and spoken in front of town officials. We met with the superintendent and had a lengthy discussion about these cuts. This override is a pivotal point in deciding the town’s future. If the school system is left short on money here, it will damage the town for years to come,” Bluestein said.
“I understand that this override comes with a heavy price tag,” he added. “Still, I believe that it is an investment worth making.”
Override impact to seniors
Despite student support for an override, some, like Finance Committee member Dennis Galvin, cited concerns that an override “could hurt a certain percentage of the population of this town,” such as seniors.
“A lot of them will be seniors and elders,” Galvin said during a Feb. 28 Finance Committee meeting.
According to a study by the National Institute on Retirement Security, approximately 40% of seniors aged 60 and older live on Social Security alone, with the average monthly check valued at approximately $1,760 per month.
The $6.8 million override proposed could see residential tax rates rise by 9.9% – approximately $760 for a median single-family home assessed at $756,500 in FY25.
A Proposition 2 1/2 override is a permanent increase to the tax levy, which would allow the town to assess additional property taxes to fund town services.
A budget with a Proposition 2 1/2 override could still result in several reductions of approximately full-time equivalent 25 positions, including to several positions within Westford Public Schools.
A budget that remains within the Proposition 2 1/2 constraints could result in reductions to services and cuts to approximately 144 full-time equivalent positions through FY28, including those in Public Safety and Westford Public Schools, according to a Feb. 13 budget memo.
Two budgets will be presented to voters during Annual Town Meeting at Westford Academy. Annual Town Meeting will be held at 9 a.m. on March 23. The override will also be presented to voters on the May 7 ballot.
Technology upgrades coming to Annual Town Meeting
Several changes to enhance the quality of the meeting for attendees are coming to this year’s Annual Town Meeting.
Technology upgrades
The Town of Westford has invested over $55,000 in American Rescue Plan Act funds for technology upgrades to enhance audio-visual capabilities of the meeting.
$26,850 in funding was used to purchase 800 additional clickers – with a town wide total of 1,600 clickers available at the time of reporting. Clickers will be designated with separate colors depending on the room the voter intends to vote in.
$9,500 was used to purchase six additional poll pads to streamline the check-in process.
$18,695 was used to purchase equipment to ensure two-way audio-visual streaming between the gymnasium and the Performing Arts Center. WestfordCAT has purchased and tested equipment to ensure seamless communication between both facilities.
This equipment allows WestfordCAT to set up an interactive back-and-forth between three different rooms – or three different buildings if needed – to offer three real time collaborative meeting rooms with no latency issues for attendees.
Attendees in one room can hear everything in other rooms in real-time – where the individual speaking will be heard and presented on screen at the same time in both rooms.
Additionally, WestfordCAT is providing – at no cost to the town – two 75 inch flatscreen TVs to be placed halfway down the gymnasium to mirror the screen at the front of the gymnasium to provide greater visual accessibility to attendees.
Non-voting attendees will be directed to a separate room to view the meeting, live streamed by WestfordCAT.
Parking and lunch
The Town of Westford has once again offered free transportation and free child care for resident. However, a shuttle bus will also be available for residents who park in two new satellite lots at Crisafulli Elementary School and Robinson Elementary School from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Additionally, 26 spaces in the front of Westford Academy will be designated as accessible spaces for voters with handicap placards. Several officers will be on duty to direct traffic as well.
Food will be available for purchase with cash in the morning, as well as during the 45 minute lunch period. Residents may also bring their own lunch. Residents are advised not to leave the premises for lunch due to parking and time constraints.
Check in will begin at 8 a.m. in the Westford Academy lobby ahead of the March 23 meeting. Town Meeting is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m.










