Opinion: Climbing out of Westford’s financial box

Opinion: Climbing out of Westford’s financial box

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Limited revenue, rising costs and state policies place strains on town finances

Dennis Galvin is a member of the Westford Finance Committee and has been tracking the town’s finances for years. The following is his assessment of the town’s financial situation as the finance review for Fiscal Year 2027 comes to an end. The views expressed here are his own and do not represent the Finance Committee.

The Town of Westford is in a tight financial box. Town Manager Kris Las calls it a “structural deficit.”

For town financial policy makers, it is the 800 pound gorilla in the room. If it is not tamed, tax burdens and town services will be negatively impacted. Westford Teacher’s Union President Kristina Jussaume framed the predicament, telling a joint meeting of the Select Board and Finance Committee: “the town needs more money; the residential property owners are overburdened; something has to be done; to do nothing would be irresponsible.”  

On paper, Westford appears to be sitting pretty. Property tax revenues increase year over year. So what is the problem? The town finds itself dealing with financial factors beyond its control.

During this year’s finance committee meetings, Las summarized these factors: union settlements, rising energy costs, rising solid waste costs, rising health insurance costs, and rising retirement contributions.

Under the provisions of proposition 2 ½, which limits budget increases to 2.5% of the previous year’s budget, the town is not garnering the revenue it needs to keep pace with these rising costs. State local aid, particularly Chapter 70, critical for offsetting the revenue shortfalls caused by Proposition 2 ½, has not kept pace. Additionally, revenue sources that historically supplemented residential property tax revenue are also drying up.

Some 75% of the town’s revenue comes from property taxes. There are three classifications; industrial, commercial and residential. Finance Committee Chair Kristina Greene presented an analysis of these revenue streams at a recent Finance Committee meeting. Her analysis extended over a ten-year period from 2017 to 2026.  During that time, revenues from industrial properties plummeted. Revenue from commercial property was stagnant, but the property tax burden on residential property dramatically increased from 85% in 2017 to 90% today.

So what are we to do?  First, do not repeal proposition 2 ½, which is being suggested in some circles. Prior to that law, homeowners and businesses around the state were crushed by the double weight of state and local taxation. Some commercial properties, particularly in cities, were taxed at triple the rate of residential property. Arson was the way out for some.

Second, increasing the burden on local commercial properties under current state tax policies will only drive out what we now have, losing whatever relief they now offer.

The solution to our problem requires tighter fiscal management and innovation. Better state economic policy would also help. Management overhead in town departments has to be seriously reviewed and trimmed, union contracts must be reasonable.

Town negotiators must bear in mind, contract settlements at the line level of service, ultimately cascade up to higher management. The revenue cutout allowed by the community preservation act must be re-examined, and perhaps most critically, a serious and thorough examination of regionalization is needed, particularly in the areas of public works and public safety. On the state level the sales tax must be repealed. 

Westford’s proximity to New Hampshire makes it virtually impossible to attract commercial business, which could lighten the tax load on town home-owners.  A more equitable distribution of state local aid is also needed. Currently, revenue is taken from the towns and redistributed to the cities, where tax bases have eroded.

These are challenging times. We must communicate and work together and most importantly we must apply good sense.

3 Responses

  1. Time to tighten the belts and stop spending so much. A lot of the businesses have moved out of Massachusetts because of the taxes.

  2. Inflation often outpaces 2 1/2 percent. That law doesn’t need to be repealed – it needs to be amended to allow increases to match the rate of inflation in any given year. Otherwise, the law forces cut-backs in schools and services that we depend on and that make Westford the great town that it is. Taxes are the price we pay to live in a civilized and welcoming society.

  3. We have lived in Westford for 4 years and have not depended on “schools and services” at all. Yet we have paid tens of thousands of dollars in residential real estate tax.

    Where did this money go? To bloated town employee salaries and union pensions?

    One of the few remaining things MA residents can do, short of leaving the state, is to vote in local elections. And this is what Westford residents did in 2024, soundly defeating Proposition 2 1/2 override. My hope is that common sense will prevail again when administration will push for it under whatever name, e.g., “amendment.”

    Massachusetts is already Taxachusetts. Don’t turn Westford into Taxford.