Burlington's May Town Meeting 2026: Conversations to Watch
Shawsheen's troubled budget, a wireless tower fight, no Fourth of July fireworks — here's what's on the table at Burlington's May 11 Town Meeting.
Shawsheen's troubled budget, a wireless tower fight, no Fourth of July fireworks — here's what's on the table at Burlington's May 11 Town Meeting.
The Annual Town Meeting for Burlington, MA, features major items such as capital and operational budgets for schools and town departments, changes to animal bylaws, and a crypto ATM ban.
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Local Government
Shawsheen's troubled budget, a wireless tower fight, no Fourth of July fireworks — here's what's on the table at Burlington's May 11 Town Meeting.
Burlington's annual Town Meeting begins on Monday, May 11. Over the course of one or more evenings, the 126 representatives – 6 representing each of Burlington's 7 precincts – will vote on the town's operating budget, capital requests from town departments, and updates to the town's bylaws.
The town's elected and appointed boards and committees have been discussing the budget and other warrant items over the past several months, and some key items have emerged that are likely to take some consideration and deliberation before a vote.
Here are a few highlights:
Shawsheen's budget has come before Burlington's Ways & Means (Finance) Committee twice, and each time the Committee expressed a lack of confidence in the budgetary stewardship and the resources necessary to institute best accounting and budgeting practices. While the Committee says the school provides an essential service to its five sending communities, it voted 4-8 regarding recommending this budget to Town Meeting. How Town Meeting votes remains to be seen but will determine whether or not Shawsheen must present a new budget. Tewksbury's Town Meeting has already voted to reject the budget. Shawsheen needs four approvals in order to move forward with the proposed budget.
Separate from the budget, Shawsheen will be presenting a request for about $165,000 to fund Burlington's share of a feasibility study so the school can enter into the eligibility phase of the Massachusetts School Building Authority grant program. Ways & Means was split 6-6 on that article, reflecting a sentiment that the project is important but the school may not have the procedures in place to shore up their finances while also completing a feasibility study.
A project to build a storage shed at the historic West School has been on the town's docket for years, and some funding has been appropriated. But, hiccups keep coming up – zoning issues, increased costs, uncertainty on who will build it – and the Ways & Means Committee was split 9-3 on whether or not they would recommend the funding to Town Meeting.
The school would like to look into permanent bathrooms at the Marshall Simonds athletic fields. Whether that means free-standing buildings or a renovation of the current locker room facilities in the building for public use is one question the study would answer. Some Ways & Means members said now is not the time and the focus should be on meeting educational priorities; Superintendent Eric Conti said the district made a commitment to families to look into the request and they're trying to follow through on it. The Ways & Means vote on this one was 8-5.
The Planning Board voted 7-0 against this request to change the town's overlay map to allow a wireless tower on Kimball Court apartments at the Woburn town line. Several members of the Planning Board said the town shouldn't have to change its carefully constructed stance to make business easier for a wireless company.
This would establish a water and sewer enterprise fund to eliminate the intermediate step of transferring water receipts to a stabilization fund. There is already a sewer enterprise fund in place; this would combine the two and infuse more transparency into how water billing works. This hasn't been a controversial article, but there will likely be discussion around the meaning and benefits of this change.
Other changes to the warrant include the withdrawal of the proposed changes to the dog bylaws that would align with the new state law governing pet care facilities. These are expected to come back in September, which works out because the state bylaw will be more worked out by then, said Planning Director Liz Bonventre, who has been working on these bylaw amendments along with Town Clerk Jennifer Priest and Animal Control Officer Jamie Jeffrey.
The Fourth of July request, originally $80,000, was cut down to $34,000 after the Fourth Committee met with the Ways & Means Committee. That means, among other things, no fireworks for Burlington this Fourth.
May Town Meeting begins at 7:00 PM on Monday, May 11, at Burlington High School's Fogelberg Auditorium. If the body's business is not completed before it adjourns for the evening, the meeting will continue on Wednesday and Monday evenings until each item on the Warrant has been voted. For updates, check the Burlington Buzz Warrant Summary.
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