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Showing posts from 2026

The budget Lancaster will vote on tommorow night projects another override request in two years.

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  If you're asked to support another override in May, 2028 -- what will you do?   It's projected in the budget book that we'll refer to tomorrow night. The budget Lancaster will vote on tomorrow night (Monday at 7PM at Mary Rowlandson elementary) projects that Lancaster will be unable to support current spending in two years:  we'll either need to "drastically cut services" or approve the second Levy Limit Override in five years.  The same budget would increase town staff -- already up  50% in 12 years through last year -- with four new hires and expanded hours for another position.   This will add another $240K in recurring expenses.    It asks the town to increase the budget for municipal services by 12% next year. The old adage goes: "if you find yourself in a hole, first: stop digging."    We're in an increasingly deep hole at the moment.

Early look at an envisioned redevelopment for the Atlantic Union College campus

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    Lancaster's Select Board looked at an early plan for redeveloping the former Atlantic Union College site during Monday's Select Board meeting.   Among the early concepts: a community athletic center, a vocational school, a hotel and a variety of housing types.  

It's Official: Following Select Board Vote, Clinton will Absorb Portion of Lancaster next April

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Some Lancaster Residents will be "Moving to Clinton" next year -- but they won't need trucks. Check to see if your street is on the list.

With the rest of us paying 40% more, why are Dunkins (and 72 other business properties) paying less this year than they did in 2019?

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  With a 2-1 vote on December 8th, Allison and Carr voted to tax the average homeowner an extra $300 this year to lower business taxes: at least 73 will pay less this year than they did in 2019.    With residential values skyrocketing, why have we been so reluctant to split the tax rates?