Aquinnah Leaders Discussing What Next After Override Fails

By JULIA WELLS

Money is tight these days in the town of Aquinnah - extremely
tight - but town officials say they plan to soldier on with a
drastically reduced operating budget for the current fiscal year.

For the second time in four weeks, town voters rejected a
Proposition 2 1/2 override request last week.

The override failure means that town employees will go without a
cost of living raise, selectmen will forfeit nearly all of their
salaries and the town contribution to the Martha's Vineyard
Shellfish Group will be slashed from $23,000 to $3,500.

A town summer camp for children will continue to operate thanks to a
series of last-minute donations.

"I am going door to door to collect donations - we are
going to cut back on some things, but we are going to make it
work," said Elise LeBovit, a member of the town community programs
committee who organizes the camp.

Meanwhile, town employees are watching their pennies.

"I would say that we definitely need to cut back on our
expenses and as quickly as possible come up with some additional sources
of revenue," said Aquinnah town accountant Marjorie Spitz this
week.

Expense cuts are clear enough, but revenue adjustments are a
trickier issue.

Last month after the first override failed, Aquinnah selectmen held
meetings to devise a budget that would not exceed the state-mandated tax
cap. The original town budget was $2.4 million and the original override
request was for $260,000. The second override request was for $130,000.
Mandatory school assessments were way up this year due to a jump in the
number of students attending the regional high school from Aquinnah.

Selectmen chipped away at some expenses - the bulk of the cuts
came from the town police department - but in order to balance the
budget on paper, revenue projections were also adjusted upward on
several fronts.

Parking fees for beachgoers were hiked and estimates were revised
for penalties and interest collected on overdue tax and excise tax
bills. The largest change in revenue projections came from money that is
owed the town by the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) for
emergency services provided to the tribal housing project.

The town signed an agreement with the tribe several years ago that
called for annual payments to defray the cost of providing emergency
services to the housing project.

Aquinnah is home to the only federally recognized tribe in the
commonwealth.

There has been considerable confusion about the arrangement. Tribal
leaders claim that the town never billed the tribe for the services;
some town leaders say that the tribe was billed while others say they
have no memory of the agreement in the first place.

But this much is now clear: In order for the town to continue to
operate in the black this year, some $48,000 must be collected from the
tribe.

Town executive secretary Beverly Widdiss said yesterday that the
bill went out on June 22 and to date there has been no response.

Ms. Spitz said the accuracy of the revenue projections is important.

"We're going to have to rely pretty closely on the
amounts that we projected," she said.

Selectmen met this week to set a date for a special town meeting,
but the date will be revised at the regular selectmen's meeting
Tuesday afternoon. The meeting is now expected to be held in late
September.

The warrant for the meeting has not yet been decided, but selectman
and board chairman Carl Widdiss said last week that he expects it will
be largely housekeeping articles.

Mr. Widdiss downplayed the town's financial problems.

"For the time being we will operate on the budget which
contains some significant cuts - we're going to explore our
options between now and the next regularly scheduled selectmen's
meeting. In the meeting time I will talk to the [state] department of
revenue and identify some options - I think we do have some
options," he said. Mr. Widdiss said the options could include
taking excess money from some accounts and moving it into other accounts
where it is needed. "We may be able to shuffle some things around
- we'll keep talking about it," he said, adding:
"The fact is that the town itself is really not in that bad a
financial position." He also said:

"It's not so much about money, it's about timing
and we'll keep working on it. But the town's not destitute
or in bankruptcy."

Ms. Spitz had a slightly different view.

"It is tight and it may involve cutting back on services. What
we really need now is a careful analysis of what we're going to
do," she concluded.