Loudon residents raise their card to vote on the budget at town meeting on Saturday, March 14. An attempt to reduce spending by 2.3% was unsuccessful.
Loudon residents raise their card to vote on the budget at town meeting on Saturday, March 14. An attempt to reduce spending by 2.3% was unsuccessful. Credit: CHARLOTTE MATHERLY / Monitor

By the time Kelly Bokhan came to Loudonโ€™s town meeting, she felt her wallet was already stretched too thin.

Having weathered the Merrimack Valley School District meeting earlier in March, where voters approved a $51.9 million budget despite efforts to cut it, Bokhan had one more chance to reduce the increase to her taxes. She took it, proposing to reduce Loudonโ€™s spending increase from 7.3% to 5%.

โ€œUnfortunately, because that tax raised, it affects our town and our town budget is now, taxes are going up,โ€ Bokhan said. โ€œItโ€™s kind of like, well, we donโ€™t have any money left in our wallet because the school just took it all.โ€

Roger Maxfield, a former selectman, urged his neighbors not to conflate the town and the school โ€” they have very different budget structures and revenue streams, he said โ€” and opposed cutting anything at all. 

Loudon has always been fiscally conservative, but others in the crowd said they agreed with Maxfield and were tired of repeated attempts to slash the budget.

โ€œYou just canโ€™t cut the budget,โ€ said Curtiss Rude, without the quality of the townโ€™s services taking a hit.

The result was a town almost equally divided. Bokhanโ€™s motion failed by a razor-thin margin, 117-119, in a secret ballot vote. The $7.4 million budget was approved, with an estimated tax impact of $10.17 per $1,000 of assessed property value. For a $400,000 home, that’s $4,068.

Firetruck dumped, again

Affirming last yearโ€™s decision, Loudon voters declined to purchase a firetruck to replace the townโ€™s 22-year-old aerial ladder truck, 97-131. 

Fire Chief Tom Blanchette had requested to take $600,000 from a capital reserve fund to buy a used truck, with no tax impact, after he unsuccessfully proposed a $1.7 million bond for a brand-new truck last year.

At the town meeting on Saturday, several residents expressed frustration with the fire department and questioned whether a new truck is really necessary or useful, saying they felt they didnโ€™t know enough about the truckโ€™s current status and the options on the table.

Jeff Green said over his decades in Loudon, heโ€™s watched the fire department โ€œgrow and grow and grow,โ€ with each piece of equipment getting โ€œbigger and fancier.โ€ He said he voted against the bond last year because he thought the aerial ladder truck would be too big to fit in peopleโ€™s driveways.

โ€œNow we want a used truck,โ€ Green said. โ€œWe have a used truck. Put the money into that truck. Itโ€™s no different.โ€

Blanchette said that to completely refurbish the one he has, it would cost $900,000 โ€” an option the town hasnโ€™t pursued because itโ€™s too expensive. He added that if voters approved a replacement truck, it could improve the fire departmentโ€™s audit rating, which directly affects insurance premiums.

Others thought it would still be a smarter investment to buy new rather than get another old one with parts that could be tough to find.

โ€œBuying a used truck is inviting trouble,โ€ said Lisa Laughlin, whoโ€™d advocated for the new one last year. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, Chief, I know you got shot down on the new truck, but buying a used truck is just kicking the cost down the road.โ€

When asked about the results, Blanchette shrugged and said, “voice of the people.”

“I guess we’ll just try to keep maintaining it the best we can with what we’ve got,” Blanchette said, “but with a $50,000 truck maintenance budget for a fleet of 11 vehicles, I don’t know.”

More business on the way?

Town residents approved a commercial and industrial property tax exemption, an incentive designed to attract more businesses to empty lots along the Route 106 corridor. Voters eyed it as a way to raise more tax revenue for the town without dipping further into homeowners’ wallets.

As officials put it, the exemption will delay the full municipal and local school property tax impact by five years for businesses seeking to build, rebuild, modernize or expand within Loudon. The five-year progression will start with a 50% tax discount off the assessed value of the businessโ€™s completed development, which then goes down by 10% each year until they pay the full tax.

The town honored several of its residents at town meeting, including Selectman Jeff Miller, who did not run for reelection this year. He served just shy of a decade, and Roger Bilodeau, who won Tuesdayโ€™s election 278-253, will fill his seat. The Boston Cane Award, a ceremonial token traditionally given to the oldest resident in town, went to William Peterson, who is 100 years old.

Voters also unanimously adopted a town motto at the request of the local Girl Scout troop: โ€œLoudon, a welcoming community with a big smile.โ€ The girls said they were inspired by a section of flowers along Route 106 that forms a smiley face.

William Peterson, Loudon's oldest resident, holds the Boston Post Cane and shakes hands with Select Board Chair Dwayne Gilman. Peterson is 100 years old.
William Peterson, Loudon’s oldest resident, holds the Boston Post Cane and shakes hands with Select Board Chair Dwayne Gilman. Peterson is 100 years old. Credit: CHARLOTTE MATHERLY / Monitor

Charlotte Matherly is the statehouse reporter, covering all things government and politics. She can be reached at cmatherly@cmonitor.com or 603-369-3378. She writes about how decisions made at the New...