Maine State Primary Postponed – What to Do About Municipal Meetings and Budgets?

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

With the news that Governor Mills has ordered Maine’s primary election to be postponed until July 14, many towns are facing a dilemma about whether to postpone their own town meetings and elections. For those towns that like to coincide their local secret ballot meetings with the June primary, on top of the already existing health concerns, this is more reason to push local meetings off until July 14. But what to do about the budget? The Omnibus COVID Bill (LD 2167), provides that if the annual meeting is delayed beyond the date the annual budget is customarily approved, the prior year’s approved budget is deemed the budget for the ensuing year until a final budget is approved. The municipality may even commit taxes based upon last year’s budget, if needed. Schools are also authorized to operate according to the past year’s budget until subsidy numbers are finalized and the state of the emergency is over.

We take this budget extension provision to mean that the town may make operational and administrative expenses in the same amounts, in the same categories, as approved in the prior year. It may also allocate revenues as spelled out in the prior year’s budget. If capital improvement accounts were funded within the last year’s budget and the purpose remains, the town could choose to fund them on a month-to-month basis per the last budget. Alternatively, a cash-strapped town might wait to fund capital improvement accounts and eventually ask the budget meeting to reduce or eliminate the total allocation for the year.

While the COVID bill helps alleviate the pressure to hold budget meetings, it still leaves concerns about how to bridge the gap where the spending authorization remains unchanged from the prior year but revenues may have plummeted due to extended tax deadlines or other economic pressures. Many of our clients are using tax-anticipation notes, which can be borrowed on authority of the municipal officers without the need for town meeting. Others are relying on provisions in the last approved budget which allow the municipal officers to either spend from reserve accounts or appropriate from surplus to fund emergency expenses. In this economic environment, expenditures that previously would not have counted as emergencies probably do now meet that criteria. For towns that don’t have this type of spending authority or enough funding in place, there does remain the possibility of holding a small, special town meeting to make any approvals necessary. Anticipating low turnout, such a meeting still may legally be held, although the town will obviously have to take careful precautions to ensure that attendees are adequately spaced and protected.