Mayor Perez: crisis averted

WINSTED — Mayor Candy Perez said Tuesday that the town’s business and finances are being steadily brought into order as an apparent fiscal crisis has been averted.

On Wednesday, Dec. 9, the Winchester Board of Selectmen voted not to take out tax-anticipation notes to settle the town’s current bills, after Interim Town Manager Wayne Dove notified the board that he was certain the town would make it through the end of the year without overspending its cash on hand.

Through work with the town’s finance and purchasing directors, along with the Board of Education, Dove told selectmen last week that the town’s available funds had been increased from less than $400,000 to about $1.2 million.  Selectmen subsequently voted unanimously to cancel a scheduled town meeting and referendum to ask voters for permission to issue the tax-anticipation notes.

While the work has been difficult, Perez said, there has not been any disagreement of note on the Board of Selectmen. “At this point, I believe we’re going along with a deliberate, systematic review and dealing with the issues put before us,� the mayor said. “I think people in the press are looking for issues. I think they’re so used to Winsted being in turmoil that they expect it to happen.�

Perez noted that a civil service lawsuit against the town has been dropped with the help of the new town manager. The lawsuit, which alleged former Town Manager Keith Robbins improperly installed two public works employees as interim directors of the department, was dropped after Dove hired former director Pat Hague to serve as an interim director for the next three months. Hague officially started the job Monday.

Perez noted that appointments to town commissions have been coming from across the political spectrum, with Democrat Lisa Smith and Republican Karen Beadle teaming up to review the openings and nominations. “People from all sides of the street have been put up for boards and commissions,� she said. “Karen and Lisa are taking suggestions and have worked to put together a slate.�

Perez said Winsted is not out of the financial woods, particularly considering the state’s dismal outlook for the next few years, and more work needs to  be done, but the immediate problems are being addressed.

“Together, many people solved the financial issue,� she said. “A lot of people worked together and people are working together now. The town manager is working diligently with the staff to solve problems with the 2009-10 budget. Everyone is working very diligently to move forward and take care of putting out the fires. The fires are going out, and it’s being done with many helping hands.�

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