Monday, June 29, 2020

Local Budgets Will Also Be Victims Of COVID-19

COVID Budget Burden Trickling Down to Local Areaby Bill Gouveia
This column was published in the Sun Chronicle on Monday, June 29, 2020)

This is a difficult and dangerous time for local cities and towns, as well as the nation. Voters must pay careful attention to what’s happening, because it is going to affect their pocketbooks in the short-term and the security of their children and grandchildren in the long run.
We are all aware of the pandemic and its threat to our health, though some take it more seriously than others. But the less obvious danger is to our communities, our local services, our educational and public safety systems, and maintaining a quality of life considered acceptable.
You hear a lot about the national debt and the exploding deficit we are running these days in Washington. Local communities are not allowed to deficit spend like the federal government. But many are draining their already low reserve funds to sustain a level of services and funding they may not be able to support going forward. Without new funding or a shifting of responsibilities, local communities are going to face either huge tax increases or a dismantling of basic services.
Most city councils or town meetings will dip deep into their reserve funds just to remain afloat. Local government and budgets have not been high on people’s priority lists given the overwhelming economic and health disasters brought on by COVID-19 and the nation’s scattered and often unfocused response. It’s hard to think about your town’s budget when you are out of work and choosing between buying groceries and paying the mortgage or rent.
But city and town governments still have to function whether we pay close attention or not. And while drastic measures and spending are not questioned under current conditions, months from now — when tax bills start increasing and services decreasing — everyone will be looking with a much sharper eye.
The new rules will be different. Schools and public safety departments have to change from the way they have done things. The days of placing 30 kids in a classroom are over, but we haven’t added more classrooms or more teachers. If schools and childcare businesses can’t open, families with two working parents have a serious problem. Local costs of virtually everything are going to soar, while at the same time local revenues from things like meal taxes, excise taxes, and state aid are plummeting.
Municipalities are going to have to pay a lot more money just to provide the same services they were operating pre-pandemic. And it seems unlikely much extra money will be coming from the state or federal government. So that leaves one basic source of additional revenue: Local taxes. From all of us.
Plainville is already having an override election. They will not be the only community to do that in the next year or so. Cities and towns are going to bear the brunt of this huge financial disaster, and unlike their elected federal counterparts — they have to present a balanced budget.
There are tough choices coming up. None of them are going to make everyone happy or satisfied. None of them are going to be easy or enjoyable.
Stay informed on the local level, folks. It’s going to get messy.
Bill Gouveia is a local columnist and longtime local official. He can be emailed at billsinsidelook@gmail.com and followed on Twitter at @Billinsidelook.

Monday, June 22, 2020

Strange Not To Be A Local Official

There's A Time For Everything...
by Bill Gouveia for the Sun Chronicle

When I got up Sunday morning and looked into my bathroom mirror, my face (a scary sight at any time, but particularly in the morning) looked just a little different. Maybe a tad more relaxed, though also a bit sad.
For the first time since 1974, the guy looking back was not an elected or appointed Norton town official. And honestly, it feels a bit strange.
Saturday evening my time as Norton Town Moderator ended. I chose not to seek reelection, opting to move on after four terms. That caps more than four decades as a town official in one capacity or another, from the town’s highest elected office to many other boards or committees less recognizable.
It’s been an interesting journey.
As an 18 year-old Norton High senior, I became the youngest town official in Norton history when Moderator Joseph Yelle appointed me to the finance committee. I served 15 years there over a couple of different shifts. At 23, I was elected to the board of selectmen, and would be elected twice more over the next two decades.
In 2008, I won a sticker campaign against an incumbent to become moderator, where I would stay for 12 years.
In between I served on the local cable advisory committee, the extended school year study committee, a few town manager search committees, a bylaw review committee, a couple of charter review boards, and some others that I and everyone else have forgotten.
With the exception of a few years in the 80’s when selectmen made $50 a month, it’s all been as an unpaid volunteer.
To serve in those type of capacities in one municipality for that long is unusual for several reasons.
People don’t stay in one town as much as they did “back in the day.” Volunteering in town government is a difficult pastime. Maintaining the necessary intensity and desire is not easy — and I can attest that losing an election is not a pleasant experience either.
I’d like people to know it is worth the effort. Whether it makes you popular or not, making a difference at the local level matters.
But public service has sort of been my thing. I can’t hammer a nail, coin and stamp collecting bore me, and my mom threw out my baseball cards years ago. So local politics and working to make my hometown better has been my hobby for a long time. Along with being a Patriots season ticket holder for 49 years, of course.
And writing. I’ve been a newspaper columnist for more than 20 years. In fact, this particular piece you are reading is coincidentally the 1,000th column I have written for this fine newspaper. I guess if nothing else, I’m consistent.
I’m not going anywhere. I’ll still be active in local affairs, and hope to keep filling this space for quite a while. But you’ll forgive an old guy if he just takes a moment to reflect on not officially being part of his town’s government for the first time in 46 years.
And now there are no sports to watch on TV. In life, as in politics — timing is everything.
Bill Gouveia is a local columnist and (now former) longtime local official. He can be emailed at billsinsidelook@gmail.com and followed on Twitter at @Billinsidelook.

Monday, June 8, 2020

Our Country, Protests, Police - And Being An American

What It Means To Be An American

by Bill Gouveia for the Sun Chronicle

There have been times when some have questioned just what it means to be an American. This is one of those times.

We are a country born of protest and rebellion. Those we call the “Founding Fathers” were termed “Treasonous Criminals” by the lawful government at the time. Had they strictly obeyed the laws and patiently waited for fairness, rather than taking a radical, dangerous and sometimes violent path — the America so many claim to love would not exist today.

This country condoned the enslavement of an entire race for over 80 years. Then fought a vicious, bloody, civil war in large part to allegedly “free” that race.

It took another 100 years before a sweeping civil rights movement would bring African-Americans even remotely close to the equality our Constitution promises. It was modeled after peaceful protest but marked by disobedience both civil and otherwise, and sometimes violence.

Today, things are much better. America has improved. We have re-written and passed many laws to protect the rights of minorities.

But better is not good enough. In this regard there is no such thing as “more equal.” There is only equality or inequality. And inequality has been tolerated for far too long.

In our area, the impact of systemic institutional racism may not seem as obvious — unless you are a victim of it. It may be more subtle than in Boston or Providence or other cities, but it is real nonetheless. That is a fact we can no longer deny.

I don’t pretend to understand it. I am a white man. I grew up and still live in Norton, a town the last census showed was over 90% white. In school in the 60’s and 70’s we had only a handful of black students. Even now, most people I know and interact with are white. That’s just a fact.

So although I read about the problems of race, talk to people about it, and watch it on television — I have little actual experience. I consider myself to be an open and accepting person. But is that enough? Have I done anything to truly help the situation? Or have I contributed to the problem by just saying racism is wrong, but not actually doing things to expose and expunge it?

Let us concentrate on that. Not on the looting, which is wrong and should stop. The truth is, that’s the easy part. And as Americans today, we are too often all about taking the easy path. The hard stuff? That’s somebody else’s problem.

This is not just about policing. It is about how society views black people, especially young black men. It is about our attitudes, our obvious prejudices and the ones we don’t even know we are projecting. It is about confusing “better” with “equal,” and mistakenly believing “white privilege” is just another made-up term instead of the truth it so obviously is.

And it is about the lack of positive action from people like me, who just simply haven’t had the experience. Who haven’t had their lives directly affected. Who need to better comprehend.

I think today, understanding that is to understand being an American.

Bill Gouveia is a local columnist and longtime local official. He can be emailed at billsinsidelook@gmail.com and followed on Twitter at @Billinsidelook.

Monday, June 1, 2020

My Celebration Winds Up In A Nike Commercial

Doing A Commercial With Tiger and LeBron...by Bill Gouveia for the Sun Chronicle

So let me tell you all a story about how I recently wound up making an appearance in a Nike commercial on national TV with LeBron James, Tiger Woods, Serena Williams and a host of other famous sports stars during a golf match featuring Peyton Manning and Tom Brady.
Talk about a sentence I never thought I’d write.
The story starts on Feb. 5, 2017, at my house in Norton. The Patriots were playing the Falcons in Super Bowl LI in Houston.
My oldest son Aaron, best friend Rick, his son and my godson RJ, and my son’s friends Mike and Vicky were all watching the game.
The Patriots were losing 28-3 late in the third quarter, and we were not in a good mood.
But as the game got closer, we got very excited.
Toward the end, my son gave his cell phone to Vicky. He asked her to record as we paced, yelled, cajoled, exhorted, cursed and prepared for either the thrill of victory or the agony of defeat.
We all know how it turned out. Most of New England went a little nuts. We jumped around, hugged, screamed and generally celebrated like idiots. And Vicky got it all on video.
My son eventually posted it on his well-known “Daddyfiles.com” blog, and it got around the internet.
Fast forward to two weeks ago when a production company called Aaron to inquire about using a very short clip from that video for a promotional Nike project. They got releases from all of us, and we joked about how cool it was. We had no idea what would come of it.
Then came the golf match on Memorial Day weekend. I wasn’t watching, but suddenly my phone started ringing and beeping. Most of the calls and texts began with some variation of “Was that you I just saw on a Nike commercial?”
That led me to YouTube where I watched the commercial. It is a great one, with LeBron James doing the narration as well as starring. It is an inspiring video, particularly given the current state of the world. The theme is “We Are Never Too Far Down To Come Back.”
It shows athletes coming back from huge deficits, people overcoming the odds to eventually emerge from the shadows. It is a great symbol of a country hungry to move on from its current problems, looking for the bright spot in an otherwise desperate and dark period.
And there, 50 seconds into it, is an old fat guy celebrating a historic moment. Nobody special. Just a season-ticket holder of nearly five decades enjoying a moment with family and friends. Living an experience that is meaningful because he could share it.
Now my standard joke when someone brings up my fleeting appearance is, “Yeah, Tiger and LeBron and Serena have been after me for years to do a commercial with them. I finally got tired of listening to them beg and said I would do it.”
So that’s my story. Next time you celebrate something, check if anyone is recording you. You never know what might happen.
Bill Gouveia is a local columnist and obsessive Patriots fan with a face for radio. He can be emailed at billsinsidelook@gmail.com and followed on Twitter at @Billinsidelook.