TOP STORY: Old Lyme Town Budget Passes Easily, Meeting Serves as Lesson in Small-Town Democracy

Old Lyme-based Attorney Fran Sablone served as moderator at Wednesday’s Town Budget Meeting.

OLD LYME–Two young men sitting with their parents in the auditorium of the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Wednesday night were recognized at the end of the 2.5-hour Town Budget Meeting for making it through a crash course in the New England town meeting form of government 

First Selectwoman Martha Shoemaker acknowledged the boys after a record-setting crowd of more than 200 residents and taxpayers approved the $45.39 million 2025-56 budget and five new or amended ordinances.

No meeting in the last seven years had drawn more than 60 people, according to Shoemaker.

“You have received the best education in what a town meeting can be like,” she told Joseph Jewett, 11, and Joshua Jewett, 9.  

The budget passed 167 votes to 40 in a year when a property revaluation left a majority of homeowners in town facing a tax hike in excess of 4.7%. Those whose property values rose more than average are looking at relatively higher tax increases.

The town meeting is a form of direct democracy that allows all eligible voters 18 years old and up to discuss and decide important matters rather than letting elected officials do it for them. 

While October 2024 data from the state Office of Policy and Management shows that 103 towns in the state have a town meeting form of government, many of them leave the ultimate budget decision up to a machine vote at a day-long referendum as a way to encourage more participation. 

Shoemaker applauded the Jewett family for showing the boys that their “voices matter.”

“Even though (the votes) may not go the way you want, your voices are heard,” Shoemaker said. 

Fire Marshal Dave Roberge said he counted 222 people in the auditorium Wednesday night. With 207 people voting on the budget, that leaves about 15 people like the Jewett children who were there to watch and learn.  

Procedural questions about how to vote dominated the early part of the meeting, with an early motion to use a paper ballot on all seven questions failing by a vote of 87 to 110. 

Voters decided to use a hand vote for the budget, which proved the most contentious issue on the call to meeting. They raised fluorescent green chits in the air to signify their voting status as Democratic Deputy Registrar of Voters Katherine Thuma and Republican Deputy Registrar of Voters John Mesham counted the chits row by row. 

When the results of the vote to approve the budget were counted, Town Meeting Moderator Fran Sablone put it this way: “The motion carries.” 

Voting down the budget would have required the town to bill taxpayers based on the current budget until a new spending plan was approved, according to town officials. That means the town would be locked into paying its share of the Region 18 education budget, which voters passed in a referendum earlier this month, even though the expense wouldn’t be reflected in tax bills. 

Board of Finance Chairman Bennett J. Bernblum, who during the meeting used the word “stupid” to describe such a scenario, was asked to clarify what he meant. 

“It would be stupid because it would put us into disarray,” he said. 

The meeting, originally scheduled for May 19, was postponed due to overcapacity at the Town Hall. Fire code there allows only 124 people in the meeting room and lobby.

Tax Impact

The finance board immediately after the Town Meeting convened to set the tax rate for the coming year at 16.23 mills. 

The current tax rate is 24.4 mills. After taking the property revaluation into account – and if spending did not increase at all in the coming budget – the tax rate would have been 15.5 mills. 

A mill represents $1 in tax per $1,000 of assessed property value.  

Bernblum in his presentation said a house appraised at $400,000 with a valuation mirroring the average 57.4% increase to the grand list is now worth $629,600. The tax bill for that homeowner based on the 2025-26 budget will be $7,153 – an increase of $321, or 4.7%, over the current tax bill. 

Assessor Melinda Kronfeld has said 3,312 properties in town will see their tax bills go up more than 4.7%, while 2,331 properties will be looking at an increase less than that, or even a tax decrease.

The finance board last month voted to use $800,000 from the town’s predicted $14.2 million ‘Rainy Day Fund’ to help mitigate the impact to taxpayers. The vote was a compromise between Republicans, who wanted to use less, and Democrats, who wanted to use more. 

Bernblum said the town’s healthy savings helped secure a AAA bond rating from S&P Global Ratings, which translates to the most favorable interest rates when the town goes out to bond. He said he was advised that the finance board’s decision to dip into the Rainy Day Fund should not adversely affect the town’s rating. 

Bernblum said the $800,000 allocation, combined with $171, 350 in cuts identified by Shoemaker and town hall department heads at the request of the finance board, reduced the original budget proposal’s impact on taxpayers by almost a million dollars. 

New and Amended Ordinances

The remaining issues on the meeting call were determined by voice votes. The most controversial was an ordinance codifying golf cart use in the Sound View and Hawk’s Nest beach areas. 

The golf carts must be outfitted with numerous safety features to qualify as the kind of “low speed vehicle” authorized last year by the state to operate on any public roads with speed limits of 25 mph or less. 

Previously, state statutes left it up to cities and towns to decide if they wanted to allow golf carts on local roads. Now, it’s up to those municipalities to specify if they don’t want them – or to limit where they can travel. 

Shoemaker said the ordinance adds several streets in Hawk’s Nest Beach to a program established by the Sound View Commission a few years ago in cooperation with the previous administration of the Board of Selectmen. 

Golf carts registered with the town will be allowed to travel on town-owned roads in the beach areas from sunrise to sunset. 

There will be an initial fine of $90 for those caught driving an unregistered golf cart, driving outside the allowed areas and hours, or missing necessary equipment. The second offense comes with a $180 fine, while the third offense will result in the golf cart being impounded. 

Golf carts must be registered annually and can only be operated with a valid driver’s license. 

Sound View Commission Chairman Frank Pappalardo said the program has “worked out very, very well safety-wise” without being a hardship on residents. He cited 25 golf carts registered currently, with more joining each year. 

Shoemaker described the ordinance as a way to keep communities safe in a town with only six full-time police officers to patrol the streets. She said voting the proposal down would result in the Board of Selectmen, which serves as the local traffic authority, outlawing golf carts completely.  

“A ‘no’ vote will mean that we will prohibit golf carts in the Soundview and Hawks Nest area,” she said. “Because we cannot have people riding around in golf carts without some rules.”

Resident Steven Ross objected to the take-it-or-leave-it approach on what he described as an overly restrictive ordinance. 

“That’s a threat. It’s heavy-handed. It’s inappropriate,” he said. “I think this ordinance should be reviewed and redrafted and brought to another town meeting.”

Shoemaker said the town can consider expanding the ordinance to include the Rogers Lake area in the future if enforcement goes smoothly this summer. 

Other changes outlined on the call to meeting and approved without controversy included updating the volunteer fire and ambulance tax abatement ordinance to increase the maximum amount of the abatement from $1000 to $2000 and to extend it to retirees; revising requirements regarding publication of notices of special and regular Town Meetings in newspapers read by seasonal residents; revising the Old Lyme Harbor Management ordinance to slow down boats and jet skis and increase fines for violations; and revising language affecting parking areas on private property in the Sound View Beach area to, among other things, provide for on-site attendants. 

A Learning Process 

Joseph Jewett after the meeting said he ended up at the meeting with his brother because their parents, Dave and Daphanie Jewett, didn’t give them a choice. 

While 9-year-old Josh Jewett said he really didn’t think they learned anything, Dave Jewett said the kids got a lesson about the importance of voting and having a say in where tax dollars go – even if they didn’t realize it. 

Dave Jewett said he voted in support of the budget. 

“I’ve been in the town my whole life,” he said. “Now I’ve got my kids growing up in this town.”

Editor’s Notes: i) Bennett Bernblum is a financial supporter of LymeLine.com, but has no input to the editorial process, which remains completely independent.

TOP STORY: Lyme Voters Approve $11.37 Million Budget; Finance Board Keeps Tax Rate Flat

On Thursday evening, Lyme residents gathered to vote on Lyme’s 2025-26 budget. The most recent US Census put the town’s population at 2,352 residents.

LYME–About 55 people came out Thursday evening to approve the $11.37 million 2025-26 budget and raise the cap on a tax break for elderly and disabled residents. 

Members of the Board of Finance gathered immediately following the 25-minute Town Meeting to set the tax rate at 14.5 mills. The move left the rate unchanged from the current year. 

The newly-approved spending plan includes $10.84 million in town operations expenses, up $513,372 over the current budget, and $530,400 in capital costs, down $1.53 million from the current budget. 

Finance board Chairman Alan Sheiness said during the town meeting that the proposed budget anticipates ending the current year with a $200,000 surplus. 

“So what you see here in summary is that we should finish this year ahead of budget,” he said. “That we should have next year a flat mill rate for property taxes, 5% growth in operating expenses, and a large decrease in capital.” 

Included in the town operations budget is $6.96 million in education funding for the town’s estimated 231 students. That’s up $299,504, or 4.5%, from the town’s current payment to the Region 18 school district shared with Old Lyme. The increase is driven by debt payments on a multi-building renovation project approved by voters at a cost to the district of $57.5 million. 

The only opposition to the proposed budget came from Affordable Housing Commission Co-Chairwoman Carleen Gerber when she called out the $1,000 budget allotted to her commission. 

She said the commission is currently working on several plans to make it more possible for people to find an affordable place to live in town. 

“To have no foresight for affordable housing in a town where service workers and teachers cannot afford a home may be pennywise – but it’s pound foolish,” she said. w

The commission for several years has been exploring the construction of multi-family options such as duplexes or quadplexes that young people and downsizing retirees can afford. They’ve also looked into rehabilitating houses with a focus on making space available for volunteers in the local emergency services.  

But First Selectman David Lahm after the meeting said the $1,000 allocated to the commission in the town’s land use budget in the is for basic operational expenses. 

“The real money for affordable housing is in our specific fund,” he said, referring to the reserve account started with private donations to promote housing for those who live and work in town. It currently totals $200,000. 

Multiple approvals and time-intensive public notice requirements are required before the commission can access the reserve fund. Members have said the process impedes their ability to close on a property quickly when it becomes available in a hot real estate market.

Tax Break for Elderly Residents

A vote to amend income eligibility criteria in the Lyme Elderly Tax Relief Ordinance was approved unanimously. 

Lahm said the new ordinance leaves it to the state Office of Policy and Management to set annual eligibility requirements for the tax relief program. Previous income limits of $40,000 for single residents and $47,500 for married residents were unchanged since 2007. 

Lahm said the revised ordinance, pending official state numbers, will likely raise the income cap for single residents to $45,200 and married residents to $55,100. 

The finance board after the Town Meeting voted to cap the program at $65,000 per year based on criteria outlined in state statute. The cap will stay in place for the next five years.

Sheiness said the total value of the tax break for all qualifying residents in town has not exceeded $20,000 in the past. That means everyone who qualifies should receive the full tax abatement.

“We don’t anticipate coming near that $65,000 cap,” he said.

Lyme-Old Lyme Crew Victorious at State Championship Once Again

The Lyme-Old Lyme High School crew team gathers for a photo to celebrate their victory at the CT Public School State Championships May 18 at Lake Waramaug in Litchfield. Photo submitted by OLRA.

National Learn To Row Day to be Held at Rogers Lake Boathouse on Saturday, June 7, 10-2, Free, All Welcome

OLD LYME–The Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) crew team on Sunday continued their dominance of the Varsity Four category at the Connecticut Public School State Championships. 

The Old Lyme Rowing Association (OLRA) in a press release heralded the team’s multiple wins, as well as the return once again of the Hart Perry Points Trophy for excellence in fours. 

The LOLHS team competed in the May 18 championship event on Lake Waramaug in Litchfield, winning the three boys varsity races in four-person boats and garnering two first places finishes and a second place finish in girls varsity races. 

“The Lyme-Old Lyme High School program has dominated Connecticut public school fours competition for the last ten years, winning the points trophy numerous times,” the OLRA said. 

An escort of Old Lyme emergency vehicles accompanied the team’s buses on the final leg of their return to the high school.

On their return journey, the buses carrying the winning LOLHS crew teams traveled along Boston Post Rd. in Old Lyme accompanied by celebratory emergency vehicles with lights flashing and sirens sounding. Photo by K. Monson.

The Lyme-Old Lyme High School crew team operates out of the Fred Emerson Boathouse and is supported by the OLRA, which also hosts the Blood Street Sculls. 

The boathouse, now in its third building opened in 2017, has been an incubator for rowing excellence for over 50 years. Started in 1965 on Blood Street by Fred Emerson, the organization initially known as Blood Street Sculls has cultivated national champions and Olympians since its inception. 

Learn more about OLRA’s summer and fall programs for adults and kids at National Learn To Row Day on Saturday, June 7, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the boathouse on the corner of Boston Post Road and Town Woods Road. 

Information about the free event is available at www.oldlymerowing.org.

Lyme-Old Lyme High School Senior Christopher B. Gibbons Awarded National Merit Scholarship

Christopher Gibbons has been named a National Merit Scholar. He is among 2,500 students with the “strongest combination of accomplishments, skills, and potential for success” out of 15,000 finalists, according to the National Merit Scholarship Corporation. Photo courtesy of Lyme-Old Lyme High School.

OLD LYMEA Lyme-Old Lyme High School senior is among 2,500 National Merit Scholars honored as the most accomplished in their states. 

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation in a press release identified Christopher B. Gibbons, of Old Lyme, as one of 30 honorees from Connecticut to receive a $2,500 scholarship from the corporation.  

The winners were chosen because they showed the strongest combination of accomplishments, skills, and potential for success out of the 15,000 finalists identified nationwide in this year’s contest, the nonprofit corporation said. 

The corporation will continue to announce National Merit Scholars through July.

LOLHS guidance counselor Jo Williams in an email praised Gibbons’ “wonderful, curious mind.” 

She described an intense schedule over the past several years that has helped prepare Gibbons to study linguistics at the University of British Columbia in Canada. 

High school coursework included seven Advanced Placement and college-level classes, including AP Calculus as a sophomore. 

Gibbons speaks Mandarin, Spanish and Polish in addition to English. He attended an ACES International trip to China over the April break that his guidance counselor described as “quite an immersion.” 

Gibbons is a member of the National Honor Society, the Environmental and Community Service Club and the Chinese Honor Society. He volunteers at the Old Lyme Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library and was a Boy Scout from 2018 to 2024, achieving the Star Scout rank. 

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation said the number of winners named in each state is proportional to the state’s percentage of the nation’s graduating high school seniors.

The first group of appproximately 830 Merit Scholars was announced in April, the corporation said. About 360 more students will be announced in June and July.

As part of a years-long process, the corporation said the current swath of National Merit Scholars were first identified beginning in October 2023 as high school juniors taking the PSAT. The highest-scoring participants in each state, representing less than one percent of the nation’s high school seniors, were named semifinalists. More than 16,000 semifinalists had an opportunity to continue in the competition.

Over 15,000 of the semifinalists met the very high academic standards and other requirements to become finalists. 

More than 6,930 finalists by the end of the summer will have earned the Merit Scholar title and received a total of nearly $26 million in college scholarships, the corporation said.

Kindergarten Registration Open at Lyme-Old Lyme Schools

LYME/OLD LYME — Registration for Kindergarten in Lyme-Old Lyme Schools for the fall of 2025 is open at Lyme Consolidated and Mile Creek Schools.

Children who will be five years old on or before Sept. 1, 2025 are eligible to register for the 2025-2026 school year.

If your child is currently enrolled in the Lyme-Old Lyme Schools preschool program, you do not need to register for Kindergarten. 

Registration packets may be picked up at either school. The following are needed for registration:

  • Birth Certificate
  • Three forms proving residency

While you may complete the registration process at either school, your child’s school placement will depend on District attendance zones, which are determined in August.

If you would like additional information, call either school at these numbers:

  • Lyme Consolidated: 860-434-1233
  • Mile Creek: 860-434-2209