April 30, 2010 Subject: Is It Gerry's Decision?
Middletown is engaged in a controversy over the
installation of artificial turf fields, but the debate is indicative of
a much larger issue with how our Township spends taxpayer dollars.
The Township took out a bond in 2006 to fund the turf fields, but the
money has sat idle, accruing interest on repayment, because Middletown
failed to reach consensus on where to locate the fields. During a
number of Township Committee meetings, the Mayor, Administrator, and
Township Attorney all emphatically stated that the bond could only be
used for the rehabilitation of fields at Middletown parks. However,
objections to this usage have recently intensified, prompting Mayor
Gerry Scharfenberger to announce he would call off the field
construction and divert the bond funds to pay for shortfalls in the
Township budget. I have serious concerns about the Mayor’s new
course of action.
First, the Mayor appears to be acting independently of the Township
Committee. Our committee consists of five members, one of whom is
selected as Mayor to lead public meetings and sign local legislation.
Nowhere in Chapter 4, Article II of our Township Code, which outlines
the duties of Mayor, does it give that person authority to make
solitary decisions on funding. A vote of the full Committee is
required.
My second concern is that the Mayor, Administrator,
and Township Attorney have been lying to residents about the potential
uses for the bond money. First, they insisted the money could only be
used for the turf fields. Now, the Mayor wants to try and amend the
ordinance so it can be used for other projects. If Mayor Scharfenberger
has not been deliberately misleading us, he, at best, does not care
enough to understand the rules on spending taxpayer dollars; at worst,
he is incompetent.
Finally, I am concerned about using bond money to
patch holes in Middletown’s budget due to shortfalls in state
aid. A single bond will not fix the fiscal reality our township must
face as a result of the national economic downturn. The Mayor must stop
looking for quick, politically convenient, fixes and present to
township residents a fiscally sound plan that does not place us further
in debt. Perhaps it is time to stand up that Finance Committee that
Committeeman Sean Byrnes keeps calling for. When will
Middletown’s Mayor start to listen to the Committee, which
represents all taxpayers, and stop acting alone?