SCITUATE - December 9, 2025 - As Scituate prepares its Fiscal Year 2027 budget, town departments are delivering “level-funded” requests while battling a surge in complex development projects and state mandates. From the Planning Board to the DPW, the message to the Select Board was unified: the town is stretching every dollar to avoid a tax override, but the margins for error are becoming razor-thin.
The Full Story
In a marathon budget review session Tuesday night, department heads detailed how they are maintaining services without asking taxpayers for significantly more money, despite inflation and increased workload.
The “Development Trifecta” Under Pressure The town’s land-use departments—Planning, Conservation, and Inspections—reported that while their budgets remain flat, the complexity of their work has skyrocketed. Town Planner Karen Joseph and Conservation Chair Frank Snow described a landscape where state mandates like the MBTA Communities Act and Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), combined with intricate coastal development projects, are soaking up staff time.
“The amount of filings, permit applications, and reviews... these projects are more complex,” said Conservation Chair Frank Snow. “We are along the ocean... these soak up a tremendous amount of time.” [11:29]
Building Commissioner Bob Vogel, presenting for both Inspections and the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA), echoed this sentiment. He noted that the “easy land” in Scituate is gone, meaning every new application pushes the envelope on zoning and setbacks.
“A lot of the cases we’re seeing seem to be more complex,” Vogel said. “People frankly are pushing the envelope... There is a lot of money coming into this town and it wants to have big houses. Sometimes those are on small lots.” [32:01]
Fiscal Reality Check Select Board Chair Andrew Goodrich praised the departments for their fiscal discipline but offered a stark warning to residents about the town’s financial health compared to its neighbors.
“I would have thought that this year would have been the year we would have needed an operational override... how thin our margins are this year. I’m looking at Norwell and Hanover and Marshfield... all looking for overrides... We are at the line where we are.” — Andrew Goodrich, Select Board Chair [07:56]
DPW & Infrastructure Wins The Department of Public Works (DPW) highlighted several operational victories. The Water and Sewer divisions have achieved a rare milestone: the entire staff is now fully licensed, with many holding the highest-level “Grade 5” or “T4” certifications.
“We are probably one of the few communities not just in the South Shore [but] the whole state that has fully licensed operators throughout the whole plants,” said Sewer Superintendent William Branton. [[09:21]]
Water Superintendent Eric Langlan noted that the department is aggressively tackling the Lead Service Line Inventory and preparing for the new water treatment plant. Meanwhile, the Highway division reported a productive year of paving, though the snow and ice budget remains a gamble, level-funded at approximately $420,000.
“We can afford like an hour and a half of snow,” joked DPW Director Kevin Cafferty, highlighting how quickly a single storm can drain resources. [01:02:24]
Why It Matters
For now, Scituate taxpayers will likely avoid the operational overrides facing neighboring towns like Norwell and Marshfield. However, the “complexity” cited by officials translates to real-world impacts: longer permitting times for residents and a strain on town staff that may not be sustainable long-term. As Chair Goodrich noted, the town is effectively “doing more with less,” but that capacity has a ceiling.
Official Minutes & Data
Key Motions & Votes
Water Main Replacement Design (AES & Thomas Clapp Road)
Motion: To award the contract for engineering design services to Weston & Sampson.
Amount: Not to exceed $120,600.
Outcome: Passed Unanimously.
Vote: [[01:23:57]]
Construction & Demolition Debris Disposal Contract
Motion: To renew the contract with Sean Harris Enterprises.
Rate: $149.00 per ton.
Outcome: Passed Unanimously.
Vote: [[01:24:50]]
2026 Alcohol & Food License Renewals
Motion: To renew various annual licenses (Liquor, Common Victualler, Entertainment) for local businesses including The Voyage, Salt Society, Untold Brewing, and others.
Outcome: Passed Unanimously (with individual recusals for club memberships).
Vote: [[01:27:32]]
Public Comment
John P. Connors Memorial: Resident Al Kelleher dropped off materials regarding a Silver Star certificate and announced a fundraising match. An anonymous donor will match donations up to $10,000 for the “Measure of a Man” scholarship fund until December 20th. [01:07]
What’s Next
Zoning Bylaw Workshop: The Planning Board will hold a workshop on Thursday regarding zoning changes.
Harbor Master Plan: Next week’s Select Board meeting will feature a “big week for the Harbor,” including the feasibility study and enterprise fund discussions. [01:39:40]


Can the town simply say “no” to complex permits, no longer allowing McMansions on postage stamp lots? It’s already ruined 3rd cliff.