Meetings ▸ Minutes
Finance Committee — Minutes, Jun 3, 2025
City of Somerville, Massachusetts
City Council Finance Committee
Meeting Minutes
6:00 PM
Tuesday, June 3, 2025
Committee of the Whole
The meeting took place virtually via Zoom and was called to order at 6:00 PM by Chair Wilson and
adjourned at 6:55 PM on a roll call vote of 10 in favor (Councilors Mbah, Wilson, Ewen-Campen,
Scott, McLaughlin, Sait, Strezo, Clingan, Davis and Pineda Neufeld), none against and 1 absent
(Councilor Burnley).
Others present: Delaney Fisher-Cassiol – Clerk of Committees
Roll Call
City Councilor At Large Jake Wilson, Ward Two City
Councilor Jefferson Thomas (J.T.) Scott, Ward Four City
Councilor Jesse Clingan, City Councilor At Large Willie
Burnley Jr., City Councilor At Large Wilfred N. Mbah,
Lance L. Davis, Ben Ewen-Campen, Judy Pineda Neufeld,
Matthew McLaughlin and Kristen Strezo
Present:
Naima Sait
Absent:
1.
Public Hearing
1.1
Requesting the appropriation of $362,915,509 to fund the FY 2026 General
Fund Operating Budget.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 25-1042)
Chair Wilson laid out the format for the public hearing and stated that each
speaker would be given two minutes. The public hearing was opened at 6:09
PM.
27 residents spoke on the city’s proposed budget. The dominant concern,
raised by over 60 percent of speakers, was opposition to the $3 million
increase in police funding. Many expressed frustration that the city continues
to increase policing funding despite years of community pushback. Several
said this budget increase ignores repeated community calls for alternative
approaches to public safety. While the city has mentioned exploring
alternative policing models, speakers noted little progress has been made.
About 10 speakers called for more investment in public education, urging
better pay and job stability for teachers, stronger support for immigrant
students and efforts to retain experienced educators.
Six speakers addressed the need to tackle air pollution through the air
filtration pilot program. They cited high pollution levels near highways and
the resulting health impacts on low-income residents and communities of
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Finance Committee
Meeting Minutes
June 3, 2025
color, framing air filtration as a public health and environmental justice
priority.
A few speakers advocated for replacing police officers in traffic enforcement
with civilian flaggers, to reduce costs and better meet community safety
needs.
Several residents raised concerns about deferred capital projects and
building maintenance, pointing out that the city continues making small,
temporary repairs instead of undertaking major construction projects.
Chair Wilson closed the public hearing at 6:55 PM.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
Referenced Documents:
•
Finance - 2025-06-03 Public Comments (with 25-1042)
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