City Manager finds some significant savings while councilors consider deep cuts to social service funding requests; a public hearing will be held tonight
By RANDY SEAVER | Editor
At the start of the Biddeford City Council’s budget workshop meeting on Monday, City Manager Truc Dever walked members of the council through several pages of a revised budget request that removed all social service funding requests and trimmed several areas that she previously suggested for funding.
The goal, Dever said, was to take a “hard look” at every possible opportunity to reduce costs and lower potential property tax impacts.
Despite some public comments supporting spending increases during last week’s public hearing on Dever’s original budget, many city councilors said they have since been feeling increased pressure and scrutiny from a public that is weary of ever-increasing city budgets.

By trimming things such as the annual employee recognition banquet, delaying professional training for senior staffers and reducing spending in several departments, Dever told the council that she and her staff were able to deliver a package that would require a mil (tax) rate of $14.98, representing just a four-cent increase over last year’s established mil rate of $14.94.
The mil rate is one part of the equation of determining the annual property tax obligation. The mil rate is multiplied by each $1,000 of a property’s assessed value to determine the overall annual tax obligation.
For example, a home, building or parcel with an assessed value of $100,000 would have a tax obligation of $1,498. That same property would have a tax obligation of $1,494 last year – an overall $4 increase.
While mil rates and property assessments fluctuate, the overall budget is what drives the debate and ultimately decides what the city’s general tax obligation will be.
Dever told councilors that her revised budget reflected a decrease of roughly $2.7 million, from a $52.8 million proposed starting point in March, to a $50.1 million budget proposal on Monday.
But all eyes during Monday’s workshop meeting were focused on the city’s social service spending budget.
Dever said adding back only half of the social service funding requests would increase the mil rate back to $15.16.
Dever suggested that the council should begin their recommended cuts from a place that would not include any social service funding, including the McArthur Library, the Biddeford Food Pantry, LaKermesse, the Biddeford Cultural & Heritage Center, Heart of Biddeford, the Community Gardens and many others
Council tackles social service spending
Councilor Dylan Doughty said he appreciates the hard work that Dever and her staff put into developing a leaner budget proposal.
Doughty also said, “it’s evident that there are many organizations during hard and credible work throughout the city.”
At the same time, Doughty said he is “uncomfortable” donating to any organization that is not self-sufficient.
Council President Roger Beaupre suggested reducing the library’s $1 million funding request by 25 percent, noting that the library already received a $250,000 in federal grant money from the city for repairs to their facility.
“They [the library] are a private entity, and the city has buildings that are deteriorating,” Beaupre said. “That is my angst.”
Councilor Lisa Vadnais agreed with Beaupre, reminding her fellow councilors that the library is “not an essential service such as the city’s police and fire departments.”
Councilor Brad Cote also proposed significant austerity measures.
“We need to cut much deeper,” Cote said. “This year, we really have to focus on the basics. We just can’t keep adding to the budget. I hate to be the hatchet man, but we have to make some hard decisions.”
“I hate to be the hatchet man,
— Councilor Brad Cote
but we have to make some
hard decisions.”
Councilor David Kurtz, however, expressed a different perspective, asking his fellow councilors to consider the consequences of deep cuts in social service programs.
“I don’t want to cut off our noses to drive down only two or three dollars a month for most homeowners,” Kurtz said. “Maintaining our social service spending has real benefits and cutting those programs will have unintended costs.”
Kurtz said that even asking the various non-profits to keep their funding requests flat from last year still represents a decrease in funding for them, when considering the impacts of inflation.
But Cote shot back, saying this year is not the year for the council to fully fund social service funding requests.
“Making [these cuts] turns my stomach,” Cote said. “There’s just not a lot of meat left on that bone.”
Councilor Pat Boston reminded her fellow councilors and members of the public that Monday’s discussion and proposed spending cuts were just a “starting point” for a long series of meetings that will include two formal hearings before the council.
“There is still a lot of time and opportunity for public input and discussion,” Boston said.
In fact, the council will be hosting another public hearing about the budget this evening, beginning at 5:30 p.m.
Dever said she is expecting revised numbers from the school department to arrive on Wednesday.
To see and/or download Dever’s proposed reductions as either an MS/Excel File or as a PDF document, please visit the Gazette’s special 2027 Biddeford Budget page
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