Voters at the Town of Charlton’s Oct. 20, 2025 special town meeting considered two related measures about the possession of firearms on municipal property and buildings; both proposals failed after extensive public comment.
Article 10 — a select-board-sponsored motion to exempt town administrative buildings and offices from being classified as “prohibited areas” under state law — was amended on the floor to exclude the Charlton Public Library from the exemption. The amendment passed by voice and then by machine vote (149 in favor, 121 opposed, 3 abstained), but the amended Article 10 itself failed on the final vote, 133 in favor, 137 opposed, and 4 abstentions.
A separate citizen’s petition (Article 12) that would have exempted municipal administrative buildings and property more broadly from state prohibitions also failed after debate and a motion to postpone that was withdrawn. The Article 12 vote ended 101 in favor, 126 opposed, and 2 abstentions.
Speakers on both sides addressed public-safety, constitutional and procedural concerns. Those opposed to the exemptions cited the presence of children, public events and staff safety; several speakers urged the town to rely on law enforcement and current restrictions. Those supporting exemption argued the change would restore a preexisting local practice for law-abiding licensed carriers and said it could make municipal spaces safer by allowing trained, vetted residents to be armed in an emergency. Several speakers warned that criminal behavior would not be affected by additional prohibitions.
Town Moderator Noreen Smith read the articles and managed a lengthy public discussion that included clergy, police officers, select board members, library trustees, and many residents. Reverend John Lucy spoke against exempting municipal buildings, urging residents to focus on community supports; Police Officer Sean O’Brien, a local law enforcement officer, said officers are often minutes away and suggested law-abiding carriers could stop an active threat.
Town officials clarified points of law and administration. The town attorney and town administrator explained that the statute under discussion references specific “prohibited areas” (including certain polling locations and court facilities) and that the attorney general’s office would review any enacted exemption for statutory conformity. The town administrator also explained that town personnel policies currently prohibit most non-public-safety town employees from carrying while at work; police officers remain exempt and may carry in all locations under their duties.
The article-by-article sequence:
- The Article 10 amendment excluding the Charlton Public Library passed 149–121–3.
- Article 10 as amended then failed, 133–137–4.
- Article 12, the citizen petition broadening the exemption to municipal property, failed later in the meeting, 101–126–2.
Both measures produced a high volume of public comment and standing-room attendance. The votes are likely to remain noteworthy for town officials as they consider personnel policy, facilities security and potential future legal reviews.