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Falmouth officials flag a $2 million operating-gap and begin FY28 budget planning

Town of Falmouth Town Meeting discussion (selectboard/town meeting program) · April 10, 2026

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Summary

Town presenters said they trimmed just over $2 million from departmental requests to balance the current operating budget and warned that FY28 will require difficult choices to constrain spending or raise revenues under property tax levy limits.

At town meeting, the town’s budget presenter described a fiscal picture that required removing just over $2,000,000 in departmental requests to balance the current operating budget, which totals about $184 million. The presenter said the operating budget increase for the year was roughly 5.7 percent (about a $9 million increase) and noted that ongoing cost drivers — especially rising health-care costs — make that pace unsustainable without revenue changes or cuts.

"We had a little over a $2,000,000 gap that we had to close," the town manager said, explaining staff struck more than $2 million in personnel and other requests rather than add new positions amid uncertain revenue growth. Officials emphasized the town faces a two-and-a-half percent property tax levy cap and must weigh fee increases, spending reductions or other revenue measures.

Members of the select board and staff said they will begin a dedicated discussion at a select board meeting on April 27 to address strategy for FY28. Committee member Colin Reed (referenced in the discussion) was singled out as helping to lead that work.

Nut graf: Officials framed the $2 million adjustment as a difficult but necessary step to present a balanced budget this year and said FY28 will require more comprehensive conversations about revenues, services and priorities.

Speakers noted Falmouth’s relatively strong bond rating reduces interest costs compared with other municipalities but cautioned many towns are pursuing overrides this year. Town officials said they plan follow-up meetings and outreach to committees and precincts as part of budget planning.