Village Trustee encourages audit


 

MILLERTON — Typically most people try to avoid getting audited, but village Trustee Yosh Schulman has raised questions about whether the municipality should look into bringing the state in to audit village books.

The matter was raised at a board meeting held on May 6, and then again at the May 19 meeting.

Schulman had originally asked if the state conducts random or scheduled audits today, as it used to in the past. He brought the answer to that question with him to the May 19 meeting.

"The comptroller does not audit randomly," he told the rest of the Village Board. "State budget cuts are why they are not doing regular auditing. They don’t do comprehensive auditing anymore."

Millerton Mayor John Scutieri said that if the state is not auditing sporadically, and the village wants a thorough review into its bookkeeping practices, it should contact a CPA.

"We can do an RFP [Request for Proposals] from a CPA," Scutieri told Schulman.

Schulman suggested the board pen a letter to the state requesting it come to the village and conduct a review.

"It’s been nine years since our last audit," he said. "We are being proactive about it."

"I personally think our books are scrutinized," Trustee Marty Markonic said. "I really don’t think we need an audit."

"I agree with Marty," Trustee Anne Veteran said. "I don’t think we need to do it for the sake of doing it."

Trustee Debbie Middlebrook agreed.

"I think if we had one or two requests from the community, that would be different," she said.

"Had things been different [and the state continued to randomly audit] there wouldn’t be this question because we would have had an audit whether we liked it or not," Schulman said.

"I’m not interested," Markonic said. "I think an audit would make us drop back and I’m just interested in getting things done. If there were a problem yes, totally."

"Wouldn’t you like to hear that from the state?" Schulman asked.

"Do you have a problem with the way our bills are allocated?" asked Veteran. "If you do, maybe that needs to be addressed."

Schulman said he "didn’t know."

The mayor weighed in on the discussion.

"We just paid an accountant $8,000 last year to close out our books," he said. "I don’t believe we need to open up an audit at this point."

"The majority of the board is interested in moving on," Veteran said.

Schulman then made a motion to write a letter on the board’s behalf to the state comptroller requesting an auditor review the village’s books.

No one seconded the motion, and the issue was dropped.

Latest News

Local pharmacists look to Congress to help loosen Rx squeeze
Pharmacist Nasir Mahmood, Pine Plains Pharmacy, is advocating for independent community pharmacies to allow them to continue serving their communities.
Leila Hawken

Local pharmacies are historically central to community life and have been for generations. If they offered a soda fountain counter with round swivel stools, so much the better.

Today’s family pharmacists throughout the area, however, are struggling under an oppressive pharmaceutical insurance middleman system that strips away profit from their prescription counter.

Keep ReadingShow less
Major construction begins on Route 44 in Norfolk

Slope being cleared of trees at the junction of Route 44 and Old Colony Road in Norfolk as part of CT DOT Project 97-95

Jennifer Almquist

NORFOLK — For the next five years, travel on Route 44 will be reduced to one lane in Norfolk, also known as Greenwoods Road West, for the Connecticut Department of Transportation (DOT) to replace existing retaining walls and stabilize the slope along the north side of the road for the safety of the highway.

Last week, DOT Project 97-95, as the extensive undertaking is called, was green lit to begin. Over time the stone retaining walls along the roadway have bulged from the pressure exerted by the angle of the slope and years of heavy rains. In 2010 a mudslide occurred in the affected section of highway which extends from just west of Memorial Green to east of Old Colony Road. In 2019 DOT installed temporary concrete bin blocks, or Mafia barriers (so-called because cement production of them used to be controlled by the mob), along the base of the existing walls due to their movement.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elevating eco-conscious tourism in Litchfield Hills

Rachel Roth

Kristen Jenson

NORFOLK — Manor House Inn has been awarded a Connecticut Green Lodging Certification, and will re-open just in time for Earth Day.

When Rachel Roth and her husband bought the 125+ year-old inn in February 2022, the property was in need of considerable repairs They spent the first seven months balancing accommodating guests and updating the property. Roth’s son worked hard restoring much of the interior space, patching walls, painting, and serving as property manager.

Keep ReadingShow less
Region One announces 2024 Superintendent Award winners

FALLS VILLAGE — Eason Zhang and Kara Franks are this year’s winners of the Superintendent’s Award from Housatonic Valley Regional High School.

Kara is the President of the Housatonic Valley FFA chapter, and an officer in the high school’s National Honor Society chapter. She plans to attend college for a nursing degree in the fall and works as a host at the Bulls Bridge Inn in Kent on weekends. In her spare time, she likes to work with horses.

Keep ReadingShow less