School Committee OKs Three Year Superintendent Contract; ‘Interim’ Dropped From Student Services Director’s Title

Photo: Belmont Schools Superinterndent Dr. Jill Geiser

It was smooth sailing for Schools Superintendent Dr. Jill Geiser as the Belmont School Committee voted unanimously to support a second employment agreement with Geiser to continue as the district’s leader for an additional three-year term.

“I want to acknowledge Dr. Geiser leadership and the work underway across the district that she has been spearheading,” said School Committee Chair Meg Moriarty, who noted the contract will run from July 1 through June 30, 2030, with a possible one-year extension. 

“The agreement that we’ve come to reflects that the school committee wishes to support the continuation of that work and your very strong district leadership. I think the contract provides important continuity for the Belmont public schools through June 2030, with a standard one-year extension,” said Moriarty.

Details of Gieser’s contract, including her salary and compensation which is being adjusted in year one, allowing her to be compensated at an equivilent level found in other districts, were not provided by Moriarty. Those changes are based on a third-year superintendent with a doctorate in education, followed by modest, predictable increases that reflect both other contract conditions in the district and the fiscal responsibility expected of the school committee.

After the vote, Geiser called out the committee’s “confidence in my work as a superintendent. I also convey that to the leadership team. It is the people on our team that really make things happen, and I want to extend appreciation in that direction as well.”

Geiser pointed out the experience of being a superintendent in a community where she lives “is really pretty incredible.”

“I get comments like, ‘Is that hard [working in Belmont]?’ I was like, ‘Actually, it’s good.’ It’s because I feel that I have much more investment in it, and it’s not hard to get out to certain events and things like that and see what’s going on,” she said.

“I appreciate very much the opportunity to do that here in Belmont, and I am looking forward to continuing on with the work,” said Geiser.

Libby Given the Full Time Job

The transitional title ‘interim’ was a prefix to Jonathan Libby’s title up until Tuesday, when the School Committee approved Libby’s appointment to be the district’s next full-time Director of Student Services through the coming three years.

The Department of Student Services encompasses guidance, nursing, and special education services from preschool through high school.

“I think that the school committee feels that the agreement supports the continuity and leadership in the Student Services Department, which is critical for many of our students and families,” said Moriarty.

After Self Insuring Employees For A Decade, Belmont Seeks Move To Join State Health Plan

Photo: Logo for the Massachusetts Group Insurance Commission (GIC)

Belmont Town officials have long said a move from a self-insured health plan for town employees and retirees into the state-run insurance program was a matter of “when, not if.”

Well, that “when” is apparently now, as the Select Board voted Monday, March 23, to join the Massachusetts Group Insurance Commission (GIC) plan, as the headwinds of skyrocketing health costs facing smaller schemes have become too precarious to chance sailing into it alone.

Select Board Member Elizabeth Dionne said joining the GIC was never a “dogmatic decision, but it would always be a pragmatic one: it would come down to the numbers.”

“I think the math makes it quite clear, and the timing quite urgent, and the comparison similarities of the plans appear to be aligned enough that I don’t think we’re going to find a better window where we can wait to move to the GIC,” said Select Board Chair Matt Taylor as the board made its formal notification of an intent to engage in the process to change health insurance benefits for more than 1,200 Belmont employees under state law Chapter 30, 2b, Sections 21 through 23. 

The town will negotiate with a group comprised of union reps representing school and town employees.

Belmont employees and retirees are currently under a health insurance trust fund, which is a self-insurance mechanism that pays employee health claims directly rather than paying premiums to insurance companies. And Belmont’s self-insured plan has held over the past decade an advantage on premiums and costs over the GIC. 

But that one-time advantage has been stood on its head as the plan underwent a sudden and steep rise in premiums that was extensively previewed at a February public meeting. While Belmont has been able to offset the cost using the plan’s reserve fund, a small municipal plan has more exposure to cost fluctuations, which forces the plan to increasingly dip into the plan’s reserve account to manage the swings in claim expenses from year to year.

“Healthcare costs are affecting everybody,” said Taylor. Many municipalities are referencing it in their budget or override requests, noted Taylor, pointing to neighboring Lexington, where their health care costs have created a significant budget shortfall that is leading them to leave open positions unfulfilled and lay off up to 14 municipal workers. 

And Belmont is not immune to the cost shock. “It’s a real budget driver for fiscal years ’26, ’27, and a surprising one for fiscal year ’25 [as it] showed up mid-year,” said Taylor. Claims have increased from $13 million in fiscal ’21 to a projected $20 million in fiscal ’27, led by a huge jump in prescriptions of GLP-1s like Ozempic, reaching $850,000 in fiscal ’25, and specialty drugs that can cost $700,000 per case. There are also higher costs for technology and administrative positions and the aging population saddled onto plans.

The impact: claims for fiscal ’25 are trending 20 percent higher than the nine percent forecasted, with a corresponding reduction in the Health Trust balance and subsequent higher premiums in the coming fiscal year. 

As dark clouds increasingly hang over Belmont and other small plans, there is increasing pressure to move under the large state-run umbrella. GIC is the state-run insurance program for public employees employed by the state and municipalities, including school districts.

The biggest advantage of the state plan is its bulk. The GIC has approximately 460,000 members, including 100,000 municipal members from more than 50 cities, towns, and regional school districts, including Ashland, Brookline, and Woburn. This larger employee pool gives the plan a greater ability to negotiate for multiple plan options from major carriers.

And the future costs show a clear advantage in joining the GIC. The current town plan will see a 24 percent increase in fiscal year ’27 vs. a nine percent increase under the GIC plan. In the first six months (Jan. 1 to June 30, 2027), while an individual’s monthly premium under both plans will increase by $50 to $258, a family premium under the town plan would increase by $135 to $699, while under GIC, that family premium will jump by $77 to $641.

A transfer will bring savings in total town costs. The projected fiscal ’27 annual increase (starting on Jan. 1, 2027) in the town plan will surge by $3 million, totaling $18.1 million, while under GIC the projected increase will be $2 million to $17.1 million.

“There’s the basic economics of the GIC, which is, insurance generally, the more you pool, the better it works. We have found that there have been some idiosyncrasies in Belmont that made it not work for us historically, but we may have turned a page on that,” said Taylor. 

One of the big advantages this year is the state’s actually throwing in more money to help GIC balance its books as a standalone, self-insuring entity. “We do not have access to that. So at this point, it’s not free money, because it all comes from us. But I’d like to reaccess that money,” said Dionne.

Taylor said this is an ideal time to switch plans, as there are plans that are almost comparable. “As a self-ensuring entity, we’ve not been able to provide the same range of options, so I believe there are now eight plans that employees will be able to choose from.”

“A larger pool is a more stable, secure environment for a series of idiosyncratic reasons,” said Dionne. “Every year we’ve either formally or informally revisited this, and every year the numbers dictate against joining GIC. As recently as this last summer, we thought that was still the case. And then it not only changed, it changed quickly, and it changed for everybody across the Commonwealth.”

“The math works out … in favor of moving to the group insurance commission,” said Taylor, ultimately giving greater financial stability to the town.

Town officials are now preparing to move forward with the negotiations with the knowledge that they will need to convince employees that they will receive a better deal with the state-run plan.

“I think change comes with some understandable uncertainty and questions from our employees about what this means for me,” said Taylor. “There are plans that are remarkably similar to what the town offers for an HMO and a PPO, and then there are six additional choices. They’re not identical, but they’re pretty close, and I think at no point will it ever be perfectly identical.”

And the town will attempt to make those changes comprehensible.

“We’ve talked about education sessions, we’ve talked about material, and we’ve talked about creating a Web page for employees so they can just be a couple of clicks from getting to the information that they need,” he said. “We hope to have additional support for [Human Resources], as we recognize this is a transition. We are committed to making sure that the employees have all the information.”

Shane Smith Signs Three Year Contract Becoming Belmont Police Chief

Photo: Shane Smith during his February interview with the Belmont Select Board

The Belmont Select Board unanimously ratified a three-year contract with Shane Smith to be the town’s next Police Chief at its Monday, March 23 meeting.

According to Kelly King, Belmont’s HR director, Smith’s starting salary is $210,000. The contract also requires Smith to establish residency within 15 miles of Belmont by the end of next summer.

Smith starts his new job on May 4, said King. 

“This is great news for Belmont,” said Select Board Chair Matt Taylor. “We got an outstanding new police chief. It’s been great discussing this with our new police chief … [and] we’re really excited to get started.”

The Select Board unanimously selected Smith from two other finalists at a special meeting on Feb. 20.

Smith was recently the deputy chief in Salem, NH, having spent his entire 24-year law enforcement career on the Salem Police Department. A graduate of the University of Massachusetts Lowell with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and psychology, Smith attended the prestigious FBI National Academy in Quantico, Va, in 2024.

Smith replaces James MacIsaac, who left in August to become director of Campus Safety and Security at the Middlesex School in Concord, Mass. Assistant Belmont Police Chief Mark Hurley has been the department’s interim head for the past seven months.

Speaking to the Belmontonian after the ratification vote, Smith said his “initial feel for the town, meeting the Select Board, dealing with the town administrator, and HR, has been fantastic. They’re just so welcoming.” 

While waiting for the meeting to start, Smith said he ran into an officer in Belmont Center.

“Today, I went and got a coffee downtown, and I saw an officer there and spoke to the patrolman. He was educated, he was well-spoken, he was genuine, everything I would look for in a patrolman,” said Smith.

Smith said coming from the outside, he will first need to take an inventory of what the police department is, who the people are, and what their culture is, “so there’s not going to be any major changes initially.” 

“I have to figure out what they’re doing right, and then I’m sure there are some areas that we can improve on. But I have to take that inventory first, and then I’m going to meet with every single person within the police department as well as the Select Board and stakeholders within the community and find out what direction that they want to go,” Smith said.

“My plan is to develop a strategic plan so everyone will know the direction the department is going, and I will set some goals of what we intend to do,” he said. 

“What I’m hearing about this police department is that it’s a great group of officers. Also, something that drew me to the job is that the assistant chief and the captain both will be here for a couple of years to help with my transition. So I’m looking forward to making a relationship with them and learning just how the town operates and how the Police Department operates.”

“I know people might be apprehensive [coming from outside the department], so I hope that they give him the opportunity to build that relationship, because that’s where trust comes from—by building relationships first,” said Smith.

League Of Women Voters Remote Candidates’ Night This Wednesday, March 25

Photo: Candidates’ night is Wednesday

The League of Women Voters of Belmont is holding its annual Candidates’ Night on Wednesday, March 25 at 7 p.m. The event will be remote.

The night will start with a video “parade” by precinct of Town Meeting candidates, followed by short speeches and a Q&A with the town-wide candidates.

And just remember: Town Election Day is Tuesday, April 7.

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After Three Spring Postponements, Belmont Town Day Scheduled For Saturday, May 16

Photo: Join the crowd at Belmont Town Day on May 16.

Fourth time’s the charm as the Belmont Center Business Association will come to the Belmont School Board on Monday, March 23 for permission to hold its 37th Annual Town Day on Saturday, May 16 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Last year marked the third consecutive year that a forecast of rain caused the postponement of the annual Belmont Town Day to September.

Leonard Street from Channing Road to Pleasant Street will be closed from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.

There will be multiple tables and tents along the Leonard Street occupied by local groups, non-profits, town departments, retailers and restaurants. There will be kiddie rides, basketball hoops, and, as always, the popular dunk tank.

The yearly Belmont Garden Club Flower and Plant Sale is expected to take place on May 16 from 9 a.m. to noon outside the Belmont Lions Club at the WWI memorial on Common Street and Royal Road.

Belmont School Committee OKs $88.3M Budget For FY ’27, A 9.3 Percent Annual Increase

Photo: FY ’27 School Committee budget

The Belmont School Committee unanimously approved an $88.3 million fiscal year 2027 budget at its March 10 meeting.

The committee will ask the annual Town Meeting to approve the $74.0 million allocated to the schools from the town’s general fund. The remaining $14.3 million is made up of grants, revolving funds, and other accounts.

The all-in budget (the general fund and the other fund sources) is 9.3 percent above last fiscal year’s amount, while the town’s general funds allocation to the schools rose 4.8 percent, or $3.38 million.

There are two big-ticket items: educator and staff salaries making up three-quarters of the budget, followed by salaries, tuition, and transportation supporting special education at 18 percent.

“You’d see the vast majority of our funds are for staff salaries, which is typical for a [school] district in general,” said Tony DiCologero, director of Finance, Business and Operations.

“So after you look at those two categories together, that’s 93 percent of the school budget coming from the general fund. It doesn’t leave us a lot to do much beyond that,” said Amy Zuccarello, who chairs the finance subcommittee. “I do applaud that we’ve been able to do so much with so little, and I think it is due to where our focus has been.” 

The number of Belmont’s Full-Time Equivalent (FTEs) teaching and staff positions will exceed 600 in FY ’27, with the addition of 19 FTE’s from all sources, as the figure reaches 613.6.

Unlike pre-pandemic budgets, which were inherently completed late in the fiscal year as the town administration and school district sweated out final state-based local aid amounts, there is no surprise of what the school’s allocation will be after the town adopted a revenue-first budget process three years ago. 

There will be two one-time appropriations in the fiscal ’27 budget: $46,000 for the implementation of a Student Information System and funding for the continued adoption of the elementary-level curriculum plan, noted DiCologero.

Revolving funds – individual accounts for specific activities such as athletics, food services, and bus fees – will come in at $4.6 million, an increase of $700,000 from fiscal year ’26, reflecting greater
reliance on the fees for student activities and visual and performing arts, and so reducing the general
fund to this area.

The ’27 fiscal year will see the return of the federal and state grants line item account. During the COVID pandemic era, the district received a significant amount of one-time federal funds along with state recurring grants. That line item has been a considerable jump from $6.3 million to $9.5 million, which is largely due to the anticipated reimbursement and the district’s reliance on state “circuit breaker” funds based on Belmont’s special education tuition and transportation expenses, said DiCologero. 

“Ultimately, I think that this is a very good budget in light of what our available resources are,” said Zuccarello. “We can never predict exactly what the future is going to look like, but this is an educated, informed budget that I feel very happy to support.”

Belmont’s Flag Retirement Ceremony At Vets Memorial On Sunday, March 15

Photo: The Flag Retirement Ceremony will take place on Sunday, March 15, at 2 p.m.

The Belmont Veterans Memorial Committee is hosting a Flag Retirement Ceremony at Clay Pit Pond, the corner of Concord Avenue and Underwood Street, on Sunday, March 15, at 2 p.m.

The ceremony will allow the town to honorably retire and replace approximately 2,500 old and worn U.S. flags from the Grove Street Cemetery and others from the Belmont community, collected by the Belmont Hill Veterans Club.

This event serves as a tribute to our national symbol and those who served to protect it.

Town Holding Public Workshop On Brighton Street Overlay March 30, 6:30 PM

Photo: A draft of the flyer announcing the March 30 workshop for the Brighton Street Planning and Zoning Project

Less than a month after successfully marshaling Town Meeting support to approve the creation of the Belmont Center and Gateway Overlay Districts on March 4, the town is moving quickly to replicate a simular plan for the corner of Brighton Street and Hittinger streets and in and around the Hills Estate.

“Your Voice Matters” proclaims the flyer announcing the first workshop of the Brighton Street Planning and Zoning Project which is set for Monday, March 30 in the Belmont Public Library’s McLaughlin Room. Sponsored by the Town and Able.City, the meeting will beginning at 6:30 p.m.

Thursday’s virtual Select Board meeting was a preliminary planning session in preparation of the March 30 meeting.

Conor McCormack, Belmont’s Planning Division Manager, said the upcoming planning session is “the next step” in the process, following a public survey conducted by Harvard University Kennedy School students, and the Planning Board adopting a vision plan for the area.

As with the Belmont Center Overlay, Able.City will manage the public process, using the same techniques used previously in the center, said Jason King, a partner with Able.City East, the same consulting firm which patched together the Center and Gateway’s form-based design.

Jason and Pamela King of Able.City

Public surveys, postcards to abutters and the surrounding neighborhood, as well as the opportunity for residents to be placed in an email “blast” will be used to bring out the community to the workshop.

The event will be a listening session, similar to a charrette, where all stakeholders will be asked how they resolve conflicts and map solutions. “It will also be an opportunity to provide [the public] an overview of a Brighton Street vision plan, and everything that’s been done before,” said McComack, as it will resemble the same setup as the Belmont Center and Gateway Overlays with charts, renderings of designs, and plenty of conversations with the town, consultants, and residents.

“The workshop will be the start to gather feedback from the public on what they see, and what they want to see in the future of Brighton Street,” said McCormack.

To obtain a good sample, the town is reaching out to the public to attend the meeting.

“We want to make sure folks in the community and particularly in the Brighton Street neighborhood are aware of this,” said McCormack. The town plans to send informational postcards to residents and property owners and allow neighbors to be placed on an email “blast.”

A day or two after the workshop, Able.City will hold several focus groups of approximately 15 participants at Belmont Town Hall with targeted stakeholders such as large property owners 

“Typically we would start the meeting with an overview of why we’re there, what we heard last night,” said Pamela King of Able.City. “Then we ask them for more specific feedback based on the topic of the meeting, to get the more detailed [suggestions] from them.” 

“We have a pretty good playbook,” said McCormack.

‘Don’t Be The Bunny’ That Misses ‘Urinetown,’ BHS Performing Arts Company’s Spring Musical

Photo: Caldwell B. Caldwell (Bennett Sprague) singing about the dilemmas of being a rabbit in a modern world in “Don’t be the Bunny” from BHS PAC’s Spring Musical Urinetown.

URINETOWN
MUSIC AND LYRICS BY MARK HOLLMANN, 
TONY AWARD-WINNING BOOK AND LYRICS BY GREG KOTIS

PERFORMANCES
Thursday, March 12 at 7 p.m.
Friday, March 13 at 7 p.m.
Saturday, March 14 at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m
​.

TICKET INFO
ADULTS: $15; STUDENTS/CHILDREN: $10; BHS Students: $5; Thursday and Sat Matinee, $10

BUY YOUR TICKETS HERE

In a drought-stricken future, all private toilets have been banned and citizens must pay to use public restrooms controlled by a powerful corporation. When an ordinary young man named Bobby Strong decides he’s had enough, he sparks a rebellion that turns his world upside down. 

The Tony Award-winning Urinetown the Musical is a hilarious and smart satire that pokes fun at musical theater while telling a surprisingly heartfelt story about love, power and standing up for what you believe in. Featuring a wide range of musical styles, big ensemble numbers [especially the end of Act 1] and a cast of bold, eccentric characters, the show is both wildly entertaining and unexpectedly thought-provoking.

This production features a large cast of Belmont High School student actors, a student-run technical crew, and a live pit band. From designing and building the world of the play to bringing its many unforgettable characters to life, the show highlights the incredible range of talent and dedication within the Belmont High School PAC.

Ezra Flam, Urinetown producer and director, said “[p]icking a show is always about looking at the overall sense of who our current students are, especially our 11th and 12th graders and what they bring into the show. And we have a lot of kids, especially in the senior class this year, who are improvisers and comedians, really funny kids. So we were looking for a show that had characters that had some of that silliness and fun that they can bring to it.”

Bringing back the musical first staged by BHS-PAC a decade ago, Flam said it’s nice looking at this production and see how the show has changed.

“Its got some things to say now that are different from when we did it 10 years ago, or when the show was written in 2001. The script reads a little differently than it did in the past. I don’t know ‘fun’ is the right word, more rewarding and interesting.”

This production carries a punch with “lots of kids” on stage, going through some complex dance numbers for how many actors are involved.

“The Act One finale is such a fantastic example of that movement. The character Officer Lockstock [William Sattler] says the act one finale is a big song and dance number for the entire cast, and it really is,” said Flam. “It’s that moment in the show where you have one group of kids singing and doing a set of choreography, while a different group is performing different lyrics and different choreography, and finally a different group is doing different lyrics and a completely different choreography. All this is happening when two leads are up on a piece of scenery that’s spinning and doing different lyrics and different moves, all at the same time. It nods to One Day More, the act one finale of Les Mis.”

This production has the advantage of it being performed in a space that everyone is quite use to.

“All of these kids have been doing shows in this theater for their entire high school career. And so I think last year was the year when really hit our stride on we’ve all been in this building. We’ve all been working here for four years, five years now, and we know what we can do, how to make the tech do all the things we wanted to do. This is a maturity of the theater space and of the program.”

Production Team

DIRECTOR/PRODUCER: Ezra Flam
THEATER & MEDIA PRODUCTION FACILITATOR: John Parker
BPS DIRECTOR OF VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS: Arto Asadoorian

CAST

OFFICER LOCKSTOCK ………………………..…………William Sattler
LITTLE SALLY …………………………………………………….Trudie Innis
BOBBY STRONG…………………………………………….Calvin Barnes
HOPE CLADWELL………………………………………..Rayna Thomas
MS. PENNYWISE …………………………………………Caroline Lafkas
MR. CLADWELL…………………………….………….Bennett Sprague
OFFICER BARREL ………………………………………Quincy Crockett
SENATOR FIPP………………………………………………….Talia Siebert
MR. McQUEEN……………………………………………….Ben Guglietta
OLD MAN STRONG………………………………………..Joseph Barry
JOSEPHINE STRONG…………………….……… Teagan Imberman
HOT BLADES HARRY…………………….…………….. Malachi Smith
BECKY TWO-SHOES…………………….… Lou Aubanel-Battilana
SOUPY SUE……………………………………………………Grace Sullivan
TINY TOM………………………………………………..Quinton Hashemi
ROBBY THE STOCKFISH………………………… Sebastian Beattie

Stay Off The Grass: Town Parks Closed As Snow Melt Soaks The Sod

Photo: Get off!

All town grass fields are closed as of Tuesday, March 10, due to snow melt and muddy conditions, according to the town’s Recreation Department.

The parks and fields impacted are:

  • Town Field: 160 Waverly St.
  • Pequossette (PQ) Park: 72 Maple St.
  • Winn Brooks Fields: 97 Waterhouse Rd.
  • Grove Street Park: 138-150 Grove St.
  • Payson Park: 288 Payson Rd.
  • Chenery Middle School Field: 95 Washington St.
  • Underwood Park: 35 South Cottage Rd.

“We will update the town alert bar and this page as well as our social media accounts as conditions improve,” said the press release.