Monroe|News|
Education & Threats to Get Voters to the Polls
Many blame a tax increase of over 4% for Tuesday's referendum defeat, but others decry low voter turnout as the decisive factor.

Bio:
Bill Bittar grew up in Monroe and has held positions at several newspapers over the course of his career. He covered his hometown as a reporter for the Connecticut Post and again as editor of the Monroe Courier.
Bill has a Master's Degree in journalism from Northeastern University.
He has won a number of awards, including: Two first place awards for investigative reporting from the Society of Professional Journalists; first for in-depth reporting from Suburban Newspapers of America; first for spot reporting from the New England Press Associaton; and first place for general reporting from the New England Newspaper & Press Association.
Bill and his wife Jennifer live in Shelton.
In his free time, Bill enjoys sports, reading, movies, traveling and get-togethers with family and friends.
His e-mail is bill@patch.com and phone number is 203-621-4847.
You can also see his Welcome to Monroe Patch video.
Beliefs
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism.
However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible and human beings have beliefs.
So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal certain key beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable.
This disclosure is not a license for our editors to inject these beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that our beliefs are on the record will force us to be ever mindful to write, report, and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you, the user, ever think you see evidence that we failed in this mission, we wholeheartedly invite you to let us know.
Politics
How would you describe your political beliefs?
I had been a registered Democrat, then later as a Republican. I now plan to change my status to Unaffiliated.
Many people in this country are firmly entrenched within one political party and prefer to get their news from only Left or Right leaning media outlets.
I think that is a big mistake, because it blinds you from the big picture of what's really going on. No political side is always right and neither is always wrong.
Hot Button Issues
What do you think are the most important issues facing the community?
Monroe is well-known for its annual budget battle and the root of it is the need for quality schools, municipal and emergency services verses taxpayers' ability to pay for it all.
I understand the frustration of town leaders and administrators and parents of school age children, who often have small funding increases or actual cuts to programs they care about.
But at the same time, property taxes have to be reigned in. Most residents salaries have not increased at the same rate as their tax bills and, in many cases, were frozen or cut.
In this national recession many have either lost or fear losing their jobs. And a high number of senior citizens are living on fixed incomes and/or have seen their retirement funds depleted.
It is my hope that the town can increase revenue by growing its commercial tax base to better accomodate both sides.
With every dispute in town, I will strive to give all parties a fair shake regardless of my personal opinion.
Many blame a tax increase of over 4% for Tuesday's referendum defeat, but others decry low voter turnout as the decisive factor.

First Selectman Steve Vavrek defended his budget proposal during a meeting following the second referendum defeat. Many urged him to leave the education budget alone.
A disagreement over how the Edith Wheeler Memorial Trust is supposed to be used has led to a freeze in spending increases for the library.
Some believe Monroe voters will pass a budget with a 3% tax increase, but no more.
Masuk senior Tyler Hurvul shares the poem, 'Somebody Should Have Taught Him'.
Property transfers recorded in the Town Clerk's Office from April 9 to 23.
Masuk's annual Post Prom Party will be held this Friday from 11:30 p.m. until 3:30 a.m. Volunteers are still needed.
Parks & Recreation Dir. Frank Cooper says parks, greens and grounds in areas of town with the most traffic 'should look like something you would be proud for people to see.'
Monroe emergency services personnel and student actors show Masuk seniors that drinking and texting when driving can have fatal consequences.
The TRIAD Uniform Fashion Show at the Monroe Senior Center Tuesday gave patrons an eye-full of authentic town, emergency services and company uniforms.
All solicitors, with the exception of representatives of non-profits, must have a vendor permit on them when going door-to-door.
The first selectman scheduled the Charter required meeting following Tuesday's referendum defeat of the $80.3 million budget proposal.
The equipment was taken from the tower on Moose Hill Road this month.
Registration is at Just Tumble & Hard Kore Fitness this Saturday.
The budget was defeated in the second referendum Tuesday, but voters overwhelmingly approved $3.8 million in bonding for Honeywell.
Polls are open until 8 p.m. to decide on two ballot questions, the $80.3 million budget proposal and bonding for $3.8 million for energy efficiency upgrades at town schools.
Police charged a Bridgeport man with carrying a firearm while under the influence.
Town Councilman Tony Unger says anticipated savings from the energy efficiency projects allowed the school board to reduce its utilities line item by $220,000.
A state statute requires requests petitioned to referendum to be voted on from noon to 8 p.m., unless a town governing body decides to start voting earlier — which the council did, making it 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
A piece of farming equipment was last seen by its owner on Feb. 8 and she noticed it was missing in April, according to police.