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	<title>Uncategorized &#8211; Brookfield Examiner</title>
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	<title>Uncategorized &#8211; Brookfield Examiner</title>
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		<title>Editorial: One Set of Rules for Officials, Another for Everyone Else?</title>
		<link>https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/05/09/editorial-one-set-of-rules-for-officials-another-for-everyone-else/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christopher Kelleher]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 14:31:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://brookfieldexaminer.com/?p=1969</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Editorial: One Set of Rules for Officials, Another for Everyone Else? By Christopher Kelleher This editorial is the third part of the Brookfield Examiner’s ongoing coverage surrounding the controversial removal of two trees from town property by Select Board member Richard Chaffee. As previously reported, the incident resulted in the resignation of Brookfield’s Tree Warden &#8230;<p class="read-more"> <a class="" href="https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/05/09/editorial-one-set-of-rules-for-officials-another-for-everyone-else/"> <span class="screen-reader-text">Editorial: One Set of Rules for Officials, Another for Everyone Else?</span> Read More &#187;</a></p>]]></description>
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.elementor-widget-text-editor.elementor-drop-cap-view-stacked .elementor-drop-cap{background-color:#69727d;color:#fff}.elementor-widget-text-editor.elementor-drop-cap-view-framed .elementor-drop-cap{color:#69727d;border:3px solid;background-color:transparent}.elementor-widget-text-editor:not(.elementor-drop-cap-view-default) .elementor-drop-cap{margin-top:8px}.elementor-widget-text-editor:not(.elementor-drop-cap-view-default) .elementor-drop-cap-letter{width:1em;height:1em}.elementor-widget-text-editor .elementor-drop-cap{float:left;text-align:center;line-height:1;font-size:50px}.elementor-widget-text-editor .elementor-drop-cap-letter{display:inline-block}</style>				<h1><b>Editorial: One Set of Rules for Officials, Another for Everyone Else?</b></h1>
<p>By Christopher Kelleher</p>
<p>This editorial is the third part of the Brookfield Examiner’s ongoing coverage surrounding the controversial removal of two trees from town property by Select Board member Richard Chaffee.</p>
<p>As previously reported, the incident resulted in the resignation of Brookfield’s Tree Warden following public controversy over whether proper municipal procedures, bidding practices, and tree removal policies were bypassed. Questions have also been raised regarding the removal of wood from the property and whether ordinary residents would have been treated differently under similar circumstances.</p>
<p>This editorial examines the broader issues raised by the controversy: accountability, equal enforcement of rules, public trust, and whether elected officials are being held to the same standards expected of ordinary citizens.</p>
<p>Brookfield residents should be asking themselves a very simple question:</p>
<p>What would happen if one of us did this?</p>
<p>What if an ordinary citizen walked onto town property, cut down two trees without authorization, removed the wood, and interfered with an active municipal bid process?</p>
<p>Would that citizen simply walk away?</p>
<p>Or would they be facing outrage, legal consequences, demands for accountability, and possibly even criminal investigation?</p>
<p>Because that is the question now hanging over the Town of Brookfield.</p>
<p>As previously reported, sealed bids had already been opened regarding the tree work. According to statements made during public meetings, it had become apparent that Select Board member Richard Chaffee’s son was not going to receive the contract.</p>
<p>Then, before the matter was formally revisited by the board at its next meeting, Richard Chaffee took it upon himself to go onto town property and cut two of the trees down himself.</p>
<p>Not through a vote.</p>
<p>Not through a formal authorization.</p>
<p>Not through the Tree Warden.</p>
<p>Not through the established process.</p>
<p>Unilaterally.</p>
<p>Even more troubling, the wood was removed. That wood belonged to the taxpayers of Brookfield, and in a rural community like Brookfield, wood has real value.</p>
<p>Anyone in rural Massachusetts understands this. Many residents heat their homes with wood. Some use outdoor wood furnaces all winter long. Firewood is not worthless property. It has real value, whether that value is measured in hundreds of dollars or a single dollar.</p>
<p>It still belonged to the town.</p>
<p>During the public discussion, Mr. Chaffee reportedly stated that when the town removes trees, the wood is often left behind for residents to take and use.</p>
<p>But that only raises more questions about what happened here.</p>
<p>If the town’s normal practice is to leave the wood for the benefit of residents, then why was this situation handled differently?</p>
<p>Why was the wood allegedly taken by the same elected official who unilaterally cut the trees down?</p>
<p>Many Brookfield residents heat their homes with wood. For some families, firewood carries real financial value. Under the practice described publicly by Mr. Chaffee himself, that wood would ordinarily remain available to the public.</p>
<p>Instead, the public property was allegedly removed.</p>
<p>Permission matters.</p>
<p>Process matters.</p>
<p>Public property matters.</p>
<p>And the question remains unanswered: why was an elected official allowed to take public property without consequence?</p>
<p>No public censure.</p>
<p>No meaningful accountability.</p>
<p>No referral.</p>
<p>No serious investigation.</p>
<p>Nothing.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the Town lost its Tree Warden — a volunteer with deep knowledge of tree law, procedure, and municipal compliance.</p>
<p>A volunteer who cost taxpayers nothing.</p>
<p>Watching the public meeting was revealing. The former Tree Warden answered questions directly, cited procedures, and appeared thoroughly familiar with the legal framework surrounding tree removals. Yet throughout the discussion, interruptions and pressure repeatedly redirected the conversation.</p>
<p>Many residents have seen this pattern before.</p>
<p>Anytime someone attempts to challenge Richard Chaffee publicly, the response often follows the same formula: dominate the conversation, interrupt repeatedly, and bulldoze an alternate version of events into the record through sheer force of personality.</p>
<p>This newspaper has seen it before.</p>
<p>Others in town government have seen it before.</p>
<p>And according to prior public meetings, even members of boards and commissions have experienced it firsthand.</p>
<p>But this controversy goes beyond personality or political style.</p>
<p>This controversy strikes at the heart of whether Brookfield operates under one set of rules for ordinary residents and another set for politically connected officials.</p>
<p>Because ordinary residents do not get to sabotage bid processes.</p>
<p>Ordinary residents do not get to bypass municipal procedure because they believe they “know better.”</p>
<p>Ordinary residents do not get to enter public property, perform hazardous tree work alone, remove town property, and then explain it away afterward.</p>
<p>And ordinary residents certainly do not get excused simply because they claim:</p>
<p>“I’ve been doing this for years.”</p>
<p>That excuse surfaced again during this controversy.</p>
<p>But experience does not place anyone above the law.</p>
<p>In fact, some of the most catastrophic accidents occur when experienced individuals become overly comfortable, overly confident, and stop respecting procedure itself.</p>
<p>Tree work is dangerous.</p>
<p>Chainsaw work is dangerous.</p>
<p>The Town itself reportedly maintains safety policies requiring at least two people present during chainsaw operations so that someone can summon emergency assistance if necessary.</p>
<p>Yet the work was allegedly performed alone anyway.</p>
<p>Again: would an ordinary town employee be allowed to ignore safety policy this way?</p>
<p>Would an ordinary citizen?</p>
<p>Or is this another example of rules becoming optional depending on who you are?</p>
<p>This is also not the first time this explanation has surfaced in controversy involving Mr. Chaffee.</p>
<p>For transparency, this reporter was the Conservation Commission chair involved in a prior dispute concerning the alleged use of state land near a protected wetland area for loading and unloading dirt, sand, and other material connected to Mr. Chaffee’s private business activities.</p>
<p>During that matter, a Conservation Commission member publicly stated that they had spoken with the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection and had been informed that a Request for Determination of Applicability (RDA) would be required for the activity in question.</p>
<p>Yet according to statements made during the public discussion, Mr. Chaffee indicated that he had been using the area in that manner for many years — reportedly as long as 25 years — without obtaining permits or going through the Conservation Commission process.</p>
<p>That raises another troubling question:</p>
<p>Why is an elected official allegedly able to use state land for his private business that was adjacent to a protected wetland area for decades without permits, without filings, and without oversight, while ordinary residents are expected to navigate formal environmental review procedures, engineering requirements, filings, hearings, and compliance orders?</p>
<p>And when concerns were finally raised publicly, the discussion reportedly shifted away from the conduct itself and toward criticism of the chair who brought the issue forward, including calls by Mr. Chaffee for that chair’s removal.</p>
<p>Mr. Chaffee also reportedly stated during the controversy that he would no longer use the area in question.</p>
<p>But the broader issue remains.</p>
<p>What message does this send to the public?</p>
<p>That if a politically connected official engages in questionable conduct long enough, the conduct itself becomes acceptable?</p>
<p>That if someone finally raises concerns, the person who reported the issue becomes the real problem?</p>
<p>Because many residents may now see a troubling parallel between what happened at the Conservation Commission and what later happened with the Town’s Tree Warden.</p>
<p>A concern was raised.</p>
<p>Procedure was defended.</p>
<p>Questions were asked.</p>
<p>And ultimately, the individual raising those concerns was pushed out.</p>
<p>That is not how accountability is supposed to work in local government.</p>
<p>Longevity is not the same thing as legality.</p>
<p>And familiarity does not eliminate accountability.</p>
<p>Brookfield residents should not have to wonder whether enforcement depends on your last name, your political influence, or your position in town government.</p>
<p>Public trust erodes when residents begin believing that ordinary people would face consequences for conduct that elected officials simply explain away.</p>
<p>The loss of the Tree Warden should concern everyone.</p>
<p>Because when knowledgeable volunteers walk away from town service after controversy like this, the damage extends far beyond two trees.</p>
<p>The real question now is not whether the trees should have come down.</p>
<p>The real question is whether Brookfield still believes that process, accountability, and equal treatment under the rules apply equally to everyone.</p>
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		<title>Police clarify noise enforcement after initial ATV post draws attention</title>
		<link>https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/05/04/police-clarify-noise-enforcement-after-initial-atv-post-draws-attention/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christopher Kelleher]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2026 13:42:52 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://brookfieldexaminer.com/?p=1915</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Police clarify noise enforcement after initial ATV warning draws attention By Christopher Kelleher SOUTHBRIDGE, Mass. — The Southbridge Police Department issued a clarification following widespread attention to an earlier post that warned of a “zero tolerance” approach to ATV-related noise complaints, including on private property. The original message, released earlier Friday, stated that ATV operators &#8230;<p class="read-more"> <a class="" href="https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/05/04/police-clarify-noise-enforcement-after-initial-atv-post-draws-attention/"> <span class="screen-reader-text">Police clarify noise enforcement after initial ATV post draws attention</span> Read More &#187;</a></p>]]></description>
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							<h2 data-start="531" data-end="612"><span role="text"><strong data-start="534" data-end="612">Police clarify noise enforcement after initial ATV warning draws attention</strong></span></h2>
<p data-start="614" data-end="641"><strong data-start="614" data-end="641">By Christopher Kelleher</strong></p>
<p data-start="643" data-end="889"><strong data-start="643" data-end="665">SOUTHBRIDGE, Mass.</strong> — The <span class="hover:entity-accent entity-underline inline cursor-pointer align-baseline"><span class="whitespace-normal">Southbridge Police Department</span></span> issued a clarification following widespread attention to an earlier post that warned of a “zero tolerance” approach to ATV-related noise complaints, including on private property.</p>
<p data-start="891" data-end="1170">The original message, released earlier Friday, stated that ATV operators could be cited if a complaint was received — even when riding on private property with the owner’s permission — and warned that property owners themselves could face violations under the town’s noise bylaw.</p>
<p data-start="1172" data-end="1381">The post also encouraged residents to report disturbances “at any time of the day or night,” and described enforcement as a “zero tolerance” approach in response to what officials said were ongoing complaints.</p>
<h3 data-start="1388" data-end="1459"><span role="text"><strong data-start="1392" data-end="1459">Clarification broadens scope, softens focus on private property</strong></span></h3>
<p data-start="1461" data-end="1634">In a follow-up statement, the department said the message was not intended to target ATV use alone, but rather to address enforcement of the town’s noise bylaw more broadly.</p>
<p data-start="1636" data-end="1822">Officials said the bylaw applies to a range of situations, including loud vehicles, amplified music, and properties that generate repeated complaints requiring multiple police responses.</p>
<p data-start="1824" data-end="1929">The department also emphasized that activity on private property is not the primary focus of enforcement.</p>
<blockquote data-start="1931" data-end="2030">
<p data-start="1933" data-end="2030">“What individuals choose to do on their private property is their business,” the statement reads.</p></blockquote>
<h3 data-start="2037" data-end="2090"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2041" data-end="2090">Enforcement based on observation and judgment</strong></span></h3>
<p data-start="2092" data-end="2301">According to the department, enforcement requires an officer to personally observe a disturbance and determine whether the noise would be considered unreasonable to a “reasonable person of normal sensitivity.”</p>
<p data-start="2303" data-end="2515">Officers must agree that a violation has occurred before any citation is issued. In some cases, the department said, officers have attempted to resolve complaints informally before considering enforcement action.</p>
<p data-start="2517" data-end="2555">No citations have been issued to date.</p>
<h3 data-start="2562" data-end="2610"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2566" data-end="2610">Safety concerns cited on public roadways</strong></span></h3>
<p data-start="2612" data-end="2815">In addition to noise complaints, the department pointed to ongoing safety concerns involving ATV use on public roads, including reports of juveniles riding without helmets and operating at unsafe speeds.</p>
<p data-start="2817" data-end="2968">ATVs were referenced in the initial post, officials said, because they represent a significant portion of recent complaints received by the department.</p>
<h3 data-start="2975" data-end="3023"><span role="text"><strong data-start="2979" data-end="3023">Public attention follows initial warning</strong></span></h3>
<p data-start="3025" data-end="3254">The clarification follows significant discussion online after the department’s initial post, which drew attention for its broad language regarding enforcement, including potential citations tied to complaints on private property.</p>
<p data-start="3256" data-end="3403">The department has made the full Noise Control By-Law available to the public, including provisions outlining enforcement standards and exceptions.</p>
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		<title>BROOKFIELD — POLLS OPEN NOON TO 7 P.M. FOR MONDAY TOWN ELECTION</title>
		<link>https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/05/02/brookfield-polls-open-noon-to-7-p-m-for-monday-town-election/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christopher Kelleher]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 13:52:56 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://brookfieldexaminer.com/?p=1894</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[BROOKFIELD — POLLS OPEN NOON TO 7 P.M. FOR MONDAY TOWN ELECTION By Christopher Kelleher  BROOKFIELD — Voting hours for Brookfield’s annual town election on Monday, May 4, will be limited to the afternoon and evening, with polls open from 12 p.m. to 7 p.m., according to town officials. The Select Board voted to reduce &#8230;<p class="read-more"> <a class="" href="https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/05/02/brookfield-polls-open-noon-to-7-p-m-for-monday-town-election/"> <span class="screen-reader-text">BROOKFIELD — POLLS OPEN NOON TO 7 P.M. FOR MONDAY TOWN ELECTION</span> Read More &#187;</a></p>]]></description>
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							<h1><strong data-start="131" data-end="198">BROOKFIELD — POLLS OPEN NOON TO 7 P.M. FOR MONDAY TOWN ELECTION</strong></h1><p data-start="200" data-end="400"><i>By Christopher Kelleher </i></p><p data-start="200" data-end="400">BROOKFIELD — Voting hours for Brookfield’s annual town election on Monday, May 4, will be limited to the afternoon and evening, with polls open from <strong data-start="349" data-end="370">12 p.m. to 7 p.m.</strong>, according to town officials.</p><p data-start="402" data-end="591">The Select Board voted to reduce the hours from the town’s typical 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. schedule. Town officials cited the absence of contested races on the ballot as the reason for the change.</p><p data-start="593" data-end="696">Massachusetts law allows municipalities to set polling hours for local elections within certain limits.</p><p data-start="698" data-end="912">Although no races are currently contested, the outcome of an election is not necessarily fixed. Under state law, voters may cast write-in, or “sticker,” votes for candidates whose names do not appear on the ballot.</p><p data-start="914" data-end="1040">Election observers note that write-in campaigns, while uncommon, can influence results, particularly in low-turnout elections.</p><p data-start="1042" data-end="1246">Residents are encouraged to plan ahead and vote within the shortened hours. Local officials said participation remains an important part of the election process, regardless of whether races are contested.</p><p data-start="1248" data-end="1312">Voting will take place at Brookfield Town Hall.</p><p data-start="1314" data-end="1411">Voters with questions about polling procedures are encouraged to contact the Town Clerk’s office.</p><p><!-- /wp:paragraph --></p>						</div>
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		<title>Editorial: In Brookfield, Open Meeting Law Isn’t the Problem — The Citizen Is</title>
		<link>https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/04/24/editorial-in-brookfield-open-meeting-law-isnt-the-problem-the-citizen-is/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christopher Kelleher]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2026 16:48:42 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://brookfieldexaminer.com/?p=1848</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Editorial: In Brookfield, Open Meeting Law Isn’t the Problem — The Citizen Is In any functioning democracy, transparency is not optional—it is the foundation. In Massachusetts, that principle is codified in the Massachusetts Open Meeting Law, a statute designed to ensure that the public’s business is conducted in public view. But in Brookfield, something has &#8230;<p class="read-more"> <a class="" href="https://brookfieldexaminer.com/2026/04/24/editorial-in-brookfield-open-meeting-law-isnt-the-problem-the-citizen-is/"> <span class="screen-reader-text">Editorial: In Brookfield, Open Meeting Law Isn’t the Problem — The Citizen Is</span> Read More &#187;</a></p>]]></description>
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							<h1><b>Editorial: In Brookfield, Open Meeting Law Isn’t the Problem — The Citizen Is</b></h1><p>In any functioning democracy, transparency is not optional—it is the foundation. In Massachusetts, that principle is codified in the Massachusetts Open Meeting Law, a statute designed to ensure that the public’s business is conducted in public view.</p><p>But in Brookfield, something has gone off course.</p><p>Instead of modeling compliance, the Brookfield Select Board—the highest-ranking governing body in town—has developed a pattern that turns the law on its head. When violations occur, the issue is not the violation itself. The issue becomes the person who dared to report it.</p><h4><b>The Pattern: Violate, Deflect, Attack</b></h4><p>The pattern is now familiar:</p><ul><li>A board violates the Open Meeting Law.</li><li>A citizen files a complaint, as the law explicitly allows.</li><li>That citizen is then publicly targeted.</li></ul><p>Rather than asking, “Did we violate the law?”, the response becomes:</p><ul><li>“You’re harassing us.”</li><li>“You’re interfering with volunteers.”</li><li>“You’re out to get us.”</li></ul><p>This framing is not only misleading—it is dangerous.</p><p>Select Board members are not merely “volunteers.” They are publicly elected officials entrusted with policymaking authority and compensated with taxpayer funds. With that authority comes a legal obligation to follow the law—not dismiss it.</p><h4><b>Behind the Scenes: Fear Instead of Facts</b></h4><p>Equally troubling is what happens behind the scenes.</p><p>In at least one instance, a board chair warned fellow members that they could be personally sued for Open Meeting Law violations—framing a routine regulatory complaint against the board as a direct legal threat to each individual member.</p><p>That assertion is misleading—both in how the law works and how it is enforced.</p><p>Under the Open Meeting Law, complaints are directed at the public body—not individual officials—and are intended to bring the board into compliance. Enforcement is handled primarily by the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, or through actions seeking corrective relief against the board as a whole.</p><p>Personal financial liability for individual board members is not how routine Open Meeting Law enforcement operates. Any penalties that may arise are borne by the municipality—meaning the taxpayers—not the individual officials.</p><p>But the effect of that warning was immediate and predictable.</p><p>A lawful complaint was reframed as a personal threat.<br />Board members were pushed to see the citizen not as someone invoking the law—but as someone targeting them.</p><p>That shift matters.</p><p>Because once fear replaces facts, the focus is no longer on whether the law was followed—it’s on protecting the board from the person who spoke up.</p><p>And that is how a transparency law gets turned into a tool of division.</p><h4><b>Shifting the Focus Away from Compliance</b></h4><p>In a public meeting, a member of the Select Board stated that she wanted to explore ways to prevent citizens from filing Open Meeting Law complaints.</p><p>That statement is striking—not because of what it says about any one complaint, but because of what it suggests about the response to them.</p><p>The Open Meeting Law provides a clear process for citizens to report potential violations. That process is not a loophole. It is not an abuse. It is part of the law itself.</p><p>When the focus shifts from ensuring compliance to limiting who can file complaints, the purpose of the law is turned on its head.</p><p>The issue is no longer whether the law is being followed.</p><p>The issue becomes how to avoid being held accountable for not following it.</p><h4><b>The Cost to Taxpayers</b></h4><p>And while the public narrative focuses on conflict, the financial consequences are quietly shifted elsewhere.</p><p>The consequences of this pattern are not abstract. They are paid for—literally—by the residents of Brookfield.</p><p>Each cycle of violation triggers:</p><ul><li>The use of taxpayer funds to retain outside counsel, such as KP Law, to draft defensive responses</li><li>Administrative time and resources spent addressing complaints rather than preventing them</li><li>Potential financial penalties—up to $1,000 per violation for repeat offenses</li></ul><p>And perhaps most troubling:</p><ul><li>A chilling effect on citizens who may think twice before speaking up</li></ul><p>In Brookfield, the message has become clear: file a complaint, and you may become the next target.</p><h4><b>What the Law Actually Requires</b></h4><p>The Open Meeting Law exists for a simple reason: to prevent secrecy in government.</p><p>Its purpose, as recognized by Massachusetts courts, is “to eliminate much of the secrecy surrounding deliberations and decisions on which public policy is based.” <i>Ghiglione v. School Committee of Southbridge</i>, 376 Mass. 70, 72 (1978). In other words, the law exists to ensure that government business is conducted openly—so the public can observe, understand, and hold officials accountable.</p><p>This includes strict requirements for executive sessions. A public body must:</p><ul><li>State the specific purpose for entering executive session</li><li>Cite the applicable exemption under the law</li><li>Ensure that the reason is lawful and properly recorded</li></ul><p>When a board enters executive session without stating a reason, it is not a gray area—it is a violation.</p><p>And in Brookfield, this is not a new issue. It is a repeated one.</p><h4><b>A Refusal to Correct Course</b></h4><p>Even when violations are formally reviewed by the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, the response from the Select Board is not reflection—it is resistance.</p><p>There is no acknowledgment.<br />No course correction.<br />No transparency with the public about the outcome.</p><p>Instead, determinations are often buried. The public is left uninformed about whether their government was found in violation of the very law designed to protect them.</p><h4><b>Training Refused, Violations Repeated</b></h4><p>One of the most basic remedies available is also the simplest: education.</p><p>The Attorney General’s Office provides free Open Meeting Law training for public officials. It is not burdensome. It is not optional in spirit, even if not strictly mandated in every instance—it is a fundamental responsibility of public service.</p><p>Yet in Brookfield, that training has been openly refused.</p><p>When asked to take advantage of the Attorney General’s free Open Meeting Law training, the former Chair of the Select Board dismissed the idea outright, stating, <i>“I don’t have time to take the course.”</i></p><p>But conducting lawful, transparent public meetings is not a side task—it is a central function of the position.</p><p>Open meetings are not incidental to the job. They are the job.</p><p>And when an official declines to learn the rules governing that process, the consequences do not fall on the official—they fall on the public.</p><h4><b>Transparency When Convenient, Silence When Not</b></h4><p>Perhaps the most telling pattern is the Select Board’s inconsistent handling of complaints.</p><ul><li>When a complaint is perceived as minor or “technical,” it may be read aloud in full—accompanied by laughter, dismissiveness, and public ridicule.</li><li>When a complaint raises serious legal concerns, the process becomes opaque.</li></ul><p>A brief acknowledgment.<br />A quick vote.<br />No discussion.<br />No disclosure.</p><p>The public is told nothing.</p><p>This is not transparency. It is selective transparency—used as a tool, not a principle.</p><h4><b>The Constitutional Issue</b></h4><p>At its core, this is no longer just about procedural violations.</p><p>It is about rights.</p><p>The First Amendment guarantees citizens the right to petition their government for redress of grievances—without fear of retaliation.</p><p>When a citizen is publicly criticized, labeled, or targeted for filing a lawful complaint, the issue moves beyond Open Meeting Law compliance and into constitutional territory.</p><p>No resident should have to ask:</p><ul><li>“If I file this complaint, will I be attacked?”</li><li>“Will I be labeled as harassing?”</li></ul><p>That is not how accountable government works.</p><h4><b>Who Pays the Price</b></h4><p>Strip away the excuses, the deflection, and the rhetoric, and the outcome is simple:</p><p>The people of Brookfield pay.</p><p>They pay when a resident is singled out for doing exactly what the law allows.<br />They pay when taxpayer funds are used to defend avoidable violations through outside counsel like KP Law.<br />And they will pay if continued violations result in fines from the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office.</p><p>Not the officials.<br />Not the decision-makers.<br />The public.</p><p>And until that changes, the cost of doing government wrong in Brookfield will continue to be passed—quietly, repeatedly, and unfairly—onto the very people the law was meant to protect.</p><h4><b>A Final Thought</b></h4><p>This is not complicated.</p><p>The Open Meeting Law is not an obstacle—it is a safeguard.<br />Citizens who invoke it are not adversaries—they are participants in democracy.</p><p>And a government that treats transparency as a threat is a government that has lost sight of its role.</p><p>In Brookfield, the law is clear.</p><p>The question is whether those in power will choose to follow it—or continue to fight the very people it was designed to protect.</p><p><b>In Brookfield, the cost of ignoring the law doesn’t fall on those who break it. It falls on the citizens—every time.</b></p><p><i>The Brookfield Examiner welcomes a response from the Select Board and will publish any official reply in full.</i></p><p><!-- /wp:paragraph --></p>						</div>
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