By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Portsmouth PulsePortsmouth Pulse
Notification Show More
Latest News
Hiller: Agreement between Portsmouth Housing Authority and the Episcopal Church violates restriction.
Letters to the Editor Opinion Real Estate
Portsmouth FY 2026 Budget Highlights
City Departments City Government City Manager
Shameless City Council Corruption to Enrich Asst Mayor Timeline Update
City Council
Fence Built on City Land Raises Eyebrows—and Ethical Questions
City Council Real Estate
Area median home prices – March 2025
Affordable Housing Community Real Estate
Aa
  • News
    • Home
    • Portsmouth City Budget
    • Dining / Restaurants
    • Rising Sea Levels
    • Health & Wellness
    • News Archive
  • City Government
    City GovernmentShow More
    Portsmouth FY 2026 Budget Highlights
    May 5, 2025
    Shameless City Council Corruption to Enrich Asst Mayor Timeline Update
    April 28, 2025
    Fence Built on City Land Raises Eyebrows—and Ethical Questions
    April 9, 2025
    Regional Developments Alleviate Portsmouth’s Affordable Housing Needs
    April 1, 2025
    Portsmouth needs a Department of Government Efficiency
    March 9, 2025
  • Letters & Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Submit a Letter to the Editor
  • Subscribe
  • Support Us
  • The Pulse
    • Announcing Portsmouth Pulse
    • About Us
    • Contact US
    • Why Portsmouth Pulse Allows Anonymous Articles and Editorials
Reading: Proposed Criteria for Considering Our Candidates
Share
Aa
Portsmouth PulsePortsmouth Pulse
  • Home
  • Portsmouth City Budget
  • Letters
  • Rising Sea Levels
  • Support Us
  • About Us
  • News Archive
  • Latest News
Search
  • News
    • Home
    • Portsmouth City Budget
    • Dining / Restaurants
    • Rising Sea Levels
    • Health & Wellness
    • News Archive
  • City Government
  • Letters & Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Submit a Letter to the Editor
  • Subscribe
  • Support Us
  • The Pulse
    • Announcing Portsmouth Pulse
    • About Us
    • Contact US
    • Why Portsmouth Pulse Allows Anonymous Articles and Editorials
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Portsmouth Pulse > Blog > City Government > Ballot Lowdown > Proposed Criteria for Considering Our Candidates
Ballot LowdownCity CouncilCity Government

Proposed Criteria for Considering Our Candidates

Editor
Last updated: 2023/10/06 at 3:09 PM
Editor Published October 6, 2023
Share
SHARE

By Editorial board et al

An important election is nearly upon us. The current City Council combines young, energetic leaders with seasoned political veterans, but will their shared vision of a Progressive Portsmouth make progress where it counts? Voters will decide on November 7, as sitting members of the Council seek reelection, while some familiar faces challenge them for their seats.

How will you vote? How will you decide?

In anticipation of election day, the Portsmouth Pulse presents what we believe are the six most important criteria for considering the candidates. We begin with fiscal responsibility.

How would we measure fiscal responsibility? To put it concisely, we would expect a budget to be conservative, easy to understand, and full of details about key items.

We would, above all, want a budget that respects residents’ finite resources of dollars and time.

The reality is that we have a labyrinth of deliberately confusing budget presentations.

We have unanimous votes from the City Council in approving the largest back-to-back budgets in decades (2022-2023 and 2023-2024).

We have the creation of 36 new full-time employees under the budgets approved by this Council. Meanwhile, the growth rate in the City’s population is only 0.4%. (See Proposed/Adopted Budgets and Financial Reports | City of Portsmouth.)

The taxpayer won’t feel the full sting of the new hires while this Council is sitting. These new hires are only partially funded for this year, as they are not meant to take place until the fiscal year is partly over.

The impact of the full annual salaries will hit after the election.

We have a City Manager, Karen Conard, who has demonstrated considerable influence over this Council, which has refused to turn down her expensive budget requests.

The Council also imprudently delegated the negotiations on the McIntyre property to Conard, and now, the City (and the taxpayers) are facing a multi-million-dollar lawsuit.

Fiscal responsibility means exercising diligence and carefully stewarding our residents’ resources. The sitting Council has boldly voiced its concerns over housing and the City’s affordability, touting its intentions for workforce housing while approving the largesse of the most recent budgets.

A swollen City budget does not make Portsmouth more affordable for anyone, nor does it respect the financial well-being of its citizens.

Fiscal responsibility also means entrusting the greatest responsibilities to the most qualified parties, people whose professionalism and experience will ensure that residents’ interests are protected.

The problems aren’t limited to the budget or the McIntyre morass. A new main water transmission line under Little Bay will cost $26 million, about three times more than the City budgeted ($8 million).

An estimating error like this in the private sector would be grounds for dismissal of the engineer or estimator responsible, and a basis for reviewing all bids over $5 million.

With property revaluations on the horizon, expenses are sure to rise for Portsmouth taxpayers. Can we afford any unnecessary expenses? Can we afford any lack of fiscal responsibility?

Can we afford this form of “Progress?” Decide on November 7!

You Might Also Like

Portsmouth FY 2026 Budget Highlights

Shameless City Council Corruption to Enrich Asst Mayor Timeline Update

Fence Built on City Land Raises Eyebrows—and Ethical Questions

Regional Developments Alleviate Portsmouth’s Affordable Housing Needs

Editor October 6, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Popular News
City Council

Shameless City Council Corruption to Enrich Asst Mayor Timeline Update

Editor Editor April 28, 2025
Hiller: Agreement between Portsmouth Housing Authority and the Episcopal Church violates restriction.
Portsmouth FY 2026 Budget Highlights
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Categories

  • City Government
  • Seacoast
  • Announcements

About US

We shine the light of truth on what's REALLY happening in the City of Portsmouth NH.
Quick Link
  • Home News
  • Contact
  • Submit a Letter to the Editor
  • Advertise

Email Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Subscribe

Portsmouth PulsePortsmouth Pulse

© Portsmouth Pulse. All Rights Reserved.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?