June 13 Camden Town Meeting: Pot shops, new street/sidewalk rules and candidates
CAMDEN – Voters will decide June 13 on whether to allow or prohibit cannabis retail stores in downtown Camden, the most talked about issue on the ballot as evidenced by signs around town, attendance at public meetings and debates on social media.
Voters will elect two Select Board members, from a field of five candidates, for three-year terms, and two School Board members, from a field of three, for three-year terms.
Among the important issues voters will decide are the 2023-24 town budget and an amendment to the Town Charter that would change the selection of budget committee members to appointment by the Select Board, instead of by local election, which is the current method. Voters will also decide on the transfer of a town-owned property along Rollins Road to Coastal Mountain Land Trust.
Camden is one of a handful of area towns that has done away with in-person town meetings, which traditionally were held soon after the June elections. This means all municipal business – from electing town and school board officials to budgets and zoning changes – will now be decided by voting via paper ballot on Tuesday, June 13. The Town Meeting Warrant, along with the full text of each warrant article, can be viewed here.
Select Board election
Five citizens are vying for two open seats on the Camden Select Board.
Each candidate has responded to questions posed by Penobscot Bay Pilot on issues important to the town and region, including adult use cannabis retail stores, the Megunticook River restoration project and future of the Montgomery Dam, protecting Camden taxpayers while governing a municipal budget and juggling various interests that request municipal funding throughout the year and the future of Tannery Park on Washington Street.
The Select Board candidates are: Raymond Andresen, Alison S. McKellar, Christopher Nolan, Marc Ratner and Mary Beth Leone Thomas. The seats are currently occupied by McKellar, who is seeking a third term, and Bob Falciani who is not running for re-election.
Cannabis shops
Voters will decide on two articles on the retail sales of cannabis for adult use. Article 3 allows up to two cannabis shops in the town’s three downtown business districts, except in areas within 500 feet of schools, day care facilities and the Camden Public Library. Article 4 allows up to two cannabis shops in the town’s three downtown business districts, except in areas within 1,000 feet of public schools and pre-schools, day care facilities and the Camden Public Library.
If the majority of voters approve Article 3, or both articles, these stores would be allowed on both Main and Elm streets in the business districts. If voters reject both articles these stores would be prohibited from opening anywhere in Camden. If voters approve Article 4, and reject Article 3, up to two cannabis retail stores would be allowed only in the Transitional Business District, which runs along Elm Street south of Camden’s downtown.
A vote to transfer the Rollins Road town land (Article 5) to Coastal Mountains Land Trust seeks to use the land as a trailhead to a trail system on the Goose River Preserve. The land has been owned by the town since 1904 and used for recreation and conservation.