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H 4175

Police income tax exclusion

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by William Bailey and 4 co-sponsors

Provincetown would shift high-level hiring decisions to require Select Board confirmation and create a formal Fire Chief contract and Board of Fire Engineers to govern the Fire Dep

Referred to Committee on Ways and Means
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Bill Summary · H 4175

Summary of H.4175: An Act relative to the charter of the town of Provincetown

A locally-focused charter amendment governing the Town of Provincetown, proposed to reorganize appointment processes for key town staff and to restructure Fire Department governance and authority. The bill originated as a local petition and is being considered in the 194th General Court (2025-2026).

Purpose and intent

  • Modernize governance for Provincetown’s Fire Department and streamline appointment authority for senior town staff.
  • Enhance town oversight through a defined role for the Select Board in approving certain appointments.
  • Establish a formal Fire Chief appointment process and a governance structure (Board of Fire Engineers) to advise on fire department matters.

Key provisions

1) Appointment of department heads (Chapter 4, Section d)

  • The Town Manager may hire, promote, and remove all Town Staff except the secretary to the Select Board.
  • For the following positions, appointment decisions require confirmation by the Select Board:
    • Assistant Town Manager
    • Finance Director
    • Police Chief
    • Town Clerk
    • Fire Chief
  • If the Select Board does not confirm or object within 15 days of notice, the proposed appointment is deemed confirmed (implied confirmation).

2) Fire Department governance (Chapter 7, Section 3 replacement)

  • A Board of Fire Engineers shall be appointed by the Town Manager for a one-year term, with up to seven members.
  • The Town Manager shall appoint a Fire Chief, with approval of the Select Board, under a contractual arrangement describing authority, responsibilities, and entitlements.
  • The Fire Chief need not be a member of the Board of Fire Engineers, but the Board may recommend candidates to the Town Manager for appointment.
  • The Town Manager shall make all appointments within the Fire Department after consulting with the Fire Chief about candidate suitability.
  • Preference shall be given to Town residents for all Fire Department appointments (temporary, permanent, full-time, part-time, or on-call).
  • Fire Chief responsibilities include fire suppression, protection of life and property, oversight of EMS within the Town, and coordination with other authorities (federal, state, county, and neighboring towns).
  • The Fire Chief is authorized to coordinate on behalf of Provincetown with other authorities and to support the Field Director during a declared emergency.

3) Effective date

  • The act takes effect upon passage.

Who is affected

  • Town Manager, Select Board, Assistant Town Manager, Finance Director, Police Chief, Town Clerk, Fire Chief.
  • Members of the Fire Department, including prospective and current Fire Chiefs and the Board of Fire Engineers.
  • Town residents, through preferences in hiring and enhanced emergency management coordination.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Status: Read, rules suspended, read second and ordered to a third reading (as of the latest legislative actions).
  • Introduced: May 29, 2025; filed May 21, 2025.
  • Local approval status indicated (Local Approval Received).
  • Related bill: HD 4737 (replaces).

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Increased Select Board oversight of high-level appointments may affect hiring timelines and administrative efficiency.
  • The new Board of Fire Engineers and clarified Fire Chief contract may improve formal governance of firefighting and EMS, and clarify authority during emergencies.
  • Resident-preference for Fire Department positions could influence recruitment dynamics.
  • Clear EMS and intergovernmental coordination language may enhance Provincetown’s emergency responsiveness.

Next steps

  • If enacted, the charter amendments would take effect upon passage and would require continued compliance with local approval processes and Massachusetts charter amendment procedures. The bill awaits final readings and potential enactment by the Legislature.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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