CONTACT: John Ouellette, MMA Communications Director

BOSTON — Municipal leaders from across the Commonwealth gathered on the State House steps today to strongly oppose a ballot initiative to cut the state income tax rate, which they said would slash state revenue and harm essential services to residents.

“For cities and towns, the consequences for this proposal are very real,” said MMA Executive Director Adam Chapdelaine. Because only small portions of the Commonwealth’s budget are discretionary, he said, “when state revenues decline, local aid becomes vulnerable.”

The projected $5 billion the proposed ballot question would take out of state revenue collections would “have a devastating effect all across the state budget,” Chapdelaine said.

“When municipalities lose state support, there are only a few options available: significantly reduce services, delay investments, or shift more pressure onto local property taxpayers,” he said. “This is not some abstract debate: this is about classroom resources; this is about ambulance response times; this is about whether communities can repair roads, hire teachers, support seniors, and keep libraries and parks open.”

Amesbury Mayor Kassandra Gove, president of the Massachusetts Municipal Association, said a significant reduction in state income tax revenues “deeply jeopardizes progress” in her city and across the state — threatening critical services and adding to the burden on local property tax payers.

“This adds insult to injury at a time when communities are already facing inflationary pressures, rising construction costs, health insurance increases, workforce challenges, and so much more,” she said. “Municipal leaders are not asking for luxuries. We are asking for stability, predictability, and the ability to continue providing the services our residents depend on.

“My residents expect safe streets, strong schools, functioning infrastructure, clean parks, reliable emergency response, and support for vulnerable populations. Those expectations are reasonable. But meeting them requires resources.”

Holyoke Mayor Joshua Garcia, president of the Massachusetts Mayors’ Association, said mayors and municipal officials “immediately understand” the potential implications when there’s discussion of a reduction of state revenues.

“It means uncertainty,” he said. “It means jeopardizing or reversing progress that residents can already see in their neighborhoods. And for gateway cities and communities with significant needs, the impacts can be even more severe.

“We cannot afford to pull resources away from education, transportation, public safety, and local government at a time when residents are asking us to do more, not less,” he continued.

“State funding is not ‘extra’ for communities like ours — it is foundational support that allows us to deliver core services and make long-term improvements as prudently as possible,” Garcia said.

“For residents,” he said, “this debate is ultimately about what kind of communities we want to live in. Do we want communities with strong schools? Safe neighborhoods? Reliable emergency services? Maintained roads? A responsive local government?

“If we do, then we must strongly oppose this ballot question,” Garcia said.