How Working Groups Help Wayland Get Things Done

December 5, 2025
1 min read

By The Wayland Post Staff

Wayland’s boards increasingly rely on small working groups and subcommittees to move complicated projects forward. When used correctly, these teams expand resident expertise, improve efficiency, and remain consistent with Massachusetts’ Open Meeting Law (OML).

Wayland’s landscape includes several different types of groups, each with its own legal standing. Some are formal standing committees established by bylaw or Town Meeting, while others are subcommittees created directly by Boards to study an issue and report back. These bodies have defined membership, a formal charge, and delegated authority, which makes them subject to the Open Meeting Law’s requirements for public notice, agendas, and minutes. 

Separate from these are informal working groups or staff-level assignments, teams formed to research a topic, coordinate logistics, or prepare background materials. Because these groups are not created by a board vote and have no independent decision-making authority, they are not considered subcommittees under OML. Instead, they function as support teams that explore specific issues but do not act as deliberative public bodies.

Other teams operate informally inside larger committees, where members pair off to draft language, review consultant material, or gather information. These assignments do not trigger the OML unless the group is formally asked to deliberate or make recommendations.

Boards can also use task forces with specific sunset dates, like the Route 20 South Landfill Visioning group which extended their sunset date to Feb. 27, 2026, which functions as a full OML committee. And occasionally the Town Manager forms short-term advisory groups to assist with budget preparation or other matters within their administrative authority. A FY26 budget working group reviewing the override possibility and an ongoing Opioid Settlement Working Group were both composed of cross functional staff and a resident(s). Under a Massachusetts court ruling (Connelly v. Hanover), those groups are not public bodies, though sharing summaries improves public understanding.  BoPW created a transfer station RFP review working group that the Department of Public Works manages. (Steve Klitgord, Mike Wegerbauer, Carol Martin, Pam Roman and Klaus Shigley).

The Town has not maintained a published list of all working groups. What matters legally is who creates the group and whether it will advise a public body. Under the OML, any multiple-member body created by a board to make recommendations must meet openly and keep minutes.

Used thoughtfully, working groups allow residents and volunteers to bring specialized knowledge to town projects while keeping final deliberation and decision-making where it belongs with boards meeting in public.

Latest from Blog

Wayland Post Adjusts Holiday Publishing Schedule

The Wayland Post will shift its print schedule during the upcoming holiday season to account for holiday closures and newsroom availability. The edition that would normally be published on November 28 will

2025 Veterans Day Ceremony

Wayland honored all those who served with a 2025 Veterans Ceremony on Nov. 11, inside at the Town Building gym instead of the Veterans Memorial due to cold weather. The program began

Are residences covered by the Dover Amendment?

By June Valliere Attorney Jonathan Silverstein’s arguments that the proposed residences at St. Philopater Mercurius & St. Mina Coptic Church’s new campus are covered by the Dover Amendment did not appear to

A Wayland Post Holiday Appeal

As the year winds down and December fills with concerts, menorah lightings, tree sales, and last-minute Amazon returns, The Wayland Post is pausing to recognize the most important constant in local journalism:

Dr. Andrew Nierenberg

By Isabel Ravenna Contributing Writer Wayland’s own Dr. Andrew Nierenberg, a Wayland resident, has spent decades treating and studying bipolar disorder. Now he’s channeling that work into a national experiment in “radical

Don't Miss