Neil Gordon & Ellen Tohn

April 4, 2025
1 min read

Dear Wayland Post Readers,

We write to encourage your vote in favor of Article 22, Create Energy Revolving Fund, at the Annual Town Meeting. This revolving fund will increase the Town’s ability to secure grants and receive rebates from approved energy projects, reducing pressure on limited town capital funds and resulting in more projects, thereby delivering carbon reductions and financial savings to the town more quickly.

Revolving funds are a common municipal financial management tool, already used in Wayland for other purposes. Energy revolving funds are successfully in place in many of our peer communities, such as Natick, Waltham and Winchester. The idea is simple: when the town receives a utility or Government rebate from an energy project, that revenue is retained in the fund to provide a readily accessible source for future projects. In particular, the funds would be available to help town officials meet matching fund requirements when applying for energy grants, making Wayland more competitive for such funds

Wayland’s success with renewable energy projects and energy efficiency efforts have made it a leader among cities and towns, have moved the town towards success in accomplishing it Climate Action Mobilization Plan (CAMP) goals, and have saved taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars each year. The Energy Revolving Fund will further support these important goals.

The Energy and Climate Committee, Finance Committee, and Select Board all support the article. Please be a supporter with a YES vote at Town Meeting.

Respectfully,

Neil Gordon, 1 Trinity Place
Ellen Tohn, 5 Fields Lane

Latest from Blog

“We need more for this bridge”

Dear Editor,I live on Sherman’s Bridge Road in Wayland, named for the historic (1743) — some would say iconic — Sherman’s Bridge over the Sudbury River. I can see this bridge from my

Wayland Post: where we stand and what we need

So far, 553 individual donations from 481 households have powered this community effort. That represents $168,273 in commitments to The Wayland Post. Advertising has added another $28,000, but the simple truth is

Public Safety Log Sep 22 – Oct 12, 2025

Monday, Sept. 224:39 p.m. — An accident on Old Connecticut Path involving two vehicles was called in by 911. There were no injuries but one car was towed.5:33 p.m. — An odor

No more capital projects until 2040

Dear Editor:I read your dismal article on the future of the town budget and saw the outrageous intention to reclassify the DPW debt for an overlarge, excessive project from the start. Obviously,