Honoring 392 Years of Local Self-Governance
Governor Maura Healey has officially proclaimed October 8, 2025, as “Town Meeting Day” across the Commonwealth, recognizing the enduring importance of citizen-led decision-making in Massachusetts towns.
In the proclamation—co-signed by Lieutenant Governor Kimberley Driscoll and Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin—Healey praised the town meeting as “the legislature of our local communities,” calling its principles of debate and cooperation “as vital and relevant today as they were amidst the founding of our nation.”
A Citation for the Massachusetts Moderators Association
Alongside the proclamation, the Massachusetts Moderators Association (MMA) received a Governor’s Citation recognizing the organization’s work “promoting peaceful and deliberative civic engagement” and “keeping town meeting alive as a vital forum for the exchange of ideas and information.”

Lt. Governor Driscoll will present the citation at the MMA’s annual meeting on November 15 at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester.
Why October 8?
Under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 6, Section 15PP, the governor must annually proclaim October 8 as Town Meeting Day to commemorate the first recorded town meeting, held in Dorchester on October 8, 1633.
The exact year this law was adopted remains unclear—it likely predates digitized archives—but the observance continues as a symbolic reminder that democracy begins at the local level.
Renewed Relevance in 2025
The proclamation arrives amid a statewide effort to modernize civic participation:
- The Healey–Driscoll administration extended remote and hybrid public-meeting options through 2027.
- The proposed Municipal Empowerment Act seeks to give cities and towns more flexibility to manage budgets, zoning, and services.
Together, those initiatives reflect the same participatory spirit that town meeting has embodied for nearly four centuries.
“Town meetings are to liberty what primary schools are to science; they bring it within the people’s reach.” — Alexis de Tocqueville
In Wayland and Beyond
For Wayland residents, where open town meeting still serves as the legislative body, Town Meeting Day is a timely celebration of community problem-solving, respectful debate, and shared responsibility.
Whether you attend in person, watch online, or read the transcripts afterward, this tradition only endures when people take part.