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Saugus was the first town in Massachusetts to accept this form of government. [56] [57] This plan included a Single transferable vote voting system, but this was abandoned in 1950. [58] Elections for all seats on the Board of Selectmen, School Committee, Town Meeting, and Housing Authority are held biennially in odd-numbered years. [57]
In 1974, Cunningham was chosen by the Board of Selectmen to replace Robert Hagopian as town manager. [9] He was later given a five-year contract by the board and the School Committee granted him a two-year leave of absence from his position as assistant principal of the Saugus Junior High School. [10]
The Town Manager of Saugus, Massachusetts, is the chief administrative manager of Saugus, Massachusetts. Saugus has a Town Manager/Representative town meeting (Plan E) system of government. The Town Manager’s Office is located in Saugus Town Hall. Scott Crabtree has been town manager since March 30, 2015 and previously held the position from ...
Pratt was the leading opponent of the Plan E form of government in Saugus. Plan E would create the office of Town Manager, expand the Board of Selectmen from three members to five, change the electoral system for town elections to Single transferable vote, and change a number of elected positions to appointed positions.
In 1946 Hansen moved to Saugus. He began his political career as a town meeting member. Hansen also served as a member of the town's Finance Committee. [1] In 1964 he was an unsuccessful candidate for the board of selectmen. [2] In 1965 he was named town moderator. [3] In 1967, he was hired as a junior engineering aid in the Essex County ...
Vernon Wynne Evans (January 5, 1895 – 1975) was an American politician and educator from Saugus, Massachusetts who served as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, Superintendent of the Saugus Public Schools, and as a member of the Saugus Board of Selectmen.
Edward Joseph Collins Jr. [2] [3] (June 29, 1943 – January 29, 2007) [4] was an American government official for the state of Massachusetts, the town of Saugus and the city of Boston. He is the namesake of the Edward J. Collins Jr. Center for Public Management at the University of Massachusetts Boston .
On February 16, 1948, Shurtleff was unanimously chosen by the Board of Selectmen to become the first Town Manager of Saugus. [12] On February 1, 1950, Shurtleff resigned as Town Manager to accept a similar job in Medford, Massachusetts. [13]