LUBEC — A standing-room-only crowd filled the Select Board and special town meetings Wednesday to address Washington County’s budget crisis, with voters ultimately agreeing to pay Lubec’s $423,512 share of the county’s 2025 tax anticipation note.
The county sent a small delegation to Lubec to address voters and answer questions.
Brian Schuth, chair of the Washington County Budget Advisory Committee and Eastport’s city manager, detailed the origins of the crisis and made the county’s case to the town.
“It’s not like I love this and I’m trying to sell you on it,” he said. “It’s ugly.”
Schuth said the $8 million debt stemmed from county bookkeeping errors that left several years of undertaxation, during which the county operated in the red without realizing it.
While audits of finances dating to 2022 are still underway, Schuth said he is convinced nothing criminal was behind the missing funds.
Having made the same pitch in Dennysville and Beals, Schuth said afterward that Lubec drew the largest crowd he has faced so far.
“The questioning was a little more aggressive,” he said. “Let me put it that way.”
County Commissioner David Burns said a “yes” vote would save the county money in the long run, with the savings passed along to the towns.
“If we can pay this off sooner, we save a lot on interest, and that in turn will limit the amount we have to pay,” he said.
Select Board Chairwoman Carol Dennison asked why the town should “benevolently” spend $9,000 in early withdrawal penalties to help the county pay off its debt early.
“I’m happy to do that if there’s a really good reason,” she said.
Harry “Sonny” Beal, a Columbia selectman and Budget Advisory Committee member, broke in to respond: “The county is you. The county is this town. It’s not just helping out the county. It’s helping everyone.”
After the Select Board meeting ended at 6 p.m., residents and board members stayed to vote on the articles, including Lubec’s share of the payoff.
Resident John Nielsen asked how Lubec would come up with the money. Dennison said it would come from the town’s undesignated funds on deposit with the Certificate of Deposit Account Registry Service.
Selectman Dan Daley added: “Fortunately, our predecessors (in town management) had the foresight to have these additional funds. There are some municipalities that are going to have to tax new taxes on their constituents (to pay their share).” The article approving Lubec’s share of the tax anticipation note, or TAN, passed by a clear majority.
The vote makes Lubec the 21st Washington County municipality to agree to contribute early.
Four towns have already made their payments. Schuth said as many as seven towns have refused, though he noted some in the “no” column have yet to hold meetings on the issue, including Baileyville, East Machias and Perry.
East Machias and Perry have scheduled meetings for January.
Five municipalities — Bennington, Deblois, Pembroke, Princeton and the Passamaquoddy Nation — have met and voted not to contribute.
County Manager Renée Gray said in a phone interview on Thursday that state law requires the county to pay by Dec. 31, but the bank’s repayment deadline is in February. The state has agreed to grant the county the same grace period, giving towns more time to consider their options.

