Leyden, Phillipston honored for top-notch annual reports

Leyden Administrative Assistant Janell Howard, Selectboard Chair Katherine DiMatteo, Town Coordinator Michele Giarusso and Selectboard member Jeff Baker.

Leyden Administrative Assistant Janell Howard, Selectboard Chair Katherine DiMatteo, Town Coordinator Michele Giarusso and Selectboard member Jeff Baker. STAFF PHOTO/MADISON SCHOFIELD

By MADISON SCHOFIELD

Staff Writer

Published: 02-10-2025 3:00 PM

Modified: 02-12-2025 3:33 PM


Two Franklin county and North Quabbin towns have received awards from the Massachusetts Municipal Association (MMA) for their annual town reports. Leyden and Phillipston earned second and third place, respectively, for their 2023 reports. 

Both towns were honored in the category of towns with a population of under 5,000 people. The last time a Franklin County or North Quabbin town won the award was in 2019 when Erving took first place in the under 5,000 population category. 

“We’re very proud,” Leyden Selectboard chair Katherine DiMatteo said. 

Under Massachusetts General Law municipalities are required to produce an annual report that includes financial reports, summaries of the year’s activities, election information and statements from town officers and boards. To encourage high quality reports, and to celebrate outstanding ones, MMA hosts an annual town report contest to see which town can produce the best report. 

Reports are judged on visual appeal, organization of material and presentation of data, summary of the year’s achievements, and evidence of planning for the future, and the practical utility of the report. 

Leyden administrative assistant Janell Howard said the report was a joint effort between the towns various departments and committees, the Selectboard and herself. The boards and departments wrote and submitted their reports, Howard compiled them into a single document and DiMatteo made edits. 

DiMatteo said for the 2023 report last year, they created a template departments could use while writing their reports, which streamlined the process and made the reports more consistent.

“They could fill it out and that gave consistency,” DiMatteo said. “We made sure the typefaces were all the same, that the layout was the same, and we put a lot more pictures in.”

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She said town officials switched the reports to be consistent with the fiscal year rather than the calendar year, allowing the financial reports to align with the rest of the year’s activities, and which allows the School Committee to include its financial reports. 

Howard added that creating the templates was time-consuming, but made the overall process of producing the annual town report faster and easier. The town just finished creating the 2024 annual report, which will be presented to Town Meeting voters for approval this spring, and the process was relatively quick and simple. 

“This year it was pretty quick, last year I was starting from scratch and creating the templates so it took me a while,” Howard said. 

In Phillipston, Selectboard clerk Nicole Gough said the report was written by the towns former Chief Administrative Officer Melanie Jackson, and that while the town was sad to see her go, as Jackson resigned last October, the Selectboard was incredibly grateful for all the work she did over the years, including putting together an award winning annual report. 

“We give her a lot of credit for that,” Gough said. 

She said creating a report that is easy to read and understand aligns with the town’s current efforts to incorporate social media into its operations. The Selectboard is working to get more residents involved in government by posting meeting agendas, minutes and recordings to social media. 

“We’re dedicated to making sure everyone is informed and everyone has a voice; that is our main goal,” Gough said. 

Reach Madison Schofield at 413-930-4579 or mschofield@recorder.com.