HomeMy WebLinkAbout1946-11-05-STATE-ELECTION-WARRANT WARRANT FOR STATE ELECTION
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Middlesex, ss.
To either of the Constables of the Town of Lexington. Greeting:
In the name of the Commonwealth you are hereby required to notify
and warn the inhabitants of said town who are qualified to vote in
Elections to meet in the Adams School, East Lexington (Precinct One)
and Cary Memorial Hall, Lexington Center (Precincts Two , Three and Four) , on
TUESDAY, THE FIFTH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1946
at 8:00 A. M. , to cast their ballots for the following officers:
Governor; Lieutenant Governor; Secretary: Treasurer; Auditor; Attorney
General; Senator in Congress ; Representative in Congress ; Councillor;
Senator ; Representative in General Court (1, 2 or 3 ) ; District Attorney;
Clerk of Courts; Register of Deeds; County Commissioner.
VACANCIES
A County Commissioner For Middlesex County
QUESTION NO . 1.
LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION.
Shall this measure, which by amendments of the General Laws (Ter. Ed. ) ,
provides for payment by the Commonwealth of adequate pensions to deserving
citizens sixty-five years of age or over in need of relief or support, who
shall have resided in the Commonwealth not less than five years immediately
preceding the date of application for such pension, and who shall have
resided in the Commonwealth continuously for one year immediately preceding
said date of application, which is further described as follows:
The measure, by amendments Of General Laws (Ter. Ed. ) , c. 6, provides
for an old age pension commission of three persons, one to be a qualified
physician, another to be an attorney at law and a third to be a non-
professional person, who are to be appointed and may be removed for cause
by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Council , and ar•e to serve
under the Governor and Council. Not more than two members or said Commission
shall be members of the same political party. Original appointments of
members shall be for one, two and three years respectively, and thereafter
appointments are to be for three years. Such members are to devote-their
whole time to the work of the Commission during business hours and be
engaged in no other business, occupation or profession. One of their
number is to be designated as chairman by the Governor and shall receive
a salary of 06,000, and each other member 05, 500 per year, with their
necessary expenses. The commission is empowered to make and enforce rules
and regulations as it may deem necessary in the performance of its duties
and as may be approved by the Governor and Council.
The measure strikes out chapter 118A of the General Laws (Ter. Ed. ) ,
and inserts in its place a new chapter entitled "Adequate pensions for
certain aged citizens. "
It is provided that pensions hereunder shall be paid from the date of
application therefor, but in no event before the applicant reaches the age
of sixty-five. The Commission shall render a decision in lot less than
thirty days from the date of application for a pension or a request for an
increase of the amount thereof. Such pension shall, wherever practicable,
be paid to the aged person in his own home or in lodgings or in a boarding
home, which for the purposes hereof shall include any institution providing
shelter, care and treatment for aged persons which is not supported in
whole or in part by public funds ; provided, that no inmate Of such a
boarding home or institution shall be eligible for a pension under this
chapter while being cared for under a contract. such pension shall be
paid by check or in cash which shall be delivered to the pensioner at his
residence, if he so requests, and shall be paid semi-monthly unless the
pensioner prefers less frequent payments. Such pension shall be on the
basis of need and the amount thereof shall be determined in accordance
with budgetary standards established by the Commission.
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Budgetary standards shall be such as to enable an individual pensioner
to maintain a standard of living compatible with decency and health.
Such pensions, except as hereinafter provided, shall be at the rate of
not less than $48.00 monthly. The pensioner' s budget at such times
as may be required shall include medical care, if recommended by a
recognized physician, eye-glasses, if recommended by a recognized
optician, dental care and false teeth, if recommended by a recognized
dentist.
In computing the pensioner' s payment under this chapter, the
Commission shall deduct from the pensioner' s budget or- the minimum
payment, whichever is greater, the amount of income the person paid or
to be paid a pension hereunder may be receiving from any source, and may
deduct therefrom such reasonable amount as raay be deemed to represent
the financial value of board, lodging or other assistance which is
being furnished to such persons from any source.
Upon the death of a person drawing a pension, whose funeral cost
does not exceed the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars and in whose
estate there are insufficient assets to cover the full cost of the
funeral, the Commission shall pay to the funeral director the
difference between the assets and the cost of the funeral, a sum not
exceeding one hundred and twenty-five dollars.
Expenses for medical, hospital and other services rendered to a
pensioner, which remain unpaid at the time of his death or commitment
to an institution as an insane person, shall be paid directly to the
person rendering such services
No pension under this chapter shall be discontinued nor shall the
amount thereof be decreased until the expiration of fifteen days after
notice has been given by the Commission to the pensioner.
Provision is made by which a person receiving a pension may be
absent from the Commonwealth on a visit without having such pension
suspended.
It is provided that General Laws (Ter. Ed. ) c. 273 , 20, which
relates to the support of parents by children, shall not apply when
parents are eligible to receive a pension.
Provision is made that there shall be set up in the Commission a
subdivision of appeals under the jurisdiction of a supervisor of
appeals. Any person aggrieved by the failure of the Commission to pay
an adequate pension under this chapter, or by the failure of the
Commission to approve or reject an application for a pension or a
request for an increase in the amount thereof, within thirty days
after receiving such application or request, shall have a right to a
fair hearing, after due notice, upon appeal to the subdivision of
appeals in the form and manner prescribed by the commission,
provided that such appeal is received by the subdivision of appeals
within sixty days after official notice of the action taken by tile
Old Age Pension Commission has been received by the applicant or
pensioner. The decision of the subdivision of appeals shall be final
and binding upon the Commission.
The Commission or any interested person aggrieved by any
decision in any proceeding before the subdivision of appeals may
obtain judicial review of such decision by filing, within twenty
days of the date of mailing of such?decision, a petition for
review thereof in the district court within the judicial district
wherein the pensioner or the applicant for a pension lives.
In any proceeding for review the findings of the subdivision
of appeals as to facts shall be conclusive, such proceedings shall
be heard in a summary manner and given precedence over all other
civil cases. From the decision of a district court upon review an
appeal may be taken to the Supreme Judicial Court.
The possession by an applicant for pension under this chapter of
assets consisting of cash, active securities or inactive securities,
or any combination of such assets, shall not disqualify him from
receiving such pension; provided, that the total of such assets,
figuring the present cash value of such inactive securities at the
sum determined by the Old Age Pension Commission, does not exceed the
sum of $300.
I✓
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A person is not to be disqualified from receiving a pension
because of the ownership of an equity in vacant land from which
there is insufficient income to provide for his budgetary needs
or minimum payments, or the ownership of an equity in real estate
by an applicant who resides thereon or who, in the opinion of
the Commission is residing elsewhere because of physical or mental
incapacity, provided that if such equity on the basis of assessed
valuation exceeds an average of $3 ,000 during the five years
immediately preceding application for the pension, the applicant
shall execute a bond in the penal sum for the amount of the
equity in excess of $3 ,000 conditioned on repayment to the
Commonwealth of all amountsiphid as such pension without interest,
such bond to be secured by a mortgage on the applicant 's real
estate. Provision is made for the recording of such bond and
mortgage without a fee and the apportionment of the proceeds
realized from any of them between the Federal government and
the Commonwealth.
A person is not to be disqualified from receiving a pension
by reason of the ownership of a policy of group insurance or of a
policy of insurance in an amount not exceeding $1,000 or of a
policy of insurance in an amount not exceeding $3 ,000, having a
cash surrender value not in excess of $1,000, if such policy has
been in effect not less than fifteen years.
No pension shall be granted to an applicant who at any time within
five years immediately prior to the filing of an application for
such pension has made an assignment or transfer of property so as to
render himself eligible to such pension. No pension shall be
subject to trustee process or assignment, and no applicant for a
pension, who knowingly makes any false statement or perpetrates
any fraud or deception in relation to his application, shall be
granted any pension nor be eligible for one during one year thereafter.
A person, his executor or administrator shall be liable in contract
to the Commonwealth for expenses incurred by it for a pension paid
to such person under this chapter if such person or his estate is in
possession of funds not otherwise exempted thereunder.
If an application for a pension under this chapter is effected
by the eligibility of the applicant to receive aid under General
Laws (Ter. Ed. ) , c. 115, which relates to State and Military Aid
and Soldiers, Relief, the applicant shall be entitled to exercise
such options and execute such waivers as may be necessary to receive
the pension which he seeks.
All cities and towns in the Commonwealth shall furnish suitable
headquarters for the carrying out of the duties of the commission
in such cities and towns.
The measure further provides that there shall be established
and set up on the books of the Commonwealth a separate fund, to be
known as the Old Age Pension Fund, consisting of receiptscredited to
said fund under General Laws (Ter. Ed. ) c. 648, G. L. (Ter. Ed. )
c. 128A, 15, as amended,. G. L. (Ter. Ed. ) c. 138, 27, as amended, and
all proceeds of taxes ageessed under Acts of 1941, c, 729, 9 and 9A.
The Old Age Assistance Fund as in force immediately prior to the
effective date of this act is hereby continued in existence, but shall
hereafter be entitled "The Old Age Pension Fund. "
It is provided that all civil service employees in the Department
of Public Welfare of the Commonwealth, including the supervisor, referee:
and employees of the subdivision of appeals in said department or of
any city or town, employed in the administration of the Old Age
Assistance Law on the effective date of this proposed measure, shall
be transferred to the service of the Old Age Pension Commission,
retaining their present civil service seniority retirement rights and
any step increases from the minim'nnpay of their grade earned during
their service with said department or said bureaus.
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It is provided that all records and property used in the administra-
tion of the Old Age Assistance Law and whiCh ' are the property of the
Commonwealth are to be transferred to the Old Age Perve on. Commission.
This act shall take effect on March first, nineteen hundred and
forty-seven,--which proposed law was approved in the House
of Representatives by a vote of 125 in the affirmative and YES
79 in the negative, and on which the Senate did not vote, NO
--be approved?
QUESTION NO . 2.
LAW PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION.
Shall this measure which provides that no labor union may be
operated or- maintained unless there is filed with the Commissioner
of Labor and Industries a statement signed by the President and
Treasurer setting forth the union' s officers, aims, scale of dues,
fees, fines, assessments and the salaries of the officers
The President and Treasurer of a labor union is required to file
annually with the Commissioner of Labor and Industries a detailed
statement in writing setting forth all receipts and expenditures of the
union which shall be open to the public , and the said Commissioner is
given the power to summons witnesses and records, and there is a penalty
of not less than 450.00 nor more thah $500.00 for whoever fails to file
a statement or whoever knowingly makes a false statement , -- which was
disapproved in the House of Representatives by a vote of 50 in the
affirmative and 154 in the negative and in the Senate by a vote of 6
in the affirMatixrt and 24 in the negative, -- be approved?
YES
NO
To obtain a full expression of opinion, voters should vote on
all three of the following questions:--
(a) If a voter desires to permit the sale in this totivat of any
and all alcoholic beverages to be drunk on and off the premises where
sold, he will vote "YES" on all three questions.
(b) If he desires to permit the sale herein of wines and malt
beverages only to be drunk on and off the premises where sold, he will
vote "NO" on question one, "YES" on question two and "NO" on question
three.
( c) If he desires to permit the sale herein of all alcoholic
beverages but only in packages, so called, not to be drunk on the
premises where sold, he will vote "NO" on questions one and two and
"YES" on question three.
(d) If he desires to permit the sale herein of wines and malt
beverages to be drunk on and off the premises where sold and in
addition other alcoholic beverages but only in packages, so called,
not to be drunk on the premises where sold, he will vote "NO" on
question one and "YES" on questions two and three.
(e) If he desires to prohibit the sale herein of any and all
alcoholic beverages whether to be drunk on or off the premises where
sold, he will vote "NO" on all three questions.
1. Shall licenses be granted in this tMm for thee;
sale therein of all alcoholic beverages (whisky, rum, gin,
malt beverages, wines and all other alcoholic beverages)? YES
No
2. Shall licenses be granted in this town for the
sale therein of wines and malt beverages (wines and beer,
ale and all other malt beverages)? YES
NO
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3 . Shall licenses be granted in this town for the sale
therein of all alcoholic beverages in packages, so called, not
to be drunk on the premises?
YES
NO
1. Shall the pari-mutuel system of betting on
licensed horse races be permitted in this county?
YES
NO
2. Shall the pari-mutuel system of betting on
licensed dog races be permitted in this county?
YES
NO
Shall the General Court enact legislation requiring
jury service by women, with such reservations as it may
prescribe? YES
NO
The polls will be open at 8:00 A.M. and will remain
open until 8:00 P.M.
And you are directed to serve this Warrant seven days at least
before the time of said meeting as provided in the By-laws of the Town.
Hereof fail not, and make due return on this Warrant , with your
doings thereon, to the Town Clerk on or before the time of said meeting.
Given under our hands at Lexington, this 14th day of October,
A. D. , 1946.
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