Norwood Votes $400 Salary Increase
In the early hours of April 26, 1946, the annual appropriation meeting at the State Armory ended in cheers and exhaustion as Norwood voters approved a $400 permanent salary increase for roughly 300 full‑time town employees. The decision came at 2:15 a.m., after hours of debate and repeated motions to adjourn, with nearly 1,500 residents, employees, and family members crowding the hall to witness the outcome.
The raise, passed against the Finance Committee’s recommendation of a smaller $200 increase, was hailed by town workers as long‑overdue recognition of post‑war living costs. Yet it came with a price: committee members warned that the measure would raise the tax rate by about $8 per $1,000 of valuation. Despite the caution, the employee bloc held firm, voting overwhelmingly for the higher figure.
The meeting reflected the tension of a community adjusting to peacetime economics. Earlier in the evening, voters rejected a proposed appropriation for a celebration honoring returning veterans, citing fiscal restraint. They did, however, approve $25,000 to reconvert heating systems in five schools that had been switched from oil to coal during the war years.
The final budget totaled $1.8 million, a record for Norwood at the time. Moderator Francis Foley declared the meeting adjourned only after the last salary motion passed, closing one of the most crowded and contentious sessions in town history.
The $400 raise came in addition to a $200 adjustment already granted earlier that year, meaning town employees received a combined $600 boost. The Finance Committee had argued that even the smaller increase would raise the tax rate by $5 per $1,000, but residents insisted on rewarding municipal workers who had kept Norwood running through wartime shortages and post‑war recovery.
By dawn, the Armory floor was littered with papers and coffee cups, and weary voters filed out into the cool April morning. The decision marked a turning point in Norwood’s post‑war civic life — a moment when the town chose generosity over caution, signaling confidence in its future and gratitude toward those who served the community every day.
Source: Boston Globe, April 26, 1946
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