Yarmouth has approximately 12,500 taxable residential parcels and 22,842 registered voters.
Not every voter pays property taxes — but every voter gets to raise them.
Massachusetts requires no voter ID and actively encourages mail-in balloting. High-turnout override campaigns can pass tax increases that disproportionately affect homeowners and landlords while renters and seasonal residents face no direct cost.
If all three fiscal questions pass, property owners absorb the entire cost — permanently for Q1 and Q2, for years on Q3. Voters who don't own property have no skin in the game.
If you own property in Yarmouth, these questions are about your money.
Facts from public records. Refreshed on every page load.
On May 19, Yarmouth voters face four ballot questions:
Yarmouth homeowners deserve answers — and a voice — before the vote.
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