Town government Freetown is governed in the traditional
New England style with a
Board of Selectmen overseeing day-to-day operations of the town and at least one
town meeting per year to handle all major decisions including, but not limited to, budgets, by-laws, and zoning. In 2004, provisions for a
Town Administrator were put in place, and in 2007, E. Winn Davis of
Falmouth, Massachusetts was hired as the town's first administrator. Mr. Davis announced his retirement in February 2009, and former
Middleborough Town Manager John Healey was hired as the interim town administrator in March 2009. He was replaced by former
East Providence manager Richard Brown in January 2012, who left on June 30, 2014, with Mr. Healey returning on July 8. The executive branch of town government is the Board of Selectmen, a popularly elected board made up of three members who are elected for terms of three years. One selectman is up for re-election every year. The current board is Trevor R. Matthews (2023), Jared Zager (2024) and Carlos Lopes (2025). Selectmen currently serve terms of three years each, and those terms are staggered to ensure that only one member is up for re-election in any given year. Through the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, the number of Selectmen was not set in law, and therefore varied, sometimes greatly. In 1988, Barbara Trainor became the first woman to hold the position of Selectman in Freetown, giving the town a record of 305 years of all-male leadership. After her defeat in 1991, no woman was again elected to the board until 2006. In 2005, attempts to expand the Board of Selectmen to five members failed. Also failing in 2005 was an attempt to limit Selectmen to a total of two terms (or, six years). Attempts to expand the board to five members have been frequent in recent years. The legislative branch of town government is the town meeting, which in Freetown is an
open town meeting. Various other officers, boards, committees, and commissions round out the variety of services provided to residents, including scattered municipal water, trash collection, fire, ambulance, police, education, recreation, voter registration, etc. As of the
Annual Town Meeting held on May 7, 2007, elections in Freetown are held on the first Monday in April.
Seal The Seal of the Town of Freetown, Massachusetts is an official
device used on documents originating from the town as well as on municipal equipment and buildings. It was devised in 1890 by the
chairman of the Board of Selectmen,
Col. Silas P. Richmond. Along the top of the seal are the words "Town of Freetown, Mass." in all
capital letters. Before the T in "Town" and after the final S in "Mass." are
stars. Along the bottom of the seal are the words "Incorporated 1683" (also in capital letters). The image of a
kettle over a cooking
fire is meant to invoke
Ye Freemen's Purchase, the agreement by which the lands now known as
Assonet and
Fall River were purchased by the
English settlers from the local
Wampanoag Indians.
County government Freetown is a part of
Bristol County, Massachusetts. Where county governments in some states collect taxes or manage schools, these functions are carried out at the municipal level in Massachusetts. However, some minimal county government does still exist; especially in the court system. The
Bristol County Commission is made up of John T. Saunders (
D-
New Bedford), Paul B. Kitchen (D-
Fairhaven) and John R. Mitchell (D-
Fall River). The current
District Attorney for Bristol County is Thomas M. Quinn III (D-Fall River). The
sheriff of Bristol County is Paul Heroux (
D-Attleboro).
State government As a small town, Freetown is often divided and attached to neighboring cities and towns to form representative districts for the
Massachusetts House of Representatives. These divisions are made along
precinct lines. The representative for Precinct I, which is in the 6th Bristol District, is
Carole Fiola (
D-
Fall River). The representative for Precincts II and III, which are in the 8th Bristol District, is Paul Schmid (
D-
Westport). The town as a whole is represented in the
Massachusetts Senate by
Jake Auchincloss (
D. The town is also represented in the
United States Senate by (Class II) Senator
Ed Markey (
D-
Malden) and (Class I) Senator
Elizabeth Warren (
D-
Cambridge).
Infrastructure Typical of the town's nature, there are separate fire stations, post offices and libraries in Assonet & East Freetown. The main police & fire department headquarters building is halfway between the two. The town hall, however, is in Assonet. Freetown's fire department provides 24-hour ambulance service to the town, and coverage to surrounding communities such as
Lakeville. The town is situated between three major cities (
Taunton,
Fall River, and
New Bedford), each with their own hospitals: •
Morton Hospital & Medical Center in Taunton; •
St. Anne's Hospital and
Charlton Hospital, both in Fall River; and •
St. Luke's Hospital in New Bedford. Mental health hospitals in the area include
Taunton State Hospital and
Bridgewater State Hospital. Freetown's state highways are patrolled by the Third (Dartmouth) Barracks of Troop D of the Massachusetts State Police.
Utilities Municipal water is provided in some portions of Assonet by the
City of Fall River, and in some parts of East Freetown by the
City of New Bedford. Both villages are billed by the Freetown Water Commission. Sewer is not available in the town, except for a small portion of South Main Street that is serviced by a line running from Fall River for use by the
Stop & Shop Supermarket Company's distribution center. Electricity in Freetown is provided by
Eversource, cable television by
Comcast, and telephone service by
Verizon. ==Education==