The function of the board of selectmen differs from state to state, and can differ within a given state depending on the type of governance under which a town operates. Selectmen almost always serve part-time, with a token or no salary. It is the chief
executive branch of
local government in the
open town meeting form of government. The basic function consists of calling town meetings, proposing budgets to the town meeting, setting public policy, calling elections, licensing, setting certain fees, overseeing certain volunteer and appointed bodies, and creating basic regulations. In larger towns, the selectmen's daily administrative duties are delegated to a full-time
town administrator or
town manager. In some towns, the board of selectmen acts more like a
city council, but retains the historic name. In some places, such as
Connecticut, the board is headed by a first selectman, who historically has served as the chief administrative officer of the town and may be elected separately from the rest of the board. In New Hampshire cities (which have a
board of aldermen instead of a board of selectmen), a "selectman" is an elected position that is responsible for organizing elections for local, state, and federal offices. Three selectmen, a moderator, and a clerk are elected in each city ward. In Vermont towns, per state statute the Selectboard performs several ex officio roles to include: serving as the local Board of Health, Board of Liquor Control Commissioners, Board of Sewage System Commissioners; and together with the town's elected
Justices of the Peace, serve as the Board of Civil Authority and Board of Tax Abatement. A rare use of the term outside New England is in
Georgetown, Colorado, where the town governing body is called the Board of Selectmen. ==First selectman==