Updated May 28, 2026 with new reporting. This is the same underlying transparency story from May 12, but the authority has now materially changed the board-page record while leaving deeper inconsistencies unresolved.
The Wilton Water & Sewer Authority has corrected part of its agenda problem by posting the May 26 board agenda on both the main board page and the archive. But the page still labels it as ‘Upcoming,’ still describes a ‘third Tuesday’ schedule that does not match May 26, and its a
The Wilton Water & Sewer Authority has made a partial cleanup since earlier complaints about stale agendas. As of May 28, 2026, the authority’s main board page and archive both show the May 26 board agenda. But the site still treats that agenda as ‘upcoming’ after the meeting date, still describes the board’s schedule in a way that does not match the May 26 calendar, and still offers oversight-committee pages whose visible records top out in 2012 or earlier.
WWSA has now done part of what residents should have been able to count on all along: it posted the May 26, 2026 board agenda in a clear archive entry and on the main meetings page.
That is better than the earlier situation, when the authority’s public agenda trail was confused and outdated.
What is fixed
As of May 28:
- the main Meetings/Board page shows May 26, 2026 in the meeting schedule,
- the Upcoming Meeting Agenda link now points to a 05/26/26 agenda PDF, and
- the Meeting Minutes and Agendas archive lists 26-May-2026 WWSA Board Agenda.
That means the authority did eventually get the May board paperwork into public view.
What is still off
Several problems remain.
1. The site still calls the May 26 packet “Upcoming”
The meeting happened on Tuesday, May 26, 2026. Yet the main board page still labels that same packet as the Upcoming Meeting Agenda.
2. The written schedule still does not quite match the calendar
The board page still says WWSA meets on the third Tuesday of every other month. But May 26, 2026 fell on the fourth Tuesday, not the third.
That mismatch may have an innocent explanation. But if there was a date change, the site should say so plainly instead of leaving residents to reconcile the math themselves.
3. The committee oversight trail still looks ancient
The authority still advertises Upcoming Audit Committee Agenda and Upcoming Corporate Governance Agenda links from the main board page. But the public committee-history pages visible on May 28 show records only from 2009 to 2012.
That does not prove the committees are inactive. It does show that the online record available to the public is far from current.
Why this matters
This is not a cosmetic gripe. WWSA handles a basic utility service and regularly deals with:
- capital projects,
- system expansions,
- contracts,
- litigation,
- billing systems, and
- ratepayer money.
A utility authority should not make residents wonder whether a meeting already happened, whether a schedule changed, or whether its oversight committees still leave a public trace.
Bottom line
WWSA deserves credit for finally getting the May 26 board agenda into the archive. But that partial fix also sharpens the remaining question: if the board page can be updated, why are the broader schedule and committee records still so messy?
Analysis: The bigger problem may not be one missing PDF. It may be that the authority still treats public-facing recordkeeping as an afterthought rather than a core governance function.
