Robert Van Campen
Mayor in Everett city government.
Everything on this page — quotes, votes, attendance, writeups — is extracted by software from official meeting transcripts, each linked below. How this site works →
- 2026-06-15 · School Committee — At the Everett School Committee meeting on Monday, June 15, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen was present for roll call and responded “Present.
- 2026-06-01 · School Committee — Mayor Robert Van Campen attended the Everett School Committee meeting on Monday, June 1, 2026, and was identified in roll call as “Mayor Van Campen.
- 2026-05-27 · City Council — At the Everett City Council Budget Hearing for Admin and Finance on May 27, 2026, Van Campen fielded extensive questions and explained several parts of the proposed budget and related policies.
- 2026-05-26 · City Meeting — On Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Everett Mayor Robert Van Campen took part in the Everett Medal of Valor Ceremony for EPD Detective Dan Wall.
- 2026-05-19 · City Council — At the Everett City Council Budget Hearing on Schools on Tuesday, May 19, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen’s recorded role in the meeting was mainly indirect, as he was referenced by Superintendent Hart rather than captured making extended remarks of his own.
- 2026-04-28 · School Committee — At the Everett School Committee meeting on Tuesday, April 28, 2026, Robert Van Campen, serving as Mayor and School Committee member, took an active role in the meeting’s procedural business.
- 2026-04-16 · School Committee — Robert Van Campen, Mayor, participated in the Everett School Committee-Budget Committee of the Whole meeting on Thursday, April 16, 2026, and was present for the roll call vote, where he voted yes.
- 2026-04-09 · City Council — At the Everett Special City Council meeting on Thursday, April 9, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen was directly addressed by a public commenter who urged him to “please freeze jobs.
- 2026-04-08 · School Building Committee — Robert Van Campen, Mayor, participated actively in the Everett School Building Committee meeting on Wednesday, April 8, 2026.
- 2026-04-06 · School Committee — At the Everett School Committee meeting on Monday, April 6, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen participated primarily by seconding motions and voting in favor of routine business before the committee.
| Date | Motion | Issue | Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 15, 2026 | approve the proposed school committee calendar with the February and April meeting eliminations | School Committee meeting calendar and scheduling | yes |
| Jun 15, 2026 | approve to exercise the first of two one year contract extensions with Whitsons Culinary Group | Everett Public Schools district wellness policy | yes |
| Jun 15, 2026 | approve the disposal of out of date career and technical education textbooks | — | yes |
| Jun 15, 2026 | submit bills and payroll, dated 06/15/ in the amount of $3,251 | School bills and payroll approvals | yes |
| Jun 15, 2026 | Pay bills and payroll in the amount of $3,251, . | — | yes |
| Jun 1, 2026 | accept the Title Part A immigrant children and youth grant | Everett Public Schools program expansion and academic improvement | yes |
| Jun 1, 2026 | submit bills and payroll in the amount of $2,271 | — | yes |
| Jun 1, 2026 | pay bills and payroll in the amount of $2,271 | — | yes |
| Apr 16, 2026 | quorum roll call | FY27 city budget | yes |
| Apr 16, 2026 | accept the FY27 budget recommendation of $145,395,399 and send it to the full committee meeting on April 28 | FY27 city budget | yes |
| Apr 8, 2026 | approve the monthly invoice package for March | New school building project | yes |
| Apr 6, 2026 | accept the middle school exploration policy and MyCAP grant in the amount of $25 | Everett Public Schools program expansion and academic improvement | yes |
| Apr 6, 2026 | accept the middle school exploration policy and MyCAP grant in the amount of $25 | Everett Public Schools program expansion and academic improvement | yes |
| Apr 6, 2026 | submit bills and payroll dated 03/31/ in the amount of $2,692, . | — | yes |
| Apr 6, 2026 | to pay bills and payroll dated 03/31/ in the amount of $2,692, . | — | yes |
Substantive votes extracted from official meeting transcripts (32 procedural votes omitted). All recorded votes →
Everett School Committee (Monday June 15, 2026)
At the Everett School Committee meeting on Monday, June 15, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen was present for roll call and responded “Present.” He took part in the meeting’s procedural actions and several votes throughout the session.
Van Campen first seconded the motion to open public comment and later moved to close public comment. He also moved to accept the report of the student representative and to congratulate the incoming student representative, saying, “Madam Chair, I move to accept the report of the student representative and also237 to congratulate our incoming student representative.” That motion was seconded and approved.
He participated in a procedural motion to take item number 2 out of order, effectively suspending the rules so the committee could consider the Chapter 74 advisory update before item number 1. The committee approved that motion. During discussion related to future electrical programming, Van Campen offered a supportive remark, saying, “Never say never.”
Van Campen later seconded the motion to accept the superintendent’s report and place it on file, which passed. He voted in favor of the proposed school committee calendar, including the elimination of the February and April meetings. He also voted yes on the motion to approve the first of two one-year contract extensions with Whitsons Culinary Group. In the record, he supported this contract extension during roll call.
When the committee considered disposing of out-of-date career and technical education textbooks, Van Campen moved favorable action on the disposal request, and the motion was approved. He also seconded Cristiano’s motion related to the Shore Collaborative quarterly report, which the committee accepted and placed on file.
At the end of the meeting, Van Campen voted yes on the motion to submit bills and payroll dated 06/15 in the amount of $3,251, and he also answered roll call and voted yes on the motion to pay bills and payroll in the same amount.
Across the meeting, Van Campen consistently supported the committee’s procedural motions, report acceptances, contract action, textbook disposal, and payroll approvals.
Everett School Committee (Monday June 1, 2026)
Mayor Robert Van Campen attended the Everett School Committee meeting on Monday, June 1, 2026, and was identified in roll call as “Mayor Van Campen.” He opened with brief remarks after being introduced by Dr. Braga, saying, “Good evening, everyone,” and noting, “I’m sure you did not come here tonight to listen to the mayor, but, I did wanna take this opportunity.” He framed his comments around the Class of 2026, saying he had “so few opportunities to speak to the class of 2026 before they leave,” and that it was “an honor” to address the “distinguished group of students.”
Van Campen praised the graduating students for their accomplishments and perseverance. He said, “Tonight is about achievement, preservation, perseverance, and opportunity,” and added that the evening was “about our students, the remarkable young people seated on this stage who have worked hard, overcome challenges, and earn the recognition we celebrate this evening, and I applaud you.” He emphasized that the scholarships being awarded represented more than financial aid: “It represents confidence in your future,” and “It reflects the belief that you have the talent, determination, and character to make a difference in this world.” He also told students, “You should be proud of what you have accomplished,” and extended that pride to families, teachers, counselors, coaches, and mentors.
During the business portion of the meeting, Van Campen made the motion to “waive the reading and place on file” regarding the records for Monday, 05/18/2026. The motion was seconded and carried by voice vote, with yes votes recorded. He also seconded the motion to accept the Everett Public Schools district wellness policy, which passed; seconded the motion for late entry approval for Everett High School grades 10 and 11 students on 06/02/2026 and 06/03/2026 to accommodate MCAS testing, which passed; and voted yes on the acceptance of the Title III Part A immigrant children and youth grant in the amount of $65,831, which passed.
Later, he voted yes on the motions to submit bills and payroll in the amount of $2,271,989.40 and to pay bills and payroll in the same amount, both of which passed. He also voted yes to enter executive session, which was approved. Van Campen was also thanked for attending and cheering on students, and he responded when directly addressed during discussion.
Everett School Committee (Tuesday April 28, 2026)
At the Everett School Committee meeting on Tuesday, April 28, 2026, Robert Van Campen, serving as Mayor and School Committee member, took an active role in the meeting’s procedural business.
He first moved “to open a public hearing on item number 1,” which the meeting identified as the fiscal 2027 budget. He voted yes by roll call on opening the public hearing. After the hearing, he then moved “to close the public hearing on item number 1, Madam Chair,” again referring to the fiscal year 2027 budget. He voted yes on the roll call to close that budget hearing.
Van Campen also participated in the school choice hearing process. He voted yes on the roll call to close the school choice hearing and seconded the motion to open the school choice hearing. During the meeting, he responded affirmatively when called upon as Mayor.
Near the end of the meeting, Van Campen moved adjournment. He voted yes on the roll call to adjourn the meeting, and the record also reflects a yes vote on “adjournment.”
The meeting record does not show Van Campen raising substantive policy questions or making extended remarks. His contributions were primarily procedural: opening and closing hearings, seconding a hearing motion, answering affirmatively when called, and supporting adjournment. His direct statements included, “Move to open a public hearing on item number 1,” “Move to close the public hearing on item number 1, Madam Chair,” and “So moved.”
Everett School Committee-Budget Committee of the Whole (Thursday April 16, 2026)
Robert Van Campen, Mayor, participated in the Everett School Committee-Budget Committee of the Whole meeting on Thursday, April 16, 2026, and was present for the roll call vote, where he voted yes. He was also the subject of several acknowledgments from others for helping bridge funding and for working closely with Superintendent Hart and the finance team. One participant thanked him directly, saying, “Thank you, Mayor Van Campen, for providing that bridge, because it would not have happened.”
During the meeting, Van Campen moved to recess for 10 minutes, and that motion passed. He later voted yes on the motion to adjourn, which also passed.
When called on to speak, Van Campen said, “I don’t have any questions.” He then offered a brief but pointed statement about the school budget and the city’s longer-term fiscal outlook. He said he would speak “in much greater detail to the community as the budget season unfolds,” but emphasized that he and Superintendent Hart shared a common goal: to make Everett Public Schools “an urban model of excellence and success.” He stated plainly that “cutting instructional side expenditures for me is nonnegotiable,” adding that his plan, in alignment with the superintendent, was to ensure Everett’s children “never want for what they need to receive the greatest education they can.”
Van Campen also raised concerns about the end of reliance on federal dollars, saying that flexibility was “coming to an end” and that the city must learn to “grow and thrive without reliance on those federal dollars.” He described “significant structural dysfunction in our financial systems” and said the city was trying to fix it through changes in fiscal procedures, accounting procedures, policy, and process. At the same time, he reassured attendees that “our financial footing is solid and strong,” even saying it was likely stronger than many surrounding communities.
He closed by thanking the superintendent, school committee, educators, administrators, and Mr. Barrett’s teams for their collaboration, saying the people of Everett “can be proud of the work we’ve done together on the school budget.”
Everett School Committee (Monday April 6, 2026)
At the Everett School Committee meeting on Monday, April 6, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen participated primarily by seconding motions and voting in favor of routine business before the committee.
He first seconded the motion to accept the student representative report. Later, he seconded the motion to suspend the rules and take item number two out of order. He then seconded the motion to accept the middle school exploration policy and the MyCAP grant in the amount of $25,000. During that item, he cast a “yes” vote on the roll call.
Van Campen also supported the committee’s financial actions. He voted “yes” on the motion to submit bills and payroll dated 03/31/2026 in the amount of $2,692,327.76, and he voted “yes” on the related motion to pay bills and payroll dated 03/31/2026 in the same amount.
His spoken contributions, as captured in the record, were brief and procedural. He said, “Second.”, “Second motion.”, and “Second.” in support of the motions brought before the committee. The record does not show him raising questions, offering extended comment, or taking a substantive policy position beyond his support for the motions he seconded and approved.
Overall, Van Campen’s role in this meeting was to help move items forward procedurally and to endorse the committee’s approval of the MyCAP grant and the bills and payroll package.
Everett City Council Budget Hearing Admin and Finance (Wednesday May 27, 2026)
At the Everett City Council Budget Hearing for Admin and Finance on May 27, 2026, Van Campen fielded extensive questions and explained several parts of the proposed budget and related policies. In response to questions about the DEI office and inclusion/access functions, he asked, “The DEI office used to serve or currently serves?” and later said he expected the new role and the human resources department to handle inclusion and access issues. He also sought clarification on references to community organizations, saying, “So, you’re referring to the Everdade Community Center, La Trinidad, Luma, I’m not sure who you’re referring to.”
Van Campen was direct about the tax outlook. He told the committee, “So, just by way of example, will taxes increase this year? Yes, they will.” He attributed the increase to fixed costs, saying the city budget is “$312,000,000,” and identifying health insurance as “the greatest threat” to keeping employees and services in place. He said, “We haven’t touched health insurance in 14 years. That is totally irresponsible,” and added that he was exploring “every option” to address the cost, including compromise in negotiations, other providers, and possibly joining the Group Insurance Commission. He emphasized that he was not planning cuts to jobs, stating, “The answer is no, there’s no reduction in positions.”
He defended preserving code enforcement, saying cutting it would save only about $1 million and would be detrimental because the service is frequently used for trash and neighborhood issues. He also said the budget was meant to “right-size departments” and that he was trying to keep the tax increase as low as possible, including using free cash to offset the tax rate.
Van Campen also discussed school overcrowding, saying he wanted to “stick to the general budget,” but noted that the former high school at 548 Broadway and Pope John at 888 Broadway were still being studied. He addressed advertising practices, explaining that the city had standardized ad sizes in local papers to reduce costs. He further clarified that health insurance is charged back from the city to the school department as an accounting mechanism, and described the mayor’s salary as set by charter and ordinance at a base of $185,000 with annual CPI-based increases.
No votes were taken in this segment.
Everett City Council Budget Hearing (Schools) (Tuesday May 19, 2026)
At the Everett City Council Budget Hearing on Schools on Tuesday, May 19, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen’s recorded role in the meeting was mainly indirect, as he was referenced by Superintendent Hart rather than captured making extended remarks of his own. The superintendent credited Van Campen and his team with helping identify funding through a review of city chargebacks.
In the superintendent’s words: “Conversely and crucially, Mayor Van Campen and his team were quick to respond, working with us to identify funds through a careful review of our city chargebacks.” This comment framed Van Campen’s involvement as responsive and cooperative, with a focus on finding resources already within the city’s financial structures rather than through a new appropriation or separate action.
No votes by Mayor Van Campen were recorded in the extracted meeting data for this hearing. No formal motions, amendments, or roll-call positions attributed to him were included in the provided record.
The notable exchange centered on the superintendent’s acknowledgment of Van Campen’s assistance in reviewing chargebacks. That recognition suggests the mayor’s contribution was administrative and budgetary, tied to identifying available funds and supporting the schools’ budget discussion through staff coordination. The record does not indicate that Van Campen challenged the proposal, offered an alternate plan, or made a public policy statement during the hearing.
Overall, the meeting data portrays Mayor Van Campen as a key behind-the-scenes participant in the budget process, with his office described as acting quickly and collaboratively to help uncover funding through financial review.
Everett Special City Council (Thursday April 9, 2026)
At the Everett Special City Council meeting on Thursday, April 9, 2026, Mayor Robert Van Campen was directly addressed by a public commenter who urged him to “please freeze jobs.” The remark was directed to the Mayor in the course of public input, and it stood out as the primary notable exchange involving him in the meeting record.
Based on the extracted activity for this meeting, Mayor Van Campen did not make any recorded statements of his own, and no votes were attributed to him. The documented material shows him in a responsive, receiving role rather than as an active participant in debate or decision-making during this special session.
The public comment framed a clear request to the Mayor regarding staffing policy, specifically calling for a freeze on jobs. That exchange indicates the commenter was pressing him on employment or hiring matters, but the available record does not show any reply from Mayor Van Campen, either accepting, rejecting, or otherwise addressing the request on the record. No motion, amendment, or vote involving the Mayor was recorded in the extracted activity.
In short, Mayor Van Campen’s role in this meeting, as reflected in the source data, was limited to being the subject of a direct appeal from a member of the public. The only quoted language associated with the exchange was the commenter’s request: “Mr. Mayor, please freeze jobs.” There are no recorded votes, positions staked out, or additional questions raised by him in the available meeting record.
Everett Medal of Valor Ceremony for EPD Detective Dan Wall (Tuesday May 26, 2026)
On Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Everett Mayor Robert Van Campen took part in the Everett Medal of Valor Ceremony for EPD Detective Dan Wall. He opened with thanks to the chief, saying, “Thank you, chief,” and then made a light remark about the presentation, adding, “First of all, I just have to say I’m glad I didn’t break that plaque.”
Van Campen then explained the purpose of the ceremony. He said the city had gathered “not only to present a medal, a medal of valor to detective Wall, but to really recognize a standard of courage and service that inspires the entire community.” He described the Medal of Valor as being “reserved for those who demonstrate extraordinary bravery in the face of danger,” and said it “reflects not only decisive action, but also a deep commitment to protecting others even at great personal risk.” He told Detective Wall, “I could not be prouder as mayor of the city of Everett to be here this evening to present this award to you,” and closed that portion by saying, “So congratulations again.”
Van Campen also used the occasion to recognize Encore Boston Harbor and its leadership. He said he wanted to “extend my congratulations to the team at Encore Boston Harbor,” noting that Jenny Holiday, the president of Encore, was present. He referenced his first six months in office, saying he had “talked about a partnership between the city and Encore.” He argued that the events under discussion showed why that relationship mattered, saying the day’s “chaos” proved that “a partnership is so critical, between our community and between Encore, to ensure that the bad guys are caught, but at the same time that we move our city forward while preserving the values that we all stand for.”
He concluded by commending Encore’s role in public safety and community support: “So I do wanna commend the folks from Encore as well.” No votes were taken during his remarks.
Everett School Building Committee Meeting (Wednesday April 8, 2026)
Robert Van Campen, Mayor, participated actively in the Everett School Building Committee meeting on Wednesday, April 8, 2026. At roll call, he was present and later took part in the committee’s votes.
His recorded remarks were brief and procedural. When the meeting moved into initial business, he said, “Second,” supporting the motion to approve the meeting minutes as amended for clerical errors. He also said, “Here,” in response to roll call. Later in the meeting, he made the motion to approve the monthly invoice package for March 2026.
Van Campen voted in favor of the committee’s motions throughout the meeting. He voted yes on the motion to approve the meeting minutes as amended due to some clerical errors. He also voted yes on the motion to approve the monthly invoice package for March 2026. These same two actions appear in the meeting record more than once, and in each instance his vote was recorded as yes.
As the meeting concluded, Van Campen moved to close public comment. That motion was adopted, and he voted yes on it. He then made the motion to adjourn. The committee approved the adjournment, and he voted yes.
In sum, Van Campen’s role in this meeting was largely procedural and supportive. He seconded and introduced motions, confirmed his presence, and consistently voted in favor of the committee’s business, including approval of corrected minutes, the March 2026 invoice package, closing public comment, and adjournment.