This action was brought after an election, held in November of 1974, in the towns of Anson, Solon, New Portland, and Emden, comprising School Administrative District No. 74 (S.A.D.). The election was held to provide authorization to the School District Board of Directors for the issuance of bonds to cover the costs of building a new high school in the S.A.D. The bond issue was passed by a sizeable majority.
Shortly after the election, however, a number of voters in the S.A.D. became concerned that the passage of the bond issue had resulted from certain alleged misrepresentations made in pre-election “informational” meetings by the Superintendent and various Board members of the district. Seeking reconsideration of the bond issue, these voters circulated petitions to be presented to the Board. The petitions eventually were signed by voters comprising ten percent of the number of voters in the S.A.D. who had voted in the last gubernatorial election. After receiving the petition, however, the Board refused to hold another election.
Upon this refusal, the named plaintiffs, a majority1 of whom had signed the petitions, brought a complaint in Superior Court seeking equitable relief. This appeal follows entry of the Superior Court’s judgment denying the relief requested.
We dismiss the appeal.
The plaintiffs below requested that the directors and the district be compelled to resubmit the bond issue to the voters in the S.A.D. They cited 20 M.R.S.A. § 225(2)(A)2 as support for their request, claiming that a new election is required under the terms of the statute. Plaintiffs also sought injunc-tive relief against the taking of any steps by the S.A.D. in furtherance of the bond issue until a new election be held. Finally, plaintiffs requested a declaratory judgment that the prior election was invalid because of the alleged misrepresentations, various irregularities of the election procedure, and because no vote had been taken to accept a gift of the land on which the school was to be built.
The court below found that 20 M.R.S.A. § 225(2)(A) was not a recall statute and did not require a new election. The court further found that no misrepresentations had been made and that the irregularities complained of related only to form, not to substance. Finally, it found that no vote need be taken to accept the land prior to the bond election. Accordingly, the court refused to compel another election, to grant the injunction or to declare that the election was invalid.
We intimate no opinion on the correctness of the court’s reasoning. We find, *3rather, that the plaintiffs had no standing3 to bring their complaint and we, therefore, do not reach the merits, except insofar as they relate to the issue of standing.
This Court has long recognized that individual members of the public may, under certain circumstances, vindicate public rights in a judicial forum. Thus, when plaintiffs have sustained a direct and personal injury themselves, such persons will be accorded standing to obtain judicial review of matters in the public interest. Fitzgerald v. Baxter State Park Authority, Me., 189 A.2d 385 (1978); McCaffrey v. Gartley, Me., 377 A.2d 1367 (1977). Similarly, a “person aggrieved” has standing to seek review of an administrative action and simultaneously vindicate public rights where such person has suffered a “particularized injury”. In the Matter of Elizabeth Lappie, Me., 377 A.2d 441 (1977), and cases cited therein.
Where a plaintiff cannot establish direct injury, however, this Court has recognized his standing under certain circumstances. Where a plaintiff alleges himself to be a taxpayer of a municipality or district, he has been held to have standing insofar as he seeks preventive, rather than remedial, equitable relief. Cohen v. Ketchum, Me., 344 A.2d 387 (1975); Blodgett v. School Administrative District No. 73, Me., 289 A.2d 407 (1972); Tuscan v. Smith, 130 Me. 36, 153 A. 289 (1931); Eaton v. Thayer, 124 Me. 311, 128 A. 475 (1925). We must now decide whether the plaintiffs in the instant case have demonstrated a direct and personal injury sufficient to give rise to standing. If they have not done so, we must then determine whether the plaintiffs fit within the taxpayer cases entitling them at least to the preventive relief which they seek.
The plaintiffs have alleged here that they are “voters” in and “inhabitants” of the towns which comprise the S.A.D. We first address ourselves to the question whether these allegations demonstrate direct personal injury. We find that they do not.
Plaintiffs contend that they are statutorily entitled, under 20 M.R.S.A. § 225(2)(A), to a new election on the bond issue. If they were so entitled, then the allegation of voter status, coupled with the fact that most of the plaintiffs had signed the petition requesting action by the Board of Directors of the district,4 arguably might have demonstrated direct and personal injury.5 We find, however, that § 225(2)(A) does not require the directors to resubmit the bond issue to election.
*4The last sentence in § 225(2)(A), the only portion of the statute with which we are here concerned, was enacted in 1973, P.L., c. 571. In a discussion of the sentence prior to its enactment, several members of the House of Representatives expressed concern that the statute conferred the right plaintiffs claim here — namely, that ten percent of the voters could force reconsideration of issues already decided by the directors. That this right was not being conferred, however, is demonstrated by the remarks of Representative Dyar contrasting the language of the sentence with a former proposal which would in fact have created such a right. 1973 Leg.Ree. 4863-64. That no such right was intended to exist is further shown by the remarks of Representative Shute, the sentence’s proponent, who declared that the sentence was only intended to bring school administrative district laws into conformity with municipal laws. 1973 Leg.Ree. 4861.6 The stated intent of the legislation enacting this sentence is clear. Only when the district directors fail to act on a school construction issue may the voters force consideration of the issue.
This intent is also clear from the terms of the statute itself. The section provides that the school directors “shall be authorized” to call a meeting for the purposes stated in the section. The quoted language does not require the directors to call such a meeting. It merely authorizes them to do so at their discretion. . The ten percent provision, therefore, merely provides a mechanism whereby voters may insure that certain issues will be considered. To hold that ten percent of the voters could force reconsideration would allow a small minority to interfere, whenever they desired, with decisions approved by a majority of voters. We cannot conceive that the Legislature intended such a result.
Since § 225(2)(A) does not confer any rights on the plaintiffs, they cannot be deemed to have suffered a particularized injury entitling them to standing under the statute. We next turn our attention to whether plaintiffs have established a particularized injury merely from the fact that they are voters. We conclude that they do not.
It is true that as voters the plaintiffs are attempting to contest the validity of an election. At first glance this might seem to give rise to a direct injury in the nature of a loss of a civil right. See Jones v. Maine State Highway Commission, Me., 238 A.2d 226, 229 (1962). Upon closer analysis, however, it appears that the assertion here is merely of “ ‘the right, possessed by every citizen, to require that the Government be administered according to law . . .” Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 208, 82 S.Ct. 691, 705, 7 L.Ed.2d 663, quoting Fairchild v. Hughes, 258 U.S. 126, 129, 42 S.Ct. 274, 66 L.Ed. 449 (1922). Such a right does not confer standing. Baker v. Carr, supra.
This case is distinguishable from Jones v. Maine State Highway Commission, supra. In that case no actual or threatened financial damage was at issue. The only substantial right asserted by the “registered voter and taxpayer” was his right to vote on a specific issue. Here, the plaintiffs have already had their vote. Moreover, the rights asserted here are not so much the plaintiffs’ right to vote on their interest in proper election procedures, but are issues of increased tax burdens on the property in the S.A.D. The school funding bond issue vote which plaintiffs are challenging is directly related to plaintiffs’ financial interest. Having failed to allege any direct financial injury, the plaintiffs clearly lack standing.
Having satisfied ourselves that plaintiffs have established no direct injury to themselves, we finally turn to the question whether they are at least entitled to preventive relief under the rationale most recently stated in Cohen v. Ketchum, supra. We find that the failure to allege taxpayer *5status deprives plaintiffs of their right to request even preventive relief.
The entry must be:
Appeal dismissed.
Remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.
The case should be dismissed from the Superior Court docket.
ARCHIBALD, J., did not sit.
DUFRESNE, A. R. J., sat at oral argument as Chief Justice, but retired prior to the preparation of the opinion. He has joined the opinion as Active Retired Justice.