BOE still suing the town over 2011-2012 MBR

WINSTED — It has been one year since the town’s previous Board of Education voted to sue the town for underfunding the state-mandated minimum budget requirement (MBR) for the school district for school year 2011-12.Despite the election of a new Democratic majority to the Board of Selectmen, which voted to fund the MBR, the lawsuit still hangs over the town.As of Tuesday, April 24, the town is still waiting for an answer from the state.In an interview this week with The Winsted Journal, Superintendent of Schools Thomas Danehy said the current Board of Education would probably revisit the lawsuit issue when the town gets an answer from state officials.“It’s still open, we’ll probably take it up when we hear back from the state,” Danehy said. “I am expecting to hear back from them soon. It’s for the Board of Education to decide whether or not to continue to pursue the lawsuit.”History of the lawsuitThe previous Board of Education voted to file the lawsuit in late April 2011, and it was officially filed on May 2 in Litchfield Judicial District Superior Court.The defendants listed in the court case are the town of Winchester, current Selectmen Glenn Albanesius and Ken Fracasso, and former Selectmen Lisa Smith and Karen Beadle.Albanesius, Fracasso and Beadle are all Republicans, while Smith is unaffiliated. While she was a selectman, Smith voted with the Republicans on many issues.The coalition voted to cut $2,820,561 from the 2011-12 proposed school budget last year, which left the school district funded at $1.3 million less than the MBR.That move led to several months of heated debates and arguments among town officials, which culminated in the municipal election in November 2011, with Democrats gaining control of the board.At the election, both Smith and Beadle were voted out of office, with Democrats Mayor Maryann Welcome and former Board of Education member James DiVita taking their place.In late November, the newly elected Democratic majority voted to fund the MBR pending the resolution of fiscal issues in the school system’s 2009-10 audit.The main fiscal issue in question that has prevented any resolution is an audit showing that approximately $636,000 in expenditures that were not properly documented by the school district.At a Board of Education meeting in December, Danehy said the funds were properly spent.At the meeting, Danehy explained that in November 2009, the school district received $1.1 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds.He said that some of the grant funds were spent on salary payments to employees.In early January, Danehy and the school district filed a corrective action plan with the state in response to the audit results.Over the next few months, the town funded half of the $1.3 million shortfall, but withheld $636,000 until the state came back with an definitive answer on the questioned school district funds.Welcome said she spoke to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy about the questioned funds when he was in town for the groundbreaking ceremony of Carriage Maker Place earlier in the month.“From what I understand, the state Department of Education is very close to the end of the whole process,” Welcome said. “As soon as we hear from the state, we will release the rest of the funds. I’m going to assume that the Board of Education will drop the lawsuit once everything is settled, although I can’t speak for them. I am hoping that they will because it would be the right thing to do.”

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Club baseball at Fuessenich Park

Travel league baseball came to Torrington Thursday, June 26, when the Berkshire Bears Select Team played the Connecticut Moose 18U squad. The Moose won 6-4 in a back-and-forth game. Two players on the Bears play varsity ball at Housatonic Valley Regional High School: shortstop Anthony Foley and first baseman Wes Allyn. Foley went 1-for-3 at bat with an RBI in the game at Fuessenich Park.

 

  Anthony Foley, rising senior at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, went 1-for-3 at bat for the Bears June 26.Photo by Riley Klein 

 
Siglio Press: Uncommon books at the intersection of art and literature

Uncommon books at the intersection of art and literature.

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Siglio Press is a small, independent publishing house based in Egremont, Massachusetts, known for producing “uncommon books at the intersection of art and literature.” Founded and run by editor and publisher Lisa Pearson, Siglio has, since 2008, designed books that challenge conventions of both form and content.

A visit to Pearson’s airy studio suggests uncommon work, to be sure. Each of four very large tables were covered with what looked to be thousands of miniature squares of inkjet-printed, kaleidoscopically colored pieces of paper. Another table was covered with dozens of book/illustration-size, abstracted images of deer, made up of colored dots. For the enchanted and the mystified, Pearson kindly explained that these pieces were to be collaged together as artworks by the artist Richard Kraft (a frequent contributor to the Siglio Press and Pearson’s husband). The works would be accompanied by writings by two poets, Elizabeth Zuba and Monica Torre, in an as-yet-to-be-named book, inspired by a found copy of a worn French children’s book from the 1930s called “Robin de Bois” (Robin Hood).

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For those lucky enough to already possess their own bike, perhaps the routes described will inspire a new way to spend a Sunday afternoon. For more, visit lakevillejournal.com/tag/bike-route to check out two ride-guides from local cyclists that will appeal to enthusiasts of many levels looking for a varied trip through the region’s stunning summer scenery.

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