BOE threatens lawsuit at press conference

WINSTED — With a TV crew and newspaper reporters in attendance, the Winchester Board of Education held a press conference at Pearson Middle School on Tuesday, April 26, to reiterate its plan to sue the Board of Selectmen for cutting $2,820,561 from the school budget.The cut was made by the selectmen during a budget hearing on April 13. The Board of Education voted to pursue legal action during its regular meeting on Tuesday, April 19.Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien was joined at the meeting by Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno, along with Gilbert School Superintendent David Cressy and various members of both the Board of Education and The Gilbert School Board of Trustees.Rationale for legal action“We are suing the town for its unwillingness to fund education at a level that allows us to meet both our responsibilities to children and the interest of the state,” Salerno said. “The reduction [in the school budget] will end up being a hardship for the schools. It is our belief that we have to go to court to bring to people’s attention that we are not meeting the needs of students.”Salerno said that, if passed, the education budget would not meet the minimum budget requirement (MBR) set by the state.According to a worksheet created by the State Department of Education’s Division of Finance and Internal Operations, the proposed MBR for Winsted is $20,049,466.With $2,820,561 cut, the proposed budget for the Board of Education stands at $18,600,000, which is $1,449,466 below the proposed MBR.“I believe that it’s imperative that people in the community know how hard pressed we are,” Salerno said. “This year, we laid off some non-instructional personnel and we have not been able to keep up on repairs on buildings. If not for the fact that we received some additional funding from the federal government this year, we would not have been able to purchase a new textbook series in reading.”At the press conference, Salerno said the lawsuit had not been drafted completely, but would be filed sometime next week.He said the lawsuit would pursue the Board of Selectmen both collectively and individually.“In the interest of both the school district and the state, we have no other choice,” he said. “We are looking for the restoration of the MBR.”When asked where the legal fees would be paid from in the school district’s budget, Salerno could not give an answer.“I can’t tell you where,” he said. “We will ultimately end up with a balanced budget by the end of the school year.”“We are doing this for our children,” O’Brien said. “We want our children to have the same opportunity that children in Simsbury, Avon and West Hartford have. They are not getting the same opportunities as the children in those towns have.”O’Brien said there is animosity between both the Board of Education and the Board of Selectmen.“I don’t think you can increase the animosity any more than this,” O’Brien said. “The reason for this animosity is because we failed to focus on what we needed to focus on and that is the children and what’s best for them. If we all focused on that, we would have the best school system in the state, and maybe the territory.”O’Brien added that the school may have to lay off up to 20 staff positions if the budget, as it currently stands, goes through.“It comes to a point in time that you have to do the right thing,” she said. “It might cost a small amount of money, but what will be gained we hope will be a better education for all kids in Winsted.”Cressy said that while The Gilbert School is not joining in the lawsuit with the Board of Education, the school is offering its support to the board.“Because next year we will have seventh through 12th grades at our school, clearly we have an interest in what takes place in terms of funding,” Cressy said. Selectmen respondLisa Smith was the only selectman present at the press conference. She confirmed this week that selectmen received a notice of intent for the legal action from the school district.Smith said the Board of Selectmen has scheduled a special meeting on Thursday, April 28, at Town Hall to discuss the legal action.At a town event earlier in the week, Smith defended the selectmen’s actions and the proposed budget.“I think it’s a good budget, but it’s not perfect,” Smith said. “The town has not put public safety first in a long time. Now we can have police cars and a new firetruck. We have not had that before because, during the past three years, we have had a flat funded budget. I think [the Board of Education] needs to make better decisions and they need to be more creative with their budget. However, it’s their job to do that; it’s not my job for me to tell them.”At a selectmen’s meeting in March, Smith moved for a risk based audit to be conducted on the Board of Education, which was approved by the selectmen.This week, Smith said the audit is still ongoing and that she did not know when it would be completed.Mayor Candy Perez called the legal action being undertaken by the Board of Education “unfortunate.”“It’s unfortunate that both boards have not been able to find a way to solve issues,” Perez said. “It’s also unfortunate that the state did not respond last year when we asked for help in some of the issues that we have faced. We asked for help because of the way we received [the school district’s] budget because they did not come out every month to us. The state commissioner sent a letter back to us and said they would not help us and that we needed to resolve issues on a local level. It’s unfortunate that we have gotten to this point.”Winchester Taxpayer’s Association President David LaPointe, a former chairman and member of the Board of Education, called the lawsuit “frivolous.”“It will cost good education dollars for a lawsuit that is not legally sound,” LaPointe said. “The Board of Selectmen is the Board of Finance for the town and they have had enough with the misinformation from the Board of Education. They have also had it with the failing school system which exists under the failed leadership of Salerno and O’Brien. The reason why animosity exists between both boards is because the Board of Education has not done their due diligence in assuring that the public school system in Winsted gets the best value for its dollar.”According to a town document provided to The Winsted Journal by LaPointe, the Board of Education budget has risen each school year in the past decade.In school year 2007-08, the school budget was set at $19,715,391 but was overspent by $127,937.In school year 2008-09, the school budget was set at $20,159,746 but was overspent by $35,586.In the school year 2009-10, the budget was reportedly overspent by $417,000.

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