Decrease in school spending planned

FALLS VILLAGE — The Board of Education presented a proposed spending plan for 2013-14 to the Board of Finance Monday, March 11, that calls for an overall drop of $108,001(3.5 percent) in total education spending.The Region One assessment for 2013-14 is $1,128,847, down from $1,340,156. That is a drop of $211,309, or 15.8 percent.The proposed spending plan for the Lee H. Kellogg School (LHK) is up $103,308 (5.8 percent), for a total of $1,886,334.Total proposed spending for education is $3,015,181.The presentation from the school board chairman, Ross Grannan, with LHK Principal Jennifer Law and Board of Education members Dom Caiati and Rachel Gall, began with a lengthy discussion of staff reductions and the number of students.Erica Joncyk, of the Board of Finance, asked point-blank if there were any plans for staff reductions in the face of declining enrollment.The school currently has eight full-time and six part-time teachers. Joncyk said her four children attended LHK and received what she considered an excellent education. But she said the prospect of “the same amount of staff with half the [number of] kids seems to me a little unbalanced.”Grannan said that state regulations and policies favor large schools, and small schools like LHK cannot “move teachers around” to cover different subjects the way they could in the past.Caiati said the school board members considered this question: “Do we force someone out and change the school to make a budget?”Law said she believed reducing staff by attrition makes more fiscal sense than layoffs. She said she anticipated at least two retirements in the near future.Joncyk said, “I don’t want to see the point where the numbers are so low in the school that people are upset and it all ends nastily. I think we should plan for this now.”First Selectman Pat Mechare, a former teacher, said she didn’t like the idea of depending on retirements for reductions in staffing costs. “I’d hate to see fabulous teachers retire before they’re ready.“I have skin in the game,” she continued, noting her grandchildren will be attending the school soon. “I think it can be done, and done more cheaply. It will be tough to sustain a $23,000 per pupil cost.”The school expects to have about 72 students in 2013-14.Tom Grayson asked what happened to the idea, floated last year, of a part-time principal. (The school recently hired Law, currently serving as interim principal, as a full-time principal.)Caiati said that after discussing the idea with the faculty, “We were convinced it would not work.”The proposed spending plan includes more money for technology, building maintenance and capital accounts.The Board of Finance will meet twice more this month, on Monday, March 18, 6:30 p.m. at Town Hall, to discuss the school board’s budget and possibly make a recommendation; and again on Monday, March 25, 6:30 p.m. at Town Hall, to receive the proposed spending plan from the Board of Selectmen.

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