Education task force is official

WINSTED — Winchester Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno will join Gilbert School Superintendent David Cressy and Town Manager Wayne Dove to form an education task force with the goal of exploring options for combining the two local districts into one kindergarten through 12th grade system.

Salerno was given the green light to join the task force after the school board unanimously voted to approve the move at its meeting Tuesday, May 11.

According to Winchester Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien, who met with the town manager last week to discuss the idea, Dove spearheaded the creation of the three-man task force with the hope the small group can jump-start the process of identifying possible redistricting options and their related costs savings, and then bring their findings to the two school boards for their consideration.

“I think he wants to do a little task force before the [bigger] task force happens,� O’Brien said at the Tuesday, May 11, school board meeting, referring to the committee formed by the Board of Selectmen earlier this year.

The committee, which includes members of both school boards and town officials, has yet to meet.

O’Brien said she thought the smaller task force was “a good idea� because it would involve the “people with the greatest experience in the area.�

In addition, O’Brien said she also supported the creation of the Dove-led task force because the “anger� built up between the two school boards over the last few years has made discussions between the two factions difficult.

“And this is something that has to be worked out together,� she said of any future redistricting plan.

Salerno said the task force was expected to hold its first meeting Thursday, May 13.

Last month, Gilbert School board members proposed relocating Pearson Middle School’s seventh- and eighth-grade students to the high school as early as the 2010-11 school year.

The possible relocation of the middle school classes was discussed during a joint meeting between members of the Winchester and Gilbert School boards of education April 22.

Steven Sedlack, chairman of the Gilbert School Corporation, said the move would result in a possible net savings to the Winchester school district of more than $700,000.

“It would be real difficult to do, but it could be done,� Sedlack said during a press conference at Town Hall April 28, referring to making the move by the beginning of the next school year.

But, feeling the move was not something that could be properly implemented by late August, the Winchester school board voted to take the option off the table for the 2010-11 school year during a special meeting April 27.

Winchester school board members said the option is something that will be considered along with other redistricting ideas in the upcoming months.

On a separate track, the Gilbert and Winchester school boards also continue to meet to negotiate a new per-pupil tuition fee contract for the 2010-11 school year. The current three-year agreement, which stipulates a $15,169 per student fee for the town, expires on June 31.

During its May 6 meeting, the two sides agreed in principle to only negotiate a one-year deal. The two sides are expected to meet next on May 20.

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