Much ado about nothing

At its Feb. 11 meeting, the Board of Education voted Richard Dutton back to the board in order to fill the seat vacated by Monique Parks-Abreu.Despite Dutton receiving the most number of votes out of the three candidates, four members of the board have filed a complaint with state Department of Education Commissioner Stefan Pryor against Chairman Susan Hoffnagle alleging that the vote was illegal.The letter was written by board member Ray Rabago and co-signed by board members James Roberts, Carol Cox and Theresa Starzyk. Rabago, Cox and Starzyk are Republicans, while Roberts is a Democrat who often votes along Republican party lines.In the letter, Rabago said the vote was in violation of board policies and Roberts Rules of Order. However, in his letter Rabago does not cite the specific Board of Education policies that were violated. Furthermore, Robert’s Rules of Order are not laws, but are unofficial guidelines used by municipalities to conduct a meeting.At the Feb. 11 meeting, board counsel Mark Sommaruga did not step in during the discussion of the vote or after the vote itself to say that the election process was improper.In reviewing the resumes of the three candidates who expressed their interest in filling the open seat, its easy to see that, after previously serving on the board for eight years, Dutton is the most qualified person to serve.Dutton was originally elected to the Board of Education in 2005 to a four-year term. He was re-elected to a second four-year term in 2009.According to his resume, David LaPointe served on the Board of Education for only one term, from 2001 to 2005. On her resume, the third candidate, Kimberlea Wimmer, said she has no experience serving on any municipal board.åClearly, with his eight years of experience Dutton was the right choice by the board.Meanwhile, Mayor Lisa Smith has stepped into this political battle and, in an email, said she agrees with Rabago. Going further, she said the Board of Selectmen should choose their own candidate for the seat.At the Board of Selectmen’s meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 18, the board voted to have Town Attorney Kevin Nelligan pursue an investigation to determine whether or not the Board of Education’s vote was legal.Selectman Jorge Pimental said that he did not see the harm in having Nelligan conduct an investigation. However, earlier in the meeting Finance Director Robin Manuele said in her report that the budget line item for town attorney’s fees is expected to go over what was originally set when the budget was developed.With the town continuing to be in rough financial straits, it is questionable why Pimental “sees no harm” in spending the town’s money to use Nelligan to play Inspector Clouseau in a pointless investigation, especially when a formal complaint has already been sent to Commissioner Pryor.This whole situation is a display of Winsted politics at its worst: When a group of people do not get their way, instead of respecting a governmental process, they file endless complaints and protests.While these board members and the mayor continue with their protests, they lose focus on much more pressing issues: school budgets, maintaining and repairing school buildings and the continuing education of district students.In many interviews conducted since she was elected, Smith has said, over and over again, that she and her Republican party would like to move the town forward.Forward into what? Forward into more ridiculous and endless controversies?If the mayor and the members of the Republican party are serious about moving the town forward in a positive direction, they would concentrate on much more pressing issues the town is facing and not on what happens if they do not get their way.

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