Once again

How much more dysfunctional can the Region One Board of Education and administration become? Is it the heat that’s helping to fuel it? This newspaper considered publishing this week the exact same editorial we wrote last time about the proposed Region One budget that failed the third time (see July 4, 2013, or www.tricornernews.com/node/30672), in that the Region One board has now sent back to the voters for a fourth referendum the exact same budget that failed in every town, with the highest number of voters, on the third referendum. We resisted doing that. The board has turned away from the public comments made at open meeting for months now, but especially did so at the special meeting July 10 that resulted in their resending to referendum the same proposal that had failed quite completely in June. Perhaps it is being seen as a waiting game, a challenge, to see who can hold out longest: the board or the voters. Who will weary of this process first? It can surely be assumed that some on all sides are tired of the continued lack of open and productive communication, where it’s more likely that lawsuits will see the light of day than solutions. Yet some seem to thrive on the controversy, which has taken on a life of its own in rumor mills around the region. It would be helpful if all involved took a step back and reviewed the facts before deciding what their next steps should be, rather than allowing what seem to be personal agendas and hostility rule the day. Some Region One voters are trying to be constructive. Falls Village resident (and town clerk) Mary Palmer said at the special meeting that she hates going through a referendum vote every few weeks. “It’s like taking $6,000 or $7,000 and flushing it down the toilet.” She stated concisely why everyone who pays taxes in the Region One towns should by now be extremely concerned about the failure of this board to find a formula that will work for the regional school district and for the voters. Money being spent on failed referendums is building up, and the arrogance of those who are charged with overseeing the high school, pupil services and the Central Office at Region One seems to be growing at an equal rate.Somebody on the board needs to come up with a complete package that is substantially different and addresses the concerns of the voters. There is some frustration with the way meetings are structured, with public comment at the beginning and nothing at the end. It could be that a comment period at the end of the meeting as well would help clear the air. And while there is a short window in between referendums, there ought to be time to have a full-blown public hearing, with the opportunity for real give-and-take, once three referendums have gone down. If effective leadership cannot be found within the Region One board, or from the administration, it must come from elsewhere. Could the Boards of Selectmen and Boards of Finance from the Region One towns weigh in on the changes that need to be implemented in order for a referendum to succeed? Would the board and administration at Region One ignore such advice with the same stubbornness they have shown in refusing to act on public recommendations? They are public servants, volunteers who have a very large and perhaps daunting responsibility, yet it is a responsibility they agreed to accept. There is too much at stake (Need we say what? OK: the welfare of all the children who attend Region One schools and their families.) for this cycle of vindictiveness to continue. This is not who we are. Is it?

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