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Salerno: State will enforce MBR

WINSTED — The state has apparently sided with the Board of Education, and the town will potentially have to pay much more to fund education during the next school year.According to Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno, the state has ruled that the town must fund the school district at the previously proposed minimum budget requirement (MBR) of $20,049,466, which was set in late April.At a budget referendum in late May, voters approved the town’s budget proposed by the Board of Selectmen, which set education funding at $18,600,000 — $1,449,466 below the MBR.“The town is now clearly in violation of state law,” board Chairman Kathleen O’Brien said at the Board of Education’s budget committee meeting on Tuesday, June 14. “It’s all clear and in your face. It’s not even a matter of investigation. How much investigation does [the state] have to do to see [the town] is in violation of the law?”Town Manager Dale Martin, who was present at the meeting, said to The Winsted Journal that the town had not yet been officially notified by the state of the decision.He did say that the subject would be a topic of discussion at the next Board of Selectmen’s meeting scheduled for Monday, June 20, at 7 p.m. at Town Hall.After Salerno notified members of the Board of Education of the state’s decision, there was no jubilation.Instead, members of the board looked over cuts proposed by Salerno in order to get to the MBR.Included in Salerno’s proposed cuts is a reduction of the school district’s kindergarten program from full day to half day, the elimination of the proposed three new reading teacher positions and the elimination of the proposed seven new paraprofessionals for the district.“We needed those seven new paraprofessionals just to be in compliance with [special education], but thanks to our good luck, our parents are not demanding it,” Salerno said. “But I am not really happy suggesting any of this.” In fact, Salerno went on to air his anger with the district’s budgetary limitations.“I have poured over this budget and I would rather have whatever few teeth left in my head pulled out without any Novocaine than to give up what we are giving up,” he said. “But these are the things we have to do just to get to the MBR.”Salerno went on to say that next school year’s first grade will have anywhere from 18 to 23 students in each class and the remaining classes in the district will have from 23 to 29 students each.The school district is still in talks with The Gilbert School over the proposed budget for the next school year.The Board of Education previously asked The Gilbert School to share in any budget shortfall.“Gilbert indicated to us that they are willing to make some reductions, but it will not be everything that we are hoping for,” Salerno said. “This means that we might have to cut [the school district’s] budget even further.”Board member Dr. Richard Dutton asked Salerno if it was possible that the town would dig in their heels and only pay the school district the $18,600,000 originally approved by residents.“If we still only get $18,600,000, are we going to have to close the schools in April because we will run out of money?” Dutton asked Salerno.“If we don’t get some appropriate action or indication soon [from the town] that they are prepared to go, we would have a real issue,” Salerno said. “The state has been good friends [to the district], but my sense is that if we do not get some sort of response from the state to the town soon, instead of just naming the town in the lawsuit, we could name the state in the lawsuit as well for not doing their part to provide adequate education. Something has to be done.”The Board of Education filed a lawsuit against the town and the Board of Selectmen in May for creating a budget that funds the school district lower than the MBR.There was no sign from board members that the lawsuit would be rescinded during Tuesday’s meeting.

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