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School board approves Danehy budget

WINSTED — The Winchester Board of Education has approved Superintendent of Schools Thomas Danehy’s proposed budget of $22.2 million, including a town appropriation of $20.8 million, despite the fact that the town manager and Board of Selectmen have said they will only support an appropriation that meets the current minimum budget requirement (MBR) of $19.9 million.Including grant money, Danehy’s proposed budget of $22.2 million is $750,000 more than the current year’s total budget of $21.4 million. During a budget presentation to residents Feb. 25, Danehy said the requested 3.5 percent increase “is below what other school districts have asked for” and that 42 percent of the bill will be paid with state and federal funds, compared with 58 percent funded by local taxes.Board members voted 6-2 to approve the budget and have Danehy send it to Town Manager Dale Martin by this Friday, March 15, when Martin’s final budget presentation to the Board of Selectmen is due.Under Martin’s proposal, which he presented at a Feb. 28 meeting, the town’s appropriation for the schools would remain at the $19.9 million MBR, presuming that amount is approved by the state legislature this year. Martin’s total proposed budget for the town is currently $31.6 million.Board of Education Chairman Susan Hoffnagle took the opportunity at Tuesday night’s school board meeting to show her support for a modest budget increase and to ask townspeople to do the same. “The schools should not be receiving notices that the utilities are going to be shut off for nonpayment of bills,” Hoffnagle said, referring to unpaid bills that were recently discovered as the town’s finance department has been under investigation. “Please offer the community a responsible budget that does something to build fund balance and aid the schools.”Hoffnagle said she was “dismayed” by the town manager and Board of Selectmen’s decision to not add “one cent over the minimum budget requirement,” and said the school system needs “every bit of the MBR and more to meet current educational needs.”Hoffnagle acknowledged that the school board is receiving Alliance Grant funds from the state to address performance issues, but noted that those funds must be used for new programs.“Apart from the grant funds that support our normal operations, the district did receive $207,000 in Alliance Grant Funds, in recognition of the fact that Winchester is one of the lowest performing districts in the state,” Hoffnagle said. “Not one penny of those grant funds can be used for current programs.”Without a budget increase, Hoffnagle said, the school system will effectively be operating with less money than it has in previous years.Danehy’s proposed budget includes increases for a number of new faculty, staff and programs, including an additional first-grade teacher, a library media specialist, an English Language Learners (ELL) teacher and a school resource officer.Danehy said he believes his budget request is reasonable and said he’ll wait to hear what the town manager and selectmen say after they receive the proposal. “Overall, yes, it’s an increase, but I think the increase we’ve asked for is respectful of the town’s wherewithal,” Danehy said. “I think the town needs to know there are education needs that need to be addressed.”

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