School board rejects union furlough request

WINSTED — Citing the fact its teachers union has already agreed to a salary freeze for the next school year, the Gilbert School Corp. decided not to forward a request by the Winchester Teachers Association that Gilbert’s educators join them in considering the possibility of taking two furlough days at the end of the current school year as a cost savings measure.

“We asked our teachers to step up to the plate and they did,� Gilbert School Superintendent David Cressy said of the teacher’s zero-percent pay increase for the 2010-11 school year during the corporation’s May 19 meeting.

“I do not want to go to my teachers and ask them to do this,� Cressy said. “I’m having difficulty with this … it’s not my recommendation.�

While corporation members did discuss the furlough request at last week’s meeting, they did not take a vote or any other action on the agenda item.

With the Winchester Public Schools still running a deficit of $109,000 for the current school year, Superintendent Blaise Salerno has asked the district’s kindergarten through eighth-grade teachers to take two furlough days at the end of next month to help bridge the budget gap.

Salerno said this could save $40,000 in salaries before the end of the board’s fiscal year on June 31.

The district’s teachers union, however, has requested that before they agree to the furloughs, the board send a letter to the Gilbert School Corp. and request that the high school’s teaching staff do the same.

Winchester board members unanimously approved the motion to send a letter to the Gilbert school board at its May 11 meeting.

Cressy, however, said the request “seems like an effort to put the blame on Gilbert� teachers if Winchester’s union members decide not to agree to the furloughs.

“They can point to us and say, ‘They didn’t do it, we won’t either,’� he said. “And I don’t like the taste of that … and that’s happened a lot over the years.�

Gilbert School Corp. member Mark Svonkin said he felt the request was an unfair one by the Winchester teachers union since their union would be receiving a raise for the 2010-11 school year.

“I believe apples to apples are important, and I don’t think we should reward our teachers [for taking a salary freeze] with a furlough,� Svonkin said.

Winchester Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien, who also serves as a member of the Gilbert School Corp., said it was “fine� if Gilbert decided not to consider taking the year-end furloughs.

“Our union had just asked us to forward this request,� O’Brien said.

Salerno has said his administration is also looking into the possibility of requesting two furlough days for teachers in the 2010-11 school year.

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