School officials make case

WINSTED — Pleas from Winchester and Gilbert school officials for increased funding in the 2013-14 fiscal year appeared to fall on deaf ears Tuesday night, March 26, in the Pearson Middle School band room, where the Board of Selectmen and Board of Education held a public hearing to review this year’s proposed school budgets.Lobbying for the Winchester school dis- trict was Superintendent of Schools Thomas Danehy, who told selectmen that larger class sizes in kindergarten and first grade have necessitated additional teachers at Batcheller Elementary School. Danehy added that the school system needs a library media specialist and English Language Learner (ELL) teachers to meet student needs. A new teacher evalu- ation plan, computerized substitute-finder system, curriculum development program, school van, computer hardware and a school resource officer are included in Danehy’s request of $20,813,590.Danehy reviewed the top budget drivers for 2013-14, including the need for struc- tural improvements such as roof repairs at the town’s decaying schools. Special education cost increases, teachers’ salaries and health benefits were all included in this year’s requested increase, along with the budget for The Gilbert School.The proposed Gilbert ap- propriation of $7,034,048 was discussed in detail by Gilbert Superintendent Anthony Serio Tuesday night. Serio noted that his request, like Danehy’s, calls for the first increase for the school system in three years.Serio noted that Gilbert has been affected by an influx of non-English-speaking students and that teachers are needed for remedial reading and math programs. Serio is also request- ing an ELL teacher to assist with language skills.The Gilbert School will begin its first year as a host school for international students at the beginning of the 2013-14 school year, Serio noted. This means the school will be bringing in revenue to offset some costs. Additional savings are being sought by combining classrooms in which the size of the class is 10 students or fewer.Danehy called the total school budget “an overall increase after having flat budgets for the past two years” and asked selectmen to support a total percentage increase of 3.5 percent. He asked for a town appropriation of $20.8 million, which reflects a nearly $850,000 increase over the state mandated minimum budget requirement (MBR) of $19.95 million.Asked after Tuesday night’s meeting what the chances are that the Board of Selectmen would deny Danehy’s request and approve only the MBR this year, Town Manager Dale Martin said, “100 percent.” Martin said the MBR is one of the only is- sues upon which selectmen have developed a consensus.Mayor Maryann Welcome agreed.“The town is $1.8 million in the hole,” she said. “There’s just no way we can do anything other than fund the minimum.”Welcome said the Board of Selectmen will meet for its sec- ond budget hearing on Thursday, April 4, at 6 p.m. in the band room at Pearson to discuss the municipal side of the budget.“We have a lot to absorb,” she said.Selectmen may decide to make a final decision on a bud- get proposal at that meeting, or they may choose to wait until their regular meeting on April 15 to take final action before sending their proposed budget to this year’s annual town budget meeting on May 6 at The Gilbert School.

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