Three boards agree at education 'summit'

WINSTED — Failing to gain unanimous approval, members of the town’s Board of Selectmen, Board of Education and W.L. Gilbert Trust agreed Monday night to consider moving Winsted’s seventh and eighth grades to The Gilbert School in 2011, in a reorganization effort designed to save money and improve the entire educational system.

Members of the Winchester school board ultimately voted 4-3 to institute a moratorium on an alternative voucher plan as a show of support for the proposed restructuring of grades. Selectmen and Gilbert representatives voiced their agreement without taking formal votes.

About 10 representatives from the town’s semi-private high school attended the special meeting in the Gilbert library, along with seven members of the Winchester Board of Education, five selectmen, school officials and Town Manager Wayne Dove.

The meeting, billed as an “education summit,� was called for by members of the Board of Selectmen last week after they heard there may not be full agreement on moving students to Gilbert.

“I’m a graduate of this institution,� Dove said in his opening remarks. “It would be a total pity if we did not take full advantage of this institution and make it part of the educational model of this town.� The town manager asked participants in the meeting not to think about control and governance of the school system before a plan is agreed upon.

“I have heard a lot of talk about control,� Dove said. “All I could ask is that we’re able to take that word control and change that to a view of management, in which control is a facet, but control is not what it’s all about. We have to model the solution first.�

Dove told board members that a timeline has been developed for putting together a restructuring plan and that he mainly wanted a consensus between boards that a plan should be explored.

Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien said she agreed that a restructuring plan should be pursued but noted that members of her board might not be in full agreement. “This board has divergent feelings,� she said. “I think we might disagree as to how we get there.�

Strong disagreement came from  board member Susan Hoffnagle, who flatly said she would not support moving the seventh and eighth grades to Gilbert and that she wanted to have other options available to the school board.

“To stop exploring other alternatives, my answer to that is no way,� Hoffnagle said, adding that other options could include having Winsted buy The Gilbert School. “I would not be in favor of either side stopping exploring other alternatives.�

Fellow board members Dr. Richard Dutton and Christine Royer sided with Hoffnagle and challenged the assumption that moving grades seven and eight to Gilbert would save money. The three members have been exploring a voucher system in which the entire student body at The Gilbert School might be moved to one or more out-of-town high schools.

Hoffnagle said one of the problems with the structure of Winsted’s school system lies in the fact that Gilbert is considered semi-private and is governed by a privately appointed majority, while the Gilbert Trust only pays a small percentage of the school’s operating costs. “We get cut and their budget stays the same,� she said.

Hoffnagle added that school boards have been debating the Gilbert issue for years without a resolution to certain issues, and that the town manager’s endorsed course of action leaves many questions to be answered, including how the restructuring would affect teachers in the Winchester system. “There are a lot of issues, and I don’t like the appearance that a decision has already been made,� she said.

A disagreement erupted as to whether school board members could even vote on the matter, and participants were asked to take a short recess. The dissenting board members were ultimately overruled by the four-member majority, but not without leaving an impression.

Mayor Candy Perez said after the meeting that she agrees with many of Hoffnagle’s points and that the Board of Education has the ultimate decision-making authority when it comes to restructuring the school system. “This just gives us an opportunity to allow the three CEOs and board members to work on the educational system that will best serve students in the long run,� she said. “The Board of Education still has control.�

The mayor added that postponing the voucher idea doesn’t kill the option permanently. “Nobody’s going to do anything until September anyway,� she said.

Dove also acknowledged that questions need to be answered. “It’s not like I have all the answers in my pocket,� he said. “This isn’t going to be easy. This is going to be an awful lot of work.�

School board Chairman O’Brien said she does not recall disagreements arising about the future of The Gilbert School until the past two decades and that the reason boils down to “the issue that causes all arguments,� money. “For years we ran without a contract, and for years The Gilbert School paid for itself. We had a free school system for years in this town, and we should be thankful for that, but now we need to decide what it is we want as a town for a school system.�

Selectman Ken Fracasso said he believes Gilbert has served the town well during the past 115 years as a private and semi-private institution, but that economic times require a change in the structure of the school system. “The whole purpose of this is to get back on track,� he said. “We need to get everyone pulling in the same direction.�

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