What is the Board of Education afraid of?

This week the Board of Education held its regular meeting on Tuesday, June 10, in Northwestern Connecticut Community College’s Draper Conference Room.Curiously, the location was a major change from the usual meeting locations of one of the school district buildings or Town Hall.However, the location of the meeting was posted on the agenda in the Town Clerk’s office at Town Hall a full 24 hours before it took place, meaning that the location change was legal.One has to wonder if this was done intentionally to dissuade residents from attending the meeting.Also curious was the lack of a public comment portion on the meeting’s agenda.While Tuesday’s meeting was used for an executive session to discuss candidates for a new superintendent of schools, there were two public portions of the meeting.Because this meeting was used to discuss the superintendent position, this meeting was quite possibly one of the most important Board of Education meetings this year. Why did the board not allow anyone from the public to speak?During the past several meetings, members of the public, including several parents and town officials, expressed their concerns to the board about the way the school district is handling policies and procedures.Each member on the Board of Education was elected to serve the public. The public has every right to have a say in their school district, and it is the job of the Board of Education to listen to every parent and person it serves.The fact that the board moved its meeting to outside of the school district and cut public comments from the agenda does not reflect well on the board as a whole.It also suggests that the board cannot handle criticism, which would be a shame, because part of the job of being an elected official is to listen to the public.

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