Parents Rally In 'Support Our Schools' Movement
Parents Rally In âSupport Our Schoolsâ Movement
By Jeff White
Tina Griesse, the mother of two Head Oâ Meadow students, came to Newtown from a Californian school district, and knows how bad things can get.
The school system did not have a physical education teacher; classroom teachers moonlighted as art and PE instructors, and there was one music teacher who traveled between schools. She understands the sense of urgency in recent weeks that many Newtown parents have shown through outspoken support for the 5/6 school and addressing the districtâs space needs. âYou cannot let this get to the point where you wake up one morning and ask âhow did we get here,ââ she said recently.
Indeed, there is a growing feeling in many Newtown parents that it is time to take the school systemâs concerns about space constraints and expenditures seriously and channel some significant money into the district.
Tuning in to Superintendent of Schools John Reedâs budget introduction on Channel 17 two Friday nights ago, nothing really surprised Mrs Griesse. Like an increasing number of parents, she realizes that the issues the district talked about were valid and, more importantly, urgent. âMost of the time when a school needs more money, they are not messing around with you,â she said.
The prevailing message from many parents is âif we need to dig deeper into our pockets, we will.â Cheryl Clark, a mother of three, had this feeling as the Legislative Councilâs finance subcommittee met three weeks ago to approve architects funds for the 5/6 school. She said she would do whatever was required to provide âan adequate educationâ for her children.
Many of the parents who lobbied for town government approval of the 5/6 school have now rallied under the banner of Support our Schools (SOS), with the purpose of getting the message out that parents (and all townspeople) have a vested interest in ensuring the quality of Newtownâs schools.
â[The crux] of Support our Schools is to show support for the 5/6 school that we need immediately, and to educate people about their relationship to both the school budget and the townâs budget,â Joseph Hemmingway, a longtime school advocate, said recently.
As part of educating the community, SOS members have spent weekends around supermarkets and other venues passing out fact sheets to let residents know exactly what is at issue in Newtownâs school system. The adverse impact of overcrowding is one fact the group cites that is affecting the quality of education in Newtown. With a 32 percent increase in student enrollment, they say, class sizes have swelled past district guidelines, arts and science classes are suffering from reduced space, and most if not all of the townâs elementary schools could exceed educational capacity in the coming school year.
Another reality that has many people, including SOS, concerned is Newtownâs drop in educational funding rankings. Of 169 towns in the state, Newtownâs net current per pupil expenditure ranking has fallen from 82 to 160, the group points out. Moreover, of the nine towns contiguous to Newtown, the district is ranked lowest in student funding, they maintain.
SOS believes that town funding for schools has not kept pace with educational/facility needs, inflation, enrollment and costs, with the percent of local spending allocated to education decreasing from 73 in 1980 to 63 in 1999.
The superintendent, SOS member Cathy Lombard has said, confirmed many of the statistics and situations that the group is calling problematic in its fact sheet, which is circulating throughout town. Dr Reed acknowledged increased parent involvement, notably with the districtâs spending plan, as recently as his budget presentation two weeks ago.
âWe have never had more parent interest in what weâre doing in terms of budget and reductions since Iâve been here than weâve had this year,â Dr Reed said.
Head Oâ Meadow parent Mike Iassogna, a PTA and SOS supporter, said last week that the fact that many Newtown students are still performing exceptionally well has colored the publicâs perception of the districtâs problems. âWhen youâre happy, you become complacent and donât get involved,â Mr Iassogna said.
âThere is a certain point,â he continued, âwhen you have to bite the bullet and ask what is it going to take to keep standards up.â
âBiting the bullet,â in this case, might mean the townâs support for a school budget that could be significantly higher than past budgets, even after board of education trimming. But many SOS members are not necessarily advocating a âdonât cut the budgetâ mentality; they simply want the town at large to get involved in the process and make their opinions known in public forums.
Toward that end, Mrs Lombard and other SOS members have put together âA Residentâs Guide to the Newtown Education Budget Process,â a detailed explanation of how a budget moves from introduction to adoption, and the various stages and dates in that process. Interested residents can view the guide on The Newtown Beeâs Web site: www.thebee.com.
For Mike Iassogna, SOSâ role is to get the facts to the townspeople, and let those facts speak for themselves.
âParents have to make up their own minds, but they really have to get out and get as much information as possible,â he said. Still, Mr Iassogna realized that whereas the superintendentâs budget probably would not make it through the process unscathed, it was time for parents to support increased funding for schools. âWe may have [cut] the budget too deep, and now we have to take a reasonable approach to get some of it back.â
Cathy Lombard echoed Mr Iassognaâs sentiment this week. She commented that the problems and realities about which SOS is trying to inform the public are not easy ones to solve; residents have more reason than ever to get involved, not least of all because of the important relationship between a town and its schools.
âWe canât put our heads in the sand and pretend [these problems are] going to go away,â she said. âIf you donât use your voice, youâll lose it.â