Parents Plead With Education Committee To Spare The School Budget
Parents Plead With Education Committee To Spare The School Budget
By Jeff White
Outside the Board of Educationâs meeting room Monday night, Jennifer Iassogna studied for a history test and her brother, Matt, thumbed a video game. Inside their father, Mike, joined a large contingent of parents who spoke out during a meeting of the Legislative Councilâs committee on education.
Speaking to the committee in support of the school boardâs proposed 2000-01 operating budget, Mr Iassogna felt confident that funding has been earmarked for necessary products and services. âI credit the Board of Education for preparing a budget that is still focusing the dollars where they are needed,â he stated.
Since the school board submitted its request for a $39.9 million spending package last month (up 14.4 percent from this year), town officials have been concerned that the likelihood of the town approving a significant increase in the townâs overall operating budget would be remote.
The message from the parents Monday night was pointed: let the people decided what they will and will not spend.
âIf you give people the chance to vote the budget, youâll be surprised,â one resident, Cathy Lombard, said at the meeting, believing that much of the town would support a large budget request.
Though some remarks were aimed at the townâs overall proposed budget, up 15 percent from this year, parents realize that the school boardâs budget comprises the largest percentage of the townâs spending plan. Supporting the school districtâs budget means supporting the townâs budget.
Parents urged the committee to recommend that the full council approve the school budget âas is,â and leave it to the citizens to vote it down. Since the town can vote for or against each line item in the budget, it can decide exactly what it is willing to fund.
âAs a taxpayer, I want to have a chance to chose,â Mrs Lombard added.
âMy big concern is if [the education committee] passed on additional cutting recommendations, it would come from areas that will seriously affect students,â Deborah Hoffman remarked. âIf more cuts are made,â she said, âthis year, we will definitely feel it.â
âWe will step [to the budget] and we will approve it,â she added.
The education committee took up the districtâs proposed spending plan last week during a meeting highlighted by detailed discussions. Though no one area was the focus of reduction discussions, questions centered on the districtâs technology request and how the district pays out health benefits.
A depleted technology fund and an almost nonexistent health insurance reserve account are two seemingly insurmountable issues in this yearâs school budget.
One reason that committee members have not identified obvious areas for reductions is because the school board delivered a budget that was already reduced by $1,075,554. Committee Chairman Joe Borst noted this week that this year is the first year in his tenure that the school district presented a budget that it trimmed. âThe Board of Education has done a very commendable job, making a million dollars worth of cuts,â he said, adding, â[It] makes our job a bit tougher.â
A few members of the committee seemed poised Monday night to recommend that the full council approve the districtâs spending plan without additional reductions. But the issue was tabled until next Tuesday night to give some committee members time to review additional information supplied by the school board. The school districtâs Director of Business Ron Bienkowski provided a substantial packet of answers to questions raised by committee members the previous week.
Committee member Dan Rosenthal stated his support for school board budget adoption by the full council without further cuts, but concluded this week that it was prudent to give members additional time for review. He stated, âI would rather have everybody on the same page.â For Mr Rosenthal, the council has to answer one question concerning Newtownâs schools: âDo we bite the bullet and take care of [the budget] this year, or wait and see it next year?â
Given continued concern from longtime council members Pierre Rochman and Melissa Pilchard, who spoke out against the townâs proposed $70 million spending plan during a meeting of the councilâs finance committee Wednesday night, it is not clear whether education committee members will have to look harder for reductions.
Superintendent of Schools John Reed was confident this week that the districtâs budget will move on to the full council intact. âI think they have a job to do, and itâs obvious that they are taking it very seriously,â Dr Reed said Thursday. âOur role is to cooperate with any reasonable request they make, and we have been attempting to do that. Iâm optimistic that in the end [the education committee] will support the [school boardâs] request.â
As many of the parents present Monday night returned home to studying and sleeping children, the hope was that town authorities would allow voters to exercise more decision making power.
âFor the time being, weâll pay for it,â one parent, Cheryl Clark, said.