Board members: cool it

Town and school officials are still in disagreement on how to respond to the 2009-10 Board of Education overspend, and if cooler heads don’t prevail the situation could get ugly.

Selectman Ken Fracasso, who has been a continuing source of inflammatory rhetoric regarding the overspend, told fellow board members Monday night that he has corresponded with state officials regarding the budget and how to handle the situation.

The selectman’s top priority appears to be forcing Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno and Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien to resign — which selectmen sought in a separate votes earlier this month — but the school official and Board of Education have not complied with the request.

State Department of Education officials have responded to Fracasso by saying they hope the situation can be resolved locally, but Fracasso pushed for a meeting between town officials and state Sen. Andrew Roraback (R-30) and Department of Education Commissioner Mark McQuillan on Aug. 2. The meeting will be attended by Mayor Candy Perez and Town Manager Wayne Dove, but was arranged without seeking a vote to do so by the Board of Selectmen.

On Tuesday, Town Manager Wayne Dove said he is not looking to force any decisions down the Board of Education’s throat and that he will not be asking state officials for input on how to forcibly remove Salerno and O’Brien. He did say he will be seeking advice on how to improve fiscal accountability in town and avoid a financial mess in the current fiscal year, which began July 1.

Whether or not Fracasso agrees with that philosophy will be determined at the Aug. 2 meeting, but the selectman has indicated he wants heads to roll. It has already been determined locally that the Board of Education makes the final decision regarding hiring and firing of superintendents and board chairmen, and Salerno and O’Brien have repeatedly said they have no intention of going anywhere.

Meanwhile, Fracasso continues to publicly threaten school-board members that they may be held personally financially liable for the 2009-10 shortfall — a preposterous insinuation. The school board has countered with a threat to complain to the state about the town not meeting its minimum budget requirement for education funding, which could result in excessive fines.

At this point, both sides need to sit down and discuss the current fiscal year without dwelling on the past. In the end, last year’s Board of Education overspend amounted to about 2 percent, or 20 cents on a ten-dollar bill. Yes, it was stupid of school officials not to fully disclose the deficit, but it was also foolish of the Board of Selectmen to insufficiently fund the school budget and then act surprised when it was overspent.

At  a Tuesday night meeting, the Board of Education put together a new finance subcommittee, including all members, which will meet the Thursday before each regular meeting to discuss current spending. That is a sign of cooperation and improved financial oversight. Hopefully the Board of Selectmen will see that as an opportunity to drop any political agendas and get back to work.

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