Gilbert contract a go

WINSTED — During a special meeting Thursday, March 10, the Winchester Board of Education ratified a three-year contract between the district and the town’s semi-private high school, The Gilbert School.Last year, the board voted to move the district’s seventh and eighth grades to Gilbert, beginning with the 2011-12 school year.The board voted 5-3 in favor of the contract, with Chairman Kathleen O’Brien and board members Carol Palomba, Paul O’Meara, Susan Hoffnagle and Joseph Hanecak voting yes.Board members Richard Dutton, Christine Royer and James DiVita voted against the contract.During the meeting, Dutton, who has spoken out extensively in the past against the seventh and eighth grades moving to Gilbert, made two motions to amend the contract that were ultimately defeated by O’Brien, Palomba, O’Meara, Hoffnagle and Hanecak.Dutton’s first motion was to add a seventh member to the joint finance committee and give it power to make cuts to the both schools’ budgets.“The way [the committee] is structured right now it will not produce a definitive result,” Dutton said. “For it to have value, it needs to be able to allocate cuts appropriately.”Palomba spoke out against Dutton’s first motion.“I don’t think it’s a good idea to cede control [of the school budgets] to the joint budget committee,” Palomba said. “I don’t think we need amendments in order to substitute the judgement of the school board for the judgement of the overall Board of Education.”Chairman O’Brien also spoke out against Dutton’s motion.“We should not be handing over something that we should be doing,” O’Brien said. “We should be looking [at the budget] as members of the school board.”After Dutton’s first motion was voted down, he then made a motion to not designate The Gilbert School as the district’s official high school in order for parents to send their children to other high schools on town funds.“We currently have kids going to Oliver Wolcott [Regional Vocational Technical School] and Hartford Academy of the Arts,” Dutton said. “I do not feel it’s appropriate to hand tie [students] to a single high school.”O’Meara spoke out against Dutton’s motion.“We are playing nice with Gilbert and you are not giving a full commitment to them by doing that,” O’Meara said. “It’s either 100 percent or nothing at all.”O’Brien said school choices are “a fire out of control.”“What’s happening with school choices is that towns have to pay [to send students] to larger high schools, causing towns to have enrollments [in their schools] decrease,” O’Brien said. “The state is not supporting towns in these efforts. This is not a good idea.”

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