O’Brien resigns from Board of Ed

WINSTED — After weeks of controversial actions by the Board of Education, Chairman Kathleen O’Brien formally submitted her resignation on Tuesday, Aug. 9.Her resignation comes two days before a scheduled special meeting to be held on Thursday, Aug. 11.The special meeting, which is being held right after The Winsted Journal goes to press, has two items listed on the agenda: The discussion and possible removal of O’Brien as the chairman and discussion and action relating to the school district’s audit of its fiscal 2009-10 budget.“There comes a time when service to your community has too high a price,” O’Brien wrote in her resignation letter. “When politics outweighs good will, then it is time to stop. Open debate and conversation about issues is the cornerstone of our democratic process. The failure to have that debate in open session perverts this process and breaks down our system. It is not appropriate to make decisions that affect the future of our children behind closed doors. I apologize to the people of Winchester for failing to live up to the trust they put in me two years ago. The truth is I was simply outnumbered.”The meeting was scheduled after several weeks of controversial actions by members of the Board of Education, including a board meeting that was held without an agenda being posted beforehand.In late July, Town Manager Dale Martin scheduled a meeting with the Board of Education to discuss the status of the school district’s audit from fiscal 2009-10.The audit, which has not been completed, is now on its seventh extension with the state Department of Education.Martin requested that the meeting be held jointly with the Board of Education, the Board of Selectmen and Town Auditor Vanessa Rossitto.However, O’Brien said that, on the advice of the Board of Education’s attorney, Mark Sommaruga, members of the board should not attend the meeting.Six school board members did not take Sommaruga’s advice and attended the meeting, which was held on July 28.“I believe that a primary reason why [members] want to remove me is because I did not go to the meeting with the selectmen as requested,” O’Brien said in an interview on Monday, Aug. 8, just one day before she submitted her resignation. “I discussed it with [Sommaruga] and on his advice I didn’t go. He didn’t see a point to it because the audit has not been finished. It’s my best guess that after the meeting that some sort of discussion of my leadership and where the board is going came up. They are not supposed to do that.”O’Brien said that on Sunday, Aug. 7, she received copies of an email discussion that involved the six members of the Board of Education who attended the meeting.She said the email discussion did not include herself or board members Paul O’Meara and James DiVita.O’Brien said the email discussion originated from board member Susan Hoffnagle.“The [email conversation] is illegal. You can’t do public business behind closed doors,” O’Brien said. “Not to say that it hasn’t been done before.”Hoffnagle said she disputes O’Brien’s assertion that the email dialogue is illegal.“We [board members] often have a lot of communication by email because people are busy with work,” Hoffnagle said. “I wanted to communicate with people who participated in the meeting with the selectmen. I sent an email that simply informed [members] that I contacted the auditor and followed through. It was an informational email. I thought it was absolutely appropriate that the board knew that we were following through with the audit.”Hoffnagle would not comply with The Winsted Journal’s request for copies of the emails in question.“We have sent tons of emails because of the audit and I don’t want every issue that we have talked about on the front page of the newspaper,” Hoffnagle said.On Tuesday, Aug. 9, The Winsted Journal made a formal Freedom of Information Act request to obtain emails from Board of Education members to other members pertaining to school district business.On Tuesday, Aug. 2, a Board of Education meeting was scheduled to be held at Town Hall.According to Town Clerk Shelia Sedlack, the meeting was listed on a schedule of meetings listed to be held at Town Hall.However, Sedlack said the Board of Education did not post an agenda for the meeting 24 hours in advance, which is required by law.Despite this, the meeting took place with board members Christine Royer, Richard Dutton and O’Brien in attendence.“[Dutton] called the meeting,” O’Brien said. “He wanted to keep the meeting private. We did not want to have the discussion in public. He wanted to keep it private.”O’Brien said Royer and Dutton both called for her resignation.“They stated that they had enough people [on the board] to remove me from the position,” O’Brien said. “Of course, they had a meeting and they did not post [the agenda], which is illegal, but that’s besides the point. It’s not in the best interest of the people in town who elected them to have meetings outside of the public view.”Dutton would not comment on questions pertaining to the meeting.“I am not going to talk,” Dutton said. “I probably said too much already. I don’t want to speak.”Royer did not return calls for comment for this story.In retrospect, O’Brien said she regrets the politics surrounding the board.“I’m thinking that with all the politics, we forget what we are supposed to be doing here,” O’Brien said. “We forget that this is about the children. For the town to move forward, we have to invest in education. I think that the board, in making this move, is forgetting that responsibility.”O’Brien is the second person to resign from the board in two months.In late June, after missing several months of meetings, board member Raymond Neal resigned.An article about the Board of Education’s special meeting will be in next week’s Winsted Journal.

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