Enrollments will set budgets for 2012

FALLS VILLAGE — Enrollment figures for the Region One school district’s seven schools, as of Oct. 1, were released this week by the superintendent’s office.The student population, as reported on Oct. 1, is used to determine how much each town will be charged in tuition in the next budget year. So the figures reported this month will determine the regional education budget for fiscal 2012, which begins next year on July 1.Representatives on the Region One Board of Education also have “weighted” votes. The towns with the most students in the school district have the most heavily weighted votes.This year, as of Oct. 1, the Lee H. Kellogg School in Falls Village has 86 students. Cornwall Consolidated has 106; Kent Center School has 278; North Canaan enrolled 311 students. Salisbury Central School also has 311 students; and Sharon Center School has 191.Housatonic Valley Regional High School (HVRHS) has a total of 470 students from the six towns.This week, Region One Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain also announced federal Title I grants, for improving basic programs, to the seven regional schools. They are $15,175 for Kellogg; $764 for Cornwall Consolidated; $10, 350 for Kent Center; North Canaan receives $22,564; Salisbury Central will get $58,381; Sharon Center, $28,288; and HVRHS will get $43,598.Chamberlain said that the formulas used by the federal government to determine these grants are mysterious, even to veteran administrators. “They are based on census data, which is corrected every 10 years.” “But we have never been able to get the formula” the federal government uses to establish which school gets what.Title I grants are typically used for remedial help for small groups and individual students, as part of the federal No Child Left Behind act of 2001. Title II grants, for improving teacher quality, went to Kellogg ($2,281); Cornwall ($6,726); Kent ($18,325); North Canaan ($11,633); Salisbury ($26,631); Sharon ($9,230); and the high school ($14,430).Kent and North Canaan also received Title III grants (English language instruction for students with limited proficiency, and immigrant students) of $10,431 and $1,469 respectively.

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