School proposal hits a flat note

Last month’s recommendation by former Connecticut Superintendent of the Year Joseph Castagnola that Winsted tear down its middle school and build a new building for grades pre-K through six didn’t gain any traction this week, particularly among town leaders on the Board of Selectmen, who said they are in no rush to put any such project into motion.Considering the economic climate in town, the board’s reticence is on the money, so to speak. The town currently doesn’t have enough cash in its fund balance to finance a new school, and many taxpayers do not appear ready to bear the expense.But that doesn’t mean townspeople should stop considering new ideas. On the contrary, Winsted residents should be eager to discuss ways the town can creatively move forward and make its schools better, safer and healthier at the right price. If that means doing some temporary fix-ups with bigger projects on the horizon, so be it.The majority of selectmen on both sides of the political aisle agreed this week that more work needs to be done to assess the community’s pressing needs regarding education and that a meeting with residents needs to be held before any new committees are formed or plans are considered. That’s a reasonable decision. Now, it’s time for people who are involved with the education system to speak up. Winsted residents need to be sold on the idea that an investment in education now will help secure a brighter future for the town. Members of the school board, particularly, need to speak up.The Winchester Board of Education, which hired Castagnola to write last month’s recommendation, has done little to promote the plan and is sadly reactive when it comes to the school system’s most pressing needs. The school board made no presentation to selectmen this week regarding the Castagnola plan and last week approved a proposed 2012-13 school budget with a simple quorum of just five out of nine members. Not surprisingly, there has been no subsequent groundswell of support from the community.If Castagnola’s $4,900 report ends up in the trash, Winchester residents can blame the school board for failing to get behind it and for not effectively communicating the school system’s needs to the town.

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