Voices

Act 46 decisions need to be made at a local level

DUMMERSTON — I encourage everyone to get out and vote against the proposal to merge the Windham Southeast school operations into one unified district. This vote will occur on Tuesday, Nov. 7 in Brattleboro, Dummerston, Guilford and Putney.

If passed, local school boards for each of our towns will be dissolved. A new Supervisory Union “super” board will decide all kinds of things that local school boards do now, with participation of local parents and community members.

School boards are often known as the education watchdog for their communities. They are responsible for ensuring that students get the best education for the tax dollars spent.

School boards are responsible for negotiating contracts with school employees. They approve curriculum materials, and they decide if and when the closure or expansion of a school is necessary.

If this merger passes, these decisions will be made by a new “super board” consisting of four members from Brattleboro, one member each from Guilford, Putney, and Dummerston, and two at-large members who will be elected by a vote in each of the towns.

With unification, while you can communicate with your towns' board member(s), each member has only one vote. This will be quite different from how it works now, where you can contact anyone on your school board in your town directly with matters that concern you, and the whole town can vote on the big decisions.

Making important decisions about our community schools is the responsibility of townspeople. While the proposed merger includes pathways of communication to the centralized school board, local people would not have a direct say in those decisions - about curriculum, staffing, maintenance, closure, and a myriad of other issues.

The oversight of teachers will be done by administrators who are not necessarily members of their community. Collective bargaining will occur at this centralized level.

Act 46 did not come out of nowhere, for no reason. We are facing genuine challenges in declining numbers of students, equal educational opportunity for all, increasing labor and facility costs, and a state education per-pupil funding formula that is completely broken and needs fixing by our Legislature.

Act 46 requires that every student have equal access to a variety of educational opportunities and that these opportunities meet or exceed educational-quality standards. The law also promotes fiscal accountability and transparency, and it expects districts to save money in the process.

However, many of us know that the already-occurring cross-school collaboration, centralized supply ordering, and some teacher-and-resource sharing has not been enough to achieve the goals required by Act 46. An Alternative Governance Structure group is working now to make a plan that preserves local school boards and also meets the goals of Act 46.

Let us face these problems collaboratively across town lines. We might have to make some terribly difficult decisions, but we at the local community level need to be the ones to do so.

There's no going back once we consolidate our schools.

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