CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The school budget would have to be sliced by up to $150,000 to bring the fiscal 2026 budget down to a 2 percent increase.
It will mean cuts in personnel, professional development and programming.
That's frustrated school officials who point out the operating budget is only going up by 0.67 percent but covering nearly $200,000 for retirees' insurance and FICA is pushing up the budget up to 7 percent.
"What I heard last week is we were tasked with cutting our budget down to 2 percent or maybe 4 percent, I heard thrown out there, too," said Assistant Superintendent Tara Barnes at Thursday's School Committee meeting. "It didn't sound like people were willing on the town side at this point to take the retirees insurance and FICA over onto the town side."
The town's Finance Committee had pushed for the school budget to absorb retiree insurance back in 2018, as well as wage-withholding such as FICA to provide some financial relief to the town. Clarksburg is the only school district to carry those lines in its budget.
"It was done ... because there was an issue at the time, and I'll say that nicely, issue at the time in the town's budget, and they came to us and asked us to help them," said School Committee member Mary Giron. "We did that with the understanding, or with not the understanding that we were going to keep this forever. It was to help them with that situation."
Superintendent John Franzoni said there were some town officials who saw the school choice account as a "slush fund" that could be used to offset the town budget.
"Those individuals got what they wanted, and now it's gone," he said. "They're not here anymore in those positions, but they got what they wanted."
Barnes ran through a "menu" of possible reductions but warned the School Committee that the school choice funds that have been offsetting insurance and FICA are nearly gone.
"What we've been able to piece together so far is that it's in a more dire situation than we thought," she said. "That number that's been budgeted in last week's budget that you got, that $200,000 is not a number that's feasible to work with. ...
"We've got a problem first that we have to fix before we even talk about cutting the other $90,000 or $150,000 that we want to cut."
This year's budget had included $265,000 in school choice funds but there's a shortfall of at least $53,000 in that line. School choice revenue of $187,000 was anticipated for next year but that may come in lower as older school-choice students graduate and no younger ones are coming in as classes are full.
The district estimates it has about $24,000 in school choice funds at the moment.
There's also an anticipated drop of $16,000 in prekindergarten tuition and possibly $80,000 in grants. The school district is getting more in state Chapter 70 education aid because local enrollment is up but school officials pointed out that money is coming in on the town side.
"I could be off by a little bit here, but I don't think in general, it's probably far off from from where we're looking at," said Barnes. "Let's just be super optimistic and say $150,000 we can put up in school choice and that, again, drains us all the way down to nothing at the end."
She said the numbers are not firm and that she and Carrie Burnett, who has come on part time with the departure of Business Administrator Lisa Blackmer, have needed more information from the town's financial team to pin them down.
"I talked to meeting our town administrator early in the week about trying to make sure that we're getting communication from the accountant, and that we really need," said Franzoni, referring to the prior accountant still working with the NBSU schools. "He was going to reach out to that individual to say that we need her to prioritize getting back to our office with some numbers about trying to reconcile some grants and different things.
Barnes said she has been getting responses to her questions.
Potential savings that Barnes laid out included reducing professional development and Chromebook purchases, charging for 4-year-olds in prekindergarten, cutting back on anticipated Drury high school tuition and psychological testing. That came to about $30,000 in savings.
Giron asked what would happen if another student wanted to go to Drury; Barnes said school choice funds but if those weren't available "we might have to have a special town meeting and we might have to ask [the town] for help with the tuition."
Further cuts could mean eliminating the prekindergarten, the interventionist and the dean of students. Barnes offered that the dean could be brought into the central office and be used in part for student support and she would take up a more active role in the financial office.
School Committee member Cynthia Brule was disappointed at town leaders' responses the week before to taking over the insurance and FICA.
"We helped them out when they needed it," she said. "Now we need help."
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Letter: Vote No on Article 13 at Dalton Town Meeting
Letter to the Editor
To the Editor:
On May 5, the voters of the Town of Dalton will be asked to vote on 31 Articles at the annual Town Meeting. I encourage all voters attending to vote "No" on Article 13.
Article 13 reads:
"To see if Town will rescind the vote taken under Article 1 of the May 1,2017 Annual Town Meeting authorizing the demolition of the old Dalton High School and the sale of the property for the redevelopment for houses in accordance with the Zoning By-Laws of the Town at this site; or take any other action in relation thereto."
(TWO-THIRDS VOTE REQUIRED)
The town did demolish the old Dalton High School. However the site was never re-developed for building lots as voted for by the voters of Dalton.
To the voters who originally voted on May 1, 2017, annual town meeting your vote meant nothing, if it can be changed so easily. So, if voters vote for something at the upcoming town meeting, someone could petition for a special town meeting and rescind that voting result. Doesn't hardly seem right.
The intent of changing the original vote is to the use the site to erect a new ridiculous 13,000 square foot, ten million plus dollar police station. Which the Town doesn’t mention in the text of Article 13. There are more viable alternate plans for a new police station that would cost far less and make a lot more sense.
Why would the town build a police station in the middle of a residential area anyways? If I were a resident in the area I would be outraged.
Why would the town give up six building lots? How much money will the Town lose by not selling these lots, not to mention the tax revenue that could be collected. Doesn’t make much sense, does it? I don’t know why the Town has not developed the building lots like it was supposed to. It’s been eight years since the vote in 2017.
Keep in mind, regardless of what the site will be used for, the site will require millions of dollars to address the repair and upgrade of the Walker Brook culvert system that runs under the site. So, you can add that to the cost of a new police station.
Unfortunately, if you are eligible voter in the Town of Dalton and are not able or do not attend annual town meeting you will not be able to vote on this important article or any other article in the warrant. The town gets to pick your pocket and decide things that affect you without the your vote. This voter discrimination really needs to stop. After all this is the 21st century not the 18th. Of the 4,500 plus registered voters, the town meetings historically are attended by less the 200 voters. Two hundred voters is not 2/3 of 4,500 voters. Why should 200 voters be able to decide the fate of the other 4,300 voters?
I hope the voters attending the May 5 Dalton annual town meeting will vote a resounding "NO" on Article 13.
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