Winchester Asks Gilbert for Cash


WINSTED — After spending a portion of their Tuesday meeting in executive session, members of the Winchester Board of Education voted to direct members who serve on the Gilbert School Corporation to ask the school for a $160,000 budget reduction in the 2007-08 school year. The request would have been made Wednesday at the monthly meeting of the Gilbert Corporation, but the meeting was postponed until next Wednesday, June 20.

Gilbert School Corporation Chairman Steve Sedlack said this week that he does not know if the Gilbert board will approve the request from Winchester officials, but did not predict any significant disagreement with the plan. He said Gilbert Superintendent Dr. David Cressy was out of town Wednesday and unable to attend the montly board meeting, so the board rescheduled.

Back on May 16, the Gilbert School Corporation made an offer to the Winchester Board of Education, agreeing to a settlement of approximately $200,000, including a $160,000 cut to the Gilbert budget and $40,000 in administrative savings to Winchester in connection with moving the town’s Alternate High School program to Gilbert.

"The Winchester Board took no action on the settlement offer," Sedlack said. "The offer was designed to help us avoid binding arbitration. We’ve passed all the periods of mediation and binding arbitration so now the question is, ‘What about the settlement offer?’"

Sedlack said the Winchester School Board was notified in writing recently by Cressy that the original settlement offer is "null and void" because the deadline for negotiations had passed and Winsted has since adopted its 2007-08 budget. Any move by Gilbert to offer reductions at this point would be in good faith.

The $40,000 portion of the Gilbert-Winchester deal took a step forward Tuesday night when Winchester school board members gave their support to a plan to move the Alternate High School — now housed in a retail-restaurant complex on Rowley Street — up to The Gilbert School on Williams Avenue. Shared Services Director Clint Montgomery, who has been tapped to become the new superintendent for Region 7 schools, presented the outline of a plan to house a 3 to 6 p.m. academic program at Gilbert, augmented by an offsite daytime vocational program. "Looking at the details, we’ve modeled at least a piece of this program on the STEPS program at Northwestern Regional 7," Montgomery said. "Our desire is to put together a program that is as strong or stronger than the program that currently exists up there."

Sedlack said the new program would still be a Winchester-run program, but that Gilbert would provide administrative assistance. "That would mean they would not have to keep their principal and we would provide the administrative service," he said."

At Tuesday night’s Winchester board meeting, former board chairman and Winsted Independent Party founder David LaPointe said he was pleased to see the board moving on the issue. "I have always advocated for the integration of the alternate school, either back to The Gilbert School or to the other program that resides at Region 7," he said. "I was very happy to see the superintendent say that he was going to work for integration with The Gilbert School. It’s been talked about on previous boards and it’s been motioned that we get rid of the alternate school. It is my hope that this board will put it out to a public hearing."

Winchester Superintendent Blaise Salerno said he was eager to get the program approved by the board so he can begin making definite plans for the Alternate High School program. "It would be helpful if the board could endorse this program so I could say to Dr. Cressy, ‘Yes, we are looking forward to moving into your building,’ and we could also send notification to the landlord on Rowley Street that we will be vacating the premises."

Any agreements between Winchester and Gilbert representatives will become more clear next Wednesday, June 20, when the Gilbert School Corporation will meet at 7 p.m. in the school’s media center.

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