Regional school board tidies up loose ends

FALLS VILLAGE — The Region One Board of Education wrapped up its 2008-09 school year calendar by approving three new faculty and guidance hires and saying goodbye and thank you to retiring Pupil Services Director Theresa Terry.

Terry thanked the board members for their support during her tenure, and noted that the new director and new supervisor of Pupil Services, Carl Gross and Martha Schwaikert, will be meeting with parents the evening of Wednesday, June 3, for an informal get-together.

Region One Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain reported the hiring of a Title I teacher whose duties will be split between Lee H. Kellogg School in Falls Village and Cornwall Consolidated School; and a new guidance counselor and part-time German teacher at the high school.

The search is still underway for a Title I position at the high school.

Board member Phil Hart, from Cornwall, reported that three bids were received for the high school gym floor replacement job. He said the low bid did not meet the specifications, and the Building Committee was reviewing the other two bids.

Hart also said the Long-range Planning Committee had “completed a substantial chunk� of the 2009-14 plan. This is an ambitious document that addresses four long-term goals: To identify, teach and assess 21st-century skills; to challenge and engage all learners; to provide better alignment and measurement of all major systems, from curriculum to the physical plant; and to ensure that resource allocation decisions are made prudently and in accordance with the values of the district.

Chamberlain said that once the report is ready she would like the committee to present it to the board in detail.

Housatonic Valley Regional High School Principal Gretchen Foster congratulated the Envirothon team, which beat out 34 other squads from around the state last week to qualify for a trip to the national competition in Asheville, N.C., Aug. 1 to 9.

She also praised the students for the success of the “Mr. Housatonic� contest. “For me to just sit back and watch everybody laugh was great,� she said.

And she had laudatory remarks for the faculty. “I can’t thank them enough,� she said. “We have so many initiatives going on in school.

“They’re exhausted, and they’ve earned it.�

The board dealt quickly with a grab-bag of odds and ends, approving field trips and declining to take a position on the disposal of sewing machines. (Of seven machines, one is going to a teacher at Cornwall and the other six to Tri Arts in Sharon. The school is keeping four. This is a result of cutting the Domestic Science program.)

Terry also asked for approval to apply for federal funds under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Board Chairman Judge Manning said formal approval wasn’t necessary. “I think the board is in favor of grants,� he stated, and smiled around the room.

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