School budget has support, but a tough battle ahead

Tuesday night’s turnout at Town Hall in support of the annual school budget was an impressive shot in the arm for Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno, who is proposing a 10-percent increase in spending for the 2010-11 school year, but it may not be enough to sway the entire town.

Tuesday night’s crowd included many teachers, school employees and town officials, but also a number of citizens who simply wanted to show their support. The message they brought was clear: It is time to provide enough money for the school system to survive and move forward.

If this message is going to make it to the town’s voting booths later this spring, Tuesday night’s meeting will have to be considered a small step in an arduous process that will involve heavy campaigning. Phone calls, fliers, community gatherings, organized attendance at future meetings and public statements will be required to get the job done.

This is not the first year that a group of parents and teachers has come out to demonstrate support for increased school funding, and it will certainly not be the first year that an organized opposition to that message offers its retort. Those in support of funding education should be prepared to discuss and debate the merits of an increase.

No one from the opposition spoke up Tuesday night, but that doesn’t mean the town will take a spending increase easily. Winsted is nowhere near a complete economic recovery, so pennies are being pinched. It will take a lot of effort to get residents to open their pocketbooks.

Clearly, there will be hurdles along the way. The superintendent’s proposed budget has not even been presented to the Board of Selectmen yet, meaning there is already a potential for several rounds of reductions before the entire town budget goes to a vote. If Salerno’s recommended budget makes it to Winsted’s annual town budget meeting unscathed, there will still be an opportunity for citizens to recommend cuts, followed by a chance to reject the whole package at the polls.

Yes, Tuesday night’s appeal from community members was impressive, but there is much more work to be done if they truly want a significant budget increase approved.

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