Superintendent search committee gets to work

WINSTED — The Winchester Board of Education has formed a new subcommittee that will develop and spearhead the process for fielding a list of potential candidates interested in serving as the district’s superintendent of schools.

The contract for current Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno expires on July 31, 2011. Salerno has served as the district’s top educator for the last four years.

The superintendent told The Journal Tuesday that at this time, he had not asked the board for an extension on his contract and has no intention of serving beyond the end of his contract date.

“The only decision would be is if I’d go earlier than that,� Salerno said, adding that while he is “committed to this district,� he will be 71 years old next year and is ready to retire for good.

The board of education unanimously voted to create the superintendent search committee at its May 11 meeting. The committee consists of school board members Susan Hoffnagle and Christine Royer and Board of Education Chairman Kathleen O’Brien.

Hoffnagle — who had requested that the superintendent search committee item be placed on last week’s meeting agenda — said the board will be required to conduct this year’s superintendent search on its own because the district does not have the funding available to hire the assistance of an outside agency as in years past.

Four years ago, the school board had enlisted the help of the Connecticut Association of Boards of Education (CABE) Search Service to generate a list of candidates from which it selected Salerno as its final choice to fill the post.

But while CABE’s service is less expansive than a private search firm, it still requires a fee that the cash-strapped district does not have available in its budget.

“I thought it worked well,� school board member Dr. Richard Dutton said of CABE. “But we pay for that, and we cannot do that this time.�

Hoffnagle said while it is too early to post the position on job search sites, it is imperative that the board get an early start on developing a search process, as well as generating a list of “what we want for a superintendent.�

“This is one of our most important activities, and I’d like to see us do it right,� Hoffnagle said.

After the vote to create the committee, Salerno told members he would be willing to serve as “an advisor� if the board does not “perceive it as a conflict of interest.�

In addition to creating the superintendent search committee, school board members also discussed the need to set a special meeting sometime this month to conduct an annual review of the performance of the superintendent of schools.

The review must be completed by May 31 according to board and contractual regulations, O’Brien said at the May 11 meeting.

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