Enrollments will set budgets for 2012

FALLS VILLAGE — Enrollment figures for the Region One school district’s seven schools, as of Oct. 1, were released this week by the superintendent’s office.The student population, as reported on Oct. 1, is used to determine how much each town will be charged in tuition in the next budget year. So the figures reported this month will determine the regional education budget for fiscal 2012, which begins next year on July 1.Representatives on the Region One Board of Education also have “weighted” votes. The towns with the most students in the school district have the most heavily weighted votes.This year, as of Oct. 1, the Lee H. Kellogg School in Falls Village has 86 students. Cornwall Consolidated has 106; Kent Center School has 278; North Canaan enrolled 311 students. Salisbury Central School also has 311 students; and Sharon Center School has 191.Housatonic Valley Regional High School (HVRHS) has a total of 470 students from the six towns.This week, Region One Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain also announced federal Title I grants, for improving basic programs, to the seven regional schools. They are $15,175 for Kellogg; $764 for Cornwall Consolidated; $10, 350 for Kent Center; North Canaan receives $22,564; Salisbury Central will get $58,381; Sharon Center, $28,288; and HVRHS will get $43,598.Chamberlain said that the formulas used by the federal government to determine these grants are mysterious, even to veteran administrators. “They are based on census data, which is corrected every 10 years.” “But we have never been able to get the formula” the federal government uses to establish which school gets what.Title I grants are typically used for remedial help for small groups and individual students, as part of the federal No Child Left Behind act of 2001. Title II grants, for improving teacher quality, went to Kellogg ($2,281); Cornwall ($6,726); Kent ($18,325); North Canaan ($11,633); Salisbury ($26,631); Sharon ($9,230); and the high school ($14,430).Kent and North Canaan also received Title III grants (English language instruction for students with limited proficiency, and immigrant students) of $10,431 and $1,469 respectively.

Latest News

Walking among the ‘Herd’

Michel Negreponte

Submitted

‘Herd,” a film by Michel Negreponte, will be screening at The Norfolk Library on Saturday April 13 at 5:30 p.m. This mesmerizing documentary investigates the relationship between humans and other sentient beings by following a herd of shaggy Belted Galloway cattle through a little more than a year of their lives.

Negreponte and his wife have had a second home just outside of Livingston Manor, in the southwest corner of the Catskills, for many years. Like many during the pandemic, they moved up north for what they thought would be a few weeks, and now seldom return to their city dwelling. Adjacent to their property is a privately owned farm and when a herd of Belted Galloways arrived, Negreponte realized the subject of his new film.

Keep ReadingShow less
Fresh perspectives in Norfolk Library film series

Diego Ongaro

Photo submitted

Parisian filmmaker Diego Ongaro, who has been living in Norfolk for the past 20 years, has composed a collection of films for viewing based on his unique taste.

The series, titled “Visions of Europe,” began over the winter at the Norfolk Library with a focus on under-the-radar contemporary films with unique voices, highlighting the creative richness and vitality of the European film landscape.

Keep ReadingShow less
New ground to cover and plenty of groundcover

Young native pachysandra from Lindera Nursery shows a variety of color and delicate flowers.

Dee Salomon

It is still too early to sow seeds outside, except for peas, both the edible and floral kind. I have transplanted a few shrubs and a dogwood tree that was root pruned in the fall. I have also moved a few hellebores that seeded in the near woods back into their garden beds near the house; they seem not to mind the few frosty mornings we have recently had. In years past I would have been cleaning up the plant beds but I now know better and will wait at least six weeks more. I have instead found the most perfect time-consuming activity for early spring: teasing out Vinca minor, also known as periwinkle and myrtle, from the ground in places it was never meant to be.

Planting the stuff in the first place is my biggest ever garden regret. It was recommended to me as a groundcover that would hold together a hillside, bare after a removal of invasive plants save for a dozen or so trees. And here we are, twelve years later; there is vinca everywhere. It blankets the hillside and has crept over the top into the woods. It has made its way left and right. I am convinced that vinca is the plastic of the plant world. The stuff won’t die. (The name Vinca comes from the Latin ‘vincire’ which means ‘to bind or fetter.’) Last year I pulled a bunch and left it strewn on the roof of the root cellar for 6 months and the leaves were still green.

Keep ReadingShow less