Selectmen not ready to act on school recomm-endation

WINSTED — Three weeks after a Board of Education-hired consultant recommended the town build a new school in town or completely renovate two others from the inside out, the Winchester Board of Selectmen agreed Monday night, March 19, that it was too early to even consider acting on the proposal.On Feb. 28, the consultant, former New Fairfield Superintendent Joseph Castagnola, presented his final report after being hired in December to help the school board decide whether to close a school building, and if so, which one.The report indicated that all of Winsted’s schools are in dire need of repairs and that the best option would be to tear down the current Pearson Middle School on Wetmore Avenue and build a new facility to house pre-kindergarten through the sixth-grade.“The Board of Education and Board of Selectmen should take advantage of the reimbursement rate from the State of Connecticut; the economics of bonding given present interest rates; and a labor market ripe for bidding,” Castagnola wrote in his report. “A new school building for the town’s students in grades pre-kindergarten through grade six will provide the spaces they deserve.”Castagnola recommended that a new school building committee be assembled for the purpose of deciding which course the town should take. He said that, if the town decides not to build a new school building, it should “renovate as new” both Batcheller and Hinsdale elementary schools to house the pre-kindergarten through eighth-grade system and close Pearson.Selectmen discuss issueMembers of last year’s board-appointed School Building Committee have complained they were not consulted during Castagnola’s review of the school system, and Mayor Maryann Welcome was the first to acknowledge a lack of agreement on the issue.“At this point, I’m not so sure it would be a good idea to make a motion,” she said, suggesting board members simply have a discussion about how to proceed.Selectman Candy Perez was also hesitant to offer any support for the new proposal.“At this point I don’t think we have enough information,” she said. “We haven’t created what the actual charge would be for the school building committee. There are a lot of interested parties that we should bring together first.”“I have to agree with Selectman Perez,” Welcome said. “I don’t think we can even put a committee together. I don’t know who would be on the committee. I‘m going to need more information from the public to find out what it is exactly that they want.”Selectman Jim DiVita noted that last year’s committee never officially disbanded and wondered if disbanding that board first would be necessary before starting a new one. Also, former selectman and School Building Committee member Art Melycher made it clear that he was not in favor of Castagnola’s recommendations and announced that he wanted to be appointed to the new committee if and when it is formed. Melycher said he believes a new school building will cost $50 million to build.Selectman Ken Fracasso made it clear he is also not in favor of building a new school in town and asked why the issue had been included on the meeting agenda for the evening.“I think that’s going to be a huge problem moving forward,” he said. “There’s no way we’re going to bond $50 million in the financial atmosphere we’re in now. It’s ludicrous to think that’s even a possibility.”Welcome said that, in principle, she supports the idea of moving forward with some kind of construction or renovation project for the schools.“I’ve made no secret that the schools are in such dire shape, that to close three and open one new one, would be an improvement,” she said.She added that she remains hopeful that the town of Winchester could secure state and/or federal resources to solve infrastructure problems in the schools. But selectmen generally agreed that any discussion of an actual plan would be premature. Republican Glenn Albanesius offered a sign of bipartisanship when he said he agrees with Perez and others in the majority that more information is needed.“I agree with Candy that we’ve kind of got to wait a little bit,” he said. “We have a number of different battleships aimed at each other. If this board is to act, it should act slowly.”The board agreed to direct Town Manager Dale Martin to put together a preliminary group of community members to study the options and to hold a meeting at a future date to be announced.

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