Sign In  |   Join  |   Forgot Password
in
Light Rain, 35° F      Jobs   Classifieds   Homes   Wheels   Help
What's your 06?

Schools Lose $1 Million

Posted by Stephen Chupaska on May 15 2008, 03:12 PM

 Board of Education member Anthony Nolan shook his head silently after the school board’s meeting last week.
“I think we can do better,” he said. “As adults, I think we can do better.” Nolan, a Democrat, was the lone dissenting vote in the board’s 5-1 decision to cut $1.05 million from its 2008-2009 budget.
“This was a painful thing to do,” said Alvin Kinsall, the school board president. “But we did what we had to do.”
The school board’s finance committee did the grunt work on the cuts that were mandated by the City Council as part of a planned $2 million reduction in the overall municipal budget.
Or, as board member Susan Connolly put it, the board “had to do with a scalpel what the City Council did with an ax.”
According to school board Vice President Elaine Maynard-Adams, the cuts were targeted to inflict the least amount of damage on academics; everything else, from after-school activities to athletics, was “fair game.”
Kinsall noted that the focus for the public schools “has to be on academic achievement.”
Only one teacher position was cut, an elementary school special education teacher.
The media specialist at Bennie Dover Jackson Middle School was also cut.
In all, the board cut $56,047 in school activities, with the New London High School track and cross-country program as the most significant elimination.
Girls’ track captain Rachael Gavin, a sophomore from Old Lyme who attends the Science and Technology Magnet School of Southeastern Connecticut, said track and field “helps students focus” on their schoolwork.
Also, the strength and conditioning coach was cut down to just one season of work, and the boys’ and girls’ swimming teams were combined under one coach.
The middle school also saw the elimination of its track-and-field team, though the boys’ and girls’ cross-country team will be combined. Also gone are the middle school wrestling and softball teams.
The board also cut the NLHS literary magazine Driftwords, which has not been published for two years, and deleted the school’s dormant online newspaper.
Elizabeth Garcia-Gonzalez, the board secretary, did not arrive until 10 minutes before the close of the meeting and did not vote on the budget cuts.
She reportedly had car trouble.

Band Triumphs
NLHS band director Scott Morgan informed the board that the Whaler concert band took home two first-place trophies from a competition in Hershey, Pa.
“Band is about participation first,” Morgan said. “But it’s also nice to win awards.”
Morgan also reported that the numbers of students in band in the past two years has been fluctuating between 30 and 40 members, down from 80 a few years ago.
Morgan attributed the reduction to cuts in the number of music teachers in the public schools.

Final Bell
Before the meeting, the school board honored teachers who are retiring this June with a cake.
The retirees are: Kathleen Austin, Gail Arzamarski, Francis DePeter, Linda Jennings, Richard Lambert, Katherine Levanti, Marty Lindblad, Deborah Palmer, Linda Palumbo, William Pukas, and Linda Rambow.

Comments

 

Clifton HArris said:

The Schools did not lose a MILLION DOLLARS. Get the facts straight. The New London Public School Budget is getting an increase of almost a Million Dollars. No wonder the schools are performing so poorly the Board of Education cannot even get this simple concept down. How on earth can they educate our children? Wait they have proven they cannot educate our children. Time for big change at the Board of Education. No one currently on the Board should be re-elected. They are too stupid to lead our school system to anything successful. How can almost a million dollar increase equate to "schools lose $1 million". Just foolisness. Kinsall should go back to being a non-productive Republican.

July 4, 2008 2:23 AM
Staff writer Stephen Chupaska's work appears every week in print in The New London Times and The Waterford Times. He also blogs about local music for theday.com. He can be reached at 860-440-1021 or by email at s.chupaska@theday.com. Prior to joining The Times Weekly Newspaper Group Steve was a contributor to San Diego CityBeat in San Diego, California. Steve graduated from St. Bernard High School in 1994. He has a B.A. in English from Keene State College and attended San Diego State University where he was assistant arts editor and a sportswriter for The Daily Aztec. Steve resides in New London and does not care to leave it much.

© Copyright 2008-2009 The Day Publishing Co.
About zip06 |User Agreement |Privacy Policy |Contact |Help |Advertise