Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Salem residents restore kindergarten money

Friday, February 6th, 2009

February 6, 2009
Fosters

SALEM, N.H. (AP) — Salem, N.H., residents have reversed their school Budget Committee and restored money for a public kindergarten program.

Residents voted overwhelmingly Thursday to put $1.6 million back in the proposed school budget.

The School Board included money for the program in the original budget, but the Budget Committee took it out, saying the state should pay because it was requiring public kindergarten.

The state is providing 75 percent of the cost of starting a program in all districts without kindergarten.

Salem’s final proposed budget goes before voters next month.

District considers other ways to fund Salem kindergarten

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

January 21, 2009
Salem Observer

With hopes of having funding restored for kindergarten pinned on a Feb. 5 deliberative session, school officials are examining what budget cuts could be made to ensure the program is in place come fall.

According to Superintendent Michael Delahanty, if the funding is not restored to the district’s operating budget, school officials would have to cut out other programs to make up for the $700,000 difference. While the state is offering $900,000 in aid to help start the $1.6 million program, the district will have to come up with the rest of the funding elsewhere.

Delahanty said he has been asked by the School Board to look into areas of the budget that can cut back without violating state requirements, including potentially ending bus service for high school students, not providing transportation of the high school band to away games, holding off on school repairs and imposing fees on student athletes.

According to Delahanty, eliminating busing for the town’s high school students could free up about $600,000 in the budget and taking the school band off away games could save a further $25,000.

“There is some talk among board members that it would be important to not fund something else and fund kindergarten instead,” Delahanty said. “There are programs that are affected if the board decided to have kindergarten even if the budget wasn’t restored.”

One of 11 communities affected statewide by the change in the state’s definition of an adequate education to include the kindergarten year, Salem is struggling to fund the program after a 5-4 vote by the Budget Committee last week removing the money set aside for kindergarten from the district’s operating budget.

According to Ed Murdough of the New Hampshire Department of Education, while state officials understand Salem’s situation, the district will still have to comply with the law. Unless the Legislature gives the district another extension – which is unlikely, according to Murdough – the law requires a kindergarten program in place by next year.

“We understand that everyone has got difficulties, particularly this year. School districts often don’t get the budget that they ask for, but that doesn’t relieve them of any of their requirements,” Murdough said. “They work with the resources they’re given and sometimes eliminate things that aren’t required.”

School Board member Bernard Campbell said the immediate challenge facing the district will be convincing voters before the Feb. 5 deliberative session that funding a kindergarten program is necessary and beneficial to the town. While the economic climate has made it tougher, Campbell is hopeful that the funding will be restored.

“How has the nation always sold the concept of a publicly funded education? The concept is that a better educated work force is more productive and it’s better for the community,” Campbell said. “It benefits the society in general.”

Salem starts kindergarten preregistration

Friday, January 16th, 2009

January 16, 2009
Eagle Tribune

SALEM — The school superintendent’s office has announced kindergarten preregistration for a fall 2009 kindergarten program. The school district is identifying kindergarten-age students for the 2009-2010 school year.

Parents of children who will be 5 by Sept. 30, are asked to notify the superintendent’s office. The school district seeks each student’s first and last name, date of birth, street and mailing address, parents’ or guardians’ names, home telephone number, and parent or guardian e-mail address.

This information is sought in advance of formal registration scheduled to begin on or about Monday, March 16. Parents or guardians who provide this information between Jan. 19 and Feb. 4, will receive registration information, including a formal registration form, parent questionnaire, health history form, and a home language survey, that can be completed in advance of formal registration.

Kindergarten Cut From Budget

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

January 13, 2009
Concord Monitor

Discontent over state-required kindergarten is spreading through the southern tier with a second town signaling that it may not comply with a law that requires school districts to offer public kindergarten this fall.

Last week, Salem’s budget committee stripped about $1.6 million from the school budget, money that had been included to provide half-day kindergarten to 300 children this September. Committee members also urged the district to join Hudson in a lawsuit that claims requiring kindergarten is unconstitutional.

Those working to bring kindergarten to Salem are undeterred. Superintendent Michael Delahanty said the school board and the budget committee have differing opinions. Board members will meet in the coming weeks to consider options for the deliberative session this month, but Delahanty says kindergarten is a priority.

“The board has remained steadfast in its belief that one, the provision of the law would likely prevent us from prevailing (in a lawsuit), and two, and probably more importantly, it’s the right thing to do,” he said. “While the rest of the country is talking about publicly funded programs for 3- and 4-year-olds, we’re talking about 5-year-olds.”

Since 1989, New Hampshire has been the only state that doesn’t offer public kindergarten to every child. Parents aren’t required to send their children to school until they are 6, but lawmakers have long encouraged districts to open kindergartens by offering grants for construction and other start-up costs.

Nearly two years ago, the Legislature included half-day kindergarten in its definition of an adequate education, something lawmakers were ordered to prepare under the terms of the most recent lawsuit over how New Hampshire pays for public schools.

One by one, the holdout towns, about a dozen in all, complied with the new law, until only Hudson remained. Some residents in other towns have fussed about the requirement and lauded Hudson for filing suit, but Salem is the only community that has taken a formal vote.

Other southern-tier school districts are having an easier time. Pelham plans to open a self-contained kindergarten in portable classrooms this fall, although the school district won’t provide transportation. In Windham, school board Chairwoman Barbara Coish says the school’s kindergarten plans are generally well accepted.

“Fortunately, we do not have a budget committee here,” she said. “We have not heard any rumbles about anyone who wants to stop us from going where we’re going.”

Nothing is certain until the votes are cast in March, but school district leaders say they’ll have little choice to comply with the law, even if their budgets undergo deep cuts.

“This is one of the mandated programs that it is going to be included in the default budget. . . . If someone decides to take money out, it really isn’t going to do any good,” said Roxanne Wilson, the assistant superintendent of schools in Pelham. “There’s a constitutional reason why some people are totally against this and I understand that. But I also understand that there’s a law in place.”

Delahanty said the Salem School Board will likely have three options at its deliberative session: accept the smaller budget and delay kindergarten, ask voters to restore the money; or accept the smaller budget and fund kindergarten by cutting other programs.

The board would have to find about $700,000 in other areas. The rest of the start-up money, about $900,000, would come from the state in the form of construction grants.

The state expects every town to comply with the kindergarten requirement this year, except for Hudson, which is exempt while its lawsuit is pending. The Department of Education has yet to say how, or if, a town would be punished for not complying, but Ed Murdough, who oversees school approval for the state, said budget reductions aren’t an excuse to sidestep the law.

“Districts frequently don’t get all the money in the budget that they want, but that doesn’t relieve them of their responsibilities,” he said. “It’s like saying we’re taking out the money for the third grade.”