Holcombe
Education Secretary Rebecca Holcombe answers a question Thursday at Putney Central School while Windham Southeast Supervisory Union Superintendent Ron Stahley looks on. Photo by Mike Faher/VTDigger

[P]UTNEY โ€” In the sometimes acrimonious debate over the future of Windham Southeast Supervisory Union, there are no easy solutions.

So when state Education Secretary Rebecca Holcombe visited the union’s Act 46 study committee last week, she faced pointed questions about consolidation, finances, school choice and school closures.

The most succinct inquiry may have come from Dummerston resident Ruth Barton: โ€œWhat happens if this thing don’t work? You got an answer for that, young lady?โ€

Holcombe declined to offer a specific road map for Windham Southeast. Instead, she said repeatedly that school officials all over the state have to take a โ€œhard lookโ€ at their structures and come up with a solution that fits their communities.

โ€œI don’t think there’s a perfect answer. I think there are better answers,โ€ Holcombe said. โ€œAnd I believe that you, locally, will work toward a better answer. And I hope you do, for the sake of the kids.โ€

Holcombe’s Agency of Education is responsible for implementing Act 46, the controversial 2015 law that pushes for consolidation of school districts in order to save money and equalize student opportunity.

At Putney Central School on Thursday, Holcombe reiterated the reasons she believes such reforms are necessary: There is a growing tax burden on an aging population, she said, while school enrollment continues to decline statewide.

โ€œWe’re down another 1,200 kids this year,โ€ she said. โ€œWe thought we’d hit bottom, but we’re still declining.โ€

But small schools are a way of life in much of Vermont, and Holcombe acknowledged seeing a lot of pushback since Act 46 became law. She compared the reaction to the โ€œfive stages of grieving.โ€

โ€œThere’s a lot of anger, and I get that,โ€ she said. โ€œBecause we do care deeply about our schools. We’re passionate about educating our kids. And our schools have deep connections to our community.โ€

The connections between small schools and their communities has been one theme in Windham Southeast, which is one of the state’s largest supervisory unions in terms of enrollment. The Brattleboro-based union also includes Dummerston, Guilford, Putney and Vernon.

Windham Southeast’s study committee has taken a close look at the Act 46 โ€œacceleratedโ€ merger option, which would involve all of the union’s districts uniting under one board. That option offers the biggest tax breaks but also requires a vote before July 1.

While the committee still is examining an accelerated merger, many members have said that schedule does not appear realistic at this point.

At Thursday’s meeting, Holcombe tried to offer reassurance that mergers and shared services can work. A clear example, she said, is the Legislature’s consolidation of special education administration at the supervisory union level โ€” a change that happened prior to Act 46.

โ€œWe’re seeing substantially better delivery of (special education) services and much more strategic use of high-value but scarce resources,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd we’re also seeing substantial savings.โ€

It’s early to judge the impact of mergers happening under Act 46. But Holcombe said themes now emerging across Vermont include additional extracurricular learning opportunities; stronger student support systems; enhanced professional development; and better retention of teachers and administrative staff.

She stressed, though, that such results โ€” and the methods used to get them โ€” must be the product of local deliberations. โ€œThe best solutions are the ones that you create locally by rolling up your sleeves, coming together as a community and talking about what you care about,โ€ Holcombe said.

In Windham Southeast, such discussions have been difficult, and Holcombe took many questions from the study committee and from the audience.

โ€ข The most prominent issue may be Vernon’s unusual school choice setup: Starting in seventh grade, the district’s students can be tuitioned to schools other than Brattleboro, and some cross the state line to attend Pioneer Valley Regional School in Massachusetts.

Vernon officials say they have gotten conflicting advice from the state about whether their version of school choice could continue after a merger with districts that don’t offer such choice. The answer now seems to be no, and that spells trouble for an accelerated merger.

โ€œThat’s a choice that we want to keep, because we understand that that’s very important to the parent and the child,โ€ said Deb Hebert, a Vernon School Board member.

Holcombe urged โ€œbig pictureโ€ thinking about long-term goals for local students, but she also acknowledged that difficult choices loom for Vernon residents. โ€œWhat Vernon may have to decide is that it doesn’t want to be a part of this union,โ€ she said.

โ€ข Worries about eventual school closures also have dogged Windham Southeast consolidation talks.

Holcombe said officials can set up a procedure for deciding on school closures and then write it into the articles of agreement for a merger. But she also said Act 46 is not designed to shut school buildings.

โ€œGiven the way the tax rates are going and the demographics are going, we think that small schools have a better chance to stay open and retain that connection to the community within bigger districts,โ€ she said.

โ€ข There is conflict in Windham Southeast about continuing to pursue an accelerated merger. Some argue that voters deserve to have a say on the matter, while others think the committee has not spent enough time looking at other options that allow for later votes.

Holcombe acknowledged that state officials didn’t anticipate the โ€œmagnitude of interestโ€ they’ve seen for accelerated mergers. She also stressed that, โ€œin many places, it’s not the right choice.โ€

But Holcombe seemed to support the idea of an accelerated merger vote in Windham Southeast. โ€œIf voters aren’t going to support unification, they’re going to let you know at the polls,โ€ she said.

โ€ข Locals also have clashed over the importance of the financial incentives attached to Act 46 school mergers. Rep. Mike Mrowicki, D-Putney, said such incentives cannot be the top priority.

โ€œThe reality is, in the Legislature, this bill is all about saving money and lowering property taxes,โ€ Mrowicki said at Thursday’s meeting. โ€œWhen we amended this bill this year, we were two hours into the debate before the word ‘children’ was used. What we need is the reminder that this is not just about money.โ€

Holcombe supplied that reminder, saying the discussion must focus on educational goals. โ€œThe (mergers) that start by focusing on tax incentives tend to go off the rails pretty quickly,โ€ she said.

But she also reminded the study committee and the crowd that there are limits to how much locals can shape the merger process. The idea of โ€œself-studyโ€ has taken hold in Windham Southeast, and some believe the supervisory union can make the case that little or no change is needed under Act 46.

โ€œYou know of our success,โ€ Dummerston School Board member Dan Normandeau told Holcombe. โ€œWe have been looked to over the years as a model SU in the state.โ€

Holcombe said there is room in Act 46 for a variety of school governance structures. But she argued that the goal is โ€œgetting to a place that is as unified as you can be,โ€ and she said she sees room for improvement and greater efficiency in Windham Southeast.

โ€œI think what you have is tremendous opportunity to unify here,โ€ Holcombe said.

Twitter: @MikeFaher. Mike Faher reports on health care and Vermont Yankee for VTDigger. Faher has worked as a daily newspaper journalist for 19 years, most recently as lead reporter at the Brattleboro...

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