
READSBORO โ In five weeks, town residents will vote on whether to keep Readsboro Central School open or to begin sending their pre-K to 6th-grade students elsewhere.
The Readsboro school board scheduled a special election May 17 after receiving a petition last week to close the townโs lone school by June 30. The school currently educates 39 students spread across eight grade levels.
The petition was signed by 39 of the roughly 600 voters of the southwestern Vermont town โ including parents who question the quality of the primary education and services the school is providing. The town sits on the Massachusetts border, just west of Whitingham.
Some petitioners emphasize the fact that two teachers are currently handling three grade levels in one classroom, up from the norm of two grades per room at Readsboro Central. Others cite multiple staff positions that have not been filled, such as librarian and guidance counselor.
โThese are all issues a functioning school shouldn’t be dealing with,โ said signatory Christie Kaiser, whose son is in first grade in Readsboro. โI have two more kids that have to go through this school system.โ
Kaitlynn Boydโs son attended fifth grade at Readsboro Central until she decided to start homeschooling him last month, believing the school wasnโt preparing him well for middle school. Boyd, who submitted the petition at a school board meeting April 4, said sheโd raised her concerns with the school board and school administrators, but didnโt see any improvements.
โThings werenโt changing,โ according to Boyd, who said she did some substitute teaching at the school last year. โI want the kids to be learning stuff to move on to bigger grades.โ
The school board and the school administrators want to keep Readsboro Central open, and say itโs a safe, stable educational institution.
โOur students are happy, learning, and thriving here,โ Principal Robyn Oyer said in an email. โStability is exactly what students need.โ
The three members of the Readsboro school board โ Helyn Strom-Henriksen, Cindy Florence and James Irace โ didnโt respond to interview requests. Oyer said the board โasked me to respond, and they agree with the responses.โ
During a school board meeting Tuesday that focused on the petition, Oyer announced that Readsboro Central had just hired a new classroom teacher for the next school year, allowing the school to revert to two grades per classroom.
As for how the schoolโs graduates are faring, Oyer told VTDigger that many of them are on the honor rolls of their current schools.
โThe feedback we have received from the schools points to the fact that we are properly preparing students socially, emotionally and academically to move forward and do well in other area schools,โ she said in the email.
The principal acknowledged that, since 2019, the schoolโs math and early literacy programs have been part of an improvement plan overseen by the Vermont Agency of Education, which runs through this school year. Oyer said itโs not known whether the improvement plan will be lifted, since the state agency has not released recent test scores.
Tim and Annelise Stys, owners of the Readsboro General Store, oppose calls to close the school. The couple and four others who work at the store have children of varying ages who attend Readsboro Central, and Tim Stys said the students are all โdoing well.โ
Losing Readsboro Central School would put the town on a downward trajectory, he said, since the school could attract young families to move to town. His own family relocated to Readsboro from the New York City suburbs at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Tim Stys said a school closure would also have a detrimental effect on local businesses and lead to population loss.
โIf you look across the country, in a rural community, if you shut down a school, the trends tend to be that there’s a population exodus,โ he said. โAlso, trends tend to be that businesses close.โ
In a letter to the editor sent to a local weekly newspaper, the Styses and 17 other signatories said that sending local children to other school districts, if Readsboro Central closed, would also remove some stability and community support from their young lives.
The way to resolve any issues with the school is for stakeholders to have a conversation, Stys said, rather than the โnuclear optionโ of shutting down the school.
Some people who signed the petition admitted they donโt expect it to succeed in closing the school, but said the effort has shined a light on problems in the school district, including a need for greater transparency from officials.
That opinion is even shared by the person who wrote the petition.
โIn my personal opinion, it’s got no chance in hell of flying,โ Larry Hopkins, a former Readsboro school board member, said of the document he drafted and signed. โBut it’s going to make people aware of what’s going on over there and maybe make somebody a little self-conscious that people are watching us here and weโve got to start improving.โ
Hopkins declined to say who came to him with the idea for the petition. He said he hopes the discussions about whether to close Readsboro Central at the end of this school year would make residents take a hard look at whatโs in the best interest of their childrenโs education, โโas Hopkins wrote in a letter to the editor distributed to a couple of news outlets.
Hopkins described Readsboro as politically dormant but, because of the petition, the town now has more community activity than itโs had in 20 years. He said Readsboro school district budget meetings usually get only a handful of participants; the school board meeting on Tuesday brought dozens to the nighttime meeting.
Meanwhile, Boyd has removed herself from social media, citing the โbacklashโ she and her family have experienced since she submitted the petition.
โI get people are upset, but there’s no reason to call people names in a public setting. No reason to scream at somebody or swear,โ she said. โThe community should be able to discuss this issue in a calm, rational manner.โ
When asked, Boyd said she doesnโt regret the steps she took out of a desire to improve local education. โSomebody had to make a change. Somebody had to stand up,โ she said, adding the petition wasnโt her idea.
Agency of Education spokesperson Ted Fisher said the decision on closing the school is up to local voters and declined further comment on the petition.
The special election will be held by Australian ballot on May 17, with voting at the Readsboro school auditorium from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
A petition can get on the ballot if it meets certain requirements and is signed by at least 5% of town voters, of which there were 617 in Readsboro as of April 5, said Town Clerk Amber Holland. The 39 signatures on the school-closing petition exceeds the 5% minimum of 30.85 voters.
The vote will be preceded by a public meeting at the school auditorium at 6 p.m. on May 16, where school district leaders plan to answer questions raised by the petition and provide information about Vermontโs school-choice system for towns that donโt have their own schools.
