Panel: Cut districts to 80 by July '08
By KEITH EDWARDS
Staff Writer
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel Tuesday, April 10, 2007

AUGUSTA -- A panel of legislators formed with a goal of slashing school administration costs without directly impacting students wants Maine's 290 districts reduced to 80 by July 1, 2008.

Subcommittee members reporting their recommendations to the full Appropriations Committee on Monday said the plan would create districts of at least 2,500 students each and save $36.5 million in 2009 -- savings they expect to be ongoing.

"We need to find predictable and sustainable funding for education in this state in order for our kids to get the education they deserve," said Sen. Peggy Rotundo, D-Lewiston, chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee.

The savings are projected to come from administrative savings, special education, building and facilities maintenance, and transportation.

Unlike Gov. John Baldacci's controversial school district consolidation proposal, the subcommittee's plan does not choose which existing school units would be grouped into larger, consolidated districts.

Instead, the plan directs the Department of Education and Commissioner Susan Gendron to present by June 30 one or more models on which to base grouping schools into districts.

The proposed new districts would be formed on factors including physical proximity to each other, demographics and population density, and maximizing existing collaborations.

Subcommittee leader Rep. Emily Cain, D-Orono, said officials from districts already working together, or that would like to consolidate with each other, should let the Department of Education know, as they would be more likely to end up together in the same district.

After the Department of Education releases its recommended potential new school districts, temporary "realignment steering committees" would be formed to get on with the work of actually creating the new districts.

The steering committees would be made up of local community members, although the plan presented Monday did not specify how members would be selected.

Subcommittee member Rep. Sawin Millett Jr., R-Waterford, said the plan was intentionally left without some details, to provide flexibility for the Department of Education and local residents to determine what would work best in each part of the state.

"It is a design model that anyone who wishes to find fault with has plenty of places to go," Millett said. "We think we've made it as workable as possible. But it works best if people roll up their sleeves and get to work as soon as we adopt it."

The proposal is now in the hands of the full Appropriations Committee. It also needs approval from the full Legislature and Baldacci.

Exceptions would be made to the 2,500 student minimum in, for example, rural districts where it might not be practical to create a district that large.

Cain noted school systems that already have more than 2,500 students would still be required to participate in the consolidation process and join with other school systems to seek savings through increased efficiency.

"There will be very few left standing alone," she said.

Part of the subcommittee plan that hasn't been finalized yet might give every voter in the state a chance to vote on their local school budget. The committee is hoping to create a statewide school budget format and force the new regional school districts to get their budgets approved by their citizens in a clearly-written ballot.

Appropriations Committee member Rep. Patrick Flood, R-Winthrop, said he had some concerns about the plan's aggressive timeline but felt it's a good plan overall.

"I don't believe we're doing anything here to damage the education our kids receive," he said.

Keith Edwards -- 621-5647

kedwards@centralmaine.com


Reader comments

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George Crawford of Harrington, ME
Apr 11, 2007 5:19 AM
The new Appropriations Committee plan has a lot of the aspects of the Governor's plan and is still pushing the process. By having four months for local school governace to decide to merge and "realign" (I hate the politically correct term and it should be called consolidation) is a rushed process. School Boards will be working on this full time and the process will will be moderated by Department of Education Facilitators mosted hired by the DOE.
Local control is also left out of the process. Parental Advosory Councils are being brought back from the Governor's plan. These are ADVISORY and can only recommended decisions and not require them. Towns with school committees in School Unions are losing the most under this proposal. People in towns are losing direct control over their schools that they have had for generations to a larger structure. Many smaller towns will have little or no voice in the matter because of the change in governance.
The state is looking to save money and already has cut General Purpose Aid to Edcuation to cities and towns next year.
Another part of this proposals is to force school districts to live in the funding limits of the Essential Programs and Services model. The EPS model is based on an idealized school district with student and teacher ratios, ratios of 1 Librarians to 500 students, and other ratios that just about every school in Maine exceeds. Almost all school districts exceed their EPS funding level and the assumptions used in in are unrealistic. It has hurt rural schools and urban schools. The EPS model needs to be reexamined. There is a bill before the Legislature to do an independent examination of EPS that I hope passes.
Schools Districts under the Appropraiations Proposal would all become SADs. School Unions and Consolidated School Districts would become abolished. Local control is being lost to the creation of buereacracy that Mainers have less of a voice in. Keep local control and local goverance! report abuse
tiredtxpayer of Winthrop, ME
Apr 10, 2007 9:52 PM
It did say the islands and such wouldn't be forced into consolidation. But I am also interested in the idea that they would save all this money "The savings are projected to come from administrative savings, special education, building and facilities maintenance, and transportation." How will it save any money from transportation? The same amount of kids will still need buses to and from school. Anyone have any answers to this?report abuse
Skeptic of Dedham, ME
Apr 10, 2007 4:59 PM
The scariest part of this whole charade is that Susan Gendrona and Mr 38% are at the helm. Ugh. I still firmly believe that any change must go to the voters and not our dysfunctional legislature. I do not trust many of our elected officials at this point. A definite "No Confidence" vote.report abuse
Mohron of Gorham, ME
Apr 10, 2007 1:00 PM
Ok (and this is why I post as "Mohron") I've re-read and do understand the part about making exceptions for practicality puposes. What this leads us to is the number 80. If we exception 30 districts to less than 2500, then the number must get made up by encouraging other towns to get larger than that number.

Apparently, it will be up to Ms. Gendron and her minions to map out the rest of the story. I can only imagine the hue and cry of the least, when these "steering committees" form to do the real work.

Can anyone spell "lawsuit"? Taxation without represention is what started this great nation.report abuse

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