Jeanna Shepard

Schools and Lessons

A long overdue renovation of the regional high school got kicked further down the road this week by Oak Bluffs voters, who refused to fund a share of a study to figure out what should be done to a facility that is fast becoming a hazard to students and faculty.

The proposed $1.4 million project, to conduct a feasibility study and schematic design work, needed approval from all six Island towns to move forward. Voters in Edgartown, West Tisbury and Tisbury spent some time debating the issue, but the funding article in those three towns passed easily on town meeting floor. It remains on the warrants for the upcoming Chilmark and Aquinnah town meetings.

In their resounding defeat of the article, Oak Bluffs voters seemed to be protesting their assessed share of the costs, which are based on enrollment numbers — and there is some merit to the point. Other Island towns accrue benefits from the high school, including use of the Performing Arts Center, that go beyond the number of students from each town that attend.

The problem is that the formula is set by a regional school agreement that would need approval from the state legislature to amend.

Kris O'Brien was one of two members of the Oak Bluffs school committee who urged voters to send a message, arguing that their repeated efforts to protest the funding formula had fallen on deaf ears.

"A no vote tonight would give me leverage sitting in that meeting,"  she said.

If it was a harsh way to get attention, at least it was done at the beginning of what will be a long process ending in a much larger pill for voters to swallow. The whole point of the feasibility study is to explore options for upgrading the high school, which suffers from deferred maintenance and hasn't had a major renovation for decades. The final cost is sure to be high.

School costs account for some 43 per cent of municipal budgets, and certainly deserve scrutiny by voters who are concerned about ever-rising tax bills. But the axe seems to fall disproportionately on school buildings, which are as necessary in their way to the education of our youth as teachers and supplies.

There was some good news in Tisbury with the unanimous approval of a $400,000 study to start fresh on a renovation plan for the Tisbury School. A proposal last year for a new $47 million school supported in part by state funds was defeated at the ballot amid friction between the selectmen and the school committee over support for the plan.

This year, the selectmen and the school committee presented a united front on the new school study proposal, perhaps signaling a lesson has been learned about ironing out disagreements early in the process.

School administrators are hopeful that they can find other sources of funding for the high school study, which could mitigate the costs to individual towns and perhaps persuade Oak Bluffs to agree to participate.

But if concerns about the funding formula derailed a $1.4 million feasibility study, it is not hard to imagine how Oak Bluffs voters will react to a renovation plan, sure to run into the tens of millions of dollars. Taking a fresh look at the funding formula will be a long and arduous process, but perhaps it is time to start.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 04/11/2019 - 20:06

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JMT Vineyard Haven

Now more taxes we have to pay in Tisbury! Im moving to OB or get a small shack in Edgartown. Im sick of Tisbury!!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/12/2019 - 12:26

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Concerned Parent Edgartown

My kids have graduated from the MVRHS and college. That being said, ten years ago, I witnessed first hand at a parent conference the toxic conditions our our Island children and teachers at the high school are forced to work in on a daily basis. I saw the buckets in the hallways collecting rain from the roof. I saw the moldy ceiling tiles and windows. Several teachers showed me the rat traps they were forced to set on their own as well as pictures of rat feces found regularly on desks, books, and papers in their classrooms. Our superintendent and high school principals have let this go on for a minimum of ten years. Can they tell us how many students and/or teachers have become sick? I remember when my son's favorite math teacher had to leave his job of 25 years due to serious health issues directly related to that building. And I know of several other faculty and staff who have suffered with similar health issues while the school administrators and school committees debate a new track or artificial grass. It's time we demand that the health of our children and teaching professionals be their number one priority starting now.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/12/2019 - 19:23

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gina Menemsha/nyc

Good question.. I don't understand why basic school building maintenance is so neglected & put on such a low priority by the Superintendents to do list .. Tisbury school, the High School are a few examples.. There appears to be a building maintenance line item on every school budget so why ignore the minimum required to avoid such dire conditions mentioned in the above post?? I guess new is just better read more expensive ??

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 04/22/2019 - 09:53

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Susan Desmarais Oak Bluffs

It has come to my attention that the Oak Bluffs selectman will be voting a their meeting tomorrow(Tuesday) whether to approve a special town meeting about the expenditure of monies for a design for a new track, infield, press box and grandstands. If the motion doesn’t pass the voters will have no say in whether the measure goes through. It will automatically enacted.

Oak Bluffs School Committee representatives and town officials recently encouraged OB residents to oppose the MVRHS master plan feasibility because of the funding formula. However, this same funding formula applies to the track project. I am concerned that this inconsistency is going to undermine our argument at the negotiating table.

Additionally, given the overall conditions at MVRHS, including all the imminent expenditures need to keep the building operational and then renovated and/or rebuilt, we must have a special town meeting to weigh the best way to proceed. And OB voters deserve to be heard. How this moves forward impacts every child(and taxpayer) on Island. Our kids deserve forethought and fiscally responsible planning from their community.

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