Superintendent Matthew D’Andrea (left): “It’s been a tough beginning of the year . . . and this was a mistake.”
Will Sennott

Superintendent Admits He Bypassed School Committee on Staff Raises

Matthew D’Andrea came under harsh criticism for overstepping bounds when he granted raises to three staffers without prior approval from the school committee.

Vineyard schools superintendent Dr. Matthew D’Andrea came under harsh criticism by the all-Island school committee this week for overstepping his bounds when he granted raises to three staff members over the summer without seeking prior approval.

Mr. D’Andrea opened a meeting of the committee Thursday by asking the board to retroactively approve the three merit raises which he put through in early July for English Language Learner director Leah Palmer, administrative assistant Ruda Stone and shared services coordinator Susan Conlan.

Combined, the salary increases total $15,000 in addition to a two per cent raise already factored into in the budget.

Mr. D’Andrea said to cover the raises he transferred funds from a small surplus in the health insurance budget, which became available after someone did not take the family health insurance plan.

The superintendent acknowledged that he had acted outside the bounds of his authority. He said he had not asked for permission from the committee prior to transferring the funds because it “slipped my mind.”

“It’s been a tough beginning of the year . . . I overlooked this,” he said. “I’m going to make a lot of mistakes, and this was a mistake. That’s it, this was a mistake.”

Committee members were openly surprised and chagrined.

“What happened was not a small snafu,” said committee member Kimberly Kirk. “This is big.”

While committee members said they agreed all three employees should be rewarded for their job performance, they leveled sharp criticism at Mr. D’Andrea for his poor handling of the matter.

“I am deeply distressed this didn’t come to the school committee before it happened. Really, deeply distressed,” said committee member Kate DeVane. “This is entirely unorthodox.”

Chairman Jeffrey (Skipper) Manter 3rd also took issue with the fact that Mr. D’Andrea took the funds from a one-time savings and put them toward a recurring expense.

“There should be sanctions,” Mr. Manter said of the superintendent. “He is the leader of our community and our school system. People should be held accountable. . . We have the whole fiscal year ahead of us, not knowing what is on the horizon.”

Assistant superintendent Richard Smith defended Mr. D’Andrea.

“Matt was supportive of these people, and that’s one big area of leadership,” he said. “In the end this is about merit, and I believe we can support his authority.”

In the end the committee voted 8-1 to approve the raises, but did not approve the transfer of funds.

It will now be up to Mr. D’Andrea to find a way to rebalance the budget, and return to the committee with a plan.

The original purpose of the meeting was to discuss and vote to certify the superintendent’s shared services budget for fiscal year 2021.

The $7 million budget represents a 4.29 per cent increase over last year. Salaries and fixed expenses account for 87 per cent of the budget.

Mr. D’Andrea is paid an annual salary of $180,000 which will increase to $185,000 in the next fiscal year.

Speaking about the budget, finance director Mark Friedman said the majority of line items are level funded with one notable exception. Spending on Project Headway, an integrated preschool program that serves children with disabilities, will see a 46 per cent increase due to rising enrollment and the need to increase staff hours. The Project Headway budget will go from $577,299 to $826,591.

Project Headway is an early childhood program for three and four year olds with disabilities. There are 42 children in the program, with 14 students housed in each of three locations: Grace Church in Vineyard Haven, the Oak Bluffs School and West Tisbury School. The program is free for children with disabilities; tuition is charged for nondisabled children who attend.

The $250,000 increase will go primarily toward paying staff, school business administrator Amy Tierney said later. She explained that at Grace Church, where the program expanded to a third location last year, the teacher’s salary was paid initially from a grant. Next year the salary will be included in the shared services budget.

Ms. Tierney also said the program is costly due to specialized transportation, specialized teachers and a small student-teacher ratio.

At the meeting last week, Ms. Devane praised the program and said it could be a model for universal pre-kindergarten in the public schools.

“It is a wonderful, wonderful program,” she said. “I think that looking towards universal pre-k and project headway expansion, we should try to house one in every school system on the Island.”

The budget was approved unanimously.

 

 

 

 

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/16/2019 - 12:51

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Lorraine Edgartown

Good resolution, you spent it, now find it. We all have to do that in our personal budgets. Out of control spending can sink fine programs. Also, I am concerned that we are pushing our schools to be more active in child care than in learning to be a productive citizen upon graduating the system. Remember, there is not "unending" budget dollars; each citizen is taxed to provide the funds for this school system. We are not concentrating enough on the secondary school system; our standing against other countries is not good. What good is it to feed and baby sit young children if they are not prepared at the end of their school life to go out and compete in the market place? We cannot run a complicated, modern IT civilization on what we are now doing. All the experts are agreed that something needs to be done and fixed in our secondary system. This is not pointed just at the island, but in our society in general. And, perhaps this comment is not appreciated by many.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/16/2019 - 14:24

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Gina Menemsha/NYC

Hmmm “it slipped my mind “ doesn’t really instill a vote of confidence yet the school board condones & votes unanimously wow

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/16/2019 - 21:01

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Tired West Tisbury

Seriously...will d'andrea ever face consequences. His disregard and disrespect for the authority of the school committee is unfathomable. If the track fiasco wasn't enough, emergency funds for a sports complex used by a few...then oh, we need major repairs to the high school...back to the voters. Not to mention the state of the Tisbury school....are you kidding me? His audacity is truly astounding. Thank you to the individuals who stand up to such arrogance.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 11/17/2019 - 12:40

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T Bone OB

Islanders love to tear people down. A lot of sad comments above. He admits a mistake, gets flogged. This island is bizarre.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 11/17/2019 - 12:52

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Bob Edgartown

This is a good example of why our school budget is one of the highest in the state. Easy to spend other peoples money. Only one person on the committee to vote no is another problem as well. I see it with most all the different committees across the island only one person will vote no. These are real tax dollars earned by hard working people and across the island they get spent like a kid in a candy store. And it reads like the 3 getting a raise do not even work directly with the children we are trying to teach. Way to much money being spent on administration.

Richard Barbieri OB

I wish someone would calculate the massive subsidy island residents receive from non-resident summer owners who never send a child to the schools but undoubtedly pay more than half the real estate taxes, since they own 64% of the homes, including no doubt the majority of the mansions. Island kids are essentially on a major scholarship just because of where they live, and I've never heard an off-islander begrudge it to them.

Real Preppie MV

Richard, I felt the same way as you when I first looked it this issue. I am not supporting this administrator for dodging protocols either. Here is the thing I learned that you might not know. You and I pay state income taxes (unlike the majority of our seasonal homeowners I might add). We pay sales tax year round as well. That money all goes to the state and the state then sends much of it back based on A formula. Most towns in mass with our relatively low incomes would fund a quarter of forty percent or more of their budget through money from the state. We get essentially none of that back. That formula looks at real estate values as much as incomes. Those subsidies you see are real, but you are missing the almost as large payouts we give to towns and cities with equally or worse wages and low property values. Keep on fighting waste here. I will too. But understand most of that second home tax money passes right on to the mainland. Also, seasonal home owners may have no kids in school, but most locals don’t either. Simple math. Count the kids and count the local residences. That’s just how society here and the rest of America works. We find other people’s kids because we had a free education available to us regardless of our parents’ finances. I have no kids but I pay my taxes funding education with honor.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 11/17/2019 - 20:43

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Peter West Tisbury

Dr. D'Andrea is not the only one culpable here. How did payroll administration process the increases without proper signatures? Finance Director? Business Manager? Payroll Manager? Dr. D'Andrea is falling on his sword, but there are others guilt of malfeasance. Who?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/18/2019 - 05:57

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God's Pal Martha's Vineyard

God Bless all the Educators of MV, support staff,administrative as well.Education,education, education.A mistake was made and admitted. Keep calm and carry on!Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/18/2019 - 13:35

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Mark Edgartown

Hope everyone remembers gross misuse of tax funds next time the towns float raising property taxes. Something is wrong when the average cost of a student on MV is the same as tuition for boarding school. Demand accountability.

Real Preppie MV

I am in no way supporting a government official spending money without authority. Agree with you there. However, this whole boarding school argument is weak. Boarding schools tend to house their teachers, and these teaching positions tend to be great career steps. Boarding schools have huge endowments that offset the cost of all student tuitions (at least the good ones do). They don’t defer maintenance for decades on end and cry when it catches up to them. You sure our students costs are unreasonable? Teachers here have to pay Manhattan rents to teach, nobody ever said “oh boy you taught on MV we must hire you” and much of our costs are tied to a previous generation that didn’t pay its share. Fake news written by Chilmark cheapskates and believed by nobody. So please stop trying to sell it. Not to mention the vast majority of kids here wouldn’t get in to a competitive boarding school, no fault of their own.

Diane Edgartown

I agree with most of what you said, but take exception with your last statement. I am a parent who experienced a boarding school environment for my children at one of the most exclusive and prestigious boarding schools and it was a productive experience. I am overly impressed with the education on Martha’s Vineyard. One has only to look at the high school to see the test scores and colleges, trade schools, etc that our children are attending to realize that we as an island and our teachers are doing a lot right. Let’s not put down the education on the island for the Inexcusable mistake by our Superintendent.

Richard Barbieri Correction - MV vs. Boarding School

MVHS Budget: $22M for 661 Students = $32K per student. Tabor Academy $41M for 537 students = $76K per student (Stated day tuition$47.2K, Boarding $64.5K)

Mark Edgartown

One data point does not make a trend. The average private school tuition in Massachusetts is $21,072 (https://www.privateschoolreview.com/tuition-stats/massachusetts). Of course you will need to add boarding for those schools that require it. Fundamentally, the fact that average private school tuition is 35% below the cost to educate on MV speaks to the mismanagement of the school budget. Demand accountability or face the repercussions of budget cuts for other services / infrastructure or tax increases.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/18/2019 - 18:06

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Frances Oak Bluffs

In the real world, which we are apparently still not a part of, this could lead to dismissal or resignations. This is clearly misuse of tax payers money. No accountability. Perhaps going forward there should be an additional layer of oversight on the school committee who seem to wants to rubber stamp this behavior. Shame on all of you.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/18/2019 - 18:45

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Carla A Cooper Edgartown

Always interested in how many commenters who throw stones at everyone, have ever run for or held public office? If not, why?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/19/2019 - 06:02

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Chris Vineyard Haven

At the heart of this for me is the example of a school leader not being truthful. How does something like this “slip ones mind”? Giving out a raise in this way circumvents policy and protocol, requires foresight and multiple actions, and involves other administrators. It doesn’t seem like a quick and simple “whoops” but an intentional act that got caught.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/19/2019 - 07:34

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Islander Too Tisbury

"A mistake was made."

Hmm, sounds familiar. Barn door open, horse escapes, "mistakes were made," time to move on!!

Pathetic. The 8-1 vote to let this pass is also a pathetic cave-in.

My ongoing impression is that D'Andrea has little concept of fiscal realities.

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