On July 26, 2017

Rochester School faces narrowing options, deadline approaching

By Evan Johnson

ROCHESTER—The 17 high school students at Rochester School will be able to attend the high school of their choice next year, significantly changing the composition of secondary education in the town.

The latest development in Rochester’s search to provide quality education for its young people and comply with state education mandates follows the failure of a proposed merger with Bethel and Royalton last month.

At a community meeting on July 13, the School Board presented the public with two options. Despite a school size about equal with most high school soccer teams, Rochester High School can still operate for the coming school year, a move that would require replacing four faculty members that had resigned. That hiring process has been put on hold in the hopes that families would choose the second option: to tuition their students to area high schools. The supervisory union will not be able to guarantee transportation for students traveling outside of Rochester.

“The school board has decided to offer free tuition to anybody in the high school to go to surrounding schools for 2017-2018,” said school board chair Jeff Sherwin, “rather than trying to find staff for one year to replace the people that have left.”

The future of the Rochester school has been the subject of discussion for the past months. In March, before town meeting day, the School Board received a petition calling for the shutdown of the middle and high school and the restoration of local control to the school. The board, after consulting with an attorney, did not put the motion before voters, saying they found the petition to be too vague.

Now, Sherwin said, there’s no time to discuss closing the schools completely as the deadline for an approved unification plan approaches. “The school year would start before we could warn the vote,” he said.

Some Rochester residents have cried foul, alleging that the board engaged in procedural improprieties. The Vermont Secretary of State’s office, when asked, said it was not investigating the matter.

Next year’s plan for the high school does not bring Rochester into compliance with Act 46, the state’s education mandate. The Rochester school district still needs to submit a plan by August to the Agency of Education, have it approved, and then warn it for a town vote. According to Act 46, smaller school districts must merge or join with larger ones by 2018. It’s unknown how many students will remain and how many will leave. Families will have to decide before the school year starts in August.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Killington 1970s skiers reunite at Charity’s 1887 Saloon to celebrate lifelong memories, adventures, and cherished friendships at Charity’s 1887 Saloon

October 17, 2024
By Victoria Gaither Saturday, Oct. 19, at 2 p.m.—KILLINGTON— Charity’s 1887 Saloon will be the scene for the Killington 1970s Reunion social event. The event came about after organizer Jack Oliver attended his 50th high school reunion. Oliver explained, “I had never attended one before and was always reluctant to do so but enjoyed it.”…

Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports seeks winter volunteer-instructors

October 17, 2024
Instructor training begins in November for skiing, snowboarding and winter sports KILLINGTON — Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports, the largest year-round disabled sports nonprofit organization in Vermont to offer daily, year-round sports and recreation for people with disabilities, is looking for energetic winter volunteer-instructors who have a dedicated passion for sports and who want to…

Enter to win the 2025 Vermont Writers’ Prize

October 17, 2024
Annual prizes for poetry and prose celebrating Vermont are awarded by Green Mountain Power and Vermont Magazine. Winning entries in each category are published in the summer issue of Vermont Magazine and receive $1,250. The deadline to enter is Jan. 1, 2025. Entries are open for the 2025 Vermont Writers’ Prize, awarded each year in…

There’s no place like the stage: twists, turns, and punchlines from Vermont to Hollywood and back again – Nick Wevursky explains

October 17, 2024
Nick Wevursky, a standup comic in Rutland County, has always had a talent for finding humor in everyday life. Growing up across small towns in the Green Mountain state, he balanced activities like tending horse farms and snowboarding at Stratton, where his sister was a pro. Even as a kid, he loved making people laugh,…