On December 7, 2022

WSCU to be named Mountain Views School District

By Curt Peterson

The Winsor Central Supervisory Union Board unanimously adopted Mountain Views School District as the new name for the consolidated seven-town district formed under Act 46 on Monday, Dec. 5.

The new name will become effective July 1, 2023.

Woodstock High students Aiden Keough-Vella and Owen Courcey, who served on the WCSU configuration and enrollment growth working group, presented the new name for the school district to the board. The new name is intended to represent and symbolize all seven sending towns, they said, pointing out that mountains are integral to the aesthetics and recreation opportunities in each sending town.

Courcey and Keough-Vella quoted an anonymous community member: “So many of our schools ‘head to the mountains’ for location-based learning and important milestones. Graduates of Prosper Valley walk to the middle school at the end of the year. WES kids take field trips up Mount Peg. Barnard kids strap on snowshoes and head out in the snow. Elementary kids learn to ski together at Suicide Six/Saskadena. Killington kids … well, they live on a mountain.”

The winning name was suggested by Killington Elementary School students.

There were originally nine suggested names gathered from a public survey and solicitations among the individual elementary and middle/high school students. Three were sent to the board on Nov. 7, including, Mountain Views School District, Calvin Coolidge School District, Riverbank School District. Courcey and Keough-Vella had made that presentation as well.

Renaming the district is also meant to distinguish the district among similarly named districts in Central Vermont. The survey had indicated public agreement that “Windsor Central Unified Union School District” was sterile, clumsy and unremarkable.
The committee publicized the three proposed names, inviting public comment. The intent, committee chair Keri Bristow said, was to involve as many members of the community as possible in the decision. The final choice is felt to be socially and politically neutral, Bristow said, and won’t offend or discount any group or town.

Superintendent Sherry Sousa thanked the committee for their hard work and congratulated them for their organized process. Several board members cited the student presenters’ poise and professionalism.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Zuckerman urges support for ranked choice voting during Ludlow Rotary talk

April 16, 2025
LUDLOW—Former Vermont Lieutenant Governor David Zuckerman recently addressed the Ludlow Rotary Club, making a case for ranked-choice voting in elections with multiple candidates. He argued that allowing voters to rank their choices rather than select just one could foster broader participation and more open dialogue among candidates. “Ranked choice voting gives voters more voice and…

David Steven Hodulik, 69

April 16, 2025
David Steven Hodulik of Ship Bottom, New Jersey, died on March 12. Hodulik was the first child of George and Dorothy Hodulik, born prematurely on April 2, 1955. His life was miraculous, as he received baptism and Last Rights at birth and was expected to live only days. He grew up in Dunellen, New Jersey,…

Jon Lamb, 63

April 16, 2025
From Jon Lamb’s daughters It is with heavy hearts that we share the passing of our father, Jon Lamb, on April 2. Jon left this world with his ski boots on, doing what he loved most in the beautiful resort town of Big Sky, Montana. His family will remember him as a man passionate for…

Deborah Lee (Hyde) Colby, 75

April 16, 2025
Deborah Lee (Hyde) Colby passed away on Sunday, March 30, at Jack Byrne Center for Palliative & Hospice Care in Lebanon, New Hampshire. She was born on April 8, 1949, in Long Beach, California, the daughter of Harley and Lee Hyde. Deborah was the beloved wife of Scott Colby, with whom she shared over four…