On February 26, 2020

Voters to decide on Barnard school merger

When voters receive their ballots on Town Meeting Day one of the questions they will be asked is whether or not to accept the Barnard school district into the Windsor Central Modified Unified Union School District. This past December, the townspeople of Barnard voted to voluntarily merge their elementary school district with the unified district.

According to Vermont Statute 721, which guides the district merger process, once a single district (Barnard School District) decides it would like to join a merged district (Windsor Central Modified Unified Union District), the collective electorate of the receiving district must vote to accept the new entity into their fold. So this March, all voters affiliated with the Windsor Central Modified Unified Union School District will be asked to formally accept the Barnard School District into its unified union. The electorate will also be asked to vote to accept the same articles of agreement that the Barnard voters approved. Policies related to campus sustainability, school closure, and grade reconfiguration were adopted by the merged Board and these policies were incorporated into the articles that the Barnard voters supported. These policies provide clarity and process to any potential future action that may be taken in these areas. The warning for this article has been posted and is lengthy as it is legally necessary to provide all the articles of agreement to the voters for their consideration.

Voters will also see two budget questions; one question asks voters to approve the budget that will be implemented if Barnard is accepted into the district, and one question asks voters to approve a budget that will be implemented if Barnard is not accepted into the district. This is required because the outcome of the Barnard merger vote will not be known before the budget vote and all contingencies must be accounted for in this process.

Towns will experience improved tax rates if there is a positive merger vote.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Weather impacts Killington mid-week skiing

May 8, 2025
Killington Resort planned on keeping its lifts running during the week until May 11 (then weekends only), but rain and warm temps over the last several days have taken a serious toll on its snowpack. Therefore, Killington Resort will be closed Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9, to preserve what they have left and…

How Killington became The Beast: Part 9

May 7, 2025
Snow, summer, and snowshed: 1960 saw fast progress How Killington became The Beast: Part 9 By Karen D. Lorentz Editor’s Note: This is the ninth segment of an 11-part series on the factors that enabled Killington to become The Beast of the East. Quotations are from author interviews in the 1980s for the book “Killington,…

Woodstock Foundation honors the winners of new Rockefeller Legacy Scholarship

May 7, 2025
Three Woodstock Union High School students were honored on April 30 for their visionary ideas about shaping Vermont’s future as the first recipients of the Laurance and Mary Rockefeller Legacy Scholarship, a new annual essay competition created to honor the Rockefellers’ lasting impact on the community. The scholarship program was launched in 2025 by The…

Jimmy LeSage Memorial Scholarship awarded to Brycen Gandin of Mendon

May 7, 2025
The first-ever Jimmy LeSage Memorial Scholarship, a $2,500 award created to honor the life and legacy of wellness pioneer Jimmy LeSage, has been awarded to Brycen Gandin, a graduating senior at Rutland Senior High School. Brycen, a resident of Mendon, can use the scholarship toward the college of his choice this coming academic year. Brycen was…