OLD LYME—After backlash to a proposed budget cut that would eliminate an elementary school music position from the proposed 2025-26 Region 18 schools’ budget, the district Board of Education has invited members of the music department for a conversation about how to maintain a vibrant and appropriately-staffed music department amid declining enrollment.
The proposed cut comes as part of the $39.7 million budget proposal coming in at an increase of $2.7 million, or 7.39 percent, over the current spending plan. It goes to voters at a May 6 referendum.
The district school board heard from about a dozen people each at its March and April regular meetings, who were clamoring to keep the music program undisturbed.
Neviaser in a phone interview Tuesday cited “underenrollment” as the reason the district cannot maintain current staffing levels.
“We just don’t have the students to support that, or the student interest in music that we used to have,” he said.
Neviaser said the remaining five music teachers would ensure continued coverage throughout the district. While the schedules have not yet been decided, he suggested a framework that could involve the middle school choral teacher moving to Mile Creek to take over both chorus and band duties, with some support from both the high school band teacher and the music teacher at Lyme Consolidated School.
“The high school choral teacher, because we have so few enrollments in chorus at the high school, would teach two classes and the rest of her day would be spent at the middle school teaching chorus there,” he said.
Data provided at an April 2 school board meeting shows there are 40 students in the chorus program at the high school and 73 students in the high school band. At the middle school, there are 119 students in chorus program and 87 students in the band.
Small group chorus lessons at the middle school would combine under the new framework but would not exceed 10 students each, according to Neviaser.
He has emphasized throughout the budget season that programs available to students would not change due to the staffing cut.
Overall, the budget proposal assumes there will be 23 fewer students districtwide in the coming year than there are currently. Data in a January budget presentation by Neviaser showed enrollment at the high school is expected to go down by 13 students, while middle school enrollment is expected to increase by 17 students.
Sara Goldin, a 2014 graduate of Lyme-Old Lyme High School, presented the school board at their April 2 meeting with a petition she started on change.org. It has since garnered 918 signatures.
Goldin said the change has implications that will affect to varying degrees the number and quality of the ensembles, concerts, music festivals and small group classes in which students are able to participate.
“Ensembles would be reduced and students at both the middle school and high school level would be losing dedicated staff. This is the definition of affecting programming for students,” Goldin wrote.
Mary Powell-St. Louis, a former district school board member from Lyme, said retaining the Mile Creek music teacher at an estimated cost of $100,000 for salary and benefits could be accomplished by paying for planned upgrades to the high school sound system and middle school lighting system out of the district’s undesignated fund balance, or ‘Rainy Day Fund,’ rather than the operating budget.
She said the move would end up lowering the overall budget increase to 6.85%.
There is $3.1 million in the undesignated fund balance, according to Neviaser.
He said the Board of Education will hold a meeting with music department teachers this Thursday to gauge their thoughts, “and what their solutions might be to address these underenrollment and staffing issues.”
The school board at the May 5 district budget meeting will vote to send the budget to referendum the next day.
Neviaser said the budget proposal can be revised prior to or during the May 5 district budget meeting.
“You can change those numbers right up to the last minute,” he said. “We’ve done it in the past.”
The meeting will be held Thursday, April 10, at 7:30 p.m. at Lyme Consolidated School. A livestream will be available here.
Editor’s Note: This report was updated with details of the time and location of the meeting with the district school board and music department .
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