Mount Greylock School Committee OKs Changes in Cultural Exchange

Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass.— Mount Greylock Regional School Committee approved some changes to the cultural exchange program that the high school’s Spanish teachers have developed with the St. Paul’s School in La Cumbre, Argentina.
 
The program was originally conceived to have students from each school traveling to the other in alternating years.
 
Given Mount Greylock’s greater size, it makes more sense if the Argentine students make the trip north every other year while Mount Greylock sends members of its senior class to La Cumbre every year, Joe Johnson, Mount Greylock world language teacher, explained.
 
That means changing the eligibility of the Mount Greylock students from “juniors and seniors” to seniors only. Mount Greylock students will go to Argentina each spring; St. Paul’s students will make the trip every other autumn.
 
In addition, Johnson asked that, instead of a program where Mount Greylock students stay in hotels while in La Cumbre, they instead stay with host families, as the Argentine students did when visiting the Berkshires.
 
“Living with a family changes the experience,” Paula Penelas, St. Paul’s School representative said in the virtual meeting. 
 
“You learn about their habits, customs, conversations, timetable. It’s different.
 
“We have many, many families who would be delighted to be asked to host. We will choose them very carefully.”
 
Johnson noted that a change to the host family model also will reduce the cost of travel.
 
“[The trip] would undoubtedly be a whole lot more doable economically,” he said. “If you’re kicking in to offset your share of meals, hot water and transportation, that’s more doable than staying in a hotel.”
 
Rather than renting vans to transport the Mount Greylock students to and from their hotel, the host families will provide transportation, as they did for the St. Paul’s students who visited Mount Greylock, he said.
 
School Committee member Carolyn Greene sought information about the screening process that would be used on both ends for host families and encouraged a more formal process, including, perhaps, a Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI) check for host families locally.
 
“Our job as School Committee members is to assess risk,” Greene noted.
 
Johnson said he would be open to talking about more formal screening.
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Mount Greylock School Committee Takes Another Look at FY27 Budget

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Mount Greylock School Committee on Tuesday decided to bring a fiscal year 2027 budget to Thursday's public hearing that maintains level services while seeking double-digit percentage increases in the assessments to each of the district's member towns.
 
The committee knew those increases were coming from a draft budget it saw at its March 3 meeting, but the numbers changed over the last couple of weeks — driving up the anticipated assessment to Williamstown and leading to a slight reduction for the budget hit to Lanesborough.
 
The draft budget in front of the committee on Tuesday includes a 13.61 percent increase in the district's assessment to Williamstown and a 10.99 percent hike for Lanesborough.
 
In real dollars, those assessment increases translate to $2,018,000 and $751,000, respectively versus the FY26 assessment to pay for the current school year.
 
Williamstown's assessment is up 0.9 percent from March 3 to March 14 while Lanesborough's is down 0.8 percent, in part because, per the regional agreement, each town pays the operating cost of its elementary school (and splits the cost of the middle-high school based on enrollment). Some of the increased cost in the last two weeks impacts Williamstown Elementary more than Lanesborough Elementary.
 
Tuesday's draft is likely to be relatively unchanged when the School Committee holds its annual public hearing on the budget on Thursday, the same night the committee likely will vote on the final FY27 budget — and resulting assessments — it will send to each member town's annual town meeting in the spring.
 
Superintendent Joseph Bergeron told the committee that the administration and the elected body's Finance subcommittee had been making modest progress on mitigating the assessment increases to both member towns before the district received two gut punches.
 
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