Letter: Support the School Budget at the Williamstown Town Meeting

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To the editor:

Due to an overnight school field trip, I am unable to attend Williamstown's Town Meeting, much to my regret.

I encourage voters to support the proposed school budget as presented. While the percentage increase is substantial, difficult decisions have been made to keep it as low as possible while maintaining current levels of service.

I also oppose the proposed amendment to add $120,000 for a math interventionist position.

Let me be clear: I value our schools and deeply respect the work of our educators. I spent the first 25 years of my career as a teacher, primarily in mathematics, and administrator in independent schools, and the past nine years as a principal in a public school. I also support the thoughtful and thorough process that produced the budget before town meeting. The superintendent and School Committee developed this budget carefully, and the Finance Committee reviewed it within the context of the town's overall financial picture and endorsed it.

Members of the Finance Committee have rightly noted that rising costs are placing increasing pressure on residents. Many in our community are feeling the strain of living here. Those realities and the process that produced the proposed budget should guide our decisions.

Adding $120,000 at town meeting, while permitted, is not sound policy. It bypasses the process designed to balance priorities across the entire town. It risks undoing the careful work of the committees charged with considering long-term sustainability, not simply immediate needs, however worthy. Most importantly, funding a new position is not a one-time expense. It increases future budgets without a clear plan to reduce costs elsewhere or generate new revenue beyond higher property taxes.

A vote against this amendment is not a vote against our schools. It is a vote for fiscal discipline, for respecting the process, and for making sure decisions are made thoughtfully and collaboratively rather than in a single emotional moment on the Town Meeting floor.

Just as importantly, a "no" vote does not mean doing nothing. There are practical ways to strengthen math support now. The district can evaluate the effectiveness of the new curriculum at the end of the year to better understand both strengths and gaps. Existing staff time can be coordinated for targeted intervention blocks. Peer or cross-grade tutoring could be expanded. Volunteers, including retired educators, college students, and community members, could be invited and trained to provide supplemental support.

Existing professional development resources could be directed toward best practices in targeted intervention. If the school determines that a dedicated interventionist is the highest priority, it could make the difficult choice to lay off a teacher and increase class sizes modestly and fund that position within the existing budget.


These are steps that can begin immediately while allowing the district to assess needs carefully and bring forward a well-vetted, sustainable proposal through the regular budget process in a future year.


I urge voters to reject this amendment, not because I do not support education, and math education in particular, but because I support the work of the superintendent, the School Committee, the Finance Committee, the town manager, the Select Board and everyone else who has worked hard over the past several months to develop a spending plan that does the greatest good for the greatest number.

John 'Jay' Merselis III
Williamstown, Mass. 

 

 

 


Tags: annual town meeting,   

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Letter: Williamstown Should Adopt Ban on Sewage Sludge Land Application

Letter to the Editor

To the editor:

This year, Williamstown Town Meeting will be considering whether to adopt a new bylaw that would prohibit the land application of sewage sludge or sewage sludge-derived products (biosolids). The ban would apply to land application of sludge and biosolids to farmland as a soil amendment or to home gardens where store bought compost may contain biosolids. The intent of this bylaw is to protect farmland, water sources, food crops and ultimately animals and people from PFAS contaminants.

PFAS are per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a group of "forever chemicals," and are linked to health issues like cancer, liver damage and immune system dysfunction. They enter wastewater systems through residential, commercial and industrial sources. Conventional treatment processes are largely ineffective at removing them. As a result, PFAS pass through treatment systems into surface waters or accumulate in sewage sludge/biosolids.

Most states and the federal law have been slow to regulate this activity. The EPA's January 2025 Draft Sewage Sludge Risk Assessment identified human health risks associated with land-applied biosolids containing as little as 1 part per billion of PFAS and yet federal law does not yet impose limits on PFAS in biosolids.

A growing number of states are adopting a range of regulatory and monitoring strategies. Maine is the only state so far to impose an outright ban on land application of biosolids from wastewater treatment plants, while Connecticut has banned the sale of biosolids containing PFAS for land application. In New York State, at least two communities, Thurston and Cameron, have banned the land application of biosolids.

At this time, we don't know of any farms in Williamstown that currently use biosolids. But we also don't know the future of the farms in our community. Biosolids can also be found in some commercially bagged compost. While this bylaw would not ban the sale of these products, we hope it will raise awareness and encourage our residents and local vendors to find biosolid-free products for use.

Let's keep our lands safe for our children and future generations. Williamstown's Select Board, Agricultural Commission, and the Board of Health recommend adoption of this article. We hope you will support this article on May 19, 7 p.m. at the town meeting at Williamstown Elementary School.

Stephanie Boyd
Sharon Wyrrick

Williamstown, Mass. 

 

 

 

 

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