Year: 2026

Budget and Overrides and the sky is falling, but not really…

Here is where I’m at on budgets and overrides and things of this nature.

First – I am against any cuts to the early learning center and elementary school first and foremost because I believe that these two buildings have the most potential for growth. Kids and families connect with each other and their teachers in these buildings. They do youth in town and connect with the kids they’ll grow up together with. These schools also are where kids form the foundations for learning. Here they learn phonics, site words and pronunciation and how to read; in addition to math skills, science and socialization skills with their peers. These are the building blocks to success later on in school! Numerous studies have also shown that lower class sizes in K-3 create a foundation for learning that lasts long into middle and high school and life. As I mentioned at one of the School Committee meetings – we all remember who our kindergarten teacher was…

Second we need to grapple with the demographic decline in the Northeast and ultimately the Sutton Public Schools. Indeed in DESE Enrollment by Grade report for school years 2023 – 2026 all of our schools, except for the Middle School show decline as shown in the chart below:

School2022-232023-242024-252025-264-yr Change
Early Learning 326339324307-19 (-5.8%)
Elementary 304313287293-11 (-3.6%)
Middle School 296295313318+22 (+7.4%)
High School 369363367336-33 (-8.9%)
District Total1,2951,3101,2911,254-41 (-3.2%)

Running the data through a linear regression model out to 2028-2029 shows more projected decline, with just moderate growth in the Middle School

School2026-272027-282028-29Trend
Early Learning~306~299~292↓ Declining
Elementary~285~279~273↓ Declining
Middle School~327~335~343↑ Growing
High School~335~326~316↓ Declining
District Total~1,253~1,239~1,224↓ Declining

These are facts, and it’s unfortunate – but these are the facts that we, as a community are currently faced with. The largest declines show in the Middle School and High School – the single most alarming signal in the dataset is the Grade 8 to Grade 9 survival rate of only ~78.5% — meaning roughly 1 in 5 students leaving Middle School does NOT enroll at Sutton High School. This shows up in the numbers last year: 94 eighth graders in 2024-25, but only 68 enrolled as freshmen in 2025-26 — a loss of 26 students in a single transition.

FTE Levels in the high school have not responded appropriately, and in spite of offering over 30 electives kids still leave for schools like Blackstone Valley Tech or private schools. Class sizes and schedules have not been adjusted and we do not have enforced minimum class size requirements – thus creating situations where one teacher will have some sections of under 10 kids. Practically until this is adjusted we actually can’t understand what our true FTE counts are or what they need to be. Further since 85% of the budget is salaries (which compound year over year via contractual obligations and step/lane changes) simply throwing more money at the problem creates a snowball effect longer term.

Common sense dictates that we cannot continue operating in the same way as before. So what should we do?

In my opinion we ought to focus on the early experience, creating smaller class sizes and giving kids the 1:1 attention they need to succeed. It’s my hope that by building back these experiences that we’ll retain kids and slowly stabilize the high school enrollment. We also ought to look at strategically bringing some career technical programs to help retain kids as well – these programs come with grants as seed money, but will require focused operational oversight to makes sure we are not exceeding budget. Further, the high school should focus on what our core responsibilities are – education children to be college or work ready. This means a sober look at our electives vs requirements and focusing more on core ELA/MATH/SCI curriculum. Our test scores have been in decline and with a total enrollment of under 400 students there’s no reason why every child in the high school shouldn’t be a high achiever and still get the electives that they want!

But what about an override?

We can’t solve a structural deficit composed primarily from unbalanced FTE counts by simply giving the district more money. 85% of our budget is composed of salaries which compound year over year. Without right sizing our staffing, and figuring out long term what we want our district to be, there is simply NO justification for an operational override for the schools. I’m not saying there won’t ever be a need for more money but it is not justifiable right now based on the facts and data. The pro override voices are loud but small. They advocate for more money and make vague platitudes about trusting the educators.

These platitudes do little to lower the burden of high gas prices and an inflationary economy where most peoples wages simply have not kept up. Those who are pro override would also quickly dismiss our most vulnerable namely the elderly, retired, and the 200 families who use our food pantry – these are the people who would be affected most when their property taxes are increased. We need to protect these people and shouldn’t be so hasty to simply raise their taxes!

Class Size Matters

I read an interesting study on how your Kindergarten class affects your earnings. The study was done out of Harvard and there was a collaboration with the National Bureau of Economic research. The authors analyzed the Project STAR study where 11,571 students in. Tennessee and their teachers were randomly assigned to classrooms within their schools from Kindergarten to Third Grade. The key difference in this study was the linking of the participants to IRS data to understand income levels.

I think it’s important to highlight some key aspects of this study.

  • Students in lower class sizes in K-3 are 1.6x more likely to attend college before age 27.
  • Students in lower class sizes from K-3 after controlling for demographics earn 3.4% more than students in larger classes.
  • Students in lower class sizes in K-3 generally have higher test scores.
  • The study also highlighted other things like having a 401k, home ownership, mobility rates, etc – all of which are thought of as proxies for having a “good job”

What does this mean for Sutton? It means that we need to think long term about where we cut and what we cut.

If we believe that the Early Learning Center and the Elementary school are the foundations of our district – why would we cut teachers from them?

If we believe that high achievement and academic rigor is important to make our district competitive – why would we cut out our very core.

If we want students to stay in district and build long lasting relationships – why would we consign students in the early years of developing academic, social and emotional skills into higher class sizes where they will loose the very 1:1 help that they need?

We need to make cuts, but we need to be smart about it.

Here’s a link to the study I mentioned

https://opportunityinsights.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/star_paper.pdf

My Statement on the Secretary of Education’s Visit

I for one welcome the visit from the secretary of education, just as I would welcome a visit from any secretary of education whether a democrat or a republican is in charge. I hope the visit gets rescheduled! I frankly was excited when I heard that along with Secretary McMahon that Massachusetts Commissioner of Education was going to come along for the visit. We have an excellent school system in Sutton and it’s important that we welcome visitors into the district to showcase the excellent teachers and staff members along with the quality education we are providing. Along with that visit, I certainly intended to broach conversations about aid and grant funding – I’m sure my other colleagues would do so as well. 

I was equally disappointed when, after superintendent Paget sent her email, that the School Committee was inundated with emails from “concerned” parents all of them with the same wording advocating an “emergency” meeting of the school committee to address these issues. 

Another common theme amongst the emails was a concern from parents about student safety. One parent, Heather Sperring, even mentioned this on the “Sutton Site,” a volunteer-run Facebook group that news about this event was posted to Reddit, an internet discussion platform known for such infamous subreddit discussion forums like /WTF, and  /RegretfulParents. One facebook commenter named Amk Graveson opined as follows and I quote:

I felt the need to review the Reddit post that Mrs. Sperring graciously linked – and I was frankly shocked. Another concerned parent – screen name Lynn Duhh said:

Not terribly disturbing, but in another thread on the same post she replies to a Reddit User called yerbamateblood who asks:

Another concerned parent posting on Reddit – threelittlesith said:

I even saw Tracy Novick, our coordinator from the supposedly apolitical MASC organization, post on the Reddit thread. These types of posts are not helpful and create the permission structure for violence – let me make that clear – when you participate in the name calling and all of this McMahon is rapist, or this group is racist nonsense you are creating a permissive structure for political violence! 

My point is simple – if you care about your kids safety and if you care about the safety of children throughout the district why would you post on reddit inviting the internet and all the craziness that this brings into our town? I’ll answer that one – you don’t care about safety, nor do you care about the safety of the kids in the district. 

Here’s the shameful thing: a group of people coordinated together to stop a visit from the US Department of Education. And they did it because of who is in charge. You can’t be a supporter of the department of education when a democrat is in charge and then a protester during the next administration. That’s not normal, it’s not helpful – it’s cowardly. It doesn’t help celebrate the country, and it certainly doesn’t help the children.

So my advice is this – rather than being an activist, concentrate on being a good citizen – focus on areas where you can agree with people, politely disagree when you can’t. Treat other people the way you want to be treated, and be a good neighbor to your fellow Americans. Maybe that’s the real civic lesson here…