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The Hooksett Banner March 4, 2004 |
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This week's stories: (click on the headline to jump to story)
School Funding'Middle towns' feel the squeezeBy RUSS CHOMA Scott Gross has a bad case of middle sibling
syndrome.
No money to give back
"A portrait of the commitment that Hopkinton has to its schools is very evident in that they are already making a commitment that already far exceeds the state average," Ayer said, noting that Hopkinton spends slightly more than 73 percent of its tax dollars on education. Though Hopkinton is not a member of the Coalition for Adequate Education Funding, Asselin hears what Ayers and many other in the mid-range towns are saying, and promises something will get done.
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By ALYSSA BAER PEMBROKE Murphy whizzed, whirled
and wowed the audience as they witnessed it knock over balls
and hoist itself up a large beam. |
HIGH TECH Michelle Kelly and Brian Roche, part of Team Discovery at Pembroke Academy, make some adjustments to their robot, "Murphy." The team goes up against other area high schools at the Verizon Wireless Arena on March 4, 5 and 6. At its recent unveiling, Murphy displayed its ability to run briefly on its own and hang from a bar. (Alyssa Baer Photo) |
By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Two traditional lightning rods for debate
a new library and the school operating budget will
once again loom large over this year's vote.
Polls will be open all day on Tuesday, March 9, and residents
will have the opportunity to vote on all candidates, as well
as school and town warrant articles.
A total of 17 warrant articles will appear before Epsom voters
on the town ballot, and some of the highlights include:
· Articles 1 and 2, the library. After years of trying,
members of the planning committee think they've finally come
up with a plan for a new Epsom library that everyone will like.
Residents will pay only $250,000 of the total $750,000 cost.
If residents vote for Article 1, the money will be bonded and
there will be no 2004 tax impact. If residents vote for Article
2, the entire sum will be raised through taxes this fiscal year.
This will create a one-time increase in taxes of $1.49 per $1,000
of assessed property valuation. That's about $223.50 on a home
valued at $150,000.
· Article 3: The town operating budget. This
year's proposed town budget is $2,162,280, only $17,906 more
than last year's town budget.
If Article 3 is passes, it will add 10 cents per $1,000 of assessed
property value to the tax rate. This translates to an increase
of $15 for the owner of a $150,000 home.
If it fails and the town is forced to accept a default budget,
there would be a decrease of 46 cents per $1,000 of assessed
value.
· Article 10: $150,000 to be raised this year and
placed in the Capital Improvements Fund for the purpose of rebuilding
and improving town roads.
At the deliberative session, Road Agent Gordon Ellis said
the town desperately needs money to repair town roads.
· Article 11: $65,000 to buy a new highway department
truck. According to Ellis, the current truck is in almost constant
need of repair, and is not worth keeping.
· Article 16: This article, if approved, would change
the position of welfare officer from an elected position,
to one appointed by the selectmen. town officials have said that
because the welfare officer deals with so much state money and
there is so much opportunity for mismanagement, keeping this
position as an elected one could be a major liability.
· Article 17: This article changes the position of
road agent from elected one that is hired. At the deliberative
session, selectmen said that they wanted to see this warrant
passed because it would provide more continuity to the job being
done on town roads.
Opponents have said that by keeping the position elected, they
will have better control over the condition of town roads.
Voters can expect to see the following items on the school warrant:
· Article 1: Operating budget. This year, the
district has requested an operating budget of $6,284,017. Passing
the budget would result in a tax increase of $2.84 per $1,000
of assessed value. Failing to pass the budget would give the
district a default budget for the third year in a row. This budget
would be $6,174,898 and would add $2.22 per $1,000 to the tax
rate.
· Article 2: This article, if approved, would give the
district $42,740 to purchase an already existing portable classroom.
If the article is turned down, the school will be entering a
two-year lease for the classroom.
· Article 3: $36,784 to pay the salary of a fourth custodian
at Epsom Central School.
· Article 4: $25,000 to begin developing property
behind the school already owned by the district into new soccer
fields and a baseball field. The total cost of developing the
land has been estimated at between $75,000 and $85,000, but the
Epsom Youth Athletic Association will be privately raising the
rest.
· Article 5: $150,000 to be appropriated to the school
construction capital reserve fund.
· Article 6: School board salaries.
This article, if passed, would allow each school board member
to draw up to $1,000 in annual salary. School board chairman
Don Harty said the board recommended this because they feared
many good candidates were not running because of the volunteer
nature of the job. All members of the current school board have
said they will not take a salary.
By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com
A hotly debated land transfer,
a voter-amended budget and a few traditional requests are among
the items voters will see on ballots on Tuesday, March 9, at
the polls.
Voting will be held at the David R. Cawley Middle School from
6 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Here's a rundown of what to expect in the voting booth:
Land transfer
A hot topic in town, Article 5 asks voters to transfer seven
acres of school-owned property near the Hooksett Memorial School
to the town for use by the Sewer Commission for a composting
facility.
The board has decided to not issue a recommendation on the article,
reserving judgment for voters.
"We've taken the position that the sewer commission needs
to make the case for the land," said School Board Chairman
BeckyBerk. "But it's land that we don't think we need for
the school district, so we're willing to have it transferred."
The school board has come under fire for placing the article
which was shot down last year on the ballot again.
A last-minute attempt to persuade voters to kill the proposal
last year was successful and didn't give the sewer commission
time to respond, said Berk.
"We wanted to give the sewer commission an opportunity to
more fully explain what it's trying to do," she said.
Berk said odor problems have not been a problem in the past for
the Memorial School and that during the three pilot composting
programs held, school officials fielded only one complaint from
faculty, staff and students.
She added that school officials agree there are no health risks
associated with composting near the school.
Operating budget
The $20.5 million operating budget has gone through a number
of changes. Ultimately, the budget committee decided against
recommending Article 4 after voters at the Feb. 7 deliberative
session of Town Meeting voted to add about $48,732 for the hiring
of a new first-grade teacher.
The school board originally asked for two new first-grade teachers,
but the budget committee cut that request, convinced the school
board could get creative with its bottom-line budget and find
room to fund the teachers within those constraints.
School officials are concerned about the large first grade. Without
any additional teachers, the class size is 26 students for each
teacher.
"Having one teacher added in doesn't get the class size
below our 20 to 1 policy, but it helps," said Berk.
Voters seemed to agree at the deliberative session, when they
amended the budget to include one additional teacher.
Still, Berk said she's concerned voters will see the "not
recommended" tag line from the budget committee and shoot
down the budget.
The board has gone over a number of options, should it be faced
with a default budget of $20.3 million.
Village School
Article 6, a proposal to transfer the soon-to-be unused Hooksett
Village School to the town for $1, stipulates the building must
be used for town or community purposes. Ultimately, according
to a school board survey, most hope the building is used as additional
town office space and a community center. If the town does not
adhere to those stipulations, the school district will regain
ownership of the land and building. The move is supported by
the school board.
Other warrants
· Voting for school officials: Berk is not running for
re-election and resident Ronald Dion is the only one who's thrown
his name in the running for the three-year term. There are three
other slots voters will be asked to fill, including that of school
district treasurer, a race between Frank Bizzarro and Dawn Stanhope.
· Article 2, a request for $25,000 for the Special Education
Expendable Trust Fund: This customary request provides a financial
safety net should students needing special education services
move into the district during the school year. It's recommended
by both the school board and budget committee.
· Article 3 proposes devoting $10,000 toward unanticipated
building repairs. It is a move that both the board and budget
committee approve. Berk said the fund will primarily cover the
Fred C. Underhill Elementary School.
"Cawley and Memorial will be new or refurbished facilities,
but it seems like every year at Underhill, there are problems
with the roof or HVAC system," said Berk. "Five out
of the last six years, we've had a pipe burst in the building."
By LARA SKINNER
Staff Writer
lskinner@yourneighborhoodnews.com
At Town Meeting on Saturday,
March 13, residents will be asked to make a police officer's
job permanent as well as consider several other warrant articles.
Voting on school and town candidates will take place Tuesday,
March 9, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Auburn Village School.
Officer salary
For the past three years, a $75,000 grant has paid for a full-time
patrol officer, but that money is now gone and it's up to the
town to fund the position.
The last installment of the grant was used up last year. Before
the department can add the salary to its regular budget, the
money has to go to the voters as a warrant article for the first
year it will be raised completely through property taxes, said
budget committee member Lynn White.
White said she believes the town will support a first-year salary
request for $47,054 because of the added service provided for
the town.
"We were just fortunate to have the (grant) funding for
the first three years," she said.
Operating budget
The town's operating budget increased $144,000, or 5 percent,
to $2.8 million dollars. Even with the increase, Town Finance
Director Linda Small said the town's portion of the property
tax rate should stay at $2.47 per $1,000 of assessed value.
A person with property valued at $250,000 would pay $617.50 in
local property taxes to the town, plus school and county taxes.
Revenues coming in from residential and commercial vehicle registration
have gone up in the past year, she said. The extra money is helping
to offset an increase in the tax rate. Registrations aren't the
only revenue the town relies on. But, based on the current registration
records, Small estimates $1 million should come in for 2004.
Even with the revenue estimate, she is still cautious about predicting
the tax rate because of the time between the Town Meeting vote
and when property taxes are set by the state in the fall.
"A lot can change," she said. "We may not receive
the revenues I've estimated."
Town departments were level-funded this year, and the 5 percent
operating budget increase is annual salary and health benefit
increases for town employees.
Fire department request
Fire Chief Bruce Phillips said his department services aren't
compromised by the level funding.
Vehicle maintenance for the fire department shows up as a warrant
article though, and the department has requested $65,700 to purchase
a replacement cab and chassis for the town's emergency rescue
truck.
"At this point we're nickel and diming it to death,"
Phillips said.
The current rescue truck was purchased in 1988, he said, and
the "box" to hold equipment needs refurbishing. A new
cab would have four seats instead of two, Phillips said, so EMTs
wouldn't have to ride with the equipment during calls anymore.
Repairs and replacements would bring the entire vehicle up to
standard, and Phillips said replacing the whole vehicle could
cost the town at least $150,000.
Other warrants
If the voters approve all of the funding warrants, the total
town budget would be $3.4 million. Other funding warrant articles
are:
· $361,000 for the Capital Reserve Fund to go toward closing
the incinerator site.
· $15,000 to create an expendable trust fund called the
Emergency Social Health Trust Fund.
· $125,000 for police outside duty detail, which is funded
through fees raised by the service.
Auburn's Town Meeting is scheduled for Saturday, March 13, at
1 p.m., at Auburn Village School.
Voting to elect town officials and pass amendments to zoning
articles is on Tuesday, March 9, at Auburn Village School gym.
The polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Thanks to amendments at
the deliberative session, voters will have five fewer warrant
items to consider when they go to the polls on March 9. There
will be little choice among candidates as well, as there are
no contested races.
Polls are open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at St. John the Baptist Church
on Tuesday, March 9.
A total of 28 warrant articles will technically be on the ballot,
but five (Articles 14, 15, 16, 18 and 20) were "zeroed"
out. Of the remaining articles, the highlights are:
Town
Zoning Articles: Articles 2 through 9 are all amendments to the
town's zoning code. All have been recommended by the planning
board.
Article 10: $3,100,736 for the town's operating budget. If this
should be defeated, the town will operate under a default budget
of $2,915,811.
If approved, this article will increase the tax rate by $2 per
$1,000 of assessed value. For the owner of a $150,000 home this
would translate to $300.
Article 11: If approved, this article would expand the definition
of who qualifies for the elderly property tax exemption.
Under the new standards residents who make less than $30,000
a piece (or $42,000 as a couple) and have assets worth less than
$85,000 can qualify for these exemptions:
· Residents between the ages of 65 and 75 will receive
a $10,000 exemption.
· Residents between the ages of 75 and 85 will receive
a $15,000 exemption.
· Residents over the age of 85 will receive a $25,000
exemption.
Article 12: New fire truck: This article asks voters to approve
the fire department entering a 10-year lease/purchase of a new
pump truck costing $649,000. The first-year payment will be $78,364.
The estimated tax impact is 37 cents per $1,000 of assessed property
value.
It is not recommended by the board of selectmen or the budget
committee.
Article 13: Approval of a five year lease/purchase of a new backhoe
for the highway department. The total cost will be $67,500, with
a first-year tax impact of $13,500. The tax impact would be six
cents per $1,000 of assessed property value.
This is recommended by the board of selectmen but not by the
budget committee.
School
Voters will have a very brief school ballot to consider, with
only five articles. The three articles requesting money are:
Article 2: Operating budget: This year's requested budget is
$7,701,973. However, if the budget is defeated, the default budget
will actually be about $10,000 higher. The school board does
not recommend approval; however, the budget committee does.
Article 3: Teacher's contract: This article asks voters to approve
a three-year teacher's contract with $333,109 in salary increases
over the life of the contract. It also asks voters approve the
raising and appropriation of $128,112 for the first year of the
contract.
Both the school board and the budget committee recommend the
approval of this article.
Article 4: $32,535 to provide busing to Pembroke Academy for
Allenstown's high school students. The school board recommends
approval, but the budget committee does not.
By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com
A handful of traditional
requests, a budget with a cut program and a petitioned warrant
article asking for $40,000 for school bus monitors are on tap
for discussion at the 2004 annual School District Meeting.
The meeting will begin at 10 a.m. on Saturday, March 6, at the
Henry W. Moore School.
Voting on school and town candidates will take place Tuesday,
March 9, from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Moore School.
Here's what voters can expect:
· An article asking for $10,000 for the Building Maintenance
Expendable Trust Fund to cover any mid-year maintenance problems
at the Moore School.
"It's just for repairs," said Bill Zarges, school board
chairman. "So we don't get caught if a roof leaks or something
like that."
· An article requesting $25,000 for the Special Education
Expendable Trust Fund. The money serves as a safety net for the
school board, should students needing special education services
move into the district during the school year.
· Article 3: The $1.23 million appropriation to send Candia
high schoolers to Manchester. After some wrangling with Mancheter
officials, the school board is using a $8,260 per student price
tag that Hooksett and Auburn school officials are using as well.
Zarges said school officials break the tuition out into a separate
warrant article per the recommendation of citizens who want to
see the money used only for tuition.
Should there be any left over, it is returned to the town for
tax rate reductions.
· Article 4: The proposed $6.47 million operating budget
will be reduced by $1.23 million if Article 3 is approved.
The budget, said Zarges, represents about a 4.2 percent increase
over last year's budget.
"We pretty much held the line on discretionary spending,"
he said.
Officials trimmed about $50,000 to $60,000 from the budget, estimated
Zarges, after eliminating the computer teacher's position.
The move, he said, has been in the works.
"We've been moving towards integration. The computer is
a tool to learn and not a separate subject. It's part of our
technology plan to integrate," he said.
That integration will come when other teachers take their classes
to the 25-terminal computer lab for lessons on curriculum-specific
material.
The math and English teachers, for example, will incorporate
a computer lesson into their plans, said Zarges.
"We're pretty confident that we've got some computer-savvy
teachers at least one on each grade level," he said.
As for the heat the board might take for cutting out the computer
program, Zarges said the district can't justify paying for the
position as the Moore School's enrollment continues to drop.
· Article 6: Asking voters for $18,000 to complete a building
and program analysis at the Moore School, Zarges said the article
is the "next step" for the district.
Recommended by the New Hampshire School Administrators Association,
the analysis would look at space in the school, assess what's
needed and how to best utilize the school's resources.
"We need to continue to move forward because we know we
have issues with overcrowding," said Zarges. "There
are parts of our building that go back to the 1920s."
· Article 7: This petitioned warrant article asks voters
to devote $40,000 toward the hiring of about five monitors who
will ride the buses in the morning and afternoon.
Inspired by former bus driver and resident Cathy Rohrs' concern
that the buses are over-crowded and fraught with discipline problems,
the move would provide an adult that would relieve the bus driver
from dealing with discipline issues.
The school board does not recommend the article, because statistics
show discipline reports are dramatically down from last year,
said Zarges.
By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Because the teacher's union
and the school board failed to come to an agreement on salaries,
voters will have a School District Meeting that district officials
have called "mundane."
The School District Meeting will take place Saturday, March 6,
at 10 a.m., at Pembroke Academy.
Voting on school and town candidates as well as whether the town
and school should move to the official ballot law will take place
Tuesday, March 9, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Pembroke Village
School.
Pembroke has one contested race, that of selectman. There are
two three-year slots open. Candidates for selectman are Richard
Bilodeau, Daniel D. Crean, Carl Schoeller and Larry W. Young
Sr.
School district warrants
There are 11 items on the warrant, of which five are money articles.
These articles include:
Article 3: The appropriation of $25,000 from surplus to be added
to the school building capital reserve fund. This money
will be taken from any surplus money left over at the end of
the 2004 budget year.
Article 4: $100,000 from surplus to be placed in the special
education trust fund. Like Article 3, this money is taken from
surplus at the end of the year. Neither article will have an
impact on this year's taxes.
Article 5: $40,603 to perform a number of small maintenance tasks
on several Pembroke schools. Some of the tasks include painting
classrooms at Pembroke Hill and replacing a 53-year-old
boiler at Pembroke Village School. Unlike the previous two items,
this money will be raised through taxes this fiscal year.
Article 6: $26,350 to improve traffic and parking issues at three
schools.
Article 7: $5,319 to replace a dumpster and the replacement of
emergency medical equipment and other safety items at the district's
schools.
Article 9: The operating budget. If approved by voters,
$18,000,153 would be spent to run the schools. This is an increase
over last year's budget of $510,234 or 2.9 percent.
By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Young students and teens are shooting hoops, going head-to-head in foosball matches and taking quiet time to do their homework, in a place that some were worried might never open.
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The Boys and Girls
Club was open and hopping on Monday, March 1, at the Allenstown
Recreation Center in the Whitten Street Park, where the satellite
facility of the Concord Boys and Girls Club will cater to local
children. While test results were pending, officials had begun busing children from Allenstown to the Concord Boys and Girls Club in September. The move, they said, was temporary until the recreation center got the green light to open. |
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By GINGER KOZLOWSKI
Staff Writer
editor@hooksettbanner.com
He had the courage to speak
on his convictions, popular or not. He was dedicated to the betterment
of Hooksett, serving the town in many capacities. He assisted
in many town projects planning the Hooksett District Court
courthouse, the Hooksett Safety Center, the highway center and
the transfer station. Donald Duford will be missed by many.
Duford, 66, of River Road, died Wednesday, March 3, of a heart
attack. He was a lifelong resident of Hooksett, and was self-employed
as a general contractor. He built the Farmer's Market convenience
store on Route 3A in Hooksett, and later ran the store.
His record of service to the town of Hooksett is lengthy. He
was a town councilor from 1989 to 1990 and 1999 to 2002 and never
took any pay for it. He was on the Hooksett Solid Waste Management
Comittee for more than 25 years, and served on the board of assessors,
safety complex committee, facilities committee, tax investigation
committee, recycling committee, transfer station committee and
sanitary landfill committee.
Duford was a member of the Knights of Columbus and the Father
Langlois Council No. 4961, a former member of the Pinnacle Fish
and Game Club, and a member of the Suncook Valley Rod and Gun
Club.
Town Councilor Patricia Rueppel served with Duford during her
present term.
"I do not know if the Reader's Digest still has the articles
'The Most Unforgettable Character I Have Ever Met,'" said
Rueppel, "but if it does, I would write an article titled
just that about Don Duford. He had the courage of his convictions
and expressed them with great determination.
"The words 'politically correct' were not in his vocabulary
and he fought hard for the things he believed in," she said.
"He loved Hooksett and served the town in many capacities.
Over the years, he assisted in building many projects to save
the town money.
"Another example of his dedication he was a member
of the council for three terms and he never took his council
pay. He donated it back to the town," said Rueppel.
Robert Schroeder of Hooksett remembered Duford's service and
tenacity.
"I feel that the town has lost one of its most ardent supporters
and an extremely determined worker for the betterment of our
town," said Schroeder.
Duford was involved in the original sanitary land fill operation
on Route 3-A and was a prime mover in providing a facility for
demolition deposit, said Schroeder, which provided a substantial
cash stream to the town.
"As a result of this," said Schroeder, "the town
was the beneficiary of a transfer building and much of the equipment
to operate the facility, a recycling building, a highway garage
building all at no tax payer expense."
Schroeder added that Duford was involved in remodeling the current
town office building and also fought hard to get the town to
build the current court house building which has also provided
an income stream for the town."
"I think that even though he was not a quiet man and seldom
held back his opinion," said Schroeder, "a lot of what
he has done for the benefit of our community may have been forgotten."
Teacher, school board member and former town councilor James
Sullivan said Duford was very helpful to him when he decided
to get involved in the town in 1989.
"If Don Duford taught me one thing, it was to stick to my
convictions and be consistent," said Sullivan. "He
felt that community service was a duty and honor."
David Paquette of Hooksett summed up Duford's life this way:
"Don was a rare person in today's society. He attended many
meetings and/or volunteered many hours of himself for the betterment
of the community.
"One (including myself at times) might have not even agreed
with Don and the issues, however he did bring up all the right
questions.
"Though many people in town may not have always agreed with
Don and his views, which could spark much discussion, at the
end of the debate/issue/discussion, he was always still your
friend, willing to share a cup of coffee and chat about other
issues.
"Don loved Hooksett with a passion and held the dollar to
a minimum, whereas each department only got what they needed
to function effectively with no luxuries."
Calling hours will be held Saturday, March 6, from 2 to 4 p.m.,
at the Petit Funeral Home, 167 Main St., Pembroke. Memorial services
will be held privately at a later date.
Duford is survived by three sons, three daughters, his mother,
two sisters, his companion Judy Casey, and many other relatives.
Memorial donations may be made to the Hooksett Conservation Commission,
c/o Hooksett Town Hall, 16 Main St., Hooksett.
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