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Mount Greylock School Committee Chairwoman Sheila Hebert and SU71 Chairman Dan Caplinger conduct Wednesday's joint meeting.

Lanesborough-Williamstown Schools Begin Search for Interim Superintendent

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Lanesborough-Williamstown Tri-District is moving ahead with a plan that officials hope will bring an interim superintendent to the district as early as Jan. 1.
 
On Wednesday evening, the Mount Greylock Regional School Committee held a joint meeting with its colleagues from Superintendency Union 71, the union of Lanesborough and Williamstown's elementary school districts, to consider a succession plan proposed by the two groups' Administrative Review Subcommittee.
 
The subcommittee proposed that the hiring committees authorize it to screen candidates and name a pool of up to three finalists who would be interviewed by the full Mount Greylock and SU71 panels. It is a similar process to the one used by the Tri-District when it hired its last interim superintendent, Gordon Noseworthy, in December 2014.
 
The subcommittee further recommended that the Tri-District look for an interim superintendent for a period of 18 months — allowing time for a thorough search process and the planned completion of the new Mount Greylock Regional School, which is set to open in spring 2018.
 
Mount Greylock shares its central office administration with its two "feeder" elementary schools, although each of the three remains a distinct district with its own elected school committee. Three members of the Williamstown School Committee and all three members of the Lanesborough School Committee serve on the SU71 Committee; together, SU71 and Mount Greylock will hire the next superintendent.
 
Currently, the Tri-District's top administrator, Assistant Superintendent Kim Grady, is serving as  acting superintendent.
 
The four-person subcommittee plans to screen candidates from a pool made up of recommendations of the Massachusetts Association of School Committees, which maintains a list of qualified potential interim administrators — usually retired superintendents, as Noseworthy was. School committee members have indicated that there may be additional candidates known to the district apart from that list.
 
The Mount Greylock and SU71 panels had just a couple of questions for the subcommittee members.
 
Mount Greylock School Committee member Wendy Penner asked if the screening committee planned to get input from the three principals, who co-signed a letter outlining a series of complaints against the Tri-District's most recent superintendent.
 
LES Committee Chairwoman Regina DiLego, a member of the ARS, said that group already had consulted with the principals.
 
Mount Greylock's Steven Miller said the hiring process has to be transparent and open to the public.
 
While the initial screening process by ARS would be done in executive session, the final interview and vote to name the interim superintendent would be done in public session, a fact that pleased Miller.
 
Immediately after the SU71/Mount Greylock joint meeting — which included an executive session to discuss a contract matter with non-union personnel — the ARS members met and set a meeting for Friday morning to begin screening applicants.

Tags: interim appointment,   MGRHS,   SU71,   superintendent,   

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Williamstown Select Board Talks Dog Park, Short-Term Rentals

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board could be going back to the drawing board on a proposal to designate an area of the Spruces Park for off-leash dogs.
 
At last week's meeting, Andrew Hogeland gave his colleagues an update on a topic that has been discussed at length by the board this year.
 
Hogeland said he had consulted with other stakeholders in the park, specifically the Hoosic River Watershed Association, Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation and town Conservation Commission.
 
"I figured they would have some thoughts about what happens in that territory," Hogeland said. "They did. Not entirely in favor, as you might predict."
 
The Conservation Commission, for example, suggested that the Select Board hold off on making any designations for use of the park until after town meeting decides whether to put all of the Spruces under the care, custody and control of the Con Comm — an action the Select Board later recommended against at the April 8 meeting.
 
The conservation groups also pointed out to Hogeland that a significant portion of the Spruces acreage is designated as a priority habitat for endangered species.
 
"The concept of having dogs running around that environment is something we should think seriously about," Hogeland said.
 
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