Letter: Pittsfield Public Schools: Opportunity for Change

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To the Editor:

The Pittsfield Federation of School Employees are the Bus Drivers and Bus Monitors who make sure your child gets to and from school safely each day. We are the cafeteria workers who prepare and serve good-tasting nutritious meals and snacks to your child. We are the custodians who make sure that your child's school is clean and safe. We are the educational secretaries who work to ensure your child's safety and well-being are accounted for daily. We are the paraprofessionals who work side by side with our teachers every day to provide your child with the education they deserve.

Most importantly — we are the parents who send our children to be educated in the Pittsfield Public Schools. We are writing this letter because we are tired!

We are tired because during a worldwide pandemic and a nationwide bus driver shortage — during a time when the Pittsfield Public Schools struggle to hire and retain staff — our bus drivers and monitors are forced to choose between coming to work sick and going without a paycheck — because they do not have paid sick leave.

We are tired because our cafeteria workers who have risen to the challenge and met ever-increasing COVID-19 production levels with inadequate staffing are now forced to come up with money — money they don't have — to pay the district for their family's health insurance premiums because they don't get paid vacation like other 10-month employees during the upcoming Christmas, February, and April recess.

We are tired because our overworked custodial staff who have endured months of forced overtime and inadequate staffing contend each day with an endless list of COVID-19-related tasks just so that our school buildings can stay open.

We are tired because our paraprofessionals, who normally are not transferred during the school year because of the disruption it causes to student learning, are being transferred in unprecedented numbers due to the current staffing shortage. We are tired because our paraprofessionals are working, and the children of Pittsfield are learning in unsafe conditions because of inadequate staffing and this administration's unwillingness to apply appropriate corrective discipline to disruptive/threatening students.

We are tired because this administration continues to hire new staff at hourly rates below the current state minimum wage of ($13.50/hour), rates which are by definition "oppressive and unreasonable."

We are tired because this administration, who gave themselves raises of 9-12 percent, keep telling us that none the district's $29.9 Million in federal and state aid can be used to adjust and increase our salaries — and we know that's simply not true!

We are tired because we must work two and three jobs to support our families because this administration does not properly value the work that we do!

We are tired because this administration refuses to acknowledge how much our families are suffering because they cannot see it from the neighborhoods where they live!

We are tired of being exploited and ignored!

The Pittsfield Public Schools are struggling, but unlike the past the problem isn't a lack of funding — it's a lack of vision and leadership. We cannot hope to give our children the schools they deserve unless we adequately staff them. What should be abundantly clear to our leaders and elected officials is the fact that we cannot begin to properly staff our schools unless we start to compensate people (our teachers and support staff) fairly for the important work that they do.

The recent School Committee elections are a reason to be hopeful — the results represent an opportunity to truly change the way our public schools are run. Change however, will require the newly elected School Committee to do more than just take the guided tour.

Sandi Amburn
President, Pittsfield Federation
of School Employees

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Pittsfield Council Takes Up $243M Fiscal 2027 Budget

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Mayor Peter Marchetti detailed the city's $243 million spending plan during the first budget hearing of the season on Tuesday. 

The proposed operating budget for Pittsfield in fiscal year 2027 is $232,782,090, a 2.9 percent increase from this year. Marchetti compared that to hikes in fixed costs: a 9 percent increase in health insurance, a 7 percent increase in debt service, and more than a 5 percent increase in retirement contributions. 

"We needed to make reductions in other places," he explained. 

The total proposed budget is $243,234,868. It breaks down into $145,927,029 for the municipal operating budget, $86,855,061 for the schools, and $10,452,778 for proposed state assessments and overlay. 

To balance the budget, the administration will not fill several vacant positions, is funding police social workers and co-responders through opioid settlement funds, and reduces the library's Thursday hours. 

"Probably one of our most painful cuts that we have produced: The overall [Department of Public Services] budget has been reduced by $738,000 from fiscal year 26 to 27, with a reduction of five positions that are currently vacant, have been vacant for some time, and we believe the reason that those positions are vacant is based on our salaries," Marchetti explained. 

"So once we are able to successfully negotiate a contract with the teamsters, we will be back looking to be able to fund these positions from a later appropriation. It is not our intent to let them go vacant all year, but it's impossible to budget when we know we can't fill them, and we don't know what salary at this current stage to use." 

The budget includes $2 million in free cash to offset the tax rate, $19,791,219 from water & sewer enterprise funds, $81,959,322 from state aid ($68,855,061 in Chapter 70 School Aid), and $15,388,750 in local receipts. 

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