image description

Higher Taxes, Loss of Latin Seen in Mount Greylock's Tentative Spending Plan

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Mount Greylock Regional School Committee on Thursday began honing in on a budget that will require much larger assessment increases than the district's two member towns typically see.
 
While repeatedly stressing that the fiscal year 2026 budget on the table was a draft, interim Superintendent explained that the spending plan he has crafted reflects the reality of non-discretionary cost increases, state aid that is not rising anywhere near the rate of those increases and some of the investments in personnel and course material that came from the district's three school councils.
 
As it stands now, the district would see an increase in its gross operating and capital budgets of a combined $1,446,733 from the current fiscal year that ends on June 30.
 
Of that $1.4 million, about 62 percent, or $890,000 comes from increases that are outside the control of the School Committee: contractual obligations for step and column increases of unionized staff, borrowing for a field and track project that was approved by town meetings in Lanesborough and Williamstown in 2023, higher transportation costs and, most significantly, health insurance.
 
A 16 percent health insurance increase from the Berkshire Health Group alone accounts for $550,000 in increased cost for the preK-12 district in FY26 — about 38 percent of the $1.4 million total.
 
Bergeron stressed that district staff continues to refine the numbers on the expenditure side of the ledger. He will bring a revised budget to the School Committee for a planned Feb. 27 budget workshop and, likely, have even more revisions by the time the committee gets to its March 13 public hearing on the budget, where it will vote the final assessments the district sends to both member towns to approve at their town meetings.
 
But he pledged that those refinements will not include reduction from the district's current staffing.
 
"This is a draft," Bergeron said. "We're continuing to identify areas where we can reduce supplies and [contracted] services. … I want to say this clearly: We do not have any areas where we'll be proposing reducing people."
 
As of Thursday, the draft budget would lead to a 6.82 percent increase in the assessment to the town of Lanesborough and a 7.96 percent increase in the assessment to the town of Williamstown.
 
By comparison, the budget approved last year saw a 3.38 increase for Lanesborough and a 3.90 percent increase for Williamstown.
 
There is another factor pushing the potential assessments higher.
 
The potential 7 and 8 percent increases for FY26 are actually higher than the 5 percent increase in the gross operating and capital budget over FY25. One big difference between this FY25 and FY26 is the availability of reserves to help mitigate the cost increases.
 
Last winter, the School Committee decided to apply a combined $2.1 million from the district's school choice, tuition and excess and deficiency "revolver" accounts to lower the assessments to the member towns. In the draft budget presented on Thursday night, the use of those reserves totaled $1.8 million, a drop of 14 percent.
 
"We have [in recent years] intentionally spent the funds we have on hand in our revolving accounts so we could keep property tax increases to a minimum," Bergeron said. "That's a good thing. You should spend the money in the bank before you increase the levy. … But we signaled to the towns that we'll be coming back with larger increases.
 
"We have been preparing them and ourselves for larger increases for numerous years, but it doesn't make it easy. It's important we bring this budget forward with a high level of justification."
 
To that end, Bergeron walked the School Committee back through the rationales for the spending increases that came from the School Councils — panels of teachers, staff and parents and caregivers in each school building that are charged with advocating for those building's needs.
 
The biggest increase in "discretionary" spending is to add three new staff members at Mount Greylock Regional School: teachers in the world languages and wellness departments and a reading interventionist position that was not filled in past years after a retirement. That's $200,000 of the increase in the draft budget. Another $100,000 is for increased paraprofessionals — two full-time equivalents at each of the two elementary schools.
 
A $90,000 increase will support a conversion to a new elementary school math curriculum that has been piloted at Williamstown Elementary and Lanesborough Elementary, the first overhaul of the school's math curriculum since 1997. Expanded professional development opportunities to help teachers increase skill in math and literacy have a $56,700 price tag. And, if the budget moves forward as drafted, four Lanesborough classrooms would acquire new overhead projectors, at a cost of $30,000.
 
Still, the budget falls short of the recommendations from the School Councils. They had requested additional math and visual arts teachers at the middle-high school and the restoration of a math interventionist at each elementary school.
 
And the budget reflects a curricular change that is sure to anger some parents and students.
 
"We are proposing, within this budget, to gradually phase out Latin instruction," Bergeron said. "We will maintain our commitment to current Latin students. But there will be no new Latin 7 [seventh-grade] or Latin 1 [for high school students] this coming year. We will focus resources where student demand has shifted."
 
Not for the first time, Bergeron explained that the current demand for Spanish — which would be the only world language offered under the plan — has far outstripped demand for Latin, to the point where class sizes in Spanish are not optimal.
 
School Committee members, who last year backtracked on the same plan after receiving a torrent of comments from constituents, asked Bergeron to talk about how to justify making the move now.
 
"Student interest in Latin has declined from 20 years ago," he said. "Part of that is functional. There are many students within our schools who recognize on their own or with their families that the importance of learning Spanish goes well beyond having a world language on their transcript for graduation or to get into college. It is valuable to anyone entering a work environment.
 
"In an ideal world, we'd offer many languages. But then the question becomes do you offer more languages and potentially have situations where we are right now where Spanish has such large class sizes that we are not providing a quality experience."
 
Bergeron said Mount Greylock Spanish classes can be as large as 27 students — well above the targeted number. And Spanish teachers currently have an average of 120 students — 20 percent higher than the 100 students that are average for faculty at Mount Greylock.
 
Bergeron had indicated that Latin again could be on the chopping block at the School Committee's January meeting.

Tags: fiscal 2026,   languages,   MGRSD_budget,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Companion Corner: Mattie at Second Chance Animal Shelter

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

ARLINGTON, Vt. — There's a dog at Second Chance Animal Shelter who is patiently waiting to play with her new family.

iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home.

Mattie is a 2-year-old chocolate Labrador mix who has been at the shelter since January.

Lead canine care technician Alaura Lasher introduced us to her.

"She came to us because her last home unfortunately, didn't have enough time for her," Lasher said. "She was living in a crate. A lot, spending a lot of her time in a crate. She has a lot of energy. She's a very sweet girl, but she can be pretty nervous meeting new people."

Mattie loves to play but does take time to warm up people, especially to men. But if you give her the time and energy, she will soon be sure to love you. 

"She loves her time outside, like I said, she loves fetch, loves her toys. We're just looking for a home that is able to work with her nervousness. They need to understand that she might be a little nervous at first," Lasher said.

Mattie does well with other dogs and could live with a cat as well.

"She does well with dogs, so she can possibly live with another dog. We're looking for a home if they have cats that they're like dog savvy, that they're able to give a dog their space when they need it," she said. "And she has also lived with children before, so we believe that she'd do well with children who are used to very energetic, high energy dogs."

Lasher said she might have a bit of separation anxiety but is crate trained if need be.

"Her last home had said that she liked to chew on oven mitts, so we're looking for a home that doesn't have oven mitts out," she laughed. "I think she gets a little bit nervous, but she is crate trained, like I said, her last home, she was unfortunately spending most of her days in a crate. So she does do well if she has to be in a crate, she's a pretty clean girl."

Mattie is hoping to find a new family that will let her be her fun and adventurous self.

"She's just very, very energetic. She just needs a friend that she can go outside with and adventure. She'll probably do best in a single person home, or maybe a single couple home again, just because of her nervousness with new people," Lasher said. "And she can be kind of anxious at times. So if she can just have her special person, that would probably work for her."

If you think Mattie might be the girl for you, reach out to Second Chance Animal Shelter and learn more about her on the website.

View Full Story

More Williamstown Stories