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July 10

Arbitrator steps in on Thornton dispute

Until he rules on a contract dispute between RUS 21 and Saco's Thornton Academy, he’s told the RSU to stop enrolling Arundel middle-schoolers.

By Edward D. Murphy emurphy@mainetoday.com
Staff Writer

An arbitrator has told Regional School Unit 21 to stop enrolling Arundel students at the Middle School of the Kennebunks until he rules on a contract dispute between the school district and Thornton Academy in Saco.

The disagreement centers on the meaning of the words "all" and "every."

Arbitrator Patrick Coughlan told RSU 21 this week not to accept any more applications from Arundel parents to send their kids to the Middle School of the Kennebunks instead of Thornton and not to enroll any students from Arundel until he rules on the arbitration.

He'll hear arguments on the case at the end of the month with a ruling expected to follow soon after, before the school year starts.

Thornton Academy, which spent $3 million four years ago to renovate a building to house a middle school that is predominantly for Arundel children, asked the arbitrator to halt the enrollment process.

"This is the stay that we sought," said Carl Stasio, Thornton Academy's headmaster. "It's a pretty clear statement."

Arundel and Thornton Academy signed a contract in 2004, before the town joined the RSU with Kennebunk and Kennebunkport, to send the town's children to the private Saco school. The contract said Thornton Academy would take all Arundel middle school students and that the town would pay tuition for every Arundel student who attends the private school.

Thornton Academy has argued that "all" means every Arundel student must go to the middle school, while the RSU says that the wording on the tuition portion -- saying it would be paid for "every" student who enrolls at the school -- suggests that not all Arundel students must go to Thornton Academy.

The RSU has voted to buy out its contract with Thornton Academy, effective next June, although under the state's school consolidation law, Arundel students would still have the option to attend the private school. The RSU would still have to pay the tuition, which was $7,440 per student this year.

RSU officials believe they would save money if more students attended the public middle school, which has the capacity to hold about 120 more students, said Maureen King, the chair of the district's school board, although Thornton Academy disputes the district's financial analysis.

"I believe that many Arundel parents would like to have the choice" of which school their child should attend. King said. "They can find the school that's right for them."

Stasio said the private school is hoping that its interpretation of the contract is upheld and added that Thornton Academy will work hard after next June to try to convince Arundel students to continue to attend the middle school.

Beyond that, however, "we'll adapt to whatever we have to adapt to," he said.

Stasio said it's hard to predict what will happen next year, when the contract buyout will give Arundel students a choice of schools to attend, regardless of the arbitrator's ruling.

With Arundel students making up the majority of Thornton Academy's middle school population-- all but 18 of the 163 students came from Arundel this past year -- he said the private school will have to watch enrollments closely to maintain the school's offerings.

"It is heavily dependent on Arundel -- we ultimately built the school for Arundel," Stasio said.

The decision could have an impact beyond the middle school. RSU officials think that if students attend the Kennebunk middle school, they are likely to go on to attend Kennebunk High School. At the same time, Thornton Academy officials feel that students who go to the middle school in Saco will likely move on to attend the private high school.

Unlike the middle school, there is no contract between Arundel and Thornton Academy's high school and students from the town are free to attend any school they wish.

Staff Writer Edward D. Murphy can be contacted at 791-6465 or at:

emurphy@pressherald.com

 

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6 COMMENTS

Citygirl said...

"With Arundel students making up the majority of Thornton Academy's middle school population-- all but 18 of the 163 students came from Arundel this past year" This cannot be correct. There are only 163 students attending Thornton Middle School? Only 18 students are from Saco? Should this be of the 163 Arundel age middle schoolers all but 18 attend Thornton? This makes no sense to me at all. I agree with Kennebunk. Thornton cannot force ALL Arundel students to attend its school any more than it force all Saco students to attend Thornton. I'm sure there are students attending other schools such as a Catholic School or Christian School. It can force all students from Arundel who attend Thornton to have to pay tuition.

July 10, 2010 at 9:37 AM Report abuse

Les said...

The RSU 21 school board is an arrogant bunch of pseudo-aristocratic snobs who are on a grand power trip. They are so out of touch with reality and their noses are so high in the air, if it rained they would drown. They treat the Citizens of Arundel like they are a mediocre lower class then they. I believe they all should all step down and do both towns a favor.

July 10, 2010 at 9:45 AM Report abuse

middleone said...

Arundel voters chose to consolidate with RSU 21. They knew that this could happen, and the contract could be bought out in 5 years with TAMS. Why should they send the kids 2 towns away to attend a middle school that does a poorer job than MSK? TA is overcrowded now. Losing the middle school will give them more space for the international students.

July 10, 2010 at 11:12 AM Report abuse

Les said...

middleone , would you send your child to a school(MSK) that has serious air quality issues (molds and mildew) that they cannot seem to find and rectify. "If we look the other way, maybe it will all go away" seems to be their arrogant mantra. Also Kennebunk didn't want to consolodate with Arundel several years ago but when the smell of money became too strong ,they deceided that since Baldy in Augusta decreed that we would have"consolidations"the money was good.

July 10, 2010 at 11:34 AM Report abuse

middleone said...

Actually, I'm familiar with the quality of education in Kennebunk, since one child went through the system, and it is excellent. Look at the TAMs test scores, or compare TA to KHS. While I am not a big fan of these types of tests, they can be used to compare one district to another. RSU 21 has it hand and fist over TA.

July 10, 2010 at 5:24 PM Report abuse

voxhumana said...

to your point, middleone, I checked out the data available on the DOE web site (http://www.maine.gov/education/mea/edmea.htm) If you look at 8th grade test results, MSK ranks 13th in the state... TAMS, after 3 years working with Arundel students, ranks 168th. I don't even have a dog in this fight but it's crystal clear to this senior taxpayer. The question is, where's your priority, Arundel?

July 12, 2010 at 9:52 AM Report abuse

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