Susan Rees: Fund our public schools

Students from Northampton High School protested against proposed school budget cuts, marching from the high school to City Hall to take their concerns to the mayor’s office on Wednesday.

Students from Northampton High School protested against proposed school budget cuts, marching from the high school to City Hall to take their concerns to the mayor’s office on Wednesday. STAFF FILE PHOTO

Students staged a sit-in at the office of Mayor Gina-Louise Sciarra on Wednesday ahead of a vote on the school budget.

Students staged a sit-in at the office of Mayor Gina-Louise Sciarra on Wednesday ahead of a vote on the school budget. STAFF PHOTO/ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL

Published: 04-11-2024 4:17 PM

Modified: 04-11-2024 6:18 PM


It is mind-boggling that in a region that holds some of the finest and affluent colleges in our nation, our public schools are in such dire financial shape. Clearly, we in western Massachusetts value education, yet we are on the brink of decimating our public schools.

When I was the school nurse at Jackson Street School, I was uniquely positioned to see the toll that short staffing took on the physical and emotional health of young and vulnerable students. I cannot begin to imagine what effect cutting even more positions will have. We need to build up our schools to recover from the extreme losses to learning and growth that closing during COVID forced on our children.

Please find the money to fund our future.

Susan Rees

Florence

Yesterday's Most Read Articles

A groundbreaking anniversary: Northampton couple reflects on lead role in legalization of same-sex marriage in Massachusetts 20 years ago
Rutherford Platt and Barbara Kirchner: ‘Magical thinking’ in downtown Northampton
Around Amherst: High school sleuths point out $2M mistake in town budget
Photos: Welcome to the Iron Horse stage
Area briefs: Free repair event in Northampton; sheep to visit Historic Deerfield; horse ride in Belchertown
Mayor’s budget boosts schools 8.5%: Advocates protest coming job cuts as spending falls short of demands