UPDATE (Friday afternoon):
Meanwhile former Amherst School Committee Chair Irv Rhodes posted a response on my very public Facebook page to this article: "When all is said and done, either the school committees/ and or towns will correct this situation on their own -- or be forced to by legal actions of concerned citizens."
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Before the venerable Amherst Regional Public School system decides to expand regionalization to the elementary level (currently the Region is middle and high schools) they should get their own administrative house in order by bringing the current nine member Regional School Committee into compliance with state law. According to Mass General Laws Chapter 71 section 14E: "Electing committee members by voters in member communities with each community’s representation apportioned according to population."
In Amherst all five elected School Committee members automatically become members of the nine member Region.
Thus Amherst, population 37,819, has a 55% say in governing the expensive Regional school system ... although we make up 88.4% of the 42,762 total population.
The other three school committees do indeed appoint members to serve on the Region. Pelham, oddly, the smallest of the three, with a total population of only 1,321 has two members serving on the Region.
Leverett, population 1,851, and Shutesbury, population 1771, have only one each chosen from their 5 member school committees.
Hmm...
But yes, according to that same state statute, another way to populate the Regional Committee is "appointing committee members by locally elected officials such as school board members."
So then who decided itsy bitsy Pelham should have two members?
Either way, Amherst is getting shortchanged. And let's not even talk about the Union 26 "partnership" we currently have with Pelham to govern the elementary schools; where Amherst provides 90% of the students -- and pays 94% of the overhead -- and has only a 50% say in governance.
Where's "no taxation without representation" Daniel Shays when you need him?