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Board approves one-year Harlem Children's Zone partnership after debate over scope and cost
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Summary
The board approved a one-year, no-cost memorandum with the William Julius Wilson Institute/Harlem Children's Zone for Promise Pathways; some commissioners warned the program extends beyond traditional education functions and that "no cost" understates staff effort.
The Waterbury Board of Education voted to approve a memorandum of agreement with the William Julius Wilson Institute/Harlem Children's Zone to run the Promise Pathways program on a one-year, no-cost basis.
Commissioner Anthony Ireland moved for approval. Commissioner Vanstone said he supported the program in principle but questioned whether the district should take on activities beyond traditional educational responsibilities. "To promote this as a 0 cost is...it's not. We're gonna have a lot of time we're gonna spend in it," Vanstone said, urging caution about staff workload and potential local financial implications if community funding did not materialize.
Supporters, including the superintendent and other commissioners, said the one-year term provides flexibility for reassessment and emphasized the program's community supports. The board approved the memorandum after discussion and a recorded voice vote.
The agreement was presented as a one-year arrangement rather than a multi-year contract to allow the district to reassess outcomes and resource demands at the end of the year.

