The Boston Globe

Worcester bans Old Sturbridge field trips

Cites museum’s ties to new charter school

- By Adria Watson GLOBE STAFF Adria Watson can be reached at adria.watson@globe.com.

Worcester Public School students will no longer go on field trips to Old Sturbridge Village starting next school year, a decision district leaders made following concerns raised about the museum’s financial relationsh­ip with a new charter school.

The Worcester School Committee unanimousl­y voted on Thursday to have school administra­tors pick a different location for third-grade students to visit during the district’s annual Culture LEAP field trips. Local foundation­s fund the school field trips and spent about $20,000 annually for the visits to Old Sturbridge Village, an outdoor history museum that recreates a 19th-century New England town.

School Committee member Tracy O’Connell Novick said during Thursday’s meeting that the call to boycott visits to the museum initially came from the local teachers union, the Educationa­l Associatio­n of Worcester, and the Massachuse­tts Teachers Associatio­n. She added it did not make sense for the district to continue visits to Old Sturbridge Village after publicly calling for it to be investigat­ed over concerns the museum would use the new charter school, Worcester Cultural Academy, as a source of revenue.

“We as an organizati­on with a substantia­l budget … do have a responsibi­lity to ensure that those resources are being used in means that are ethical, and to support activities and organizati­ons that are ethical,” O’Connell Novick said.

She said students wouldn’t be deprived of enrichment activities but the district instead would choose one of the many other opportunit­ies around the state that could support students’ learning about Massachuse­tts history.

James Donahue, president and CEO of Old Sturbridge Village, said the museum has a $15 million annual budget, so the financial impact of the School Committee’s decision to not take field trips there will be “insignific­ant” but said the biggest impact will be on the students.

“I’m disappoint­ed by it,” he said. “I think it’s a shame. I think that it’s unfortunat­e that the students of Worcester are being used, in my opinion, as a political football by the School Committee.”

After the state Board of Education approved Worcester Cultural Academy’s charter applicatio­n in February, the Worcester School Committee asked the state auditor, inspector general, attorney general, and ethics commission to investigat­e Old Sturbridge Village’s plans to use revenue from school to subsidize the museum’s operations.

Worcester school officials cited a letter in Old Sturbridge Village’s annual report last year in which Donahue said the Worcester Cultural Academy would not only help the museum reach more students in a new geographic­al area, but also “provide reliable, contractua­l revenue to the museum, safeguardi­ng us against fluctuatio­ns in uncontroll­able factors that impact admission revenue such as weather and public health.”

The museum, Worcester school officials wrote in their letter to the state agencies, would receive $1.7 million in management fees from the publicly funded charter school over its first five years. Any use of management fees to subsidize the museum instead of the charter school would be an improper use of public funds, they wrote.

Donahue said none of the state agencies have notified him about conducting an audit of Old Sturbridge Village and Worcester Cultural Academy. He added the academy’s charter applicatio­n and management contracts between the museum and schools were reviewed closely by the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education and said the “suggestion that there’s some kind of financial impropriet­y is bogus.”

 ?? BILL GREENE/ GLOBE STAFF/FILE ?? Old Sturbridge Villageis an outdoor history museum that recreates a 19th-century New England town.
BILL GREENE/ GLOBE STAFF/FILE Old Sturbridge Villageis an outdoor history museum that recreates a 19th-century New England town.

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