All town offices and agencies, including Newtown Senior Center, will be closed Friday, April 15, for Good Friday.
Newtown Community Center will be open normal o...
A number of stories were posted to newtownbee.com this past weekend. In case you missed them, here is a list of some of those stories.
"Kleats For Kids: Marc Ma...
Marie Grace Cuomo passed peacefully into the hands of the Lord on April 7, 2022, in her home in her beloved Newtown, Conn. Marie was 91.
Born on the kitchen tab...
July 26, 1966 to April 8, 2022
Alexey Avetisyan, 55, of Newtown, entered eternal rest on Friday, April 8, 2022, finding peace after a long battle with canc...
A mixture of old and new talent has the Newtown High School boys’ track and field team excited for a fun season in which they are eager to see what they can acc...
Members of the Newtown High School Students Advocating For Diversity And Equity (SADE) Club recently shared insight into an upcoming Read Aloud event at C.H. Bo...
Do you know a young person who is passionate about saving the environment and its creatures? Protect Our Pollinators (POP) wants to give them the platform to sh...
Rock n’ Rescue is a nonprofit animal organization based in South Salem, N.Y., and its “happy tails” have been making the 30-mile trip into Newtown.
The nonprofi...
BROOKFIELD — A Newtown artist is one of three to have works featured in the current exhibition at Brookfield Craft Center.
Janice Mauro, Isabella Saraceni, and ...
BOE Referendum, Round Two, UnderwayRegistered Newtown voters are heading to the polls today, for the second attempt by the Board of Education to get a budget for the 2024-25 academic year passed.Registered Newtown voters are heading to the polls today, for the second attempt by the Board of Education to get a budget for the 2024-25 academic year passed.All voting is again taking place at Newtown Middle School, 11 Queen Street. Polls opened at 6 am and will remain open until 8 pm.Following a rejection of the school budget by 507 votes at a referendum on April 23, the Legislative Council at its April 29 meeting slashed $1,408,307 from the Board of Education’s proposed 2024-25 budget.The reduction was unanimously approved by all 12 councilmen, in contrast to a previous, pre-referendum meeting on March 27, where no bottom line for the school budget drew more than a simple majority of seven votes.The new bottom line of $87,409,066 is a $2,339,415 or 2.75% spending increase over the 2023-24 budget, which places it in line with the municipal budget, which was passed by voters.The previous proposed 2024-25 BOE budget rejected by voters was $88,817,373, which would have been a $3,747,722 or 4.4% spending increase.The education budget failed, 1,701 No votes to 1,194 Yes votes.On the secondary question to the education budget — If the proposed sum for the Board of Education is not approved, should the revised budget be higher? — the responses were 727 Yes and 2,071 No.The Registrar of Voters reported 15.1% of Newtown’s registered voters participated in the April 23 referendum, with 2,952 people showing up at the middle school to vote and another 47 turning in absentee ballots.
It is a shame but yes, we are so broke... The NIMBY crowd will not allow any new development so there is no ability to add to the tax base... got to hire strangers to park at our schools, and grocery stores and sneak around on our property to ensure our kindergartners Spanish class doesn't get canceled.
I was the recipient of such a invasion of my privacy when my daughter was visiting her boyfriend in Waterbury. They tried to get me to pay them taxes instead of Newtown. They were rude, offensive and threatening and I had to call the mayor of Waterbury to finally get it cleared up after being threatened. It was a long drawn out process to get this overturned. Are we that broke that we have to turn our residents over to these mercenaries? This is beyond belief. How dare you hire these rent a cops to harass and threaten us?
Thanks for the quote, many people don’t realize Newtown does not exist in a silo and we have peers to benchmark against. For example Trumbull also spends less per student and outperforms us.
ALL students benefit from consistent policies and quality education. Affordability matters, especially to less affluent families which tend to skew more heavily minority based on census data.