The Marblehead School Committee on May 20 voted 4–0 to accept Superintendent John’s recommendation that the district not participate in Massachusetts’ school choice program.
At a public hearing, Superintendent John said the state’s $5,000 per‑pupil payment typically falls short of Marblehead’s per‑pupil costs and limits the district’s ability to vet incoming students for disciplinary histories or special‑education needs. “There’s this $5,000 cap that comes with them… we’re only getting $5,000 back,” he said, adding that incoming choice students sometimes arrive with needs that require supports the district would then have to provide without commensurate funding.
A committee member moved to accept the superintendent’s recommendation; the motion was seconded and passed unanimously. Chair (speaker 1) then closed the public hearing.
Why this matters: School choice can affect district budgets and classroom resources. By opting out, Marblehead preserves current enrollment and avoids taking students whose additional needs could require unfunded supports, the superintendent said. The committee noted the decision can be revisited annually.
What’s next: The district will remain classified as a non–school‑choice district unless the committee votes otherwise in a future meeting. The committee recorded the opening and closing of the hearing and the approval vote in the meeting minutes.