One Northeast Kingdom town took an unusual step to retain some control over its schoolโ€™s fate just as the state Legislature finalized passage of this yearโ€™s landmark education reform bill on Friday evening.

Around 40 Peacham, Vt., voters unanimously approved an article authorizing the select board to purchase the townโ€™s elementary school building for the nominal amount of $1. The pre-K-6 school with around 60 students continues to operate, but the town will now retain the facility and grounds for community use in the event that its school district merges with another, a likely outcome given the districtโ€™s small size.

Andra Hibbert, chair of the Peacham school board, said Monday that the idea of the property transfer surfaced about a year ago, when there was uncertainty about whether the Legislature would imminently force district mergers.

โ€œIt just felt like the only move we could make to sort of future-proof the school as a community asset,โ€ Hibbert said.

โ€œWe all want the school to stay open. We all love our school,โ€ she said, adding that the board and townspeople want to ensure the town is in charge of what the building is used for should a merger occur.

โ€œWe continue to believe that small, efficiently run, community schools are vital,โ€ the school board wrote in the Peacham town report. โ€œIt is critical for children that they be educated close to home in a context that knows and understands them well while meeting their needs.โ€

The building will be leased back to the district, with the school assuming responsibility for all operating costs. The building itself is in good shape, according to last yearโ€™s school meeting minutes, and its ventilation system, heating system and windows are all new. It is the only building that could work as an emergency shelter, Hibbert said, and abuts the town soccer field and pump track.

Rep. Peter Conlon, D-Cornwall, chair of the House Education Committee, said in an email last week that he couldnโ€™t think of a situation where a school district does not own its building, aside from Burlington School District renting the former Macyโ€™s department store during construction of the cityโ€™s new high school.

โ€œThere is at least one situation โ€” Ripton โ€” where the school closed and the building was given back to the town in the past year,โ€ he said. โ€œMost districts have that in their agreements that if the district closes a school, it must offer it back to the town.โ€

That was the case for Roxbury Village School, whose board voted to sell the school building to the town for $1 in November 2024. The school had been shuttered following a 2024 vote by the merged Montpelier Roxbury school board, in which five Montpelier board members voted to close the school, with four voting against.

Per the Montpelier Roxbury merger agreement, the school district could have kept the building if it found a financially feasible use for it, such as hosting central office employees or operating a specific magnet-type school. If it could not find such a use, it had to offer the building to the town of Roxbury for $1.

Hibbert said that worries about any future district retaining the Peacham School building and grounds for its own use spurred the townโ€™s decision.

Morgan Gold, a Peacham farmer well-known for sharing his life on YouTube, weighed in on the issue in a 12-minute video recapping Peachamโ€™s vote that he posted this weekend. By Monday afternoon, it had gained 23,000 views. Gold also shared the video in a Facebook group for Rural Vermont Rising, an advocacy organization representing rural landowners and farmers that coalesced earlier this year in opposition to Act 181, a 2024 land-use law.

โ€œWe see this as a very active and vibrant community,โ€ Gold says in the video. โ€œAnd a big part of that is our elementary school. That elementary school is the lifeblood of our town.โ€

Although the education reform bill that passed Friday evening does not mandate mergers, it does create a fast-moving process for facilitating voluntary district consolidation. Lawmakers hope future districts will have at least 2,000 students.

Peacham School currently has its own district controlled by its own school board, which is overseen by the larger Caledonia Central Supervisory Union. The supervisory union oversees five districts operating seven schools: Barnet, Vt., Danville, Vt., Waterford, Vt., Walden, Vt., Cabot, Vt., and Peacham, Vt., as well as Twinfield Union School serving Plainfield, Vt., and Marshfield, Vt. According to the stateโ€™s โ€œSchool District Builder,โ€ the entire supervisory union currently has 1,461 students.

The bill that passed Friday will also penalize more districts whose spending exceeds a certain threshold, with that mark lowering year after year. Last year, Peacham moved $10,000 in funds for the elementary schoolโ€™s after-school program into the town budget to avoid the excess-spending threshold penalty already in place.

Critics of the bill, which passed with broad support from legislators, say it will unfairly target small rural schools.

โ€œWe would not have so many young families moving to town if we didnโ€™t have an elementary school,โ€ Gold says in his video. โ€œIf we didnโ€™t have an elementary school, this would become a town just consigned to second-home owners and retirees. And, when I think about the future of this town, where I really do hope to spend the rest of my life in, itโ€™s kind of depressing.โ€

This story was republished with permission from VtDigger, which offers its reporting at no cost to local news organizations through its Community News Sharing Project. To learn more, visit vtdigger.org/community-news-sharing-project.