Accountability posts
Drafts ready to share. Click to copy, then post. School Board · Sunapee · February 2, 2026.
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Off-agenda votes on six high-significance warrant articles without adequate public notice
⚠️ TRANSPARENCY ALERT: On 2/2/26, Sunapee School Board voted on 6 major warrant articles — $15.8M+ in commitments — but the public agenda only listed a 'default budget review.' Residents had no notice of the full scope. That's a... https://meetingwatch.org/nh/sunapee/school-bo...
Legislative uncertainty undermining local open enrollment policy — and lack of contingency planning
At the 2/2/26 Sunapee School Board meeting, the board voted to cap open enrollment at 0% — then a state rep told them HB 751 could override that decision by July 1st. The board thanked her and moved on. No contingency plan discu... https://meetingwatch.org/nh/sunapee/school-bo...
Budget increase exceeded the board's own stated target
Sunapee School Board set a budget goal of 'just under 3%' — then adopted a 3.56% increase on 2/2/26. That's $15,715,564. The overage is driven by teacher contracts and rising health insurance. Board: unavoidable. Taxpayers: your... https://meetingwatch.org/nh/sunapee/school-bo...
Combination of off-agenda open enrollment vote and real-time legislative threat disclosed mid-meeting
On 2/2/26, Sunapee's board voted 0% open enrollment limits, citing ~$26,000 lost per departing student. A state rep said HB 751 — which would override this — may pass THIS THURSDAY. None of this was on the published agenda. Suna... https://meetingwatch.org/nh/sunapee/school-bo...
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🧵 THREAD: What actually happened at the Sunapee School Board meeting on 2/2/26 — and what wasn't on the agenda when you decided whether to show up. #MeetingWatch
The published agenda described a narrow 'review of a proposed amendment to the default budget.' What actually happened: the board formally voted on 6 separate warrant articles totaling over $15.8 million, plus an open enrollment...
If you looked at the agenda and decided not to attend, you missed votes on: a $15,715,564 operating budget (+3.56%), a $25K special ed reserve, a $50K HVAC fund, a $25K tech fund, a $25K school renovation fund, and a 0% open enr...
On open enrollment (Article 8): the board voted to set enrollment limits at 0% — effectively blocking outside students — to protect local taxpayers. Their math: each student who leaves costs ~$26,000 that the state doesn't reimb...
Then, mid-meeting, State Rep. Hope Damon took the floor. She said HB 751 — which would OVERRIDE local open enrollment decisions — was coming to the House floor that Thursday, with a July 1, 2026 effective date. The board thanked...
Board member a speaker put it plainly: 'This open enrollment thing is going to happen. It will be happening.' In other words, the board may have known their own vote could be moot within months — and voted anyway, without a publ...
Also worth noting: the board's stated budget target was 'just under 3%.' The adopted budget came in at 3.56%. That's not a scandal, but it's a gap between what was promised and what was delivered — and residents deserve to hear...
Good news: biomass heating saved Sunapee $38,000 vs. oil ($22K at the high school, $16K at the elementary/gym). That's a real win worth acknowledging.
Bottom line: Sunapee's school board made sweeping decisions on 2/2/26 that were not clearly telegraphed on the public agenda. Residents who rely on agendas to decide when to show up were left out. That's a structural transparenc... https://meetingwatch.org/nh/sunapee/school-board/2026-02-02/ #SunapeeNH
SUNAPEE SCHOOL BOARD — FEBRUARY 2, 2026: What Was Decided, and What Wasn't on the Agenda On February 2, 2026, the Sunapee School Board held a deliberative session that went significantly beyond what the published agenda suggested. The posted agenda described a review of a proposed amendment to the default budget — a narrow, technical item. What actually took place was a comprehensive set of formal votes on six separate warrant articles totaling more than $15.8 million in commitments, plus a major open enrollment policy decision. Residents who read the agenda and chose not to attend had no way of knowing the full scope of what would be decided. That is a transparency failure, and it deserves to be named as one. The votes included: adoption of a $15,715,564 operating budget (a 3.56% increase — above the board's own stated goal of 'just under 3%,' driven by teacher contract costs and rising health insurance); a $25,000 special education capital reserve; $50,000 for HVAC equipment replacement (part of a $600,000 phased project); $25,000 for network infrastructure upgrades; and $25,000 for elementary school renovations including ADA compliance work. All passed by voice vote. The most consequential item was Article 8: the board voted to set open enrollment limits at 0%, effectively capping outside student enrollment to protect local taxpayers. The financial rationale is real — each student who leaves the district represents approximately $26,000 in costs the state does not reimburse. But the vote came with a significant complication: mid-meeting, State Representative Hope Damon took the floor and informed the board that House Bill 751 — which would override local open enrollment decisions entirely — was expected to come before the full House that Thursday, with a potential effective date of July 1, 2026. The board acknowledged the information and thanked Rep. Damon, but no public discussion of contingency planning followed. Board member a speaker acknowledged directly: 'This open enrollment thing is going to happen. It will be happening.' The board may have voted knowing their decision could be nullified within five months. Residents of Sunapee should know what was decided on their behalf on February 2nd — and should ask why decisions of this scale were not more clearly advertised in advance. The biomass heating system did deliver real savings ($38,000 compared to oil heating last year), and the capital reserve funds reflect genuine infrastructure planning. But good outcomes don't excuse a process that left residents without adequate notice to participate. If you care about these issues, the open enrollment question in particular is not settled — HB 751 is moving at the state level, and your voice still matters. https://meetingwatch.org/nh/sunapee/school-board/2026-02-02/ #MeetingWatch #SunapeeNH