The Connecticut Education Department unanimously voted to approve the education commissioner’s recommendation, finding reasonable cause that the Killingly.
The inquiry stems from a 10-4b complaint filed by Killingly residents who claimed the local board violated the educational interests of the state when it rejected a grant-funded mental health clinic at the high school.
Normand Ferron said he wants an apology and retraction from Michael McKeon, the director of Legal and Governmental Affairs for the state Department of Education.
The Killingly Board of Education has failed to meet the mental health needs of its students, according to a report from the Connecticut State Department of.