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©
2001
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School
district taps foundation donations
Donations totaling $22,450 made
by developers of McKinney Butte Ranch to upgrade the Sisters sewer line
for Sisters High School never made it to the City of Sisters.
The line upgrades were instead
paid entirely from school district cash reserves.
The donations, which were
made to the Sisters School Foundation, were used for other purposes at
the discretion of School District Superintendent Steve Swisher.
Swisher said the donations
were used for expenses that would have otherwise been paid from the school
general fund, including athletic club memberships that were part of employment
contracts.
Board members were apparently
not told donations totaling $22,450 were available when they voted on
December 11, 2000 to transfer $44,900 from cash reserves to upsize the
sewer line.
The Nugget began looking into
the transaction after obtaining a copy of a January 3, 2001, letter from
Swisher to City Administrator Barbara Warren, advising her that developers
contributed to the sewer upgrade; however, the newspaper found no accounting
record of this contribution.
According to correspondence
beginning in June, 1999, the school district was negotiating with the
City of Sisters to bring high school property along the McKenzie Highway
into the sewer system boundary.
The school district was asked
by the city for $44,900 to increase the size of the line through Sisters
from a 15-inch line to an 18-inch line, with capacity increase of 44 percent,
to accommodate the existing high school and any future school development.
In a letter dated August 29,
2000, to Richard Nored of HGE, the city's engineer, Swisher committed
the district to paying for the upsized line.
Swisher also wrote to Nored
"...we are actively seeking grant sources and Legislative relief to assist
us in the project. We want to keep all options open for funding before
we use Sisters School District general fund dollars, which would have
a negative impact on our educational programs."
Among the potential sources
of money were the owners of the 90-acre McKinney Butte Ranch, adjacent
to the school property.
McKinney Butte is owned by
school board member Bill Reed, developer Bill Willitts and builder Curt
Kallberg. Each has been extremely generous to the school district over
the years, donating thousands of dollars and many hundreds of hours of
personal time.
According to Reed, "Steve
Swisher was looking for help with the $44,900 figure."
Reed said the developers also
recognized that they could some day benefit from the sewer line upgrade
if they pursued rezoning of their land for higher density use, though
that might not occur.
The McKinney Butte owners
decided to contribute half the cost.
Each made a donation of $7,483.33,
for a total of $22,450 to the Sisters School Foundation.
However, on December 11, 2000
the Sisters School Board, which Reed chaired at the time, passed a supplemental
budget resolution that transferred $68,742 for sewer and water.
This included the entire $44,900
to pay for the sewer upsizing for the high school.
Apparently, the four school
board members aside from Reed did not know that $22,450 from the McKinney
Butte partners was available.
As a developer, Reed said
he thought his donation would be used for the sewer line.
He also thought the developers'
donations had been discussed by the board.
However, none of the other
board members recalled any discussion that the $22,450 was available from
non-school sources.
Swisher said he wished board
members had been told of the donations, but explained that he arrived
late for that meeting and was still recovering from his near-fatal auto
accident in September.
The developers' money was
not used for the sewer line. Instead, $22,450 went to a "discretionary"
account at the Sisters School Foundation available to the school district
for other purposes.
Swisher said that even though
the money did not go directly to the city for the sewer upsizing, it was
spent on items that otherwise would have been paid for out of the general
fund.
Significant expenditures from
the foundation account, following the December 14, 2000 deposit of developers'
checks, include $5,000 for technology at the elementary school, $1,000
for high school "VICA" program, and $1,372 for softball field improvements.
Another $6,000 was drawn for
a contract with the Sisters Athletic Club to provide direction and training
of students involved in a "school to work" program.
Swisher said that although
$6,000 had been transferred from the foundation to the school district,
only $1,000 was spent on the athletic club contract and the arrangement
would not be pursued.
The remaining $5,000 was still
with the school district and would become a general fund resource for
next year, Swisher indicated.
Another $1,068 went for memberships
in the Sisters Athletic Club for staff members as part of their employment
contract, according to the superintendent.
Swisher, who is secretary
of the foundation and sits on the foundation board, said the discretionary
account was set up for exactly this purpose, to offset expenses that would
otherwise be paid from the general fund.
He emphasized that there was
no negative impact on the district. Placing the donations with the foundation
allowed maximum flexibility in distribution of the funds.
Contracts for service, such
as that with the Sisters Athletic Club, save the district money, Swisher
said, as opposed to hiring personnel.
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