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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
School
spending compared statewide Sisters schools
spent $7,553 per student on operating costs in 2000-2001, according to an
audit by the Oregon Secretary of State's office.
That was slightly above the
statewide average.
The audit entitled "Oregon
Department of Education: Kindergarten Through 12th Grade Cost Survey"
was released about six weeks ago. It was, in fact, a study of per-student
operating expenditures in all 198 Oregon school districts, broken into
several categories, for the year 2000-2001.
In total spending per student
the survey shows the statewide average of all districts as $7,258. This
is supposed to include a district's spending for all purposes except debt
service and capital outlay, according to a senior auditor who worked on
the survey.
Bend-La Pine and Redmond districts
came in at $6,892 and $6,504 respectively, somewhat below the average.
Differences of this type might be expected because larger districts benefit
from economies of scale.
The accompanying chart lists
the fall 2000 enrollments and total spending per student for all of the
six Central Oregon school districts with more than 500 students. Sisters
is next to the smallest of the group, exceeding only Culver in size. Sisters'
spending per student, however, is the second highest of the group, exceeded
only by Jefferson County School District (Madras).
Sisters Superintendent Steve
Swisher said he thought the spending figure for his district looked a
little high. After doing some research, Swisher offered a theory that
may indicate that the figures in the study do contain some apples-and-oranges
problems.
In 2000-2001, the Sisters
district borrowed $800,000 against the Lundgren Mill property which it
intends to sell as a way to pay for maintenance and repairs to the high
school. The district actually spent $709,000 on those repairs.
Swisher says the borrowed
money came into the general fund and was set up as "a special revenue
fund basically for maintenance projects...so it probably did show as expenditures"
that would have been included in the state's survey.
If this one-time special expenditure
were excluded, Sisters' total spending per student would drop by $615
to a level of $6,938. The district would then rank fourth instead of second
among its Central Oregon peers.
If the survey had been done
for the following year, however, Sisters' ranking would be back up to
the higher level. That's because the district's voters approved a "local
option" levy that is yielding about $700,000 a year in operating revenue.
The levy began in 2001-2002
with a term of four years. Sisters is the only district of the six on
the chart whose voters have approved such a supplement.
The survey breaks expenditures
into three large categories and a variety of sub-categories. The chart
below shows expenditures for one of the three major groupings, instruction,
which includes everything from teachers' salaries and benefits to supplies
and materials.
Sisters ranks second in this
category among the Central Oregon districts, which caused Swisher no dismay.
"...At least it's being spent
on instruction," he remarked, noting that "we do have better class sizes
than our comparative districts around here, and that's a conscious effort."
The full survey, including
data for every school district in Oregon, is on the Secretary of State's
web site at www.sos.state.or.us
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