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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Schools
seek funds for furniture It would be a
shame to build a new house and not have any furniture to put in it. The
same would be true of a new school.
This is not likely to happen
with the new high school being built in Sisters, scheduled to open in
mid-September. But the school board and administration have not found
it easy to agree on exactly how to furnish the new structure or how to
pay for it.
In the meantime, some faculty
members have said they heard that at its last meeting the board refused
to approve furniture purchases. That's not correct.
The board has agreed to borrow
funds to pay for furniture now, to be repaid with state grant funds.
The board had before it a
proposed resolution authorizing a line of credit for $840,000 to furnish
and equip the new high school and the remodeled middle school, at a low
interest rate (2.765 percent) offered by the Bank of the Cascades.
Superintendent Steve Swisher
explained that the loan was necessary because the district must buy furniture
now but won't know until next spring how much help it can expect for this
purpose from the state.
A law adopted several years
ago set up a grant program to pay districts for furniture and equipment
for new schools at up to 8 percent of total construction costs. But the
actual amount appropriated varies from year to year. This year, it is
set at 3.8 percent, which in Sisters' case would bring in more than $800,000.
Swisher said Sisters won't
know how much it might receive for 2003-2004 until next February and in
the meantime should act conservatively. Although the line of credit would
be for $840,000, Swisher proposed not obligating more than about $400,000
until October, when a clearer indication of the state funding level will
be available.
After some discussion, board
member Steve Keeton proposed that the board authorize a loan of only $500,000.
In the end, however, previous
motions were withdrawn and Keeton moved to approve the resolution as originally
proposed -- with a line of credit for $840,000 -- but with the condition
that no funds be spent without prior board approval.
That motion passed 4 to 1,
with Eric Dolson dissenting.
The topic is on the agenda
again on Monday, April 7.
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