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©
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. |
State
funds tight for furnishing schools The
Sisters School Board is getting a little nervous about how much money the
district will receive from the state to pay for furniture and other equipment
for the new high school and the remodeled former high school that has become
a middle school.
Last spring, the board accepted then-Superintendent Steve Swisher's estimate
that the state would give the district an amount equal to at least 4 percent
of the $21 million cost of the two projects.
It now appears that a first round of funding may be only a little more
than half that amount.
The money would come from a special fund created by the Legislature several
years ago to subsidize the cost of "fixtures, furnishings and equipment"
(FF&E) in new school buildings.
The law actually authorizes payments of up to 8 percent of a building's
cost. But in recent times, state education budget cuts have left average
FF&E payments well below that level. That's why Swisher said he was being
conservative in estimating an allocation of about half the maximum allowable.
Based on that estimate, the board negotiated a three-year line of credit
with Bank of the Cascades for $844,000 to furnish and equip the two schools.
This was necessary because the equipment had to be bought before the schools
opened this fall while the state funding would not be received until later.
Schools eligible for FF&E money in 2003-05 will receive a payment in
March 2004, with an additional amount possible in May 2005, near the end
of the biennium.
District Business Manager Diane Shelly told the board at its meeting
Monday, September 15 that an Oregon Department of Education representative
had recently estimated that the payments coming in March would average
only 2.65 percent of the cost of affected projects.
But Shelly assured the board that a better estimate would be available
within a month.
In a later interview, Shelly said the district has been hoping to receive
a full 4 percent of its project's cost from the state next March, and
possibly an additional amount in May 2005. But she said information has
become available that will soon make it possible to get a clearer and
firmer idea of what can actually be expected next March.
Even if the FF&E payment falls short of the hoped-for 4 percent, there
would be a possibility that a supplementary payment in May 2005 would
bring the total up to that level.
And in the meantime, the district has two possible cushions to fall back
on.
For the time being it still has its low-interest loan from the bank.
And in coming months it hopes to have proceeds from the sale of the former
Lundgren Mill property, 29.5 acres of surplus land that the district recently
put on the market (The Nugget, September 3). If the board gets its asking
price of $100,000 an acre, it will receive $2,950,000 from the sale.
And as Shelly pointed out, in a March 2001 resolution on the disposition
of sale proceeds, the board declared that the money would be used "to
pay for the repairs and upgrades needed at the current high school" as
well as "to purchase school furniture, equipment and other items not covered
by the bond that are needed to equip the new (high) school."
"So if worse comes to worst," Shelly explained, "we'll still have some
funds available for that purpose."
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