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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
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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. |
School
gets funds for equipment High
school Principal Bob Macauley won approval Monday night, October 13, to
spend an additional $210,000 to purchase equipment for the new Sisters High
School.
The district has already spent
approximately $630,000 allocated to fund Furnishings Fixtures and Equipment
(FFE). The district is expecting reimbursement for part of its FFE expenditures
through a state grant program.
However, the estimated state
funding, which is based on a percentage of overall construction costs
has fluctuated and Superintendent Lynn Baker said he has been unable to
pin the state down on how much the state will pay.
According to Baker, the current
commitment is for $550,000. The school district has a line of credit for
$840,000 based on an earlier estimate of $880,000 in state FFE funds.
Proceeds from the sale of the district's Lundgren Mill property may be
used to supplement state-reimbursed FFE funds as well as for maintenance
on other buildings.
In a 3-2 vote, the board approved
spending up to that $840,000 limit. The $210,000 allowed to Macauley was
derived by subtracting the $630,000 already spent from the $840,000 cap.
That vote, along with the
split decision on allowing Macauley to determine which items the school
will select from a tiered list of FFE items revealed a philosophical fault
line on the board.
Eric Dolson (publisher of
The Nugget), wanted the board to scrutinize the list and set priorities.
Jeff Smith was hesitant to spend more than the state reimbursement guarantees
(currently $550,000).
Glen Lasken, Tom Coffield
and Bill Reed are comfortable that the Lundgren Mill proceeds will cover
any funding gap and wanted to leave the details to Macauley and his staff.
Dolson argued that while Macauley
and his staff did a good job compiling a realistic list of needs, it is
still the board's job to set funding priorities.
"I think it still comes down
to spending priorities and I'm not comfortable with saying 'it's your
money,'" Dolson said.
He argued that the board should
go through the items on the tiered FFE list and decide where money should
be spent.
"I see not doing that as an
abdication of our responsibility," he said.
Coffield disagreed, arguing
that staff knows best what they need.
"I see it (reviewing the list)
a different way," he said. "I see it as micromanaging."
With the $210,000 he was authorized
to spend Monday night, Macauley will purchase items ranging from front
office supplies to fitness and science equipment.
The board also authorized
purchase and installation of LCD (liquid crystal display screens) in classrooms,
although they were not officially part of the FFE list. The LCD screens
carry a total cost, including extensive installation work of approximately
$100,000.
They replace overhead projectors
and allow materials to be presented from a computer to a large screen.
Sisters resident Mike Gould,
sitting in the audience, recommended that the district look into flat-screen
liquid plasma TV screens for the same application.
He believes they may be more
flexible in use and comparable in cost if bought in bulk.
Macauley assured the board
that he was "not looking for a free ride. I'm not looking for something
for nothing."
He said he has aggressively
sought grants and done fund-raising to secure equipment and he will continue
to do so.
The district may spend more
lower-tiered items once proceeds start coming in from the sale of the
Lundgren Mill property.
However, Principal Tim Comfort
reminded the board that Lundgren Mill proceeds are also authorized to
go to other buildings and that if they're all spent on high school FFE,
there won't be anything left for the elementary and middle schools. |
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