Panel agrees on software
By Donna M. Perry
,
Staff Writer
Friday, July 11, 2008
JAY - School Committee members voted unanimously Thursday to buy software through a three-year lease that they say will make it easier to submit the 3,000 reports required by the state each year.
The decision was made despite objections from town officials as they and school officials offered opinions and authority for the purchase. The lease will cost $14,526 annually.
During earlier budget discussions, the issue of buying the Advanced Data System software, an eight-component package, arose in a plan to have Jay schools share payroll and payable services with SAD 36. That school district already has the software.
The town of Jay provides the financial services to the School Department now through a Trio software program used by many municipalities.
School officials budgeted $48,500 to have two of SAD 36's central office staff members come over to Jay and do payroll and accounts payable services. The software cost was also covered in the budget.
However, Jay town officials sought a legal opinion and were told that they could refuse to have the services removed from the town office since schools are still a town department.
Several years ago the services were moved from the superintendent's office, prior to Superintendent Robert Wall being hired, to the town office to make it more efficient to keep town books.
Selectmen and Town Manager Ruth Marden sent a letter to the School Committee earlier this year opposing the purchase and asked the panel to remove the software and additional personnel from the budget until further research was done.
The School Committee does not plan to use the software this year but wants to be able to send its reports to the state and be ready to align with the towns in SAD 36 for a possible school consolidation.
The School Committee agreed to remove the shared personnel cost with SAD 36 from the budget but kept the software cost in the budget.
Selectmen and Marden told School Committee members Thursday that they believed the software cost was also removed from the budget.
Select board Chairman Steve McCourt said that he thought when school officials came before them that the agreement was to wait to see if Jay, Livermore and Livermore Falls voters would approve consolidation before buying the software.
School Committee Chairwoman Mary Redmond-Luce said the board only agreed to remove the personnel costs.
School Business Manager Stacie Everett said they need to buy the software to report more effectively to the state and it would save money if they bought it now rather than wait. Information would need to be entered into the new system prior July 1, 2009, she said.
"We cannot go from June 30, 2009 to being part of an RSU (regional school unit) July 1, 2009 and have no records," Everett said.
Both SAD 36 and Jay, if they each had the software license, would receive credits for the programs they had if a new school system is formed.
"We have 3,000 reports we have to give the state of Maine," Redmond-Luce said. "We still need school software to do school functions. Payroll and payables are a small part of it."
Marden said it was such a controversial issue, at the very least she thought it should come back to selectmen before it appeared in a warrant to be paid. Once she learned the purchase was on the agenda, she said, she wanted to discuss it before it came before selectmen and they refused to sign the warrant.
"Is it controversial because you're afraid payroll and payables are not going to be done in the town office or is it controversial because we need software to do school reports?" Redmond-Luce asked.
Marden said it was town officials understanding that there would be no purchase until after a regional school unit was formed.
"It is ineffective. It's inefficient," Wall said of town software. "(The ADS software) is an effective way to work with the state (Department of Education.) This Trio is a municipal software."
Wall said he is responsible for school financials and he needs to have the correct information to do so.
When select board Vice Chairman Warren Bryant made a comment, Redmond-Luce told him in her opinion it was conflict of interest since his wife is Jay's financial director.
Marden said the committee could talk to selectmen at 6:30 p.m. Monday, July 14, at the town office. |
CLICK HERE To Show/Hide Discussion Thread - (7 Comments)
Comments
 |
Posted By:jeff jacobson at July 11, 2008 9:33 AM (Suggest Removal) Seems the townspeople arent the only ones who get the wool pulled over their eyes by the school board. They want to spend this money IN CASE they merge with SAD 36. It looks to me like we better get our house in order if we want anyone to merge with us and maybe now the selectmen and Ruth Marden will help do it. (and why can the school board appoint a new member?? guarantee we get a clone.
| Add your comments
|
Posted By:Taxpayer at July 11, 2008 9:51 AM (Suggest Removal) I think its the town not the school that is hood winking us taxpayers on this one! Maybe the town does not want the school board to have school payroll done at the school again. This would cut a position from the sacred cow town office.Its time the selectmen think for themselves!Kudos to Ms Redmond-Luce for speaking truth.
| Add your comments
|
Posted By:???????????????????????? at July 11, 2008 10:10 AM (Suggest Removal) All we hear about from the school system is technology, technology, and more technology. When I attended JHS in the early 80's the student population was doubled and we had less admin, and secretaries. to me it seems that this tecnology is only adding positions to the school system.I'm sure we will add staff to run this tecnology! Where I work technology has decreased the number of hours used to staff our business. When is this going to happen in Jay?? Hopefully the selectboard will step up and begin to force the consolidation issue, employee production, mis-management of our town and schools. Time for the taxpayers to take back our town from both these boards.
| Add your comments
|
Posted By:Michael at July 11, 2008 10:40 AM (Suggest Removal) Why don't any of you join the budget committee and help deal with the different parts of the town budget? There is room left, and you ARE welcome. The committee needs more people that are willing to represent the taxpayers in town. It does get testy at times, but that is what happens when you deal with administrations that are used to getting their way one way or the other.
| Add your comments
|
Posted By:wenulata at July 11, 2008 3:56 PM (Suggest Removal) Wow, I think this amounts to, too many chiefs and not enough Indians. Come on, Jay is not a major metropolis. Why all the issues? We do have way too many people in the town office. So yes, I agree the "sacred cow" may need to be sacraficed. In these tough economical times why shoudl anyone feel exempt from reality because this town runs on a -who you know, not what you know basis?
| Add your comments
|
Posted By:Concerned Citizen at July 11, 2008 5:56 PM (Suggest Removal) Why does the blame always land on the school committee? The article was pretty clear about Ms Marden trying to micro manage the schools. The software isn't even a threat to the town or it's officials, it would align your school with the state. As far as techology goes it would be more efficient for your school system to be able to report to the state using similar programs instead of trio which is designed just for towns. The issue of whether or not you merge with sad#36 shouldn't even come into play here, the point of the software is to be able to more accurately report to the state department of education (which Ruth you are not in charge of), which in turn needs the accurate information in order to decide if any monies goes to your school system. Maybe Ruth and her selecpeople want the town of Jay to just foot the entire school budget. As far as Mr Bryant goes, I agree with Mary, that has got to be a conflict of interest and he should not have anything to say about it.
| Add your comments
|
Posted By:???????????????????????? at July 11, 2008 7:57 PM (Suggest Removal) There every year most nights...you?
| Add your comments
|
|
Advertisement

|
 |
| John R. Hatzenbuehler, M.D. |
a sports medicine specialist, has been named to
the Central Maine Medical Center Medical Staff. He is practicing with
Central Maine Sports Medicine in Lewiston. |
read more >>
|
| "Mini-Medical School" Educational Series |
beginning in October is sponsored by Central Maine Medical Center and the Central Maine Heart and Vascular
Institute. |
read more >>
|
| “Understanding Cardiac Medications For Those With ICDs” |
will be the topic of
a presentation set for the October 16 meeting of the Central and Western
Maine ICD Support Group. |
read more >>
|
| CMHVI Launching Chapter of Mended Hearts |
a national non-profit organization that supports heart disease patients and their families through a visiting program and monthly meetings. |
read more >>
|
|
|