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A community Web site for the Octorara Area School District is now available for you at www.lancasteronline.com. To register, visit lancasteronline.com, click on My Community on the top left, and register to be notified or contribute some "buzz."

You will also have the opportunity to comment on community news and issues and send in news of community events. News items formerly posted to this site as a community service now apear just there.

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

Octorara furloughs more staff

The Octorara Area School Board May 16, telling the community they were managing district finances in a businesslike manner and with a “new reality,“ furloughed 18 evening custodians, a middle school math teacher, and outsourced speech and occupational therapy services to a lower bidder to again trim the 2011-12 budget.

The board also passed (by a 7-2 vote) a proposed final spending plan of $45,878,532, although Superintendent Tom Newcome said the numbers will likely move again before the final June 30 vote. Still up in the air is the cost for professional staff salaries and benefits as the OAEA negotiates a new contract with the school board, and state revenue figures.

At this point the proposed budget, which calls for using $1.2 million of the district’s fund balance, will cost Lancaster County taxpayers 28.55 mills. This is up .42 mills, or 1.49 percent over the present level. Chester County taxpayers will pay 35.49 mills, up .37 mills or 1.05 percent.

Newcome said furloughing the evening custodial staff and outsourcing this work to Servicemaster will save the district $200,000 annually. All furloughed custodians will receive nine days severance pay, cash for unused vacation and personal days, and three 15-year employees will receive $2,500 checks for their service. He said Servicemaster agreed to interview district employees for jobs.

The superintendent recommended that the board consider hiring from the outgoing staff two evening custodians to handle event set-up and tear-down, snow removal, heating and cooling system maintenance and mail at salaries not to exceed $45,000 each.

As for occupational and speech therapy, Newcome said the Chester County Intermediate Unit allowed the district to opt out of its services and contract for any needed services with Austill’s at various lower hourly rates.

Public comment was lively on the evening before the primary.

Jerry McArdle of Sadsbury Township said the district has spent $63 million to buy land and in building and renovation projects in the last decade, but enrollment is the same as it was during the 1970s, at 2,591 students.

“We have a new school across the street that’s half empty,” he said, challenging the school board to solve the “problems created by previous school boards and by not raising our taxes.”

Newcome said no buildings are “half empty” and previous school boards looked at seven different scenarios before beginning building projects.

“At some point people will be glad we got 2006 bid prices rather than 2016 prices,” Newcome said.

“It’s very easy to look back and make comments,” said board member John Malone. “We were being told growth and when the growth occurs this school district will be ready for it.”

Board member Brian Norris said if the district had not renovated the high school, it likely would have been condemned.

“In 1976 instruction was delivered much differently,“ said Newcome. “It’s not that simple a math problem,” he said.

One factor no board could have anticipated was the growth in cyber schools and the mandate that districts pay student tuition to these. Newcome said about 170 Octorara students are now attending cyber or charter schools.

“We are looking outside the box and approaching the school district like it’s a business,” said board president Lisa Bowman.

Board member Bob Hume reminded residents 12 to 15 percent of individual tax bills have to make up for lost Clean and Green revenue.

“It’s not right of the legislature to take money from one group and transfer it to another group,” Hume said. “We don’t even have enough land to develop to make up that money. It is affecting our pupils and I don’t know why our residents aren’t raising cain about that,” he said.

Finally, the school board: again named John Malone board treasurer; hired Katherine Smith as a long-term substitute middle school math teacher; hired Cori Brittingham as a long-term substitute fifth grade teacher; accepted with regret the retirement resignation of Doris Talley, who has taught since 1977; and approved a new high school club, the Cartoon Club.
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Monday, May 23, 2011

Voters pick two new faces for Octorara School Board

Campaigning up to the May primary was quiet in the Octorara Area School District, with some candidates making homemade yard signs and only one challenger candidate, Republican Thomas Seth Jr., speaking publicly at school board meetings.

According to results provided by election bureaus in both Lancaster and Chester counties, and the candidates themselves, there will be two new faces -- Sherri Melton and Leon Lapp Jr. -- on the school board after the November election. Here is a comprehensive look at what the voters said.

Region 1

In Region 1, which includes Atglen Borough, Christiana Borough, Parkesburg North, and West Sadsbury Township, three seats were up for election. Incumbents Brian Norris and Shawna Johnson received both Democratic and Repulican votes in all municipalities, as did newcomer Sheri Melton.

Incumbent Linda Bicking did not campaign but said she was willing to be written in as a candidate.

“As there was a third candidate on the ballot, I’m sure any write in wouldn’t have made it,” she said in an email after the election. “If there hadn’t been a third candidate, then I was willing to be written in.”

Official results from both Lancaster and Chester counties show in Atglen Norris received 62 Republican votes and 17 Democratic votes; Johnson won 45 Republican votes, and Melton won 59 Republican votes and 17 Democratic votes.

In Christiana Norris received 26 Republican votes, Johnson 27 Republican votes, and Melton 26 Republican votes. Norris received 8 Democratic votes and Melton 9 Democratic votes. There were no write-in candidates in either Christiana or Atglen.

In Parkesburg North, Norris received 15 Republican votes, Johnson 14 Republican votes, and Melton 28 Republican votes. Democrats cast 18 votes each for Norris and Melton, and there were two write-in candidates.

West Sadsbury Republicans cast 51 votes for Norris, 37 votes for Johnson and 36 votes for Melton. Democrats in that municipality gave eight votes to Norris, 10 to Melton and cast three write-in votes.

It appears that unless another candidate wages a write-in campaign prior to the November election, Norris and Johnson will again take their Region 1 seats, alongside Region 1 newcomer Sheri Melton.

Region 2

Primary results in this region, which includes Sadsbury Township in Lancaster County and West Fallowfield Township in Chester County, show incumbent school board President Lisa Bowman won her race against challenger Thomas Seth Jr.

In Sadsbury Township, Lancaster County, Seth received 64 Republican votes to Bowman’s 33. Bowman, who had cross-filed, also received 33 Democratic votes. In West Fallowfield Township in Chester County, Bowman received 61 Republican votes to Seth’s 28, and Bowman received 27 Democratic votes.

Votes in both municipalities are counted together, so Bowman’s name will be the only name on the ballot in November. Seth said he plans to continue to attend school board meetings and speak out, but does not plan to wage a write-in campaign for this seat.

Region 3

Region 3 includes Highland and Londonderry townships and Parkesburg South. The incumbent is John Malone and although he may have received some write-in votes, Malone has said in an email he has served eight years and is not running again.

In Highland candidate Leon Lapp received 40 votes, and 75 Republican votes in Londonderry. There were 13 Democratic write-in candidates in Highland, and three Democratic write-in candidates in Londonderry. Lapp received 54 Republican votes in Parkesburg South, and there were seven write-in candidates there. Lapp’s name will be the only name on the ballot.

Finishing Eight years

"I have loved being on the board - except at budget time,” said outgoing board member Bicking. “It is such a struggle.

“The group I’ve worked with over the last eight years have had only the kids as their agenda, along with keeping the millage as low as they could.”
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