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The School Committee listened to auditor Gregory Winters report on fiscal 2010 that shows the school used $100,000 in reserve funds to balance its budget.

Mount Greylock High Dipped Into Reserves To Balance 2010 Budget

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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School officials will be keeping a close eye on a revolving athletic account that has shown a deficit.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Mount Greylock Regional School District’s finances are still in troubled water and the fiscal 2010 report shows the school used about $100,000 in reserve funds to balance the general budget. 
 
“In 2010, you actually lost $275,000,” Gregory Winters, auditor from Scanlon and Associates, told the School Committee on Tuesday. “Overall, the school district has $100,000 less in reserves.”
 
The district had $11,098,069 in revenue compared to $11,373,691 in expenditures and the difference was overcome with reserve and school-choice funds. The school transferred $200,000 from school-choice funds and $101,517 from reserves.
 
However, the deficit was expected. The district nearly level-funded the $9.9 million budget despite a reduction of state aid by $250,000. At the time, school officials said the difference would be made up in excess capital and school choice funds. 
 
“There is about $375,000 in reserves for the next budget and that’s a comfortable reserve,” Winters said. 
 
Winters only had a few financial management suggestions this year: Segregate payroll duties because there is currently only one person handling all of the payroll, close a revolving account and update post-employment benefits statements. 
 
The district has already enhanced the role of the treasurer, transferred funds from the revolving account and requested the health insurance provider to update those statements, Winters said. 
 
The audit report also shows deficits in capital projects from repairs to the boiler room and the locker rooms — both projects expected to be completed in the next few weeks — but the school is expected to be reimbursed by the School Building Authority.
 
Winters had trouble explaining a difference in an athletic revolving account. The revenues were confirmed but the account is still unbalanced. Previously, expenditures were not going through the district’s ledger and warrant system and the school changed its procedure. With that in place, the account still shows a deficit.
 
“The business office is just going to have to watch that account,” Winters said. 
 
The school is ahead of most districts in school lunch revenue, he noted. The cafeteria budget finished the year up $58,175.
 
“Because of the recession, other school districts are running a deficit here,” he said.
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'The Art of the Opening' To Be Displayed In New WCMA Museum

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) is hosting a monthly program series this spring called "The Art of the Opening" that will offer audiences a glimpse into specific works of art that will be on display when the new museum building opens in the fall of 2027.

On Feb. 4, March 18, and April 1 from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., curators from our curatorial engagement team will share an in-depth preview of a different object that will be on view in the inaugural installation, which aims to showcase WCMA’s global art collection guided by a liberal arts ethos. The audience will be invited to ask questions, and lunch will be provided for the first 12 people to register.

Kicking off the series on Feb. 4 will be Elizabeth Gallerani, our curator of Mellon Academic Programs, who will share information recently learned about a pichhwai (temple hanging) in the WCMA collection that depicts the Hindu god Krishna painted on a huge cotton cloth. Mellon Curatorial Fellow Rachael Nelson will present on March 18, and Senior Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art Dan Byers will present on April 1.

RSVPs are required here: https://airtable.com/appEgY2dFQZxVvJhJ/pagiusORQgIBjIM8k/form.

For more information, visit artmuseum.williams.edu.

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