May 01, 2008 12:27 pm
—
By JIM AUSTIN
Cooperstown Crier
Youngsters will have an abbreviated
summer program this year
because of a loss of funding for the
CROP program.
Since 2001, the village’s Red
Bursey Playground program has
partnered with the Cooperstown
Central School’s CROP program to
provide area young children with
summertime activities.
This year, a lapse in funding for
the CROP program means there
will be no money for the school to
provide its regular program. Instead,
the village will put on a program
of its own. A similar glitch in
funding cut the program to half
days in 2003.
Elementary Principal Teresa
Gorman said Tuesday there is no
funding for the program this year.
``It’s not that we don’t want to
partner with the village, but it’s
not a school endeavor anymore.’’
she said.
Gorman said the village’s program
will still be able to make use
of some of the school facilities for
its program.
``We’ll help them in any way we
can,’’ she said.
Members of the village finance
committee met Tuesday afternoon
to discuss how to handle this year’s
summer program. Mayor Carol
Waller is the only one who was in
office the last time the village ran
the Red Bursey Playground Program.
For many years, the Red Bursey
Playground Fund was self-supporting,
but costs increased and
donations diminished until the
fund was almost exhausted. In
May 2000, Mayor Wendell Tripp
commented in a board meeting the
fund was depleted and that the village
would not be able to fund and
administer the program the following
year.
But an agreement was reached
with the school, and since 2001,
the two have partnered to put on
the summer youth program.
The village now budgets $9,000
annually for salaries and other expenses
for the summer program,
but without the school’s
CROP funding, it will only
cover a reduced program.
According to Village Treasurer
Mary Ann Henderson,
the Town of Otsego gives the
village $1,000 annually to
help pay for the summer
youth program.
Committee members discussed
how to stimulate donations
to the Red Bursey
Playground Fund. In the
past, there had been an informal
suggestion that parents
make a donation to help
perpetuate the fund, but
those donations have dropped
off since the program was
combined with CROP.
CROP Site Coordinator
Kate Siracusa will run the
program, which will be daily
from 9 a.m. to noon during
the month of July. There will
be no transportation for participants
this year. The program
will be open to children
who will be entering grades
one through five this fall.
Siracusa told the committee
the only thing she wasn’t
sure about is enrollment.
``If the village is going to
be the sole funder, is it going
to be village kids?’’ she
asked.
Committee members said
the program was open to all,
but did ask her to keep track
of where the children live.
Siracusa said that without
transportation, it may
end up being primarily village
children anyway.
Last year, 100 children
participated in the program.
This year, Siracusa and her
three assistants expect to be
able to handle somewhere
between 60 to 80 children.
She said a letter will be
going out to parents next
week with enrollment information.
``Maybe it will be the same
next summer when the money
is back,’’ Siracusa said.
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