Monday, January 16, 2017

Candidates for School Board to be interviewed at Special Meeting on Wednesday, Jan. 18


The Columbia Borough School District Board of Directors will hold a Special Meeting on Wednesday, January 18, 2017, at 5:30 p.m. in the District Administration Center, 200 N. 5th Street, Columbia, to interview candidates for the open board position to discuss and take action on that and any other matter that comes before the board, according to a legal notice on lancasteronline.

The regular monthly school board meeting will be held Thursday, January 19, at 7 p.m.

Get help with your finances at Columbia Life Network

Help with your finances is now available at the Ann B.Barshinger Financial Empowerment Center at Columbia Life Network at 336 Locust Street. Services include analysis of your finances, review of credit reports, and management of debt.

For an appointment, call 717-358-9364, or email bfolker@tabornet.org. Minimal fees may apply - waiver available.





Sunday, January 15, 2017

Library Happenings this week







Sunday morning on ice

Columbians awoke this morning to find a thin sheet of ice on sidewalks, vehicles, and roads. According to wgal.com, ice will last through the morning.




Saturday, January 14, 2017

Money for school agreement is so far a no-show


State funding for Columbia’s shared services agreement with ELANCO has apparently fallen through. Dr. Robert Hollister, superintendent of Columbia Borough School District, made the announcement at January’s Committee of the Whole meeting. The statement was in response to Board Director Kathleen Hohenadel’s question regarding the status of the grant. The anticipated funding is for an amount up to $250,000 for up to three years to pilot the program and was to have come from the PA Department of Education.

Hollister said he has not gotten a response from Senator Ryan Aument’s office, despite several inquiries. ”I’ve not heard a thing. That’s not good news,” he said.

Hollister asked residents to contact legislators, but was not overly optimistic. “Phone calls always help, but the other side of that story is this state is in dire financial consequences. I’m operating as if that money is not going to show up,” he said.

The grant was previously discussed by former Superintendent Ken Klawitter at Columbia’s August 2016 Committee of the Whole meeting. Klawitter said the bill authorizing the grant was the first of its kind in Pennsylvania. “They wrote it specifically for us, because we were the first ones legally to do this,” he said. He added that he had received an autographed copy of the bill and a signature pen indicating funding would be made available to pilot the program.