ONALASKA, Wis. – Here’s a scenario: You’re an Onalaska parent,
and you give your high school student, Junior, $2 per day to buy lunch in the a
la carte line.
You hope he chooses a
balance of nutritious foods, but you have no way of knowing whether he’s blowing
the whole $2 to buy cookies every day.
Next year, if you doubt
Junior’s dining decisions, you need only phone somebody at the school
district’s food service program to get a report of his a la carte purchases,
thanks to a new software program approved Monday night by the Onalaska School
Board.
The ability to generate
such reports is only one advantage for the district, said Sue Black, who runs
the food service program.
The Wordware software program, which already is being used in
Holmen and West Salem, also will make it easier for the district to collect
money and parents to pay money.
With the software, each
family will have one account to cover any number of students. Parents deposit
money into the account, and the students are each assigned a four-digit code
they punch in when they get food at school.
Black said parents can pay
for two weeks worth of lunches at a time or a whole semester, depending on
their preference.
Parents will be notified,
probably by mail at first, when it’s time to put more money into the account.
Sometime next year, Black said, she hopes to have an automatic telephone
notification system.
The software will mean less
work for school personnel collecting the money and passing out lunch tickets,
Black said.
Black said problems with
students using another student’s code have been rare in other districts, and to
make sure it doesn’t happen, Black plans to have a picture appear on the
terminal that should match the face of the student who punches in the code.
The software will cost
about $18,000, which will be paid for out of a $69,000 surplus in the food
service fund. Superintendent John Burnett told the board that money could not
be used to help with the district’s budget woes in the general fund.
In all, the food service
budget will use $43,000 of that surplus next year, including money for new
lunch-related equipment at the high school and Irving Pertzsch Elementary.
The board also approved a
nickel per meal increase for next year, except for adult lunch prices.
In other business,
n The board approved a
$429,550 capital improvements budget for next year, including $263,000 in
spending given immediate approval. The other roughly $166,000 in spending must
wait until at least October, at which time enrollment figures will be in and
the district will have a better handle on its final budget.
The board approved
establishment of an American Sign Language club at the high school next year.
Randy can be reached at
(608) 782-9710, Ext. 446, orrerickson@lacrossetribune.com.
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