High-school teacher compiles K'12 arts and tech asset inventory to support capital planning
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A McDowell teacher presented a K'12 inventory of large-ticket assets in art, music, physical education and tech education and urged the district to adopt a capital asset management system to forecast replacement and maintenance needs.
A Millcreek teacher and aspiring leader, Herb Gilroy of McDowell Intermediate/High School, presented a K'12 inventory of high-value assets in art, music, physical education and technology education and recommended a capital asset management system to support proactive replacement and maintenance planning.
Gilroy said the project collected equipment age, estimated remaining lifespan and replacement costs for items valued at $1,500 or more. The inventory revealed large-ticket items such as a bank of 21 surface touch computers (estimated $30,000) and musical instruments that circulate across schools, making end-of-year collection critical to accurate counts. Gilroy noted that a major grant in February 2008 supplied much of the middle- and high-school equipment (a $1 million-plus initiative referenced in conversation). He described gaps: maintenance costs are not visible to teachers and building-level inventories vary in completeness.
Gilroy recommended feeding the inventories into a capital asset management platform (the presentation noted such platforms can use predictive analytics) and suggested making inventory completion a building goal to gather missing data for all departments. The business office and maintenance departments will need to supply annual maintenance costs and replacement-parts data to complete total cost-of-ownership calculations.
The project is at an early stage: high-school inventories are near completion, some middle-school and elementary building data remain outstanding, and Gilroy said he would continue working with the business office and department chairs to finish the set. He argued the asset-management approach will reduce long-term costs and improve classroom outcomes by ensuring key equipment is serviceable when teachers need it.
The committee received the presentation as an information item; administrators did not take formal action at the meeting.
