Committee members used the school presentation to question what belongs on the capital-improvement plan versus the operating budget. Several members said routine maintenance and short-lived equipment should not inflate the CIP total; school staff responded that listing items helps planning and forces visibility of upcoming replacements.
Jo Ann Duffy and Scott Gross discussed the CIP's five-year-lifespan rule. Gross said computer lab equipment typically has an eight-year life (often stretched to ten), but the town's IT guidance suggested computers can become obsolete in two to three years and therefore may not meet the CIP threshold. Committee members disagreed on whether budgeted IT replacements should remain visible on the matrix.
The committee agreed to consider the pattern across presenters and to finalize a policy position later in the review cycle; no formal rule change was adopted at this meeting.