State

59° F Broken Clouds

Central Oregon Forecast

Articles Restaurants Web Newsprint Archive 1907 — 1994

Donor’s failure to pay threatens Beaverton school arts program

By The Associated Press
Published: October 15. 2012 4:00AM PST

BEAVERTON — A Vancouver, Wash., businessman who pledged $400,000 to a Beaverton School District arts program failed to make his scheduled payment this year.

The Oregonian reports that the district might have to scramble to find additional private money for the five-year Arts for Learning Program, a collaboration with researchers at the University of Washington and Young Audiences Arts for Learning of Oregon/SW Washington to infuse art into literacy in grades three through five.

The donor, John Wolosek, told district staff in August and September he would reschedule his payments, but he hasn’t so far, said Jon Bridges, Beaverton School District administrator of accountability.

The 48-year-old stepped forward in September 2010, as the district rushed to find private donors to help meet an $800,000 match within five weeks to secure a $4 million federal education grant for the program. Beaverton was among only 49 education groups chosen from 1,700 grant applicants in the U.S. for the Investing in Innovation Fund, known as the i3 grant.

Wolosek and The Giving Stream were relatively unheard of at the time, but he pledged more than several other well-known donors, including Intel and Meyer Memorial Trust. He signed an agreement to pay the pledge in increasingly larger increments every April until he paid it off with $150,000 in 2015. Wolosek made good on the first payment of $25,000 in 2011 but didn’t make a promised $50,000 donation for 2012.

Washington state court records list Wolosek as a debtor in a civil case filed in Clark County in November 2010 in which he owes $249,000 on a line of credit agreement. And in Wisconsin, where his business American Bark is located, Wolosek’s company was ordered to pay Associated Bank about $350,000.

After multiple attempts, the district reached Wolosek over the summer. Bridges said he and Wolosek discussed a revised payment schedule for years 2013-15, which the district needed in writing by Oct. 10.

View The Bulletin's commenting policy »

comments powered by Disqus
The Bulletin