SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            WASHINGTON, D.C.  20549

               Annual Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15 (d) of
                      the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
                  For the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2000

                        Commission File Number 0-13898

               VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
(Exact Name of Registrant as specified in its Charter)


          DELAWARE                               16-1192368
(State or other jurisdiction of       (IRS Employer Identification Number)
incorporation or organization)

3750 MONROE AVENUE, PITTSFORD, NY  14534
(Address of principal executive offices)

(716) 381-6000
(Registrant's telephone number, including area code)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (b) of the Act

     NONE                                              N/A

(Title of Each Class)                            (Name of each exchange
                                                 on which registered)

                   COMMON STOCK,  $.10 PAR VALUE
(Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (g) of the Act)

     Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item
405  of  Regulation  S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to
the  best  of  registrant's   knowledge  in  definitive  proxy  or  information
statements incorporated by reference  in  Part  III  of  this  Form 10-K or any
Amendment to this Form 10-K. ____


     Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has  filed  all  reports
required to be filed by Section 13 of 15 (d) of the Securities Exchange Act  of
1934  during  the  preceding  12  months  (or  for such shorter period that the
registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such
filing requirements for the past 90 days.

                YES      X       NO

     The aggregate market value of the voting stock  held  by non-affiliates of
the registrant as of January 31, 2001 was  $11,918,981.

     The  number  of  shares  of  Common Stock, $.10 par value, outstanding  on
January 31, 2001 was 8,188,909.







                     DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE



PART I    -                 None

PART II   -                 None

PART III  -    Item 10      Pages 2 - 5 and page 11 of the Company's Proxy
                            Statement for the Annual Meeting of
                            Shareholders to be held May 17, 2001, under
                            "Election of Directors" and "Compliance With
                            Section 16 (a)."


               Item 11      Pages 6 - 8 of the Company's Proxy Statement
                            for the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be
                            held May 17, 2001, under "Executive
                            Compensation."

               Item 12      The tables contained on Pages 8 - 9 and the
                            information under "Election of Directors" on
                            Pages 3 - 5 of the Company's Proxy Statement
                            for the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be
                            held May 17, 2001.







                                    PART 1


ITEM 1    BUSINESS

     Veramark  Technologies  (  the "Company")  was  incorporated  (as  MOSCOM
Corporation) in New York in January  1983  and  reincorporated  in Delaware in
1984.  The Company's name was changed to Veramark Technologies, Inc.  on  June
15, 1998.  The Company merged with the privately-owned Angeles Group, Inc.  on
January 7, 2000.

     Veramark  Technologies, Inc. produces a broad range of telecommunications
management systems  for  users  of  private  branch exchange (PBX) based voice
networks,  Internet  protocol  (IP) based voice networks  and  data  networks.
These products are used to track, report and manage telephone usage, equipment
location and maintenance activity,  and  telecom  fraud.   Veramark's products
consist primarily of software running under Microsoft Windows  95, Windows 98,
Windows  2000  and Windows NT Systems.  Target end user customers  range  from
small businesses  with  25 employees to the largest organizations in industry,
government  and health care  encompassing  hundreds  of  locations  with  over
100,000 employees.   Veramark's  large  system  products  incorporate database
management software from Oracle, Informix or Microsoft.

     Veramark  is  one  of  the  world's leading producers of call  accounting
systems and has sold more than 85,000  of these systems, and related products,
to customers in more than 80 countries.   Veramark's  call  accounting systems
are  sold  through  leading  manufacturers and resellers of telephone  systems
including   Avaya,  Exp@Nets,  SBC/Ameritech,   Philips,   Siemens,   Pinacor,
ScanSource and VodaOne.

     Veramark's   Enterprise   Telemanagement   Systems   provide   to  larger
enterprises  cable  management,  asset  management,  and  service  records  in
addition  to  call  management.   Due to their higher levels of complexity and
cost, these more comprehensive systems are sold directly to end users.

     Veramark's headquarters, operations,  engineering  and  support  staff is
located  in  a  65,000  square  foot  leased  facility in Pittsford, New York.
Approximately 35 field sales and support personnel  are located in cities with
high  concentrations of Veramark's products.  The Angeles  Group  Division  is
located   in  a  9,453  square  foot  leased  facility  in  Westlake  Village,
California.


PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

CALL ACCOUNTING

     Veramark's  most basic products are CALL ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS which connect
to a business telephone  system  (or  PBX)  to  collect,  store,  and  process
information on every outside telephone call made or received.

     Call   accounting   systems  give  businesses  easy  access  to  complete
information on telephone usage including the dialed number, calling extension,
call duration, time of day,  destination,  trunk  line  and cost of each call.
All   of   Veramark's   call  accounting  products  provide  this  fundamental
information,  in  graphical  summary  and  detailed  report  formats,  without
monitoring actual phone conversations.

     A primary appeal  of call accounting systems is that end users save money
on telephone and network  equipment  bills.  Telephone bills can be reduced by
10% - 30% through heightened awareness  and management.  As a result, the cost
of a call accounting system can generally  be  recovered in less than one year
through direct expense reduction.

     Call accounting systems are purchased and used  for  many  other valuable
reasons as well, including:

  Traffic  analysis  to determine an optimal number of trunks and  best  long
   distance carrier configurations.
  Allocating telephone  expense  to specific cost centers or clients based on
   actual use.
  Producing revenues by reselling phone services to clients.
  Detecting fraudulent use of the  phone  system  by hackers and unauthorized
   use of company phones for personal calls or 900 numbers.
  Evaluating employee productivity.

     Veramark's premier call accounting product, since its release in 1999, is
the Emerald XP software.  Emerald XP comes in affordable  model  sizes ranging
from  25  to  20,000 telephone extensions.  The Emerald XP system is  able  to
collect and process  data  from  up to 100 different remote telephone switches
(PBX's) from one central location.   Veramark's  economical  Pollable  Storage
Unit (PSU) collects data from the remote PBX's and stores it until polled by a
central  Emerald XP system.  Private label versions of Emerald XP are sold  by
Avaya and Philips.  Emerald XP is designed to be an international product.  It
supports worldwide call rating, all world currencies, date schemes and privacy
practices.

     Veramark  also  produces  call  accounting software products based on the
UNIX operating system.  These products are marketed by Avaya and Avaya dealers
as  an  integrated  solution  with  Avaya's   smaller  telephone  systems  and
application processors.

     PBX FRAUD DETECTION SYSTEMS address a problem that is estimated to exceed
$1 billion annually - the theft of telephone service  through  PBX  "hacking."
PBX  owners  use  call  accounting  systems  to  spot potential fraud and take
corrective  measures  to  minimize  the  loss.  Veramark  offers  an  optional
HackerTracker module with the Emerald XP system  to  automate the detection of
fraud  24  hours per day and send out alarms by printed  report  or  pager  to
initiate preventive measures.

     A typical  range  of  end  user prices for Veramark's call accounting and
fraud detection systems is from $1,100 to $40,000 per system.

DEFINITY NETWORK TELECOMMUNICATIONS SOFTWARE

     Definity Network Telecommunications  software  ("DNT") is a client/server
based  enterprise management system that automates cost  control  and  service
operations  in  large  corporate  voice and network environments.  DNT runs on
highly scalable single or multi-processor  Windows  NT computer platforms, the
de  facto  standard  for  client/server  computing  in information  technology
departments throughout the world.

     Veramark  sells  DNT to end user customers as a certified  Avaya  branded
product pursuant to a referral agreement with Avaya.

     Target customers for  DNT  are  mid  to  large  size enterprises from all
industries and include multi-national corporations, government  agencies,  and
medical and educational institutions.  Typical users will have 2,000 to 50,000
telephone  extensions  in multiple facilities.  End user prices will typically
range from $45,000 to $235,000 per system.

THE ANGELES GROUP SOLUTIONS

     The Quantum Series  produced  by Veramark's Angeles Group Solution is the
Company's most comprehensive telemanagement  software product.  It consists of
fully integrated modules that can also be separated  as  stand-alone  products
for  Call  Accounting,  Cable  Management, Work Orders, Trouble-Tickets, Phone
Bill  Management,  Consolidated  Billing,   Inventory   Management   Personnel
Directory, and Telecom Fraud.


1.  ASSETS  &  EQUIPMENT  INVENTORY  manage the allocation and maintenance  of
    telephones, LAN equipment, videoconferencing systems and other voice, data
    and  imaging  apparatus,  along with  related  warranty  cost  and  vendor
    information.

2.  PHONE BILL and its associated  VENDOR  DATA  INTERFACE module automate the
    electronic receipt of bills from local and long distance service providers
    plus CLECs, and OCC's, merges these billing statements and translates them
    into  an  easily-understandable  statement  of external  network  charges.
    These  modules,  in  conjunction  with  automated  bill  verification  and
    auditing, can eliminate substantial sources  of  error  in  communications
    bills.

3.  CONSOLIDATED  BILLING provides internal network users and clients  with  a
    consolidated bill for network usage, trunk charges, special charges, taxes
    and other recurring  and  non-recurring  network  services.  Angeles Group
    customers  can  customize  the  format of internally generated  bills  and
    provide interfaces to General Ledger and Accounts Payable systems.

4.  CALL INTRUDER ALERT (CIA) is a security  module  that  constantly monitors
    calling activity  looking for potential fraud and provides  administrators
    with real-time pager alerts.

5.  CALL-MASTER  is  a  high-performance  call  accounting module that  tracks
    telephone call usage.  Of particular interest  is  the link to Vendor Data
    Interface to be able to capture and track detailed call  records  directly
    from  vendor  bills  (from  cellular  phones,  credit  card calls, private
    lines).   Typical  clients  process  up  to  20  million calls  per  month
    collected from as many as 35,000 sites.

6.  CABLE-MASTER  determines  the  best  routing for new network  connections,
    tracks circuits and network connectivity  throughout  a building or campus
    and  determines  who  is affected by a cable break or failure  of  network
    resources. The AUTOCAD  INTERFACE  maps  network  circuit  connections  to
    existing facilities drawings.

7.  WORK  ORDERS  &  TROUBLE  TICKETS  accelerate  the provisioning of network
    service  changes, improve the accuracy of requests  for  moves,  adds  and
    changes (MACs)  and  quickly  route  trouble  reports  to  the appropriate
    network technicians.

8.  PERSONNEL DIRECTORY links each module to the person who "owns" the part or
    circuit and associates proper cost allocation to the department.   It  can
    maintain personal information as well as pictures.

9.  DIRECTORY  ASSISTANCE  assists phone operators, security, reception or the
    mail room in rapidly locating employees and services.

10. CUSTOMIZED REPORTS and DATABASE  BROWSERS  helps  administrators  plan for
    network growth and movement of personnel.


     Each  Angeles Group system is customized to meet the special requirements
of larger customers with complex voice, data and image networks.

     The  target  for  the  Quantum  series  is  Fortune  1000  companies  and
comparably  sized  organizations in health care, utilities, financial services
and government sectors.   The  Quantum  series  is sold through a direct sales
force  and  through  distributors  such as SBC/Ameritech  and  pursuant  to  a
referral agreement with Avaya.  Typical  sales prices range from $75,000 to $1
million.

OUTSOURCED TELEMANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS

     For companies that recognize the benefits of telemanagement, but lack the
means  or  desire  to utilize internal staff  and  equipment  to  perform  it,
Veramark  offers  a  completely   outsourced   solution.    Using   the   same
telemanagement  tools  developed  by Veramark for software customers, Veramark
can remotely poll, process and report on telecommunications activity and data.
Outsource customers can access standard  as  well  as  customized  reports  by
email,  fax  or CD-ROM.  Outsource customers sign multi-year contracts and pay
for services monthly based on the number of call records processed.

CENTRAL OFFICES TELEMANAGEMENT

     Veramark's  INFO/MDR  products  capture,  at  the  central  office, vital
information  in  the  form of Message Detail Records on every call handled  by
that particular central  office  switch.   These  raw  detail records are then
processed  into  meaningful  formats  and  distributed to a central  telephone
company billing processor or to business subscribers.

     Telephone companies use INFO/MDR to enhance  the  appeal  of  Centrex and
Virtual  Private  Network  service.   With Centrex service, business customers
utilize  the telephone company's central  office  switch  to  route  calls  to
individual  extensions  rather than a PBX.  INFO/MDR gives telephone companies
the ability to provide complete,  timely  and accurate call detail information
to  customers, economically and efficiently.   Telephone  companies  are  also
using  INFO/MDR  to  provide  message accounting for virtual private networks,
another rapidly growing segment  of  the  telecommunications  market.  Virtual
private networks utilize customized software design to provide private network
functionality over the common carrier public network.

     Telephone  companies  with  multiple  INFO/MDR systems installed  include
AT&T, Alltel, Bell Atlantic, Century Telephone,  Citizens  Utilities,  Cable &
Wireless,  SBC/Ameritech and Sprint.  End user prices for INFO/MDR range  from
$26,000 to $80,000 per system.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AND MAINTENANCE

     To varying degrees all of the Company's products afford an opportunity to
provide professional  services to customers on a fee basis.  The vast majority
of active users of Veramark's  products  pay  an annual maintenance fee, which
entitles the user to post warranty support via  telephone  or  modem,  and new
software service pack releases.  Annual fees for maintenance range from 10% to
22.5%  of  the  original  software  license  fee, depending upon the hours and
priority of support and whether a distributor  plays  an  intermediary support
role.

     The licensing of Veramark's more complex products, including  The Angeles
Group  Solution,  DNT  and  some Emerald XP systems, include the provision  of
professional  services  on  a  fee   basis.   These  sales  typically  include
installation, implementation and training  services and often include software
customization and data conversion services.

MARKETING AND SALES

     Veramark's marketing and sales personnel  are located at its headquarters
in Pittsford, New York and 18 locations throughout the United States.

     Veramark's marketing and distribution strategy  is  founded  on  building
mutually  beneficial  relationships  with  companies  with  large, established
distribution  networks  for  telecommunications  and  computer products.   The
nature of the relationships varies depending on the product  and  market.  For
some, Veramark develops and manufactures customized products under  a  private
label  while  other  purchase  and  resell  Veramark's standard products.  The
Angeles Group Solution is sold through a direct sales force as well as through
SBC/Ameritech.

     Veramark's   marketing  strategy  is  focused   upon   telephone   switch
manufacturers and sellers  and  providers  of  telephone  services.  A partial
listing of companies using or selling Veramark products follows:

     TELECOMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURERS
      Avaya
      Philips
      Siemens

     TELEPHONE SERVICE PROVIDERS
      SBC/Ameritech
      AT&T
      Sprint

NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT

     Veramark  is  currently  pursuing  several  opportunities to  expand  its
telemanagement  and billing product lines and to offer  products  for  related
markets.

     Software development costs, meeting recoverability tests, are capitalized
in accordance with  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting  Standard No. 86 when
technological  feasibility has been established for the software.   The  costs
capitalized are  amortized  on  a  product-by-product basis over its estimated
life, or the ratio of current revenues  to  current  and  anticipated revenues
from such software, whichever provides the greater amortization.   The Company
periodically  records  adjustments to write down certain capitalized costs  to
their net realizable value.

BACKLOG

     At December 31, 2000,  Veramark  had a backlog of $3,878,070.  Backlog as
of December 31, 1999 was $2,428,377.  Backlog  is  not deemed to be a material
indicator of 2001 revenues.

     The Company's policy is to recognize orders only  upon  receipt  of  firm
purchase orders.


COMPETITION

     The  telecommunications  management  industry  is  highly competitive and
highly fragmented.  The number of domestic suppliers of telemanagement systems
for business users is estimated to exceed 100 companies.  The vast majority of
those  are  regional  firms with limited product lines and limited  sales  and
development resources.  Several competitors are established companies that are
able to compete with Veramark on a national and international basis.

     There are fewer competitors  in the market for large scale telemanagement
systems for telephone service providers, although several existing competitors
are substantially larger than Veramark and may be able to devote significantly
more resources to product development and marketing.

     With respect to all of Veramark's  products,  some  competing  firms have
greater  name  recognition  and  more  financial,  marketing and technological
resources  than  Veramark.  Competition in the industry  is  based  on  price,
product performance,  depth  of  product  line and customer service.  Veramark
believes it products are priced competitively based upon their performance and
functionality.   However, Veramark does not  strive  to  be  consistently  the
lowest priced supplier  in  its markets.  Historically, prices for application
software  have  declined  rapidly  in  the  face  of  competition.   Increased
competition for the Company's  software  products  could  adversely affect the
Company's sales volume and profits.

MANUFACTURING

     Veramark assembles its products from components purchased  from  a  large
variety of suppliers both domestic and international.  Wherever feasible,  the
Company secures multiple sources, but in some cases it is not possible.

     Veramark offers warranty coverage on all products for 90 days or one year
on  parts  and 90 days on labor.  Customer support services are offered at the
Pittsford, New York and Westlake Village, California facilities and by some of
the Company's larger customers.

EMPLOYEES

     As of December  31,  2000,  Veramark  employed  174  full-time personnel.
Veramark's employees are not represented by any labor unions.


ITEM 2    FACILITIES

     The Company's principal administrative office and manufacturing  facility
is located in a one-story building in Pittsford, New York.  Veramark presently
leases approximately 65,000 square feet of the building of which approximately
5,000  square feet is devoted to manufacturing.  The term of the lease expires
on October 31, 2007.

     The  Angeles  Group  Division occupies 9,453 square feet of a building in
Westlake Village, California, pursuant to a lease that expires on February 28,
2004.

ITEM 3    LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

     There are no material pending legal proceedings against the Company or to
which the Company is a party or of which any of its property is the subject.

ITEM 4    SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

     None.



PART II

ITEM 5    MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT'S  COMMON  STOCK  AND  RELATED STOCKHOLDER
          MATTERS

     Veramark Technologies, Inc. Common Stock, $0.10 par value,  is  traded on
the  NASDAQ  National  Market System (symbol: VERA).  The following quotations
are furnished by NASDAQ  for  the  periods  indicated.  The quotations reflect
inter-dealer  quotations  that  do not include retail  markups,  markdowns  or
commissions and may not represent  actual  transactions.  (See  Note 15 to the
financial statements for disclosure regarding the cessation of trading  on the
NASDAQ National Market System).

COMMON STOCK PRICE RANGE

Quarters Ended
           MARCH 31        JUNE 30      SEPTEMBER 30          DECEMBER 31

    2000  $12.25-4.38    $5.00-3.50         $4.13-2.75         $3.19- 0.63
    1999   $8.75-5.75    $7.75-5.88        $11.88-7.50        $14.75-11.00

     As  of  December  31,  2000,  there  were  609  holders  of record of the
Company's common Stock and approximately 3,247 additional beneficial holders.

The Company paid a dividend of $0.02 per share in January 1996.  No dividends
have been paid in subsequent years and no dividend is planned for 2001.

ITEM 6    SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
                                        YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,


                               2000            1999                  1998             1997            1996
                                                                            
Net Sales                     $16,525,357     $29,396,688     $22,329,113      $16,395,988     $16,614,987

Net Income (Loss)             $(6,858,645)     $2,398,586      $1,989,005      $(5,186,131)    $(6,256,547)

Net Income (Loss) per
 Diluted Share                     $(0.85)          $0.27           $0.24           $(0.67)         $(0.87)

Weighted Average Diluted
Shares Outstanding              8,079,281       8,800,662       8,272,609        7,692,210       7,227,004

Cash Dividends paid per
share                               $0.00           $0.00           $0.00            $0.00           $0.02

Total Assets                  $11,859,330     $21,289,282     $17,522,034      $12,724,178     $14,312,218

Long Term Obligations          $3,373,399      $4,254,483      $3,982,847       $1,983,348      $1,320,682




ITEM 7:   MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF RESULTS  OF  OPERATIONS
          AND FINANCIAL CONDITION

     Except  for  the  historical  information  contained  herein, the matters
discussed in this report are forward-looking statements, which  involve  risks
and  uncertainties  including,  but  not  limited  to,  economic, competitive,
governmental  and  technological factors, affecting the Company's  operations,
markets, products, services  and prices, as well as other factors discussed in
the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

2000 COMPARED WITH 1999

     The year 2000 was a very  difficult  one  for the Company.  Early in 2000
the Company's largest customer, Lucent Technologies  announced  that they were
exiting the PBX switch business via the sale of one business unit to Exp@nets
and the spin-off of another (now known as Avaya Communications). The resulting
disruption  and  turmoil  within  the  Company's  major  distribution  channel
negatively impacted financial results for the year.   However,  by  the end of
the year, the Company had reacted to these events, significantly reducing  its
expense  base, streamlining it operations, and most importantly, retaining the
business of the resulting successors to the PBX market.  On December 20, 2000,
the Company  announced  a  new  three-year  distribution  contract, with Avaya
Communications,   covering  the  Company's  complete  line  of  Telemanagement
products.

     Primarily  as  a  result  of  this  disruption  in  the  Company's  major
distribution channel,  sales  for  the year decreased from $29,396,688 for the
year ended December 31, 1999, to $16,525,357  for  the year ended December 31,
2000,  a  decline of 44%.  Hardest hit by the changes  in  the  former  Lucent
channel were  sales  of  the Company's core call accounting software products,
which declined by 57% from  1999 sales.  For the year ended December 31, 2000,
call accounting products and  services  accounted  for  46%  of  total Company
sales, versus 60% of total sales for the year ended December 31, 1999.

     Sales of the Company's enterprise products, DNT and Quantum, were down 3%
from  1999 results and represented 37% of total sales for 2000 versus  22%  of
total sales  for  1999.   The  Company  sells  DNT  to end-user customers as a
certified Avaya branded product, pursuant to a referral  agreement with Avaya.
Quantum is the Company's most comprehensive telemanagement product and is sold
and  marketed  by  The Angeles Group Division of the Company.   The  Company's
acquisition of The Angeles  Group  was successfully completed in January 2000,
and the Quantum product line has become  a  major  component  of the Company's
total telemanagement and network management solutions offering.   During 2000,
the Company signed major contracts for the Quantum product with San  Francisco
Airport, M & I Data Systems and K-Mart.

     Sales  of Info/MDR for 2000, decreased by 34% from 1999 sales, accounting
for 6% of total  2000  revenues.   Despite the drop in 2000 sales, the Company
feels that there is sufficient activity  in  the  Centrex  and Virtual Private
Network market to warrant continued sales efforts and investment.

     During 2000, the Company announced that it was seeking  a strategic buyer
for Verabill, its billing and customer care product.  The Company's management
made the decision that the Company's long-term interests were  best  served by
focusing  on  marketing,  sales and development within its core telemanagement
and network management markets.  The Company completed the sale of Verabill on
March  26,  2001 (See Note 15  to  the  Financial  Statements).   The  Company
continued to  sell  and support the Verabill product as negotiations continued
with potential buyers  of  the  product  line.   For  2000, Verabill sales and
services accounted for 9% of the Company's total sales,  versus  12%  of total
sales for 1999.

     For the year ended December 31, 2000, product sales accounted for  54% of
total  sales,  with  services, consisting of maintenance and support, training
and installation, accounting  for  the  remaining 46% of total sales.  For the
year ended December 31, 1999, product sales  accounted for 65% of total sales,
and services 35% of sales.

     The gross profit margin earned on sales for  the  year ended December 31,
2000 was 81% of sales or $13,396,481 versus 87% of sales,  or  $25,600,480 for
the year ended December 31, 1999.  The lower percentage gross margin for 2000,
as  compared  to  1999, reflects overhead and amortization expenses,  both  of
which are relatively  fixed  in  nature,  being applied to lower sales volumes
recognized in 2000, versus those recognized in 1999.

     In  reaction  to lower sales volumes, the  Company  sharply  reduced  its
operating expenses, primarily through staff reductions beginning in the second
quarter of 2000 and  continuing  through  the end of the year.  As of December
31,  2000,  the Company employed 174 full-time  personnel,  compared  with  an
employment level  of  266  as  late  as  March  31, 2000.  The result of these
expense reductions was a 14% decrease in overall  operating  expenses  for the
year  ended  December 31, 2000, versus the year ended December 31, 1999.   The
reductions are more evident when comparing operating expense for the Company's
quarter  ended  December  31,  2000,  for  which  operating  expenses  totaled
$3,997,487,  and  the  quarter  ended  December  31, 1999, for which operating
expenses were $7,011,384, representing a decrease  of  43%.   Since  March 31,
2000,  the Company has been able to reduce its quarterly breakeven point  from
approximately  $7.7  million,  to  approximately  $4.4 million at December 31,
2000.

     Net  engineering and software development expenses  for  the  year  ended
December 31, 2000 were $5,145,352 as compared to $5,942,262 for the year ended
December 31,  1999, a decrease of 13%.  Engineering and development efforts in
2000 included an  upgrade to the Company's CAS/Emerald call management product
line  to  include  e-mail  and  Internet  capabilities,  and  the  release  of
CAS/Emerald Lite, a  shrink-wrapped, user-installable, telemanagement software
solution.

     The table below details gross engineering and development expenses, costs
capitalized, net engineering  and  development  expense,  and  the  amount  of
previously  capitalized  expenditures  amortized and charged to cost of sales,
for the years ended  December 31, 2000 and 1999.


                                                 2000              1999

GROSS EXPENDITURES FOR ENGINEERING AND
Software Development
                                              $6,047,731        $6,336,169

LESS:  COSTS CAPITALIZED                        (902,379)         (393,907)
                                              ----------        ----------

NET EXPENDITURES FOR ENGINEERING AND
Software Development                           5,145,352         5,942,262

PLUS:  AMOUNTS AMORTIZED AND CHARGED
to Cost of Sales                               1,020,134         1,095,642
                                              ----------        ----------

 TOTAL EXPENSE RECOGNIZED                     $6,165,486        $7,037,904
                                              ==========        ==========


     Selling,  general and administrative expenses for the year ended December
31, 2000 were $14,667,292  as  compared  to  $17,209,308  for  the  year ended
December  31,  1999,  a  decrease  of  15%.   The  reduction in expense levels
reflects a combination of the staffing reductions across  all functional areas
referred  to above, plus the consolidation of certain functions,  particularly
in the administration  and  marketing  areas, subsequent to the acquisition of
The Angeles Group.  A comparison of the  selling,  general  and administrative
expense by functional area for the year ended December 31, 2000  and  1999, is
as follows:



                                                   2000                  1999
                                                  
Marketing/Product Management                 $2,670,988            $2,775,031
Sales                                         3,477,004             4,230,159
Sales Support and Service                     5,171,576             5,574,735
Administration                                3,347,724             4,629,383
                                            -----------           -----------
                                            $14,667,292           $17,209,308
                                            ===========           ===========


     The  Company  recognized  $156,460  of  other  income  for the year ended
December 31, 2000 versus other income recognized of $47,883 for the year ended
December  31,  1999.   Other  income  primarily  consists  of interest  income
generated from the investment of excess cash balances, reduced  by  associated
management fees, and interest expense.  In 2000, other income included $55,000
of capital gain recognized on the sale of securities.

     For  the year ended December 31, 2000, the Company recognized a net  loss
of $6,858,645, or $0.85 per diluted share.  This compared with a net profit of
$2,398,586, or $.27 per diluted share for the year ended December 31, 1999.


RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

1999 COMPARED WITH 1998


     Sales  of  $29,396,688 for the year ended December 31, 1999 established a
Company record for  annual sales achievement and represents an increase of 32%
from the $22,329,113  of  sales achieved for the year ended December 31, 1998.
The Company's fourth quarter  1999  sales  of  $8,115,242, set a new quarterly
sales record, and was the eleventh consecutive quarterly sales increase.

     The Company's record sales were attained as  a  result  of  gains  in all
major product categories for 1999 as compared to 1998.  Sales of the Company's
core  telemanagement  products and services, which accounted for approximately
60% of total 1999 revenues,  increased  24% from 1998 results.  Telemanagement
products are used by organizations to optimize the usage of telecommunications
services  and  equipment, and to control telephone  expenses.   The  Company's
telemanagement products  are  sold through leading manufacturers and resellers
of telephone systems, including  Lucent  Technologies,  SBC/Ameritech, Philips
and Siemens.

     Sales  of  VeraBill,  the Company's billing and customer  care  offering,
increased 144% from 1998 levels  and  accounted for 12% of the Company's total
1999 sales, versus 7% of the Company's  1998  sales.  VeraBill is sold through
distributors including Alcatel, and Ericsson Telecom,  as  well as on a direct
sale basis.  For 1999, approximately 48% of VeraBill revenues  were  generated
from distributor relationships.

     Sales  of  INFO/MDR, the Company's central office telemanagement product,
increased by 43%  from  1998  levels,  accounting  for 5% of 1999 total sales.
Telephone companies use INFO/MDR to enhance the appeal  of centrex and virtual
private network services.

     Sales   of   DNT  (formerly  called  TMS  for  Windows),  the   Company's
client/server enterprise  product,  increased  by  63%  from  1998  sales  and
accounted for 4% of the Company's total sales for 1999.  During
the fourth quarter of 1999, the Company  completed a new release of DNT, which
significantly  enhances the product's reliability  and  functionality.   As  a
result of this new  release,  the  Company  expects  sales  of DNT to increase
significantly again in 2000.

     Sales of Quantum, the Company's comprehensive telemanagement  system  for
1999  were nearly identical to 1998 sales, accounting for 18% of the Company's
total 1999 revenues.

     For  the  year ended December 31, 1999, shipment of product accounted for
65% of total sales,  with  the  remaining  35%  of  sales  being  derived from
services such as maintenance and support, training, and installation services.
During  1998 product sales accounted for 67% of sales, and services  accounted
for 33% of  the total.  Overall product sales for 1999 increased 29% from 1998
levels and 1999 service revenues increased 38% over 1998.

     In 1999,  the  Company  generated a gross margin of $25,600,480 or 87% of
sales versus a gross margin of  $19,010,915 or 85% of sales for the year ended
December 31, 1998.  The higher margins  reflect  a combination of lower direct
product  costs  associated  with  the  increasing content  of  software  based
applications in the Company's product mix, and a reduction in the amortization
of previously capitalized development costs as a percentage of total sales.

     For the year ended December 31, 1999,  the Company incurred $5,942,262 of
engineering  and  development  expenses,  net  of   costs  capitalized.   This
represented  a  63%  increase from the net engineering and  development  costs
incurred  for the year  ended  December  31,  1998.   Gross  expenditures  for
research  and   development,   before  the  effects  of  capitalization,  were
$6,336,169  for  1999,  an  increase  29%  from  the  1998  expense  level  of
$4,913,882.

     The following table depicts  the  overall financial impact of engineering
and  development efforts on the Company's  results,  for  1999  and  1998,  by
highlighting  gross  expenditures,  amounts  capitalized,  net engineering and
development  expense,  and  the amount of previously capitalized  expenditures
charged to cost of sales:




                                                 1999              1998
                                                   
GROSS EXPENDITURES FOR ENGINEERING AND
Software Development                          $6,336,169        $4,913,882

LESS:  COSTS CAPITALIZED                        (393,907)       (1,269,019)
                                              ----------        ----------
NET EXPENDITURES FOR ENGINEERING AND
Software Development                           5,942,262         3,644,863

PLUS:  AMOUNTS AMORTIZED AND CHARGED
 to Cost of Sales                              1,095,642           983,945
                                              ----------        ----------

TOTAL EXPENSE RECOGNIZED                      $7,037,904        $4,628,808
                                              ==========        ==========


     During  1999  the  Company's  development efforts resulted in a number of
notable accomplishments including:

a) New releases of VeraBill and DNT,  both  of  which  contained  upgrades  in
   features  and functionality, allowing the Company to expand the addressable
   markets available.
b) A significant  upgrade  to  Emerald,  the Company's flagship telemanagement
   product,  designed, not only to broaden  the  appeal  of  this  product  to
   existing channels,  but  also  to open new potential areas of distribution.
   Private  label  versions  of Emerald  XP  are  now  being  sold  by  Lucent
   Technologies  and  Philips.    Emerald   XP  is  also  designed  to  be  an
   international  product,  supporting  worldwide   call   rating,  all  world
   currencies, date schemes and privacy practices.
c) Development of the Company's new Internet accounting product  (VeraWeb) and
   the  integration  of  that product into a number of the Company's  existing
   call management offerings.  These network products will allow businesses to
   easily track, manage and  allocate  costs for use of the Internet and other
   network resources.

     Selling, general and administrative  expenses of $17,209,308 for the year
ended December 31, 1999 were 27% higher than  the  expenses  incurred  for the
year  ended  December  31,  1998  of  $13,528,703.   The  higher  expenses are
attributable to an increase in employment level from 202 employees at December
31,  1998 to 266 employees at December 31, 1999.  The chart below breaks  down
the increased employment by function:



                                    1999            1998
                                         
Manufacturing/Materials              15              12
Engineering/ Development             80              61
Marketing/Project Management         27              17
Support/Service/Implementation       86              61
Sales                                34              32
Administration                       24              19
                                    ---             ---
                                    266             202
                                    ===             ===


     The increased staffing in the support, service, and implementation areas,
was deemed  necessary  to  enhance  the  prospects  of future sales growth and
opportunity, especially in support of the Company's network  products, DNT and
VeraBill, and to provide the proper level of service and trained  personnel in
anticipation  of  the  Company's  first  quarter  2000  launch of its Internet
accounting product offerings.

     The Company also invested heavily during 1999 to augment  its product and
project management functions.  This investment has strengthened  the Company's
abilities  to  gather   competitive  market data, and more efficiently  manage
product releases.

     For the year ended December 31, 1999, the Company realized a 21% increase
in net income to $2,398,586 representing  8.2%  of  sales,  from $1,989,005 or
8.9% of sales for the twelve months ended December 31, 1998.

     Earnings per share for the year ended December 31, 1999  were  $0.27  per
diluted  share  versus $0.24 per diluted share earned for 1998, an increase of
12.5%.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

     The Company's  total  cash position (cash plus short-term investments) at
December 31, 2000 was $1,466,874.  This compared with a total cash position of
$8,031,768 at December 31, 1999.   The  decline in the Company's cash position
reflects primarily the operating loss incurred  for  the  year  2000, but also
includes  the  repayment  of a $1,100,000 note payable carried by The  Angeles
Group Division and approximately  $600,000  of expenses incurred to consummate
that  merger.   As  mentioned in the management  discussion  section  of  this
report, the Company undertook  an  aggressive  streamlining  of its operations
through  the  year  to  bring  its  expense base back into line with  expected
revenue  streams.  As a result of these  actions,  the  Company  was  able  to
stabilize its cash position throughout the last five months of 2000.

     Accounts  receivable  at  December  31, 2000 totaled $2,104,505, net of a
$201,000 provision for doubtful accounts,  as  compared to accounts receivable
of  $3,821,244,  net  of  a  $260,000  provision at December  31,  1999.   The
reduction in accounts receivable is a reflection  of  the  lower sales volumes
recognized for 2000 versus 1999.

     Inventories  declined to $332,003 at December 31, 2000 from  $557,123  at
December 31, 1999.   By  the  end of 2000, the Company's product offerings are
primarily software-based solutions,  thereby  eliminating  the  need  to stock
significant raw components and finished goods.

     Prepaid  expenses  and  other  current  assets  at December 31, 2000 were
$96,336 as compared to $596,574 at December 31, 1999.   The  decrease reflects
the elimination of prepaid interest associated with the note payable  referred
to above and the buy-out portion of a number of capital leases carried  by The
Angeles Group at the time of merger.

     Capital spending for the year ended December 31, 2000 was $334,038,  down
significantly  from  the capital expenditures of $2,128,008 for the year ended
December 31, 1999.  The  Company  will  continue  to carefully monitor capital
purchases throughout 2001.

     Software  development  costs  capitalized and carried  on  the  Company's
balance  sheet total $1,948,728 at December  31,  2000  versus  $2,691,807  at
December  31,   1999.   During  2000,  the  Company  capitalized  $902,379  of
development expenses and amortized $1,020,134 of costs capitalized in previous
years.  In addition,  as  of  December  31,  2000,  $625,324, representing the
unamortized value of development costs associated with  the Company's Verabill
product line, has been reclassified to "Asset Held for Sale,"  in  the current
asset portion of the Company's balance sheet, pending the anticipated  sale of
the product line.  (See Note 15 to the Financial Statements).

     Total  current  liabilities  at December 31, 2000 of $5,019,073 were down
26% from the total current liabilities of $6,803,683 at December 31, 1999, the
result of the staffing reductions undertaken  throughout  the year and reduced
sales volumes.  Accounts payable decreased 53% from $827,837  at  December 31,
1999  to  $385,779  at  December 31, 2000, accrued compensation fell 20%  from
$2,021,102 to $1,606,886,  and  deferred revenue decreased 28% from $3,038,726
to $2,175,986.  Deferred revenues represent services for which the Company has
billed customers, but has not yet  performed  the  associated  service.  These
services typically included training, installation, maintenance and support.

     Long  term  liabilities decreased by $881,084, or 21% from $4,254,483  at
December 31, 1999  to $3,373,399 at December 31, 2000.  This was primarily the
result of the repayment  in  January, 2000, of the $1,100,000 note held by The
Angeles Group Division at December  31,  1999, in accordance with the terms of
the merger agreement.

     The Company maintains a private equity  line  of  credit agreement with a
single  institutional investor.  Under the equity line, the  Company  has  the
right to  sell,  to  the  investor,  shares of the Company's common stock at a
price equal to 94% of the average bid  price  of  the stock for the subsequent
ten trading days.  During the term of the agreement the Company may sell up to
$6 million to this investor with no more than $500,000  in  any  single month.
During  the  third  quarter of  2000, the Company sold 8,400 shares of  common
stock to this investor,  recognizing  proceeds,  net  of discount, of $23,688.
This agreement expires August 30, 2001.

     The  Company maintains an agreement with a major commercial  bank  for  a
secured demand  line  of credit arrangement in the amount of $3,000,000. There
have been no borrowings against this  agreement as of December 31, 2000.  From
August 1999 until December 2000, the Company maintained a separate $7,000,000,
three-year, acquisition  revolving  credit  agreement with the same bank.  The
Company has decided not to continue this acquisition credit line for 2001.

     Despite  the significant operating loss incurred  in  2000,  the  Company
believes that with the combination of expense reductions already in place, the
proceeds recognized  from  the sale of its Verabill product line, and the bank
line of credit agreement referred  to  above,  sufficient  resources  will  be
available  to meet the Company's financial obligations and support anticipated
growth over the next twelve months.


ITEM 8 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
       REQUIRED TO BE INCLUDED HEREIN AS FOLLOWS:

                                                                     Page

REPORTS OF INDEPENDENT  ACCOUNTANTS                                  19-20

CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS:

 Consolidated balance sheets                                         21-22

 Consolidated statements of operations                                23

 Consolidated statements of stockholders' equity                      24

 Consolidated statements of cash flows                                25

 Notes to consolidated financial statements                          26-37


ITEM  9  DISAGREEMENTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

         None


Report of Independent Accountants

To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of
Veramark Technologies, Inc.


In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements listed in the
accompanying index present fairly, in all material respects, the financial
position of Veramark Technologies, Inc. and its subsidiary at
December 31, 2000, and the results of their operations and their cash flows
for the year ended December 31, 2000 in conformity with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America.  In addition, in our
opinion, the financial statement schedule listed in the index  appearing
under Item 14(c) on page 42 present fairly, in all material respects, the
information set forth therein when read in conjunction with the related
consolidated financial statements.  These financial statements and financial
statement schedule are the responsibility of the Company's management; our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and
financial statement schedule based on our audits.  We conducted our audit of
these statements in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in
the United States of America, which require that we plan and perform the audit
to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free
of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis,
evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements,
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.  We
believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.


PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP



Rochester, New York
February 12, 2001, except for the second paragraph of
 Note 15 - Subsequent Event, which is as of March 26, 2001





CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS


As independent public accountants, we hereby consent to the incorporation by
reference in this Form 10-K of our report dated February 4, 2000 included in
Veramark Technologies, Inc.'s Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999.
It should be noted that we have not audited any financial statements of the
company subsequent to December 31, 1999 or preformed any audit procedures
subsequent to the date of the report.



                                        ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP

Rochester, New York
March 30, 2001










VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
DECEMBER 31, 2000 AND 1999

ASSETS                                                         2000              1999
                                                              
CURRENT ASSETS:
  Cash and cash equivalents                            $  1,072,421      $  2,894,500
  Investments                                               394,453         5,137,268
  Accounts receivable, trade (net of allowance
    for doubtful accounts of $201,000
    and $260,000)                                         2,104,505         3,821,244
  Inventories                                               332,003           557,123
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets                  96,336           596,574
  Assets held for sale (Note 4)                             625,324                 -
                                                       ------------      ------------
      Total current assets                                4,625,042        13,006,709
                                                       ============      ============

PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT:
  Cost                                                    6,733,928         7,664,867
  Less accumulated depreciation                           4,203,173         4,563,669
                                                       ------------      ------------
      Property and equipment, net                         2,530,755         3,101,198

  Software development costs (net of accumulated
    amortization of $1,464,890 and $1,531,720)            1,948,728         2,691,807
  Pension assets                                          2,125,878         1,977,710
  Deposits and other assets                                 628,927           511,858
                                                       ------------      ------------
      Total other assets                                  4,703,533         5,181,375
                                                       ------------      ------------
TOTAL ASSETS                                           $ 11,859,330      $ 21,289,282
                                                       ============      ============

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated
financial statements.






VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
DECEMBER 31, 2000 AND 1999
                                                              
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                           2000              1999

CURRENT LIABILITIES:
  Accounts payable                                     $    385,779      $    827,837
  Accrued compensation and related taxes                  1,606,886         2,021,102
  Deferred revenue                                        2,175,986         3,038,726
  Capital lease obligation - Current                         13,733            70,106
  Customer deposits                                         636,175           477,231
  Other accrued liabilities                                 200,514           368,681
                                                       ------------      ------------
      Total current liabilities                           5,019,073         6,803,683

Long-term portion of capital leases                          41,582           110,712
Note payable                                                    -0-         1,100,000
Pension obligation                                        3,331,817         3,043,771
                                                       ------------      ------------
      Total liabilities                                   8,392,472        11,058,166

STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY:
  Common stock, par value, $0.10; shares
    authorized, 40,000,000; issued 8,269,134
    shares and 8,143,673 shares                             826,913           814,367
  Additional paid-in capital                             20,191,304        20,109,463
  Accumulated deficit                                   (17,165,602)      (10,306,957)
  Treasury stock (80,225 shares at cost)                   (385,757)         (385,757)
                                                       ------------      ------------
      Total stockholders' equity                          3,466,858        10,231,116
                                                       ------------      ------------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY             $ 11,859,330      $ 21,289,282
                                                       ============      ============


The accompanying notes are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.





VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2000, 1999 AND 1998



                                                    2000                1999                1998
                                                                            
NET SALES                                            $16,525,357         $29,396,688      $22,329,113
                                                     ===========         ===========      ===========
COSTS AND OPERATING EXPENSES:
  Cost of sales                                        3,128,876           3,796,208        3,318,198
  Engineering and software development                 5,145,352           5,942,262        3,644,863
  Selling, general and administrative                 14,667,292          17,209,308       13,528,703
  Other expenses (Note 11)                               598,942                   -                -
                                                     -----------         ===========      ===========
      Total costs and operating expenses              23,540,462          26,947,778       20,491,764

INCOME (LOSS) FROM OPERATIONS                         (7,015,105)          2,448,910        1,837,349

OTHER INCOME                                             156,460              47,883          167,456
                                                     -----------         -----------      -----------
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE INCOME TAXES                     (6,858,645)          2,496,793        2,004,805

INCOME TAXES                                                   -              98,207           15,800
                                                     -----------         -----------      -----------
NET INCOME (LOSS)                                    $(6,858,645)        $ 2,398,586      $ 1,989,005
                                                     ===========         ===========      ===========
NET INCOME (LOSS) PER SHARE
       Basic                                         $     (0.85)        $      0.30      $      0.25
                                                     ===========         ===========      ===========
       Diluted                                       $     (0.85)        $      0.27      $      0.24
                                                     ===========         ===========      ===========

WEIGHTED AVERAGE SHARES OUTSTANDING (BASIC)            8,079,281           7,973,183        7,926,646
                                                     ===========         ===========      ===========
WEIGHTED AVERAGE SHARES OUTSTANDING
 (DILUTED)                                             8,079,281           8,800,662        8,272,609
                                                     ===========         ===========      ===========



The accompanying notes are an integral part of these
consolidated financial statements.



VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2000, 1999 AND 1998


                                                 COMMON STOCK                   ADDITIONAL        ACCUMULATED      TOTAL
                                           SHARES           PAR VALUE           PAID-IN           DEFICIT          STOCKHOLDERS'
                                                                                CAPITAL                            EQUITY
                                                                                                  



BALANCE - December 31, 1997               7,910,553           $791,055          $18,670,220       $(13,953,392)     $ 5,507,883

 Sale of Stock                               24,700              2,470              140,914                  -          143,384
 Fair Value of Warrants Issued with
   Debt                                           -                  -              175,000                  -          175,000
 Exercise of stock options and
   warrants                                  26,044              2,605               79,951                  -           82,556
 Stock Purchase Plan                          9,981                998               49,905                  -           50,903
 Stock Retirements                           (2,719)              (272)             (17,231)                 -          (17,503)
 Treasury Stock                             (52,300)                 -             (213,215)                 -         (213,215)
 Stockholder Distributions                        -                  -                    -           (618,500)       *(618,500)
 Net Income                                       -                  -                    -          1,989,005        1,989,005
                                          ---------           --------          -----------       ------------      -----------
BALANCE - December 31, 1998               7,916,259           $796,856          $18,885,544       $(12,582,887)     $ 7,099,513
                                          =========           ========          ===========       ============      ===========

 Exercise of stock options and
  warrants                                  151,898             15,189              888,247                  -          903,436
 Stock Purchase Plan                         24,099              2,410              134,038                  -          136,448
 Stock Retirements                             (883)               (88)             (11,581)                 -          (11,669)
 Treasury Stock                             (27,925)                 -             (172,542)                 -         (172,542)
 Stockholder Distribution                         -                  -                    -           (122,656)       *(122,656)
 Net Income                                       -                  -                    -          2,398,586        2,398,586
                                          ---------           --------          -----------       ------------      -----------
BALANCE - December 31, 1999               8,063,448           $814,367          $19,723,706       $(10,306,957)     $10,231,116
                                          =========           ========          ===========       ============      ===========

 Liquidation of Warrants Issued                   -                  -             (163,589)                 -         (163,589)
 Sale of Stock                                8,400                840               22,848                  -           23,688
 Exercise of stock options and
  warrants                                   20,536              2,054               54,790                  -           56,844
 Stock Purchase Plan                         96,525              9,652               97,792                  -          107,444
 Fair Value of Warrants Issued                    -                  -               70,000                  -           70,000
 Net loss                                         -                  -                    -         (6,858,645)      (6,858,645)
                                          ---------           --------          -----------       ------------      -----------
BALANCE - December 31, 2000               8,188,909           $826,913          $19,805,547       $(17,165,602)     $ 3,466,858
                                          =========           ========          ===========       ============      ===========

*Represents distributions to TAG Division Shareholders
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial
statements.




VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2000, 1999 AND 1998


                                                                     2000                  1999                 1998
                                                                                       
OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net income (loss)                                          $(6,858,645)            $2,398,586           $1,989,005
                                                             ===========             ==========           ==========
  Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss)
   to net cash provided by (used in) operating
   activities:
        Depreciation and amortization                          1,905,776              1,801,743            1,380,033
        Provision for bad debts                                    4,000                107,000               68,973
        Provision for inventory obsolescence                     139,996                 73,101              274,996
        Loss on disposal of fixed assets                          18,839                  4,497                2,719
        Fair value of warrants issued                             70,000                      -              175,000
        Changes in assets and liabilities:
             Accounts receivable                               1,712,739               (730,656)            (844,812)
             Inventories                                          85,124                (50,256)             309,833
             Prepaid expenses and other current
              assets                                             336,649               (404,743)            (147,993)
             License fees and purchased software                       -                      -              (30,405)
             Deposits and other assets                          (265,237)               (30,888)          (1,026,649)
             Accounts payable                                   (442,058)                (8,037)             (66,474)
             Accrued compensation and related taxes             (414,216)             1,021,911              519,302
             Deferred revenue                                   (862,740)              (230,362)             474,427
             Other accrued liabilities                           (65,596)              (489,609)             379,472
             Pension obligation                                  288,046                160,924              899,499
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
             Net adjustments                                   2,511,322              1,224,625            2,367,921
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
        Net cash (used in) provided by operating
         activities                                           (4,347,323)             3,623,211            4,356,926
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
INVESTING ACTIVITY:
  Sale (purchase) of investments                               4,742,815               (418,574)          (2,362,913)
  Additions to property and equipment                           (334,038)            (2,128,008)            (790,700)
  Capitalized software development costs                        (902,379)              (393,907)          (1,269,019)
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
       Net cash provided by (used in) investing
         activities                                            3,506,398             (2,940,489)          (4,422,632)
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Proceeds from (Repayment of) Note Payable                   (1,100,000)                     -            1,100,000
  Repayment of Capital Lease obligation                          (69,130)               (18,364)                   -
  Distributions to Shareholders                                        -               (122,656)            (618,500)
  Proceeds from sale of stock                                     23,688                      -              143,384
  Decrease in Short-term borrowings                                    -                      -             (100,000)
  Exercise of stock options and warrants                          56,844                891,767               65,053
  Employee stock purchase plan                                   107,444                136,448               50,903
  Treasury stock purchases                                             -               (172,542)            (213,215)
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
       Net cash provided by (used in) financing
        activities                                              (981,154)               714,653              427,625
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------

NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND CASH
  EQUIVALENTS                                                 (1,822,079)             1,397,375              361,919
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, BEGINNING OF YEAR                   2,894,500              1,497,125            1,135,206
                                                             -----------             ----------           ----------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, END OF YEAR                       $ 1,072,421             $2,894,500           $1,497,125
                                                             ===========             ==========           ==========

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial
statements.







VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2000, 1999 AND 1998



1.  DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

    The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts
    of  Veramark Technologies, Inc. (the Company)  and  The  Angeles  Group
    Division  ("TAG"),  reflecting  the  Company's merger with  The Angeles
    Group effective January 7, 2000.  Veramark  Technologies,  Inc.  issued
    360,850  shares  of common stock in exchange for all of the outstanding
    shares  of  The Angeles  Group,  Inc.   The  business  combination  was
    accounted  for   as   a   pooling-of-interests,  and  accordingly,  the
    historical financial statements  of  the  Company have been restated to
    include the consolidated financial statements of Veramark Technologies,
    Inc.  and  The  Angeles  Group,  Inc. for all periods  presented.   All
    significant   intercompany  accounts   and   transactions   have   been
    eliminated.   The   Company   designs  and  produces  telecommunication
    management, Internet management  and  billing  systems  for  users  and
    providers  of  telecommunication  services  in the global market.  (See
    Note 11)

    ESTIMATES  - The preparation of consolidated financial  statements,  in
    conformity with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles,  requires
    management  to  make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
    amounts of assets  and liabilities, and disclosure of contingent assets
    and liabilities, at  the  date of the consolidated financial statements
    and the reported amounts of  revenues and expenses during the reporting
    period.  Actual results could differ from those estimates.

    The  consolidated  financial  statements   include   management's  best
    estimates  of  the net realizable value of software development  costs.
    Accordingly, the Company periodically records adjustments to write down
    the  carrying  value   of  software  development  costs  to  their  net
    realizable value.  The amounts  the  Company  will  ultimately  realize
    could  differ  materially  from  the  carrying  value  of  the software
    development costs.  (See Note 4)

    FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS - Statement of Financial Accounting
    Standards  (SFAS)  No.  107  "Disclosures about Fair Value of Financial
    Instruments,"  requires  disclosures  of  the  fair  value  of  certain
    financial  instruments.   The   carrying   amount   of  cash  and  cash
    equivalents,  investments,  accounts  receivable  and accounts  payable
    approximate fair value due to their short-term nature.

    CASH  AND  CASH EQUIVALENTS - The Company considers all  highly  liquid
    investments  purchased  with  a  maturity of three months or less to be
    cash equivalents.

    INVESTMENTS - The Company records  its  investments  in accordance with
    SFAS No. 115, "Investments in Certain Debt and Equity  Securities."  As
    of December 31, 2000 and 1999, the Company has classified its portfolio
    as available-for-sale securities.  At December 31, 2000  and  1999  the
    carrying value of investments approximated fair market value.






    Investments at December 31, 2000 and 1999 consisted of the following:


                                       2000            1999
                                      
Commercial Paper                 $        -      $  550,000
Certificates of Deposit                   -         483,541
US Government Securities                  -         662,267
Bond Funds                          394,452       3,991,460
Money Market Funds                1,022,886       1,979,695
                                 ----------      ----------
                                 $1,417,338      $7,666,963
                                 ==========      ==========



    The  contractual maturities of the Company's investments as of December
    31, 2000 are primarily due within one year.

    CONCENTRATIONS   OF   CREDIT   RISK   -  Financial  instruments,  which
    potentially  subject  the  Company  to concentration  of  credit  risk,
    consist  principally  of  investments  and  accounts  receivable.   The
    Company places its investments with quality financial institutions and,
    by  policy,  limits  the  amount  of investment  exposure  to  any  one
    financial institution.

    The Company's customers are not concentrated in any specific geographic
    region, but are concentrated in the telecommunications industry.  As of
    December 31, 2000 and 1999, one customer in this industry accounted for
    approximately  $527,101  and $1,100,834,  respectively,  of  the  total
    accounts  receivable balance.   The  Company  performs  ongoing  credit
    evaluations of its customers' financial conditions but does not require
    collateral to support customer receivables.  The Company establishes an
    allowance for  doubtful  accounts  based  upon  factors surrounding the
    credit  risk  of  specific  customers,  historical  trends   and  other
    information.

    INVENTORIES  are  stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out)  or
    market.  The Company evaluates the net realizable value of inventory on
    hand considering deterioration,  obsolescence,  replacement  costs  and
    other pertinent factors, and records adjustments as necessary.

    PROPERTY  AND  EQUIPMENT  is  recorded  at  cost  and  depreciated on a
    straight-line basis using the following useful lives:

           Computer hardware and software      3-5 years
           Machinery and equipment             4-7 years
           Furniture and fixtures             5-10 years
           Leasehold improvements          Term of lease

    All maintenance and repair costs are charged to operations as incurred.
    The cost and accumulated depreciation for property and equipment  sold,
    retired,  or  otherwise  disposed of are removed from the accounts, and
    the resulting gains or losses are reflected in earnings.

    LONG-LIVED  ASSETS AND INTANGIBLES  -  In  January  1996,  the  Company
    adopted SFAS  No.  121  "Accounting  for  the  Impairment of Long-Lived
    Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to be Disposed  Of."    SFAS  No.  121
    requires that long-lived assets and certain identifiable intangibles be
    reviewed  for  impairment  whenever  events or changes in circumstances
    indicate that the carrying amount of an asset may not be recoverable on
    an  undiscounted cash flow basis.  The  statement  also  requires  that
    long-lived  assets  and certain identifiable intangibles to be disposed
    of be reported at the lower of carrying amount or fair values less cost
    to sell.  The adoption  of  SFAS No. 121 did not have a material effect
    on the financial statements.

    SOFTWARE   DEVELOPMENT   COSTS   meeting   recoverability   tests   are
    capitalized, under Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standard No. 86,
    "Accounting for the Costs of Computer Software to be Sold,  Leased,  or
    Otherwise  Marketed,"  and amortized on a product-by-product basis over
    their economic life, ranging  from three to five years, or the ratio of
    current  revenues  to  current  and   anticipated  revenues  from  such
    software, whichever provides the greater amortization.

    REVENUE RECOGNITION - The Company recognizes revenue from product sales
    upon shipment to the customer.  Revenues  from maintenance and extended
    warranty  agreements  are  recognized ratably  over  the  term  of  the
    agreements.   The  Company also  enters  into  license  agreements  for
    certain of its software  products.   These  revenues  are recognized in
    accordance with the provisions of Statement of Position (SOP) No. 97-2,
    "Software Revenue Recognition" as amended by SOP 98-4.

    INCOME  TAXES  are  provided  on  the  income  earned  in the financial
    statements.   In  accordance  with  SFAS  109,  "Accounting for  Income
    Taxes,"  the  Company applies the liability method  of  accounting  for
    income taxes, under which deferred income taxes are provided to reflect
    the impact of "temporary differences" between the amounts of assets and
    liabilities for  financial  reporting  purposes  and  such  amounts  as
    measured  by tax laws and regulations. The Angeles Group was treated as
    an S-Corporation for Federal Income Tax purposes for all years prior to
    2000.

    NET INCOME  (OR  LOSS)  PER COMMON SHARE is computed in accordance with
    the provisions of SFAS No.  128,  "Earnings  Per  Share."  Basic EPS is
    computed by dividing reported earnings available to common stockholders
    by  weighted average shares outstanding.  No dilution for common  share
    equivalents is included.  Diluted EPS is computed on a similar basis to
    the previously  calculated  fully  diluted  EPS.  Included  in  diluted
    earnings  per  share  in  1998 and 1999 are 345,963 and 827,479 shares,
    respectively, which represents the dilutive effect of stock options and
    warrants issued.  There is  no  dilutive  effect  of  stock options and
    warrants in 2000 as the effect would be anti-dilutive.

    RECLASSIFICATIONS - Certain prior year balances have been  reclassified
    to conform with current year presentation.

    STOCK-BASED  COMPENSATION  - In October 1995, SFAS No. 123, "Accounting
    for Stock-Based Compensation"  was issued which sets forth a fair value
    method of recognizing stock-based  compensation  expense.  As permitted
    by SFAS No. 123, the Company continues to measure compensation for such
    plans using the intrinsic value based method of accounting,  prescribed
    by  Accounting Principles Board (APB), Opinion No. 25, "Accounting  for
    Stock   Issued   to   Employees,"  and  will  disclose  the  additional
    information relative to  issued stock options, and pro forma net income
    and earnings per share, as  if  the  options  granted  were expensed at
    their estimated fair value at the time of grant.

    NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS - In June 1998, the Financial  Accounting
    Standards   Board   ("FASB")  issued  SFAS  No.  133,  "Accounting  for
    Derivative Instruments  and  Hedging  Activities."   This  standard was
    amended  by  SFAS  No. 137, "Accounting for Derivative Instruments  and
    Hedging Activities-Deferral of the Effective Date of FASB Statement No.
    133," and changed the  effective  date  of  SFAS  No. 133 to all fiscal
    quarters of fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2000.   In June 2000,
    the  FASB  issued  SFAS  No.  138,  "Accounting  for Certain Derivative
    Instruments and Certain Hedging Activities, an amendment  of  SFAS  No.
    133."  SFAS requires that all derivative instruments be recorded on the
    balance  sheet  at  their  respective fair values.  Changes in the fair
    value of derivatives are recorded  each  period  in current earnings or
    other comprehensive income, depending on their designation  as  a hedge
    of  a particular exposure.  The Company has determined the adoption  of
    SFAS  No.  133  will  not  have  a  material  impact  on  the financial
    statements.

    In  December  1999,  the  Securities  and  Exchange Commissions ("SEC")
    issued Staff Accounting Bulletin ("SAB") No.  101, "Revenue Recognition
    in Financial Statements," which summarizes certain  of  the SEC's views
    in   applying  generally  accepted  accounting  principles  to  revenue
    recognition in financial statements.  The SEC delayed the date by which
    registrants  must apply the accounting and disclosures described in SAB
    No. 101 until  the  fourth  quarter  of  2000.   The  Company's revenue
    recognition policies comply with the guidance contained  in SAB No. 101
    and, therefore, the Company's results of operations were not materially
    affected.

2.  INVENTORIES

    The major classifications of inventories as of December 31, 2000 and 1999
    are:


                                             2000             1999
                                              
Purchased parts and components           $198,995         $423,460
Work in process                            65,127           94,991
Finished goods                             67,881           38,672
                                         --------         --------
                                         $332,003         $557,123
                                         ========         ========

3.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT

    The  major  classifications  of property and equipment as of December
    31, 2000 and 1999 are:


                                             2000              1999
                                              
Machinery and equipment                $  802,355        $1,241,036
Computer hardware and software          2,785,033         3,679,595
Furniture and fixtures                  1,763,981         1,376,024
Leasehold improvements                  1,382,559         1,368,212
                                       ----------        ----------
                                       $6,733,928        $7,664,867
                                       ==========        ==========

    Depreciation expense was approximately  $886,000,  $677,000 and
    $366,000  for  the years ended December 31, 2000, 1999  and
    1998,  respectively.    The  Company  recorded  a  loss  of
    approximately $19,000, representing  the  net book value of
    assets written-off during 2000.

4.  ASSET HELD FOR SALE

    During  2000, the Company announced its intention to either
    spin-off into a separate  Company  or  sell  to a strategic
    buyer,  Verabill,  the  billing  and customer care  product
    line.  As of December 31, 2000, the  unamortized portion of
    capitalized software attributable to the  Verabill  product
    was  $625,324.   The  Company continued to sell and support
    the Verabill product during the process of negotiation with
    interested parties.   The  Company  completed  the  sale of
    this  product  line  on  March 26, 2001 (See Note 15 to the
    Financial Statements).








5.  ENGINEERING AND SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT EXPENDITURES

    Engineering  and  software  development  expenditures  incurred
    during the years ended December  31,  2000,  1999  and 1998
    were recorded as follows:


                                                            2000             1999             1998
                                                                          
Engineering and software development expense
 included in the consolidated statements of
 operations                                           $5,145,352       $5,942,262       $3,644,863
Amounts capitalized and included in the
 consolidated balance sheets                             902,379          393,907        1,269,019
                                                      ----------       ----------       ----------
Total expenditures for engineering and software
  development                                         $6,047,731       $6,336,169       $4,913,882
                                                      ==========       ==========       ==========

    Additionally,   the   Company   recorded  amortization  of
    capitalized    software    development     costs    of
    approximately $1,020,000, $1,096,000, and $984,000 for
    the  years  ended  December  31, 2000, 1999 and  1998,
    respectively.  Such amortization  is  included in cost
    of sales in the consolidated statements of operations.

6.  BENEFIT PLANS

    The  Company  sponsors  an employee incentive  savings
    plan under section 401(k)  for all eligible employees.
    The   Company's  contributions   to   the   plan   are
    discretionary and totaled $100,000 in 1999 and $50,000
    in 1998.  There were no contributions in 2000.

    The Company  also  sponsors  an  unfunded Supplemental
    Executive Retirement Program, which  is a nonqualified
    plan  that  provides  certain  key  employees  defined
    pension  benefits.  Periodic pension expense  for  the
    years ended  December 31, 2000, 1999 and 1998 consists
    of the following:


                                              2000            1999            1998
                                                          
Service cost                              $320,413        $307,637        $279,957
Interest cost                              215,210         173,356         120,933
Net amortization and deferral               86,883          86,883          49,444
                                          --------        --------        --------
Pension expense                           $622,506        $567,876        $450,334
                                          ========        ========        ========






    A reconciliation  of  the  pension  plan's funded
    status  with amounts recognized in the  Company's
    balance sheets is as follows:


                                                        2000               1999
                                                       
Actuarial present value of accumulated
  benefit obligation                            $  3,331,817       $  3,043,771
                                                ============       ============
Actuarial present value of projected
  benefit obligation                            $  3,331,817       $  3,043,771
Plan assets                                                -                  -
                                                ------------       ------------
Projected benefit obligation in excess of
  plan assets                                      3,331,817          3,043,771
Prior service cost not yet recognized in
  net periodic pension cost                         (913,655)        (1,000,538)

Additional minimum liability                         913,655          1,000,538
                                                ------------       ------------
Accrued pension obligation                      $  3,331,817       $  3,043,771
                                                ============       ============



    Included in the pension assets caption in the
    consolidated  balance  sheets  as of December
    31, 2000 and 1999 is an intangible  asset  of
    $913,655    and   $1,000,538,   respectively,
    related to the  minimum  liability adjustment
    for   the   unfunded   accumulated    benefit
    obligation.

    The  discount  rate  and rate of increase  in
    future    compensation   levels    used    in
    determining  the  actuarial  present value of
    the projected benefit obligation  were 7% and
    3% respectively, for all years presented.

    The Company maintains life insurance covering
    certain  key employees under its Supplemental
    Executive Retirement Program with the Company
    named as beneficiary.  The Company intends to
    use death  benefits  as well as loans against
    the accumulating cash  surrender value of the
    policies to fund the pension obligation.

7.  STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

    The Company maintains a  private  equity  line of
    credit  agreement with a single institutional
    investor.  Under the equity line, the Company
    has the right  to sell to the investor shares
    of the Company's  common  stock  at  a  price
    equal to 94% of the average bid price of  the
    stock  for  the  subsequent ten trading days.
    During the term of  the agreement the Company
    may sell up to $6 million  of common stock to
    the  investor with no more than  $500,000  in
    any single  month.   During 2000, the Company
    sold  8,400  share of common  stock  to  this
    investor, realizing  net proceeds of $23,688.
    There were no shares of  common stock sold to
    this investor during 1999.   During 1998, the
    Company sold 24,700 shares of common stock to
    this  investor  realizing  net  proceeds   of
    $143,384.   This agreement expires August 30,
    2001.

    The Company has  reserved  650,000  shares of
    its common stock for issuance under its  1993
    Stock  Option Plan, the successor plan to the
    1983 Stock  Option Plan.  The Company's Board
    of Directors  approved  a  1998  Stock Option
    Plan  on  December  15, 1997 covering  up  to
    2,500,000 shares of common  stock, subject to
    shareholder approval, which was  obtained  in
    May,  1998.   Both plans provide for options,
    which  may  be  issued   as  nonqualified  or
    qualified  incentive  stock   options.    All
    options granted are exercisable in increments
    of  20 - 50% per year beginning one year from
    the date  of  grant.   All options granted to
    employees have a ten year term.

    The  Company  accounts  for  its  stock-based
    compensation plans under  APB Opinion No. 25.
    Accordingly,  compensation expense  has  been
    recognized only  to  the  extent the exercise
    price was below the fair market  value at the
    time of the grant.  Had compensation cost for
    the Company's stock-based compensation  plans
    been  determined  based  on the fair value at
    the  grant dates for awards  consistent  with
    the method of SFAS No. 123, the Company's net
    income  (loss)  per  share  would  have  been
    adjusted  to  the pro forma amounts indicated
    below:


                                                                   2000              1999              1998
                                                                               
Net income (loss)                  As reported             $(6,858,645)        $2,398,586        $1,989,005
                                   Pro forma               $(9,166,081)        $1,855,680        $1,359,147
Net income (loss) per common share As reported
                                      Basic                      $(.85)              $.30              $.25
                                      Diluted                    $(.85)              $.27              $.24
                                   Pro forma
                                      Basic                     $(1.13)              $.23              $.17
                                      Diluted                   $(1.13)              $.21              $.16



    Compensation   expense   recognized   in  the
    statement  of  operations for the years ended
    December  31,  2000,   1999   and   1998  was
    $448,562,      $355,638     and     $215,991,
    respectively,  for   options   issued  at  an
    exercise price below fair market value at the
    time of the grant.  The SFAS No.  123  method
    of accounting has not been applied to options
    granted  prior  to  January  1,  1995, so the
    resulting pro forma compensation cost may not
    be  representative of that to be expected  in
    future years.

    For purposes  of  the  disclosure  above, the
    fair  value of each option grant is estimated
    on the  date  of  the  grant using the Black-
    Scholes   option-pricing   model   with   the
    following  weighted-average assumptions  used
    for grants in 2000, 1999, and 1998.


                                         2000               1999               1998

                                                        
Dividend yield                              -                  -                  -

Expected volatility                    66.98%             64.47%             59.00%
Risk-free interest rate                 6.24%              4.58%              5.61%
Expected life                         7 years            7 years            7 years







    A summary of stock option and warrant transactions for the years ended
    December 31, 2000, 1999 and 1998 is shown below:



                                               2000                             1999                         1998

OPTIONS                                              WEIGHTED                          WEIGHTED                   WEIGHTED
                                      SHARES          AVERAGE          SHARES          AVERAGE       SHARES       AVERAGE
                                                       PRICE                            PRICE                     PRICE
                                                                                            
Shares under option,
 beginning of year                   2,181,520         $4.76         1,715,475          $4.16        655,746      $2.40

  Options granted                    1,131,550          4.70           536,537           6.55      1,163,720       5.15

  Options exercised                    (20,536)         2.36           (47,517)          3.14        (22,450)      2.31

  Options terminated                  (592,024)         6.44           (22,975)          5.43        (81,541)      4.61
                                     ---------         -----         ---------          -----      ---------      -----
Shares under option,
 end of year                         2,700,510         $4.38         2,181,520          $4.76      1,715,475      $4.16
                                     =========         =====         =========          =====      =========      =====

Shares exercisable                     893,371         $4.05           656,556          $4.15        379,146      $4.11
                                     =========         =====         =========          =====      =========      =====

Weighted average fair value of
 options granted                         $4.70                           $4.35                         $3.33
                                         =====                           =====                         =====

WARRANTS

Warrants outstanding,
 beginning of year                      78,045         $7.68           185,822          $7.20        194,770      $7.12
Warrants granted                        50,000          3.12             5,289           6.38              -          -
Warrants exercised                           -             -          (104,381)          6.92         (3,594)      4.87
Warrants expired                       (13,301)         5.74            (8,685)          5.76         (5,354)      5.37
                                     ---------         -----         ---------          -----      ---------      -----
Warrants outstanding,
  end of year                          114,744         $5.92            78,045          $7.68        185,822      $7.20
                                     =========                       =========                     =========



8.   SALES INFORMATION

    Sales   to   one   customer   were  approximately
    $7,394,000  or  45%  of  the Company's  total
    sales in 2000.  Sales to this  same  customer
    were approximately $16,287,000 or 55%  of the
    Company's    total    sales   in   1999   and
    approximately  $11,763,000   or  53%  of  the
    Company's total sales in 1998.

    Export   sales   to  unaffiliated  customers,
    primarily in Europe  and  South America, were
    approximately  $1,990,414,  $5,219,000,   and
    $3,435,000    in   2000,   1999   and   1998,
    respectively.









9.  INCOME TAXES

    The components of the income (loss) before income
    taxes for the years  ended December 31, 2000,
    1999 and 1998 is presented below:


                                                 2000              1999              1998
                                                               
Net (loss) income                        $(6,858,645)        $2,789,452        $1,034,427



    The income tax provision (benefit) includes the following:


                                                2000               1999               1998
                                                                    
Current income tax expense:
  Federal                                          -            $80,908            $12,775
  State                                            -             17,299              3,025
                                          ----------            -------            -------
                                          $        -            $98,207            $15,800
                                          ==========            =======            =======
Deferred income tax provision
(benefit):
  Federal                                 (2,000,921)           510,123            236,281
  State                                     (173,993)            48,660             93,738
  Increase (decrease) in valuation
   allowance                               2,174,914           (558,783)          (330,019)
                                          ----------           --------           --------
                                                   -                  -                  -
                                          ----------           --------           --------

                                          $        -           $ 98,207           $ 15,800
                                          ==========           ========           ========



The   income   tax  (benefit)  provision differs  from those computed using the
statutory federal tax rate of 34%, due to the following:


                                                      2000              1999              1998
                                                                    
Tax at statutory federal rate                $(2,331,939)          $948,414          $351,705
US Tax effect of foreign losses                        -           (312,024)                -
State taxes, net of federal tax benefit          (69,425)             4,857            64,136
Merger costs                                     209,300                  -                 -
Utilization of tax credits                             -                  -           (31,977)
(Decrease) increase in valuation
 allowance                                     2,174,914           (558,783)         (354,118)
Other                                             17,150             15,743           (13,946)
                                             -----------           --------          --------
                                             $         -           $ 98,207          $ 15,800
                                             ===========           ========          ========



The deferred income tax asset (liability) recorded in the
consolidated     balance    sheets results  from differences  between
financial    statement   and   tax reporting     of    income     and
deductions.   A   summary  of  the composition of the deferred income
tax asset (liability) follows:




                                      2000             1999
                                           
General business credits             1,451,747       $1,055,314
Net operating losses                 2,907,598        1,305,396
Deferred compensation                1,203,943          956,317
Alternative minimum tax credits        322,216          329,273
Inventory                              104,762          165,173
Accounts receivable                     28,060           35,457
Capitalized software                  (952,400)      (1,004,616)
Fixed assets                           (78,685)         (65,687)
Restructuring                                -          205,314
Other                                  145,402           46,264
New York State ITC                      70,476                -
                                    ----------       ----------
                                     5,203,119        3,028,205
Valuation allowance                 (5,203,119)      (3,028,205)
                                    ----------       ----------
Deferred asset (liability)          $        -       $        -
                                    ==========       ==========



The  Company has $7,858,374  of federal   net   operating  loss
carryforwards available  as  of December  31,  2000.   Of  that
total, $682,000 is limited to a utilization   of  approximately
$100,000     annually.      The carryforwards expire in varying
amounts in 2011 through 2020.

The   Company's    tax   credit carryforwards  as  of  December
31, 2000 are as follows:


DESCRIPTION                                        AMOUNT         EXPIRATION DATES
                                                        
General business credits                       $1,451,747         2000 - 2020

New York State investment tax credits            $106,778         2001 - 2015

Alternative minimum tax credits                  $322,216         No expiration date


Cash  paid  (received)   for  income  taxes during  the  years  ended December
31, 2000,  1999  and  1998 totaled  $2,132, $11,705, and $(87,018)
respectively.




10. COMMITMENTS

LEASE OBLIGATIONS -  The Company leases current   manufacturing    and   office
facilities and certain equipment  under operating   leases,   which  expire  at
various  dates.   The  facility  leases provide for extension privileges.  Rent
expense  under  all  operating   leases (exclusive  of  real  estate  taxes and
other   expenses   payable   under  the leases)   was  approximately  $621,000,
$453,000, and  $534,000  for  the years ended December 31, 2000, 1999 and 1998,
respectively.

Minimum  lease  payments as of December 31,  2000 under capital  and  operating
leases are as follows:


YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31,           CAPITAL LEASES        OPERATING LEASES               TOTAL
                                                                      
2001                                      $19,370              $  617,359           $  636,729
2002                                       19,370                 629,230              648,600
2003                                       19,370                 647,605              666,975
2004                                        8,069                 468,905              476,974
2005                                            0                 433,165              433,165
Thereafter                                      0                 794,136              794,136
                                          -------              ----------           ----------
                                          $66,179              $3,590,400           $3,656,579



Less: Amounts representing interest       (10,864)
Present value of minimum
   capital lease payments                  55,315
Less: Current Portion                     (13,733)
                                          -------
                                          $41,582
                                          =======

Legal Matters - The Company is subject to litigation from time to time
in the ordinary course of business.  Although the amount  of  any
liability  with respect to such litigation cannot  be determined,
in the opinion of management, such liability will not have a material
adverse effect on the Company's  financial  condition or results
of operations.


11. OTHER EXPENSES


    On January 7, 2000, the Company  completed its
    merger with  TAG, a supplier of telemanagement  software
    systems  for  large enterprises.  The transaction
    was structured  as  a stock-for-stock merger with
    the shareholders of TAG  receiving 360,850 shares
    of the Company's common stock,  which represented
    an  aggregate value of approximately  $4,060,000,
    assuming  a  per  share  amount  of  $11.25.   In
    addition,  Veramark  assumed and paid debt of TAG
    totaling approximately $1.1 million.  Transaction
    related broker, accounting,  and  legal  fees  of
    $598,942   are   included   in  the  accompanying
    consolidated statements of operations.


12. LONG-TERM DEBT


    In November, 1998, TAG entered into a note payable in
    the amount of $1,100,000.  Interest  was  payable
    monthly  at  the  rate  of  thirteen  percent per
    annum,  through  December 1, 2003, at which  time
    the principal balance  was  due.   The  note  was
    secured  by  substantially  all  the  assets  and
    intellectual  property  of  TAG.   This  note was
    repaid in January, 2000.


13. LINES OF CREDIT


    The  Company  maintains  a  secured  line  of  credit
    agreement  with a major commercial bank for up to
    $3,000,000,  all  of  which  is  available  as of
    December 31, 2000.


14. QUARTERLY FINANCIAL INFORMATION (UNAUDITED)


    Summarized  quarterly  financial information for  the
    years ended December 31,  2000  and  1999  is  as
    follows:


                                                          Three Months Ended

                               March 31            June 30         September 30      December 31
                                                                      
2000
Net sales                         $4,914,417          $3,111,859       $4,889,126       $3,609,955
Gross profit                      $4,046,277          $2,376,770       $4,068,089       $2,905,345

Net income (loss)                $(2,859,965)        $(3,292,588)       $(222,050)       $(484,042)
Net loss per share
     - Basic                     $     (0.36)        $     (0.40)      $    (0.03)      $    (0.06)
     - Diluted                   $     (0.36)        $     (0.40)      $    (0.03)      $    (0.06)

1999
Net sales                         $6,434,695          $7,309,406       $7,537,346       $8,115,241
Gross profit                      $5,630,395          $6,270,471       $6,623,659       $7,075,955

Net income (loss)                   $676,612            $870,318         $805,928          $45,728
Net loss per share
     - Basic                     $      0.09         $      0.11       $     0.10       $     0.01
     - Diluted                   $      0.08         $      0.10       $     0.09       $     0.00


15. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS


    On December 28, 2000, the Company announced
    that it had  received a NASDAQ staff determination
    indicating  that the Company failed to comply
    with  net tangible  assets  requirements  for
    continued  listing  on  the  NASDAQ  National
    Market.   After considering an appeal of  the
    NASDAQ's determination, the Company announced
    on January 26, 2001, that it had decided that
    it was not in the Company's best interests to
    enter into  potentially dilutive transactions
    in order to meet NASDAQ's net tangible assets
    requirement.    As  a result, effective March
    16,  2001,  the  listing   of  the  Company's
    securities  was  transferred  to  the  NASDAQ
    Smallcap Market.


    On March 26, 2001, the Company  announced the
    completion  of  the  sale  of  Verabill,  its
    billing  and customer care product  line,  to
    MIND CTI Ltd.  of  Yokneam, Israel.  The sale
    price paid in cash at closing was $1,000,000.
    The  Company will recognize  a  non-recurring
    gain on  the  sale,  in  the first quarter of
    2001, of approximately $300,000.


    PART III

ITEM 10   DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

     Information relating to directors of the
Company is incorporated herein  by  reference
to  pages  3  -  5  of  the  Company's  Proxy
Statement   for   the   Annual   Meeting   of
Shareholders  to  be  held  May 17, 2001 {see
"Election of Directors" and "Compliance  With
Section 16 (a)".}

     The  following  lists the names and ages
of all executive officers of the Company, all
persons chosen to become  executive officers,
all  positions and offices with  the  Company
held  by   such  persons,  and  the  business
experience during the past five years of such
persons.  All  officers  were  elected or re-
elected to their present positions  for terms
ending  on  May  17,  2001  and  until  their
respective   successors   are   elected   and
qualified.

                 MANAGEMENT

DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE
REGISTRANT

     The Directors and executive officers of
Veramark are as follows:



NAME                                  AGE          POSITION
                                             
David G. Mazzella                     60           Chairman of the Board, President and CEO

William J. Reilly                     52           Director

John E. Gould                         56           Director

James R. Scielzo                      58           Director

Robert Stubbs                         66           Director

Paul T. Babarik                       59           Vice President - Telemanagement Sales

Robert L. Boxer                       47           Vice President, Secretary, General Counsel

James W. Karr                         57           Vice President - Sales, Billing And Customer Care

Ronald C. Lundy                       49           Treasurer

Douglas F. Smith                      57           Vice President - Operations


     All  Directors  hold  office  until the next
annual meeting of stockholders, and  until  their
successors   are   duly  elected  and  qualified.
Officers are elected  annually  by  the  Board of
Directors  and  serve  at  the  discretion of the
Board.

     DAVID  G. MAZZELLA, JR. was appointed  Chief
Executive Officer  in  June  1997,  he previously
served  as President and Chief Operating  Officer
of the Company  from  February  1997.   He became
Chairman of the Board on December 19, 1998.  From
June  1994  to  February 1997, he was engaged  in
management consulting.   From  February  1992  to
June  1994,  he  was  the  President  and  CEO of
Scotgroup Enterprises, Inc., which was engaged in
the  development  and  sale of telecommunications
software equipment and the  sale  of  paging  and
cellular  telephone  services.   From 1988 - 1991
Mr.  Mazzella  was  Vice  President  of  Glenayre
Electronics,  a  manufacturer  of software  based
telecommunications equipment.  He  was  President
and CEO of Multitone Electronics, Inc., a company
engaged in the manufacture, sale and servicing of
telecommunications equipment from 1983 until  its
acquisition by Glenayre Electronics in 1988.

     WILLIAM  J.  REILLY  has  been a Director of
Veramark  since June 1997.  He is  the  Executive
Vice President  for  Checkpoint  Systems, Inc., a
manufacturer  and  distributor  of  systems   for
electronic   article   surveillance,   electronic
access  control,  closed  circuit television  and
radio frequency identifications.   He  has served
in that capacity for more than five years.

     JOHN   E.  GOULD  has  been  a  Director  of
Veramark since  August  1997.  For more than five
years Mr. Gould has been  a  partner  in  Gould &
Wilkie,  a general practice law firm in New  York
City.  Mr. Gould is also Chairman of the American
Geographical Society.

     JAMES  R. SCIELZO was appointed to the Board
of Directors  of  Veramark  in  March 1998.  From
1994, until his retirement in 1999,  Mr.  Scielzo
held  the  position of Senior Vice President  and
Chief Technology  Officer  for  Young  & Rubicam,
Inc.,    a   global   corporate   communications,
advertising  and public relations firm.  Prior to
that,   he   was  Senior   vice   President/Chief
Technology Officer  at  Wundermann  Cajo Johnson,
the  direct  response  advertising subsidiary  of
Young  &  Rubicam, and the  Director  of  systems
Development for Young & Rubicam.

     ROBERT  W. STUBBS was appointed to the Board
of  Directors of  Veramark  in  July  1998.   Mr.
Stubbs  was President and Chief Executive Officer
of  Bell  Atlantic   Capital   Corporation,   the
financial  services organization of Bell Atlantic
Corporation  from  1986  until  his retirement in
1993.   Prior  to  that,  he  was  the   CEO   of
TriContinental  Leasing  Company which he founded
in 1968 and sold to Bell Atlantic  in  1984.  Mr.
Stubbs  has  served on the Board of Directors  of
the  Equipment  Leasing  Association,  the  trade
association of the equipment leasing industry and
was elected  its  Chairman  in 1989.  He has been
Director of Corporate Affairs for ELA since 1993.
Presently, Mr. Stubbs is a Director of BMC Credit
Corporation,  a  Director of Aviation  Facilities
Company,  Inc.,  and   a   Trustee  of  Manhattan
College.

     PAUL T. BABARIK was appointed Vice President
of Sales in April 1996.  After  joining  Veramark
in  1987  as  a  Regional  Sales  Manager he held
several  sales  management  positions,  the  most
recent  as Director of AT&T sales  from  1989  to
1996.  Prior to joining Veramark, Mr. Babarik was
employed  by  AT&T  from  1977  - 1986 in various
sales management positions.

     ROBERT L. BOXER became a Vice  President  of
Veramark  in November 1991.  Prior to that he had
been Secretary  and Corporate Counsel of Veramark
since March 1983.   Prior  to  that  he  had been
Counsel   at   Sykes  Datatronics,  Inc.  and  an
attorney with the firm of Middleton-Wilson.

     JAMES W. KARR  has  been  Vice  President  -
Sales,  Billing  and  Customer  Care since May 1,
1989.   After joining Veramark in  1983,  he  had
held various  sales  management positions.  Prior
to that he held sales  management  positions with
Sykes   Datatronics,   Inc.,   Itel  Corporation,
Honeywell    Information    Systems,   and    NCR
Corporation.

     RONALD C. LUNDY was appointed  Treasurer  of
Veramark in July 1993.  Since joining Veramark in
1984   he   has   held  a  variety  of  financial
management positions, the most recent having been
Corporate  Controller  since  December  of  1992.
Prior to that he held various financial positions
with Rochester Instrument Systems from 1974-1983.

     DOUGLAS   F.   SMITH   was   appointed  Vice
President  of Operations in December  1998.   Mr.
Smith has been  an  employee of the Company since
1984 as Order Administration  Manager and then as
Director  of Operations.  Prior  to  joining  the
Company,  Mr.   Smith   held  various  management
positions  with  Rochester  Instruments  Systems,
Inc.


ITEM 11   EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     Information    relating     to     executive
compensation  is  incorporated  by  reference  on
pages 6 - 8 of the Company's Proxy Statement  for
the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held May
17,  2001.   (See  "Executive  Compensation"  and
"Corporate Governance Information.")

ITEM 12   SECURITY     OWNERSHIP    OF    CERTAIN
BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     Information   relating   to   the   security
holdings of more than  five  percent  holders and
directors   and   officers   of  the  Company  is
incorporated herein by reference  to  pages 3 - 5
of  the Company's Proxy Statement for the  Annual
Meeting of Shareholders to be held May 17, 2001.

ITEM 13   CERTAIN   RELATIONSHIPS   AND   RELATED
TRANSACTIONS

     None.



                     PART IV

ITEM 14   EXHIBITS,     CONSOLIDATED    FINANCIAL
STATEMENT   SCHEDULE   AND   REPORTS    ON   FORM
                               8-K

(a)  REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

1. Registrant   filed   a   Form   8-K  with  the
   Securities and Exchange Commission  on January
   13,  2000  announcing  that  the  Company   on
   January    7,   2000   had   consummated   its
   acquisition  of  The  Angeles Group ("TAG"), a
   supplier of enterprise software solutions.

   TAG has its headquarters  located  in Westlake
   village, California, and will be operated as a
   division  of  Veramark.   The transaction  was
   structured  as a stock-for-stock  merger  with
   the  shareholders  of  TAG  receiving  360,850
   shares   of   Veramark   common  stock,  which
   represents an aggregate value of approximately
   $4,059,562,  assuming  a price  per  share  of
   Veramark common stock of $11.25.  In addition,
   Veramark assumed and paid debt of TAG totaling
   approximately  $1.1  million  and  transaction
   related broker, accounting,  and legal fees of
   approximately $600,000 were paid  in  cash out
   of working capital.

   TAG  was  not  affiliated  with  Veramark, any
   director   or  officer  of  Veramark  or   any
   associate of  any  such  directory  or officer
   prior to the merger.

2. On March 16, 2000, the Company filed  a report
   on Form 8-KA providing, on a pro-forma  basis,
   the   consolidated   financial  statements  of
   Veramark Technologies,  Inc.  and  The Angeles
   Group, Inc. for the years 1997-1999.

3. On April 3, 2000, the Company filed  a  report
   on   Form  8-K  announcing  a  change  in  the
   Company's  certifying  accountants,  effective
   March   28,  2000.   The  Company's  Board  of
   Directors   approved  the  engagement  of  the
   accounting firm  of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
   as independent auditors  for  the  Company and
   its  Divisions  and subsidiaries for the  year
   ending December 31,  2000, subject to approval
   of  stockholders.   The   audit   relationship
   between  the  Company and its past independent
   auditors, Arthur  Andersen  LLP  was continued
   through  an orderly completion of all  matters
   related to  the year, which ended December 31,
   1999.  During the two most recent fiscal years
   and interim period  subsequent to December 31,
   1999, there were no disagreements  with Arthur
   Anderson  LLP  on  any  matter  of  accounting
   principles  or  policies,  financial statement
   disclosure, or auditing scope or procedure.

(b)  Exhibits (numbered in accordance  with  item
        601 of regulation S-K)
     (11.1)  Page  45 Calculation of earnings per
        share

(c)  Schedule II Page 43 Valuation and Qualifying
        Accounts.

   All other schedules  are  omitted because they
   are not applicable or the required information
   is shown in the financial statements  or notes
   thereto.





           VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

SCHEDULE II - VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2000, 1999, AND 1998


                                                                        
            COLUMN A             COLUMN B             COLUMN C             COLUMN D             COLUMN E
       ALLOWANCE FOR           Balance at           Charged to             Accounts           Balance at
            Doubtful    Beginning of Year            Costs and          Written Off               End of
            Accounts                                  Expenses          (Recovered)                 Year
                2000             $260,000               $4,000              $63,000             $201,000
                1999             $110,000             $107,000            $(43,000)             $260,000
                1998              $75,000              $68,973              $33,973             $110,000








                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant  to the requirements of Section  13
or 15 (d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
the registrant has  duly caused this report to be
signed  on  its  behalf   by   the   undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized.

           VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

    _________________________________________
      David G. Mazzella, President and CEO
              Dated: ______________

     Pursuant   to   the   requirements   of  the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report  has
been  signed  below  by  the following persons on
behalf of the registrant and  in  the  capacities
and on the dates indicated.



SIGNATURE                         CAPACITY                           DATE
                                                               
                                  Chairman of the Board, Director    March 27, 2001
David G. Mazzella
                                  Director                           March 27, 2001
John E. Gould
                                  Director                           March 27, 2001
William J. Reilly
                                  Director                           March 27, 2001
Robert Stubbs
                                  Director                           March 27, 2001
James R. Scielzo
                                  Treasurer                          March 27, 2001
Ronald C. Lundy






Exhibit 11.1

           VERAMARK TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
        CALCULATION OF EARNINGS PER SHARE




                                                                          Year Ended December 31,
                                                             2000                1999                1998
                                                                                 
BASIC
Net Earnings (Loss)                                      $(6,858,645)          $2,398,586          $1,989,005
                                                         ===========           ==========          ==========
Weighted average common shares outstanding                 8,079,281            7,973,183           7,926,646
                                                         ===========           ==========          ==========
Earnings  (Loss) per common & common equivalent
 share                                                        $(0.85)               $0.30               $0.25
                                                         ===========           ==========          ==========

DILUTED

Net Earnings (Loss)                                       $6,858,645           $2,398,586          $1,989,005
                                                          ==========           ==========          ==========
Weighted average common shares outstanding                 8,079,281            7,973,183           7,926,646

Additional dilutive effect of stock options &
 warrants after application of treasury stock
 method                                                            -              827,479             345,963
                                                          ----------           ----------          ----------
Weighted average dilutive shares outstanding               8,079,281            8,800,662           8,272,609
                                                          ==========           ==========          ==========
Earnings  (Loss) per common share assuming full
 dilution                                                     $(0.85)               $0.27               $0.24
                                                          ==========           ==========          ==========