Thursday, December 19, 2024

MCPS agree to pay vendor $1.3 million to conduct boundary study


MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (7News) — 7News is working to learn more about the Montgomery County Public Schools boundary study.

The opening of Crown High School, reopening of Charles W. Woodward High, and expansion of Damascus High for the 2027-2028 school year are why Superintendent Dr. Thomas Taylor said the study is necessary.

The school system is trying to determine which students will attend those schools.

In a recently released video, Taylor outlined the plans for the study and said, “Because of this expansion we will need to adjust our student attendance boundaries for high schools.”..

MCPS agree to pay vendor $1.3 million to conduct boundary study

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

@mocoboe President Julie Yang: In an attempt to boost transparency... is also making school board contracts available to the public.

New Montgomery Co. school board president details plans to regain public trust

It’s been over a year since allegations of bullying and sexual harassment against former Montgomery County schools principal Joel Beidleman first surfaced in Maryland’s largest school system, eventually leading to the departure of superintendent Monifa McKnight and calls from parents for school officials to be more transparent.

In the months since, Montgomery County Public Schools has reviewed its policies and procedures and made changes as it works to regain the public’s trust.

This month, the Board of Education elected Julie Yang to serve as its next president. Yang was elected to her four-year term on the board in November 2022...

New Montgomery Co. school board president details plans to regain public trust - WTOP News

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Red Lights, Green Cash: How a Florida Legislator Boosted School Bus Cameras and Benefited Her Family

In The Tributary, reporter Nandhini Srinivasan. First report Oct. 24, 2024, updated Nov. 4, 2024. To read the full story go here.

Florida Rep. Vicki Lopez’s votes benefited her son’s employer as she tried to help BusPatrol win new laws and contracts.

Personal connections, aggressive lobbying and hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions fueled the rapid rise of an obscure school bus camera vendor, BusPatrol, which quickly became a major player in a niche industry that didn’t exist in Florida until last year.

That success represented a remarkable turnaround for a company with a troubled history of allegations that it values revenue over public safety and opportunity over ethics.

BusPatrol’s reversal in fortunes, already evident in other states, echoes the comeback of Florida state Rep. Vicki Lopez, once a down-and-out Lee County commissioner, with whom BusPatrol is inextricably linked.

Last year, Lopez co-sponsored a bill allowing cameras on school buses statewide. Within months, her family had cashed in on the new industry through a web of connections built with BusPatrol, which stands to make millions from traffic tickets.

A Tributary investigation found a familiar pattern between Lopez and BusPatrol — one of overlapping personal, professional, and political interests – that evokes past allegations of ethical impropriety that have dogged both.

And:

The BusPatrol Revenue Machine

BusPatrol’s business model has proven highly lucrative—largely built on the revenue generated from citations issued by its cameras. In Florida and beyond, the company has positioned itself as a leader in school bus safety, but questions persist about whether its primary focus is public safety or profit.

In Miami-Dade, the company’s cameras led to 11,500 citations in the first two weeks. BusPatrol keeps 70% of the revenue from every $200 citation issued. At that rate, BusPatrol stands to make about $3.2 million a month in revenue.

In Hillsborough County, the company estimated its cameras led to 2,500 to 3,000 citations in the first week. The company gets $225 a month for each of the about 840 school buses equipped with cameras. It also receives $65 for every fine issued.

If the county continues issuing about 3,000 citations a week, the company stands to make about a million dollars a month in Hillsborough.

BusPatrol has repeatedly faced allegations that local governments use its cameras to wrongfully and excessively issue citations.

The company faces a federal class-action complaint in New York for issuing citations without evidence. News reports in New YorkMassachusetts and Pittsburgh have also reported that drivers were fined despite not breaking the law. 

Pittsburgh-based television station WPXI reported last year that the station had received complaints from viewers that BusPatrol’s cameras were wrongfully citing people with $300 penalties. 

In New York, after an appellate supreme court decision that BusPatrol’s cameras provided “insufficient evidence”, about 8,000 tickets in Suffolk County were dismissed. The state changed its bus camera law, and Suffolk County created a more extensive process to review citations from BusPatrol’s cameras.

Last month, Newsday reported Suffolk County and the Town of Hempstead in New York issued  nearly 250,000 tickets last year. That means in one year, one citation was given for every nine residents of the area. In two years, BusPatrol made more than $20 million off of those tickets in Hempstead and Suffolk County.

Suffolk County’s comptroller issued a report in June about BusPatrol’s operation. “When you get under the hood you see how inefficient and chaotic the implementation truly was,” he told Newsday. The report suggested the county strengthen its ethics laws to prevent officials from going on to work for companies like BusPatrol. 

It also found that of about 200,000 citations it looked at, about 1,600 were dismissed when the drivers contested them. However, the report also said the data suggested tickets had “improved driving behavior around school bus stops in Suffolk County.”

In Suffolk County, BusPatrol similarly hired a legislator’s son as a lobbyist, along with the elected prosecutor, his chief of staff, a state senator, a county lawmaker and other top county officials as outside counsel, lobbyists and top executives, according to an investigation by Newsday.

One of those former Suffolk County officials lobbied Miami-Dade and Hillsborough on behalf of BusPatrol, according to county records.

Friday, December 13, 2024

Baltimore City, Montgomery school districts receive warning from Blueprint board, could lose funding

Baltimore City’s and Montgomery County’s school systems are in jeopardy of losing funding due to unmet requirements under the state’s preeminent education plan, the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future.

At a meeting Thursday, the Blueprint Accountability & Implementation Board voted to officially warn the two school systems that they have not complied with certain criteria that would warrant the board’s approval to release fiscal years 2025 and 2026 Blueprint funds.

“We do have to make certain we abide by the terms and conditions in our statute to make sure that we get compliance in a timely fashion,” said board chair Isiah Leggett. “We also try to work very carefully with all the jurisdictions that we are as responsive and responsible as possible to get to a positive outcome for everyone in terms of compliance. Unfortunately, there are some that are still not at that level and some are close to it, and so we need to at this point and time consistent with statutory requirements make some distinctions here.”

Each Maryland school system had to provide an implementation plan to the board, a government entity charged with overseeing the execution of the Blueprint. Baltimore City and Montgomery County haven’t provided all of the components of their implementation plans, according to the board, including Baltimore’s career ladder...

https://www.baltimoresun.com/2024/11/21/baltimore-montgomery-blueprint-warning/

Former MCPS teacher to serve 12 months for sexually abusing student

Educator sentenced to 30 years in prison with all but 12 months suspended; must register as sex offender for 25 years

...Curtis was charged with sexual abuse of a minor in November 2023. According to 2023 charging documents, Curtis sexually abused a 14-year-old boy for several months in 2015, with some of the incidents taking place on the grounds and in a classroom at Montgomery Village Middle School.  

According to the 2023 charging documents, the victim said the abuse began in 2015 when he was attending the school, which was where Curtis was teaching. At the time the abuse started, Curtis was 22 years old. 

The incidents occurred in her car, at their homes and inside the school, according to the charging documents. The victim alleged Curtis had sexual intercourse with him at least 20 times in the months that the incidents occurred. According to the state’s attorney’s office statement, the victim volunteered for an after-school project Curtis was running...  

https://moco360.media/2024/11/19/former-mcps-teacher-sexually-abusing/

Chicago Tribune: "Highland agreed to all the concessions the district requested in the contract, Kerns said."

 

After months of analysis, the West Aurora School District 129 board has decided to add some electric school buses to the district’s fleet.

The plan to bring in 27 electric buses to replace some older diesel models is part of the district’s ongoing efforts to be environmentally-conscious, district officials said.

The move impacts more than one-third of the district’s bus fleet.

The district has a fleet of 73 buses powered by diesel engines, half of which are under two-year leases due to expire at the end of the school year...

...The decision was made Nov. 18. The board decided to partner with Highland due to several key factors as presented by the administration, including contract concessions, West Aurora School Board President Richard Kerns said.

Highland agreed to all the concessions the district requested in the contract, Kerns said...

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/11/25/west-aurora-school-district-charges-ahead-with-plan-to-add-electric-buses/?share=dtcotwsch5ierhebaeho

Reading wars head to court: Lawsuit claims ‘deceptive’ practices by famed literacy specialists

 The plaintiffs sold faulty curricula that “sought to diminish and even exclude” phonics instruction, two mothers claim in a suit seeking class-action status.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

UConn Keeping Air in Connecticut Classrooms Safe

 UConn Today

Several years of community service and real-world research of the cross-campus UConn Indoor Air Quality Initiative has led to the awarding of $11.5 million in state support to UConn to bring access to low-cost, do-it-yourself “Corsi-Rosenthal” air-purifiers to every individual public school classroom in Connecticut.

On October 22 the State Bond Commission in Connecticut approved funding for the UConn Indoor Air Quality Initiative to administer and implement the purchase of equipment and materials for the construction and installation of individual classroom air purifiers. The state funding awarded to UConn will be part of SAFE-CT: Supplemental Air Filtration for Education Supplemental under the Clean Air Equity Response Program.

“We are pleased to offer these inexpensive devices to all classrooms across Connecticut,” says the Director of the UConn Indoor Air Quality Initiative, Marina Creed, an APRN who also serves UConn Health as a neuroimmunology nurse practitioner.  “When schools, students, and teachers run one of these inside their classrooms it will reduce their exposure to viruses and bacteria, reducing the risk of disease transmission, meaning they are less likely to get sick.”

Creed adds, “Thank you to the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and General Assembly for putting the health of our students and teachers first.”

Although these devices are created simply with just $60 of hardware store materials, they have been shown to be incredibly effective.  The EPA and UConn jointly tested the devices in the EPA’s large bioaerosol test chamber, and results showed that in just 60 minutes it effectively removes over 99 percent of airborne viruses including the virus that causes COVID-19. Plus, recently published collaborative research findings by UConn and Arizona State University also show that DIY air purifiers work better than commercial HEPA air cleaners for a fraction of the cost...


https://today.uconn.edu/2024/10/uconn-keeping-air-in-connecticut-classrooms-safe/#

How Could Maryland Teacher Be Hired Without Valid Teaching Certificate?

...Following his arrest, Project Baltimore obtained a copy of the resume Darien used to get his six-figure job at Pikesville. Much of it was not true. Darien claimed to have earned a bachelor’s degree, two master’s and a doctorate. But Fox45 News contacted the universities on his resume, and none of them had any record of Darien graduating. Which leads to another unanswered question.

If Darien did not have a college degree, he would not have been eligible for a Maryland teaching certificate, which is required to be an athletic director. Therefore, how could Darien have been hired by BCPS if he didn’t have a valid teaching certificate?

For months, Project Baltimore has been trying to get answers to these questions. BCPS Superintendent Dr. Myriam Rogers said the school system followed the standard process before hiring Darien, which includes checking references and credentials in addition to a criminal background check and fingerprinting...

https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/trial-date-set-for-ex-pikesville-athletic-director-accused-in-ai-plot-against-principal-dazhon-darien-eric-eiswert-myriam-rogers-baltimore-county-schools#


Tuesday, December 10, 2024

New: Super. Thomas Taylor on principal change at Wootton HS, "entire school was supposed to receive training" "prior to the start of school, but didn't do"

On December 9, 2024, MCPS Superintendent Thomas Taylor spoke at the Montgomery County Civic Federation monthly meeting.  

Superintendent Taylor was asked about the recent news out of Wootton High School.  The video below goes to Superintendent Taylor's complete response to this issue.  

Notes from the Superintendent's response: 

Superintendent Thomas Taylor:

 "...as bad as reported...

...events that happened last Monday that I was not aware of until Thursday of last week...

...hold people accountable... 

...there was a leadership change at that school on Thursday night...

...sometimes leadership change is necessary and needs to be swift...

...I am not afraid to do that...I recognize that sometimes puts me sideways with a union or two...

...I was very disappointed to find out that the entire school that was supposed to receive some training in this space did not receive that training and that's very disheartening...

...now stopped the world and done emergency training with staff that they should have done prior to the start of the school year but didn't do..."



MCPS Achievements Called ‘Disappointingly Flat’

The Maryland Department of Education released its 2024 public schools report card, listing percentile grades for every public school.

Overall, the 160,000 students enrolled at Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) showed limited improvement and met few annual targets.

In a news release, MCPS called the results “disappointingly flat” but still better than the state average.

There were a wide variety of results, with some schools reaching the highest grade of five out of five while many more were in the three or four out of five range. Almost every school scored a three or higher on the annual star rating.

Walt Whitman High and Bannockburn Elementary schools each received the top grade.

About half the 202 schools obtained a four or five rating, which is a 1.8% increase from the previous year.

MCPS schools exceeded the state average by 9%. Statewide, 41% of Maryland schools earned four or five star ratings.

To see how individual schools did, click here and type in the name of a particular school...

https://www.mymcmedia.org/mcps-achievements-called-disappointingly-flat/

Monday, December 9, 2024

Wootton High principal placed on leave after racial slur incident sparks community outrage


MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (7News) — A representative of the Black and Brown Coalition for Educational Equity and Excellence in Montgomery County told 7News that MCPS has informed the group that Wootton High School Principal Douglas Nelson has been placed on administrative leave after an anti-Black racial slur found written on a desk of a student has sparked outrage.

Coalition member Wylea Chase said Dr. Peter Moran, Chief of the MCPS Office of School Support and Improvement, informed her and PTSA leaders on Dec. 6 that Nelson is being replaced by an interim principal who will begin working at the school on Wednesday...

 https://wjla.com/news/local/maryland-montgomery-county-public-schools-mcps-wootton-high-principal-placed-on-leave-racial-slur-incident-parents-douglas-nelson-ptsa-black-and-brown-coalition-for-educational-equity-and-excellence-

Rivera-Oven and Natalie Zimmerman were absent for vote on new @mocoboe officers

In its first meeting with new board members, the Montgomery County school board on Thursday morning unanimously elected Julie Yang, who holds the District 3 seat, to serve as its president for the coming year and District 1 representative Grace Rivera-Oven as vice president.  

“We will fix our attention on our North Star — the student achievement,” Yang said after her election Thursday morning at the school board’s headquarters in Rockville. “We will be a symbol of hope for all our students, families and educators and together … we will strive to change lives and build futures.”..

https://moco360.media/2024/12/05/yang-to-lead-school-board/

Tonight: Superintendent Thomas Taylor at Civic Federation Meeting on Zoom at 7 PM

DECEMBER MEETING

MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2024

MONTGOMERY COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS

Time:  7:00 p.m.

https://montgomerycivic.org/index.html

 https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82434200537#success

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Councilmember Dawn Luedtke to host 'Let's Talk School Safety' Dec. 9th, 7-8:30pm, Sequoyeh ES

 On Monday, December 9 from 7 p.m.-8:30 p.m., Councilmember Luedtke (D-District 7) is hosting a community meeting on school safety in the cafeteria at Sequoyah Elementary School (17301 Bowie Mill Road, Derwood, MD 20855). Representatives from MPCS and the Montgomery County Police Department will be there.

Join to tell them your concerns, hear from Montgomery County Public Schools Chief of Security and Compliance Marcus Jones and others, and discuss this critical need.

Learn more and pre-submit questions here. 



Some Montgomery County high schools will offer a Holocaust studies course

Amid calls for Montgomery County Public Schools to educate its students more on the Holocaust, some high schools in the district will offer an elective course next year on the history surrounding the World War II murder by Nazi Germany and its collaborators of about 6 million Jews.

The semester-long course will give students an “in-depth historical analysis of the Holocaust and the events and ideas which led to the Holocaust and the aftermath of the Holocaust,” according to a summary given to the Montgomery school board. It was one of several elective courses unanimously approved by the board earlier in November.

The decision comes after the school system — Maryland’s largest with over 160,000 students — saw several antisemitic incidents in recent years, ranging from students drawing swastikas on classroom desks and in bathrooms to a person spray painting “Jews Not Welcome” across Walt Whitman High School’s entrance sign...


https://wapo.st/3ZFNhI1

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Montgomery Co. Public Schools electric school bus vendor files lawsuit against competitor

Montgomery Co. Public Schools electric school bus vendor files lawsuit against competitor


7News is learning more about a lawsuit filed on Nov. 21 by the electric school bus vendor hired by Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS).

HET MCPS. LLC along with HEF-P BALTIMORE CITY, LLC, and HEF-P MANASSAS. LLC filed the lawsuit against competitor AutoFlex Fleet and its owner Luis MacDonald.

The three plaintiffs are affiliated with Massachusetts-based Highland Electric Fleets...

...Janis Sartucci of the Parents’ Coalition of Montgomery County told 7News, “We have to respect the inspector general. We’ve got to have some oversight. We’ve got to have someone we trust to look at this contract and all the contracts the board of education enters into.”

Montgomery Co. Public Schools electric school bus vendor files lawsuit against competitor