Monday, March 24, 2025

Gun Store Burglary: Authorities said the two arrested suspects, both 16 years old, were caught in Gaithersburg, Maryland, thanks to swift interagency cooperation between Fairfax County police, Montgomery County police, the Gaithersburg Police Department and the ATF Washington Field Division.

Two teenagers have been arrested in connection with a gun store burglary in Springfield, Virginia, while a third suspect remains at large, authorities said Monday.

Fairfax County police responded to a burglary alarm around 1:21 a.m. at Dominion Defense, located at 7200 Fullerton Rd. on Monday morning. Officers arrived to find the store’s front entrance severely damaged and multiple firearms stolen.

According to Fairfax County police, the suspects used a stolen Toyota Tacoma to ram the storefront before stealing firearms and fleeing the scene. They later switched vehicles to a stolen Hyundai Tucson before fleeing across the American Legion Bridge into Maryland...

2 teens arrested after Springfield gun store burglary, 3rd suspect still at large - WTOP News

Friday, March 21, 2025

Separate But Unequal: The History of School Segregation in Montgomery County

Education, denied to the enslaved, was one of the highest priorities of emancipated African Americans. But in Montgomery County, where slavery existed, public education was not extended to Black children until a decade after it was instituted for White children. Even then, the practice of “separate but equal” schools was anything but equal, and no Black high school was built until well into the 20th century. A surprising number of these African American schools used during segregation still exist in the county, including several erected through a partnership between Booker T. Washington and philanthropist Julius Rosenwald that helped improve Black education all over the South.



 

Thursday, March 20, 2025

MCPS to Hold Public Information Meetings on School Boundary Studies

Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) will hold public information meetings on boundary studies for three high schools. The studies aim to address overcrowding and plan for new school facilities, focusing on reopening Charles W. Woodward High School, opening Crown High School, and expanding Damascus High School...

MCPS to Hold Public Information Meetings on School Boundary Studies - Montgomery Community Media

Monday, March 17, 2025

Opinion: Bethesda-Chevy Chase High administrators shouldn’t be scapegoats


On March 4, in response to Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School’s two lockdowns in six days, Montgomery County Councilmember Andrew Friedson (Dist. 1) organized a community meeting to discuss safety at B-CC and in its surrounding Bethesda community.

Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) leaders were there. County police were in the house. Approximately 100 parents, students and community members, according to Bethesda Today, were in attendance, too.

Notably absent was the B-CC administration.

How notably?..

Opinion: Bethesda-Chevy Chase High administrators shouldn't be scapegoats - Bethesda Magazine

Friday, March 14, 2025

Elrich proposes 3.5% property tax rate increase to fund MCPS budget


Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich announced Friday he is proposing a 3.5% property tax rate increase in order to fully fund Montgomery County Public Schools’ (MCPS) $3.65 billion budget request for the upcoming fiscal year.


The proposed property tax increase is part of Elrich’s recommended $7.6 billion county operating budget plan for fiscal year 2026, which he released during a briefing Friday morning in Rockville. The spending plan represents an increase of 7.4% from the county’s current $7.1 billion operating budget. The budget proposal now heads to the County Council for review and approval.

Elrich defended his proposed tax increase, noting “the most valuable asset this county has is its schools.”..

Elrich proposes 3.5% property tax rate increase to fund MCPS budget - Bethesda Magazine

Thursday, March 13, 2025

County Council Hires Former MCEA Union President Doug Prouty as Education Committee "Staff."


The Montgomery County Council has a new member of their staff.

The Council hired a new person to be the Education Committee staff person.  

The Council's Education staff person assembles the packets that the Education Committee discusses, reviews and votes on at each meeting.  The staff person can be like an analyst who provides a balanced presentation to the Council members as they deliberate each education matter, or the staff person can just copy some documents and submit a biased presentation.   

We've even witnessed Council staff switch MCPS memos to change the narrative on Board of Education procurements.  We know the Council staff can control what the Councilmembers and the public see as the Council deliberates and votes.  These positions have great influence over the public process.

The Montgomery County Council has now hired former MCEA (teachers' union) president and former MSEA (State teachers' union) vice-president Douglas Prouty as their education staffer.  

You can read Douglas Prouty's resume in this Whitman High School newspaper article.  

Here is the video of the January 30, 2025, Montgomery County Council Education Committee's meeting with Mr. Prouty seated in the "staff" seat.  



Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Magruder High School Play Moved After Ceiling Debris Falls Midshow

A student musical performance at Col. Zadok Magruder High School is moving to another school after debris from the auditorium ceiling fell during the performance.

Once Upon a Mattress, the high school’s spring musical, now will be featured at Shady Grove Middle School this Friday and Saturday...

School Play Moved After Ceiling Debris Falls Midshow - Montgomery Community Media

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

PG Letter to Parents and Guardians Due to Flu Outbreak

 

  • Enhanced Cleaning – Increased disinfection of high-touch areas in schools and buses.
  • Handwashing & Hygiene – Ensuring ample soap, paper towels, and hand sanitizer, along with reminders for proper handwashing.
  • Temporary Masking – If flu cases reach critical levels in a school, we may require temporary masking to safeguard students and staff.
  • On-Site Flu Vaccination – We are partnering with the Prince George’s County Health Department to provide flu vaccines in affected schools.
  • Limiting Exposure – Keeping students in consistent groups where possible to limit interactions and contain outbreaks.
  • Extracurricular Adjustments – Modifying or postponing high-contact activities and large gatherings as needed.
  • Ongoing Monitoring – We continue to track illness trends, work closely with local health officials, and update families regularly.

Monday, March 10, 2025

Maryland community outraged over plans to build drug rehab center near MCPS elementary school


BROOKEVILLE, Md. — A tightknit Maryland community are outraged about a proposed drug rehab facility moving in near a local elementary school.

Families in Brookeville are frustrated after recently finding out about two houses being turned into a residential treatment center next to Greenwood Elementary School.

Joy Brewington told WUSA9 she and her family have lived in the neighborhood for six years. She has five children who attend Greenwood Elementary...


...Community members created a petition to stop the opening of the facility... 


Community feels blindsided by potential drug rehab center near elementary school | wusa9.com

Friday, March 7, 2025

MCPS parents continue to push for more safety measures after gun incidents


Montgomery County Public Schools held a meeting Tuesday night to address concerns about students and gun safety. It comes after two separate gun-related incidents that put Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School on lockdown last month.

While the recent lockdowns happened at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School the impact was felt in the surrounding community leaving parents wanting to know how to prevent another emergency.

This was the fourth safety meeting in two and a half years and that has parents concerned and angry. 

A wide array of topics were discussed, from who is responsible for calling a lockdown to where to go for official information. 

"That happened at 10 a.m. Why are kids allowed out of the campus at any time of day?" one attendee asked. "Why can’t they stay on campus during school hours?"..

MCPS parents continue to push for more safety measures after gun incidents | FOX 5 DC

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Vitamin A? Cod liver oil? Experts say there’s no replacement for measles vaccination

Texas health experts are warning that vitamin A — found in food and in supplements such as cod liver oil — is not an alternative to measles vaccination.

They’re urging Texans to vaccinate themselves and their children, as the West Texas measles outbreak continues to grow and after an unvaccinated child died from the illness.

Their concerns come after U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote about vitamin A in a Fox News column responding to the Texas measles outbreak. (Kennedy has also falsely stated in the past that vaccines cause autism.)

Kennedy’s comments in the column — that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend vitamin A for people hospitalized with measles, and that studies have found vitamin A can help prevent measles deaths — are not inaccurate.

But they lack important context, said Dr. Peter Hotez, a vaccine expert at the Baylor College of Medicine. Hotez worries the missing context might mean people put their faith in vitamin A over vaccination — a decision that could cost lives.

“The thing that I worry about is by (Kennedy) playing this up and others playing this up, it sends a false equivalency message, that somehow treating with vitamin A is equivalent to getting vaccinated, which is clearly not the case,” Hotez said...

Vitamin A? Cod liver oil? Experts say there’s no replacement for measles vaccination

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Montgomery County Public Schools request 52 additional security guards amid safety concerns


The Brief

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

The Education Department is retreating from some of the most incendiary suggestions

The Education Department is retreating from some of the most incendiary suggestions it made last month in a sweeping directive threatening to pull federal funding from any college or K-12 school district that considers race in hiring, programming, scholarships and virtually every other aspect of student and campus life.

A new question-and-answer document, posted online late Friday, clearly states that by law the federal government cannot dictate curriculum. It also notes that cultural celebrations and events celebrating Black History Month are legally permitted as long as they are open to people of all races.

It also narrows the definition of which types of diversity, equity and inclusion programs might draw scrutiny. The new directive adheres more closely to traditional court doctrines and interpretation of civil rights law, experts said Saturday.

“I see it as a significant retrenchment back towards more established case law,” said Ray Li, an attorney who worked on these issues in the Office for Civil Rights during the Biden administration. “It reads as if written by someone different.”

“A lot of the most unsupported claims made” in the original letter, he said, “have been walked back.”..

Education Dept. softens controversial guidance on race and schools

Monday, March 3, 2025

Kennedy High community looks to MCPS to improve safety in Silver Spring school


When junior Alex Acuna walks into John F. Kennedy High School in Silver Spring to start his school day, he feels safe. But in the back of his mind, he says he’s also thinking that walking into the school means it could be his “last day alive.”  

“I’ve seen people who look like grown adults [come into the school] and they were trying to jump my friends,” Acuna said.  

After continued concerns for safety and a back-to-back lockdown and shelter-in-place in January, a group of about 25 Kennedy students, staff and families gathered at the school Wednesday night for a session hosted by the PTSA to discuss how to improve safety in the school moving forward. Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) leaders, including Marcus Jones, the former county police chief who now heads the MCPS Department of Security and Compliance, also attended...

Kennedy High community looks to MCPS to improve safety in Silver Spring school - Bethesda Magazine

Friday, February 28, 2025

Breaking: AGAIN! MD State Board of Education ORDERS MCPS Board of Ed. to Comply with Appellate Court of MD Order to Review $168M Elec. Bus Contract Award

The Montgomery County Board of Education has still not complied with the March 2024, Maryland Appellate Court Order that mandated the Board of Education review the award of the electric school bus contract to a vendor that had a subcontractor that was found to be involved in an embezzlement scheme with 2 of the 3 MCPS employees that ranked the bids.

On Tuesday, February 25th, the Maryland State Board of Education once again issued an Order to the Montgomery County Board of Education to comply with the Maryland Appellate Court Order. 

The BOE's electric school bus contract is an $168 million dollar award that commits the BOE to a leasing scheme for 16 years There is a lot of money involved in this scheme.  It should be important to get this right. 

And complying with a Court Order would be a good idea too. 

From this week's State Board of Education Order: 


Full text of Maryland State Board of Education Order:  

AutoFlexFleetInc.OR25-03 by Parents' Coalition of Montgomery County, Maryland on Scribd

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Thursday, Feb. 27th at 7 PM: Let's talk about the MCPS Operating Budget in Detail



MCTL is Co-Sponsoring the annual MCPS Budget Palooza with the Parents’ Coalition of Montgomery County are Montgomery County Civic Federation. We will do a deep dive into the $3,655,244,116 MCPS FY2026 Operating Budget.

Register at this link.

MCPS Board of Education Briefing to County House Delegation + vote on BOE compensation increase - Friday Feb 28th 9am on Zoom

Our MCPS Board of Education will be briefing the House Delegation at their weekly Friday morning meeting this Friday, February 28th, at 9am.

The delegation will also be discussing and voting on the proposed substantial pay increase for the BOE members.

Please tune in. Link is below.

The Montgomery County House Delegation will be meeting on Friday, February 28th at 9:00 a.m. via ZoomThe meeting will be livestreamed on Youtube for viewing. The meeting agenda and link to the livestream are below.


Meeting Agenda

Briefing:

  • Montgomery County Board of Education
  • Universities at Shady Grove

Work and Voting Session:


Youtube Livestream: Link

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

BCC High School, "This is the second lockdown for the school within six days."

A Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School student faces charges of possession of a weapon on school property and other offenses after he allegedly brought an airsoft gun to the downtown Bethesda campus, resulting in a lockdown Tuesday morning, according to Montgomery County police. 

Police said on social media Tuesday afternoon that a male juvenile taken into custody following the lockdown at the high school was in possession of an airsoft gun, a pellet gun that resembles a firearm. The student was charged with disruption of school activities, possession of a weapon on school property and possession of a concealed weapon, county police spokesperson Shiera Goff told Bethesda Today in an email Tuesday afternoon. 


Bethesda-Chevy Chase High student charged after airsoft gun at school causes lockdown   - Bethesda Magazine

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Senator Brian Feldman's Maryland Senate Bill 554: "I urge you to throw this bill in the trash where it belongs."

There is another bill in the Maryland legislature on behalf of our Democratic Attorney General to prohibit people from being able to request public records of the government for which government gets to determine are abusive.

Here is my letter to the Chair and Vice Chair of the judiciary committee.
Dear Senators,
It is very troubling that PIA (Public Information Act) legislation is being prioritized to limit the public's access to public records. The Attorney General's own Public Information Act manual states:
"In most cases, a person need not justify or otherwise explain a request to inspect records, and a custodian of records may not require a person to say who they
are or why they want the records as a prerequisite to responding to a request. GP § 4-204. Nor may a custodian ignore a request on the grounds that it was made for the purpose of harassment. GP § 4-203(c)(2)."
I am a parent advocate for special education and I have submitted many PIA requests to gain public records related to the provision of services to students with disabilities. The Kirwan Commission recognized special education services to be so lacking as to create a separate work group for special education. The public has a right to know how our children with disabilities are being educated or not. Should school systems be allowed to simply ignore my requests and ban me from future requests, which I believe is unconstitutional.
When a friend told me that Carroll County Public Schools was paying 2 expensive private attorneys to fight one parent in a special education due process hearing, I submitted a PIA request last February for the attorney invoices to see how much CCPS was paying to fight this parent. The request was denied. So, I wrote back and explained to CCPS that attorney invoices do not reveal personally identifiable information and CCPS then provided almost fully redacted invoices (redacting the 2 attorneys initials also). After additional emails, I ended up in mediation with the Attorney General's Public Access Ombudsman. All I am allowed to say is that the mediation was not resolved. I then filed a complaint with the Public Information Act Compliance Board. It took additional time of back and forth with the Board and CCPS and the final ruling was that CCPS had to provide me with the invoices with only the student information redacted. Eight months later, there were no consequences for the school system's noncompliance with the law. THAT is what the legislature should be correcting. The PIA "shall be construed in favor of allowing inspection of a public record" GP §4–103
In another case, former Delegate Robert Flanagan requested emails between the Howard County administration and a private lobbyist. The records were denied using attorney-client privilege and deliberative process exemptions. The person denying the records was the County Executive's sister-in-law, campaign manager, and his special assistant in state government. Mr. Flanagan filed a circuit court complaint with violations of the PIA and the County admitted willful violation of the law. Imagine if this bill was in effect and the County Administration could simply ignore the requests and ban the requester from any other requests. This is unbelievably outrageous and reminds me of Trump and not Maryland Democrats, who are supposed to be about transparency in government.
from the bill: "... THE CUSTODIAN NEED NOT RESPOND TO FUTURE REQUESTS FROM THE APPLICANT OR ANOTHER PERSON MAKING A REQUEST ON BEHALF OF THE APPLICANT FOR A SPECIFIED PERIOD OF TIME."
I urge you to throw this bill in the trash where it belongs.
Respectfully.
Barb Krupiarz

Friday, February 21, 2025

B-CC High student held without bond after Wednesday shooting in downtown Bethesda park


Nicolas Blanco, 18, faces assault and fire-arms related charges

A Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School student allegedly involved in a Wednesday morning shooting during a fight in a downtown Bethesda park was ordered Friday to be held without bond in Montgomery County District Court in Rockville, according to digital court records.

No injuries were reported after the incident at Chase Avenue Urban Park at 4701 Chase Ave., less than 1 mile from the high school at 4301 East West Highway, according to the Maryland-National Capital Park Police. The shooting caused Bethesda-Chevy Chase High and a nearby private school to go into lockdown that morning.

Nicolas Paolo Blanco, 18, was arrested by the Maryland-National Capital Park Police on Thursday. He faces charges of first-degree assault, reckless endangerment and firearm-related offenses for the non-contact shooting during the fight involving a number of youths...

https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/02/21/b-cc-student-park-shooting-held-without-bond/