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Dedicated to improving responsiveness and performance of Montgomery County Public Schools
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In 2006, MCPS was stopped by the Montgomery County Council from moving Seven Locks Elementary School to another site after a scathing report was released by the Montgomery County Inspector General. The IG found that MCPS had fibbed about construction costs.
A few weeks after the IG's report was released the County Council defunded the project and Seven Locks Elementary School was not moved.
The superintendent's plan had been to hand the existing site over to developers.
Here's the timeline of what happened:
FEBRUARY, 2006: Montgomery County Inspector General Thomas Dagley releases a 25-page report that faults MCPS for providing misleading and inflated cost data about renovating Seven Locks Elementary and failing to provide the board and council with information about two less costly options on the site. The report also states that MCPS misrepresented community sentiment in reports to the board and council. In response, Councilmember Howard Denis (R-1) says he’ll introduce a CIP amendment to halt plans to build on Kendale and instead build a new school on the current Seven Locks site...
https://www.connectionnewspapers.com/news/2006/feb/14/seven-locks-controversy-timeline/
The Montgomery County Council affirmed March 28 that it will not fund the construction of an elementary school on Kendale Road in Potomac — an outcome that was nearly inconceivable three months ago...
https://www.connectionnewspapers.com/news/2006/mar/28/if-not-kendale-then-what/
Notes from the PTSA meeting held at BCC High School on February 18, 2026.
The topic of the meeting was the surprise announcement of a pilot of the VOLT AI system. MCPS Director of Security Marcus Jones was the only speaker on this topic. No representatives from VOLT AI spoke.
Director Jones said that MCPS was approached and offered a no cost, 30 day trial of the VOLT AI product.
The 30 day pilot will be at three schools: Seneca Valley HS because it is the largest high school in the state of Maryland, BCC High School because it is urban, and Magruder High School because it is suburban. They asked the principals if they would participate. The pilot will begin March 2nd.
Director Jones said this is the "evaluation phase." There will be weekly reports and a final report. MCPS schools already have cameras. The VOLT AI system will only be on 30 cameras per school. Each school has about 200 cameras. Currently, existing MCPS cameras are not monitored.
A question was asked about what data MCPS currently has on incidents at schools and if that data would be used to compare to to the data generated from the VOLT AI pilot. Director Jones said there isn't any data and you can't know what will happen in a school any given week. There are no plans to evaluate data and no metrics for evaluating the system were stated.
The agreement to do this pilot was reviewed by MCPS legal counsel.
Director Jones said that nothing is off the table with regard to school security.
Once installed, MCPS will run tests to see how VOLT AI responds. They will set up test scenarios and see response. A human at VOLT AI will receive the alerts, review the video and contact MCPS. A question was asked about where the VOLT AI human was located, the answer was USA.
VOLT AI will retain the video for 30 days and then it will be deleted.
Director Jones said he can not speak to the cost of VOLT AI. He said he is not the decision maker. The decision maker are the elected officials. Even though VOLT AI is from Bethesda, they won't be given preference.
Director Jones will not tell principals how to use the information from VOLT AI.
Eventually, as the comments continued, Taylor told families he knew his responses would be “unfulfilling and unsatisfactory,” and then ended the meeting.
“That was very embarrassing,” one parent said. “We came here because we expected that they were going to answer our questions, but unfortunately, they didn’t answer our questions.”..
The day before gunfire pierced a Montgomery County high school, the district quietly began rolling out a pilot program for an AI-powered weapons detection system.
Chief Safety Officer Marcus Jones wrote to families in three high school communities — Seneca Valley, Bethesda-Chevy Chase* and Magruder — to tell them that their campuses were poised to test VOLT AI.
“This pilot is a careful, short-term opportunity to test a potential tool,” the Feb. 8 letter reads...
Sokolowski isn’t charging Montgomery County for its 30-day pilot.
“We are confident in our technology, so we allow companies and school districts to pilot completely for free.”
He said he has not yet discussed future pricing models with the district...
*Note: Superintendent Thomas Taylor has said he grew up in the BCC High School community and would be moving home when he took the MCPS superintendent position.
The suspect, who is also 16 and lives in Rockville, will be charged as an adult, officials in Montgomery County said.
The victim, who police say is from Gaithersburg, was taken to a hospital in stable condition. The students’ names were not released. Both are students at Wootton.
The school campus was placed on lockdown...
From Wikipedia:
The Maryland Child Victims Act is a law in the U.S. state of Maryland passed by the Maryland General Assembly during the 445th legislative session in 2023 and signed into law by Governor Wes Moore. It retroactively and prospectively repeals the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse lawsuits and raises the liability limits for a single plaintiff for claims against private institutions. Its first version was introduced by former Democratic state senator James Brochin in 2007. Iterations of the proposal were put forth during the 425th, 435th, 436th, 437th, 439th, 441st, 442nd, and 445th legislative sessions...
In 2025, approximately 20 Montgomery County Public School children or adults filed suit against the Montgomery County Board of Education under the Maryland Child Victims Act of 2023.
The Montgomery County Board of Education has already hired the outside law firm of Karpinski, Colaresi & Karp, P.A. in Baltimore to handle the majority of these cases.
Yet, as of today, the Montgomery County Board of Education and Superintendent Thomas W. Taylor have not said a word about these cases.
Further, to date, the Montgomery County Board of Education has never put out a statement with regard to the dozens upon dozens of children who have been sexually abused in classrooms and schools over the last 20 years. In the vast majority of these cases MCPS administrators, and sometimes even the Board of Education, had been notified of suspected child abuse occurring in a school but did not report this information and did not remove the suspected perpetrator from contact with students.
MCPS even kept a secret list of suspected abusers who were still employed by the school system.
The Parents' Coalition of Montgomery County, MD has followed many of these cases by attending court proceedings. In the majority of these cases, there was no press in the courtroom, no one from the Board of Education and no one from MCPS.
Neither the BOE nor MCPS administrators were in the courtrooms to hear the victim impact statements on behalf of these children. We have transcribed just a few of these statements for the public.
The 2017, weeklong trial of MCPS elementary school teacher John Vigna wasn't even covered by any local media. When the trial was over, the Parents' Coalition obtained the audio transcripts of the trial and posted much of the proceeding to this blog.
Does MCPS still keep a secret list of suspected child abusers that are in classrooms?
"We have a confidential file that we keep separate from personnel files, and we check those names routinely when we get an investigation." Statement of MCPS investigator Myles Alban, Page 102, Transcript of Daniel Picca v. Montgomery County Board of Education.
Will the Board of Education acknowledge these 20+/- victims or will they continue to spend Operating Budget funds on endless litigation fighting students who were sexually abused in MCPS schools?
Montgomery County Public Schools requested county assistance Sunday Feb. 1 at around 2 p.m.—about a week after the storm hit—to clear sidewalks and school bus stops. Officials later said the work was not completed.
“We couldn’t make a decision to open schools if there was no enforcement of clearing sidewalks,” said Adnan Mamoom, chief of district operations for MCPS. “Otherwise, we wouldn’t have a way for students to safely walk to school.”..
https://www.mymcmedia.org/county-officials-cite-communication-gaps-after-snowstorm/
Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) may hire a program audit coordinator to expand the district’s investigative abilities beyond financial audits in response to County Council concerns that the district relies too heavily on the county inspector general’s office for oversight, according to MCPS officials.
“Well, we have a long list of problems, there’s no question about that. There’s a long list of things that we could look into and correct,” Superintendent Thomas Taylor told the county school board during a Jan. 20 work session on the district’s proposed $3.78 billion operating budget for fiscal year 2027.
Creating the position, which would report directly to the board, “might help to support identifying areas of improvement … it may enhance our efforts to continuously improve,” Taylor said.
The audit coordinator was among several positions Taylor included in proposed discretionary spending, such as 10 full-time equivalent positions to support implementing a proposed regional program model, a Safe Routes to School coordinator to support pedestrian safety, 28 full-time equivalent elementary school-based safety staff and 153 full time equivalent special education resource teachers...
https://bethesdamagazine.com/2026/01/29/mcps-auditor-budget/
The Montgomery County Board of Education hired Superintendent Thomas W. Taylor in July of 2024, at a salary of $360,000.
Parents, guardians, students and staff have seen the Superintendent's cute snow day videos.
But tomorrow, Tuesday, February 3, 2026, when the County Council holds a Briefing on the Winter Storm/Snow Operations during Winter Storm Fern, they won't see the Superintendent.
Instead, Superintendent Taylor and the Board of Education will skip the Council's Briefing and send staff in their place.
Today at the MCPS Bethesda Depot at 4 PM:
"Your budget is a spending plan.
There isn't a single line in the 10,000 lines that are in your budget that will be spent
exactly how the dollars line up.
You will have some that are higher and very few that are lower.
But it is your plan as you have it mapped out for how
In a statement to the I-Team, MCPS said it is still reviewing the state’s decision and has not yet analyzed the full implications for the district.
The Montgomery County Board of Education is meeting for two days off camera to hold discussions and possibly act.
These meetings are open to the public under the Maryland Open Meetings Act. The public is encouraged to attend part or all of these meetings and record or document what discussions and business the Board of Education transacts.
Past Board of Education retreats have yielded crucial discussions that impacted the operations of MCPS and the Board's interactions with the public.
Friday, January 23rd and Saturday, January 24th
15 West Gude Drive, Rockville, Maryland