Monday, August 11, 2025

"As public awareness of CTE research has grown, there has been a decline in participation in youth and high school tackle football and a rise in participation in flag football."


...Thirty years ago, through the winter of 1994-95, the NFL began its slow transformation into the very different game that is played today. Reacting to serious concussions suffered by several of the league’s star players, including Dallas Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman, then-league commissioner Paul Tagliabue took a big, if seemingly begrudging, step. Despite describing concussions as merely “an occupational risk,” he created a brain injury committee. 

Since then, dozens of new rules, new equipment, and stiffer penalties have been put in place, all with the intention of trying to reduce the number of concussions players sustain...

...In recent years, much of the public pressure for change has built because of research out of the CTE Center, under the direction of Ann McKee, a William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor. McKee has previously said she was a “lifelong football fan,” but she now views the game as dangerous and says that “football damages brains, and young brains especially.”..

https://www.bu.edu/articles/2024/research-on-cte-changed-the-nfl/

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Silver Spring "Nonprofit" Safe Kids Worldwide: A Noble Mission — at What Cost?

Thank you to Bethesda Magazine for the story about $5000 grant to Safe Kids Worldwide (SKW) from Purple Line Transit Partners, the builders of the Purple Line. Unfortunately, Bethesda Magazine missed the real story — outsized compensation for the leadership of SKW —  so we'll fill you in.

Safe Kids Worldwide, the high-profile nonprofit that claims to work tirelessly to prevent childhood injuries — from traffic accidents to drownings and poisonings — is drawing scrutiny for the sky-high compensation its leaders collect. Public filings reveal a stark disconnect between the organization’s administrative payouts and its mission, especially as the nonprofit’s work overlaps substantially with many existing agencies and local coalitions.


Executive Payouts Soar

The organization’s latest IRS Form 990 (fiscal year ending mid-2023) reveals pay packages more in line with corporate boardrooms than a child-safety charity.

  • Kurt D. Newman, MD — Former President/CEO of Children’s National Medical Center — $3,000,204 in reportable compensation + $46,404 in other compensation = $3,046,608 total.

  • Aldwin Lindsay, Executive VP & CFO — $1,138,312 base + $135,445 other = $1,273,757 total.

  • Mary Anne Hilliard, Board Secretary — $932,977 base + $126,033 other = $1,059,010 total.

  • Michelle Riley-Brown, President/CEO (CNMC, from July 2023) — $843,121 base + $15,887 other = $859,008 total.

  • Torine V. Creppy, President of SKW (quoted in the Bethesda Magazine story) — $527,130 base + $84,224 other = $611,354 total.

  • Jennifer MacKay, Director of Research — $194,256 base + $19,236 other = $213,492 total.

  • Gary Karton, Content Advisor — $152,350 base + $7,835 other = $160,185 total.

  • Shushanna Mignott, Program Director for Domestic Pedestrian Safety (through Nov. 2023) — $127,626 base + $31,579 other = $159,205 total.

  • Cassandra Lynn Herring, Director of Child Occupant Protection — $137,226 base + $16,777 other = $154,003 total.

  • E. Jane Enright, Creative Director — $133,279 base + $8,581 other = $141,860 total.

For context, these 10 individuals together accounted for roughly $7.78 million in total compensation — nearly 80% of SKW’s annual revenue.


Income vs. Expenses: A Worrying Gap

SKW reported $9.79 million in revenue, with $1.62 million from program service income. The organization ended the year in the red by nearly $477,000.

Total expenses reached $8.16 million, of which $6.33 million went to program services. But executive and staff pay consumed a dominant share, leaving far less available for direct child safety initiatives.


Duplicating Efforts Across Agencies and Coalitions

Safe Kids Worldwide frames itself as a global leader in unintentional injury prevention for children — covering road safety, home safety, sports safety, and more. But these topics are already addressed by:

  • Federal agencies, like the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (child passenger safety, bicycle safety), Consumer Product Safety Commission (product recalls, home hazards), and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (injury prevention research).

  • State and local governments, which run safety campaigns in schools and communities.

  • Local nonprofits and hospitals, many of which operate car seat checks, drowning prevention programs, and helmet giveaways — often on shoestring budgets.

This raises the question: is SKW adding value, or simply repackaging existing efforts under its own brand while channeling large sums to executive pay?


Local Spotlight: The $5K ‘Purple Line’ Grant

Bethesda Magazine reported on August 8, 2025 that SKW received a $5,000 grant from Purple Line Transit Partners to promote pedestrian and bike safety along the light-rail corridor in Silver Spring. The grant funded activities aimed at encouraging safer walking and biking for students — an admirable goal, but one already pursued by local school safety officers, municipal transportation departments, and bike/ped advocacy groups.

In comparison, that $5,000 represents less than one-tenth of one percent of what SKW’s president, Torine V. Creppy, earned last year.


Putting the Contrasts in Perspective

  • Total Executive Pay: about $7.78 million for 10 individuals.

  • Total Revenue: $9.79 million (net loss ~$477,000).

  • Program Service Spending: $6.33 million — less than what the top earners were paid collectively.

  • Local Impact Example: A $5,000 pedestrian safety grant dwarfed by million-dollar executive packages.


The Accountability Question

Should a nonprofit ostensibly focused on child safety — and funded through donations, grants, and sponsorships — devote such an outsized share of its budget to high-level salaries, especially when much of its work overlaps with existing public programs?

The juxtaposition is stark: a small grant to help keep kids safe walking to school, and multimillion-dollar paychecks for executives. Donors, partners, and the public may reasonably wonder whether their contributions are going toward real safety improvements — or sustaining an elite payroll.

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Report flags risks in Montgomery County schools' background check system


...Thousands of Montgomery County Public Schools workers have fallen through cracks in background check systems, according to a new report, potentially meaning people with criminal histories could be working closely with children.

Maryland’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG) released a report Monday detailing “deficiencies” with background checks in MCPS, which serves more than 160,000 students.

The report found what it calls serious lapses in important personnel security measures required by state law and county policy within Maryland’s largest school district...

https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/report-flags-risks-in-montgomery-county-schools-background-check-system/3970639/

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Montgomery watchdog says school system is behind on criminal history checks

About 12,000 employees have outdated criminal history checks, and 4,900 employees haven’t been screened for cases involving child abuse and neglect.

...Inspector General Megan Davey Limarzi said in an interview the tone of the superintendent’s response letter was unusual, but she maintained that her office’s work was factually accurate. She noted that the school system agreed to most of the report’s recommendations.

“I think a lot of this back-and-forth really is a distraction, and it’s to get people to talk about something other than the deficiencies that we identified and that are contained in the report,” Limarzi said...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2025/08/05/montgomery-schools-background-checks/

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

4,900 MCPS hires have not been submitted for CPS background checks. "100% Your Children are Not Safe"

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (7News) — A new report from the Montgomery County Inspector General just revealed that almost 5,000 of the district's hires have not been checked out for past violations with the state's Child Protective Services (CPS) division.

So, who's spending time with your kids in schools?..

..."100%. Your children are not safe in MCPS from people who may choose to harm them sexually," said Jennifer Gross, a licensed clinical social worker...

https://wjla.com/features/i-team/montgomery-county-public-schools-background-checks-sex-offender-mcps-education-marc-elrich-child-protective-services-safety-education-classroom-maryland-oig#


Monday, August 4, 2025

Breaking**Inspector General: "Actions of MCPS senior leaders do not demonstrate either accountability or transparency." Report on MCPS Failure to Background Check Staff/Contractors/Volunteers.


Today, the Montgomery County Office of the Inspector General issued a report entitled, "Review of MCPS Background Screening Office."

The IG's Report details disturbing gaps in the MCPS background checks of staff, contractors and volunteers.

The MCPS Superintendent, Thomas W. Taylor, responded to the Report and criticized the IG's process.

The IG responded to the Superintendent's criticism with a response letter that included the following statements:  

...OIG staff met with members of the Superintendent’s leadership team on June 25th and in response to that meeting made corrections to address the concerns raised and provided a revised draft report on July 7th. On July 16th we held another meeting to discuss MCPS’s proposed corrective actions and address any other questions or issues. At no time during or after that meeting did MCPS leadership request additional changes to the report, raise wording discrepancies, or identify any inaccuracies. The Superintendent did not attend either of these  meetings, and despite his claims, MCPS leaders did not exhibit or invite an authentic collaboration. In fact, during our last meeting with MCPS leadership, they repeatedly refused to discuss specifics of certain planned actions which would assist the OIG in determining if the proposed steps would address observed deficiencies or offer alternative considerations. It was only in the Superintendent’s July 25th formal response that we learned of the nature and extent of discussions with the State regarding CPS checks...

...Lastly, in contrast to their statements, the actions by MCPS senior leaders do not demonstrate either accountability or transparency. The fact remains that thousands of individuals with unsupervised access to MCPS schools and students have not had a criminal history check in more than five years and thousands more have not completed a CPS check. In the end, only one entity is tasked with and has accepted the responsibility for obtaining these background checks to safeguard employees and students, and that is MCPS.  


The full IG Report is reproduced below: 

Montgomery County Public Schools, Maryland screening of employees by Parents' Coalition of Montgomery County, Maryland on Scribd