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Monday, November 3, 2025

2025: Petitions to the Board of Education on Boundary, Program and Facility Changes Proposed by Superintendent Thomas Taylor

Superintendent Thomas W. Taylor has proposed massive changes to MCPS programs, boundaries, and facilities. Some of his many proposals have pushed parents all over the County to Petition the Board of Education for relief.  

We will compile the current Petitions to the Board of Education in this post.

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One Step at a Time



Furloughed parents are jumping into thorny school debates

...Hougham — a furloughed federal employee — wasn’t used to having so many hours to herself while her two kids were in school.

But, less than a week into the shutdown, Montgomery County Public Schools gave her a way to spend the unexpected free time.

District officials unveiled new campus boundary maps in early October, practically at the same time that many parents were sent home from their jobs at nearby federal agencies.

The proposal ignited ardent debate, with some furloughed parents quick to rally in opposition. During hours they would’ve normally spent drafting government reports or prepping for briefings, these federal workers instead circulated petitions and created an advocacy toolkit via Google Docs...

...“Every single current proposal protects the boundaries of the most affluent high schools while pushing severe disruption and instability onto East County families,” Hougham, a Silver Spring resident, told the school board Oct. 16...

...The boundary maps were the first reveal that shocked some furloughed parents into action. Next came the proposal to close Silver Spring International Middle School.

“That really escalated things,” Hougham said...

https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/furloughed-parents-are-jumping-into-thorny-school-debates-D6LIMFQZ4BAAHA5N6GNSJXPFEA/?schk=YES&rchk=YES&edition=montgomery&utm_source=The+Banner&utm_campaign=ff25dfb371-NL_MCD_20251103_0600&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-ff25dfb371-617456822&mc_cid=ff25dfb371#comments-header


Friday, October 31, 2025

‘Completely blindsided’: Silver Spring International Middle community reeling from proposal to close school


When Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) Superintendent Thomas Taylor announced Oct. 13 that he would be recommending the closure of Silver Spring International Middle School (SSIMS) by 2031, many in the school community were shocked, parents said.  

“Many of us felt completely blindsided,” Lora Elinoff, the parent of a SSIMS student, told Bethesda Today on Wednesday. “There’s lots of different views — some people feel very strongly that the building is in such bad shape that we do need a new building. But I don’t think anyone ever imagined we would just get a building taken away.” 

In a 15-minute Zoom meeting Oct. 13, Taylor told the school community that he was planning to recommend the closure as part of the district’s proposed $2.7 billion 2027-2032 Capital Improvements Program (CIP). The school board is conducting hearings for Taylor’s proposal before voting on the proposal in November...

https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/10/27/silver-spring-international-middle-reeling-close-school/

Thursday, October 30, 2025

What is the Montgomery County school board going to do about Crown High?


...Gaithersburg residents showed up at the school board meeting to ask the board not to use Crown as a holding school. They said they’ve been waiting for a brand-new campus in their community, and they called the potential pivot unfair.

“Families purchased homes in Crown based on official plans guaranteeing a local high school. Changing course now undermines community trust,” Nora Walsh wrote in a letter to district officials.

District officials are expected to share Crown proposals with the community by late November, with opportunities for public feedback in December and January...

https://www.thebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/crown-high-holding-school-boundary-study-mcps-PYRLPVGBLBDZ7B3OGPLS462XMU/

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Students forced out of Montgomery County high school by water main break


MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (7News) — A water main break forced students at Quince Orchard High School in Montgomery County to leave the main building on Friday.

"We have evacuated the main building due to a water main break impacting building systems. (Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service) is on site assessing the situation. Students are safe and are being supervised in the Cougar Dome," the school said in a message to parents.

The school did not say what caused the break or how long repairs might take...

https://wjla.com/news/local/students-forced-out-of-montgomery-county-high-school-by-water-main-break-quince-orchard-high-school-evacuation

Opinion: Closing downtown Silver Spring’s neighborhood schools is a mistake


As a deeply concerned Silver Spring resident, I urge the Montgomery County Board of Education and the County Council to reject Superintendent Thomas Taylor’s proposal to close Silver Spring International Middle School (SSIMS) and Sligo Creek Elementary School (SCES). The plan – which involves redistributing SSIMS students to other middle schools, building a new SCES, and converting the current school buildings into a holding school – is both misguided and unfair, and it would do lasting harm to our neighborhood schools and families.

For years, SSIMS and SCES have been overlooked for capital improvements. Parents and community members have consistently advocated for MCPS to renovate these schools—but never to close them. Now, instead of making long-overdue investments, the district is proposing closing both schools and using the campus to benefit other communities’ renovation timelines. To frame this as a “meaningful investment in Silver Spring” is manipulative and condescending. Closing our walkable neighborhood schools is not an investment; it’s an abdication of responsibility.

The transportation implications alone are deeply troubling. Downtown Silver Spring is already dense and congested. Turning SSIMS and SCES into holding schools would bring in buses from all over the county, while busing neighborhood students elsewhere. This is a step backward in terms of safety and sustainability. Bus traffic presents more risks to students than train traffic from the upcoming Purple Line ever could. Locating schools in transit-oriented, walkable communities should be seen as a model, not a drawback...

https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/10/25/opinion-closing-downtown-silver-springs-schools-is-a-mistake/

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Parents, Students Rally for Silver Spring International Middle School


Parents and students want to save Silver Spring International Middle School a
fter the Montgomery County Public Schools superintendent announced plans to close the campus.

In his plan Superintendent Thomas Taylor, Ed. D., also shared a plan to divide the students between other schools and turn the building into a holding school during other campuses’ construction projects. However, a group of concerned parents and students from the community rallied outside the middle school Sunday afternoon in protest...

https://www.mymcmedia.org/parents-students-rally-for-silver-spring-international-middle-school/

Monday, October 27, 2025

WASTE: This Week Watch Superintendent Taylor Waste $43M+ on a Commercial Lease by Abandoning 30 Acres of FREE Board of Education Land


On Thursday, October 30, 2025, the Montgomery County Board of Education will unanimously vote to approve a Consent Agenda (no discussion) that includes a brand new lease of a massive warehouse in Gaithersburg.  

To date, Superintendent Taylor has pretended like finding a new MCPS warehouse was something the Board of Education was going to consider.  

Surprise! Superintendent Taylor has already negotiated the lease of a massive commercial space in Gaithersburg and the lease starts SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1st!  The lease commits the Board of Education to lease payments of at least $30 million dollars over the next 10 years and requires the Board of Education to spend $13 million dollars out of the Capital Budget to construct the interior of this currently empty warehouse.  

The commercial space that Superintendent Taylor is leasing is completely empty (see image above) and will require $13 million dollars to build out the interior of the warehouse.  The lease vote is on Thursday, October 30th, but the $13 million is part of the FY 2027 MCPS Capital Budget that hasn't been voted on yet.

Superintendent Taylor is going to force the Board of Education to commit to a FY 2027 Capital Budget proposal this week, even thought the Board of Education's vote on the proposed Capital Budget isn't until November 20, 2025.  

Presumably the lease of the commercial space will be paid out of the MCPS Operating Budget and the construction of the interior space will be funded out of the MCPS Capital Budget.  By forcing a vote on the lease this week, Superintendent Taylor will force the Board of Education to commit $13 million of the Capital Budget to the construction of the interior of the warehouse before the Board of Education even considers any of the Capital Budget needs of any of MCPS' 211 schools. 

~~AND~~

In order to make use of this massive Commercial Warehouse, Superintendent Taylor is going to abandon 4 Board of Education sites totaling over 30 acres of free public school land.  The land that Taylor is going to abandon is owned by the Board of Education and is free of mortgages, rents and property taxes.  Taylor has not put forth any justification for the abandonment of free public school land in favor of Leased Commercial land that will create ongoing debt (with an escalation clause) for the Board of Education for at least the next 10 to 20 years.  

Here are the Board of Education owned public school sites that Superintendent Taylor is abandoning: 


This is from Superintendent Taylor's recently released FY 2027 Capital Budget proposal.  This page shows the cost of building the interior of the Leased Commercial space.  Taylor did not disclose this cost on his October 30th Action Item Resolution for the Board of Education vote. 


This is how MCPS' funding and resources are wasted without public notice or opportunity to comment.


Superintendent Taylor Prioritizes MCPS Warehouse over Students in Trailers

Superintendent Says It’s Time to Find a New Warehouse as Building Conditions Decline

The condition of Montgomery County Public Schools’ buildings is deteriorating, including the warehouse in Rockville, which was constructed using materials recycled from the World War II era, according to MCPS officials.

Superintendent Thomas Taylor, Ed.D., said he believes it is time to look for a different warehouse location. MCM joined a tour of the current facility Tuesday evening with Taylor and other MCPS officials...

https://www.mymcmedia.org/superintendent-says-its-time-to-find-a-new-warehouse-as-building-conditions-decline/

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Maryland failed to document many deaths from suspected child abuse or neglect


The state’s Department of Human Services repeatedly violated a policy mandating detailed reports when children die from suspected abuse or neglect, a requirement that experts say is needed to provide transparency, force accountability and prevent future tragedies.

The Baltimore Banner discovered the problem after filing a public records request for reports of all suspicious child deaths that occurred over a five-year period. The reports are known as Form 1080s. Officials denied the request in part because it would have been “unduly burdensome” to fulfill. Only after facing the threat of litigation did the state concede that many of the documents did not exist.

Reports were missing for roughly a third of the children who died in 2023 and 2024, according to data provided by the human services agency. The number of required records missing for prior years is unknown...

https://www.thebanner.com/community/public-health/maryland-child-abuse-deaths-7XKQLLJ32FBTNLNCL5NGTKG7NI/

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Superintendent Thomas Taylor Holds Capital Budget Presentation for 7 People

7 people?

Where is the Board of Education? Where are County Councilmembers? Where are State Senators and Delegates?  Where are parents?  

Reminder:  There are STILL over 10,000 MCPS students spending their school day outside of their school buildings in classroom trailers.  MCPS students have been in trailers for 42 YEARS.

But Superintendent Taylor felt it was important to make one of his Capital Budget presentations from a warehouse.  

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After years of silence, Maryland education leaders do homework, find funding flaws

Baltimore (WBFF) — Maryland education leaders say they are now open to changing how the state funds public schools. This comes after Project Baltimore exposed how millions of your dollars are going to schools to educate students who are not there.

Project Baltimore, since 2021, has been investigating potential problems with how Maryland funds public schools. But for four years, state education leaders have been unwilling to address the concerns we’ve uncovered.

Now, one recent Fox45 News report appears to have had an impact. Last month, Project Baltimore exposed how Maryland schools got an estimated $168 million last year to educate students who were not in class.

“As you've dug into this about enrollment data, I've learned a lot in your reporting and our team really diving into this for us,” said Dr. Joshua Michael, President of the Maryland State Board of Education. “From looking at it now, there could be a better way of representing the students that are actually in our schools.”..

 https://foxbaltimore.com/news/project-baltimore/maryland-education-schools-underfunded-dr-joshua-michael

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Montgomery County parents push back against plan to move graduations


MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (7News) — 7News obtained an email from Damascus High School's principal sent to the school community.

It explains that the upcoming graduation on May 28 will be held at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, which is 35 miles from the school.

The letter states that Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) decided to provide a "comfortable, indoor setting that's not dependent on weather.

It also refers to "ample parking and accessibility for guests."

We emailed several parents to get their responses...

https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-high-school-graduation-move-baltimore-damascus-umbc-2026-parents-controversy-education-reaction-tradition-ceremony-student-safety-policy-district-decisions-seniors-plans

Monday, October 20, 2025

Schedule for CIP and Silver Spring schools decisions

 Superintendent’s proposal and next steps:

On October 13th and 14th, the Superintendent laid out his CIP (capital budget) proposal to the Board of Education. This is the first step in a lengthy process of reviewing the CIP and ultimately determining the future of SSIMS and SCES. 

More details of the Superintendent’s proposal will be discussed at the Board of Education’s (BOE) meeting on Tuesday November 4, 2025 at 10:00 a.m. and livestreamed and recorded on the Board’s website

There are two public hearings before the Board of Education for residents to weigh in on this proposal and the CIP (capital budget):

The public may sign up to provide testimony for both Board of Education hearings at this form

Sign-up registration will close on the following dates:
  • Hearing on October 23, 2025 at 6:00 p.m. – Sign-ups closed on Friday, October 17, 2025, at 12:00 p.m.
  • Hearing on October 28, 2025 at 6:00 p.m. – Sign-ups close on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, at 12:00 p.m.

MCPS CIP Timeline
October 13-14, 2025 Superintendent presents CIP to Board of Education
October 23, 2025 Hearing at BOE (noted above)
October 28, 2025 Hearing at BOE (noted above)
November 4, 2025 BOE meeting with discussion of CIP
January 15, 2026 Montgomery County Executive (CE) transmits his CIP including both County Government Projects and School Projects to County Council 
January 15, 2026 Council receives CIP budget from CE and begins review
February/March 2026 Council schedules public hearings on CE proposed CIP budget
March/April Schools CIP budget reviewed by the County Council Education and Culture Committee 
April/May Full Council reviews CIP Budgets including MCPS CIP
May 22, 2026 Montgomery County Council passes final CIP budgets 

If Silver Spring International Middle School (SSIMS) and Sligo Creek Elementary School (SCES) are closed, what happens to the property?
The Superintendent has stated that the proposed plan for SSIMS and SCES after they close in 2031 is to use the facilities as holding schools or temporary locations for schools under construction in the county. 

If the plan changes, and MCPS determines that SSIMS/SCES would not be used as holding schools or for any use by MCPS, the property must go through a process with DGS (Department of General Services) that includes community input, review and approval by County Council. 

Friday, October 17, 2025

Greencastle Elementary School AC Unit Caught on Fire


...Greencastle Elementary School, located at 13611 Robby Road, had an AC unit that caught on fire, according to Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service (MCFRS) spokesperson Pete Piringer.

No students were at the school at the time of the fire. The fire was put out by school staffers, said Piringer...

https://wjla.com/news/local/greencastle-maryland-elementary-school-fire-put-out-with-no-injuries-montgomery-county-fire-and-rescue-service-school-day-teacher-staff-public-school-airconditioning-ac

Thursday, October 16, 2025

MCPS suggests postponing Crown High School opening for use as holding school

Story in Bethesda Today, reporter Ashlyn Campbell. Full story here.

Declining enrollment cited as reason; boundary study change would be required

Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) is considering a plan to use the upcoming Crown High School in Gaithersburg, which is currently under construction, as a holding school rather than opening it in 2027 as scheduled, the district told the county school board Thursday. 

“We would like to explore the idea of potentially making Crown a holding school for a few years while we continue to assess our enrollment projections,” Taylor said, noting that the district’s enrollment is declining. “[To] make sure that we are fully utilizing our buildings to their highest and best value, this makes a lot of sense. That being said, it can make a lot of sense and still be a terrible idea.”

If the district moves ahead with the plan, the change would impact the district’s ongoing boundary study that is expected to determine which students would attend the new high school.

Draft 2025-2026 School Year Calendar - Four Options. Final Board of Ed vote on December 11th

MCPS has released a memo for the draft school calendar for the next school year, 2025-2026. There are four draft calendar scenarios shown in the memo.  According to the memo, there can be public comment. The Board will vote on the final calendar at their December 11, 2025 business meeting.






Draft Sch Yr Calendar 2026-2027 251016 by freestategal

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Superintendent Taylor's letter to the community Oct. 15, 2025: Dear Sligo Creek Elementary School Community

 We understand that Superintendent Taylor sent this letter out this evening (Wednesday, October 15, 2025).

Dear Sligo Creek Elementary School Community,

You have likely heard by now the news about our facilities plan, which includes an historic investment in Silver Spring schools and the Silver Spring community.  An important part of this investment is the eventual move of Sligo Creek Elementary School to a new building on a new site, and the repurposing of Silver Spring International Middle School.  

Any time there is a change of this magnitude, there are bound to be a lot of emotions. I know how important both Sligo Creek Elementary and SSIMS are to you and our community and I want to share some of the thinking behind this recommendation and offer some opportunities for follow up. An important truth is that for many years, your school communities have been raising concerns about the building. The building was the former Blair High School and was built 90 years ago in 1935. It is old. Twenty-six years ago, the facility's condition and size made it unsuitable to continue as Blair HS - this should have been a big red flag back then.

Since then, MCPS’s best attempts to upgrade the facility have been thwarted by unforeseen building conditions and structural issues that far exceeded projected costs. And as a consequence, projects have been cut short or simply just not done.  This is completely unacceptable and I am sorry that I can’t change decisions made in the past. Presently, the building simply does not allow for the improvements that were promised to you, and I cannot in good conscience recommend the level of investment that would be required to continue operating two permanent schools there. It really has reached the end of its useful life as a permanent home for a school.

And even before this school can transition to a holding school, we know that there is still a ton of work that needs to be done.

Adding to these challenges is the Purple Line construction immediately adjacent to the school site. Though destined to be a huge community asset eventually, the Purple Line does create some real safety concerns, particularly for our many students who walk to school in what is already a very busy area. Again, I know that many in the community have raised the alarms about these conditions for several years; I am both grateful for your dedicated advocacy and sorry that it took this long for MCPS to hear you. This year’s submission of the Capital Improvements Program is my first opportunity as Superintendent to respond and start to make it right. I knew that we needed to make a meaningful investment in Silver Spring and some tough decisions to go along with that investment. None of these recommended decisions was made lightly, but all are in response to your advocacy.

I also announced that the plan says the building would become a holding school for future construction projects, so an obvious question is: if this building isn't suitable for a permanent school, why is it appropriate as a holding school? Really, the main reason is that people – staff, students, families – can manage temporary inconveniences more readily when there's a clear endpoint and a better permanent solution waiting. As I mentioned earlier, even to turn this facility into a holding school will require extensive work. I also need the building to be empty to make those improvements. Importantly, as a holding school, all students would arrive by bus rather than walking through the increasingly complex and busy streets around the Purple Line.

As a reminder, I have recommended the following:

For Sligo Creek Elementary School: We will build a brand new Sligo Creek Elementary School on a new site in the Silver Spring area. The school would open for the fall of 2029.  This is an ambitious timeline and site selection would need to happen this Spring.

For Silver Spring International Middle School: We will repurpose the building as a secondary holding school and accommodate SSIMS students through other middle schools in the area, including new construction additions at Eastern Middle School and Sligo Middle School. We are planning for Silver Spring International Middle School to close in August 2030, and this means no student currently enrolled at SSIMS will be impacted by this closure.

It is also important to note that these are recommendations before the Board of Education and that this extensive investment into Silver Spring schools also requires funding by the County Council.  I mention this because there is a long road ahead and this is one part of a very long, multiyear process before any of this becomes reality.

I can only imagine the questions that have arisen following our virtual meeting, and so we created this Question or Concerns Form to collect your thoughts and questions. My team and I are committed to meeting with you in person very soon, where we will answer your questions and talk more about the very real reasons that these are the right decisions for both schools. Details about this next meeting are being developed as I write this, and we'll share them when they are complete. 

I know that this news was shocking to some and validating for others. I think it is really important to be clear and straightforward with you about our situation and our next steps (even if that means that you may not like some of the things I have to say). To that end, I want to be clear with you about the state of the building and the limits of what we can reasonably fix. This is about shifting our focus from struggling with a building that has defeated our best efforts to ensuring better school environments for all. 

Here are our immediate next steps:

  • Beginning with the Board of Education worksession on November 4, we will provide more details about the facility analysis that brought us to this decision, and the facility projects and supports we will implement for both schools;  
  • We will schedule in-person school community meetings;
  • We will provide responses to the questions you submit in the Questions or Concerns Form; and
  • As we move forward, we will continue to communicate with you regularly as we make improvements to the current building and plan for any transitions.

Again, thank you for your time in reading this really long but important message. I look forward to connecting with you very soon. 

Sincerely,

Thomas W. Taylor, EdD, MBA

Superintendent of Schools 


Tuesday, October 14, 2025

‘No longer tenable’: MCPS to recommend closure of aging Silver Spring International Middle by 2031

 In Bethesda Today, reporter Ashlyn Campbell. Full story here. Yellow highlights my own.

Plan calls for students to be divided between rebuilt Eastern, Sligo middle schools

Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) will recommend the closure of the aging Silver Spring International Middle School by 2031 as part of its proposed six-year capital improvements program, Superintendent Thomas Taylor announced Monday. 

In a 15-minute Zoom meeting Monday afternoon, Taylor told the Silver Spring International Middle School (SSIMS) community that he is planning to recommend the closure when he presents a preview of the district’s proposed 2027-2032 Capital Improvements Program (CIP) to community members on Tuesday.  

Instead of replacing the middle school, MCPS will recommend the renovation of Eastern and Sligo middle schools in Silver Spring and then divide the SSIMS community between the updated facilities, Taylor told the group of about 70 in the online meeting.  

“Eventually, five years down the road, we would like to move to a place where SSIMS … can become a holding school for the school district and no longer be a school that’s [operating] in its current state,” Taylor said during the meeting. “Now that’s dramatic news. It is probably different than what you expect, but it is in response to a lot of what we have heard from our parents and from our students and from our teachers, which is that the learning environment at SSIMS is no longer tenable.” 


Superintendent Thomas W. Taylor's Chief of Staff, Essie McGuire

Superintendent Thomas Taylor has been sending his Chief of Staff to Montgomery County Council Committee hearings to speak on MCPS issues.

Superintendent Taylor hired Essie McGuire to be his Chief of Staff shortly after he was appointed Superintendent. 

Let's start with her resume.  Ms. McGuire's resume (below) shows that she has degrees in English, History and Social Work.  

Here is the listed Education, Training and Experience for the Chief of Staff position from the MCPS Job Description:


Coursework in educational administration? Doctorate?  
Experience as classroom teacher or school administrator? 


  

Monday, October 13, 2025

How much is Montgomery Co. spending to fix school background checks? 7News investigates

 


Taylor added, "We do not intend to come to the county council to ask for supplemental appropriation. We are going to deal with this within our existing budgeted funds."

Janis Sartucci of the Parents' Coalition of Montgomery County questioned the superintendent's comments.

"As recently as this spring, Superintendent Taylor said he needed an extra $30 million or he had to let teachers go, and he had to make class sizes larger. So, how and where is this money now coming from?" she asked...

https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-schools-background-check-overhaul-costs-mcps-maryland-employees-investigation-budget-education-accountability-law-firm-million-dollars-funds-outdated-criminal-history

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Largest US teachers union sends 3M members map that completely ‘erases’ Israel: ‘Inexcusable lapse’

 From the New York Post, reporter Anna Young. Full article here.

Note all our MCPS teachers are members of the MCEA, which is part of the National Education (NEA).

The nation’s largest teachers union reportedly sent its roughly 3 million members a sickening email containing a map that erased Israel “completely” and labeled it as Palestine.

The National Education Association sent the email Friday providing its members with resources for “teaching about indigenous peoples” that included the disturbing map, the North American Values Institute told the Jewish News Syndicate.

Friday, October 10, 2025

11-year-old girl struck, killed by Montgomery County school bus identified; school community grieving

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (DC News Now) — The Montgomery County Public Schools community is grieving after a young girl, who police publicly identified Friday, was struck and killed by a school bus Thursday afternoon.

In a news release Friday, the Montgomery County Department of Police identified the girl as 11-year-old Summer Lim. According to police, an initial investigation revealed that Lim was heading east on Bauer Drive with her bike after leaving Earle B. Wood Middle School on Oct. 9 when the school bus, which had also left the middle school, struck her.

The bus was also traveling on east on Bauer Drive and was turning right onto southbound Russet Road at the time of the crash, officials noted...

https://www.dcnewsnow.com/news/local-news/maryland/montgomery-county/11-year-old-girl-struck-killed-by-montgomery-county-school-bus-identified-school-community-grieving/