Showing posts with label Lyda Astrove. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lyda Astrove. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Bowen Levy went to school one day and never came home

...Advocates for students with disabilities said Bowen’s death has gained notice far beyond Central Special.
“It’s just so upsetting to hear about this when it could’ve been, and should’ve been, entirely preventable,” said Lyda Astrove, a longtime advocate for students with special needs in neighboring Montgomery County, who said Bowen’s death stirred concern in online discussions and on Facebook.
“The whole community has been heartbroken for them,” she said of the Levys...

Thursday, January 23, 2020

Fields of Waste: Artificial Turf, Touted as Recycling Fix for Millions of Scrap Tires, Becomes Mounting Disposal Mess. Article Features Investigation by Lyda Astrove of Parents' Coalition

...The turf piles grow
An EPA spokeswoman said in an email the agency “encourages the environmentally appropriate beneficial use of secondary materials, including scrap tires.” She said the agency has not studied disposal of turf fields, and has no information about where the waste ends up. That’s up to state and local governments, she said.
The problem is mounting.
The Synthetic Turf Council, the industry’s main trade group, estimates there are between 12,000 and 13,000 synthetic turf fields in the U.S., with some 1,200 to 1,500 new installations a year. The industry’s pitch is that synthetic turf saves on water and eliminates the need for pesticides, fertilizers or constant mowing. And unlike real grass, the manufactured variety is billed as a year-round surface.

But today, hundreds of fields that were installed in the mid-2000s are at or beyond their estimated eight- to 10-year life spans. Most of these early fields were made with tire crumb, also known as crumb rubber, a product that has come under intense scrutiny in recent years over fears that tiny tire fragments containing heavy metals and chemicals might be dangerous.
Now these fields are coming out – en masse. In one 2017 report, the Synthetic Turf Council projected that by the end of the decade at least 750 fields will be replaced annually. With the average field containing approximately 40,000 pounds of plastic carpet and 400,000 pounds of infill, according to the report, this means as much as 330 million pounds of waste could require disposal every year.
A parallel turf dilemma is unfolding in soccer-loving Europe. Footage from a recent Dutch documentary, by the news program Zembla, revealed a so-called “turf mountain” in the Netherlands formed by discarded playing fields, graphically illustrating the enormity of the waste problem overseas.
But one expert who was featured in the documentary said in an email to FairWarning that he believed the disposal issue is graver on this side of the ocean.
“It is definitely a MUCH bigger problem in America than in Europe,” said Dennis Andersen, owner of Re-Match, a recycling plant in Denmark that specializes in synthetic turf. “You are not regulated at all with used turf and have massive amounts laying around.”
Disposal issue under wraps
Among American turf sellers and promoters, disposal is a touchy topic.

A truck loaded with used turf from a Montgomery County, Maryland, high school headed last year for its new home on a paintball park 50 miles away (Photo by Lyda Astrove).
Seven large artificial turf companies who market their product in this country declined to be interviewed by FairWarning about disposal, or the recycling programs they say they maintain. FieldTurf, based in Montreal and one of the largest synthetic turf vendors in the U.S., did not answer specific questions but issued a statement, attributed to the Synthetic Turf Council and affirming its members’ commitment to sustainability.
“Our members have found many applications for end of life turf that are commonly found in the marketplace, and they are at the forefront of technology that is expanding end of life turf applications,” the statement said. Turf council president Dan Bond did not return FairWarning’s phone calls or answer questions submitted in writing.
Even among environmentalists, disposal of artificial turf has gotten scant attention, but for a vocal group of parents and activists, including many with roots in the Washington, D.C., area. They are alarmed by some studies calling out the potential health risks of crumb rubber and the exposure of young people to cancer-causing chemicals, lead and other dangerous toxins...


Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Montgomery moves forward on plan to remedy mismanagement at special education school

Montgomery school leaders are moving forward with a plan to make payments to students at a special education school for withdrawals from their school-arranged bank accounts, in spite of strong criticism that the proposal is inadequate.

The school board voted 6 to 1 last week to support the plan offered by Superintendent Joshua P. Starr to resolve mismanagement of work-study funds at Rock Terrace, a special education school in Rockville. Board Member Michael A. Durso opposed the plan, and student board member Justin Kim was absent.

and...

Lyda Astrove, a lawyer who has advocated for the families of Rock Terrace, had called Starr’s proposal “insulting” when it first became public, saying the $200 payments amounted to a “lowball” offer.

After the board’s action, Astrove said she was heartened that Durso “seemed to get it,” but was disappointed in the outcome. “I still think they need an independent auditor to look at it,” she said.

For the entire article go here.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Lyda Astrove Community Hero Monday evening at Civic Fed

Please join the Montgomery County Civic Federation in honoring Lyda Astrove this Monday evening as she is awarded the Civic Fed's Community Hero Award at our monthly meeting.

DATE: Monday, November 11th
TIME: 7:45 PM
LOCATION: Montgomery County Council Building, 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville. Walking distance to the Rockville Metro redline stop; free parking in parking garage to rear (south side) of building.  Directions here.

Following, please stay for the discussion on the proposed new Zoning Ordinance, Councilmember Marc Elrich (D-At-large) will be the speaker.

Thanks.
Paula Bienenfeld
First Vice President and Education Committee Chair, Montgomery County Civic Federation

Friday, March 22, 2013

Starr writes Memo in Response to Astrove Question

On Wednesday, March 20, 2013, on this blog special education advocate and former Board of Education candidate Lyda Astrove asked about surprise changes to special education staffing at MCPS high schools.
In response to Ms. Astrove's question, Superintendent Joshua Starr created the memo below.
Note that Ms. Astrove's question could not be answered by reading Superintendent Starr's FY 2014 budget.  That's the budget the BOE already approved.  Why doesn't Superintendent Starr's budget provide details of how he is spending our public school dollars? What other surprises exist in the FY 2014 Starr plans?

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Civic Fed Program/Panel: Choosing a New Superintendent

Please join the Montgomery County Civic Federation on December 13th at 7:45 pm for a Panel Discussion on ‘Choosing a New Superintendent.’


Please join us for an open community discussion on choosing a new superintendent for our public school system, Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS). I believe this is the first open community-wide discussion to be held on this process. All are invited for an open discussion.


PANELISTS (confirmed):

Lyda Astrove, Special Education Advocate
Emily Barton, Executive Director, Teach for America, DC Region
Phil Kauffman, Board of Education, member of the BOE ad hoc group, Superintendent Search Process
Neal McLuskey, Associate Director, Center for Educational Freedom, Cato Institute
Fred Stichnoth, President, Montgomery County Gifted and Talented Association

TIME: 7:45 pm
DATE: Monday, December 13, 2010
LOCATION: 1st FL Auditorium, County Council Office Building 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville, Maryland

Directions: http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/csltmpl.asp?url=/content/council/dir.asp

We hope for a wide-ranging open and frank discussion with lots of audience participation.

Please pass this email on to anyone who would be interested, including posting on school and neighborhood listservs. If you have questions please email or call me offline.

Thank you.

Paula Bienenfeld
Chair, Education Committee, Montgomery County Civic Federation

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

WPOST: Jerry Weast, superintendent of Montgomery schools, to retire in June

The Washington Post: Jerry Weast, superintendent of Montgomery schools, to retire in June

...Weast is not without critics. Some in the community contend that he often pretends to listen to others but ignores points of view that are not in line with where he wants to lead the schools.
"I've been disturbed that his focus has been on the national community instead of running the local schools," said Lyda Astrove, a frequent Weast critic and member of the watchdog group Parents' Coalition. Astrove, who is running for an at-large seat on the school board, has been dissatisfied in her interactions with the county in obtaining special education services for her child. She said that Weast had been quick to shut out people who disagreed with him. Two other members of the Parents' Coalition are running for school board seats, four of seven of which are up for election this year...

Friday, July 23, 2010

Berthiaume: "They outwit, outlast and outplay."

Board of Education member Laura Berthiaume writes about the Board of Education's failure to exercise their power to oversee the school system in a letter to the editor in The Washington Post.

Maybe it's time for voters to "outwit, outlast and outplay" the incumbent Board of Education members and vote them off the island?


The Washington Post - Letter to Editor: Who really controls the Montgomery schools
By Laura V. Berthiaume
Rockville
Sunday, July 25, 2010


...In the balance of power between the board of education and the bureaucracy, the superintendent and his staff hold all the cards. They outwit, outlast and outplay. In my experience, the board actually has little to no impact on union contract negotiations: The superintendent and his staff negotiate the contracts. Even if there ever were actual board opposition, it would be met with a fierce, resolute wall of angry staff.
Given that Dr. Weast is the one who negotiated and recommended the contracts, budget and benefits over the past 10 years that are now the subject of so much complaint, is it not hypocritical to excoriate the MCEA for unrealistic salaries and benefits yet praise Dr. Weast and demand that his contract be renewed? Both The Post and the voters should consider this issue carefully this fall.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Weast and the Board: Who should be on the way out?


by Frederick Stichnoth


I hope you saw Leah Fabel's article in Sunday's Examiner: MontCo schools chief on the way out (Page 5).

Generally, the article said that six of the Montgomery County Board of Education members (all but President Patricia O'Neill) would welcome Superintendent Jerry Weast's departure, largely because of his "imperial attitude," "he's Machiavelli," he uses "bullying tactics."  I've been irritated by these things too.

However, I would ascribe blame elsewhere. Weast is at the center of the Montgomery County political system, and heads a large and important bureaucracy. Given his function, he must manipulate the levers of power, and I greatly respect his skill in doing so.

He has seated other potentially competing powers at his "table," and thereby largely neutralized them.  I would include the unions, the County Council and MCCPTA.

I would also include, first and foremost, the Board of Education. The Board has great statutory powers (to establish policy, including curricula, and to set the budget) but has subordinated itself to the position of a rather insignifcant department in Weast's bureaucracy. (Some members, most notably Ms. Berthiaume, occasionally battle to establish some independence. Perhaps if the six members who want Weast gone had exercised their responsibilities consistently and cooperatively, then system management and priorities would not be so warped.) Weast's necessary exercise of power must be checked through a governance system of checks and balances, which the Board has squandered.

I also find it interesting that President O'Neill is said to approve of Weast's method of operation. It reminds me that Ms. O'Neill called Gifted and Talented parents who pressed to have a role on school improvement teams "PIAs--pain-in-the ass parents." (Board of Education meeting 5/12/09) Current Board of Education VP Barclay said that they were "not agreeable" and "don't know how to agree to disagree;" they should be "respectful" and "professional." In the classic line applied to John Bolton: "Kiss up, kick down."

The Board needs to reassert its prerogatives. This will require responsibility from the individual Board members, and voter insistence on that they assume responsibility. We have the opportunity to make Board responsibility the significant issue that it should be at the forthcoming elections, in which incumbents Brandman, Docca, O'Neill and Durso put their records up for scrutiny.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

2010 Board of Education Elections

4 Board of Education  seats are up for election this year.

Mark your calendar for the upcoming election dates:

Primary - September 14, 2010

General - November 2, 2010

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Louis Wilen files for Board of Education seat

Louis Wilen of Olney, Maryland has filed a notice of Candidacy for the Montgomery County Board of Education District 5 seat that is up for election in the fall of 2010.


Louis Wilen for Board of Education campaign page here.

Louis Wilen for Board of Education Facebook page
here.


UPDATE: September 1, 2010

The Municipal and County Government Organization (MCGEO) has endorsed Louis Wilen for Board of Education in the District 5 race.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Lyda Astrove files for Board of Education seat

Lyda Astrove of Rockville, Maryland has filed a notice of Candidacy for the Montgomery County Board of Education at-large seat that is up for election in the fall of 2010.


Ms. Astrove can be contacted by e-mail at: lydaforboe@hotmail.com


Lyda Astrove's campaign site is here.


Lyda Astrove for BOE Facebook page here.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Washington Post: Court Favors Parents in Battle Over Special-Education Tuition

The Washington Post reports on the U.S. Supreme Court decision in the
Forest Grove School District case in Court Favors Parents in Battle Over Special-Education Tuition. From the article:

"I think it's good that the Supreme Court finally is paying attention to the rights of students with disabilities," said Lyda Astrove, a longtime Maryland special-education advocate. "I don't think there's going to be a tsunami of parents placing their kids unilaterally in private special-education schools," she added, because families must pay for the tuition up front and
then be reimbursed, and they may get caught in litigation over whether the private school services are necessary.

UPDATE 6/24/09: On the Record, A business and legal blog for Maryland quotes Lyda Astrove in the article, Attorney, advocate, mother praises special-ed ruling. From the article:

A Rockville special-education attorney, advocate and mother is lauding the Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision Monday that parents may be reimbursed for sending their youngster to private school without first trying a public-school curriculum they believe would not meet their child’s special-ed needs.

“I hope school districts sit up and take notice” of the decision and ensure their special-ed programs meet the students’requirements, thus eliminating the desire of a number of parents to send their children to private school, said Lyda L. Astrove, a solo practitioner.