Showing posts with label Policy FAA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Policy FAA. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2024

MCPS Administrator Closes a School without Vote of Board of Education #notTransparent #lies

Because why not? Why should MCPS administrators respect the elected Board of Education? Why should they respect State law on the closure of schools?   

Why should anyone in MCPS follow the Baldridge processes that have been written into Board policies? 

Why should parents believe anything that comes from MCPS in a Community Message? 

On Friday, May 24, 2024, MCPS sent out a Community Message that stated:

"Final decisions will not be made until the Board approves the budget on June 11."

And today (May 30th) a MCPS administrator sent out this letter:  

"...decision has been made to close the Montgomery Virtual Academy..."






Friday, August 16, 2019

Affected neighborhood communities were NOT involved in the site selection committee for the proposed @mcps @mocoboe school

The City of Gaithersburg is considering selling Kelley Park, including most of the athletic fields, playgrounds, and green space, so that an elementary school could be built on the land.
The proposed school already has land to be built on which can accommodate the needs and traffic of a large school. Although Kelley Park will not be completely torn down, some parts of it will be lost to the school and the use of Kelley Park may be restricted while school is in session.
With lack of community involvement thus far in this decision, it is important to understand what is at stake, and how to let your voice be heard.

WHY IS THIS PARK SPECIAL?

Kelley Park, built with $550,000 of State and Gaithersburg City funds through the program know as Open Space, is the only multi-use park east of 355.  People from across the region come and use these facilities.

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Residents want land reserved now for future Montgomery Co. schools

WASHINGTON — More public schools eventually will be needed in Montgomery County, and land should be set aside for them today.
That’s what several residents told county leaders at a public hearing Tuesday night.
The Montgomery County Council is considering a plan for new development in a 460-acre, bowtie-shaped area centered near the intersection of Rockville Pike and Montrose Road.
The White Flint 2 Sector Plan recommends changing largely commercial properties, especially shopping centers, into mixed-use centers.
That could lead to as many as 6,000 new homes in the area, and existing residents say more schools are needed sooner than later.
“Two years ago, we testified that a tsunami of students is headed to the Walter Johnson Cluster. It is now arriving,” said Wendy Calhoun.
“Take this opportunity now to reserve land in this plan, and don’t kick the can down the road. We just can’t afford it,” Kip Edwards, president of the Garrett Park Estates-White Flint Park Civic Association, told the council...

Friday, December 11, 2015

Councilmembers and Planning Board Chair Question MCPS About Capacity Plans

Local leaders are asking questions in hopes of assuring constituents there is room for more development in the Bethesda area.
Montgomery County Council President George Leventhal, Education Committee Chair Craig Rice, District 1 Councilmember Roger Berliner and Planning Board Chair Casey Anderson sent a letter to Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) Acting Superintendent Larry Bowers to ask about the school system’s plans to address future capacity needs in the Bethesda-area school clusters of Bethesda-Chevy Chase, Walter Johnson and Walt Whitman.
Leventhal talked about the importance of the letter at his weekly briefing on Nov. 30th.

 http://www.mymcmedia.org/councilmembers-and-planning-board-chair-question-mcps-about-capacity-plans-video/

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

City of Gaithersburg: "this system for providing facilities is not working." @mcps @mocoboe

Testimony of the City of Gaithersburg Before the Montgomery County Board of Education on the Superintendent's Recommended FY 2016 Capital Budget and the FY 2017-2022 Capital Improvements Program

November 12, 2015

Good evening President O’Neil and members of the Board of Education. My name is Jud Ashman and I have the honor of being the Mayor of the City of Gaithersburg. I am here this evening to provide the City’s comments on the Interim Superintendent’s recommended Capital Improvements Plan. Unfortunately, we were not able to testify on November 9th as it conflicted with the Swearing in Ceremony for newly elected officials in Gaithersburg.
I’m joined tonight by several members of the City Council.

We appreciate the work that went into both the CIP and the supplemental recommendations. While the City would like to speak to all of the concerns related to clusters serving Gaithersburg students, in the interest of time I will touch on a few key issues.

Gaithersburg Cluster

It is projected that between FY 2017 and FY 2022, enrollment at each of the four elementary schools in the Gaithersburg cluster will exceed capacity by 172 seats or more. Since 2007, school enrollment in the Gaithersburg cluster has increased by nearly 600 students.

As part of the Interim Superintendent’s recommendations, we noted that an addition to alleviate the overutilization of Summit Hall was tabled due to the concerns associated with the timing and incorporation of the addition with the scheduled rev/ex of the school. The City strongly supports the community’s request to accelerate the construction of an addition or the rev/ex to alleviate overutilization as expeditiously as possible. We understand Summit Hall was identified by a recent County OLO study as a school whose FACT score may change, resulting in a change in its order in the queue. We look forward to the recommendations of the FACT Review Committee and hope that the project moves forward on a more appropriate timeline.

The Council and I are dismayed that no real solution was offered to address the overutilization of Gaithersburg Elementary School. More than 800 students currently walk to school and another solution is needed that does not involve busing children to another school outside the community. A permanent addition to the existing building or complete rev/ex would allow the community to remain whole and reduce the long-term operational costs of busing.

We support the Superintendent’s recommendation to convene a Tri-Cluster Roundtable Discussion to address the overutilization of elementary schools in the Gaithersburg Cluster and elsewhere. Not to get too far off topic, but we actually think it’s a good idea to include the Quince Orchard Cluster in this discussion. We certainly favor collaboration between the clusters, but Summit Hall needs relief today. Postponing the solution again to a long-standing problem is unacceptable. The students and parents have been patiently waiting for a solution to be proposed, and it is troubling that the timing for that relief is now uncertain.

Quince Orchard Cluster

First off, we are happy to see the Brown Station Elementary rev/ex move forward and we thank you for keeping that on track. We support the QO Cluster requests for needed projects at Quince Orchard High School and Fields Road Elementary.

As you know, Rachel Carson Elementary is overcapacity by more than 375 students this year and already has 11 relocatable classrooms to cope with the situation. The school community has repeatedly expressed that the status quo is unacceptable. The City appreciates that several solutions were considered to address the overutilization of Rachel Carson. However, we respectfully disagree with the recommendation that the addition to Dufief will be a viable long term solution; we believe that a new elementary school should be programmed in this CIP for the Quince Orchard Cluster. We came to this conclusion based on current and historic student generation projections for Carson – Carson’s enrollment is nearly 200 higher than the projection from six years ago – and because we believe there will be additional needs to relieve other QO Cluster schools. Our concern is that enrollment at Carson and in the Cluster will continue to increase at a faster pace than currently projected and exacerbate the problem even further.

Regardless of the solution the Board approves for Carson, the timeline must be revised to address this situation in the current CIP. Another six-plus years of this is unacceptable.
Northwest Cluster


We are very pleased that a classroom addition is scheduled for Diamond Elementary School. The school’s core facilities are inadequate to meet the needs of the current school population. We strongly support the Board’s recommended completion date of 2018 to address this crucial capacity project.

Overall for the City

We recognize the solutions to the overutilization of schools in Gaithersburg are complicated and costly. We come to you and to the County year after year to advocate for our school communities – and we’re always mindful that if we advocate for Project A, it will potentially take away from a worthy Project B.

While MCPS does a fabulous job educating our children, this system for providing facilities is not working. The proposed CIP recommendations are an unsustainable solution to a persistent problem. Building additions on to existing schools can sometimes be an adequate solution, but often it’s only a temporary relief – and ultimately more costly in the long run than programming new schools. We respectfully suggest that MCPS needs to adopt a better way to project long-term needs in order to adequately plan for them.

The time to demand adequate funding for our educational infrastructure – or look to fundamentally change how it is funded - is upon us.

We’re not just saying this, we are trying to proactively help. The City recently created a mechanism within our APFO that will, for the first time, allow us to collect funds from new developments to be earmarked for school facilities projects. While this won’t solve all of our problems, the Council and I feel it’s an important step in assisting your efforts to meet the needs of all students by helping to further contribute funding to our schools.

Gaithersburg continues to be an active partner in improving the situation for our students. While we aren’t involved in the administration of our schools, we have a long and impressive history of educational support and cooperation with MCPS and the Board of Education. We are often recognized for the comprehensive and creative partnership approaches we take in working with you to prepare our youth for their future success.

We join you in advocating for our most precious resource – our youth – and we have made additional school construction funding a priority in the City’s legislative agenda in Annapolis. We ask that every consideration be given to ensure our youth receive the highest quality education possible in facilities that reflect your commitment to excellence.

Thank you for this opportunity to testify before you tonight. Thank you for all you do. I would be pleased to answer any questions.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Update!! Exclusive Breaking News: Bowers Gives Away 61.25 Acres of MCPS School Land

UPDATE:
Is your local MCPS school overcrowded? Have you heard the Board of Education complain that they do not have any place to build more schools and that they can only build multi-level, overcrowded schools on too small lots?

Do you like being tricked?

Well Trick or Treat time is here, and the Parents' Coalition has heard that the Board of Education and Superintendent Larry Bowers have a big trick for parents this week!

The Trick is that without any public process or Board of Education public discussion or vote, Superintendent Larry Bowers is giving away 61.25 acres of open public school land.  

The Treat is that the land is being handed over to a no bid vendor.  

Where is this land located in the County?  It doesn't matter.  
Public school land is a valuable asset and its disposition should be discussed in public by the land owner, the Board of Education.  
The land could be used to build a school, it could be sold, or it could be traded.  The possibilities are endless, but, once again, usable public school land will disappear from the Board of Education inventory without any public process.  





We have seen over 176 acres of MCPS public school land lost since 1994.  

 
Say good-bye to another 61.25 acres this week and add it to the list of dedicated, public school land that was given in trust to the Montgomery County Public Schools Board of Education for the benefit of public school children, but not used for the educational benefit of our children.  

Happy Halloween!  

 

Monday, October 26, 2015

Letter to Council: MCPS MISINFORMATION AT THE COUNTY COUNCIL EDUCATION COMMITTEE WORKSHOP!!

To: "Councilmember Berliner" <Councilmember.Berliner@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Elrich" <Councilmember.Elrich@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Floreen" <Councilmember.Floreen@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Hucker" <Councilmember.Hucker@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Katz" <Councilmember.Katz@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Leventhal" <Councilmember.Leventhal@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Navarro" <Councilmember.Navarro@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Rice" <Councilmember.Rice@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "Councilmember Riemer" <Councilmember.Riemer@montgomerycountymd.gov>, "county council" <county.council@montgomerycountymd.gov>, MCP-Chair@mncppc-mc.org 

Sent: Tuesday, October 13, 2015 6:03:24 PM

Subject: MCPS MISINFORMATION AT THE COUNTY COUNCIL EDUCATION COMMITTEE WORKSHOP!!

Dear Montgomery County Councilmembers,

Once again, Mr. James Song, MCPS Director of Facilities, has lied to you about an important fact that you asked him during the Council Education Committee meeting regarding the proposed B-CC Middle School #2 on Monday October 12, 2015. This is fundamental information which has led Montgomery County leaders, including the MCPS BOE, to base their decisions on misinformation.
When asked whether there are any MCPS middle schools on small sites of less than 10 acres not adjacent to parks, and with larger populations, Mr. Song, hesitantly, responded “Yes.”
Not true!
The MCPS FY2016 CIP, Appendix J, which lists all MCPS school properties, shows that all 4 existing middle schools on less than 10 acres are co-located with a park which doubles their property sizes, allowing for all needed amenities, including parking and standard size program spaces within the school. In addition all 4 schools have far less than 1200 student capacity! Here are the true facts:
  • Lakelands Park Middle School - MCPS Capacity 1,122 - 8.1 acres + 11.6 acre Lakelands Park with lighted fields for baseball, softball, soccer and other team sports, a picnic pavilion, and Billy’s Playground, a fully handicapped-accessible play area for young children. Includes a synthetic turf field.
  • Newport Mill Middle School – MCPS Capacity 825 - 8.4 acres + 10+ acres Newport Mill Park with a playground, three softball fields, soccer field, and three multi-use fields, 3 basketball courts, 2 picnic areas.
  • Parkland Middle School – MCPS Capacity 948 - 9.18 acres + 8.5 acre Parkland Local Park with 2 baseball fields and 2 soccer fields.
  • Earle B. Wood Middle School – MCPS Capacity 961 - 8.5 acres + 10+ acres Earle B. Wood Park with one softball field and one baseball field (with a soccer field overlay), two softball fields under construction, tennis courts, basketball court.
Once again, information was manipulated and withheld to sway decisions, and the deceit only proves that they know what they are doing is wrong! Withholding facts in order to manipulate has been the sanctioned MCPS behavior throughout this entire process, including the Site Selection Committee meetings. Repeated lies only engender questions about what other information has been withheld to influence important decisions about this school. You, our elected leaders, cannot make informed decisions in the best interests of your constituents if you are not told the truth!
We thank you for emphasizing the issues about equity and the importance of creating a great school that is differentiated with excellent programs and academic offerings, compensating for its many shortcomings. We truly would love a superior school in the “Eastern” part of the cluster. You are correct that thousands of constituents and parents will be enraged when they discover the school does not deliver comparable academic or athletic programs as its sister school, Westland MS. However, while Mr. Song stated that there are “no bells and whistles” in this school, he failed to explain how an outstanding school can be created when it is missing core spaces, including:
  • Less than required ESOL rooms
  • Smaller classrooms
  • Cafeteria and auditorium 25% too small to support the needs of 1200 Students.
Schoool administrators will be pre-occupied with addressing these shortfalls, and students will pay the price!
During the meeting you mentioned the importance of master planning. MCPS has made a decision with no consideration of the greater good or the County master plan. Instead, they have used lies and deceit to achieve their goals, taking us backward instead of forward. A smarter solution would be to master plan a new school near the Purple Line, giving parents and students alike access to resources throughout the year. It is shameful that a golden opportunity is being missed to create an exemplary, cooperative 21st Century school and park facility that is central and accessible to the greater community, delivering more value for the $55Million cost to taxpayers.
We are looking to you as our leaders! If you continue to be misinformed and lied to by MCPS, how are you going to ensure that this will be an equitable or superior school for our children?? How are you going to ensure that fair and responsible decisions are being made by MCPS??
This school will be a 50-year legacy left to the community by MCPS and the Montgomery County Council. There is no excuse for the actions of elected officials who prioritize development over our children and quality of life, once a core value in Montgomery County. It's high time for Montgomery County leaders to step up to what is right, and not accept lies, deceit, and manipulation.

Susie Cooper, Mary Maday and other future BCC Middle School #2 Parents


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Letter to the Editor: Invest in more schools, not bigger ones

The Oct. 13 Metro article “County school enrollment tops previous records” brought needed attention to the increased enrollment and crowding of Montgomery County schools. Our neighborhood school, Ashburton Elementary, has capacity for about 650 students. Enrollment exceeds 900 — representing a 57 percent increase since 2007. Unfortunately, the county’s solution to crowding is to build even bigger schools on existing sites. In fact, Montgomery County Public Schools is considering an addition to Walter Johnson High School to bring its capacity to 3,200.
This strategy is in sharp contrast to the “Final School Size Study Report: Impact of Smaller Schools,” published this summer by the Maryland State Department of Education. That report made the following recommendations: elementary schools no larger than 700 children, middle schools capped at a 900-student capacity and high schools to be built for a maximum of 1,700 students. Most schools in our area are larger than these recommendations already, and the county continues to approve new development projects that bring in even more students.  
Unless the county gets creative, schools will continue to suffer from crowding. The long history of high-quality education here will suffer, and so will property values. The county needs to invest in more schools, not bigger ones, before approving more development.
Shannon Ross, Bethesda

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/invest-in-more-schools-not-bigger-ones/2015/10/16/daa38f46-72b6-11e5-ba14-318f8e87a2fc_story.html

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Breaking News: BOE sets up Secret Group to Decide how to put Public Schools in Commercial Office Space


2009: Sign Violated Open Meetings Act
Once again the Board of Education (BOE) is relying on a secret "work group" to make major decisions about PUBLIC schools. 

Yes, we are talking about PUBLIC schools here. So why is the BOE setting up a SECRET committee to discuss and make recommendations about this PUBLIC issue? 

PTA members, as usual, you are being represented on this secret committee by an unknown person who will not be allowed to tell you what is going on at the committee. 

The PUBLIC? They will not be allowed to ATTEND these meetings, they will not be allowed to see the AGENDAS for these meetings, they will not be allowed to see the MINUTES of these meetings.  The press will not be reporting on these meetings because they will not be allowed to attend. 

This is Long Range Public School Planning that intentionally EXCLUDES the Public.  

Friday, March 20, 2015

Leggett Lives on 5 Acres, But Wants 4 acres for Elementary Schools

Sardines
From the Sentinel article on County Executive Ike Legget's plan to develop the current MCPS Shady Grove bus depot for housing, we learn that the elementary school site for this future development will be just 4 acres of land!

4 acres? When did Montgomery County citizens decide that the 12 acre standard that they prefer should be trashed in favor of 4 acres?  They didn't.  The decision to smash our school children into the smallest sized lots possible is being made by our Apple Ballot elected officials without public input.

County Executive Ike Leggett lives in a single family house on 5 acres.  Can we invite 700-1,000 elementary school kids over to his house one day so that he can get a feel for what that many kids on 4 acres would feel like? (We can rope off the tennis courts to make the site smaller.)

Back in 1986, Montgomery County citizens actually participated in the formation of a Long Range Planning Policy for Montgomery County Public Schools.  In that Policy, the size of elementary school sites was to be 12 usable acres of land.

In 2005, the Montgomery County Board of Education shredded that Policy without input from the public.

Montgomery County parents and guardians are now left without a Policy that sets minimum school site sizes.  The size of our school sites is being set by elected officials and developers that seek to put as many children as possible on the tiniest parcel of land, smashing them in like they are sardines.

You can read the lost Long Range Planning Policy at this link and learn about what parents, guardians and citizens in Montgomery County wanted for a long range public school planning policy.

Friday, March 6, 2015

Roger Berliner's Saturday Farce

On Saturday, March 7th at a location we won't mention, Councilmember Roger Berliner is holding a PR event.  The claim is that the event is to "engage" community members on school planning issues.

The "engagement" for this event requires that if you have a question, you must submit it in advance!  Your question can then be screened and the "appropriate" questions will be selected for presentation at the PR event.

The event takes up an entire Saturday. Parents, you have an entire Saturday to spend sitting in a room waiting to see if your question is deemed appropriate for this panel, right?

Here's what the sign up form for this PR event states: 
Do you have a question about schools and transportation? We want to hear it. Add it to our list of questions from Forum registrants. At the Forum we will draw from this list, answering as many questions as time permits.

Thanks Councilmember Roger Berliner for providing a concrete example of what is wrong with the public school planning process in Montgomery County!  Parent voices are not being heard! Parent voices are screened, silenced and muted!

The PUBLIC is no longer a part of the PROCESS! Click here to read about the Lost School Planning Process.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Starr Wants All the Power, BOE to Be Neutered, Public to Be Excluded

At the March 24, 2014, Board of Education meeting the Board of Education will unanimously (we have a crystal ball) vote to give all their power related to the use of public school land over to the Superintendent.  

Why not? Board of Education members are just figure heads anyway.  And besides, by delegating all these decisions to the Superintendent the PUBLIC will have NO CLUE what is going on!

That's the way it should be in Montgomery County, right?  
Land use decisions should be made behind closed doors with no public notification or comment period, right? 

You know what they say...













Sunday, March 16, 2014

Empty Middle School Sits Right Next to Elem. School with Trailers

Empty classrooms right next to a school that is overcrowded, and yet, Superintendent Starr says that MCPS has no use for the empty classrooms.

Meadow Hall Elementary School is  in upper left of this image.  
Broome Middle School is lower right.
Yes, Broome Middle School is located right next door to Meadow Hall Elementary School. Remember Broome is the empty school building that Superintendent Joshua Starr has personally determined is not needed for public school students.

Meadow Hall is...overcrowded and currently has 4 classroom trailers in use at the school.

What other Maryland Counties have the luxury of not using empty classrooms when the school right next door is overcrowded?

Friday, March 14, 2014

Over 10 School Buildings Controlled by MCPS, But Not Used for Classrooms

Here's a follow up to the listing of public school buildings under the control of Montgomery County Government.  This list shows school buildings that are under the control of MCPS, but are not used for public school classrooms.  See the column titled "status".  Could any of these buildings be re-opened and used for current public school students?  Has the Board of Education discussed long range planning for public school classroom needs in the last 10 years, or does the BOE just rubber stamp whatever the MCPS construction department brings to them as "plans"?

*Note:  These two blog posts are not the complete list of closed MCPS school sites. 


Starr Doesn't Need Empty Middle School

Here's an entire MCPS middle school that sits empty.  
Could it be used to get current students out of classroom trailers? 

Superintendent Joshua Starr has told County Executive Ike Leggett that the classrooms aren't needed and won't be needed for at least the next 6 years, and so Montgomery County can use the building.

Should the Board of Education have discussed this decision, or can Superintendent Starr simply declare an entire middle school building useless to the needs of current public school students?      

By the numbers, MCPS isn't in a capacity crisis.

Not according to the State of Maryland. 

According to Maryland Public School Construction standards, MCPS has seats for 155,825 students. 

Current enrollment is 151,289.

Over 20 Unused Public School Sites controlled by Montgomery County Government

Here is a partial list of closed MCPS schools.  

There are over 20 properties on this list, each representing a former MCPS school that was closed when enrollment declined. These former MCPS schools are currently under the control of Montgomery County government.  We know that at least 2 of these school buildings will have empty classrooms this year.

Now that enrollment has increased have any of these sites been evaluated for re-opening?  Public school construction funds already paid to build these public school buildings, but they aren't benefiting public school students in need of classroom space today. 

Where is the long range planning for public school classrooms? That process was gutted in 2005. Why do any long range planning? 


Read what Montgomery County has to say about closed school sites at this link(June 2017 Update:  Montgomery County has taken down this link since this blog post was written. The link now goes to an archived screen shot of the County's website page on unused school sites and buildings.)


Closed Schools
Peary High School13300 Arctic AvenueMelvin J. Berman Hebrew AcademyLease
Aspen Hill Elementary School4915 Aspen Hill RoadSheppard Pratt Health Systems, Inc.Lease
Alta Vista Elementary School5615 Beech AvenueBeth Country Day SchoolLease
Brookmont Elementary School4800 Sangamore RoadWashington Waldorf SchoolLease
English Manor Elementary School4511 Bestor AvenueThe Children's Learning CenterLease
Lower Parkside Elementary School9504 Burnett AvenueAcorn Hill School, Inc.Lease
Forest Grove Elementary School9805 Dameron DriveHoly Cross HospitalLease
Dennis Avenue Health Center2000 Dennis AvenueSpanish Catholic Center, Inc.Lease
Holiday Park Senior Center3950 Ferrara DriveMental Health AssociationLease
1st Amendment
Holiday Park Senior Center3950 Ferrara DriveInteragesLease
Lone Oak Center1010 Grandin AvenueCenters For The Handicapped IncLease
1st Amendment
Fernwood Elementary School6801 Greentree RoadThe Woods AcademyLease
Gude Drive Shelter600 E Gude DriveMobile Medical Care, Inc.Lease
Randolph Junior High School11710 Hunters LaneCharles E. Smith Jewish Day SchoolLease
Montgomery Hills Junior High School2010 Linden LaneYeshiva of Greater Washington, Inc.Lease
Congressional Elementary School300 Lorraine DriveThe Hebrew Home of Greater Washington, Inc.Lease
Hillandale Elementary School10501 New Hampshire AvenueCenters For The Handicapped IncLease
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueMaryland Child ServicesLease
1st Amendment
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueCasa de MontessoriLease
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueKappa Alpha PsiLease
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueColesville Council of Community Congregations, Inc.Lease
1st Amendment
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueMontgomery Volunteer Dental Clinic, Inc.Lease
1st Amendment
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueRaising Hispanic Academic Achievement, Inc.Lease
Colesville Elementary School14015 New Hampshire AvenueBethah AssociatesLease
Clara Barton Community Center7425 MacArthur BoulevardClara Barton Day Care Inc.License
1st Amendment
2nd Amendment
Arylawn Elementary School5650 Oakmont AvenueYMCALease
1st Amendment
2nd Amendment
Georgetown Hills Elementary School11614 Seven Locks RoadThe Ivymount SchoolLease
1st Amendment
MacDonald Knolls Elementary School10611 Tenbrook DriveCenters For The Handicapped IncLease
1st Amendment
Broome School751 Twinbrook ParkwayThreshold Services, Inc.Lease
Pleasant View Elementary School3015 Kensington Blvd, KensingtonCrossway CommunityMaster Lease with HOC
Program Management Agreement
Amendment to Program Management Agreement