Showing posts with label abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abuse. Show all posts

Monday, November 18, 2024

‘Our current path is not sustainable’: Montgomery Co. schools superintendent, council look at challenges to school funding

Montgomery County’s Superintendent of Schools Thomas Taylor told the county council that he’s focused on the tough fiscal picture ahead for the school system that educates more than 161,500 students.

“What is clear in my examination of the budget, and as illustrated in the data that you have before you today, is that our current path is not sustainable,” Taylor said at a county council work session on Tuesday.

Taylor and Board of Education President Karla Silvestre were among the school officials at the work session on the school system’s “cost drivers” — expenses that fuel the budget.

Craig Howard, the county council’s new executive director, explained that over a period of 10 years, FYs 2015-25, the operating budget grew by 3.9% on average each year.

In June, the county council approved a $3.3 billion operating budget for FY 2025.

Noting that nearly 90% of the operating budget is spent on staffing, Taylor said, “The system must engage in a thorough reevaluation of resource allocation.”..

‘Our current path is not sustainable’: Montgomery Co. schools superintendent, council look at challenges to school funding - WTOP News

Monday, June 10, 2024

Board of Education to Raid Student Activity Funds. ***Complaint Filed with MoCo Inspector General***

 Mon 6/10/2024 3:41 PM

To:  Megan Davey Limarzi, Esq. 

       Montgomery County Office of the Inspector General 
       ig@montgomerycountymd.gov
In reviewing the Agenda for the Montgomery County Board of Education's June 11, 2024, business meeting we were shocked to read a Resolution that discussed using Independent Student Activity Funds (IAF) as an option for funding a MCPS Operating Budget expenditure.  
Buried in the Montgomery County Board of Education's Agenda Item 6.6 for June 11, 2024, is the following sentence: 
...A total of $14,225,000 is projected to be funded in the FY 2023–2028 CIP, and $10,775,000 is projected to be funded in the FY 2025 Operating Budget or the Independent Student Activity Funds...
The Resolution does not give any further explanation as to how the superintendent would accomplish this transfer of student funds.  
MCPS Student funds ...IAFs for each school are to be used for the benefit of the student body currently in attendance...
We have reviewed the MCPS Financial Manual chapter on MCPS Independent Activity Funds (IAF) and do not find any exception that allows the Board of Education to steal funds from student accounts at neighborhood schools.  
IAF funds are raised through student fees at sporting events, student ticket sales at musical and drama performances, yearbook sales, senior dues, field trip fees, memorial funds (deceased students), student parking permits, and student picture sales. We are not aware of any policy or regulation that permits the Montgomery County Board of Education to use these funds to fund the Operating Budget.
If MCPS student funds can be used to fund the MCPS Operating Budget, please advise how that would be accomplished and we will make that information available to parents and guardians so they are aware of how fees they pay into their local school can be diverted by the Board of Education.   
Thank you for your review of this issue.  

Janis Zink Sartucci
Parents' Coalition of Montgomery County, MD

Formed in 2002, the Parents' Coalition of Montgomery County, Maryland seeks to achieve the goals of coherent, content-rich curriculum standards; high expectations combined with timely remediation and acceleration; a wider range of educational options for parents and children; greater transparency and accountability; and meaningful community input.

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

MCPS Principal sexually harassed female employees to the point they changed their appearances to avoid attention, report says

 


"Those complaints alleged, among other things, acts of bullying, retaliation, sexual harassment and unfair hiring practices," the investigation reads.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. — Years of bullying, sexual harassment and a culture where some staff felt threatened, are just some of the findings of an investigation into the former Montgomery County Public Schools Principal Joel Beidleman, according to a recently released report

In September, the Office of the Montgomery County Inspector General (OIG) announced that it would open two investigations related to allegations against Farquhar Middle School Principal Dr. Joel Beidleman and Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) handling of misconduct complaints. Officials claimed he was unanimously promoted during a June meeting to become the principal at an area high school – all while being under investigation for sexual harassment...


//www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/maryland/investigation-misconduct-former-mcps-principal-dr-joel-beidleman-released/65-f43e0399-bfcc-4744-8519-76b62ef38588

Sunday, December 18, 2022

ABC7: Furniture, headphones, tires: OIG finds $133k in illicit spending from MCPS DOT employee

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Md. (7News) — Charles Ewald was second in charge of MCPS' Department of Transportation.

The division has 1,800 employees and an annual budget of $120 million.

Last fall, Montgomery County's Office of the Inspector General (OIG) dug into Ewald's MCPS charge card statements and found $133,000 in prohibited spending...

Furniture, headphones, tires: OIG finds $133k in illicit spending from MCPS DOT employee | WJLA

Friday, December 16, 2022

Report: MCPS’ Department of Transportation Abused Use of its Credit Cards @mcps @mocoboe

Montgomery County Public School’s Department of Transportation (DOT) abused its use of purchase cards [CREDIT CARDS], according to a 15-page report released Thursday by Montgomery County Inspector General Megan Davey Limarzi.

An earlier internal audit by the school district found “questionable purchases,” including gift cards, furniture, and other purchases that were shipped to an employee’s home.

The Office of Inspector General (OIG) reviewed $570,000 worth of transactions from July 2020 to June 2022 and ruled that $133,000 of these purchases by a former DOT assistant director were prohibited by MCPS policy.

The OIC and MCPS noted that $6,500 was spent on items that were considered not for use by MCPS.

According to the report, “The OIG also found that MCPS DOT management and staff regularly violated MCPS P-Card [CREDIT CARD] policies.”..

Report: MCPS' Department of Transportation Abused Use of its Purchase Cards - Montgomery Community Media (mymcmedia.org)

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Baltimore teacher says he was fired after calling Child Protective Services

 “I saw [the teacher] attacking three kids while we were in circle time because she was very, very upset and she wanted to make a point, keep the kids in check,” Shulevitz told Project Baltimore.

“What do you mean by attacking?” asked Project Baltimore Investigative Reporter Chris Papst.

“Hitting,” said Shulevitz. “Hitting the students. I was shocked.”..

https://foxbaltimore.com/newsletter-daily/baltimore-teacher-fired-calling-child-protective-services?fbclid=IwAR0OG3zyp7JpywacZyYgI4HeaWTBxjP_22MHlEBNV3Va2JxKWtYqR_fv7ME

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Working for change after video showed girl with autism being dragged off Va. school bus

7 On Your Side has obtained more video of what happened before and after a bus driver and aide dragged a 9-year old girl who has autism off a Prince Williams County Public Schools bus in Manassas, Virginia. We first reported on this story in September, after obtaining a portion of the same video... https://wjla.com/features/7-on-your-side/watch-bus-driver-allows-9-year-old-with-autism-to-ride-on-the-floor-of-bus

Monday, January 25, 2021

Montgomery Co. parent says bodycams show police abuse, threaten child inside school


The parent of a Montgomery County Public Schools student is suing both the school system and the county police department following an incident in 2020 involving her Maryland child.

Parent Shanta Grant, who filed the lawsuit, said her son was able to walk away from East Silver Spring Elementary last year without being noticed. She said once police found the boy, about two-tenths of a mile away, officers were verbally abusive, threatening, and even put a handcuff on the child once he was taken back to the school...

https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2021/01/montgomery-co-parent-says-body-cams-show-police-abuse-threaten-child-inside-mcps-school/?fbclid=IwAR2ATtlMLzxZuTG86PO_num2qezaqq34K6D42RK_W7runJWoz_USEfhjkQ8

Monday, April 20, 2020

Jack Smith contract litigation from Calvert County. Now Smith is withholding $800K Contract Term from MoCo Board of Ed.

Let's review what happened when Jack R. Smith was the Superintendent of Calvert County Public Schools. 
SoMdNews Online
March 5, 2015
...Members of the Calvert board of education claim they were unaware of the executive team contracts held between the employees and Smith and said because the contracts were signed with Smith and not the board, the provisions stated in the contract were not to be extended past the June 30, 2013, date...
SoMdNewsOnlineSeptember 2, 2015
...At the end of the 2013 school year, Smith announced his resignation as Calvert’s superintendent of schools to become chief academic officer for the state. In the following months, some Calvert County Board of Education members uncovered the amount of money Smith was permitted to take from the school system in comprehensive benefits.While Smith’s contracts paid him an annual base salary of $169,000, his total compensation was upward of $300,000 in his last year as superintendent. Smith said the additional income was due to benefits, including life and health insurance coverage that will continue for life for him and his wife, paid by the Calvert school system and approved by the previous school board.Smith also was permitted to cash in annual sick leave he hadn’t used. Though Smith’s salary remained at $169,000, his take-home amounts increased each year.Smith also had granted similar contracts to his executive team members. Many Calvert school board members, including current board member Kelly McConkey, were not aware of these contracts.“I couldn’t believe somebody could do what they did and be promoted to a position of importance like that,”..
Now, here we are in 2020, in the beginning of a global pandemic where schools are closed and the public is not allowed to attend public meetings.  

****************
Now let's look at what is happening this week in Montgomery County Public Schools. 
  • Tomorrow the Montgomery County Board of Education will be given a MEMORANDUM that purports to detail a CONTRACT.  
  • The Board of Education is to vote on the CONTRACT without ever actually seeing it.
  • Based on the years of litigation generated in Calvert County by then Superintendent Jack Smith's signing of contracts one would think that Superintendent Smith would be providing Montgomery County Board of Education members with the actual CONTRACTS that they are voting on.  But that won't happen tomorrow, April 21, 2020.
On April 21, 2020, the Montgomery County Board of Education will vote to spend up to $800,000 for an artificial turf football field for the City of Gaithersburg without even knowing it. 

Here is the MEMORANDUM that Superintendent Jack R. Smith is presenting to the Montgomery County Board of Education: 
Jack Smith Memo to Board of Ed.


But here is the ACTUAL CONTRACT that Superintendent Jack Smith has sent to the City of Gaithersburg.  
The Parents' Coalition has obtained the actual document and made it public.  


In the actual Contract it says that the City of Gaithersburg shall construct a field of THEIR choice, either artificial turf or natural grass.  The Contract says that if the City of Gaithersburg builds an artificial turf field then the Board of Education shall reimburse the City for up to $800,000 for the design and construction of an artificial turf field.  










On April 21, 2020, the Montgomery County Board of Education will unknowingly vote to spend $800,000 on a luxury item for the City of Gaithersburg, meanwhile children in Montgomery County are out of school, missing meals and families are in crisis.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

"On top of that, the toilet paper dispensers are extremely inefficient and only allow for 2 to 3 squares to be broken off at a time. I have over 100 signatures on a petition advocating for better toilet paper from Cabin John’s 8th Grade alone."




The second topic is purchasing more buses. MCPS has too many students and too few buses. I’ve seen the crisis going on right now when it comes to bus space and overcrowding. I have personally witnessed the horrible seating, students (including me) sitting on the floor, squeezing 5 people in a three seater and witnessing an actual fistfight over who could be the third person in a three seater. I’ve talked to hundreds of students who feel the same way.

Monday, December 16, 2019

Baltimore County Public Schools whistleblower has message for employees, asks others to speak out

A whistleblower, who recently blew the top off a concealed second-known shredding of financial documents at Baltimore County Public Schools last year, has a message for other employees of the school system: “Think about how much you have seen, and what you know.  Has your silence made any of it better?”
The source, who recently came forward to two media outlets under the condition of preserved anonymity, says others should also find a way to speak out. “The only thing silence buys is more corruption. The truth will set you free… tell someone; a reporter or [WBFF-TV] Project Baltimore…”
“I’ve seen taxpayer money wasted in the millions. I’ve watched as our peers are mistreated, wronged, even fired for defending themselves or asking a simple question. If you question them, the regime will make an example of you.  They think they are above the law. It’s a culture of fear and the closer you get to retirement, the more silent you become…”
After a school board directive prohibited certain employees from destroying documents last year, two high-level executive directors suddenly disassembled a file room containing financial documents during the first phase of an active procurement audit – a room which held years’ worth of records not previously disturbed, according to the whistleblower...

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

“Clearly, the system holds them back and restricts their opportunity to thrive,” [Christopher] Barclay said. “That level of neglect must and can be addressed.”

Community Calls for Education Equity for ‘Black and Brown’ Students
Group makes list of recommendations to address achievement gap
...
The coalition said that to eradicate the achievement gap, MCPS needs to:
• provide incentives to recruit and retain strong teachers and principals in high needs schools
• increase access to professional learning
• ensure minority students have access to advanced-level courses
• engage families in their students’ education

• work closely with education equity advocates to quickly implement services...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Christopher Barclay was a Montgomery County Board of Education member from December 2006 to 2016. 
Montgomery Co. school board member pays back almost $1,500 in unauthorized expenses
The Washington Post
May 22, 2014

Montgomery County Board of Education member and County Council candidate Christopher S. Barclay has reimbursed the school system for nearly $1,500 in unauthorized expenses since 2012, including restaurant meals and purchases from an online travel site, records show.
The expenses were charged to a board-issued credit card that members and other senior school officials may use for meals, travel and lodging related to official business. School system spokesman Dana Tofig said Thursday that the personal expenses on Barclay’s card were flagged during a monthly review of card use. He said Barclay has fully repaid the school system.
The reimbursements were first disclosed by the Parents’ Coalition of Montgomery County, a watchdog group that presses the school system for greater transparency. The information came in response to a public records request, and WJLA (Channel 7) reported on the expenses Wednesday...


Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Elected official used school district credit card for personal purchases

ABC7:  Elected official used school district credit card for personal purchases | WJLA.com

ROCKVILLE, Md. (WJLA) - A Montgomery County Board of Education member who made personal purchases with taxpayer dollars vows he'll never do it again.

Current member and former board president, Chris Barclay, used his school district American Express card to buy meals, rent cars, and stay at hotels. Expense reports obtained by ABC7 show the 53-year-old made 14 unauthorized purchases between Jan. 2012 and Feb. 2014. All combined, the charges siphoned $1450.89 from school district coffers.

Barclay spent $906 on Hotwire.com, $210 at a Lancaster Pa. Ramada Inn, $73 at Enterprise Rent-A-Car, and hundreds more at stores and restaurants like CVS, Safeway, 7-Eleven, Armand's Chicago Pizzeria, and Popeyes. Barclay claimed it was an honest mistake all 14 times, but records show he then took months, and in one case more than a year, to pay back his debts -- interest-free.

"How was it caught," ABC7's Kevin Lewis asked Barclay during a sit-down interview.

"I can't go through line-by-line. I don't know all of them to say this one was this way, or that one was that way. I'm sorry, I just can't do that," Barclay said.

Ironically enough, the Silver Spring resident, who's currently campaigning for the hotly contested District 5 Montgomery County Council seat, sits on MCPS' Fiscal Management Committee.

"I mistakenly used the board credit card and anytime it was brought to my attention, I paid it back," Barclay, who earns $25,000 a year as a BOE member added.

"Was it ever intentional?" Lewis asked Barclay.

"Intentional, no," Barclay replied.

"All 14 times, it was purely a mistake?" Lewis asked in return.

"Like I said, I made a mistake. Anytime it was brought to my attention, I took care of it," Barclay fired back.

"That's using taxpayer money to give yourself a no-interest loan," said Janis Sartucci. "This was simply his way of fronting himself money."

Sartucci is a key leader of the Montgomery County Parents' Coalition, an organization advocating for better government transparency. Sartucci would like MCPS to post every school district credit card statement online for public review.

"This is a situation where the cards clearly can be used for non-authorized purchases without any oversight," Sartucci added. "We'd like to see that change."

Take food, for example. Since Jan. 2012, Barclay has bought 131 meals with his school district credit card; a tab worth more than $3,800. Yet records show that 55-percent of those purchases (77 in total) violated school district policy as Barclay failed to turn in an itemized receipt and/or identify who he was meeting with.

Montgomery County Public Schools' finance rules clearly state: "Itemized meal receipts must be submitted... for reimbursement." And, "Restaurant receipts must be annotated with the names of the meeting participants."

Despite those unmet standards, Board of Education Chief of Staff, Roland Ikheloa, approved all 131 of Barclay's meals, receipt or not. On that list, a $174 lunch at Ruby Tuesday, a $78 dinner at Matchbox Pizza, and a $75 meal at a Rockville Thai restaurant.

"I work with our staff to make sure they have all the information they need," Barclay told ABC7.

"But the information you provided staff went directly against policy," Lewis stated.

"Anytime they [BOE staff members] asked me, what was the information they needed for that receipt, I would provide that information," Barclay responded.

MCPS spokesman Dana Tofig didn't explain why Ikheloa repeatedly bent the rules for Barclay, but instead outlined a behind-the-scenes internal appeals process.

"If there is a question about an expense, then Mr. Ikheloa and/or the board staff will follow up with the board member to get the relevant information. If there is a concern about a specific expense, it is this process that will identify the concern and then it is resolved with the board member," Tofig wrote in an email.

The questionable accounting comes to light after a year of repeated trips to Annapolis, where Superintendent Starr and his cohorts begged state leaders for additional school funding. Starr cited a dramatic spike in student population, a trend that MCPS argues its current budget can't sustain.

"I would say poor is in the eye of the beholder. If this is what Montgomery County considers to be poor, I'd bet there are other counties in the state that might beg to differ."

Unlike MCPS' Board of Education, the Montgomery County Council doesn't issue credit cards to its members. Council spokesman Neil Greenberger says councilmembers pay with cash, submit itemized receipts, and only then are they reimbursed.

"History has proven that there are individuals that get themselves in situations that taint an organization," Greenberger remarked. "Not having credit cards minimizes even an honest mistake."

ABC7 has requested expense reports for all seven other Montgomery County Board of Education members, Superintendent Joshua Starr, and a handful of other top administrators. The school system is still preparing that paperwork.

"This really comes back to the taxpayers and citizens of Montgomery County saying, 'Is this really the best use of our precious education dollars, or is this what people expect from their public school system,'" Sartucci remarked.

"If we request your records two years from now, what would look different?" Lewis asked Barclay.

"I'm sure you won't see me anytime making personal expenses with my school district card," Barclay concluded.


Read more: http://www.wjla.com/articles/2014/05/elected-official-uses-school-district-credit-card-for-personal-purchases-103374.html#ixzz32PVVDbKG
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