Satirical MCPS blog is #1 on Google
Crooked School Board, our satirical sister blog, has been ranking in the top 3 of 49,100 Google search results for the name of MCPS Superintendent Jerry Weast. As of this writing, the blog ranked #1 and #3.
How Montgomery County, Maryland puts politicians, developers and political correctness first - at the expense of the children. | JerryWeast.com | NancyNavarro.com
Crooked School Board, our satirical sister blog, has been ranking in the top 3 of 49,100 Google search results for the name of MCPS Superintendent Jerry Weast. As of this writing, the blog ranked #1 and #3.
Families and neighbors of Seven Locks Elementary School heaped praise on Lt. Gov. Mike Steele for showing so much interest in their desire to save the community landmark, which the school board has slated for demolition.
The American Cancer Society is promoting legislation in Annapolis that would overturn Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) policy of denying children the right to carry sunscreen.
A Bethesda resident is challenging Montgomery County School Superintendent Jerry Weast and the Board of Education, who want to surplus school property so it can be turned into a housing development.
A "battle is brewing over the future of Seven Locks Elementary School in Montgomery County," NBC4-TV of Washington, D.C. reports.
Visiting Seven Locks Elementary School on March 24, Lt. Gov. Mike Steele singled out a first grader wearing a "Save Our Schools" shirt and asked for a closer look.
The Montgomery County Council believes that preserving a "grassy view" along a six-lane highway of strip malls is more important than preserving a thriving neighborhood school.
State Senator John Garagiola will be visiting the Seven Locks Road neighborhood on Saturday, March 26, and he says he wants to hear local constituents' concerns.
Just as the Save Our Schools Coalition ratchets up the political pressure to the County Council and state levels, we learn that Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele will visit the doomed Seven Locks Elementary School on Thursday, March 24.
Montgomery County Councilman Howard Denis, after meeting with local constituents, has "agreed to fight surplusing of Seven Locks" Elementary School.
The Board of Education (BoE) voted March 8 to abolish all references to public hearings, civic organizations and PTAs in a policy document on long-range educational facilities planning.
The Montgomery County Council of Parent Teacher Associations (PTA) called an "emergency meeting" to discuss the Board of Education's vote that strips all mention of the PTA from its long-range educational facilities planning guidelines.
Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) officials say there's no reason for the public to be alarmed, and that worries about the March 8 vote erasing references to the PTA are "misplaced."
While trying to persuade the public that there is no reason to fear the school board's deletion of references to public participation in long-range planning, board member Steve Abrams admits to the Potomac Almanac that the concerns are "arguably legitimate."
Facing opposition from parents and other residents who opposed giving up school land to developers, the Montgomery County Board of Education "was moving to make decisions about the properties without following the procedures" the board had set for itself, the Potomac Almanac reports.
"It's not a coincidence" that the the same day the Board of Education approved preliminary designs for the controversial and unpopular Seven Locks Replacement School on Kendale Road, it voted to abolish the policy for community and PTA input into school demolition and construction decisions.
The Board of Education's secretiveness about its apparent decision to tear down an elementary school and give the land to County Executive Doug Duncan for a high-density housing project has led local parents to question the board's motives.
A January Montgomery County court decision might be the smoking gun showing that the board of education, in the face of mounting parental pressure, voted to erase PTA involvement from school facilities decisionmaking.
The following letter appeared in the Gazette on March 16, 2005:
This letter to the editor appeared in the Gazette on March 16, 2005:
The following letter to the editor appeared in the Potomac Almanac, March 16-22, 2005:
The Board of Education's own e-mail standards classify the controversial "cucumber curriculum" as having "inappropriate content" not only for kids, but for the board members themselves.
"Angry residents near Seven Locks Elementary School in Bethesda say they've been misled and cheated by the Montgomery County Board of Education," the Montgomery County Sentinel reports on March 12.
The Montgomery County Council intends to add more portable classrooms to overcrowded schools, even as it pushes ahead with County Executive Doug Duncan's plan to tear down an existing school, sell the land to developers, and build a much larger school on a smaller piece of property.
Blogger note: Montgomery County Public Schools suddenly announced at their March 8 hearing that the cost of the Kendale facility ("Seven Locks Replacement School") has magically dropped from $14.7 million to $12 million - while expanding the size of the school by almost 4000 square feet.
The following is the text of an e-mail message from a Seven Locks parent who attended the Montgomery County Public Schools Board of Education meeting on Tuesday, March 8, 2005:
a. Maintenance cost for the next 35 years (despite BOE insistence in earlier meeting that OPERATING budget and CAPITAL budget are treated separately) and Seven Locks cost more to run because it is an older school;
b. Cost of two-phase modernization;
c. Cost of rental of holding school, busing of kids, etc.
The heads of the Seven Locks Elementary School demolition/replacement project are touchy about PTA members' questions about corruption.