Not hyperbole: locked bathrooms and 8 uses of narcan in MCPS. Drug and alcohol use out of control

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So Virginia school districts are dealing with this too, but the difference is they seem more serious about punishment and law enforcement. Culpepper County police charged a student for distributing on school grounds: https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/culpeper-students-charged-after-17-year-old-revived-with-narcan-at-school-sheriff/3267436/

MoCo Police, why aren't you doing the same? These low-level distributors are a key part of the fentanyl supply chain that needs to be stopped.


Because nobudy is stupid enough to deal on school grounds. Most the drugs are from the internet and kids take them before school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So Virginia school districts are dealing with this too, but the difference is they seem more serious about punishment and law enforcement. Culpepper County police charged a student for distributing on school grounds: https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/culpeper-students-charged-after-17-year-old-revived-with-narcan-at-school-sheriff/3267436/

MoCo Police, why aren't you doing the same? These low-level distributors are a key part of the fentanyl supply chain that needs to be stopped.


Because nobudy is stupid enough to deal on school grounds. Most the drugs are from the internet and kids take them before school.


You are naive. The dealers are students in the school. Drugs are routinely bought and distributed on school grounds. No school is immune to the problem and MCPS has turned a blind eye for years. Overdoses at school are not a new problem, just one that is growing because of fentanyl.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So Virginia school districts are dealing with this too, but the difference is they seem more serious about punishment and law enforcement. Culpepper County police charged a student for distributing on school grounds: https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/culpeper-students-charged-after-17-year-old-revived-with-narcan-at-school-sheriff/3267436/

MoCo Police, why aren't you doing the same? These low-level distributors are a key part of the fentanyl supply chain that needs to be stopped.


Because nobudy is stupid enough to deal on school grounds. Most the drugs are from the internet and kids take them before school.


Are you daft? Kids are literally dealing and using at school. That’s the complaint in news reports and why everyone is freaking out. You can’t be serious.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So Virginia school districts are dealing with this too, but the difference is they seem more serious about punishment and law enforcement. Culpepper County police charged a student for distributing on school grounds: https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/culpeper-students-charged-after-17-year-old-revived-with-narcan-at-school-sheriff/3267436/

MoCo Police, why aren't you doing the same? These low-level distributors are a key part of the fentanyl supply chain that needs to be stopped.


I don't know anything about that, but these are matters for the police. Some posters complain there aren't consequences but we have laws on the books that cover these issues. If you're aware that laws are being broken out of school, call the cops.


Exactly if laws are being broken, this is a matter for the police not the school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So Virginia school districts are dealing with this too, but the difference is they seem more serious about punishment and law enforcement. Culpepper County police charged a student for distributing on school grounds: https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/culpeper-students-charged-after-17-year-old-revived-with-narcan-at-school-sheriff/3267436/

MoCo Police, why aren't you doing the same? These low-level distributors are a key part of the fentanyl supply chain that needs to be stopped.


I don't know anything about that, but these are matters for the police. Some posters complain there aren't consequences but we have laws on the books that cover these issues. If you're aware that laws are being broken out of school, call the cops.


Exactly if laws are being broken, this is a matter for the police not the school.


MCPS would rather not involve the police. It reflects poorly on the school system if they keep having to get the police involved. Remember the Rockvillr and Damascus rape cases? Both times, the police were not immediately called, even though they should have been.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So Virginia school districts are dealing with this too, but the difference is they seem more serious about punishment and law enforcement. Culpepper County police charged a student for distributing on school grounds: https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/culpeper-students-charged-after-17-year-old-revived-with-narcan-at-school-sheriff/3267436/

MoCo Police, why aren't you doing the same? These low-level distributors are a key part of the fentanyl supply chain that needs to be stopped.


I don't know anything about that, but these are matters for the police. Some posters complain there aren't consequences but we have laws on the books that cover these issues. If you're aware that laws are being broken out of school, call the cops.


Exactly if laws are being broken, this is a matter for the police not the school.


Then have police inside school buildings to make the arrests. MCPS allows drug dealing and use to continue by not reporting cases when drugs are confiscated on campus.
post reply Forum Index » Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: