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How you treat your most vulnerable students speaks volumes about your institution's morals
https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2025/01/its-costing-them-their-success-mcps-alternative-school-staff-raise-safety-health-concerns/ |
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Way to bury the lead. The asbestos is just one part of the problems laid out in this article.
MCPS decided ONE security guard would be suitable for TWO alt schools with some of their most behaviorally challenged students? Are they insane? |
| The BOE was more concerned about their fancy new offices and retreats than student health and safety. |
The lead wasn't buried. Asbestos will kill everyone. |
PSA: It’s bury the “lede.” |
| You can lead the horse to asbestos but you can make it drink from the security guard’s cup. |
| Time to contact all the brand new BOE members to advocate they address the situation. |
Unfortunately, the new board members are hesitant to be disruptive or aggressive. |
Both lede and lead are acceptable. Lede is a journalistic spelling of lead. |
Because they knew parents of those students at the school wouldn't sue them? Awaiting response from...mcps lawyer on this forum. Still waiting.... |
MCPS is not scared of parents when it comes to complaints about safety and security. Not at BCC, not at Kennedy, not at Whitman or at Northwest. The only people they're scared of is MCEA, MCAAP and anyone with lawyers or the media. |
The idiom is in the journalism context and is only spelled “lede.” |
They are in for a rude awakening if they don't clean up the shit, literally and not. |
Ironically, it may also be correct here to say bury the lead, if it means the metal used to make pipes, as I’m sure MCPS did that |
It is perfectly fine to use the normal spelling. This is actually not a journalistic context, this is DCUM |