Because it’s a poor school and largely Latino. This doesn’t happen in Potomac. |
The letter from Jawando doesn't contain any of that information. What was the issue diagnosed, and what kind of expert diagnosed it? |
The link to Jawando's Facebook post includes a screenshot of a letter from the NHES PTA stating that the three aforementioned entities have hired an "Industrial Hygienist" and will be sharing the results and the report with MCPS and the public in March 2026. |
Jawando is looking for attention and to stay relevant. |
What was the cause? I apologize if it was stated earlier and I missed it. |
Click the link to Jawando's statement on FB, which includes the NHES PTA's letter which outlines the details of the incident. |
It does not say the cause. |
The letter makes it clear the findings will be released this month. So they're not out yet and the NHES PTA plans on sharing it with MCPS and the public when they get it. That was stated in the letter. |
| The air quality in so many schools is poor. We filed a few reports at one of the schools I worked at but nothing was done. Nowadays they have indoor air quality monitors at each school. Google "MCPS air quality monitoring" and you can see each individual schools levels. I think it's not a true accurate picture and even if the levels are above suggested levels, there is small print that the levels need to be consistently above the recommended amount for a certain period of time before they would even consider doing anything (or nothing). |
The school has been plagued by mold for years, which as an east-side, Title 1 school, the school district has chosen to mostly ignore. |
Mold is an elusive toxin. It can wax and wane, depending on weather conditions, esp. humidity. I don't know that I have ever heard that MCPS air sensors have reported any problems in any school to which MCPS has responded. Anybody know of an example where MCPS showed up to fix something based on its air sensor readings? |