BOE - who are people voting for?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here are the people I am voting for:
At large: Sharif Hidayat
District 2: Ricky Fai Mui
District 4: Bethany S. Mandel.

Reason: I am looking for the safety of the school, improving teaching for better results and disciplining students for bullying, violations or chronic absence with consequences, and ending the nonsense of the current BOE.

I did a lot of digging, listened to the candidates' zoom meeting (https://youtu.be/DTVs3hv_Peo) and looked at their websites.


Well, I'm not voting for any of those people. Just Zimmerman, Stewart, and Montoya. I appreciate their more mainstream positions.


Well, I don't have any problem for your choices. But I don't think they are mainstream positions.


DP. You are entitled to your opinion, but the reality is that they are mainstream positions in Montgomery County (which I, personally, am grateful for).

-another Zimmerman, Stewart, Montoya voter
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It looks like the other thread was removed about Rita Montoya, and an article that came out about bylaws and resigning from the PTA before running. does anybody know why?


The OP of that thread had consistently sock puppeted throughout the thread. It appeared to be more of a oppo campaign ad instead of a discussion.


OK thank you I appreciate the explanation. Can we discuss it here? I thought it was pretty important and I was glad to have read that thread.


Unfortunately when posters sock puppet in this manner it puts everything they have posted in doubt. If you can support what you want to say with authoritative sources, it should be okay. But I will be viewing things very skeptically. Ironically, I discovered the sock puppeting by accident while simply trying to evaluate ad formats on an iPad. It wasn't even my intention to look for such a thing.


The post was heavily sourced. Maybe you should have paid attention.


It also misunderstood the relationship between local PTAs and MCCPTA. The NCC PTA inherits from Free State PTA, which inherits from National PTA. MCCPTA is, literally, a coalition of individual school PTAs aimed at support (like helping get those individual PTA bylaws done) and group advocacy (sometimes contentious among members). Montoya is not an MCCPTA officer, and local school PTAs do not inherit from MCCPTA bylaws, the source of the quoted prohibition on running for office while an officer.



It doesn't appear from the source that the NCC PTA bylaws require her to step down. The NCC PTA's bylaws do restrict campaign support when acting in official capacity, so she can't campaign in her 10 minutes at tonight's meeting (probably reserved for a President's report). If the councilmembers' appearances are tacitly for the purpose of Montoya's campaign, that would be a violation, since the NCC PTA bylaws prohibit association time for that. If they are there for another purpose, then they would not.

Of course, getting that many councilmembers at your PTA meeting might be considered heavy signaling...



Agree with the last statement- it feels like we have to beg/plead to get any council member to come to our DCC MS school events, but getting 5 to come to NCC ES cultural night? Really? Sorry- that just irritates me.


It's ridiculous for Montoya to put out there that all these county council members, including one whose name she misspelled, are coming to her PTA meeting. Montoya is trying to imply endorsements from council members that just don't exist. We don't need this kind of manipulative behavior on the BOE.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It looks like the other thread was removed about Rita Montoya, and an article that came out about bylaws and resigning from the PTA before running. does anybody know why?


The OP of that thread had consistently sock puppeted throughout the thread. It appeared to be more of a oppo campaign ad instead of a discussion.


OK thank you I appreciate the explanation. Can we discuss it here? I thought it was pretty important and I was glad to have read that thread.


Unfortunately when posters sock puppet in this manner it puts everything they have posted in doubt. If you can support what you want to say with authoritative sources, it should be okay. But I will be viewing things very skeptically. Ironically, I discovered the sock puppeting by accident while simply trying to evaluate ad formats on an iPad. It wasn't even my intention to look for such a thing.


The post was heavily sourced. Maybe you should have paid attention.


It also misunderstood the relationship between local PTAs and MCCPTA. The NCC PTA inherits from Free State PTA, which inherits from National PTA. MCCPTA is, literally, a coalition of individual school PTAs aimed at support (like helping get those individual PTA bylaws done) and group advocacy (sometimes contentious among members). Montoya is not an MCCPTA officer, and local school PTAs do not inherit from MCCPTA bylaws, the source of the quoted prohibition on running for office while an officer.

It doesn't appear from the source that the NCC PTA bylaws require her to step down. The NCC PTA's bylaws do restrict campaign support when acting in official capacity, so she can't campaign in her 10 minutes at tonight's meeting (probably reserved for a President's report). If the councilmembers' appearances are tacitly for the purpose of Montoya's campaign, that would be a violation, since the NCC PTA bylaws prohibit association time for that. If they are there for another purpose, then they would not.

Of course, getting that many councilmembers at your PTA meeting might be considered heavy signaling...


I am more interested in candidate positions than these subtle technicalities of things that seem mostly irrelevant. I'd leave that to wacky outlets like Moderately Moco to obsess about.


Hard disagree with you. These are more than subtle technicalities. And technicalities are exactly what we need to look at if we want a board of education who is not corrupt and can be efficient and effective for everybody. I want an ethical person who does not bend the rules or looks for loopholes to benefit themselves even before being elected. The bar for elected officials needs to be high, not low. There are other candidates who are running in that category that you can vote for.


I wonder what other subtle technicalities the Apple Ballot decided to overlook when they endorsed Montoya, Laura Stewart and Zimmerman.


The Apple Ballot omitted Montoya's occupation. Nowhere in their information does it say her full-time occupation is as an advocate for Medical Cannabis businesses.


Of course it did. That’s not politically helpful so they’re hoping to hide the ball.

Similar to Laura Stewart taking down her formerly public twitter page she used to publicly advocate for issues because her views expressed there were so extreme that they’d be damaging in an election.


Do we know what methodology the apple ballot uses to decide their endorsements? Or is it all about who you know?


The candidates respond to a questionnaire and are interviewed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here are the people I am voting for:
At large: Sharif Hidayat
District 2: Ricky Fai Mui
District 4: Bethany S. Mandel.

Reason: I am looking for the safety of the school, improving teaching for better results and disciplining students for bullying, violations or chronic absence with consequences, and ending the nonsense of the current BOE.

I did a lot of digging, listened to the candidates' zoom meeting (https://youtu.be/DTVs3hv_Peo) and looked at their websites.


Well, I'm not voting for any of those people. Just Zimmerman, Stewart, and Montoya. I appreciate their more mainstream positions.


Well, I don't have any problem for your choices. But I don't think they are mainstream positions.


DP. You are entitled to your opinion, but the reality is that they are mainstream positions in Montgomery County (which I, personally, am grateful for).

-another Zimmerman, Stewart, Montoya voter


You wouldn’t say that about Laura Stewart if you could go back and see all of her twitter posts that she’s now removed since running for office because they’re so extreme/politically damaging
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else get a text message from Mandel today asking for your vote? I get them routinely for higher-level offices, but first time I've ever gotten one for a BOE race candidate. I wonder how much those cost to send.


No, but that's fascinating. That kind of targeted SMS is expensive. There's a campaign finance deadline tomorrow, but it's only for expenses through 4/26. So, if she's doing a big targeted outreach campaign but wants to play hide the ball about where the money came from during the primary, now's the time to do it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here are the people I am voting for:
At large: Sharif Hidayat
District 2: Ricky Fai Mui
District 4: Bethany S. Mandel.

Reason: I am looking for the safety of the school, improving teaching for better results and disciplining students for bullying, violations or chronic absence with consequences, and ending the nonsense of the current BOE.

I did a lot of digging, listened to the candidates' zoom meeting (https://youtu.be/DTVs3hv_Peo) and looked at their websites.


Well, I'm not voting for any of those people. Just Zimmerman, Stewart, and Montoya. I appreciate their more mainstream positions.


Well, I don't have any problem for your choices. But I don't think they are mainstream positions.


DP. You are entitled to your opinion, but the reality is that they are mainstream positions in Montgomery County (which I, personally, am grateful for).

-another Zimmerman, Stewart, Montoya voter


You wouldn’t say that about Laura Stewart if you could go back and see all of her twitter posts that she’s now removed since running for office because they’re so extreme/politically damaging


I'm the PP you're responding to. The "-another Zimmerman, Stewart, Montoya voter" PP. You sure have a bee in your bonnet about one particular candidate's social media account. As it happens, I did see her tweets, and no, they were not extreme. I've also seen Bethany Mandel's tweets, and those are extreme.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It looks like the other thread was removed about Rita Montoya, and an article that came out about bylaws and resigning from the PTA before running. does anybody know why?


The OP of that thread had consistently sock puppeted throughout the thread. It appeared to be more of a oppo campaign ad instead of a discussion.


OK thank you I appreciate the explanation. Can we discuss it here? I thought it was pretty important and I was glad to have read that thread.


Unfortunately when posters sock puppet in this manner it puts everything they have posted in doubt. If you can support what you want to say with authoritative sources, it should be okay. But I will be viewing things very skeptically. Ironically, I discovered the sock puppeting by accident while simply trying to evaluate ad formats on an iPad. It wasn't even my intention to look for such a thing.


The post was heavily sourced. Maybe you should have paid attention.


It also misunderstood the relationship between local PTAs and MCCPTA. The NCC PTA inherits from Free State PTA, which inherits from National PTA. MCCPTA is, literally, a coalition of individual school PTAs aimed at support (like helping get those individual PTA bylaws done) and group advocacy (sometimes contentious among members). Montoya is not an MCCPTA officer, and local school PTAs do not inherit from MCCPTA bylaws, the source of the quoted prohibition on running for office while an officer.



It doesn't appear from the source that the NCC PTA bylaws require her to step down. The NCC PTA's bylaws do restrict campaign support when acting in official capacity, so she can't campaign in her 10 minutes at tonight's meeting (probably reserved for a President's report). If the councilmembers' appearances are tacitly for the purpose of Montoya's campaign, that would be a violation, since the NCC PTA bylaws prohibit association time for that. If they are there for another purpose, then they would not.

Of course, getting that many councilmembers at your PTA meeting might be considered heavy signaling...



Agree with the last statement- it feels like we have to beg/plead to get any council member to come to our DCC MS school events, but getting 5 to come to NCC ES cultural night? Really? Sorry- that just irritates me.


It's ridiculous for Montoya to put out there that all these county council members, including one whose name she misspelled, are coming to her PTA meeting. Montoya is trying to imply endorsements from council members that just don't exist. We don't need this kind of manipulative behavior on the BOE.


That was an NCC PTA message, not campaign. Our PTA definitely puts the names of invitees/ expected attendees (e.g., an MCPS official, BOE,member, County Council member or education specialist) on notices when we have meetings. That aspect is a nothingburger.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here are the people I am voting for:
At large: Sharif Hidayat
District 2: Ricky Fai Mui
District 4: Bethany S. Mandel.

Reason: I am looking for the safety of the school, improving teaching for better results and disciplining students for bullying, violations or chronic absence with consequences, and ending the nonsense of the current BOE.

I did a lot of digging, listened to the candidates' zoom meeting (https://youtu.be/DTVs3hv_Peo) and looked at their websites.


Well, I'm not voting for any of those people. Just Zimmerman, Stewart, and Montoya. I appreciate their more mainstream positions.


Well, I don't have any problem for your choices. But I don't think they are mainstream positions.


DP. You are entitled to your opinion, but the reality is that they are mainstream positions in Montgomery County (which I, personally, am grateful for).

-another Zimmerman, Stewart, Montoya voter


You wouldn’t say that about Laura Stewart if you could go back and see all of her twitter posts that she’s now removed since running for office because they’re so extreme/politically damaging


I'm the PP you're responding to. The "-another Zimmerman, Stewart, Montoya voter" PP. You sure have a bee in your bonnet about one particular candidate's social media account. As it happens, I did see her tweets, and no, they were not extreme. I've also seen Bethany Mandel's tweets, and those are extreme.


Yeah, Thiat's the Evans supporter who keepa showing up to try to paint Stewart as more extreme than Evans (despite Evans extremity in her own stay-silent-and-no-oversight/questioning-of-MCPS way) because Evans folks are really only concerned about Stewart, knowing Mandel has no shot in the general election.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else get a text message from Mandel today asking for your vote? I get them routinely for higher-level offices, but first time I've ever gotten one for a BOE race candidate. I wonder how much those cost to send.


No, but that's fascinating. That kind of targeted SMS is expensive. There's a campaign finance deadline tomorrow, but it's only for expenses through 4/26. So, if she's doing a big targeted outreach campaign but wants to play hide the ball about where the money came from during the primary, now's the time to do it.


PP again. I did take a look at the previous Mandel campaign finance report, however: Link.

A lot of non-MoCo donors, which is expected, but also a big-for-local-politics donation from a shady PAC closely aligned with the Trump campaign (The Presidential Commission, LLC).




Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else get a text message from Mandel today asking for your vote? I get them routinely for higher-level offices, but first time I've ever gotten one for a BOE race candidate. I wonder how much those cost to send.


No, but that's fascinating. That kind of targeted SMS is expensive. There's a campaign finance deadline tomorrow, but it's only for expenses through 4/26. So, if she's doing a big targeted outreach campaign but wants to play hide the ball about where the money came from during the primary, now's the time to do it.


I got this too. I get lots of dem texts fwiw
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It looks like the other thread was removed about Rita Montoya, and an article that came out about bylaws and resigning from the PTA before running. does anybody know why?


The OP of that thread had consistently sock puppeted throughout the thread. It appeared to be more of a oppo campaign ad instead of a discussion.


OK thank you I appreciate the explanation. Can we discuss it here? I thought it was pretty important and I was glad to have read that thread.


Unfortunately when posters sock puppet in this manner it puts everything they have posted in doubt. If you can support what you want to say with authoritative sources, it should be okay. But I will be viewing things very skeptically. Ironically, I discovered the sock puppeting by accident while simply trying to evaluate ad formats on an iPad. It wasn't even my intention to look for such a thing.


The post was heavily sourced. Maybe you should have paid attention.


It also misunderstood the relationship between local PTAs and MCCPTA. The NCC PTA inherits from Free State PTA, which inherits from National PTA. MCCPTA is, literally, a coalition of individual school PTAs aimed at support (like helping get those individual PTA bylaws done) and group advocacy (sometimes contentious among members). Montoya is not an MCCPTA officer, and local school PTAs do not inherit from MCCPTA bylaws, the source of the quoted prohibition on running for office while an officer.

It doesn't appear from the source that the NCC PTA bylaws require her to step down. The NCC PTA's bylaws do restrict campaign support when acting in official capacity, so she can't campaign in her 10 minutes at tonight's meeting (probably reserved for a President's report). If the councilmembers' appearances are tacitly for the purpose of Montoya's campaign, that would be a violation, since the NCC PTA bylaws prohibit association time for that. If they are there for another purpose, then they would not.

Of course, getting that many councilmembers at your PTA meeting might be considered heavy signaling...


I am more interested in candidate positions than these subtle technicalities of things that seem mostly irrelevant. I'd leave that to wacky outlets like Moderately Moco to obsess about.


Hard disagree with you. These are more than subtle technicalities. And technicalities are exactly what we need to look at if we want a board of education who is not corrupt and can be efficient and effective for everybody. I want an ethical person who does not bend the rules or looks for loopholes to benefit themselves even before being elected. The bar for elected officials needs to be high, not low. There are other candidates who are running in that category that you can vote for.


I wonder what other subtle technicalities the Apple Ballot decided to overlook when they endorsed Montoya, Laura Stewart and Zimmerman.


The Apple Ballot omitted Montoya's occupation. Nowhere in their information does it say her full-time occupation is as an advocate for Medical Cannabis businesses.


Of course it did. That’s not politically helpful so they’re hoping to hide the ball.

Similar to Laura Stewart taking down her formerly public twitter page she used to publicly advocate for issues because her views expressed there were so extreme that they’d be damaging in an election.


Do we know what methodology the apple ballot uses to decide their endorsements? Or is it all about who you know?


The candidates respond to a questionnaire and are interviewed.


I hope an investigative journalist or mainstream local news looks into the story to corroborate or clarify the accusations, because it seems extremely unethical. Playing loosey goosey with bylaws is very slick, and I don’t want slick candidates in the board of education.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else get a text message from Mandel today asking for your vote? I get them routinely for higher-level offices, but first time I've ever gotten one for a BOE race candidate. I wonder how much those cost to send.


No, but that's fascinating. That kind of targeted SMS is expensive. There's a campaign finance deadline tomorrow, but it's only for expenses through 4/26. So, if she's doing a big targeted outreach campaign but wants to play hide the ball about where the money came from during the primary, now's the time to do it.


PP again. I did take a look at the previous Mandel campaign finance report, however: Link.

A lot of non-MoCo donors, which is expected, but also a big-for-local-politics donation from a shady PAC closely aligned with the Trump campaign (The Presidential Commission, LLC).



Oh look, there they are on an amicus curiae brief, with Citizens United, supporting Texas's claim that Pennsylvania chose Pennsylvania's electors wrong in the 2020 election. (The Supreme Court declined the case on grounds that Texas didn't have standing.) https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/22/22O155/163495/20201211101813720_Texas%20v%20Pennsylvania%20CU%20CUF%20TPC%20amicus%20brief.pdf

And there they are on another amicus curiae brief, with Citizens United, supporting the Trump administration's plan to end DACA, where the very first item in the "Table of Authorities" is "Holy Bible (Exodus 18:16)". https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/18/18-587/113672/20190826153031721_18-587%20-588%20-589%20Amicus%20BOM%20Citizens%20United.pdf Exodus 18:16 is "Whenever they have a dispute, it is brought to me, and I decide between the parties and inform them of God’s decrees and instructions."

And there they are, giving $1,000 to Bethany Mandel.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else get a text message from Mandel today asking for your vote? I get them routinely for higher-level offices, but first time I've ever gotten one for a BOE race candidate. I wonder how much those cost to send.


No, but that's fascinating. That kind of targeted SMS is expensive. There's a campaign finance deadline tomorrow, but it's only for expenses through 4/26. So, if she's doing a big targeted outreach campaign but wants to play hide the ball about where the money came from during the primary, now's the time to do it.


PP again. I did take a look at the previous Mandel campaign finance report, however: Link.

A lot of non-MoCo donors, which is expected, but also a big-for-local-politics donation from a shady PAC closely aligned with the Trump campaign (The Presidential Commission, LLC).


Mandel is funded by Stephen Miller's Nazi loving group for idiots First America Legal (Miller could not pass the bar fun fact)

Anyway I digress. Mandel is suing MCPS with funds from Miller.

She belongs no where near any BOE.


Oh look, there they are on an amicus curiae brief, with Citizens United, supporting Texas's claim that Pennsylvania chose Pennsylvania's electors wrong in the 2020 election. (The Supreme Court declined the case on grounds that Texas didn't have standing.) https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/22/22O155/163495/20201211101813720_Texas%20v%20Pennsylvania%20CU%20CUF%20TPC%20amicus%20brief.pdf

And there they are on another amicus curiae brief, with Citizens United, supporting the Trump administration's plan to end DACA, where the very first item in the "Table of Authorities" is "Holy Bible (Exodus 18:16)". https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/18/18-587/113672/20190826153031721_18-587%20-588%20-589%20Amicus%20BOM%20Citizens%20United.pdf Exodus 18:16 is "Whenever they have a dispute, it is brought to me, and I decide between the parties and inform them of God’s decrees and instructions."

And there they are, giving $1,000 to Bethany Mandel.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else get a text message from Mandel today asking for your vote? I get them routinely for higher-level offices, but first time I've ever gotten one for a BOE race candidate. I wonder how much those cost to send.


No, but that's fascinating. That kind of targeted SMS is expensive. There's a campaign finance deadline tomorrow, but it's only for expenses through 4/26. So, if she's doing a big targeted outreach campaign but wants to play hide the ball about where the money came from during the primary, now's the time to do it.


PP again. I did take a look at the previous Mandel campaign finance report, however: Link.

A lot of non-MoCo donors, which is expected, but also a big-for-local-politics donation from a shady PAC closely aligned with the Trump campaign (The Presidential Commission, LLC).


She is funded by outside sources she is the Moms4Liberty, America First Legal, Trump, RW garbage candidate.

Zero qualifications to be on a BOE.

Keep her off the BOE.



Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
jsteele wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It looks like the other thread was removed about Rita Montoya, and an article that came out about bylaws and resigning from the PTA before running. does anybody know why?


The OP of that thread had consistently sock puppeted throughout the thread. It appeared to be more of a oppo campaign ad instead of a discussion.


OK thank you I appreciate the explanation. Can we discuss it here? I thought it was pretty important and I was glad to have read that thread.


Unfortunately when posters sock puppet in this manner it puts everything they have posted in doubt. If you can support what you want to say with authoritative sources, it should be okay. But I will be viewing things very skeptically. Ironically, I discovered the sock puppeting by accident while simply trying to evaluate ad formats on an iPad. It wasn't even my intention to look for such a thing.


The post was heavily sourced. Maybe you should have paid attention.


It also misunderstood the relationship between local PTAs and MCCPTA. The NCC PTA inherits from Free State PTA, which inherits from National PTA. MCCPTA is, literally, a coalition of individual school PTAs aimed at support (like helping get those individual PTA bylaws done) and group advocacy (sometimes contentious among members). Montoya is not an MCCPTA officer, and local school PTAs do not inherit from MCCPTA bylaws, the source of the quoted prohibition on running for office while an officer.

It doesn't appear from the source that the NCC PTA bylaws require her to step down. The NCC PTA's bylaws do restrict campaign support when acting in official capacity, so she can't campaign in her 10 minutes at tonight's meeting (probably reserved for a President's report). If the councilmembers' appearances are tacitly for the purpose of Montoya's campaign, that would be a violation, since the NCC PTA bylaws prohibit association time for that. If they are there for another purpose, then they would not.

Of course, getting that many councilmembers at your PTA meeting might be considered heavy signaling...


I am more interested in candidate positions than these subtle technicalities of things that seem mostly irrelevant. I'd leave that to wacky outlets like Moderately Moco to obsess about.


Hard disagree with you. These are more than subtle technicalities. And technicalities are exactly what we need to look at if we want a board of education who is not corrupt and can be efficient and effective for everybody. I want an ethical person who does not bend the rules or looks for loopholes to benefit themselves even before being elected. The bar for elected officials needs to be high, not low. There are other candidates who are running in that category that you can vote for.


I wonder what other subtle technicalities the Apple Ballot decided to overlook when they endorsed Montoya, Laura Stewart and Zimmerman.


The Apple Ballot omitted Montoya's occupation. Nowhere in their information does it say her full-time occupation is as an advocate for Medical Cannabis businesses.


Of course it did. That’s not politically helpful so they’re hoping to hide the ball.

Similar to Laura Stewart taking down her formerly public twitter page she used to publicly advocate for issues because her views expressed there were so extreme that they’d be damaging in an election.


Do we know what methodology the apple ballot uses to decide their endorsements? Or is it all about who you know?


The candidates respond to a questionnaire and are interviewed.


I hope an investigative journalist or mainstream local news looks into the story to corroborate or clarify the accusations, because it seems extremely unethical. Playing loosey goosey with bylaws is very slick, and I don’t want slick candidates in the board of education.


Again, doesn't appear to be a violation of bylaws. She is not an MCCPTA officer, and not subject to the requirement from MCCPTA to step down before running. She is the North Chevy Chase ES PTA president, and while NCC PTA follows Free State PTA and National PTA bylaws, it does not appear that NCC PTA or those organizations have bylaws that require a local PTA officer has to step down.

As long as the councilmembers are at the meeting to address a school-related issue (maybe funding or SROs? celebrate NCC cultural diversity?), and not to campaign for a candidate, that's not exactly playing loosey goosey with the bylaws or being unethical. That doesn't mean it's not a really convenient happenstance for her, though. Politics can be like that...without being against the rules.
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