Anonymous wrote:This sounds awful. So basically the Maryland legislature ok'ed MCPS kids getting only 175 days of instruction per year? Such a difference from Massachusetts which requires its school districts to schedule 185 days of school, to ensure that they get 180 with snow days.
But MCPS staff get more paid holidays, so I guess they're happy.
Anonymous wrote:Starting a new threat from the thread on HB1084 with a few updates that are going to get missed otherwise:
The bill passed out of the MD House today and on to the Senate but was amended in some important ways --
The bill only allows MCPS the ability to reduce the number of days in school below 180 in the event of inclement weather (or other specific issues detailed in the legislation) and still requires them to plan a calendar with 180 minimum days. It also sets a floor at 175 days -- MCPS cannot go under 175 days.
I still think we need to push MCPS to better plan for snow days, but this is far better than the original text that would have given MCPS carte blanche to reduce the number of days in the year.
It needs to pass the Senate still but this would be retroactive meaning schools would end on June 18...
https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/2026RS/amds/bil_0004/HB1084_51312501.pdf
Massachusetts doesn't have non-student grading days after every quarter. They seem to not have as many closures as Maryland despite being further north. For instance MCPS have closed 6 days while many Massachusetts schools have closed 3 or 4 days.Anonymous wrote:This sounds awful. So basically the Maryland legislature ok'ed MCPS kids getting only 175 days of instruction per year? Such a difference from Massachusetts which requires its school districts to schedule 185 days of school, to ensure that they get 180 with snow days.
But MCPS staff get more paid holidays, so I guess they're happy.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds awful. So basically the Maryland legislature ok'ed MCPS kids getting only 175 days of instruction per year? Such a difference from Massachusetts which requires its school districts to schedule 185 days of school, to ensure that they get 180 with snow days.
But MCPS staff get more paid holidays, so I guess they're happy.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds awful. So basically the Maryland legislature ok'ed MCPS kids getting only 175 days of instruction per year? Such a difference from Massachusetts which requires its school districts to schedule 185 days of school, to ensure that they get 180 with snow days.
But MCPS staff get more paid holidays, so I guess they're happy.
Anonymous wrote:So this effectively means that MCPS can now plan a 180-day calendar with five built-in snow days?
Also interesting that it uses the term "hours of attendance" (not "hours of instruction").