Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in this district. The families of children WHO ATTEND THIS SCHOOL get an email every time this happens letting them know there was an event at school and if their child saw it and needs mental health support, there are resources available at school. The entire LCPS community does NOT receive that message and nor should it when it is an issue occurring at a school they do not attend.
The story coming out now is pure politics. It’s Chapman wanting to scare up drama for re-election- the extra police he’s put at the school aren’t doing anything it standing around outside in the morning. A school board candidate is using this for her campaign. Now there’s news cameras they’re making a spectacle of the school. None of these people actually care about the real issue and this is not new info- people have been to the school board about the drug crisis and LCPS’ lack of response and resources earlier this year.
Exactly this.
Parents have been notified all along.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another piece on the same story:
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/virginia-high-school-saw-8-opioid-overdoses-three-weeks-unprecedented-rcna123151?ex=digest
I find this outrageous:
Four of the overdoses occurred on campus and three required CPR. At least three cases also required the administration of naloxone, a life-saving medication approved by the Food and Drug Administration to quickly reverse opioid overdoses.
Julia said at least one person at every school in Loudoun County is trained to administer the medication.
In a statement Tuesday, the superintendent of Loudoun County Public Schools, Aaron Spence, said he was "concerned and saddened" by the crisis, adding that "the issue of addiction is truly at play here."
Spence said the school system held community information sessions about fentanyl last spring and is now training and supplying its high school staff with naloxone. Park View families received a message this week with information and resources, he added.
But Julia said the sheriff's office felt the need to draw more attention to the issue by issuing a press release on Tuesday.
"Normally we allow the schools to take the lead in this, but in all honesty, we felt that there was not enough public information being put out there of what was actually happening," he said.
Loudoun County Public Schools did not respond to a request for comment.
So, the school did not contact parents? The sheriff's office had to do this?
The Narcan training takes no more than 10-15 minutes. EVERY teacher/staff member should be trained.
Anonymous wrote:Another piece on the same story:
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/virginia-high-school-saw-8-opioid-overdoses-three-weeks-unprecedented-rcna123151?ex=digest
I find this outrageous:
Four of the overdoses occurred on campus and three required CPR. At least three cases also required the administration of naloxone, a life-saving medication approved by the Food and Drug Administration to quickly reverse opioid overdoses.
Julia said at least one person at every school in Loudoun County is trained to administer the medication.
In a statement Tuesday, the superintendent of Loudoun County Public Schools, Aaron Spence, said he was "concerned and saddened" by the crisis, adding that "the issue of addiction is truly at play here."
Spence said the school system held community information sessions about fentanyl last spring and is now training and supplying its high school staff with naloxone. Park View families received a message this week with information and resources, he added.
But Julia said the sheriff's office felt the need to draw more attention to the issue by issuing a press release on Tuesday.
"Normally we allow the schools to take the lead in this, but in all honesty, we felt that there was not enough public information being put out there of what was actually happening," he said.
Loudoun County Public Schools did not respond to a request for comment.
So, the school did not contact parents? The sheriff's office had to do this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another piece on the same story:
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/virginia-high-school-saw-8-opioid-overdoses-three-weeks-unprecedented-rcna123151?ex=digest
I find this outrageous:
Four of the overdoses occurred on campus and three required CPR. At least three cases also required the administration of naloxone, a life-saving medication approved by the Food and Drug Administration to quickly reverse opioid overdoses.
Julia said at least one person at every school in Loudoun County is trained to administer the medication.
In a statement Tuesday, the superintendent of Loudoun County Public Schools, Aaron Spence, said he was "concerned and saddened" by the crisis, adding that "the issue of addiction is truly at play here."
Spence said the school system held community information sessions about fentanyl last spring and is now training and supplying its high school staff with naloxone. Park View families received a message this week with information and resources, he added.
But Julia said the sheriff's office felt the need to draw more attention to the issue by issuing a press release on Tuesday.
"Normally we allow the schools to take the lead in this, but in all honesty, we felt that there was not enough public information being put out there of what was actually happening," he said.
Loudoun County Public Schools did not respond to a request for comment.
So, the school did not contact parents? The sheriff's office had to do this?
If you read what you quoted, it indicates that the school did contact parents. From above, “Park View families received a message this week…”
Anonymous wrote:I’m in this district. The families of children WHO ATTEND THIS SCHOOL get an email every time this happens letting them know there was an event at school and if their child saw it and needs mental health support, there are resources available at school. The entire LCPS community does NOT receive that message and nor should it when it is an issue occurring at a school they do not attend.
The story coming out now is pure politics. It’s Chapman wanting to scare up drama for re-election- the extra police he’s put at the school aren’t doing anything it standing around outside in the morning. A school board candidate is using this for her campaign. Now there’s news cameras they’re making a spectacle of the school. None of these people actually care about the real issue and this is not new info- people have been to the school board about the drug crisis and LCPS’ lack of response and resources earlier this year.
Anonymous wrote:I do think the state/districts could be more open about this stuff. I know what years ago (pre covid) you used the VDOE school report card used to list drug stats under their offenses data but now that data either isn't listed or is listed under an ambiguous name that I can't figure out (the listed offenses are things such as "behaviors of a safety concern, behaviors that endanger health, safety, or welfare of others, etc...). I am not sure why or when this changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect they will trace the 8 recent ones to the same source.
And? Are you saying well everyone does fentanyl but these 8 were only the bad batch?
Anonymous wrote:I suspect they will trace the 8 recent ones to the same source.
please post the email.Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately it’s not just Park View. The superintendent sent out an email yesterday stating that this school year there have been ten suspected overdoses across six high schools, including Briar Woods and Broad Run which are among the top rated schools within Loudoun.
Students do drugs based on an election date?Anonymous wrote:The sheriff is up for re-election next week. The timing of these stories is not coincidental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sheriff is up for re-election next week. The timing of these stories is not coincidental.
What does that mean?