Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mcps balloon has popped.
Sadly this will be the downfall of public education in this area. County council failing to recognize that if you don’t pay teachers their COLA or steps, while raising insurance premiums with worse coverage, teachers will leave. It won’t be the teachers within 5 or 7 years of retiring, but those that are only five or seven years into teaching, the brightest and most capable ones won’t see the value in staying. You can’t take home less money each year and still pay the bills when inflation is skyrocketing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an MCPS employee, a parent of MCPS students, and a Montgomery County homeowner. I’m glad the county council is listening to those of us who said we cannot afford to write MCPS a blank check. I’d love to see the council go line by line through MCPS’ budget.
Line item vetoes by the council is what we need. Taylor will cut things such as Special Education, hitting other vulnerable populations, instead of rethinking his vast regional program boondoggle. The real costs for that fiasco won't be proposed for another year, but it's been so poorly planned that it will not be something that benefits the community. I'd like to defund Taylor's salary, as a start.
This is not legally possible. Council gives the total amount but has no control of what it's spent on. Only the Board of Ed can control the details of what the money is spent on.
I know it is not legally possible. My larger point is that the superintendent has too much power in this state. We need to rewrite state rules that empower BOEs, and county councils, to have a greater check on superintendents. As it stands, the council is more powerful, on a large scale, than the BOE, in determining school district decisions.
The BOE already has the ability to control where the spending goes, they just won't use it and instead make the choice to defer to the Superintendent the vast majority of the time.
(Partly because their staff are all in the pocket of MCPS Central Office and tell them it's inappropriate for them to question MCPS decisions-- and partly because they're not brave enough to rock the boat.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an MCPS employee, a parent of MCPS students, and a Montgomery County homeowner. I’m glad the county council is listening to those of us who said we cannot afford to write MCPS a blank check. I’d love to see the council go line by line through MCPS’ budget.
Line item vetoes by the council is what we need. Taylor will cut things such as Special Education, hitting other vulnerable populations, instead of rethinking his vast regional program boondoggle. The real costs for that fiasco won't be proposed for another year, but it's been so poorly planned that it will not be something that benefits the community. I'd like to defund Taylor's salary, as a start.
This is not legally possible. Council gives the total amount but has no control of what it's spent on. Only the Board of Ed can control the details of what the money is spent on.
I know it is not legally possible. My larger point is that the superintendent has too much power in this state. We need to rewrite state rules that empower BOEs, and county councils, to have a greater check on superintendents. As it stands, the council is more powerful, on a large scale, than the BOE, in determining school district decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an MCPS employee, a parent of MCPS students, and a Montgomery County homeowner. I’m glad the county council is listening to those of us who said we cannot afford to write MCPS a blank check. I’d love to see the council go line by line through MCPS’ budget.
Line item vetoes by the council is what we need. Taylor will cut things such as Special Education, hitting other vulnerable populations, instead of rethinking his vast regional program boondoggle. The real costs for that fiasco won't be proposed for another year, but it's been so poorly planned that it will not be something that benefits the community. I'd like to defund Taylor's salary, as a start.
This is not legally possible. Council gives the total amount but has no control of what it's spent on. Only the Board of Ed can control the details of what the money is spent on.
I know it is not legally possible. My larger point is that the superintendent has too much power in this state. We need to rewrite state rules that empower BOEs, and county councils, to have a greater check on superintendents. As it stands, the council is more powerful, on a large scale, than the BOE, in determining school district decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an MCPS employee, a parent of MCPS students, and a Montgomery County homeowner. I’m glad the county council is listening to those of us who said we cannot afford to write MCPS a blank check. I’d love to see the council go line by line through MCPS’ budget.
Line item vetoes by the council is what we need. Taylor will cut things such as Special Education, hitting other vulnerable populations, instead of rethinking his vast regional program boondoggle. The real costs for that fiasco won't be proposed for another year, but it's been so poorly planned that it will not be something that benefits the community. I'd like to defund Taylor's salary, as a start.
This is not legally possible. Council gives the total amount but has no control of what it's spent on. Only the Board of Ed can control the details of what the money is spent on.
Anonymous wrote:All of central office can be removed without impact. That money saved should be re distributed to teacher salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an MCPS employee, a parent of MCPS students, and a Montgomery County homeowner. I’m glad the county council is listening to those of us who said we cannot afford to write MCPS a blank check. I’d love to see the council go line by line through MCPS’ budget.
Line item vetoes by the council is what we need. Taylor will cut things such as Special Education, hitting other vulnerable populations, instead of rethinking his vast regional program boondoggle. The real costs for that fiasco won't be proposed for another year, but it's been so poorly planned that it will not be something that benefits the community. I'd like to defund Taylor's salary, as a start.
Anonymous wrote:I’m an MCPS employee, a parent of MCPS students, and a Montgomery County homeowner. I’m glad the county council is listening to those of us who said we cannot afford to write MCPS a blank check. I’d love to see the council go line by line through MCPS’ budget.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mcps balloon has popped.
Sadly this will be the downfall of public education in this area. County council failing to recognize that if you don’t pay teachers their COLA or steps, while raising insurance premiums with worse coverage, teachers will leave. It won’t be the teachers within 5 or 7 years of retiring, but those that are only five or seven years into teaching, the brightest and most capable ones won’t see the value in staying. You can’t take home less money each year and still pay the bills when inflation is skyrocketing.
Was that money guaranteed to go to the teachers ONLY, and not for any other purpose? If not, then I’m in favor of cutting MCPS’ budget to ensure that less of my tax dollars are wasted by the current leadership.
Yes, MCPS bargained a contractor with the teachers and is committed to paying them the COLA they agreed to. If the funding is not passed they will have to go back on their word and renegotiate the contract to take the raises away (unless the union refuses, but they won't since the alternative is laying off hundreds of teachers.) But if the funding does pass, the contract is binding as-is and the money goes to teachers getting their COLAs.