Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
After 43 years, it is not unreasonable to want someone new
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Follow the money… it all leads to the pockets of Peter O. Moran.
Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in Montgomery County the Autism program was a racket like the Minneapolis fraud.
I think they were labeling kids that weren't autistic as autistic so they could get federal funds. Now they are afraid of getting busted.
As someone who worked in special ed in MCPS you could not be more wrong.
Yes, my experience is that it's been the opposite...those programs are EXPENSIVE and the gap between federal/state funding and what the district has to cover is a lot. They are more likely to gatekeep, if anythiingl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in Montgomery County the Autism program was a racket like the Minneapolis fraud.
I think they were labeling kids that weren't autistic as autistic so they could get federal funds. Now they are afraid of getting busted.
As someone who worked in special ed in MCPS you could not be more wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
There are regional high school programs to construct and operate...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
Regardless, I don't think someone who's been in a position for 43 years is entitled to stay there forever. We need fresh blood in MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds like they are going to dump even more children into mainstream elementary classrooms who have no business being in one. It helps nobody except the bottom line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬