Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An administrator that didn’t call 911 for a stabbing is unbelievable. Sitting on hold for 12 min calling the non-emergency line?! Decision making is obviously very flawed. This is crazy and I would have zero confidence
It's not unbelievable once you realize and accept that they're avoiding calling 911 intentionally.
can you expand on this? how does calling 911 impact MCPS negatively?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An administrator that didn’t call 911 for a stabbing is unbelievable. Sitting on hold for 12 min calling the non-emergency line?! Decision making is obviously very flawed. This is crazy and I would have zero confidence
It's not unbelievable once you realize and accept that they're avoiding calling 911 intentionally.
Anonymous wrote:An administrator that didn’t call 911 for a stabbing is unbelievable. Sitting on hold for 12 min calling the non-emergency line?! Decision making is obviously very flawed. This is crazy and I would have zero confidence
Anonymous wrote:An administrator that didn’t call 911 for a stabbing is unbelievable. Sitting on hold for 12 min calling the non-emergency line?! Decision making is obviously very flawed. This is crazy and I would have zero confidence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.
You’re obviously very protective of the Wheaton administration. Let me get this straight, the Wheaton admin allowed an armed intruder to enter their school, attack a student with a deadly weapon, leave anonymously before the admin even knew. Then the admin responded by not calling 911, not alerting staff or students, and then misleading the public about what happened. And you think that is doing a good job at handling this?
They didn't let anyone in. Another student let them in and they don't have enough staff to monitor the halls given how large the school is. We've also been happy at Wheaton, its far better than the other HS our other child is at.
So MCPS is hinging the safety of its school building on the judgement and discernment of minor children who may let people they do or don't know in? That sounds like a sound way to run a $3 billion dollar school system?
And if they don't have enough security staff, is the principal, teaching staff or PTSA lobbying the superintendent or the school board to increase security staff at the school? I have never seen or heard them state that.
You're an idiot
Anonymous wrote:Staff called non-emergency line rather than 911. That’s why they were on hold for 12 minutes.
https://bethesdamagazine.com/2025/12/19/mcps-stabbing-non-emergency-line/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.
You’re obviously very protective of the Wheaton administration. Let me get this straight, the Wheaton admin allowed an armed intruder to enter their school, attack a student with a deadly weapon, leave anonymously before the admin even knew. Then the admin responded by not calling 911, not alerting staff or students, and then misleading the public about what happened. And you think that is doing a good job at handling this?
They didn't let anyone in. Another student let them in and they don't have enough staff to monitor the halls given how large the school is. We've also been happy at Wheaton, its far better than the other HS our other child is at.
So MCPS is hinging the safety of its school building on the judgement and discernment of minor children who may let people they do or don't know in? That sounds like a sound way to run a $3 billion dollar school system?
And if they don't have enough security staff, is the principal, teaching staff or PTSA lobbying the superintendent or the school board to increase security staff at the school? I have never seen or heard them state that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.
You’re obviously very protective of the Wheaton administration. Let me get this straight, the Wheaton admin allowed an armed intruder to enter their school, attack a student with a deadly weapon, leave anonymously before the admin even knew. Then the admin responded by not calling 911, not alerting staff or students, and then misleading the public about what happened. And you think that is doing a good job at handling this?
They didn't let anyone in. Another student let them in and they don't have enough staff to monitor the halls given how large the school is. We've also been happy at Wheaton, its far better than the other HS our other child is at.
So MCPS is hinging the safety of its school building on the judgement and discernment of minor children who may let people they do or don't know in? That sounds like a sound way to run a $3 billion dollar school system?
And if they don't have enough security staff, is the principal, teaching staff or PTSA lobbying the superintendent or the school board to increase security staff at the school? I have never seen or heard them state that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.
You’re obviously very protective of the Wheaton administration. Let me get this straight, the Wheaton admin allowed an armed intruder to enter their school, attack a student with a deadly weapon, leave anonymously before the admin even knew. Then the admin responded by not calling 911, not alerting staff or students, and then misleading the public about what happened. And you think that is doing a good job at handling this?
They didn't let anyone in. Another student let them in and they don't have enough staff to monitor the halls given how large the school is. We've also been happy at Wheaton, its far better than the other HS our other child is at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.
You’re obviously very protective of the Wheaton administration. Let me get this straight, the Wheaton admin allowed an armed intruder to enter their school, attack a student with a deadly weapon, leave anonymously before the admin even knew. Then the admin responded by not calling 911, not alerting staff or students, and then misleading the public about what happened. And you think that is doing a good job at handling this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.
You’re obviously very protective of the Wheaton administration. Let me get this straight, the Wheaton admin allowed an armed intruder to enter their school, attack a student with a deadly weapon, leave anonymously before the admin even knew. Then the admin responded by not calling 911, not alerting staff or students, and then misleading the public about what happened. And you think that is doing a good job at handling this?
Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is very misleading. I have a child at the school and based on what I know, it sounds like the excellent Administration at Wheaton did a good job of handling this. I appreciate the day-of explanation.