Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The contractor was not cleared to work at Wheaton HS yet he was working on school grounds. MCPS knew he had felony convictions. The contractor was working there anyway because MCPS doesn’t check who is working at their schools. MCPS should be checking. MCPS should also put the construction company on a do not hire list.
I don't understand why you think MCPS should be given a pass for a lapse in school security? Both the contractor and MCPS bare the responsibility for not preventing a convicted felon from working at Wheaton HS. However, MCPS could easily close this security gap if it valued protecting students. Just confirm who is working at schools that have students present. Issue work badges so school security can check who is allowed to be on school grounds and who is not.
Nobody has said that.
Nobody is saying that. What doesn't make sense is why people on here seem to only be pointing the fault at MCPS when there are at least 2 other parties that should bare the bigger responsibility. Also since the occurrence didn't happen on school grounds, I'm not really sure if the the rapist's place of work is relevant here.
Anonymous wrote:I think there are a lot of construction and landscaping contractors cutting corners by hiring people with no background checks. I'm very nervous with my kids and teens around construction projects for this reason--I think it's one of the few jobs where guys with violent criminal histories know they can probably get a job regardless of their background.
Anonymous wrote:What MCPS should be addressing is their inability to keep convicted felons from working at a MCPS school. MCPS should along address the lack of supervision of their contractors and failure to impose a penalty to a contractor that knowingly had a convicted felon at a school site.
Anonymous wrote:What MCPS should be addressing is their inability to keep convicted felons from working at a MCPS school. MCPS should along address the lack of supervision of their contractors and failure to impose a penalty to a contractor that knowingly had a convicted felon at a school site.