Monthly Archives: June 2017

Fresh faces needed for 2018 Election Cycle – Candidate Filing Requirements.

2018.elections.pngDue to high levels of corruption and the need to disrupt organized schemes in Maryland, We need fresh candidates to run for open seats across the state and especially in Prince George’s County.  We intend to support incumbents who have good record and new faces with commitment to good governance.

Otherwise, candidates not involved in bribery and other violations for personal gain will be supported.  Please join us as we make plans and strategies on bringing down the corrupt establishment. For those interested in running for public office, listed below are the requirements.

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Filing Requirements for Candidacy

Candidate Filing for the 2018 Gubernatorial Primary Election begins: February 28, 2017
The candidate filing deadline is Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:00 p.m.

You must be a resident of the District for which you are filing, a registered voter, and have completed and filed the following:

FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE STATEMENT FILING INSTRUCTIONS

https://efds.ethics.state.md.us/

Once the disclosure has been completed, be sure to continue “clicking” or follow the red button (at the bottom right), to retrieve your confirmation.  Bring this confirmation with you when you file.

Note:  Effective October 1, 2017, candidates for certain State offices (State’s Attorney, Sheriff, Register of Wills and Clerk of the Circuit Court) will no longer be permitted to use a paper format for filing their financial disclosure statements.  They must use the Commission’s electronic system.

If you have any questions, contact:

States Ethics Commission
45 Calvert Street
3rd Floor
Annapolis, MD  21401
Office 410-260-7770
Toll Free 1-877-669-6085
Office Hours:  8:00 am to 4:30 pm (after 4:30 by appointment only)

Federal and State Offices are filed at the State Board of Elections. The following County and Central Committee Candidates must be filed at the Prince George’s County Board of Elections:

  •  County Executive
  • County Council
  • State’s Attorney
  • Clerk of the Circuit Courts
  • Register of Wills
  •  Judges of the Orphan’s Court
  • Sheriff
  • Board of Education – Districts 2, 3, 6, and 9
  • Democratic Central Committee
  • Republican Central Committee

Filing Fee

There is a filing fee of $25. The fee for Central Committee is $10. The fee must be paid by either check, money order or cash. No credit cards can be accepted at this time.

Campaign Account

Prior to filing Certificate of Candidacy, each candidate must file a campaign account. A campaign account is established by filing a Statement of Organization with the State Board of Elections.

More Information

Visit the Maryland Board of Elections Filing page for more information on general candidacy filings and Campaign Finance. Be sure to review the Summary Guide to Maryland Candidacy and Campaign Finance Laws. A list of filed candidates will become available after filings begin. The link is updated approximately 24 hours after new filings are completed. For additional information, please contact 301-341-7300.

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Sen. Muse condemns Prince George’s County alleged grade fixing

– Senator Anthony Muse calls for the resignation of Prince George’s County Public Schools (PGCPS) CEO Dr. Kevin Maxwell after more than 140 seniors were highlighted for last-minute “assistance.”

He claims upwards of 70% of students entering Prince George’s Community College must take up to two years of remedial classes before they can begin regularly scheduled undergraduate curriculum.

“We have turned a two year college into a four year college,” Senator Muse said.

Parents have come forward alleging that students’ grades were changed from failing to passing, and teachers have admitted to changing grades under pressure from the administration.

Dr. Maxwell is credited with improving PGCPS high school graduation rates from 74.1% since he took over in 2013 to 81.4% in 2016.

The state found no evidence of grade fixing during past investigations.

Dr. Maxwell claims the accusations are baseless, though he declined to appear with Senator Muse this morning.

“Just come out and give an answer. Come out and listen to the teachers. Not appearing today is the same as not appearing in front of hundreds of parents who went to the school to talk about it,” Senator Muse said.

If grade fixing is taking place, he believes Dr. Maxwell should be held accountable for his actions going forward.

Via Fox5DC

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Staff members speak out about pressure from Prince George’s Co. Public Schools to graduate students

It has several Prince George’s County school board members calling for a state investigation into allegations of fraud. Board members Edward Burroughs, David Murray, Raaheela Ahmed and student member Juwan Blocker sent a letter to Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan saying that whistleblowers at almost every level in the school system “have clear and convincing evidence that PGCPS has graduated hundreds of students who did not meet the Maryland State Department of Education graduation requirements.”

Schools CEO Dr. Kevin Maxwell has denied the claims and said they are politically motivated.

The school district celebrated significant gains in its graduation rate earlier this year with 81 percent of seniors graduating in 2016, the highest number since 2010. Dr. Maxwell and his team made surprise visits at high schools with graduation rates over 90 percent.

“When Maxwell came up to our school with an entourage to celebrate our high graduation rates, we all howled with laughter,” a teacher told FOX 5. “Because we knew that they were completely fraudulent.”

“Most of the counselors laugh at it,” said a high school guidance counselor. “Because we know that it’s not real.”

The staff we spoke to wanted their identities concealed for fear of retaliation. They work at different high schools but tell the same story.

“There is incredible pressure coming from the central office onto all of the principals at all the schools to push kids through whether they really earned the credits or not,” a teacher said.

“It’s, ‘What are you going to do to make sure that they pass,’ rather than, ‘What are you going to do to make sure that they learn,’” another teacher told FOX 5.

Boosting the graduation rate has been a top priority for Dr. Maxwell since he was appointed in 2013. The county had been lagging behind the state average before making gains.

Along with the spike in graduates, there have been changes in policy. For example, a new grading procedure says that students will get a minimum of 50 percent for making a “good faith” effort on an assignment or assessment.

“As long as 50 percent of the work is done,” a teacher said. “It doesn’t have to be correct, just has to be complete – which makes no sense.”

Staff members say that is the just the beginning.

“Either outright asking the teacher to change the grade, I’ve seen them just change the grade,” the guidance counselor said of administrators at her school.

She says her principal told her to contact the teachers of failing seniors and see if more could be done to help them pass. She says when some students were still failing, she was told to contact those teachers again.

“Email them all and tell them, ‘Change all the grades.’ Whether it was a 30 or 50, change it all to passing,” she says she was told by the principal.

FOX 5 obtained an email from a guidance counselor and assistant principal at DuVal High School, one of the schools where Maxwell was celebrating the 92 percent graduation rate. It was sent to staff and read in part, “Below are a list of our seniors who need one last intervention with your assistance.”

It goes on to say, “If there is any last minute, (rub a genie in a bottle), assistance you can help our future scholars, please assist (yes one more time)!”

The email was sent about a month before graduation and lists the names of 141 seniors and their teachers.

FOX 5 spoke to a mother who has an 11th grader at DuVal. She says she learned he was failing a class with a 29 percent and talked to the teacher.

“She had nothing else to justify a higher grade,” said Randa, who opted not to give her last name. “The guidance counselor for that grade said, ‘Do not worry he will pass with a 65.’”

She says her son indeed passed the class, and that he is very aware of why.

“When I try to challenge him and say, ‘You need to give more with that essay, you need to study a little bit more,’ (he says), ‘Well what for? They’re going to pass me anyway,’” Randa said. “He is passing, no problem. Does he know the material? No idea. Am I going to be tasked to teach him that over the summer? I’ve already begun that process.”

Dr. Maxwell declined our request for an interview, but provided this statement:

“I am aware that four Board of Education members sent a politically-motivated letter to the Governor regarding Prince George’s County Public Schools’ (PGCPS) graduation rate. These claims are an affront to the hard work of our teachers, administrators, students and parents over the last few years. I categorically deny any systemic effort to promote students who did not meet state graduation requirements. Prince George’s County schools have much to celebrate this graduation season: more than $151 million in scholarship awards, acceptances to our nation’s finest colleges and universities, certifications to help students embark on challenging careers. We remain focused on improving students’ lives and preparing them for opportunities beyond high school. We welcome the Maryland State Department of Education to fully explore this matter.”

On Monday, nine school board members wrote their own letter opposing the allegations, and demanding their colleagues apologize and resign if an investigation fails to provide clear evidence of systemic corruption or no investigation is warranted at all. They blasted the board members for contacting the state instead of bringing the claims to the attention of the board and county first.

“The claim that folks are pushing students out is false,” said board member K. Alexander Wallace. “We’re pushing our students to be the best that they can be.”

Board Chair Segun Eubanks said he was confident the state would find no evidence of wrongdoing if there is an investigation.

“If there is any clear and compelling evidence from legitimate authorities about this, we’re very anxious to see it,” Eubanks.

FOX 5 asked if he had requested to see the evidence referenced in the board members letter to the governor.

“We have not asked them for any evidence,” Eubanks said. “We have gone to our administration and said we want to make sure that everything they have told us is correct and that there is absolutely no systemic corruption going on. And we are confident they will give us that.”

“I’m confident we will be vindicated in this,” added board member Sonya Williams.

The three board members also referenced a prior investigation by the Maryland State Department of Education into an anonymous tip that educators were being forced to change grades.

According to a report provided by a PGCPS spokeswoman, the state looked into the issue in January after the tip was sent to the U.S. Department of Education.

In a letter, the academic officer assigned to the case says she spoke to Dr. Maxwell and “asked him to identify others with whom I could talk.” The letter goes on to say that she spoke to an Instructional Director, a Data Management and Strategy Analyst, a Special Project Officer, a Deputy Superintendent as well as Maxwell and concluded there was no wrongdoing. The U.S. Department of Education said they found the state response “satisfactory” and considered the matter closed.

A spokesperson for the Maryland State Department of Education said she had no comment at this time.

Gov. Hogan’s office confirmed it has received the board members letter saying, “The allegations are very concerning and they have been forwarded to the Maryland State Department of Education.”

Staff we spoke to say they hope to see an investigation by the state.

“You’re cheating the students,” a teacher said. “They’re not learning good work ethics. They’re pretty much being led to believe that entitlement is the norm, and it’s not.

“If they go to college, they are going to be in a great deficit because they didn’t learn that content,” said the guidance counselor. “And so I feel like we’re setting them up to fail.”

Stay with FOX 5 for the latest on this developing story. Contact the reporter at Lindsay.Watts@foxtv.com.princegeorges1

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Claims of fraud in graduation rates at Prince George’s Co. school

Published on Jun 19, 2017

A school district is firing back against shocking allegations of widespread corruption in Prince George’s County Public Schools.hq720

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Maryland school official responds to fraud allegations in graduation rates

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Prince George’s County schools Chief Executive Kevin M. Maxwell, in front, is shown in a file photo. (Mark Gail/For The Washington Post)

Four members of Prince George’s County’s school board have urged Gov. Larry Hogan to order an investigation into what they allege is a systemic effort to fraudulently boost graduation rates in the Maryland school district.

The members, a minority bloc on a 14-member board, say the state’s second-largest district engaged in “widespread systemic corruption” that has inflated graduation rates since 2014. They allege that grades were changed and that students were credited for courses they did not take.

“Whistleblowers at almost ­every level in [Prince George’s County Public Schools] have clear and convincing evidence that PGCPS has graduated hundreds of students who did not meet the Maryland State Department of Education graduation requirements,” the four said in a letter.

The accusations drew a strong reaction from other school board members and senior school system officials.

School district officials said Monday afternoon that the state had investigated the system’s graduation rates several months ago. The state did so at the request of the federal Education Department, which got an anonymous complaint last summer.

Investigators found nothing improper, district officials said, providing a state letter discussing the result of the examination, which included several hours of interviews with five people who work in the school system. The school officials also released a federal response saying the matter was closed.

“We already feel this situation was thoroughly investigated and . . . the allegations were unfounded,” Deputy Superintendent Monique Davis said Monday.

The board members who wrote the letter, dated May 30, are Edward Burroughs III (District 8), David Murray (District 1), Raaheela Ahmed (District 5) and student member Juwan Blocker. Burroughs, who provided the first signature on the letter, is a frequent critic of Kevin Maxwell, the school system’s chief executive.

The letter noted that Maxwell started as the top leader of the 132,000-student system in summer 2013 and that he has touted graduation rate improvements as a significant achievement.

Maxwell, who was appointed to a second four-year term this year by County Executive Rushern L. Baker III (D), issued a statement that called the letter “politically motivated” and welcomed state education officials to “fully explore” the matter.

“These claims are an affront to the hard work of our teachers, administrators, students and parents over the last few years,” he said. “I categorically deny any systemic effort to promote students who did not meet state graduation requirements.”

State data shows that four-year graduation rates in Prince George’s have improved from 74.1 percent for the class of 2013 to 81.4 percent for the class of 2016. That jump was the largest for that time period of any school system in the state, data shows.

Even so, the county’s rate lagged behind the statewide rate (87.6 percent) and the rate in any other Maryland school system except the city of Baltimore’s.

Prince George’s officials attributed their gains to increasing expectations and standards since Maxwell arrived and efforts to provide support to students.

Nationally, on-time graduation rates have risen in recent years, and many school systems, especially those that are lower-
performing, have felt pressure to show gains, said Michael Hansen, director of the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institution.

The letter was first reported Saturday by Fox 5 News. It requested that Hogan (R) order the state’s attorney general and the Maryland State Department of Education to investigate and also asked that documents be seized and a process created so that whistleblowers may come forward without fear of retribution.

A spokeswoman for Hogan called the allegations “very concerning” and said in an email that they had been forwarded to the state education department.

A state Education Department spokeswoman declined to comment Monday.

The letter alleged that whistleblowers have evidence about the ma­nipu­la­tion of student records both before and after graduation.

According to the four board members, the whistleblowers said:

●Courses that students had not taken had been added to their records;

●Grades were changed without teachers’ consent;

●Students received credit for service learning hours that they had not earned. Maryland requires students to amass a certain number of service learning hours for graduation.

“These actions, which alter the much touted student graduation rate, are occurring across the school system leading us to believe that there are accomplices and complicity at the highest levels of the school system,” the letter said.

In a separate letter to county citizens, nine other school board members said Monday they were shocked and dismayed by the allegations and had no knowledge or evidence of systemic corruption to increase graduation results.

They said it was “appalling” that the minority bloc ignored local leadership and chose to “secretly share and distribute information that seeks to belittle the hard work of students, educators and parents.” The school district has monitoring and compliance systems in place, and those who cut corners would face “definitive sanctions,” the nine wrote.

Baker told reporters he had not seen the letter to the governor but had spoken to Maxwell. Baker said any allegations would be taken seriously, but he also commended the district’s success.

“They’ve done a great job in the school system to get the graduation rates up,” he said. “The teachers and principals have worked really hard. And so I know that they are going to look at this seriously. We’re very proud of the work the school system has done and the progress they’ve made.”

Via Washington Post 

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Prince George’s County Foreclosures and other dead ends

Dr. Haitham Hijazi, Director, DPIE

Dr. Haitham Hijazi, Director, DPIE is a Syrian immigrant who is an engineer with a doctorate and was appointed the head of Prince George’s new permitting, inspections and enforcement office by Mr. Rushern Baker III.

In case you ever fantasized about making a million or few by house flipping —

There are two avowed official registries of foreclosures that take place in Prince George’s County, Maryland. One is included in the statewide registry maintained by the State of Maryland. The other is maintained by the Department of Permitting, Inspections and Enforcement (DPIE, pronounced “D-Pie,” as in “cherry pie”).

Neither registry is open to the general public. The Maryland Foreclosed Property Registry is, as stated on its website,

an online, password-protected system managed by the Office of the Commissioner of Financial Regulation in the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (“DLLR”).

By law,

DLLR may grant access to the Registry only to State agencies and local jurisdictions, including counties and municipal corporations

to facilitate code enforcement, etc. The DLLR’s registry is not a before-the-fact research tool in any case; it is not a list of properties coming on the market.

Effective October 2012, in accordance with Maryland Code, Real Property Article § 14-126.1, every residential property purchased at a foreclosure sale must be registered in this system.

Purchasers are required to submit an initial registration of the property within 30 days after the foreclosure sale.

The purpose of the Maryland registry is to close the chronological records gap between the date of the foreclosure sale and the date the deed is recorded,

when unoccupied homes may fall into disrepair and it can be difficult to identify or contact the new owner.

The purchaser still has that 30-day grace period between buying a foreclosed property and submitting the registration. And again, the registry is not publicly accessible.

The information contained in the Registry is by law not a public record, and DLLR cannot grant access to the general public.

Prince George’s County

The registry maintained by the Prince George’s County Department of Permitting, Inspections and Enforcement (DPIE) is also closely held, though apparently in a different sense. DPIE’s public notice, on the agency website, explicitly tells mortgage holders to register foreclosures:

Foreclosure Property Registration Form

Attention Lenders
Please register a property (residential or commercial) that is in the process of foreclosure. After the information is completed, it will be added to Prince George’s County’s Foreclosure Property Registry.

The form itself tells lenders to deliver it in person or mail it to the DPIE “Foreclosure Registration Unit” in an office condo at 1220 Caraway Court, Largo, Maryland. The form includes spaces for the name, address and contact information of the property owner; it does not include any statement or certification that the property owner has been contacted about the foreclosure.

P. G. County DPIE Foreclosed Property Registration Form

Questions have now arisen as to how the Prince George’s County foreclosure registry is used. Like the State of Maryland registry, it is not open to public view. According to a person with close knowledge of the process, “Historically,” the registry kept by DPIE has been “highly restricted.” The County foreclosure list is announced via DPIE website for the purpose of registration, but the list itself is “held very close to the vest.” Access to the registry is applied for through a Maryland Public Information Act request; form linked here. To find out about the foreclosures, you fill out the form and submit it, asking for records. The form then goes up the managerial pipeline through “appropriate channels.” Indications are that even people involved in the MPIA process are not necessarily involved in the resolution of MPIA requests, nor are they necessarily informed about requests granted or denied. The hole in the channels leaves open a realistic possibility that access to the registry may be secretive but may not always be protected. This possibility has been confirmed in interviews and conversations with County officials.

The stated rationale for holding the P. G. County foreclosure registry so closely is the danger of squatting in vacant properties. The County does not release the information on upcoming foreclosures because officials do not want to give advance notice to squatters. “You can read between the lines” as to this claim, this writer was told. I asked whether the list breaks down into foreclosures on abandoned properties and foreclosures on occupied homes. Answer: no.

Where to file if you’re foreclosing in P. G. County

Asking whether interested parties such as house flippers could access the registry, I was told, “You’re on the right track.” There is no in-house mechanism to prevent exchange of friendly influence or sharing information with flippers. Indeed, the Director of DPIE himself, Haitham Hijazi, is closely connected to more than one house-flipping company through immediate family members as well as through his ownership of property on which his relatives operate their businesses. (Previous blogs on this topic linked here and here, among others.) Dr. Hijazi has not returned messages requesting comment or information. His son Abdullah Hijazi, principal of a house-flipping company who has appeared as party and as attorney in numerous foreclosure cases, has also not replied to request for comment.

The foreclosure registry may be somewhat arcane to the general public. However, as someone with knowledge of the operating structure and the registry has said,  “your information is known by a variety of people here”–meaning in the county and in county government. But–“they also know nobody’s doing anything about it.” The problems with foreclosures, the genuine phenomenon of troubled homeowners being pushed out of their homes by people with a vested interest in the houses is “Probably pretty well known among key people in the county,” I was told, but county officials cognizant of the issues seem to be covered by “teflon.”

As previously noted, Hijazi as head of the Department of Permitting, Inspections and Enforcement is one of County Executive Rushern Baker’s few holdovers from the previous county administration. Baker’s office has not yet had time to return a call requesting comment.

More to come

via  Margie Burns

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PGCPS board members claim graduation rate ‘fraudulently’ elevated, call for state investigation

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– Several Prince George’s County school board members are calling for a state investigation into what they call “widespread systemic corruption” in the school district.

“Specifically, the altering of student credit counts and the changing (of) student grades in order to fraudulently boost the high school graduation rate from school year 2014 to present,” reads to the letter sent to Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan.

The letter, signed by board members Edward Burroughs, David Murray, Raaheela Ahmed and student member Juwan Blocker, goes on to say that whistleblowers at almost every level in Prince George’s County Public Schools “have clear and convincing evidence that PGCPS has graduated hundreds of students who did not meet the Maryland State Department of Education graduation requirements.”

Raising graduation rates has been a top priority for PGCPS CEO Dr. Kevin Maxwell. The district celebrated significant gains earlier this year with more than 81 percent of seniors graduating in 2016, the highest number since 2010.

FOX 5 has spoken to multiple school employees who say there is pressure to graduate students regardless of whether they have earned a diploma. The employees, who work at different high schools, spoke to us on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.

“They are banking everything on graduation rates and things of that nature,” one teacher said. “So there is incredible pressure coming from the central office onto all of the principals at all the schools to push kids through whether they really earned the credits or not.”

“It comes down from the county, that comes down to the principals, that comes down to the staff,” said a guidance counselor.

“It’s, ‘What are you going to do to make sure that they pass,’ rather than, ‘What are you going to do to make sure that they learn,'” said another teacher.

FOX 5 sent the letter to Dr. Maxwell and Prince George’s County Public Schools spokeswoman Raven Hill on Friday afternoon for comment. We are still waiting for response.

Gov. Hogan’s office confirmed the letter was received.

“The allegations are very concerning and they have been forwarded to the Maryland State Department of Education,” said Amelia Chasse, a spokeswoman for Hogan, in an email.

Stay with FOX 5 for our full investigation.

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Read more >>>> Let us demand a Federal investigations without further delays.  No one should be given a free pass after bribery to the public officials in Maryland and elsewhere to have cases dismissed in an organized schemes. There is no need to engage in ‘fraudulent’ graduation rates while deceiving the public and depriving poor kids of their future. We deserve transparency, accountability and truth. We must stand with students who deserve a quality education. Call your elected representatives and the media. Enough is Enough.

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Major Prince George’s Education Rally and 2nd Major Meeting Planned in PG County to protest corruption and other issues

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BREAKING MAJOR STORIES

Major breaking story on Prince Georges Public Schools tonight and Monday!!! Watch Fox 5 tonight at 10pm — and Monday night at 10pm for an even bigger story.

Major Meeting to protest corruption

SECOND EDUCATION FORUM. Please join Senator Anthony Muse and other sponsors at our next Prince George’s Education forum Scheduled at Jericho City of Praise Church 8501 Jericho City Dr. Landover, MD 20785 on Monday, June 19th, 2017 at 6:45pm. Hundreds turned out at the last meeting. However,we cannot just meet. Many issues were identified and we need the information on these issues so that we, as a community, can ACT. Numbers matter. Please be present and invite as many as you can. Meet us there please share this on you FB page.

MAJOR RALLY

On Thursday June 22nd, 2017 Enough is Enough Education Rally is schedule at 14201 School Lane, Upper Marlboro, MD 20772 at 6:30pm to 7:30pm

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Read more >>>> Let us demand investigations without further delays.  No one should be given a free pass after bribery to the public officials in Maryland and elsewhere to have cases dismissed in an organized schemes. We deserve transparency, accountability and truth. We must stand with students who deserve a quality education. Call your elected representatives and the media. Enough is Enough.

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Prince George’s schools making policy changes after 848 employees placed on leave this school year

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 – Summer break has arrived for Prince George’s County Public Schools and new data released on Friday shows over 800 school employees have been placed on leave this school year for alleged misconduct and abuse. On Friday, school district staff detailed changes in policies and procedures at a school board retreat held at National Harbor.

FOX 5 was first to expose that hundreds of school employees have been placed on leave this school year after they have come under investigation. The final total, revealed Friday, is 848. About half of those placed on leave are teachers. Currently, 233 employees remain on leave as we head into the summer months. In total, 67 employees accused have been fired, resigned or retired, according to information provided by district staff.

New student safety policies were put in place one year ago to address cases of child abuse by school staff. These policies were meant to better protect students, but some school employees say the changes have resulted in innocent staff members and teachers being pulled from schools unnecessarily.

According to a presentation by Robin Welsh, the district’s executive director of accountability and compliance, the vast majority of the more than 800 cases reported to Child Protective Services have been “screened out,” which means they have not risen to the level of an investigation. She said many cases involved more minor inappropriate behavior that was not child abuse.

Welsh says the plan for this summer is ensure school employees are fully aware of expectations and disciplinary consequences. The district will be working with employee unions to put that information in writing. Principals will receive training to do their own investigations and be more selective about involving Child Protective Services.

Prince George’s County Board of Education chair Segun Eubanks said he hopes to see allegations dealt with more appropriately and quickly.

“I’m confident that if these new strategies are applied, that we are going to see a significantly better result, and certainly, people on administrative leave for less amount of time,” he said. “And hopefully, not necessarily less reporting. Because again, we talked about the fact that we want folks to report, but more with that being dealt at the school level and at the administrative level, and less being escalated into long-term administrative leave issues.”

The school district will continue to work on these policies and they are expected to be finalized by July 1.

via Fox5

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prince George’s County Schools CEO Dr. Kevin Maxwell

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2nd Major Meeting Planned in PG County to Discuss corruption and other issues

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Senator C. Anthony Muse
Democrat, District 26, Prince George’s County (See Below)

SECOND EDUCATION FORUM. Please join Senator Anthony Muse and other sponsors at our next Prince George’s Education forum. Hundreds turned out at the last meeting. However,we cannot just meet. Many issues were identified and we need the information on these issues so that we, as a community, can ACT. Numbers matter. Please be present and invite as many as you can. Meet us there please share this on you FB page.

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Read more  and call your representatives>>> Let us demand investigations.

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