Jay Fergusonjay@deepcreekvacations.com301-501-0420
Menu

BOE Revises Proposed School Closing Calendar

Support the Republican Newspaper! It’s only $9.95/year for the online edition!

Nov. 11, 2010

The Garrett County Board of Education held its regular monthly meeting this week, at which the revised school closing calendar was presented.
The suggested timeline for letters and a press release to be sent is the week of March 1–8, and the report of the superintendent’s advisory groups on the impact of the proposed closing(s) will be given at a meeting set for March 8.

The potential hearing dates for the school(s) being considered for closure have been set for March 22 for Bloomington Elementary School, with March 29 set as a weather make-up date, and March 24 for Kitzmiller Elementary School, with March 31 set as a make-up date.

The superintendent’s report and final recommendation will be given at a board meeting in April (to be announced), and the board will make its final decision at a separate meeting to be set in April as well.

Continuing business items included a motion to approve the school closings calendar and action on the JROTC CO2 Pellet Rifle Proposal, presented by Lynn Bell, director of secondary education. Action on this item was postponed until it is learned whether the approved proposal will result in an insurance increase at the high schools. It will be addressed at next month’s meeting.

An additional business item not listed in the agenda was the proposal of the development of Unified Sports, which will comply with the new Fitness and Athletic Equity for Students with Disabilities Act. The Unified Sports will include bocce in the winter, track and field in the spring, and aquatics/swimming in the fall. This will be developed to give opportunity to disabled students to participate in an athletic extracurricular activity.

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Winners of Garrett race for board will decide schools’ fates

Megan Miller
The Cumberland Times-News Sun Oct 10, 2010, 07:58 AM EDT

— OAKLAND — The candidate who wins the nonpartisan race for the District 3 seat on the Garrett County Board of Education faces a difficult decision early in his term — whether to close two elementary schools.

Incumbent Rodney Durst has served on the board for 20 years. He said he did not plan to run for re-election at first, but reconsidered because of “the severe situation the state is in.”

“We’ve worked so hard to get our schools to be some of the best in the state,” he said. “I don’t want to see it fall apart because of the budget. … I figured now is not the time to walk away.”

Durst said his priority is ensuring state government provides equal opportunities and funding for Garrett County students as it does for students in other parts of the state.

“What I want to do is make sure state government meets its responsibility, and hold its feet to the fire,” he said.

Challenger Rodney Reckart has served as president of the Crellin Elementary School PTO for four years.

“I just wanted to do more to help,” Reckart said of his decision to run. “I just think that some of the decisions need to have a different set of eyes.”

He proposed taking another look at the energy efficiency of school buildings.

“A lot of the buildings have old windows and doors,” he said. “If they’d spend the money to replace those things, the operating cost would go down.”

The biggest issue now facing the school board is the proposed closure of Kitzmiller and Bloomington elementary schools, and the consolidation of those students into Yough Glades and Broad Ford elementaries.

Durst said he supports the small schools, but will not do so at the expense of other educational programs.

“I’ll fight all the way I can. I believe in smalls schools,” he said. “But the thing I will not do is cut high school programs to save an elementary school. My total belief is we’ve got to do what’s best for all the students of Garrett County.”

Reckart, who has spoken publicly against the closures, said he would have to “take a long, hard look at it” before agreeing to such a move.

“I don’t think anybody wins by closing a school,” he said. “But I can’t say for sure that I would vote against it.”

Reckart said he would take into consideration factors like the potential number of students in consolidated classrooms, the financial savings for the school system and how the move would impact teachers’ contracts.

The board of education seats representing Districts 1 and 2 are also open, but candidates for both — current board President Donald Forrester and Vice President Thomas Carr, respectively — are unopposed in their bids for reelection.

The board could gain a new member if current member-at-large Jim Raley is successful, as he likely will be, in his bid to become a county commissioner.

Raley is currently unopposed in seeking the District 2 seat on the commission.

If elected to the commission, Raley would resign from the school board, creating a vacancy that would be filled by an appointment by the county commission.

Since the process would be triggered by Raley’s resignation from the school board, it’s possible that the newly-elected commission — including Raley — would be the one to name his replacement.

Contact Megan Miller at mmiller@times-news.com

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Garrett schools may be closed

Board scheduled to vote in March on Kitzmiller, Bloomington Elementary fates

Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News Thu Sep 16, 2010, 08:05 AM EDT

— OAKLAND — Kitzmiller and Bloomington elementary schools could be closed permanently at the end of the 2010-11 school year, depending on the outcome of a March vote by the Garrett County Board of Education.

Schools Superintendent Wendell Teets formally recommended the two elementary schools for closure during Wednesday night’s school board meeting, which was held at Southern Middle School to accommodate the approximately 80 members of the public who gathered for the announcement.

“I deeply regret the necessity of these recommended actions,” Teets said. “None of us wants to be in this position or could have anticipated these actions even two years ago.”

Teets presented his recommendations as an information item for the board, which is not scheduled to vote on the issue until March. None of the board members commented on the proposal.

The recommendations, Teets said, are based on input from all central office staff within the school system.

“These schools have the highest costs of operation per student and low attendance,” he explained.

Teets said that, in the current school year, it costs $425,761 to operate Bloomington Elementary and $409,405 for Kitzmiller, for a total of $835,166.

Under the proposal, Bloomington students would be moved to Broad Ford Elementary, and Kitzmiller students would attend Yough Glades Elementary.

Four people gave public comment on the issue after Teets’ announcement, including Piedmont, W.Va., resident Greg Harvey, who pointed to the towns of Piedmont and Westernport as cautionary tales of what can happen in the wake of community school closures.

Harvey said he grew up in Bloomington and now operates the Tri-Towns Basketball League out of the school facility. “It is going to be an effect on the community along with the kids in the school,” he said of the proposed closure. “We need to give families a reason to come to these places, not a reason to leave. … Anything we gain by closing that school financially, this county’s going to lose.”

Longterm financial concerns are the reason the measure is necessary, according to Teets. He said repeatedly that the closures would help the school system reduce spending without eliminating programs that benefit all students countywide.

“If we had sufficient funding to meet our … needs, I would not be making any such recommendation this year,” he said.

Garrett County Schools are facing a $1 million state funding reduction for the second year in a row. That’s because two years ago, the state changed its aid formula to be reflective of counties’ enrollment, and Garrett’s enrollment is steadily declining.

As of Sept. 8, Garrett County is down 99 students compared to September 2009. Teets said state figures project the decline to continue through 2019.

The school system forced a $700,000 carryover from the last fiscal year to balance this year’s budget, but it’s unlikely to be able to accomplish that again for the upcoming year.

While Garrett County schools stand to receive about $832,000 over the next four years in federal Race to the Top funding, those dollars are dedicated specifically to innovation and improvement programs.

Teets said he will appoint advisory committees for Bloomington and Kitzmiller within the next week. The committees, made up of parents, school representatives and community members, will report back to Teets and the school board after assessing the pros and cons of school closure through areas like building condition, transportation, student relocations, and the impact on the surrounding community.

The board will also conduct public hearings in November at both of the schools being considered for closure. The hearings schedule will be set in the board’s October meeting.

Contact Megan Miller at mmiller@times-news.com.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Garrett board to discuss which elementary schools to close

Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News Sat Sep 11, 2010, 07:58 AM EDT

— OAKLAND — The Garrett County Board of Education will hear administrators’ recommendations Wednesday on which elementary schools to consider closing at the end of the current school year.

The recommendations will be made as part of the board’s regular September meeting, which will be held at Southern Middle School. Public comment periods are scheduled for 4 and 7 p.m. The board will take up the public portion of its agenda at 5:30 p.m.

Superintendent Wendell Teets will recommend a school or schools for closure based on input from administrative staff members, but the board can add other facilities to the list as it sees fit.

In the coming months, each school named for consideration will be studied by an advisory group made up of parents, school representatives and community members. The groups will look at things like building condition, transportation, student relocations and the potential impact of a school’s closure on the community.

Teets said he will be selecting people to participate in the advisory groups. The advisory groups will report their findings to the board of education.

According to a schedule adopted in August, the board will also conduct public hearings in November at each of the schools being considered for closure.

Meanwhile, a group of parents, municipal officials and other concerned residents from areas like Crellin, Bloomington and Kitzmiller have organized a coalition called the Small Rural School Focus Group to advocate for keeping all existing elementary schools.

Matthew Paugh, a spokesman for the group, said it’s been meeting at least monthly and holding information conversations with board members and county political candidates on the issue.

“We’re in a holding pattern until we see which schools we’re dealing with,” Paugh said. “Once we know that, we’ll develop specific strategies with those communities to fight back.”

The final decision on which, if any, schools will close won’t occur until March 8. By law, a decision must be made no later than April 30 if a school is to be closed for the 2011-12 academic year.

School officials have attributed the proposed consolidation partly to a budget crunch caused by major state funding reductions. Funds have been lost due to decreasing Garrett County enrollment and because of changes in the way the state calculates aid per pupil.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Garrett group hopes to show negative effects of consolidation

Kitzmiller councilman says keeping school top priority
Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News

— KITZMILLER — While the Garrett County school board prepares to discuss closing elementary schools, a group of county residents is working to show what losing those schools could mean for their communities.

Parents, municipal officials and other concerned residents from areas like Crellin, Bloomington and Kitzmiller are organizing into a coalition called the Small Rural School Focus Group, to advocate for keeping all existing elementary schools in Garrett County.

“My biggest concern is about the communities,” said Angie Paugh, a Kitzmiller resident and mother of four with two children currently enrolled at Kitzmiller Elementary. “This is where my kids play after school. This is where they’re involved in sports. This is where we live. The whole town is really going to go if the school goes.”

The group held its first official meeting July 12, and is in the process of developing research and ways of sharing information with officials and the public on small rural schools in the educational system.

“We really, in Kitzmiller, see it a lot as a community development and revitalization issue,” said Matthew Paugh, a Kitzmiller town councilman not related to Angie Paugh. He pointed out that the town’s 2004 strategic plan called retaining the school its most important priority “by far.”

Paugh said the school is not only a place for educating children, but also a lifelong learning facility for the community. But for that to work, Garrett County’s school system must continue to maintain it.

“The town really doesn’t have the economic resources to pull that off alone, without having something else in that building,” he said.

Angie Paugh said the group’s aim is not to launch a negative campaign against the school system’s board, administrators or other employees. Instead, it will highlight what members believe is the crucial role of small rural schools, and will present the board with alternatives to consolidation.

“Research demonstrates that small neighborhood schools reduce the achievement gap, provide better education and bridge socioeconomic differences,” the group stated in a news release. “These schools serve as anchors for their communities.”

School officials have attributed the consolidation discussion partly to a budget crunch caused by major state funding reductions. The cuts include funds lost because of decreasing student enrollment and because of changes in the way the state calculates aid per pupil.

The board is expected to discuss a timeframe for considering consolidation in its August meeting. A decision on the issue was expected in December. But by law, the board would have until as late as April 2011 to vote on any school closures that would go into effect in the following academic year.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350 Deep Creek Lake Info, Business Directories, Classified Ads, Events & more! Advertise on www.DeepCreekAlive.com!