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‘With remorse’ Garrett County superintendent suggests school closings

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Garrett County’s interim superintendent of schools recommended Tuesday that Dennett Road and Kitzmiller elementary schools be closed due to a lack of state funding.

“We don’t have any wiggle room in the budget. I am a proponent of small schools and I agree that it takes a community to raise a child. This is definitely an emotional issue,” said Sue Waggoner, who said it was “with remorse” that she made the decision.

House Bill 660 and Senate Bill 586, proposed by Delegates Wendell Beitzel, Kevin Kelly and LeRoy Myers Jr. and Sen. George Edwards passed in the Senate but failed in the House, according to Waggoner.

“It is unprecedented. Who would have believed that the legislature would adjourn without passing it,” said Waggoner, who said she wasn’t sure if lawmakers would return for a special session to hash out budget differences. “I’m still hopeful things can change.”

The county stands to lose $1.5 million in state assistance in fiscal year 2012 and that number is projected to be $2.5 million in FY 2013.

The board will vote on the recommendation at a special meeting on April 24 at 7 p.m. Public comment will be taken before the vote.

The proposed bill would have limited the board’s losses in state funding to 5 percent for the next three years. If the bill would have passed, it would have capped losses at $1.5 million.

In closing Dennett Road and Kitzmiller, it will save the board $1.2 million and $279,000 respectively, according to Waggoner. However, the board would have to add $170,750 in unemployment compensation to its budget.

There was no public comment on the school closing recommendation.

Contact Elaine Blaisdell at eblaisdell@times-news.com.

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Waggoner To Give School Closure Recommendation

Apr. 5, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education will hold its regular monthly meeting on Tuesday, April 10, beginning at 4 p.m. The meeting will be held in Southern Middle School cafeteria.

Following public comment at 4 p.m., the board will meet in closed session until 5:30 p.m. At that time, public agenda topics will involve recognition of Girl Scout Troop 55021 and FIRST Robotics Team 1629, as well as Maryland wrestling champ-ion Austin Shaffer.


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Action will be taken on the 2012-12 school calender and the 2012 retiree recognition dinner.

Information items will deal with special education procedures and Interim Superintendent Sue Waggoner’s recommendations concerning budgetary issues and school closings.

A second public comment will be held at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend.

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BOE Hears School Closure Committees

Mar. 15, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education heard three advisory committee reports on Tuesday concerning the proposed closure of three county elementary schools – Dennett Road, Friendsville, and Kitzmiller. All three committees made appeals to the board to keep the schools open and operating.


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The advisory committee representatives made their respective cases in the cafeteria of Southern Middle School, a venue selected by the board to accommodate the larger than usual crowd expected.

The groups cited the stress that would be placed on children by longer commute times, the loss of educational programs, and the damage that would be done to the surrounding communities as reasons to not close the schools.

It was also generally believed by the advisory committees that eliminating the three schools would cause crowding at other facilities and also adversely affect Garrett County’s ability to attract new industries and businesses.

“Class size is important,” stated Leo Martin, Mtn. Lake Park mayor, during the public comment forum.

“If we close these schools what do we do with the buildings? You simply create another burden for the tax payer. Like it or not, Garrett County will develop – what do we do then without adequate space for students?”

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Dennett Road is the best place for special needs children

To the Editor: Cumberland Times-News

I have three children in my home who attend Dennett Road Elementary School. One is a son in fourth grade who has done amazing there and received a wonderful education.
He is very involved in extra sports and they use the gym for practice often. He has excelled in math and science and loves the special evening workshops. I would love him to finish his last year in this school.
I also have a granddaughter in first grade, who spends most of her day in a special education classroom. She isn’t vocal and has cerebral palsy for which she uses a walker.
I have a disability advocate who has given me advice. I know I could request her to receive services at our home school (Crellin) and the board of education would have to provide it.
After her coming to Dennett Road, I believe the BOE has a great setup there for her and decided this was best for her education.
Dennett Road has two separate special education rooms, huge bathrooms, separate changing area, sensory room and all therapy in one place. To change something so well structured is a terrible injustice to kids who need structure the most.
My third child, a granddaughter, is in kindergarten. She isn’t vocal and has cerebral palsy. She is in special education only for one hour for speech and sign language. The rest of her day is regular classrooms.
She has done wonderful and deserves to be in the regular class, where she best fits in. Next year the BOE predictions say 30 kids in each first grade class at Yough Glades. I toured the school and desks for 30 kids would make it so tight she would be tripping over things, not handicap accessible at all.
Bathrooms are a big concern. As with most children with CP they are longer to toilet train. One tiny bathroom in the old Head Start class with no private area to change and clean them would be very embarrassing to them. They deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.
I am against closing Dennett Road School. I hope you will find a different solution and help not just the special need children but all the children in Garrett County. May God guide you in your decision.
Shari Ashby
Oakland

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Closing Dennett Road bad for special education students

To the Editor: Cumberland Times-News

I am disappointed that no mention has ever been made of the special education population at Dennett Road Elementary School.

I do not know if everyone knows that Dennett Road is the special education center for the entire southern end of Garrett County.

At Dennett Road, there are two large classrooms, a kitchen area to teach life skills, safe Time Out area, a private changing area for children who require this type of assistance, sensory room, handicapped equipped playgrounds, and ample handicapped equipped bathroom stalls and facilities separated into “Girls’” and “Boys’” bathrooms to serve the large number of students taught at this school.

The consolidation plan calls for these students to be shoved into two cramped classrooms at Yough Glades with NO private changing area, NO sensory room, NO safe time out area, NO kitchen skills and safety teaching area, NO handicapped equipped playground, and ONE toilet and sink (NOT Handicapped Equipped) to be shared by BOTH boys and girls.

I am sure that the staff of Yough Glades have good intentions and are highly qualified teachers, but their school is poorly designed, and will not allow for the inclusion of these students in the regular education setting, as they are included at Dennett Road.

This large special education population deserves better than to be shoved into a corner of leftover space in a building that doesn’t provide enough room for a walker to fit in a bathroom or in classrooms.

I recall one mother saying, at the Garrett County Board of Education meeting at Southern High School, “Just because my daughter is non-verbal, does not mean that she will not feel humiliated being changed in front of other students/adults. It does not mean that she will not feel hurt because she is not able to be included in activities because her walker doesn’t fit into the areas that the other students can access.”

I have dealt with similar situations during my wife’s life-ending illness. She was in a wheelchair for approximately ten years. Not having access to stores, restrooms, parks, etc. that non-handicapped people could access was humiliating and depressing.

Is this the message we really want to send to the special education students and their families? I think not. Send the right message. Make the only right decision. Keep Dennett Road Elementary School open.

Darrell DeWitt

Oakland

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Garrett school board delaying decision on elementary school closings

Vote to come during April 24 meeting

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — The final decision on whether to close Dennett Road, Friendsville and Kitzmiller elementary schools will come during a special meeting April 24, the Garrett County Board of Education voted at its Tuesday meeting.

Delaying the decision will allow time for additional funding opportunities and to allow the committees additional time to work, according to Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools. Advisory committee reports will be presented at the next board meeting on March 13.

“Because of pending legislation and other assistance, possibly, I would like to recommend that the superintendent’s recommendation not be made until April 10, because it will be after the close of the legislative session,” said Waggoner.

House Bill 660 and Senate Bill 586, proposed by Sen. George Edwards and Delegates Wendell Beitzel, Kevin Kelly and LeRoy Myers Jr., limit the board’s losses in state funding to 5 percent for the next three years. If the bill passes, it will cap losses at $1.5 million, according to Larry McKenzie, the board’s director of finance.

The Senate bill also asks that the study done by the Maryland State Department of Education include the impact on state funding of declining enrollments in local school systems with small enrollments.

“We are hoping that the bill does something for rural counties in the future. We can’t be the fifth-wealthiest county in the state with 46 percent farms,” said Waggoner.

Board vice president Charlotte Sebold encouraged all county residents to support the bill and write letters, stating, “It’s going to be heard.”

The hearing on SB 586 will be brought to the Senate Budget and Tax Committee on Wednesday at 1 p.m. in Annapolis, according to Sebold.

Angel Simms, a teacher at Dennett Road Elementary School, asked board members if they had talked to other counties about how they are cutting costs. Simms noted that she called 14 counties to ask if they closed schools and how they are saving money.

“I have talked to 14 counties. None of them had said they had closed schools. Some of them laughed. They think it’s a laughable idea that you would close a school,” said Simms. “When I started realizing that they are not closing schools and they are not firing all these teachers, I asked what are they doing.”

Some of the schools raised the co-pay for health insurance from $10 to $20; made a 5 percent cut to all programs; took furloughs; cut all salaries across the board; offered early retirement incentives; and placed a freeze on buying new maintenance equipment, according to Simms.

“To me, the things you want to think about cutting first are the things that kids aren’t going to notice,” said Simms. “The first thing they are going to notice is that their school is closed and their teachers are gone. So that’s the last thing you want to cut.”

The board is talking with other counties to try to find any kind of money savings, according to Thomas Carr, president.

“We do go down (to Annapolis) and lobby and will be going down for the March 15 (Maryland Association of Boards of Education) lobby day,” said Carr. “We are on the road a lot talking to people.”

The board also voted to honor a retirement incentive for employees even though there are fewer certificated employees then originally planned. The retirement letters that were sent to 158 eligible employees called for 15 certificated employees and three noncertificated employees. Only 10 certificated employees and nine noncertificated employees ex-pressed an interest in the retirement incentive.

The retirement incentive would save an estimated of $400,000 to $500,000, according to Waggoner.

The county commissioners had encouraged the board to review retirement incentives as a way to reduce staff numbers without eliminating new employees.

“We are going to look and see if we can absorb those positions,” said Waggoner during the board meeting.

Applications for a new superintendent are being received by the Maryland Association of Boards of Education. The board will meet with association representatives on March 14, said Carr. Interviews for the position will begin March 31; the second round of interviews will be conducted April 21; and final interviews will take place May 16-18.

“We have six applications in hand and possibly another one. At that point (in May), we desperately hope to have a new superintendent,” said Carr.

Waggoner had accepted the interim position for a year when former Superintendent Wendell Teets retired.

Contact Elaine Blaisdell at eblaisdell@times-news.com

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BOE Pushes Back School Closure Vote

Feb. 16, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education informed those attending its Tuesday meeting that in light of new legislation being brought forward in Annapolis, it was delaying its decision on the potential closure of three county schools – Broad Ford, Kitzmiller, and Friendsville elementaries.

Originally, Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools, was scheduled to make a recommendation to the board on the closure issue on Feb. 14. That recommendation will now occur at a meeting in April.


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“We’ve delayed our decisions to allow our advisory committees and our elected state officials more time to do their work,” stated Waggoner before an audience in the cafeteria of Southern Middle School.

The bills currently being proposed by Wendell Beitzel, Maryland state delegate, and George Edwards, state senator, – House Bill 660 and Senate Bill 586 – would cap cuts in state aid to Maryland school systems at 5 percent from the previous year’s budget.

These measures come after Maryland’s new state-aid formula has assessed Garrett County as the state’s fifth wealthiest, in spite of the large percentage of local children who qualify for free and reduced lunch. The assessment has presented the BOE with a loss in funds of around $3 million.

If passed, the new law would reduce the school system’s current losses by an estimated $1.1 million. Similar losses would be capped the following year; however, it is believed that by 2015, as the school system takes measures to reduce its expenditures, the loss limitation would no longer apply to Garrett County.

Waggoner and Larry McKenzie, the school system’s director of finance, expressed their plans to travel to Annapolis next week (Feb. 22, 1 p.m.) to testify in favor of the senate bill. That process will be repeated in the coming weeks to support the house bill.

“This situation is unfair to our county,” said Waggoner. “This legislation would do much to help Maryland’s rural communities.”

Waggoner stated that she has met with Senator Edwards to discuss the ongoing process. She also relayed a message from Delegate Beit-zel, who has requested that citizens send their stories, comments, and concerns to officials in Annapolis.

Pending any new decisions made at the state level, the superintendent’s recommendation is now scheduled to come on April 10, after the board has heard from the school advisory committees on March 14. The board’s final decision on the fate of each school would then come on April 24 at a specially called meeting.

It was also reported that 19 of the 158 eligible school employees have accepted the board’s retirement incentive. On the superintendent’s recommendation, the board voted to accept these retirements, which will save the school system approximately $450,000 in fiscal year 2013-14.

The board also recognized Southern High 10th grader Lindsey Murray, who designed last year’s BOE Christmas card, as well as the Garrett County FIRST LEGO League teams which collectively took first-place finishes in three major categories at a recent state tournament.

“We are so proud of how these students have represented Garrett County,” stated Waggoner.


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Closing Dennett Road would be major blow

Cumberland Times-News

My name is Kaitlin Shaffer. I went to Dennett Road Elementary School for five years: first through fifth grade. I am very distressed to even think about Dennett Road closing.

If Dennett Road closes, over 320 children will be taken out of a learning environment they are used to being in. Plus, they will be taken away from their friends, because the students of Dennett Road School would be split between three different schools.

The third graders would suffer the most, though. They would be expected to attend Dennett Road in third grade, a different elementary school in fourth grade, and possibly the Middle School in fifth grade!

Three schools in three years will not allow these children to make the connections with fellow students and teachers that they need to have a successful learning environment.

Now, onto the fifth grade situation. I have been informed that the Board of Education is thinking of putting fifth grade at the middle school in the tiny pods in between classrooms.

Those pods are five-sided and can fit 15 people in them at the max. There simply isn’t enough room or lockers for those students in addition to the sixth, seventh and eighth graders that are already there.

I also have heard that the second choice is to take the fifth graders and distribute them among Crellin, Yough Glades, and Broadford schools and close the schools the students came from. If this is done, the class sizes would be huge, which I know from experience isn’t good either.

I am in sixth grade honors classes at the middle school. My teacher’s job is made more difficult due to a very large class size of 29 students.

We have to learn lessons very fast so we can complete our state curriculum, and if there is something you don’t understand and want some help you are faced with a choice, go up to the teacher and wait for a long time because there are so many other kids in line.

Or, try to figure it out by yourself, which doesn’t always go so well. There is the option to go for tutoring in the mornings, but when there is homeroom, you sit in the back with about 20 people in the classroom.

If fifth grade is placed at the other elementary schools in Oakland, their classes will be much like mine.

In my fifth grade year, I had 20 students in my class and it was a lot easier to get help and learn because my teacher, Ms. Simms, didn’t have to divide her time between nine extra students.

I had a wonderful connection with her, because she simply had more time to get to know me.

So, if Dennett Road closes, those kids are deprived of that. And if the school closes, it doesn’t just affect fifth grade, it affects the entire community! Some excellent teachers will lose their jobs, everyone is forced to move somewhere else, and all the schools will be overcrowded. So it just causes problems for everyone.

I sincerely appreciate you taking the time to read my letter. I hope that the Garrett County Commissioners and the Garrett County Board of Education will truly consider my thoughts, as I am just one of hundreds of students who feel this way.

Kaitlin R. Shaffer

Oakland

BOE Postpones School Closure Advisory Meeting

Feb. 2, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education has announced that it will postpone its special meeting for the presentation of the Dennett Road Elementary, Friendsville Elementary, and Kitzmiller Elementary advisory committee reports.


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The special meeting for these advisory committee reports to the Board of Education will be rescheduled for a date to be announced after the board’s regular meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 14.

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Board Of Ed. Holds Elementary School Closure Hearings

Jan. 26, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education recently held its public hearings for the potential closings of Kitzmiller and Dennett Road elementary schools. The hearing for Kitzmiller Elementary was held last Thursday (Jan. 19) in that school’s multipurpose room, while the hearing for Dennett Road Elementary took place on Tuesday in the gymnasium of Southern High School – a venue chosen to accommodate the large crowd expected by the board.


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Both events began with a presentation by Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools. Those presentations showcased the fiscal problems faced by the county and the BOE, namely the trending loss of enrollment and Maryland’s wealth formula, which ranks Garrett County as the state’s fifth-wealthiest county despite its large number of students who qualify for free and reduced meals.

“This is like a grieving process as we’re dealing with the potential loss of our schools,” Waggoner said. “We’re looking at every aspect of this situation while trying to make tough decisions.”

Waggoner also talked about trying to attract some of Garrett County’s 294 homeschooled students into the system through the use of technology and offerings in advanced-placement courses. This addition of students would potentially increase state funding, though, as Waggoner explained, this would require some support from lawmakers in Annapolis, as Maryland currently does not permit funding for part-time students.

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