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Maryland State Board Of Ed. Willing To Waive Up To Five Days Of School

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Feb. 25, 2010

The Maryland State Board of Education yesterday set forth a limited waiver process for Maryland school system calendars affected by the historic snow storms of this winter.
School systems may request a waiver of up to five days from the required 180-day instructional calendar because of the inclement weather that affected the State during storms in December and February. The state board has authorized the state superintendent to approve individual requests from local system superintendents to make adjustments in the school calendar.

State law requires that schools be open for a minimum of 180 instructional days. The law also grants the state board authority to make adjustments to the school year if normal school attendance is prevented by severe weather. Under the waiver provision, systems must demonstrate that they have made sufficient effort in providing instruction through calendar planning and modifications.

“We believe that 180 instructional days is a bare minimum in a competitive world where some nations keep students in school for 220 days or more,” said state superintendent of schools Nancy S. Grasmick. “At the same time, we recognize that severe weather conditions this year have been unprecedented, and the state board believes that some flexibility must be granted.”

Read the rest of the article 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 Lake pic featured on AccuWeather.com weather blog


“No comment necessary in Deep Creek Lake, Md. Photo by AccuWeather.com Facebook user Shelley Thompson.”

A cool pic found its way to the weather blog of Accuweather.com. I found it on Twitter and wanted to share. The blog basically says we are in for another big storm beginning next week:

“From there, you guessed it, the swath of heavy snow may roll into the central Appalachians and the mid-Atlantic Sunday night and Monday.

While a wedge of warm air will try to work northward along the Atlantic Seaboard with this storm, odds favor mostly snow verses mostly rain at this time of the year, due to the cold ocean, cold ground, etc.

While this does “not” appear to be a storm that produces 2 to 3 feet of snow, it will add more weight to the existing snow on the ground and on roofs, be it water or more snow.”

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

School systems looking at how to make up for missed days

Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — School officials in Allegany and Garrett counties are struggling to piece together academic calendars and instructional plans wrecked by winter weather, but some help might be coming from the state.

In Allegany County, where students have missed eight days of school because of weather so far this year, officials haven’t decided how to handle make-up days.

Allegany County Superintendent David Cox said he’ll have more information about what the local board might do after a statewide meeting of superintendents scheduled for Friday.

“I  know that every school system in the state, practically, has been impacted by missing a whole week of school,” Cox said. “We will continue these conversations. As we learn about our options, we’ll let you know.”

For Allegany County students, the last day of school is scheduled for June 8, with June 9-11 and June 14-18 designated as snow make-up days. Last year, the board voted to use Presidents Day and Easter Monday as snow make-up days.

At Tuesday night’s board of education meeting, Allegany County High School teacher Evan West implored members not to extend the school year.

“It’s very difficult to maintain a high level of instruction in those last days of June going into July,” said West, who is also a parent. “And it would be a morale boost for the staff, also.”

Cox said he hopes winter will back off so that the school year can proceed. “We would like to resume some sense of normalcy.”

At the state level, education officials are also hoping to avoid extending school years into mid-summer.

On Tuesday, Maryland Superintendent of Schools Nancy Grasmick will ask the state board of education to waive a few of the 180 days Maryland schools are required to complete in an academic year. If the board agrees, schools might not have to extend their class schedules as far into the summer as they currently expect.

“The waiver wouldn’t necessarily be for all of the days that students have missed, because we do think the 180-day requirement should be taken very seriously,” said Maryland State Department of Education spokesman William Reinhard. “But we’ve had a historic snow in Maryland, and this seems to be something that should be done so students aren’t in school until the Fourth of July.”

The board has approved similar waivers in the past, sometimes tailoring the number of days waived to conditions in individual counties. But Reinhard said Grasmick will probably request a set number of days to be waived statewide.

“The snow has pretty much affected every county,” he said. “Although some got a little less than others, most got a ton.”

As of Wednesday, Garrett County schools had missed 12 scheduled days of class. Without state intervention, Superintendent Wendell Teets said that will probably mean extending the school calendar well past the original last day of classes set for June 8.

“We normally build five days into the calendar as make-up days, and we have the option of using Easter Monday as well,” Teets said. “That will give us six days. The others, at this point in time, would be added on in June.”

Teets said the Garrett school system, too, would benefit from a state waiver, but it’s planning ways to solve the problem on its own, just in case.

“Right now that’s a nonissue for us,” he said. ”We’re just looking at ways to make up the days we have to make up.”

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

School Personnel Explain Two-Day School Closing

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School Personnel Explain Two-Day School Closing

Feb. 11, 2010

It was decided this week that Garrett County schools would be closed today and tomorrow because of weather conditions. Transportation director Ed Wildesen explained the reasoning behind Wednesday’s decision to close for both days.
According to Wildesen, the decision was made by an entire team of individuals representing various agencies, including county and state roads departments, local police agencies, and emergency management organizations.

The State Highway Administration at Keyser’s Ridge recorded approximately 34 inches of snow-fall during this past weekend’s storm, and another 15 to 20 inches over the past two days. A total of 26 Garrett County roads remain closed and inaccessible, according to Garrett County Roads general superintendent Jay Moyer.

Read the rest of the article here

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