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Superintendent Joshua P. Starr

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Montgomery County School Board to Hold First Budget Hearing

The hearing on Superintendent Starr's $2.2 billion plan will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday.

  The Montgomery County Board of Education will hold a public hearing Thursday on Superintendent Joshua P. Starr’s $2.2 billion operating budget request for the 2013-2014 school year.  The hearing, the first of two before the board, will be held at 7 p.m. at the Carver Educational Services Center, at 850 Hungerford Drive in Rockville. The hearing also will be broadcast live on the web and on MCPS TV (Comcast channel 34, Verizon FIOS channel 36, and RCN channel 88). A second hearing will be held at 7 p.m. Jan. 17 at the Carver Center. Click here for more information, including how to testify. The proposed spending plan for fiscal 2014, which begins July 1, is a $48.95 million increase (2.3 percent) over the current budget. Starr’s plan aims…

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Once Again, a Battle Looms Over Funding Law and Montgomery County Schools Budget

Superintendent remains confident that he can win over the County Council.

Superintendent Joshua P. Starr’s proposed $2.2 billion fiscal 2014 budget for Montgomery County schools could face a familiar challenge—how to comply with a state law on school funding minimums while winning approval from a County Council determined to rein in spending on schools. Starr's spending plan, unveiled Tuesday, is $10 million—less than half a percent—above the funding floor mandated by the state’s maintenance of effort law, which requires counties’ per-pupil spending to remain the same or increase from year to year. But the half percent increase could have major implications. County school budgets that dip below the funding level can have the difference withheld by the state comptroller when passing through income tax revenues to…

John

4:07 pm on Saturday, December 15, 2012

This battle goes on every year and makes me sick. The schools need more money, MOE aside, because the number of students in the schools is increasing at a faster rate than the general population is increasing, in MoCo. Yet, the County Council, every year, does not give the schools enough money for MoCo's schools to remain among the top school systems in the country, which is why many people have …   more ›

Starr Calls For School Spending Hikes to Address Achievement Gaps, Growing Enrollment

The $2.2 billion budget adds teachers and targets middle school instruction.

  A $2.2 billion county schools operating budget proposed Tuesday by Superintendent Joshua P. Starr increases spending to manage growing enrollment, seeks to address persistent achievement gaps and invests in a curriculum aimed at meeting new state and national standards.  It also sets the school system up for yet another debate with the Montgomery County Council over spending on K-12 education. “This is a responsible budget that allows us to keep up with growing enrollment, while making strategic investments that will benefit our students today and in the future,” Starr said in a statement. “A budget is a reflection of our values and I know that Montgomery County understands the direct connections between the quality of our schools and …

John

5:20 pm on Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The rate of increase of students in Montgomery County public schools is exceeding the rate of growth of the general population, in Montgomery County -- a fact the Montgomery County Council and the current County Executive want to continue to ignore, when they budget money for the school system. They say they are funding the school system at 100%, but they do not account for the higher percentage …   more ›

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

$1.4 Billion in Capital Improvements Proposed by Superintendent for MCPS

The report addresses overcrowding issues in the Bethesda-Chevy Chase cluster of schools.

A newly released capital improvement report calls for $1.4 billion in updates to Montgomery County schools over the next six years. The improvements are designed to ease the impact of the nearly 9,000 students expected to be added by 2017 and ensure that current students are being taught in quality school buildings, according to the report released Friday by Superintendent Joshua P. Starr. The report notes that current construction costs of $217 per square foot compared to previous levels of $280 make now a prudent time to update facilities. “It is conceivable that when the construction market returns,” reads the report, “We may pay up to thirty percent more per square foot for construction than we pay currently.” Overcrowding is of …

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jag

2:25 pm on Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Uh, Jerry, the old Blair high school is now used by Silver Spring International Middle School. You're pretending like the site was forsaken or something. The county has grown - it's entirely logical that the Wayne Ave. location (not even the original location of Silver Spring's high school - i wonder if your grandfathered whined about the move to Wayne Ave?) would be outgrown after a few …   more ›

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