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County Council

Thursday, February 7, 2013

County Council: Eased Rules for Accessory Apartments, Disabled Hiring Bill Passes and More

Notable outcomes include eased regulations for accessory apartments, passing of the disabled hiring bill and evaluation of potential affordable housing locations.

The Montgomery County Council met Tuesday, Feb. 5. Notable outcomes from the meeting include: County Eases Rules for Accessory Apartments The Montgomery County Council passed a zoning amendment and bill Tuesday that will make it easier for homeowners to add an accessory apartment to a single-family home, The Washington Examiner reported. After almost 10 years of policy discussion, homeowners who want to add a small apartment for an aging parent, a caretaker or a renter can now do so in 90 to 110 days, versus a process that previously took a minimum of five to six months, The Washington Post reported. Residents opposed to the change were concerned it might lead to overcrowding of neighborhood schools, according to The Washington Post, but "…

Monday, January 14, 2013

On the County Agenda: Rapid Transit System Public Hearing and More

The Montgomery County Council meets at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in Rockville.

The Montgomery County Council will hold a public hearing regarding an amendment to fiscal 2013-18 Capital Improvements Program and supplemental appropriation to the fiscal 2013 capital budget that will provide an additional $1 million to development of the Rapid Transit System. "The funds would provide for additional studies as precursors to full-fledged project planning studies for certain bus rapid transit (BRT) lines identified by the County Executive's Transit Task Force to be built in a first phase," according to County documents. The studies, according to the County, will include: The full information packet for the public hearing is available online and the hearing is scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. Other agenda items of note …

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Schools, County 'Working Toward Common End'

MCPS and the County Council are optimistic heading into budget season.

After weathering years of contentious debate and a threatened lawsuit, leaders of Montgomery County Public Schools and the County Council say they're ready to move on and work together to serve students during trying economic times.  Members of the council and the Board of Education took questions from parents during Wednesday's Montgomery County Council of PTAs forum at Richard Montgomery High School, discussing the coming budget debate and the county's economic state. County Councilmember Marc Elrich said he's optimistic the two groups can put their past disagreements behind them, and he has been impressed with new Superintendent Joshua Starr's commitment to reason and transparency. "The tenor of the relationship has really changed," …

Susan Byrne

3:07 pm on Sunday, April 15, 2012

"County Councilmember Marc Elrich said he's optimistic the two groups can put their past disagreements behind them, and he has been impressed with new Superintendent Joshua Starr's commitment to reason and transparency." But what has changed materially that supports the commitment to transparency? Do taxpayers have any better idea how funds are spent for direct services to students and can they …   more ›

County Leaders Oppose Pension Shift

Effects of shift would devastate county budgets, executives say.

Leaders of counties from around Maryland said a plan to shift part of the cost of teacher pensions from the state would have serious consequences for the budgets of local governments. Nearly two dozen leaders from counties around the state, all members of the Maryland Association of Counties, met in Annapolis on Wednesday to show their opposition to Gov. Martin O'Malley's plan to shift to local governments. Montgomery County Council President Roger Berliner said his county is already dealing with a budget deficit of its own. "None of us up here are oblivious to the challenges the state faces in balancing its budget and its structural deficit," said Beliner, a Democrat. "We know because we've been doing it for years and years and years now…

Jordan

9:12 am on Thursday, February 16, 2012

Local tax payers don't recall having had any input into the size of teachers' pensions. If counties and local tax payers are now to assume this burden, they should have the right to renegotiate these pension contracts so that they are sustainable in the long run. Local tax payers themselves have either lost huge chunks of their own retirement in the past few years, and making them subsidize …   more ›

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

County Wants Police Officers Back in Schools

Montgomery County residents and officials are advocating the return of a full school resource officer program in Montgomery County schools to help with preventative public safety.

Montgomery County officials, police and parents are hopeful that the fiscal 2013 operating budget will allow the county to increase police staffing where they say it could have the greatest impact on public safety: in public schools. "Many of our high schools are virtual cities, many with over 2,000 students and hundreds of staff per school," said Susan Burkinshaw, an advocate of the school resource officer program and co-chair of the Safety and Health Committee of the county council of PTAs. "We don’t need officers in our schools because our schools are not safe; we need officers in our schools to keep our schools and communities safe." With recent budget cuts, school resource officers—traditionally a police officer stationed within high …

Thursday, February 2, 2012

County Moves Toward Cameras on School Buses

The County Council's Public Safety Committee unanimously endorsed the idea.

Drivers who don't stop for children getting off of school buses could soon face a fine of up to $250 under a bill moving through the County Council.  The council's Public Safety Committee unanimously recommended the bill at its meeting Thursday, and the issue will go before the full council as early as Feb. 7. The bill, introduced by County Councilmember Valerie Ervin, does not specify a cost, fine amount or number of cameras. Instead, it authorizes Montgomery County Police to consult with the Board of Education on a plan to install cameras on certain buses. Councilmember Phil Andrews, who chairs the Public Safety Committee, said the county has issued more than 1,200 citations over the past three years for failure to stop at a bus crossing…

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Danny

8:40 pm on Monday, February 6, 2012

Yep! Communicating in the English language is an important skill.   more ›

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Berliner Elected County Council President

Navarro approved as vice president.

The Montgomery County Council elected Councilmember Roger Berliner as its next president on Tuesday, choosing Councilmember Nancy Navarro as vice president. Berliner, who succeeds outgoing Council President Valerie Ervin, said Montgomery County's work to regain fiscal stability is not yet done, and that the county will face budgetary, transportation and environmental challenges in the future.  "If we are to meet these challenges, we will have to meet the hardest of them all: becoming change agents rather than servants of the status quo," he said. "We need to introduce new words into our county’s business model, words like nimble, bold, entrepreneurial." Navarro, who represents District 4, is the county's first Hispanic female vice …

Friday, May 20, 2011

Leggett Talks About the Fiscal 2012 Operating Budget

The county executive met with reporters after the County Council's preliminary vote on Thursday.

County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) met with reporters on Thursday to discuss the $4.4 billion county operating budget for fiscal 2012. The County Council held a preliminary vote on the budget on Thursday. A final vote is scheduled for May 26.

Budget Restores Police in Schools, Cuts $25 Million from MCPS

The Montgomery County Council is expected to adopt the final budget May 26.

The Montgomery County Council unanimously agreed on a budget that would cut school funding, restore funding for a smaller squad of school resource officers and put the county on a  more “sustainable” financial path. The council reached the decision during a work session Thursday morning and is expected to formally adopt the $4.4 billion budget May 26. The budget would go into effect July 1, the start of the 2012 fiscal year. County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) said the council’s budget adopted about “98 percent” of what he had recommended. The most drastic difference was an additional $25 million cut from the Montgomery County Public Schools budget. MCPS requested $82 million in new funding from the county in order to comply with a state …

Bob Hydorn

12:40 pm on Friday, March 16, 2012

Ask any school principal and they will tell you that SRO's are needed.   more ›

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Leggett Calls for Job Cuts, Flat Funding of Schools

Restructuring government and benefits costs is part of a county budget that reflects "a new normal," the executive said.

Montgomery County must “use these tough times to define a new normal,” County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) said Tuesday as he outlined an operating budget proposal that seeks to close a $300 million gap by slashing 216 county jobs, tapping county employees to bear more of the cost of their benefits and rejecting the school system's request for more county aid. Under the $4.35 billion plan for fiscal 2012, which begins July 1, county taxpayers would likely see a slight increase in property taxes, which are held at the county charter limit—the rate of inflation plus the value of new construction. The budget must be approved by the County Council by June 1. The proposal does not include employee furloughs and avoids the elimination of another …

Sharon

10:37 am on Wednesday, March 16, 2011

It County Executive Leggett back in one of his 'Manic Modes' AGAIN!!!!!!   more ›

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