Posted on 10/10/2016 10:42:27 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Montgomery County Board of Education President Patricia ONeill asked the countys state legislators Wednesday if they could help eliminate tolls for county school buses that drive on the state-operated Intercounty Connector.
A Montgomery County Public Schools spokeswoman said in an email Friday the school system spends nearly $18,000 per year on ICC tolls. Buses that typically use the ICC include those for cross-county special education routes and sports trips, according to spokeswoman Gboyinde Onijala.
It would help us a great deal to make a more efficient transportation system for the 100,000 students we transport every day if we could use the ICC without paying a toll, ONeill said during Wednesdays legislative priorities meeting with state legislators in Rockville.
However, spokesman John Sales said in an email Friday that the Maryland Transportation Authority (MDTA) is governed by a trust agreement for the benefit of its bondholders and that under the agreement county-owned buses are required to pay the tolls.
Drivers who are permitted free passage on the ICC include state employees while they are in the discharges of their official duties, elected officials and emergency workers, according to the trust agreement.
ONeill told the countys delegates and state senators that buses dont use the road very often due to the toll. The $2.3 billion highway that connects I-270 in Gaithersburg with I-95 in Laurel first opened in 2011.
ONeills request came as she pleaded with legislators to fight for additional school construction funds in Annapolis.
Typically we assume were getting $40 million [in state funds]thats not enough, ONeill said. Were very worried that pot might shrink and that would be terrible for us.
She said the school systems budget took a sizable hit last year when Gov. Larry Hogan declined to release the countys approximately $17.7 million share of the Geographic Cost of Education Index (GCEI) funds. Hogan instead plans to use the $68 million typically budgeted for GCEI as a contribution to the states pension system.
The GCEI funds are provided to school districts where the cost to educate students is higher than in other districts. The countys General Assembly delegation has been battling with the Republican governor over his unwillingness to release the GCEI funds since he withheld them in May.
ONeill sent a letter to Nov. 16 to Hogan explaining the countys need for additional school construction funds.
We expect enrollment to increase by 10,000 students in the next decade, ONeill wrote. This is why it is essential that the state not only maintain the $250 million previously set aside for school construction but rather increase it. We account for over 17 percent of the student population in the state, but only receive approximately 12 percent of the states construction funds.
On Wednesday, ONeill said the school systems $2.3 billion annual budget has been reduced to the bone and that any reductions would negatively affect the school systems operations.
Maryland “Freak State” PING! to article from a year ago.
They didn’t build that.
$18,000 per year Is pocket lint in a school system budget of $23 billion per year, it’s < 0.0001% of the budget. This school system is spending $23,000 per student per year (!).
Sorry, that’s $2.3 billion, so <0.001%, so still pocket lint. Facetiously, they could probably come up with that by reducing their expenditure on LGBT inclusiveness instructional materials. The $23,000 per student per year is correct.
It would be a lot easier if they would just build special roads only for government vehicles. The politicians and bureaucrats shouldn’t have to wait in traffic or pay tolls to do the people’s work.
User fees Are a good Thing - always
If the school district fired one petty bureaucrat, like an “assistant deputy vice principal” or some such, they’d “save money” (like government can “save money” - ha)
MoCo resident here - yep, $18,000 is utter pocket change for the school system. There are a staggering number of levels of bureaucracy and administrative personnel - you’d save multiples of $18,000 by eliminating just one “cluster superintendent”, “math resource specialist”, etc., etc.
Anyone else catch who gets to use the road for free - “elected officials”. The rats ride for free while school buses get charged. So typical!
The fact that the BOE president is even taking any time on this shows she is incompetent for the position. This is political grandstanding and nothing else.
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