BOE releases budget SGA restructures constitution By Josh Schmidt The Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) Board of Education (BOE) unanimously agreed upon and announced a $2.13 billion budget for the fiscal year 2013. MCPS superintendent Joshua Starr initially requested a $2.1 billion budget. The unanimously approved budget will be sent to Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett (D) on March 1 at which time he and the Montgomery County Council will submit recommendations for revisions on March 15. The recommended budget will all the county to be allowed under the maintenance of Effort (MOE) law. MOE is the law that counties must spend the same amount per student from one year to the next. Montgomery County has not done this for the past three years. Student Member of the Board (SMOB) Alan Xie claims that the BOE is aware of the problems associated with MOE. “We are acutely aware of the challenges that the current law presents to the board,” Xie said. The BOE is also attempting to move the penalty of not following BOE away from the school system according to Xie. “As a board we are going to ask the state legislature to look at moving the penalty for noncompliance away from the school system,” Xie said. “It’s been a main worry of the board for the past
four years. Really since rough economic times hit.” MCPS may not receive the full amount designated by the BOE because of their not following MOE. The state may withhold $26.2 million in aid as punishment. This budget will be a $30 million decrease from last year’s
see BUDGET page 10
Government hopes to promote student rights By Puck Bregstone In the spring, the Blair Student Government Association (SGA) will institute several landmark reforms in order to better connect with the Blair community. T h e reforms are outlined in their new constitution, which was ratified Monday by the House of Representatives. The revised constitution requires that one representative from each grade meet with the central SGA daily, and work under the same sponsor. “We want to make the SGA function as a way to unite all of the classes,” said SGA sponsor Stefanie Weldon. Currently, the SGA is structured so that the president, vice president, treasurer, secretary and several other officer posi-
president and vice president. This makes collaboration difficult, said Weldon. In the new constitution, SGA President Patrice-Morgan Ongoly has emphasized the SGA’s duty to raise awareness TOLU OMOKEHINDE about student “At At lunch, SGA helps students register to vote. rights. the beginning tions function separately from the of each school year, each student four separate class governments. gets a book with all of the student Each of the class governments assee SGA page 9 semble at a different time than the
GT policy enacted MSDE approves new standards By Srividya Murthy
MAUREEN LEI
Capitol comedy
On Feb. 28, the Maryland Department of Education (MSDE) adopted the first statewide policy on Gifted and Talented (GT) programs, which will establish minimum standards for such programs in school systems across the state. GT programs label some elementary school students as “gifted” based on standardized assessments and
provide these students with accelerated instruction to these students apart from the on-level curriculum. According to Jeanne Paynter, specialist for gifted education at MSDE, these CLARE LEFEBURE regulations will set Pine Crest Elementary School accepts the foundation for GT GT students based on their applications. programs in Maryland. “It’s a policy tool for program said. Paynter said that these reguimprovement. It’s not perfect, but lations would set requirements for we need to start somewhere so we can improve these programs,” she see GT page 8
Class rings to wedding bands By Ruth Aitken Where only first names appear, names have been changed to protect the identity of the source
LEAH MUSKIN-PIERRET
Capitol Steps comedian Corey Harris portrays Herman Cain in a Mar. 4 PTSA fundraising show at Blair. See review, page 24.
On Christmas night, Lucy, a senior, was riding in a car with her closest friends. Suddenly, Lucy’s boyfriend Rick stopped the car. The blasting music was muted, and Lucy’s friends grew silent. Rick thanked Lucy for supporting him through tough times in high school, got down on one knee, and presented her with a small box. “Keep being there for me throughout the rest of my life,” he said. Immediately after the proposal, Lucy was overwhelmed. “At first, I didn’t know what to think — my mind went blank. In the moment I just thought: ‘Yes.’ I’ve been with him all of my high school years,” Lucy says. “But afterward I was thinking, am I making the right decision? Am I too young?”
Lucy, however, is one of an expanding subset of teenagers who are preparing for marriage with their significant other. Despite the increase in the average age of marriage in the United States over the past fifty years, the percentage of married teenagers has increased since the 1990s. According to a CBS News poll, an average of 4.5 percent of 15-19 year-olds were married in 2000, in contrast to 3.4 percent in 1990. The trend nestled its way into pop culture in 2008, when MTV aired the first episode of its original series “Engaged and Underage.” The show follows the lives of couples aged 18 to 22 in the weeks before their weddings. Although in all states but Nebraska the legal marriage age is 18, engagements can begin earlier on in the teenage years. For engaged Blazers, age is
see ENGAGED page 19
insideCHIPS Graduating to debt: Columnist Maggie Shi argues that student loans are excessive and unfair. see page 5
OP/ED 4
SOAPBOX 7
NEWS 8
Metro mania: Transit center completion date is labeled “indefinite.” see page 9
Army proud families: Students with parents in the military talk about their many moves. see page 21
FEATURES 16 CHIPS CLIPS 23 LA ESQUINA LATINA 28
The old Target: Discover DC’s best and oldest market and all it has to offer. see page 27
ENTERTAINMENT 24 SPORTS 30