Originals

Stafford County isn’t one to wait around to see what other area school divisions are doing when closing schools for inclement weather.

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Mark Broklawski says he takes pride in the fact that he is the product of the public school system.

The IT professional has lived in Stafford for 17 years. His wife, Amanda, is a public school teacher, and his children attend Stafford public schools. Broklawski also has other family members that work in public schools reaching back at least three generations.

Broklawski wants to put his experiences and knowledge to use by running for the Hartwood District seat of the Stafford County School Board. He wants to continue improving taxpayer value for their dollar and making the biggest impact possible while, as he puts it, "we reimagine education to ensure our schools, kids, and community meet the challenges of our technological era."

Broklawski already has some experience with the school board in helping to build broad coalitions of stakeholders to improve efficiency and ensure that resources can be deployed where they're needed most, as he has done with the Capital Improvement Planning and Multicultural committees created by the Stafford County School Board.

Potomac Local News talked to Mr. Broklawski about his campaign for the School Board as well as his perspective on events and how they've affected the way Stafford schools will run moving forward.

What inspired you to run for the school board?

After years of underfunding and mismanagement, the Stafford County public school system is in disarray. We are 35.3% below the state average in funding while being the 17th wealthiest county in the country. This is unacceptable. I'm running for Stafford County Schoolboard because our community deserves better.

Strong schools make strong economic sense for our community. Even if you don't have children in school now, strong schools protect your home value and increase our ability to attract businesses that pay well and grow our commercial base.

As we return to in-person instruction, we need to reimagine the way we do things. In this age of advanced technology our education system has been left in the dark. That needs to change. We need to invest in our teachers and our students. We need more classrooms not trailers. We need to empower all students to prepare for life after high school. We need more teachers per student and they need to be competitively compensated.

If I'm elected I will work tirelessly with our community members, parents and teachers. I will do everything I can because I believe that education is at the core of our community's health. It's time for our schools to be brought into a future we can be proud of, and if I'm elected I won't stop until we get there.

What do you think that Stafford Schools have done that's encouraging and what could be improved?

We need to prepare students for life after high school, whether that means attending a community college, pursuing a four-year degree, entering an apprenticeship program, or going right into the job market. It's time to move beyond the "bachelor's degree or bust" mentality. Not every child wants to go to college, in today's economy, they shouldn't have to in order to build a great life - if our schools help set them up for success from the start.

Stafford Schools has done a great job with their Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs, which is very encouraging; however, I see huge opportunities to further expand career path opportunities for students by building additional partnerships with businesses, community colleges, and building trades. This will allow students to concurrently earn credentials, learn apprentice-level content, and have long-term prospects for good-paying jobs with health and retirement benefits they can rely on.

CTE programs offer students marketable, real-world skills. But too many kids either don't know about or can't access these programs. This needs to change.

We must provide more staffing and space in buildings for high-demand programs, so that students can access these programs. CTE was ranked 5th on the 2020-2021 Top Ten Critical Shortage Teaching Endorsement Areas in Virginia.

Last year students missed a lot of school time due to the pandemic. Do you think it was necessary to shut down the schools?

My wife, a public school teacher, worked incredibly hard and put in countless hours whether teaching virtually or concurrently throughout the year, as did all of our teachers, admins and support staff. Let's also not forget about our special education teachers who continued to teach in-person throughout the school year.

So, to say that schools shut down last academic year is a false premise.

As a parent of two children in the public school system, the instructional models offered were far from perfect. The struggle was real for many families, including ours. Working families, especially women, have made deep career sacrifices to help oversee their children's education. Teaching children is not easy. My respect has only deepend for our incredible educators and all that they do.

In this coming year we need to make sure our teachers and families have the support in place to make sure that we are bridging the learning gap for our children.

Another struggle was the lack of affordable access to high-speed Internet in Hartwood.

We cannot have two types of education: one on paper and one on the Internet. But the pandemic has highlighted the digital divide within our district. The lack of affordable high-speed internet has deepened inequities in access to education for our children, as well as inequities in parents' employment.

I will work with local, state, and federal partners to increase Internet access by bringing in more competition into our community and advocating for community broadband networks, which will have the net effect of greater accessibility, lower prices, and more options.

Do I believe if COVID-19-relief funds were prioritized to implement proven risk mitigation strategies that we could have returned to in-person instruction sooner? Absolutely.

Children and school staff are now required to wear masks throughout the school day. What are your thoughts? 

It's critical that children return safely to in-person instruction and can stay there.

State law requires that all schools offer in-person instruction and adhere to currently applicable mitigation strategies to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 that have been provided by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC guidance continues to evolve, as the virus evolves, and as we learn more about the science surrounding the virus and subsequent variants. In fact, the CDC guidance changed again last week.

We must follow the science and the law when it comes to any required mitigation strategies, so children can safely return and remain in the classroom.

Broklawski is running against Alyssa Halstead for the Hartwood District seat on the Stafford County School Board on Tuesday, November 2. Early voting starts at the Stafford County Government Center on Friday, September 17.

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Originals

Are schools overprotecting children and staff when it comes to the coronavirus?

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News

Alyssa Halstead has a long history of service when it comes to public safety and health.

She's worked as a public health emergency manager for the City of New York's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, has a Master's degree in public health and education, and worked for 15 years in infectious disease planning for a pandemic.

Now she's running to represent the Hartwood District on the Stafford County School Board.

Halstead and her husband, a retired Marine Corps gunnery sergeant, came to Virginia In 2012 and settled in Stafford three years later. The couple has two children and two rescue dogs from a boarding facility in Woodbridge, where she developed a curriculum to help children learn social and emotional empathy by bonding with shelter animals.

Potomac Local News talked with Halstead about her campaign for the school board seat and other issues related to the Stafford County Schools.

What inspired you to run for the School Board?

My decision to run for the school board is because our children deserve better than what they are being provided. There were previously well-defined strategies for how to accommodate learning during a pandemic. But, not even one included doing what we have done to our children over the last 18 months.

The back and forth, the indecision, and the fear posturing must stop, and we must return to education where the focus is on learning and helping our children move forward in their lives. Our children are the future of this country but over the course of the past few years, the public school system has continued to lower educational standards to manipulate greater positive outcomes. Education does not work that way; someone needs to stand up for our children.

But it's not just our children we have shortchanged, we have also allowed our teachers to be taken advantage of as well. In many situations, they are underappreciated and underpaid.

What do you think Stafford schools have done well, and what could they improve upon?

The elementary schools and their teachers have done an excellent job at showing their passion for educating young students and they are dedicated to moving forward strong, particularly under the circumstances we've seen this last year.

However, there are several things that need to change within the school system. We allow children far too much freedom to control the classroom and disrespect the teachers and policies in place to protect the learning environment. We need to go back towards stricter rules regarding disruptions in the classroom, respect, and even grading and achievement.

Over the past year, students missed classroom time due to the pandemic. Do you think it was necessary to shut the schools down?

No, it most certainly was not necessary for schools to be shut down during the pandemic. Based on my work, we have egregiously failed our children by ignoring well-defined strategies designed to protect them. Instead of trusting well-developed and practiced emergency plans, we have allowed the CDC, a nongoverning group of scientists, to dictate how free Americans live their lives. 

Considering many people continued to work and survived the year and a half it seemed ridiculous that teaching and education weren't deemed essential. I personally, at the beginning of the pandemic introduced myself to the current school board and offered my expertise to avoid the shutdowns, and was ignored. We need to understand that for many students, schools are also considered the largest custodial care institute in the country.

We provide this amazing place for our kids to be during the day with equally dedicated teachers and administration so that our parents can work and provide for them. We've taken that away. We made it so our parents were struggling, our kids were suffering (needlessly). Self-esteem is down in kids, consistency is down, motivation is down, grades are down. The only thing that's up is drug use and abuse, bullying, and divisiveness.

Where do you stand on mask mandates for children? 

I am opposed to masks and mask mandates. Aside from the slippery slope of what the word mandate means in a free society, we live in a world where every decision made has the power to bring an unintended consequence that can be dangerous, have a long-lasting impact, and be catastrophic for some.

We heard some of those unintended consequences at the July 27 Stafford County School Board meeting by parents who shared how the previous mask mandates impacted their children.

From the beginning, the overuse of masks as a solution has created a division among people and turned common sense into nonsense. The prolonged use of masks to prevent illness has been misrepresented and only served to perpetuate fear for a virus that has a 99.9 percent recovery rate - without treatment.

I'll say that again, a 99.9 percent recovery rate without treatment.

There are implications to mask-wearing we don't even know about yet, and parents are tired. Their children, my children, are suffering mentally and physically.

Scientists estimate that 380 trillion viruses live inside or on your body, that's 10 times the number of bacteria, now while most are there to coexist with your body, some are poised and ready to cause illness at any time. These viruses are there to support your immune system to learn and grow. When you mask our kids, you shut down their immune systems and you make that system lazy.

So, when you unmask our kids there is a greater chance these viruses, and bacteria become opportunistic and while your immune system is busy waking itself up again, there are many things that can hurt, do harm, or worse, to our kids. That's unacceptable by any standard in 2021. Our kids need someone to protect them from the real viruses, misinformation/half information, and political agendas.

Halstead will run against Mark Broklawski for the Hartwood seat, both will be on the ballot on November 2.

Early voting for this election begins Friday, September 17, and ends on Saturday, October 30. Early, absentee in-person voters may cast their ballots during this time between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on the second floor of the county government center, located at 1300 Courthouse Road in Stafford.

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Politics

Of the four School Board members whose terms expire at the end of the year, Falmouth District representative Dr. Sarah Chase is the only one running to retain her seat.

She's also the only candidate whose running unopposed.

During her four years on the Stafford County School Board, Chase, a psychology professor who teaches at St. Mary's University in Maryland, experienced the coronavirus pandemic's issues, the departure of the district's school superintendent, and political redistricting in the county.

"It took a long time for me to decide to run again, but it's an important responsibility and we need different people on the board who have done their due diligence and their research in making these decisions," said Chase.

Chase said that her experience not only as a member of the Board but as someone who volunteered in the schools before her term would help with the transition that the school board will go through with three new members coming onto the board and a new superintendent to be hired in the next few months to replace the outgoing Dr. Scott Kizner, whose leaving in September.

"We're going into a situation where we have two members of the Board who only have two years of experience and one who has twenty years of experience and we're getting a new superintendent. I want to stay on and help whoever becomes the new superintendent to acclimate to the school system," says Chase.

Chase is also proud of some of the board's success during her term, such as purchasing the old Fredericksburg Christian School off Garrisonville Road in North Stafford, which became the Northstar Early Childhood Education Center. The center, according to Chase, provided necessary space for the developmental needs of the students.

Chase also touts the opening of Moncure Elementary, stating that they got it open on time as a success. Chase is also staying on when students are coming back to school after having to adapt to the issues brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. While some teachers and students with special needs or in need of internet access did stay in the buildings, most were relegated to virtual learning throughout the 2020 school year.

Students began to trickle back into the school soon after some elementary school students returned in October, while some high school students could return in February 2021. Many worked on hybrid programs during that time, spending half the time in class and the other half online.

"It wasn't ideal, I'm not going to pretend that everything worked out great. But for a difficult situation, it worked as well as we could make it work," says Chase of the school's adaptations to the pandemic.

Another issue for some Stafford residents is requiring students, teachers, and staff to wear masks as they returned to school on Aug. 9. Gov. Ralph Northam says a new law requires all school divisions across the state to require masks, although the author of the law disagrees. The forced mask mandate for everyone inside school buildings will stand until September 21, when the board will revisit the issue and decide whether or not to continue with the mask mandates. 

Chase is especially concerned about potential exposure to the virus as students go on vacation with their families during the four-day weekend for Labor Day, which falls on Monday, September 6.

Chase hopes to retain her seat on the school board and focus on the challenges that Stafford County is currently facing. The County's growth and need for more schools to accommodate that growth concern the board is planning for. The board is currently looking for a site for the county's sixth high school and is working on a new elementary school plan.

The board continues to face teacher retention, which has long been a challenge for Stafford due to Spotsylvania having a competitive salary and Prince William County offering a much higher salary to teachers. Dr. Chase hopes to narrow that particular gap and would have liked to have done it sooner, but as with all things affected by the pandemic, things changed.

"We had planned to make an increase in teacher's pay during the year of COVID, but then it hit and we weren't able to implement it. We did start it this year and we're hoping that in the next four years we can get that salary increase for teachers and licensed staff taken care of," said Chase. 

Early voting begins on Saturday, September 18. Election Day is Tuesday, November 2. 

In addition to the Falmouth seat, the School Board seats for the Aquia, Garrisonville, and Hartwood districts are also open.

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As students return to the classroom in numbers not seen since the pandemic began, public school divisions across the region are experiencing a shortage of teachers.

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Schools

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