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McKay, left, says removing the word limits the property. Jarboe saysย keeping the word inย leaves the door open to undesired possibilities. โ€“ The Bay Net photo by Sean Rice

It seems the last bit of the drama surrounding the St. Maryโ€™s County Board of Educationโ€™s decision to build a new elementary school on protected land has been played out in the county commissionerโ€™s room.

Itโ€™s been more than six months since the commissioners narrowly agreed to make an exception to the county comprehensive water and sewer plan and allow an elementary school to be built within the Rural Preservation District (RPD) off Indian Bridge Road.

One final issue was decided Tuesday in Leonardtown, regarding a single word in the law crafted to give the school the go-ahead to build.

Commission President Tommy McKay and Commissioner Larry Jarboe had a short but pointed debate on whether the enabling text should allow for an โ€œelementary school facilityโ€ or just state an โ€œelementary school.โ€

The debate over the use of the word facility has been an issue since the commissioners held an illegal, non-public meeting to work out a deal to allow the school project.

In December, the commissioners tried several times to pass a motion to approve the school site. After four unsuccessful votes, the board illegally excluded the public from the decision making process and adjourned to a back room to continue debating the issue.

Maryland law allows for a few narrow reasons a public body can exclude the public from hearing the debate, such as bargaining for property or reprimanding employees. Considering a zoning text change is not one of the accepted reasons.

The board emerged from their secret meeting and approved the issue with no discussion on what debate took place.

Jarboe on Tuesday shed some light on that back room deal. He said he was persuaded to change his vote and let the school site go forward in exchange for a promise that the board would consider removing the entire site and Myrtle Point Park land from the RPD.

McKay began the debate Tuesday, stating that if the board is taking all these extra months of procedure simply to remove the word โ€œfacilityโ€ from after the words โ€œelementary schoolโ€, people in the future will wonder what the boardโ€™s intentions were.

โ€œ10 years from now I think people will say, โ€˜what was the intent for removing the word facilties?โ€™ McKay said, adding the decision will leave the public, โ€œowning school sites that have limited use.โ€

โ€œBecause someone is going to interpret it that the board of commissioners intended something to be removed from that property in terms of facilities,โ€ McKay continued. โ€œAnd what facilities exactly are we removing from that property?โ€

Jarboe responded: โ€œThatโ€™s their problemโ€ if school officials wonder in 10 years what the commissioners’ intentions were.

โ€œYou can r