Southern Maryland legislators and St. Maryโ€™s County Public Schools officials sat down to breakfast at the Forrest Center yesterday, Thursday December 14. It was a planned breakfast to discuss issues for the coming year. Yet, despite the festive gingerbread houses adorning the tables, the mood was less than festive as the first item of discussion was a stabbing that occurred at Great Mills High School less than 24 hours earlier.

โ€œI hope you take it very, very seriously, because the community out there does,โ€ cautioned Senator Roy Dyson, who is now the vice chair for Marylandโ€™s Education, Health and Environment Committee, of the stabbing on Wednesday.

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ย Senator Roy Dyson (center)
The Bay Net Photo by Anna Bedford

โ€œWe are taking it very seriously,โ€ assured Superintendent Martirano. โ€œWe are not a school system in crisis,โ€ said Martirano. โ€œWe are not a jurisdiction โ€“ as the tri-county region – in crisis,โ€ he asserted. โ€œBut we have to react and be responsive.โ€ Martirano pointed to broader community-based problems that inevitably spill over into the schools. โ€œWeโ€™re all in this together,โ€ he said Thursday. โ€œItโ€™s not just a school issue.”

Dyson pointed to the response to a recent lock-down at Leonardtown High School and concerns by parents and community members about a lack of communication. โ€œThe Bay Net was the only source for information [on the situation],โ€ Dyson commented after the meeting. โ€œThe parents wanted a meeting,โ€ said Dyson.

โ€œWe did hold a meeting immediately after the Leonardtown High School crisis,โ€ assured School Board member Cathy Allen. โ€œWe now have the reverse phone system so parents can know whatโ€™s going on,โ€ Allen added. She advocated working closely with MABE (Maryland Association of Boards of Education), for which she was recently elected secretary. โ€œMABE needs to decide what should happen [in response to school violence],โ€ commented Allen. โ€œIt needs to be a collaborative approach.โ€

โ€œIt has a lot to do with the home, and parents not doing their job,โ€ commented Delegate Johnny Wood. โ€œI raised nine kids,โ€ he added. โ€œPunishing these kids by expelling them or sending them home is not the right response because thatโ€™s what they want,โ€ said Wood. โ€œI donโ€™t know what the answer is but I know we have to do something,โ€ he advised. โ€œWe have to go back to the basics. Iโ€™m sure everyone in this room has heard it: โ€˜My kid wouldnโ€™t do that!โ€™ โ€“ I know what I did when I was a kid, and I did everything I could get away with,โ€ stated Wood.

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ย Superintendent Michael Martirano
The Bay Net Photo by Anna Bedford

โ€œI would hope that at this school there is some sense that this is being dealt with quickly,โ€ said Delegate John Bohanan.

โ€œWe used the telephone system, since there was not time to send a letter,โ€ responded Martirano. โ€œIt was a non-disruptive event during the school day,โ€ the superintendent added, pointing to a basketball game and community musical event that continued as scheduled in the evening.

Delegate Bohanan asked if the stabbing was a