October 27, 2021
Virginia Mercury
One of the last school board meetings of an eventful calendar year in Loudoun County, Va., saw dozens of parents, residents and students turn out for dueling parking lot protests — while inside, more than 100 people gave impassioned and angry speeches, with many calling for the resignation of the board and Superintendent Scott A. Ziegler. Inside the building, speakers filed into the meeting room one by one to address masked board members seated behind a wooden desk on a raised dais. Board rules, adopted after an especially chaotic June meeting ended in an arrest, do not permit an audience during public comments. The guidelines also mandate that only one speaker at time can enter the room to address the board, and that only 10 speakers total can set foot in the building simultaneously, after undergoing a search by security personnel stationed outside the door.
The Washington Post
The Virginia State Police is investigating threats made against Commonwealth’s Attorney Buta Biberaj, one of the many public officials being criticized for the handling of the alleged sexual assaults against Loudoun students. News that a student, who on Monday was convicted of assaulting a female student in a Stone Bridge High School bathroom on May 28, was charged with assaulting another student at Broad Run High School on Oct. 7 shocked the community and called into question decision making by Superintendent Scott Ziegler. On a school division Facebook post, users posted threatening messages. “A public hanging is in order. No charge to attend. Should only take a few seconds and won’t cost much,” Facebook user Jim Culleton commented. An anonymous message to the full board, referring to Ziegler, said, “We The People are going to drag him—and every last [expletive] one of you pieces of [expletive] out into the middle of the street and teach you a [expletive] lesson that you will never [expletive] forget.”
Loudoun Now
The Center for Public Integrity
Bryce Wyles, The Cavalier Daily
Missouri State Education Commissioner Margie Vandeven inadvertently identified the precise problem when responding to a journalist’s question about why she pinned the blame on a Post-Dispatch reporter for a serious security issue on a Missouri education agency website, even though the reporter merely discovered the flaw and alerted her agency to its existence. “I would ask you to do your research on — on where and who is responsible for those data security issues before you make that accusation,” Vandeven said. It was an odd response, because the question contained no accusation. It was just a question. The only accusation out there is one first leveled by Vandeven and later amplified by Gov. Mike Parson after the Post-Dispatch’s Josh Renaud stumbled across teachers’ Social Security numbers embedded in a Department of Elementary and Secondary Education website. One thing neither Parson nor Vandeven has done so far is own up to the fact that someone in authority attached teachers’ Social Security numbers to a state website.The person who alerted them to the problem is now irrationally the target of their ire, threats and accusations.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch