The Loudoun County School Board has dealt with a number of controversies over the past few years, from sex crimes to drug overdoses, but most recently over policies allowing students to use bathrooms and locker rooms based on their chosen gender rather than biological sex.
Now the Loudoun County School Board is at a crossroads. Five seats on the school board are up for election this year and four of them are contested.
Loudoun County School Board candidate Amy Riccardi said the number one issue on voters’ minds is Loudoun County Public School policy allowing boys who identify as female to use girls’ bathrooms and locker rooms at school – and vice versa.
“I don’t understand why we’re allowing biological boys and girls to be sharing spaces, and it’s been a failed experiment, in my opinion,” said Riccardi. “I’ve had plenty of Sterling parents that are really upset about this.”
Riccardi is running against School Board Member Arben Istrefi, who declined our request for an interview this week but talked to us about the policy last fall.
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Nick Minock: “Do you think biological male students should be able to use girls’ locker rooms and restrooms in schools. Yes or no?”
Arben Istrefi: “I think gender identity and gender expression is and should be protected.”
School Board Member April Chandler is also running for reelection. Chandler and Istrefi voted to uphold LCPS’s bathroom and locker room policies.
Chandler also declined our invitation to be interviewed for this story, but her opponent, Matt Malone, was happy to share his stance.
“My first priority is the bathroom policy,” said Malone. “I think it should be repealed entirely and we should finally have safe spaces for boys and girls in locker rooms, bathrooms, and there should not be boys in girls’ sports.”
Sam Yan and Ross Svenson are running against each other for the school board seat in the Broad Run District.
Sam Yan told 7News that bathroom and locker room use should be based on biological sex.
Svenson didn’t respond to our request for an interview. But in 2024, Svenson on behalf of two transgender students – arguing that Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s model policies discriminate against transgender students on pronoun usage, bathroom and locker room access, and participation in sex-segregated activities like girls’ sports.
Currently, the Loudoun County School Board’s support for these policies has led to the U.S. Department of Education restricting funding to LCPS for violating equal protection under Title IX.
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Jon Pepper is running for the school board in the Dulles District, but he did not respond to our questions about his stance on education issues, including this one. His opponent, Santos Muñoz, said the potential loss of funding is one more reason why these bathroom policies, known as Policy 8040, need to be reconsidered.
“Now we’re risking millions of dollars in federal aid that actually is used to feed those kids,” said Muñoz. “Some of these kids, that money is used for the only meal they get in a day. And that is gone. Not only that, but you also have the kids that are special needs; that funding supports that.”
“Also, the children that are doing the junior ROTC, so we’re talking about thousands of kids lives are going to be turned upside down,” Muñoz said. “I’m totally against policy 8040 for many reasons.”
Lauren Shernoff is running for reelection in the Leesburg District, and she did not respond to 7News’ questions.
7News emailed written questions to every candidate running for Loudoun County School Board this year. You can read the candidates’ answers below:
Santos Muñoz is running for Loudoun County School Board in the Dulles District
QUESTION: What are your top priorities if voters choose you to represent them on the Loudoun County School Board, and what in your background qualifies you to serve on the school board?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “My top priorities are student safety, academic excellence, parental engagement, and fiscal responsibility. Loudoun needs schools that are secure, focused on strong fundamentals, and transparent with parents and taxpayers. I bring over 20 years of senior executive experience managing large teams, policies, and billion-dollar in assets. One of those senior executive decisions and experience as an example was co-leading the historic shoot down of a U.S. satellite in 2008 called Operation Burnt Frost. This was a complex interagency effort to protect the public from an uncontrolled satellite with 1K pounds of hydrazine (20x more lethal than cyanide) that could have survived reentry. We had to lead for months over 200 experts among 14 different government agencies around the world and it was executed to perfection. That skill set is directly relevant to governing Loudoun’s $2 billion school system responsibly.”
QUESTION: How would you improve student achievement and academic performance in Loudoun County Public Schools?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “We must refocus on fundamentals in math, reading, and science while expanding access to advanced programs like TJ with fair transportation so opportunity isn’t limited by income. We also need to expand opportunities in the trades, targeted tutoring, better use of data, and strong parent-teacher partnerships are key to helping struggling students. Achievement improves when expectations are high, resources are targeted, and parents are full partners in the process.”
QUESTION: How would you improve school safety in Loudoun County Public Schools?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “Safety means both physical security and mental health support. I support adding School Resource Officers, strengthening coordination with law enforcement, and ensuring fair discipline policies. At the same time, we need more counselors and early interventions so we are preventing problems before they escalate.”
QUESTION: Do you support school policies that allow students to use bathrooms and locker rooms at school based on their gender identity, yes or no, and why?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “I am on the record to repeal Policy 8040. It does not actually help transgender students and instead puts at risk the federal Title I funding that supports more than 16,000 students, many of them Latino or English learners, who depend on school meals every day. The better approach is for parents, doctors, and schools to work together to create individualized 504 or IEP plans that meet each student’s needs with dignity and fairness, without harming other students.”
QUESTION: Do you think the school board should comply with the Title IX demands of the U.S. Department of Education and repeal LCPS’s current transgender and non-binary bathroom and locker room policies? How would you vote?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “Yes. Loudoun must comply with Title IX. Ignoring federal law puts vulnerable students and federal funding at risk, which directly impacts children in Title I schools. I would vote to repeal the current policy and ensure individualized support through 504 and IEP processes.”
QUESTION: Would you vote to keep Aaron Spence as Superintendent, and why?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “I will not pre-judge a future vote, but I do have serious concerns. For example, Superintendent Spence used taxpayer money to fund a trip to San Diego where he was also paid personally to give a speech. If I did something similar while in uniform it would be catalogued as fraud, waste and abuse and I would be sent to jail. My approach will be to hold him accountable to results in academics, safety, and rebuilding trust with parents, and to evaluate his leadership on data, transparency, and ethics.”
QUESTION: Do you think the Loudoun County School Board made the right decision to turn off cameras on parents during public comment, and do you approve of Chairwoman Melinda Mansfield interrupting parents as they speak at school board meetings?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “No. Parents deserve full transparency and respect at public meetings. I do not support turning off cameras on parents during public comment, and interruptions should be reserved only for genuine violations of decorum — not because a message is inconvenient. Trust requires civility on both sides, but the School Board must lead by example.”
QUESTION: Do you support adding school resource officers in elementary schools?
SANTOS MUÑOZ: “I fully support adding SROs to the remaining elementary schools in Loudoun. Middle and high schools already have SROs working effectively with their communities, and extending this model will give parents, teachers, and students peace of mind. SROs must also be trained to work with younger children in constructive, age-appropriate ways.”
Matt Malone is running for Loudoun County School Board in the Algonkian District
QUESTION: What are your top priorities if voters choose you to represent them on the Loudoun County School Board, and what in your background qualifies you to serve on the school board?
MATT MALONE: “My top reason for running is to ensure a safe learning environment for our children. I also want to review the LCPS budget and find ways to put more money into the classrooms toward proven learning methods to improve literacy scores. I have 30 years of experience as a technical trainer and curriculum developer. I’ve created lasting educational resources and solved problems efficiently in the private sector. I will bring that same accountability and results-driven mindset to LCPS.”
QUESTION: How would you improve student achievement and academic performance in Loudoun County Public Schools?
MATT MALONE: “There is a trend in education toward buying hot new products and training ideas, but we have seen that the best methods are often the simplest and oldest. We want to continue implementing data driven results oriented methods like the science of reading, which has drastically improved reading scores across the country. I want to push similar restructuring for math teaching reforms. With 7 hours a day and $2 Billion dollars a year, every child should be able to read and do math at grade.”
QUESTION: How would you improve school safety in Loudoun County Public Schools?
MATT MALONE: “I support having School Resource Officers in every school, including elementary schools, as recommended by the blue ribbon panel. The current board’s reliance on AI monitoring is potentially flawed, it’s often either overly sensitive and ignored, or it misses real threats due to outdated equipment. AI cannot determine intent from a silent video. Lastly, we need to ensure student data in the new AI surveillance system is secure.”
QUESTION: “Do you support school policies that allow students to use bathrooms and locker rooms at school based on their gender identity, yes or no, and why?”
MATT MALONE: “No. Students deserve privacy and safety in single-sex spaces. Policy 8040 disregards those rights and should be repealed.”
QUESTION: Do you think the school board should comply with the Title IX demands of the U.S. Department of Education and repeal LCPS’s current transgender and non-binary bathroom and locker room policies? How would you vote?
MATT MALONE: ” Yes. I would comply with federal law and repeal policy 8040.”
QUESTION: Would you vote to keep Aaron Spence as Superintendent, and why?
MATT MALONE: “At the end of the day, parents want to know their children are safe, that they can read, and that teachers are supported and happy in their work. That’s where our focus should be. Dr. Spence’s performance should be judged on these standards and I would like to engage with him directly before deciding whether he should stay or go.”
QUESTION: “Do you think the Loudoun County School Board made the right decision to turn off cameras on parents during public comment, and do you approve of Chairwoman Melinda Mansfield interrupting parents as they speak at school board meetings?”
MATT MALONE: “No. Parents and taxpayers deserve transparency. I would restore cameras, allow more speaking time, and protect free speech without interruption. I will put students first, restore parental trust, and ensure schools focus on learning, safety, and accountability.”
April Chandler is running for reelection in the Algonkian District for Loudoun County School Board, and she did not respond to 7News’s written questions.
Amy Riccardi is running for Loudoun County School Board in the Sterling District
QUESTION: What are your top priorities if voters choose you to represent them on the Loudoun County School Board, and what in your background qualifies you to serve on the school board?
AMY RICCARDI: “As an independent candidate, my top priority is to restore common-sense policies and lower the political temperature of the school board. I aim to focus on sound decision-making through data-driven, non-partisan solutions that benefit all students, families, and teachers. We need to get LCPS out of the national news and refocused on educating our children in a safe and respectful environment.
Academic Excellence – One of the primary areas of focus is to enhance academic outcomes in Sterling Park’s seven Title I schools, specifically addressing underperformance among English Learners and economically disadvantaged students. I’ll support teachers with practical policies and resources, such as additional family liaisons and funding to support the basic needs of our Title I students (e.g., school and classroom supplies). We also need to fund robust before- and after-school programs for all of our Title I schools, commensurate with those at other schools within the district and county.
Real transparency and accountability are critical—I’ll push for third-party budget audits and line-item transparency to address issues like the $74 million fund depletion that occurred in August 2025 and the lack of financial transparency. I’ll strengthen community engagement through quarterly meetings and advisory boards for parents, students, and staff.
As a 16-year Sterling resident and the mother of four public school graduates, I hold a master’s degree in education from George Mason University and have 24 years as CEO of Leadership Evolution Group, LLC, specializing in leadership and organizational change. I’m an adjunct professor at GMU’s Costello College of Business, served as Policy Aide to Independent School Board member Lauren Shernoff in 2024, and sit on the Loudoun Youth Inc. board. I’ve attended every LCPS board meeting for more than three years, which has given me deep insight into district operations. As a former Division I athlete, Sterling club volleyball coach, and USA Volleyball youth referee, I’m committed to our community’s youth.”
QUESTION: How would you improve student achievement and academic performance in Loudoun County Public Schools?
AMY RICCARDI: “To boost student achievement in Loudoun County Public Schools, especially in Sterling Park’s seven Title I schools, I’ll focus on data-driven solutions and best practices from around the country.
First, to set the context, the biggest need in our district is targeted interventions for English Learners (EL) and economically disadvantaged (ED) students at our seven Sterling Park schools. This cohort of students is performing lower than the EL students across Virginia. We have 4593 students in the seven Title I schools, and approximately 55% of them fall into either or both of these categories. Virginia’s new Accreditation Framework has identified all seven Sterling Park schools as either “Off Track” or “Needs Intensive Support”. We need to transform and rapidly address the way we are educating our EL and ED students.
So how do we do that? We do things differently and quickly. We need to quickly examine what others in the country are doing to help EL and Title I students catch up in reading and math. Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Indiana are great examples of this. We need to study what they have been doing, and work with our front-line teachers and administrators to adapt those methods for Sterling schools, then train teachers in these methods. We also need stronger accountability to improve the learning outcomes for these students. Teachers want these students to thrive and grow, and we need to continue to empower them to do it.
Here are just three ideas:
– Transparency with parents about how their child is performing in reading and math. Parents should ask what grade and month level their child is at right now, and how parents and teachers are going to partner to get those students up to grade level.
– Further investment in reading and math “high dosage” tutoring, to meet students where they are at and help get them to where they need to be.
– School-level accountability and transparency for school administrators, so parents know the learning environment their child is in.
Our Loudoun Valley Estates students (within the Sterling District) are outperforming their LCPS peers and need additional high-performance programs like the International Baccalaureate program. We’ve added one at Park View High School for the 2027 year, but Rock Ridge could use it now. Parents there tell me they are paying for additional tutoring to push their students beyond what is being taught in the classroom, so we need to adjust our curriculum to meet these needs.”
QUESTION: How would you improve school safety in Loudoun County Public Schools?
AMY RICCARDI: “To improve school safety and continue to create excellent learning environments for our students and staff, I want to implement data-driven, proactive measures to cover a range of safety components – physical school safety, classroom safety, and mental health and wellness.
First, we need access to school safety data, including incidents of bullying, harassment, classroom disruption, and criminal activity. The school board and the public deserve to know the details of what is happening in our schools. I would like to see the school board hold quarterly safety-focused community meetings in our most challenging schools and establish advisory boards for parents, students, and the community to help shape safety policies. I would also advocate for transparent safety audits to identify and fix vulnerabilities across LCPS facilities.
Second, classroom disruptions detract from the learning environment for students and should be addressed by school administrators, not classroom teachers. I want to understand how and why in-class disruptions are currently happening and how the behavior of these students is being addressed before disruptive students are reintegrated back into the classroom. I’ve seen some really innovative approaches and want to explore them once we understand the root cause of the problems.
Third, from a big picture perspective, I’d like to see Security Resource Officers (SROs) at all schools, including elementary schools, to enhance physical security and foster positive relationships with students.
Fourth, and this is a common-sense practice, we need to get back to basics and enforce sex-separated bathrooms, locker rooms, and sports, aligning with Title IX and Virginia’s Model Policies to ensure student privacy and dignity. Allowing our minor children to share intimate spaces with opposite sex children is not working well in LCPS, and we need to get back to common-sense policies.
Finally, I’d like to explore the existing mental health support systems that LCPS currently provides, as well as the additional resources the Commonwealth offers, and make determinations about what other programs our students need. Access to mental health counselors can be a challenge and we need to work with parents to help determine the needs of our students and families.”
QUESTION: Do you support school policies that allow students to use bathrooms and locker rooms at school based on their gender identity, yes or no, and why?
AMY RICCARDI: “No. I want to create safe environments for all of our students, regardless of how they identify themselves. However, we’ve tried this experiment of mixing sexes in bathrooms, and it has failed. LCPS is embroiled in multiple lawsuits and federal and state investigations because we are allowing students to use facilities based on gender identity. Loudoun, and specifically Sterling families, are not comfortable with these policies and do not want them. Our students should use bathrooms and locker rooms based on their sex, not gender identity, to ensure safety and privacy for all. Loudoun County Public Schools invested tens of millions of dollars in single-use bathrooms, which provide an alternative for students who identify differently. This common-sense approach, proven effective historically, protects every student’s dignity while aligning with Federal Title IX law.”
QUESTION: “Do you think the school board should comply with the Title IX demands of the U.S. Department of Education and repeal LCPS’s current transgender and non-binary bathroom and locker room policies? How would you vote?
AMY RICCARDI: “Yes, the school board should be complying with the U.S. Department of Education’s Title IX demands and repeal LCPS’s transgender and non-binary bathroom and locker room policies. The current policies have led to a loss of $46 million in federal funding for Title I, Special Education, Head Start, and JROTC programs. These funds are a lifeline for Loudoun’s most vulnerable students—kids who deserve every opportunity to succeed. I would vote to repeal these policies, aligning bathrooms and locker rooms with sex-based designations per Title IX. This common-sense approach, proven effective for decades, speaks to the hearts of parents who want their children safe and their dignity respected. As I meet with parents and taxpayers, this is a bipartisan issue. I have Democrats, Republicans, and Independents all asking me about this and no one supports it. (To read more about the impact of the loss of federal funds, here is my blog post, “LCPS School Board Education Policy Choices Have Consequences for Our Most Vulnerable Students”)
LCPS’s significant investment in single-use bathrooms offers an inclusive alternative for students who identify differently, ensuring no one is left out. As a former Division I volleyball player, Sterling club volleyball coach, USA Volleyball youth referee, and mother of sons and a daughter who played high school and college sports, I know firsthand the importance of fair and safe facilities—every girl deserves a fair shot, just as every boy does. Policy 8040 has failed, dragging LCPS into lawsuits and investigations while risking funds our kids need. My goal is to make decisions that put students first, not politics.”
QUESTION: Would you vote to keep Aaron Spence as Superintendent, and why?
AMY RICCARDI: “My decision would be based on a thorough review of his performance contract and the closed-door evaluations conducted over the last two years, focusing on accountability for student outcomes, transparency in decision-making, and effective leadership for all schools, particularly our Title I programs in Sterling Park.
Superintendent Spence’s contract began in August 2023 with a four-year term and has been extended twice—first to June 2028 in December 2024 and then to June 2029 in June 2025—accompanied by a salary increase to approximately $500,000. These extensions were approved in closed sessions without full public disclosure of the evaluation criteria or performance metrics, which raises concerns about transparency under Virginia’s open meetings laws.
I have serious concerns about communication and transparency during his tenure. For instance, details from annual performance reviews in June 2024 and 2025 were not shared publicly, limiting community input on leadership effectiveness. Additionally, there has been no measurable improvement in academic achievement for our Title I schools. Our EL students continue to rank in Virginia’s lowest categories under the new Accreditation Framework (In Sterling, four schools are “Off Track” and three “Needs Intensive Support”). These students deserve targeted progress, yet district-wide reports often overlook these disparities.
Furthermore, the administration’s approach appears to prioritize portraying LCPS in a positive light, regardless of the consequences. Gathering data and information from staff is nearly impossible if the outcome is negative for LCPS – board members, the public, and the media all struggle to obtain information from LCPS in these instances. This raises serious concerns for me that I want to examine objectively. The public deserves truth and transparency, and this current school board does not hold the LCPS administration accountable. My observation is that the LCPS administration runs the school board, not the other way around, and this needs to be addressed.
As a non-partisan candidate, I believe school board decisions should be data-driven and student-centered, not politically rubber-stamped. Renewing the Superintendent’s contract without addressing these gaps would undermine accountability for our families and teachers. Instead, I’d advocate for a leadership review process with clear, public metrics to ensure the superintendent prioritizes academic excellence and community trust.”
QUESTION: Do you think the Loudoun County School Board made the right decision to turn off cameras on parents during public comment, and do you approve of Chairwoman Melinda Mansfield interrupting parents as they speak at school board meetings?
AMY RICCARDI: “No, the Loudoun County School Board did not make the right decision to turn off cameras during public comment, and I do not approve of Chairwoman Melinda Mansfield interrupting parents as they speak at meetings. Many board members campaigned on transparency, yet in March 2024, they voted to shut off cameras, limit public comments to one minute, and even considered reducing comment periods to once a month. These actions silence the voices of Loudoun taxpayers and have become hyper-partisan. Mansfield’s practice of interrupting speakers—exclusively those she disagrees with—is a regular occurrence, with ever-changing, restrictive comment rules that shift from meeting to meeting. Her condescending approach shows she’s unwilling to hear criticism or engage with the public. Her failure to hold a single town hall in two years further proves this disconnect. As a non-partisan candidate who has attended every LCPS board meeting for over three years, I believe in open, respectful dialogue. I’ll push for transparent public comment processes and quarterly community meetings to ensure every voice is heard, rebuilding trust with our families and teachers.”
QUESTION: Do you support adding school resource officers in elementary schools?
AMY RICCARDI: “Yes, I support adding school resource officers (SROs) in elementary schools to enhance physical security and foster positive relationships with students and parents. LCPS already has an agreement with the Sheriff’s office to have SROs at all high schools and middle schools, yet it declined to have them in elementary schools for some reason. SROs at all schools, including elementary, align with practical, data-driven policies that prioritize protection without politics.
In summary, my goal is to be accessible, communicative, and results-focused for our students, families, and staff. We have a very diverse district with a wide range of educational needs, and I have a unique skill set to address them effectively. I want to celebrate successes and identify and fix issues that help move the needle for our most vulnerable students. Being open and honest about what is happening, how to address issues, and ensuring accountability is critical to our success. Those are the characteristics I will bring to the Loudoun County School Board and the Sterling District. I work for you, and it would be an honor to serve our Loudoun community and the Sterling District.”
Riccardi’s opponent, Istrefi, did not respond to 7News’s written questions.
Sam Yan is running for Loudoun County School Board in the Broad Run District
QUESTION: What are your top priorities if voters choose you to represent them on the Loudoun County School Board, and what in your background qualifies you to serve on the school board?
SAM YAN: “Education excellence comparing with international standards (SOL and SAT are not reliable anymore due to DEI). Restrict AI usage in learning. Mental health awareness should be prioritized so that issues such as anxiety, loneliness, depression, stress and bullying are dealt with proactively- including banning smartphones at all schools (the “Bell to Bell” policy from Governor Youngkin is far from enough) and limiting access to social media for students. prohibiting electronic devices in elementary schools, ensuring each student participates in a group or team activity, and expanding options such as JROTC in every high school, cricket teams, male volleyball, drama/theater, and interest clubs. Remove politics from LCPS, including gender ideology and divisive DEI policies, which have distracted from our primary mission. Build LCPS into a STEM powerhouse, expand trade school pathways, and prepare all students for success, rich or poor. Special education needs renewed efforts and open-minded strategies. Parental involvement is a key to education success.
Parents should be members of their kids’ education team. Title I schools should be allocated more resources, including hiring international STEM teachers for ESL students. School hours should be extended to allow students to finish homework, read, and even have some meals after school. We don’t want to see LCPS divided into two separate educational worlds. My qualifications include 51 years of direct involvement in education as a student, a professor or a parent. I am a trained scientist with a Ph.D. In mathematics, a former professor at a top engineering university in the world conducted research at Los Alamos National Laboratory and worked in the high-tech industry, such as in the field of semiconductor fabrication. All my three children graduated from LCPS and one of them serves in the military as a military academy cadet. I am a leader for meritocracy in education and was part of many years’ efforts in a fight against elite colleges such as Harvard University for their DEI admissions policy against Asian American students. The results of our lawsuit against Harvard and UNC were the landmark case that DEI admission policies are unconstitutional.”
QUESTION: How would you improve student achievement and academic performance in Loudoun County Public Schools?
SAM YAN: “As mentioned above, higher and truly measurable outcomes have to be well defined and to be focused on. Title I schools should have the resources they need to produce high-quality students as other schools. LCPS doesn’t have to have two education worlds. Recognize and reward excellence in teachers, relieving them of unnecessary administrative burdens so that they have all the time and freedom to focus on classroom instruction and helping students.”
QUESTION: How would you improve school safety in Loudoun County Public Schools?
SAM YAN: “Mental health is part of school safety, we need to deal with proactively and creatively. Each elementary school should be assigned an armed police officer- we cannot wait for things to happen.”
QUESTION: Do you support school policies that allow students to use bathrooms and locker rooms at school based on their gender identity, yes or no, and why?
SAM YAN: “[It] should [be] based on their biological gender – common sense.”
QUESTION: Do you think the school board should comply with the Title IX demands of the U.S. Department of Education and repeal LCPS’s current transgender and non-binary bathroom and locker room policies? How would you vote?
SAM YAN: “Yes. This is the policy 8040 that the previous school board made, and the current school board refuses to repeal. This policy will be the first thing to be voted out once I am elected.”
QUESTION: Would you vote to keep Aaron Spence as Superintendent, and why?
SAM YAN: “I will not keep him. I can pay someone half the price and can do a better job. For one, he doesn’t listen to teachers and parents, including me. I wrote an open letter to him in 2023 on Loudoun Times and Mirrors with some suggestions that included getting rid of laptops in elementary schools. He never got back to me after I sent the letter to him and again to his new communication director.”
QUESTION: Do you think the Loudoun County School Board made the right decision to turn off cameras on parents during public comment, and do you approve of Chairwoman Melinda Mansfield interrupting parents as they speak at school board meetings?
SAM YAN: “No. I was at a couple of school board meetings to speak. This board is even worse than the previous one which I had worked with.”
QUESTION: Do you support or oppose adding school resource officers to all LCPS elementary schools?