
The Frustration of a Pennridge School District Parent
If you are unhappy, like I am, with the ideological actions of the school board and its lack of transparency and accountability, the election on November 7 is the only remedy.
If you are unhappy, like I am, with the ideological actions of the school board and its lack of transparency and accountability, the election on November 7 is the only remedy.
If someone says you are doing something harmful, be humble enough to look into it and critically self-reflect. This would be a good start.
Democrat Ehasz pledges to fight for women’s abortion rights, make herself accessible to the public and press, defend public education, and champion other issues that set her clearly apart from Trump-backed Republican incumbent Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick.
If elected, Stoltz will fight to protect abortion rights, pass common sense gun safety measures, and raise Pennsylvania’s minimum wage, as well as support other policies to improve voters’ lives in Bucks County.
Miller couldn’t stand by while Republican Rep. Craig Staats continues to misrepresent the people of Bucks County.
Pennridge’s School Board will vote on the plan at a special meeting Wednesday night.
The loudest “defenders” of the Second Amendment and guns on demand don’t even understand the full context of the amendment.
The school board and its loudest supporters are the proof that there is a very urgent need for it in this community.
Activists, residents and leaders say increasingly combative tactics used by federal immigration agents are sparking violence and fueling neighborhood tensions in the nation’s third-largest city.
As PA Senate Republicans hold the budget hostage, domestic violence shelters are forced to furlough staff and turn away victims putting Pennsylvanians at risk of injury or death.
With elections next month, Central Bucks School Board’s Karen Smith reminds community members of the chaos and divisiveness Republican book banners inflicted on the district just a few years ago.
PEN America’s new report “The Normalization of Book Banning” exposes how book censorship has become “rampant and common” in public schools across the United States.
When politicians order books off the shelves, they aren’t protecting kids—they’re silencing voices, narrowing choices, and undermining the very purpose of a public education, writes Darren Laustsen.