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A Pennsylvania mom is concerned over what she perceives as the school district’s failure to adequately address violent incidents, spotlighting the issue in light of a third-party investigation that was launched after a 12-year-old student was reportedly attacked with a metal Stanley cup at a local middle school last month.
“Why is a third-party investigation needed for the superintendent to say, ‘You know what, you messed up,’ to the principal?” Stephanie Palovcak, whose child attends Pennbrook Middle School in the Philadelphia suburbs, told Fox News Digital.
The North Penn School District announced it had hired a firm to conduct an unbiased third-party investigation to look into the violent incident that took place at the middle school last month and assess how the district handled the situation so something similar doesn’t happen in the future.
“Does there need to be a third-party investigation to hold people accountable in this situation?” Palovcak asked. “I don’t understand why he [the superintendent] can’t act on these facts that he told us and hold people accountable. Why wait for a third-party investigation?”
PARENTS AT PENNSYLVANNIA MIDDLE SCHOOL OUTRAGED AFTER GIRL BRUTALLY BEATEN: ‘THERE WERE SO MANY FAILURES’
The alleged attack happened at Pennbrook Middle School. (FOX29 Philadelphia WTXF)
Bias is another concern. Palovcak said that parents, including herself, are worried that the law firm hired to conduct the investigation could potentially be biased in the school district’s favor.
Another parent brought up that concern with a question at Tuesday’s school safety forum.
“How do we know they’re independent?” one concerned dad asked.
Superintendent Todd Bauer, also responding to a question about the hiring process for the third party, said, “The board will vote on the approval of the firm,” adding that three firms had been brought forward to consider through a review process.
“This firm, along with some others, are covered by the [district’s] insurance policy,” he added.
Parents also demanded to know why problem students continue to be allowed in the classroom, including the one behind the incident at Pennbrook Middle School.
“How come the kid that keeps doing the wrong thing gets back in the classroom? It’s because, for whatever reason, they cannot be disciplined,” the concerned dad said.
One mother, whose three children attend elementary school, said during the Q&A session that some students have been repeatedly physically violent toward other kids at her children’s school, including one who allegedly hit another student’s head against a desk, locked others in the bathroom and had thrown heavy objects during class.
PA GIRL CHASTISES SCHOOL BOARD FOR NOT HEEDING WARNING ABOUT STUDENT WITH ‘HIT LIST’ BEFORE GRUESOME ATTACK
Students at Pennbrook Middle School were horrified by the incident that took place in the cafeteria last month. (FOX29 Philadelphia WTXF)
“We know which students are the problem. I’ve spoken to the principal [and] she says that ‘We’re following our policy as laid out.’ Well, let’s change that policy. Let’s make this a safe school environment for all the students,” she said.
Her comment was met with applause from those attending.
Palovcak told Fox News Digital that her child was in the cafeteria and witnessed the incident involving the Stanley cup as it took place. Like other parents, she described the culprit as a disruptive 13-year-old student who exhibited a violent past while attending other local schools.
Going into detail, she said students were traumatized by the incident and some were even calling their parents. A FOX 29 Philadelphia report quoted Palovcak as recalling that seventh-graders were left behind to witness the cleanup of blood.
The account was corroborated by another parent, Sarah Batory, who, in a previous interview with Fox News Digital, said her son was present in the cafeteria when the incident took place.
“He told me that something had happened and there was a lot of blood. And then he texted me and said that everybody, all the teachers, were making the kids put away their phones and telling them they couldn’t call or text their parents. So obviously, that sent a lot of parents into quite a frenzy,” she said.
Batory and Palovcak said that students were left in the cafeteria for approximately 30 minutes as they witnessed the cleanup.
A female student at a previous board meeting also recounted blood flying “everywhere,” adding that the accused student grabbed the victim’s hair and began yelling “I’m going to murder you” while “hitting her against the table.”
The victim was hospitalized while the accused student was taken into custody.
FRUSTRATED PARENTS, TEACHERS DEMAND SCHOOLS BRING BACK POLICE TO CURB VIOLENCE: 911 CALLS ‘ALMOST EVERY DAY’
Parents say the culprit is far from the only student with behavioral problems and violent tendencies in the district, however.
One of the moms present at Tuesday’s meeting cited an incident in which a then-3rd grade student chased others with scissors.
“My God, what if he had gotten them? I mean, does it take that? Would that even do anything?” she asked.
“I want to know my kids are safe, and they’re going to come home the way that I sent them there and, right now, I don’t feel that.”
Parents insist the repeatedly problematic students need to be removed from their current settings and placed in either online learning or an alternative school to ensure the safety of other children. They also argued that prior warnings were not taken into account concerning the student attacker from last month.
“Every child is entitled to an education. I totally support that. I support mental health awareness,” Palovcak said.
“However, if you have a child who is constantly disruptive to the class setting or the school setting and is especially violent, I think that there comes a time where we just need to look at different place for that child, whether it be an alternative school or the way they did with COVID, putting students online.”
Palovcak said Wednesday that she was working to arrange a protest ahead of another meeting slated to take place on Thursday.
She also said the student behind the Stanley cup incident has not returned to her daughter’s school yet.
“From my understanding, they [the accused student] were just released from custody. I don’t really know too much about the whereabouts of the student or when they got out of jail or anything like that. I just know that the superintendent has assured me that they have to have a hearing with the child and their family, to my knowledge, on determining whether the student can return to school or not,” she said.
“The superintendent assured me that, if the child were to return at school, that he would email the parents, and I haven’t received an email. Let me tell you, if that child’s attending school, my daughter’s being pulled out, and then I’m suing the district, and they’re going to pay for my child to go to a private school,” she continued.
Palovcak said she would like to see trained security on campus to help mitigate or deter such situations.
Superintendent Todd Bauer admitted at Tuesday’s meeting that the district could do better, saying, “I recognize sometimes decisions are made, and in the end, it was the wrong decision. Perhaps that was the case here.”
He additionally said, “That is something that is going to be clearly investigated here, in this incident. How was the decision made? Why was the decision made?”
Fox News Digital reached out to North Penn School District for comment concerning Palovcak’s remarks and received the following reply: “We encourage North Penn community members with concerns to reach out directly to the school district. The superintendent continues to meet individually, in groups and in public forms to address concerns.”
Fox News’ Kristine Parks contributed to this report.
Read the full article from Here
Local News
LinkedIn has released its 2026 top companies list for Boston, highlighting the employers it says offer workers the strongest opportunities for career growth in the region.
The annual ranking, based entirely on LinkedIn data, evaluates companies on factors tied to career advancement, including skill development and promotion. To qualify, companies needed at least 250 global employees with at least 100 located in the city as of Dec. 31, 2025.
Healthcare, life sciences, and finance companies dominated this year’s list, underscoring the industries that continue to shape Greater Boston’s economy.
CVS Health claimed the top spot on the ranking, followed by Mass General Brigham and Boston-based Vertex Pharmaceuticals.
Financial firms Fidelity Investments and State Street also landed in the top 10, alongside healthcare and research institutions including Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
LinkedIn said the rankings reflect Boston’s status as a major hub for biotech and healthcare innovation.
“The list is more than a ranking — it’s a snapshot of the world of work in Boston right now,” LinkedIn wrote in the report.
The company said its methodology measures workplace growth using data on employee advancement, skill growth, external opportunities, and company stability. Unlike LinkedIn’s national Top Companies ranking, the Boston list focuses specifically on activity within the local metro area.
Several companies on the list stood out for specialized skills in growing industries.
At Vertex Pharmaceuticals, the most notable employee skills included pharmaceutical manufacturing, pathology, and nanotechnology, while Liberty Mutual Insurance highlighted expertise in artificial intelligence engineering and software development.
Amazon, which rounded out the list at No. 10, was recognized for skills tied to AI engineering, mobile application development, and linguistics.
The report also identified some of the most common jobs at each company. Research roles were among the most common positions at Mass General Brigham, while software engineer positions appeared frequently at Fidelity Investments, Liberty Mutual, and Amazon.
Here are LinkedIn’s top 10 companies in Boston for 2026:
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Connecticut offers an unusual density of options for retirement and that is part of what makes it work. Towns here sit close to good hospitals and walkable downtowns. The Litchfield Hills run inland and the Long Island Sound coast catches the south. Four real seasons turn up without the punishing extremes of the Northeast’s harder climates. Theater companies, art museums, and historical societies keep year-round calendars across the state. The eight communities ahead each give seniors room to settle in at their own pace.
Cheshire keeps an agrarian feel without sacrificing what you need close to home. The Farmington Canal State Park Trail and Lock 12 Historical Park are both ADA-accessible, giving seniors flat walking with bus-stop connections. Quinnipiac Recreation Area covers 59 acres with soccer fields, an in-line skating rink, and picnic spots that work as well for family Sundays as for daily walks. Hickory Hill Orchards and Drazen Orchards both open up for U-pick fruit through summer and fall, and Sweet Claude’s Ice Cream Parlour has been a local fixture for years. New Haven sits about a 30-minute drive south, which puts Yale New Haven Health within reach for specialized care.
Daily life gets easier with the Bartlem Recreation Area, which hosts gardening clubs, sports leagues, and skating, while the Cheshire Historical Society runs lectures and tours that lean on the town’s deep colonial roots. The Barker Character Comic & Cartoon Museum keeps roughly 80,000 antique toys and collectibles on display, in case you have ever wanted to lose an afternoon to mid-century memorabilia. Local stops like Cheshire Coffee and Vespucci’s Italian Restaurant round out the everyday rhythm.
Essex puts everything inside a walkable village, which is a quality not every town in the state can claim. The waterfront on the Connecticut River is the social anchor, with marinas, the Connecticut River Museum, and the Essex Steam Train & Riverboat all clustered around the same quarter-mile stretch. The Griswold Inn has been serving food and drink continuously since 1776, making it one of the oldest taverns in the country still in operation. Main Street keeps a working-village feel, with shops, galleries, and restaurants you can reach on foot from most residential neighborhoods.
Flat terrain and short blocks make daily walking comfortable. The Essex Land Trust manages preserves like Cross Lots and Bushnell Farm with gentle paths, and the riverfront at Essex Harbor is a favorite for slow afternoons. Middlesex Hospital sits about twelve miles north in Middletown for primary care, with Yale New Haven Hospital roughly thirty-five miles southwest for specialized needs. The Black Seal Seafood Grille and Olive Oyl’s on Main Street handle most of the everyday lunch and dinner rotation, and the Ivoryton Library Association just up the road runs a busy calendar of lectures, films, and community events.
Glastonbury is one of Connecticut’s oldest communities, and that long history shows up across the town through preserved forests, working farms, and a tidy central village. Eastbury Pond shifts with the seasons. It is used for swimming and fishing in summer and ice skating once it freezes over. Scott’s Orchard & Nursery is a full-service garden center stocking Christmas trees, fall apples, and seasonal produce, and seniors with green thumbs treat it almost like a second hobby. Forest preserves around the edges of town add quiet walking and biking routes that stay flat enough for an easy afternoon.
Daily errands work well thanks to the town’s central location, with quick highway access to Hartford and the major medical centers there. Hartford HealthCare’s main campus sits about ten miles west across the Connecticut River for both routine appointments and specialized care. The Minnechaug Golf Course is a community favorite with an island green that draws golfers from across the area. For meals, Plan B Burger Bar, Char Koon for Pacific Rim cuisine, Angelo’s for Italian, and Patty Cakes Bakery for morning coffee and treats round out the dining rotation.
Farmington was settled in 1640, making it among the oldest communities in the state, and that early history is still visible in the central village. The Stanley-Whitman House dates to about 1720 and runs ongoing educational programs, with member volunteers helping lead tours and events year-round. Just up the road, the Hill-Stead Museum keeps a sunken garden, an art collection that includes Monet, Degas, and Whistler works, and a long-running poetry festival in season. The town’s two big trail networks anchor outdoor life, with the Farmington Canal Heritage Trail covering roughly fifty-six miles through Connecticut on the old canal route and the Farmington River Trail adding another eighteen miles of riverside paths.
Seniors can stay busy at any pace they prefer. Winding Trails Cross Country Ski Center operates on 350 acres just outside the village, with snowshoeing, skiing, and warm-weather paths for those who keep moving in winter. Golfers have the Westwood Golf Course and the Tunxis Country Club within easy reach. UConn Health’s main campus is in Farmington itself, putting one of the state’s largest academic medical centers minutes from home. For meals, Wood-n-Tap covers American comfort, Green Tea handles a wide Asian menu, and Piccolo Arancio remains the town’s longtime Italian destination.
Wethersfield is another of Connecticut’s earliest towns, founded in 1634, and the legacy still shapes daily life through historic streetscapes and community institutions. The central village holds one of the largest historic districts in the state, with flat sidewalks that make for easy walking. The Wethersfield Historical Society runs lantern light tours in the fall and winter, the annual Witch of Blackbird Pond Ball (a nod to the locally set Elizabeth George Speare novel), and craft fairs that pull in regional artists. Affordable housing and proximity to Hartford make Wethersfield a practical fit for retirees who want urban amenities without paying urban prices.
Mill Woods Park covers 122 acres on the town’s south side, with the Eleanor Buck Wolf Nature Center hosting wildlife programs, an off-leash dog area, and seasonal sports facilities. Hartford Hospital sits about six miles north for medical access, and the Veterans Administration’s Newington campus is even closer for those tied into VA care. Wethersfield’s dining rotation includes Ginza for Japanese, Ming Moon for Chinese, and Carmela’s Pasta Shop, which still makes fresh pasta to order. The town’s senior center runs daily programming and works with both local non-profits and area health systems on wellness offerings.
Madison sits along Long Island Sound with a beach town that earns its reputation honestly. Hammonasset Beach State Park stretches more than two miles, making it the longest shoreline park in Connecticut, with a flat boardwalk that doubles as a popular daily walking route. The Hammonasset Natural Area Preserve next door adds quieter dune and marsh habitat for birding and slow strolls. Bauer Park covers another inland corner of town with hiking trails, community gardens, and ponds. The Sculpture Mile, part of the Hollycroft Foundation’s regional exhibition, runs through Madison’s downtown with rotating outdoor art that gives a walking tour real shape.
Medical access has been improving for years, with the Yale New Haven Health network reaching out through several local clinics, and Yale New Haven Hospital itself less than twenty miles west. The center of town is a walkable downtown with cinema, tea shops, and family-owned stores, anchored by R.J. Julia Booksellers, a long-running independent bookstore that hosts author events nearly every week. Most senior-care residences sit near the shoreline, which keeps the beach within reach even for those needing assisted living. Chef-driven Bar Bouchée and The Wharf at the Madison Beach Hotel keep the dining scene more varied than a small shore town usually manages.
Old Saybrook is where the Connecticut River meets Long Island Sound, which gives the town both a working harbor and easy beach access in the same square mile. The Acton Public Library runs one of the most extensive senior program calendars on the shoreline, with tax-prep clinics, computer lessons, and an active book club. The Katherine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center, locally known as The Kate, fills out the cultural side with films, concerts, and stage productions year-round. Harvey’s Beach offers shallow Sound water for quiet swimming, and Fort Saybrook Monument Park traces the town’s colonial-era history along an accessible walking path.
For active days, the Connecticut River Greenway State Park brings walking trails and views along the lower river. The Estuary Council of Seniors operates a busy senior center on Main Street with meals, programs, and transportation services that draw in residents from across the shoreline towns. Middlesex Health Shoreline Medical Center runs in Westbrook just up the road for primary and emergency care, with Yale New Haven Hospital about thirty-five miles southwest for specialized treatment. Local favorites for meals include Liv’s Oyster Bar, Penny Lane Pub, and the long-running Pat’s Kountry Kitchen for an easy breakfast or lunch.
Ridgefield sits at the southern edge of the Litchfield Hills with about twenty-five thousand residents and a Main Street that has stayed mostly intact since the eighteenth century. The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum keeps a national-caliber rotating exhibition program in a town this size, which is unusual. The Keeler Tavern Museum & History Center anchors the colonial-era end of things, with a cannonball still lodged in its corner post from the Battle of Ridgefield in 1777. The Ridgefield Playhouse fills the rest of the cultural calendar with live music, comedy, and films, and Weir Farm National Historical Park sits just outside town with restored Impressionist-era studios open to the public.
Day to day, Ridgefield consistently ranks among the safest towns in the country, which removes one of the bigger worries for aging in place. The Ridgefield Golf Course handles the obvious recreational side, and Bennett’s Pond State Park offers easy walking trails just north of the village. Norwalk Hospital and Danbury Hospital are both within a twenty-five-minute drive, both part of the Nuvance Health network. Hardly anyone leaves Ridgefield without circling back through downtown, where independent shops, small cafes, and the Books on the Common bookstore keep the village rhythm steady.
Connecticut earns a real spot on the retirement map by mixing close-knit small towns with reliable medical access and four full seasons that stay manageable most years. Cheshire, Essex, Glastonbury, Farmington, Wethersfield, Madison, Old Saybrook, and Ridgefield each carry their own personality. Some lean coastal, some lean inland, and some put their colonial-era past right out where you live it. What ties them together is a sense that daily life can stay engaged and walkable for as long as you choose to stay.
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