Washington
Washington special needs class headed to Broadwater, closure plans announced
Families learned about their children’s education future with the closure of Washington Elementary School.
The School District 2 administration met with parents during a meeting that lasted about an hour on Wednesday night.
Parents had a chance to find out where their children will go to school next year, heard about the bus routes and met the principals from Broadwater, Miles Avenue and Newman.
After weeks of uncertainty, this was a night for answers.
For some gathered at Washington Elementary school Wednesday night, the big question was what will happen to children enrolled in special education when their neighborhood school is closed?
“I’m kind of curious as to where that program is going to land in one of the other schools,” said Michelle Caras, a mother whose son is in the special needs class. “And be sure that the special needs children are still top priority in this change that can be a little bit disruptive to them.”
“I want to make sure he’s still getting the proper education that he should be getting to develop in life,” said Allen Gwilliams, a father with a son in the special needs class.
Superintendent Erwin Garcia answered that question and others.
He said all the Washington special education students, teachers, and teachers’ aides will stay together and make the move to nearby Broadwater Elementary.
“We’re talking about the most vulnerable students,” Garcia said. “We want to make sure that the teachers that currently serve the students can actually travel with those students to the new school. So we minimize the mobility, the change, as much as we can of course.”
On Monday, the Billings school board voted, 6-1, to close Washington, and disperse about 130 students to the other elementary schools.
While more than 200 currently attending Washington, Garcia said that 130 is the remaining students after taking into consideration the special needs student solution and that 5th graders will move onto middle school.
The plan is to turn the closed school into the Washington Innovation Center.
The meeting started with showing the new school boundaries and the possible bus routes.
Families then had a chance to meet the principals.
“We have a great group of leaders that are opening their arms who receive our kids,” Garcia said about the principals. “So that’s exciting. It was a great meeting.”
While many have voiced frustrations and concerns over the closure of Washington, many gathered here saying they’re looking to the future for their kids.
“Hopefully they can still thrive wherever they land going forward,” Caras said.”
“That’s what I kind of want for him is to be able to grow and learn,” Gwilliams said.
Washington
Washington County seizes nearly 11 pounds of meth, two guns in major bust
The nearly 11 pounds of meth and the two guns seized in Washington County. Photo courtesy of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. (Supplied)
INVER GROVE HEIGHTS, Minn. (FOX 9) – A significant drug bust in Inver Grove Heights has led to the arrest of a local man and the seizure of methamphetamine and firearms.
Washington County Drug Task Force operation
What we know:
Danny Gene Zaccardi, 62, was arrested and charged with first-degree sale and possession of a controlled substance. The arrest followed a search warrant execution on Feb. 3 at a residence in Inver Grove Heights.
Investigators found nearly 11 pounds of methamphetamine and two firearms during the search.
The meth was discovered in various locations in a downstairs bedroom, while additional meth and the firearms were hidden behind a basement couch.
The backstory:
The Washington County Drug Task Force, a multi-agency partnership, led the investigation. This task force is supported by the North Central High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program, which aids in disrupting drug trafficking operations.
The task force’s efforts highlight their commitment to keeping dangerous narcotics out of local communities. The seized firearms included a Sig Sauer P365 9mm handgun and a Sig Sauer P232 380 Kurz handgun.
Washington
Monks bring peace message to Washington DC, return to Texas begins
Buddhist monks closing out Walk for Peace
The Walk for Peace is coming to an end and the Buddhist monks will be returning to Texas this weekend and then headed to their homes. Many people are grateful for their journey over the last few months and message of peace.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – After 109 days and roughly 2,300 miles on foot, nearly 20 Buddhist monks brought their “Walk for Peace” to a powerful pause this week on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.
What we know:
Clad in saffron robes, the monks made their way down the National Mall on Wednesday, greeted by hundreds of supporters holding flowers and handmade signs with messages of mindfulness and nonviolence.
The walk began Oct. 26 in Fort Worth, Texas, and carried the group through nine states — including a stretch through Georgia, where supporters gathered along metro Atlanta roadways throughout the state to cheer them on during bitter winter weather.
Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara, who led the pilgrimage, spoke to the crowd gathered at the memorial.
“Ladies and gentlemen, life moves very fast,” Pannakara said. “Sometimes, just a few seconds are enough for us to hurt someone, to say words we regret or to create more pain in a world that is already exhausted.”
“But those same few seconds, if we live them well, can become the beginning of peace,” he continued. “Today, I do not ask you to think about big ideas. I simply invite you to live five seconds of your life with mindfulness.”
The monks, several of whom walked barefoot, crossed Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia before reaching the nation’s capital. Along the way, they endured a collision that resulted in the serious injury of one monk, a handful of protesters, and harsh winter weather, including brutal winds, freezing rain and even several inches of snow.
Snellville monk rejoins Walk for Peace monks near Washington DC
Millions of supporters followed the journey online, where live updates drew a worldwide audience. Thousands of others often traveled for hours to see the monks in person along their route.
Dr. Neeraj Bajracharya, the group’s government liaison and press coordinator, reminded the crowd that the journey does not truly end in Washington.
“The walk for peace is going to continue,” Bajracharya said. “Washington, D.C., is not the final stop because the walk towards peace must continue.”
On Thursday, the monks plan to enter Maryland — their ninth state — for a final day together before boarding a bus back to Texas. They will spend the night in Wytheville, Virginia. Although they will not greet visitors before retiring for the night, they will host a peace gathering before their departure at 7 a.m. Feb. 13.
Buddhist monks’ Walk for Peace ends in Maryland
OTHER RELATED STORIES
They are expected to arrive in Fort Worth on Saturday, Day 112, and complete the final six miles to the spot where the walk began. The walk is currently scheduled to begin at 8 a.m. Lunch and visitation will take place between 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. at Hương Đạo Vipassana Bhavana Center, where it all began. A peace gathering for final reflections on the current journey will take place between 1 and 3 p.m.
Photos of monks and rescue dog as they finish cross-country peace walk in Washington, DC
How to follow the monks
For those who are unable to attend any gatherings in person, the monks are very active on social media, livestreaming and posting multiple times per day.
How to follow the monks
For those who are unable to attend any gatherings in person, the monks are very active on social media, livestreaming and posting multiple times per day.
Washington
Monks bring balm for America’s wounds as Washington cheers peace odyssey
Bhante Saranapala gazed down at more than a hundred Buddhist monks wearing burnt-orange, saffron and maroon robes, most sporting woolly hats, a few clutching flowers.
“These monks are awesome!” roared Saranapala, who is known as the “Urban Buddhist Monk”, prompting a cheer from the big crowd. “Their determination should be greatly appreciated. Walking from Texas to Washington DC, 2,300 miles; it requires strong determination!”
The Lincoln Memorial has witnessed much over the past century – Black opera singer Marian Anderson, Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech, Richard Nixon’s late-night chat with the anti-war demonstrators – but rarely a scene as colourful as on Wednesday.
For 19 monks and Aloka, a rescue dog from India, it was an important stop on a 2,300-mile “Walk for Peace”, a self-described spiritual journey across nine states that had been cheered on by crowds of thousands.
The odyssey had begun in Texas 108 days ago, and saw them brave frigid temperatures and a paralysing winter storm, sometimes with bare feet, to raise “awareness of peace, loving-kindness, and compassion across America and the world”.
About 100 monks and nuns joined them in America’s political capital determined to stay away from politics, although among the thousands who gathered at the Lincoln Memorial was someone waving a Palestinian flag and another who held a big sign that said: “Peaceful resistance.”
The gathering took place within view of the recently renamed Donald J Trump Institute of Peace and close by the also recently renamed Trump Kennedy Center. But above the monks were more enduring Washington touchstones such as the 19ft-tall seated statue of Lincoln, carved from Georgia marble, and the aspiration inscribed into the memorial to “bind up the nation’s wounds”.
The monks had come with balm for America’s current wounds and found the weather obliging as the capital emerged from a recent cold snap, though plenty of ice and snow lingered. As the monks took their places below the memorial, a song boomed from loudspeakers: “Spreading peace, love and harmony all the way to Washington DC.”
Several made speeches as birds and the occasional plane flew overhead. Tencho Gyatso, a niece of the Dalai Lama, the highest spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, read a letter paying tribute to the monks: “Their commitment, including enduring physical hardship and challenging weather conditions over a journey of more than 2,000 miles, has drawn attention both within the United States and internationally,” he wrote.
“The message of peace and mutual understanding conveyed through their conduct, marked by humility and calm presence, has resonated with many people as they encountered along the route … May their walk help sow the seeds of greater peace, understanding and compassion in the United States and beyond.”
Bhikkhu Bodhi, a monk originally from Brooklyn, described the walk as one of the most important events of the 21st century and said: “It seems to me that this walk for peace has brought out the greatest quality of the American character, which is the recognition stated in the words of Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg address that this is a nation founded upon the principle that – he said all men are created equal. We have to revise that and say all people are created people.
“And this walk has shown that no matter what race you might belong to, whatever ethnicity you might come from, whatever religious faith you might adhere to, whatever the color of your skin might be, we all celebrate peace.”
Peace walks are a cherished tradition in Theravada Buddhism. Some of the monks have walked barefoot or in socks during parts of the journey to feel the ground directly and help them be present in the moment.
But the effort has had its perils. In November, outside Houston, the group was walking on the side of a highway when their escort vehicle was hit by a truck. Two monks were injured; Venerable Maha Dam Phommasan had his leg amputated.
Phommasan, abbot of a temple in Snellville, Georgia, rejoined the monks near Washington and addressed the crowd at the Lincoln Memorial from his wheelchair.
The peace walk garnered interest from millions of people on social media, with many sharing messages of support.
On Wednesday, King’s son, Martin Luther King III, posted on X that the walk is “a powerful reminder that peace is practiced step by step. In a divided time, this is what it looks like to stand up for the best of who we are. Love demands endurance. Peace is strength.”
Some in the crowd at the Lincoln Memorial held roses or signs that included “Warriors of peace welcome”, “Equal rights for all humans” and “Every heart needs an Aloka”. They joined in a chant of “Today is going to be my peaceful day” led by Bhikkhu Pannakara, spiritual leader of the Walk for Peace.
Jacquelyn Gray, 64, who works in construction logistics, said: “I’ve been following them since the day they left and I was impressed that somebody would be so committed to something. I know as well as anybody else that they aren’t gonna get here and, magically, peace will cover the planet, but I admire their commitment to this cause.”
Katharine Naujoks, 57, a high school science teacher, said: “The world needs a bit of communalism and camaraderie and peace and goodwill. A lot of people are looking for that. I want to be a part of this positive experience.”
Reflecting on the monks’ epic walk, which will end in nearby Annapolis, Maryland on Thursday, Naujoks added: “It’s quite amazing, the fact that they had to come in through the coldest time in Virginia, Maryland and DC. We’re not usually that cold, so it’s amazing to me. It just shows that it’s an important thing. It’s important to them and it’s important for everybody else around here.”
Could Washington politicians learn something from them? “That would be lovely,” she said.
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