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Anonymous wrote:Listening to the meeting tonight at Madison.
What the new Facilities guy (Erik Gordon) said tonight re KAA is:
* Current capacity is only 1300
* Goal is to open with two classes in fall 2026
* Long-term he is tasked with expanding school to 2000, but that could take years
Coats K-6 983
McNair K-2 531
McNair Upper 3-6 606
Floris K-6 666
Oak Hill K-6 639
1300 scenario
Coats+McNair = 2120 => 1211 students for 9-12 (n * 4 / 7)
Coats+McNair+Floris = 2786 => 1592 students for 9-12
2000 scenario
Coats+McNair+Floris+OakHill = 3425, => 1957 students for 9-12
The plan is to open the school with 9-10 only, so scenario 3 would start with 1000 students and transition to full capacity on year 3.
2026/2027 1000 students. Gr. 9-10
2028 1500 students Gr. 9-11
2029 2000 students Gr. 9-12
If this is what you think, the problem would be KAA won't have 2000 capacity by 2029. I hope they do.
If the main building cannot be adapted to 2000, then the additional buildings could easily be used. Better than modulars. However, I think they could adapt the main building. It is large enough. The issue is the configuration. But, with three gyms, it seems to me they could have additional classrooms.
They aren’t going to open KAA as a high school campus where kids are routinely going in and out of three buildings. That’s completely inconsistent with their focus on enhanced security and all the money they recently spent to put West Potomac under one roof.
You are really trying to mislead people into thinking KAA can soon be a typical HS without a lot of additional money being spent.
Have you ever driven down Education Drive? Probably safer than going into trailers or modulars. Do high school kids go outside for physical education?
As for the sports, that is an issue. But, the main issue is that Reid has given little thought and her hires have not been especially good. This is a problem no matter how they implement KAA.
All I can say is that the reasons given for the boundary study apply in spades to this area. The school is needed as a traditional school. Any creative staff could figure out a way to do it and to do it soon.
But, then, these are the people who decided to delay a criminally overcrowded situation for another year. Go take a look at Coates campus.
I doubt they are going to conclude Education Drive in Herndon is some Nirvana of school safety and security.
If something went wrong they’d be facing massive liability.
They want to get kids out of trailers and they only put up with kids in modulars because otherwise they’d have to change more school boundaries and it would shed a light on the disparities in school facilities within FCPS. But that doesn’t mean they’ll replicate those conditions at a new school.
Have you been there? Doesn't sound like it.
Yes. And I can't believe you're delusional enough to think FCPS will just turn it into an open, three-building high school campus.
Suggest you drive around some other high schools. Many are pretty open. Education Drive is almost a private drive. The School Board and the Park Authority own
all the property. There is no need for
any thru traffic. Certainly, it wouldn't be as exposed as most high schools in Fairfax County.
But, the main building is likely to be able to handle it, in any case. Extra buildings could be used for storage, academy or whatever.
If you think that FCPS is going to get rid of all modulars and trailers, you must be new to Fairfax County.
Facts matter.
This is one stupid assertion after another on your part.
The relative seclusion of Education Drive could make it more vulnerable from a security perspective. Let's not forget how close it is to a self-storage business right off McLearen and other commerical properties.
But in any event the main security risks arise from having so many kids in buildings with limited security. That's what FCPS has been trying to address, and an open campus with three buildings runs directly counter to the thrust of their recent priorities and efforts.
The new head of Facilities has repeatedly said the current capacity of KAA is in the 1200 to 1300 range, so stop pretending it's going to be a regular 9-12 high school any time soon.
And of course they aren't going to get rid of all the trailers and modulars at EXISTING schools right away, but that doesn't mean they are going to open a NEW school with the same issues.
Most likely this is going to be a multi-year project to redesign and expand KAA so it can function as a public HS. Some of those same bells and whistles that had you people salivating over sending your kids there rather than to, say, Westfield are probably going to be torn out to create more standard classrooms. We'll spend a lot of additional money and the end result will be a less attractive facility than KAA is today.