She shifted upper middle class out of Marshall to Madison to make both less diverse. |
Your opinions are get over it, go private, or move. Sorry. |
Plenty of support. See, e.g., https://housingmatters.urban.org/articles/how-students-transportation-options-or-lack-thereof-affect-educational-and-health-outcomes#:~:text=But%20for%20many%20students%2C%20the,are%20more%20than%20an%20hour. |
It's like PP doesn't even try to understand the facts before posting. |
Pfft, no you are no sorry at all. You are just a jerk who wants kids to pay the price for the idiocy of adults. |
Nope not when it involves 45 minute plus commutes. Then it becomes car and traffic centered policy. To think otherwise is to live in a dream world and not understand roads, cars, buses and traffic. |
So your solution is to go private so the student can avoid changing schools while in HS? Mmm,k. 🤦🏻♀️ |
What are you to think you have the right to tell a kid they have to go to a bad school? Let the parents decide if they want to have their kid commute or not. You can choose to stay close to home because it’s called CHOICE. |
But SOME students could choose to attend a better school and could make it work. Not everyone, but some. It’s called CHOICE. |
What am I? I am a human. That defines me as different from you, a MAGA /Grok chat bot who cannot formulate a question. I’m guessing you asked GROK how to fix FCPS boundaries and they came up with “make boundaries completely go away.” No way a human came up these! |
| It was a ploy from Musk to sell more Teslas as his market of government employees has dried up. So he is trying to end school boundaries and have driverless Teslas take the kids to school. Kids deserve choice! And Tesla can get you there! |
Meanwhile, Mel is crying on Facebook: I worked to uphold the commitment of the boundary policy, and proposed a funding solution to pay for the buses for students’ choice. That effort failed. Now, elementary and middle school children who in policy have this choice, do not. They only have the choice if their families can provide their own, private transportation to school every day. Thankfully, at least the choice was upheld for high school students. The Superintendent proposed that only next year’s 12th grade students impacted by boundary changes would receive a school bus if they chose to remain at their current school and not the newly-boundaried one. The Board ultimately expanded that, to include students in 10th and 11th grades for next year. I voted to support this because at least more students than initially thought would receive bussing. Now, without guaranteed school bussing, hundreds of children - from ages 10 through 13 - will spend their final year of elementary school or middle school in a new school. Why? A majority of the Board denied using some of the $8 million in the School Board’s reserve funding that’s available for flexible use, to pay for the $3.1 million needed. The majority of the Board and the Superintendent also denied looking at any other possible areas to reduce funds and apply that to the bussing cost. ---- Meanwhile, middle school after school programs ($3 Million, remember?) are on the chopping block again. |
Funny that you think anyone you disagree with is M*GA. That says more about you than me. I’ll ask again, why do you think you have the right to tell a kid where they have to go to school? |
| Reminding you all that middle school after school programs are on the chopping block again but oh no, let's bus 2nd graders back to their old schools. The compromise that was made was the RIGHT CHOICE given the massive shortfall in budget (I think it's $40M+) that good old Melanie is completely ignoring. |
+1 McDaniel’s compromise was reasonable and Meren looks like an out of touch Karen picking up her toys and going home when she didn’t get her way. |