The point is DCPS has no standards for school capacity, capacity is whatever they say it is. |
Have you seen the projections in the DME's Master Facilities Plan? 2108 students by SY 2017-18. That's eight years away. |
How is this not a fire code violation? It would be interesting if parents sued on the grounds of safety. I'm not sure everyone could evacuate in time, if there was an emergency. |
Please tell us more about your expertise in rating building emergency evacuation capacity. |
it is Next time you are in Deal - look on the wall at capacity for the cafeteria. If it is less than the enrollment for a grade - there is a problem. |
Yeah, some parents haven't a clue what is going on! Check phones and read the posts, not all squeaky clean or overcrowding like some of you all think
|
My kids, who are white, and attend Deal, here the N word used by African American kids everyday. I remember the use of that word was very common, if not over used by African Americans in DC when I was a kid in the 70's and 80's... I guess it's still being used. |
Shut down feeder OOB at Deal. It would solve this. |
Reminds me of the time when I waited forever for a Metrobus, despite ok weather and light traffic conditions. Asked the driver why the bus was 40 minutes behind schedule. The driver replied “The schedule is wherever I’m at!” It’s a DC thing. |
Problem solved by printing a new placard. |
My kid doesn't have a phone. |
Mine doesn’t either. Kids really don’t need phones until HS. You invite the crazy in by having a phone. |
Which OOB feeder goes to Deal? |
You mean OOB feeder rights. Just because an OOB student attends an in boundary elementary school should not confer the right to go on to Deal and to Wilson. |
|
Just a friendly reminder that neighborhood schools are a choice as well. There is no fundamental right to go to your neighborhood school. School districts adopt systems to identify how they will distribute seats to schools. DCPS has long been a neighborhood school system with a lottery system for available seats. The feeder rights for OOB students has now been in place almost a decade.
Cities like NY give a preference but no guarantee of a spot in a neighborhood school. SF has a complete lottery system. Seattle long had a choice system with a neighborhood preference to a cluster of schools. DCPS could adopt a number of ways to solve the overcrowding problem. Doing away with the right for OOB students to follow a feeder pattern is one option but not the only and not necessarily the most politically palatable. My youngest starts Deal in the fall. How they solve this will not have an impact on my kids so I really do not have a dog in this fight other than property values. All of you parents that recently bought into upper NW and think this can be easily solved by cutting off feeder rights to OOB students likely did not participate in this discussion last time it was actually on the table in a boundary review. I think it is wise to think about a solution that betters the system for all DCPS students, not just your child's path. |