Oh no. It’s the opposite of that. There are about 6 people who really want an elementary school in that area. One of whom is an extremely racist and aggressively attack anyone who questions why an elementary school is needed in that location. They do not care about demographics, facts or splitting up existing neighborhoods. People like yourself. You never argue the facts just that those old white racist in Fox Hall do not want the white kids from Palisades, Wesley Heights and Glover Park coming to their “neighborhood”.
Most people do not care. Like Glover Park did not care. The city has proposed dividing Glover Park and shipping the majority of elementary age kids to the new Fox Hall elementary. Why…because there are not enough elementary age kids to fill a 1/4 of the school from Fox Hall. Glover Park is organizing and is strongly against this boondoggle. Wait till DCPS comes out with the new boundary showing Wesley Heights and everything south of MacArthur and east of Dana in Palisades going to the new Fox Hall elementary. That would relieve crowding at the elementary schools that feed Deal. That elementary will never be built. |
This is what I don't get. My kids are in college now. When my oldest was 3 we moved into our neighborhood so we could send our kids to the local public school, one of the Ward 3 "good" schools. We sent three kids to that school, from Pre-K to 5th, and I consider those years to be among the happiest of my life. I have many close friends we met among the parents there, my kids have friends among the students. In my mind our neighborhood is the school, and the school is the neighborhood. Why would anyone not want that? Why would anyone want to deny that experience to others? |
It's the "Fox Hall" guy from the Stoddert thread with his "Fox Hall Facts." |
People hate everyyyyything. They want everything to stay exactly the same, or be magically changed to fit exactly what they think they are entitled to. What I don’t get is putting organizing energy into it. Seriously get an life - you’re spending your precious hours on earth protesting A SCHOOL? In our neighborhood they even protested a preschool! Please, take all that negative energy and go pick up trash or read books to homeless children. Anything but the misery you’re indulging yourself in. |
it's amazing what groupthink will do. With the Ward 3 shelter discussion, a handful of people started off saying it was not a great idea. By the end of the discussion a year and a half later, you'd think putting a homeless shelter for families next to a police station was a crime against humanity. |
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Take it a step further
People complained about closing the service lane in Cleveland Park, how the former Babe's site in Tenley wasn't going to have parking, or how the 15 year 'battle" over Cathedral Commons was going to ruin the neighborhood. Yes all these things happened and pretty much nothing has changed. Just better shops, more housing and better pedestrian experience. Maybe it is time to stop listening to the NIMBYs in total and move on with the new development and progressive transportation initiatives. |
My favorite is the bike lane on New Mexico Avenue. When that was debated you would have thought that putting in a bike lane was letting the terrorists win. Now it's been there for years and it's like it's always been there. |
the service lane debate is an evergreen one. The ANC 3C commissioners under 50 have been tagged with being "pro chain store" - not because they have proposed closing the service lane or because they are pro chain store, but because they are seen as a threat to the slow decline of CP. |
“Take it a step further”. Commercial redevelopment of the strip for “density” will lead to higher commercial rents, which makes businesses like Vace or the antique jewelry store not feasible. In their place you will get more fast casual dining. The five over one cookie cutter experience turns every urban community into the bland equivalent of an outdoor suburban shopping mall. This is not what people imagine when diverse, vibrant urbanism is being discussed. |
yes, they picture empty 1-story storefronts and parking lots. |
which sounds a lot more like the "bland suburban shopping malls" envisioned by the PP and the sad, current reality of Cleveland Park. |
Yes, I agree, the people who have lived in Cleveland Park for 30+ years have ruled over its decline. It is time to put a stop to it. That is why the new development there is a good thing, as are closing the service lane and adding bike lanes so more people can get there safely. |
So you are saying that the density in Bethesda is harming the Vace there? Because if that is what you believe, I have bridge in Brooklyn I am happy to sell you for cheap. |
everyone knows that lack of density is what helps urban businesses thrive |
You need to show up and make your view known! If people like you don’t go to ANC meetings etc, then your elected officials think the cranks are the only opinions. |